(This post is meant for her, who knows who she is, and the rest of you, who know who you are. My use of “he” is for purposes of convenience; women, too, are capable of the behaviors and attitudes described. Copyright © 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW)
It wasn’t you. It was him. I know you’re not a black and white person (like he was). But sometimes it is black and white. And so this is the deal: It wasn’t you.
He wanted you to think it was you, when all along it was him. And you didn’t fully want to believe it was him, either. Even now, perhaps in a corner of your heart, although it may conflict with your rational healing self, you may still not be entirely ready to believe that it wasn’t you.
It was comforting, after all, on some level, to believe it was you. Because if it was you, you had some control. You could fix yourself. You could make yourself better, more attractive; less frustrating, more gratifying. If it was you, you could improve yourself; make yourself more perfect.
You could become something more that he needed more of; something better than you were (and that he demanded). And this left you with hope: with hope that it was possible, with enough patience, tolerance, searching and self-improvement, to stumble upon the formula that would finally earn his love and respect (and affirm your merit to be loved and respected).
And in some ways he made it easy to hope. To begin with, as we’ve noted, he could be quite covincing in the validity of his blame. And we’ve also noted that you half-wanted (on some levels, perhaps badly wanted) to be persuaded that, as exploitative, selfish and indisputably abusive as he was, maybe he was right! Maybe, in the end, he was right to finger you as the underlying problem.
Sure, he had an anger problem, but never to this extent, until he got involved with you! Maybe he drank, but not until he met you, and had to endure your constant nagging, demands and general insatiability, did his drinking escalate!
Maybe he was a cheat, but what normal guy wouldn’t have strayed having to put up with your constant crap? Besides, there were plenty of prior relationships, he’ll take pleasure in reminding you, in which (allegedly) he didn’t cheat, never even had the urge to cheat, thereby testifying to his capacity for fidelity!
And as painful as this abusive drivel (in its manifold variations) always was to hear, yet at the same it protracted your hope. And so you never completely lost hope as long as, on some level, you bought into—in a sense colluded with—his warped framing of his exploitation of you as having arisen, somehow, from your lack, your deficiency.
And so you cut him some slack, and then some more slack; and you made this concession, and this accomodation, and that concession and that accomodation; and you forgave him this, and forgave him that.
And now and then, just enough to powerfully reinforce your enabling behavior that, of course, he found so wonderfully convenient, he rewarded you with a few bones of his “love,” affection, appreciation and “sensitivity.” He could convey these “emotions” selectively—that is, when it suited his interests.
And, of course, it was so tempting to believe (if not convince yourself) that just because he could “be sensitive,” he fundamantally was; just because he could be affectionate, appreciative and thoughtful, he fundamentally was these things.
It was so tempting to believe that “these things” reflected who he really was; who he was really meant to be. If only”¦if only you could decode that magic formula that would, in effect, liberate the underlying mensch from the cad.
And so, in order to cling to the hope that you desperately needed, you accepted the absolutely necessary, yet futile, proposition that you were responsible to satisfy him when, all along he, not you, was insatiable.
And you assumed the equally necessary, yet futile, proposition that it was your job to compel what his personality disorder precluded his ever genuinely giving you—his respect, loyalty and love.
And now you are strong enough, finally, to face this; to come entirely to grips with these truths. You are ready to relinquish, truly and finally, that last bit of hope (as insistent as it’s been for a long time).
You can now release every last vestige of that old hope that all along was false; that, all along, was based on the pathological premise that it was you.
When it never was. When it was him. Always.
Yeah being on this site is a tremendous help to me, my friend keep telling me why are still talking to him, why are you still hurting over him, you need to move on he done you wrong f**k him. Ok all of the above is true but damn when you love some one is it that easy to move them out of your heart especially when you gave your all to that that person. You call your self building a future with that man. I’m so glad you all understand what I’m going through. Thank-u
Sarasims,
LF is the greatest resource, I’m so glad you’ve found strength here. But please, get books on the subject. Go to your library’s website and search under the topic “narcissism”.
