By Joyce Alexander, RNP (Retired)
I was thinking about 9/11 and the horrible burns experienced by some of the victims who did recover. Being a registered nurse practitioner with a wide variety of clinical experience, the burn units had always been the one place I did not want to work. The terrible pain experienced by the victims of burns always tore at my heart, and even my professional distancing from the pain of my patients could not keep me from “feeling” their pain.
On the day the U.S. mourned the fall of the Twin Towers, I started thinking about the analogies of those 9/11 attacks and how they are so much like the attacks on our lives by the psychopaths, and the injuries we suffered are so much like those burn victims.
Bad sunburns
The physical wounds to the body and skin caused by burns are classed as first-, second-, third-, and fourth-degree. Most of us have experienced first-degree burns when we got a sunburn that turned our skin red and hot. Many of us have also experienced second-degree burns when we got a sunburn that peeled our skin, blistering up the top layer of skin into weeping blisters. Few of us have experienced third degree, though, in which the entire thickness of the skin is burned, and fourth degree is where the underlying fat and muscle is burned
The damage done in each of the first two levels of a burn are extremely painful because the sensitive nerve endings are injured and “scream” in pain. In some third- and fourth-degree burns, there is only numbness because the nerve endings themselves are injured in such a way that they can’t send signals to the brain, which is where pain is perceived.
I see how our emotional injuries in the aftermath of the psychopath’s attack are like the burn victims in the aftermath of the attack on the Twin Towers. Some of us are like the victims of a large sunburn. We are not severely injured in terms of medical danger, but the pain is extremely acute. There is no way we can lie down and not lie on that sensitive, burning skin. Only by standing in a cool shower can we receive any relief from that pain, but it will pass in a comparatively short time without much injury to us, except a memory that encourages us not to repeat the same behavior that got us burned in the first place.
With burns a bit more severe, maybe from staying out in the sun all day and being tender skinned to start with, we get a second-degree burn that blisters up our skin. We are in acute agony for days and days, maybe even in some medical danger if the burns are large or we get a subsequent infection. When they do start to heal, the new skin forming under the blisters is tender and raw, unable to stand pressure from lying down or even a cool shower. If a large enough area experiences second degree burning, the person may have to be in the hospital or require expert medical and nursing care for treatments.
Third-degree burns
With third-degree burns, the entire integrity of the skin is ruined, and it requires that the damaged skin and tissue be “debrided” from the wound as it starts to heal. The dead tissue must be carefully removed as the wound starts to form scar tissue to replace the burned skin. This kind of healing takes a tremendous amount of time, and depending on the depth of the wound may require skin grafts to diminish the scarring.
Many victims of psychopaths are I think like the victims of the third degree burns ”¦ we require the debridement of the dead tissue of our charred selves. We are very raw and tender as we start to heal, and sometimes the “treatment seems worse than the injury,” as we are required to experience the healing debridement of digging out the burned debris of our former selves from the wound. The people who are invested in helping us to recover prescribe the “treatments” such as No Contact, but we don’t want to listen because those treatments are painful. Since we only experience immediate pain from those treatments, and no perceived immediate benefit, we don’t want to go through those daily treatments. We want an “instant fix” to our pain. We want the pain to end NOW! We want to be restored to health and a pain-free life NOW! The caregivers of people who have been burned know that without the daily, or even hourly, treatments, the victims of large burns will become infected and die. Yet those very treatments that will ultimately save them are incredibly painful.
The debridement and cleaning out of our old ways of looking at things, the debridement of our most cherished memories of our love for the psychopaths and the way in which they betrayed us, tore at our core selves, are so incredibly painful in the now, but necessary to our healing and our very survival, in the long run.
Recovery
There are some things that cannot be “rushed” or “speeded up,” no matter what we do. You can’t get a baby in one month by getting nine women pregnant, and you can’t speed up the healing from burns, they both take time for new growth to be accomplished. We also can’t “speed up” the healing process from the damage done to us by the psychopaths, and some of that healing does require the painful debridement of damaged emotional, financial, and even physical damage to ourselves.
As we peel off each layer of damage to our emotions, our finances, and even our physical selves, the pain is intense, and the new skin underneath is tender and raw, barely tolerating any touch at all. We may become angry at those who reach out to help us; we may not want to listen to therapists or friends who advise us. Yet, that new growth in our spirits, our finances, and our physical selves will be the thing that sustains us, allows us to grow and recover.
There may be scars left that are visible with the naked eye that others may see when we walk down the street, or our the scars may be covered by our exterior clothing, only to be seen by those intimate enough to see us without (emotional) clothing, or they may not be visible at all, only felt by ourselves, not seen by even the most intimate significant other. Our bodies, minds and spirits may forever be changed by the experience of our painful injuries and our even more painful recovery, but by surviving, even with the changes in ourselves, we are demonstrating that we are stronger than the attackers, that we will recover and grow again.
