Editor’s note: This article was submitted by Steve Becker, LCSW, CH.T, who has a private psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, and clinical consulting practice in New Jersey, USA. For more information, visit his website, powercommunicating.com.
You really need to admire yourself for surviving an exploitative relationship. I say this very seriously, not flippantly. We all, of course, hope to minimize our involvement with exploitative individuals. But in the course of life, as we know, that’s not always possible. It is vital, therefore, if you’ve been victimized by and/or are recovering from involvement with an exploiter, to fully, genuinely appreciate (and remind yourself constantly) that you are indeed strong, impressively strong, because only the strong survive exploitation.
Many clients with whom I work (really, most people, I think) tend to see personal strength and insecurity; personal strength and low self-esteem, as incompatible. They balk at the idea that you can be a very strong person and insecure at the same time; that you can be a very strong person even with low self-esteem. For instance, when someone violates you (especially chronically) and you don’t defend yourself properly, the tendency is to attribute your failure at self-protection to “personal weakness.” The thought is something like, “If I was a strong person, I wouldn’t have let that abuse occur. I’d have asserted myself, defended myself, drawn the line.”
But it’s not personal weakness that explains the failure to protect your boundaries; it’s more often a lack of clarity, in knowing precisely what your boundaries are, and precisely what constitutes an unacceptable violation of them. Victims of sustained exploitation/abuse aren’t personally weak, quite the contrary. My experience has affirmed again and again how remarkably strong and resourceful most of them are. What they lack, however, often is a clear, secure sense of their boundaries; this insecurity of boundaries leaves them vulnerable to compromising themselves. After all, you can’t assert and/or protect your boundaries unless and until you’ve established them very clearly and securely (in your mind).
This explains what for many can seem so confusing and dichotomous: how a victim of sustained exploitation/abuse can, on the one hand, lobby so effectively for others’ interests, while, with respect to her/his own, appear stuck in circumstances he or she would counsel anyone else to reject and escape.
But I restate: You can’t protect your interests if they aren’t, in the first place, clearly defined. And you can’t defend your boundaries if, on any level, you’re uncertain, or ambivalent about, what they are. This disadvantaged position helps explain how an otherwise strong, resourceful adult can find her/himself tolerating and enduring the meanness and nonsense of a defective partner.
When my clients who have been in exploitative relationships discover confidently their boundaries, they often feel sad, on one hand, not to have done so sooner; but thrilled on the other to find themselves, as if miraculously, just as skilled at protecting their own interests as they’ve always been at protecting others’.
It’s a kind of bittersweet discovery. The bitter part, if grieved properly, is usually short-lived; the sweet aspect is long-lasting.
kat … hey you. when you coming to the city?
i don’t think we’re supposed to ‘find’ love. i believe that we’re just supposed to love ourselves the most, and all else falls into place in the right time, with the right person.
i have to admit, i’ve never been great at truly loving myself in a deep, unconditional way. i wonder what my role was in this last sick relationship; i realize i’ve never really had a relationship where i didn’t get the short stick in some way.
it takes two, ya know.
i, too, would love to be in love with someone who really loves me back. since my dad was a s/p/n (was he EVER … my mom’s been giving me an ear full since i told her about my breakup. her response was: ‘he’s another smooth-talking user like your father was’.) anyway, i digress.
when the time is right, and we are whole (or nearly so) i have faith that our right and perfect partner will appear in our lives.
’til then, i hope my ex rots from the inside out, and that we all find our peace in short order.
towanda.
I just read the original article by Donna. I find it very helpful. She states that is is not that we are necessarily weak or having poor self-esteem, but that we have not clearly defined our boundaries. I feel this is very true. It never occurred to me to me that if a man makes a date with me and then doesn’t show up or return my calls, then says “I have no explanation,” to never speak to him again. It never occurred to me because it never happened to me before. The P’s behaviors were so bizarre that I thought there MUST be SOME logical explanation because no human being would treat another like that.
I have learned a very valuable lesson about boundaries, but continue to feel shocked reading these stories. Some of these P’s are absolutely diabolical!
hi stargazer: i’m in shock too. i don’t think that we’re even wired to process their insanity.
the behavior is just beyond any sort of human comprehension. i’m doing well in my healing, but then i think about him and go into this sensory shock where i just get completely confused and have no idea which way to turn to get over the ‘what?’ ‘huh?’ ‘how on earth…!’ of my experiences with the nutcase.
I will probably be able to come down sometime before the end of the year, if the work ever gets done on my car. every time they fix something, something else goes
I’m starting to realize how really lonely I am. The answer isn’t in me really, because I’m already working on myself as hard as I can. I really want to find that mate someday that will love me and keep me company in my old age. Even though I’m pretty happy with my situation, my apt, my kids etc., I want that companion. I doubt if I’ll ever stop looking.
It’s especially hard for me because I never saw the “devalue” phase, and I’m not even completely sure I was discarded. But reading all these stories, I know I cannot second guess myself, because what he did do was crazy enough that I can assume the rest was just around the corner.
kat – I can relate with you so much. I am lonely as well – but as time goes on it is less so. I think we will always have one eye open for a special someone in our life – but I think we need to focus on us and our lonliness. Being lonely is dangerous for us. Looking for someone to complete us is dangerous. We need someone to compliment us. I think every notion of love we thought we needed and wanted is unrealistic. i guess my idea of ‘happy ever after’ is just wrong and unhealthy. So I am mourning the loss of that unrealistic yearning for love, evidently I have been doing it wrong. And right now I feel like there is not much to look forward to – in the romance department – cause if butterflys in the stomach and fireworks in the bedroom are red flafs , well then i better get used to being alone – and I am ready for that – I cant give my unrealistic idea of love anymore energy…………..
I have often masked my loneliness by a huge amount of independence. So it is actually not easy to let others get very close. The P was somehow special enough to slip through. So when I go through the pain and grief, it’s not about longing for someone–it’s about missing HIM. When I’m not missing him, I don’t feel the least bit lonely. I believe the more we heal what is broken within us (and I think this is no daunting task), the easier it will be for us to get our emotional needs met without resorting to people who are not good for us.
I just wanted to add that all the people I have been blogging here with for the last few months are really quite remarkable. You are all so strong, and very kind, caring, and intelligent people. There are none of the arguments and power struggles on this site that are so prevalent on other types of forums. Please give yourselves some credit for being so awesome.
I was able to block her from you tube and just print out all her evil messages and put them in a file for my lawyer, i want to thank you all for your kind words, i too yearn to be with an honest loving women to spend the rest of my life with, all other parts of my life are great, business friends, family, i just hope i can find an honest loving woman that wont try to scam me and just love me for who and what i am. I know this sounds crazy but i hope someday they can hold these people accountable for their actions and even more get them some kind of treatment so they don’t continue to destroy honest loving fols like us.
I want to say i’m sorry for leaving out the k in the word folks in my last post, we are loving folks and the Sp’s are Fool’s.