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!
Hi Libelle,
new home, new job, that is exciting. where are you now, I mean the country, if you cannot tell, that is fine.
Sky has my email – if you want to you can write to me.
It was very interesting to read your post, as being in the medical field, I also have to break bad news at times. why do you think “you feel” more after spath, as compared to pre-spath.
I also feel as if I “feel more” after the jerk.
petitie
And these people are like dragons, fire breathing dragons with fire you cannot see and that is why they burn. The lies they breathe out are toxic and caustic.
Oxy –
Thank you for directing me to your article. Your comment of “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.” is exactly what I was referring to.
I had been using a band aid to cover the wound, but not cleaning the wound which caused more of an “infection” to my life.
Now that the wound has been completely exposed, I can see how much debris I need to clean out before it can fully heal.
Your kindness and words are truly a blessing to me at this time.
Oxy,
Thank you for this fantastic analogy. I always thought of getting to know a person was like peeling the skin off an onion, you do it one layer at a time to get to the core….but never thought of the reverse affect when we are burned by the psychopaths.
I have recently attended some spiritual healing work shops in which the message that I got the most peace from is that we can re-write our story. Thinking in terms of burnt skin….We can look at the horrors of burned skin and re write it to see that the burned skin we shed, will be replaced it with new tender but stronger skin that we add one layer at a time (in our healling process) to our core onion layers…….
Thanks for your story, it’s all so true only the survivors know of the healing we all go through. You so describe the way our emotions are so well, God bless..
Thanks guys, I’m glad that this analogy resonated with you. There are so many layers to our healing, and it takes time to visualize them, apply them to our lives. I do think too that the healing process is also very much a spiritual journey as well.
Even in working with patients who are seriously physically injured from falls, car wrecks, burns, or any other debilitating injury, there is a spiritual aspect to the healing and recovery of our bodies, minds and spirits that can’t, I think, be separated from each other.
Wow! I cannot compare my emotional hurt to others who have suffered much worse.
Sky,
Yes it was a SPATH FREE day and a good one. There was joy in my heart… It felt weird to be normal, for a day anyway.
But I did realize something. Isn’t it funny how something will prompt us to connect dots?
I bought a book by that author you were blogging about,Alexander Lowen, called FEAR OF LIFE. I read 100 pages today.
Anyway, there was a piece in there that says people are often the opposite of what they project. They gave two examples:
A) CEO’s who project the ultimate in confidence, they are actually very insecure and need adoration and attention to feel secure.
B) people who always seem kind and happy – that they are really deeply angry inside, and they’re afraid to show it.
I had just realized this week that I never, EVER saw my dad angry…he’s always appearling kind and happy. Despite having a terrible childhood. Hmmmmmm.
So, when I think about it, my SPATH WAS
schizoid,
schitzophrenic,
sociopathic,
paranoid,
sadist,
machostic.
My spelling is off.
Isn’t that a lot? Does the DSMV say it’s possible to have all these disorders at once?
He did, or he was faking that he did…. to make it interesting for me and for him.
Superkid10
Superkid,
interesting. My exspath also dressed in a type of uniform. Blue jeans and a plain tee-shirt preferably with one pocket, mostly blue or gray or brown. Also always wore a baseball cap and a jean jacket. He wanted to project a blue collar worker look, but also be unmemorable.
Spaths have compartmentalized lives so maybe your spath was telling his other women that he was a janitor.
My spath picked up hookers and women at casinos. He also made it so that his car’s passenger door couldn’t be opened from the inside, unless you knew how. He always said it was broken. So he was picking up women and either hurting or scaring them. One day he came home with a story about giving a girl a ride and that she became violent and broke his window with her foot when he asked her to get out. Lies. I believe that he dresses the way he does so he won’t be noticed or remembered while doing his dirty deeds.
I think you can have all those disorders at once, but it’s also possible that he is a spath and embellishes his disorders, IMO. On the otherhand, if he’s really schizoid, he’s not likely to be very good at hiding his spath tendencies. So he would be what I call a “failed spath”. Since a spath is only as good as his mask, if he doesn’t wear a mask because of his other PD’s, then he is a failed spath. LOL!
Unless… that is his mask!
It’s sick no matter how you look at it. Someone who is so ashamed of what they are that they have to pretend to be someone else, is pathetic.
Edit: I meant Spathetic.
Oh My – What did I miss?