We had no choice about being attacked and injured. It was the choice of the attackers to injure us, but we have the choice to heal, to recover, and to endure the painful treatments to remove the dead tissue of our old selves so that the new tissue of healing can grow!
Oxy – This is a terrific, insightful analogy. Very, very helpful. Thank you so much.
Donna
Oxy,
this speaks to me because I still haven’t cleaned out the house of all its ghosts. It’s been too painful, but I’m starting the process.
Ox, beautiful article, and I think we must be somehow on a similar wavelength today. I was just thinking today something along the lines of, “Why is this actually more painful than when I was with him? Healing hurts like hell!!!”
It absolutely does hurt more right now. I was “numb” while I was with him to most of this pain. I realize that I spent many days absolutely catatonic, sometimes weeks. There was one month in particular that I was so catatonic for so many days at a time that I forgot to eat….so much that my stomach shut down and my veins collapsed. I went to the ER and my stomach was bloated out and full of acid and the nurse couldn’t push up a vein in my arm (she told me they had collapsed…). I didn’t even realize until I was in that state what was happening to my body. I didn’t feel hunger. I couldn’t ever remember when the last time was that I’d eaten. Was it this morning? Was it yesterday? Have I eaten at all this week? I had no idea. I couldn’t feel anything.
Now that I’m out….oh my…..I feel.
The only thing that makes it worthwhile is that every moment, every day since I started healing, I feel like I am seeing a little more of someone I lost touch with long, long ago, someone I used to know very well: myself.
This is a great analogy Oxy. We do recover from the relationship we had with a spath but we are forever scarred.
I can remember a friend of mine said, “you didn’t know him long enough before you said I do.”
I had only known my spath under a year before we married but he was love-bombing me and I had never had so much attention from a man before. I just thought I had met my perfect soul mate.
After my experience with him I was so scarred it took me a few years to heal. I almost didn’t marry again but I believe heaven sent my current husband to me and sent me the very best man after I had been to hell and back with the worst.
Glad you liked the article guys. I think sometimes the healing is worse than the initial injury, and it just hurts so much to clean that tender wound out, but without cleaning out the wounds of all the debris there isn’t any way for the new growth to fill in the holes.
That’s right ox!! Fantastic article. Thank you.
I LOVE this analogy. As a nurse (and I was a burn nurse for 4 years), this is really spot on, and ‘speaks’ to me on a deep knowing level.
The things we need to do, in fact HAVE to do, to heal from the injury of being in a LIE, from start to finish, is painful. I think that after the realization that we have been completely bamboozled and nearly destroyed, we want quick relief. And it doesn’t come. The effects of betrayal are long lived and deep. This generally depresses us, makes us mad as hell, and leaves us with feelings of shame. Because, initially, we take the blame.
It is NOT our ‘fault’ that we were perpetrated upon. But we do have the RESPONSIBILITY to do the work of healing. However painful. And it does require further difficulty.
It appears the real legacy of a spath is the prolonged suffering of the victim. The painful and slow layers of repair that require so much from each of us. Looking at our childhoods, our false beliefs, our self-loathing, our guilt over every slight that has come our way, our pretending to be something we aren’t…so many things we have to face about ourselves. When we didn’t even do anything WRONG.
Oh, that is why it is SO important to go NO contact. We need to quit picking at the scabs. Every time we connect with a spath they ‘burn’ us.
We need to turn our attention to real, but painful, personal exploration.
So don’t give them ONE SINGLE moment of prolonged knowledge of your suffering. We may have to struggle. But they sure as hell don’t need to get ANY satisfaction from it. And we need not feel one shred of shame from our suffering. Be PROUD. Walk away. Cut them off!
We may not have the capacity, initially, to live a life that FEELS better. But the thing is we have the ability to do it. That is HUGE. We can, over time, change our lives and create something so perfect for us, that the pains of our experience are no longer our motivating force.
Instead love, real love, will motivate us. Not fear and suffering and ‘treatment’ of our wounds.
NO matter what, don’t give them any knowledge that you are suffering, beyond what is absolutely necessary (ie, divorce proceedings and child custody). If you have no reason other than HUGE sums of money or children, CUT THEM OFF TOTALLY.
Even then, if you can, let it go. Escape. Decide, now, to give them NOTHING of yourself. You have suffered enough.
Heal in private, with those you totally trust and who love and nurture you. Take strength in LOVE, with real and true friends, family, and like-minded helpers.
Slim
Thank you so much for this article.
Everyone here is a blessing.
Ox That was a great article. I dont think anybody that get’s tangled intimately with a sociopath get’s away without some scar’s. And slimeone is so right, the best revenge is living a good life.
Ox-that was a great article. My first burn patient was a 95% body surface area and it brought me back. I do feel like it has been like burns-with these N people in my life. Maybe now I am debriding myself.