You will notice that they ARE ALL CHECKED OUT! with long lines of people waiting to reserve them.
Anyway, get in line and get the books. They will round out and fill out your resolve to stay NC. But more than that, they will help you to understand why and what, so that you can see the toll that this PD is taking on this world.
Like Henry said, this new knowledge almost (I said ALMOST), makes the torture of having known a P, worth it.
The more you know, the more “worth it” it will be. Then you can go out and spread the word to anyone willing to listen.
hopingtoheal
My husband and your POS could be twins! If not, they sure do have the same behavior. However, mine has NEVER said that he should consider my needs. My needs are are treated as his annoyances.
For me, it’s difficult to go NC because I still live with the person(?) who treats me like a POS. Wow! Making that statement felt sort of self affirming. It’s like getting a grip with my denial. Maybe that’s a positive step forward for me.
The Golden Rule is something that I’ve tried to (though not always successfully) live by. Whenever someone I love disrespects, cheats and lies to me it hurts my soul.
Angry people intimidate and change my responses, but usually not for the better. Instead of feeling helped, I usually end up feeling worse about myself.Each angry put down statement kills a little part of who I am. It seems doubtful that a bully would enjoy having others to respond back to them with their same behavior.
Whenever attempting to discuss anything that is bothering me, I cringe about my husband’s usual interrupting put downs and loud accusations. He attacks to avoid giving answers. So, out of fear of being attacked by someone who could care less about anything I have to say, I almost always try to stuff all of my feelings. Instead, I play out his response in my head. It seems better than actually trying to discuss anything with a bully who only sees me as an enemy.
Discussions become battles where my bully claims victory by intimidation. I’m treated like his opponent, not his partner. An opponent doesn’t play on the same team. Opponents exist merely to be defeated.
Maybe that’s why NC with anyone who treats others like swamp scum make sense. You can’t reason with unreasonable people.
Love716
My P husband uses guilt to control me. I’m an evil person if I don’t do whatever he expects at any particular given moment. When I refuse to bend to his wishes, he piles on the guilt to get his way!
Per my P, whenever I refuse to do battle, I am assuming blame for the outcome. I’m the unreasonable party who walks away. It becomes my fault if things aren’t resolved. He’s the good guy who wants to hang in there and fight for “right”…I’m a POS who refuses to argue (with a bulling jerk)!
Either talk to yourself in the mirror and feel guilty, or do battle with a controlling jerk who demands his way.
The P is guilty. The P should be ashamed of himself. Stupid is as stupid does…and the P is stupid. I am too smart to accept his thoughtless demands. (Daily repeating that thought might actually allow it to sink in and become reality. I’d put it on a mirror, but then my P husband would find a way to punish and guilt me for it.)
Luv- I’m totally with you. I COMPLETELY understand what you are saying because my friend told me the same thing. Just forget him like nothing ever happened? How do you wake up one day and act like you never loved someone…esp. after you have shared so much! But YES, I’m seeing that here at LF we are here to support each other and instead of hoping and praying to hear from him just one more time everyday….hoping and praying that he will give me just one more chance…..I’m so anxious to log on arm myself with more knowledge and strength. Prayers to you!
Skylar…thank you for the great suggestion. I will do just that. Do you have any suggestion for a good book to “start” with??
Thank you – thank you – thank you!
Sarasims, yes that is so true because that is exactly what I do I hope for what you said his calls, his words and wishing for change. Whille at work I look at my phone all day to see if I miss his call. I’ll be so glad when I can gain the strength and the knowledge instead of ripping myself apart for not paying attention to all the warning signs in the beginning.
Luv, yes….there with you too! Watching that phone, watching my email…the whole nine yards.
I want to wake up in the morning and have my life back!! I don’t want him to consume one more minute of it….but it’s getting the strength to get from here to there! Be strong!
You be strong too, thanks for the encouragment!
Sarasims, my favorite starter book is:
“Why is it always about you?” by Sandy Hotchkiss.
Next on my list is
“The sociopath next door” by Martha Stout
3rd would be:
“People of the Lie” by Dr. M. Scott Peck