One night last week, I awoke from a very real dream. It was not horrible or frightening. In fact, it was quite ordinary. It was a very accurate depiction of the everyday exchanges that commonly occurred in what was once my life. As dreams go, things were slightly out of place and somewhat strange, but I understood.
In the dream, it was a crisp October evening. I was dressed in jeans and a sweater. He was dressed in navy blue dress pants and a white shirt. The accoutrements were missing from the shirt, as they often were in reality. Why we were together, as he came from work, I have no idea.
I was younger in the dream, the age I was the day we met, but he was his current age. We were at the library in the town where I grew up. It was the library from my Story Time days and evening high school study groups, but it looked as it did then, not now . I went upstairs to gather a few books. He went downstairs to read magazines. We agreed to meet at the front doors at 7:00pm, allowing an hour of free time. At about seven o’clock, I approached the large stained glass doors. I waited….and waited.
Familiar territory: the land of insignificance and blame
Just before 7:30, I began my descent down the wide stone staircase in pursuit of a reason for the delay. I passed the children’s section, and headed to the room that housed the magazines. I was irritated that I had been kept waiting, but was willing to hear his explanation. Maybe he lost track of time. I tried to remain calm, but my insides were churning, knowing that blatant disregard was responsible for my wait and that my experience would remain void of explanation, apology, or any decent form of acknowledgement.
There he was. Sitting as if he had all the time in the world and was the only one who mattered, he casually thumbed through one of many magazines he had selected. I asked if he knew what time it was. He nodded in the affirmative, with his eyes glued to the periodical. No eye contact. I asked if he remembered that we were to re-connect at 7:00. Again, an almost undetectable shrug in the affirmative.
When I realized that he knew of the plan and had knowingly disregarded all that was supposed to be, I felt my breathing quicken. Sensing my upset, he slammed the magazine down, glared into my eyes, and blamed me for not coming to him sooner. The fact that he did not follow through with the plan he initiated, under the terms he agreed to, now became “my fault.”
Glimpses of the slipping mask
Angrily, he stood up. Glancing about, checking to insure that no one was nearby to witness his rage, he quietly, but forcefully pushed the chair in under the table. He directed me to move out, and through gritting teeth snarled, “Another night, ruined by Linda. Are you happy now, huh, huh?” I remained silent while in the library, but tears welled in my eyes. I felt alone. As I passed the fireplace, its warmth, coupled with the emotional storm brewing within, left me feeling scorched.
I felt as though I were walking through a spinning tunnel where only I existed. Everything was surreal. The sounds were muffled as I made my way to the doors, with the exception of the loud thumping sound of the date stamp machine (the library was not yet electronic.) Once outside, the rushing river and crisp fall scent brought me back. The fallen leaves crunched beneath my feet, as I made my way to the car. I blocked everything and everyone from my existence, until I slid into the cold, gray leather seats of the “work car,” the one that was ok to leave out in the elements for several days.
The quest for understanding and justice
Then, it began. My search for sense amongst madness began. “Why did you blame me for that? I was waiting for you. How did I ruin the night? I didn’t want to ruin the night. It was time to go. What did I do? What should I have done?” The insane “hamster on the wheel” feeling reigned supreme. I was surfing on a rotating sit and spin. This was the “push-pull” of what used to be.
I kept talking and asking. I, so badly, wanted an explanation and understanding. I also wanted things to be ok. My questions met with silence followed by rage at “my behavior.” I think by now I was crying, confused by the state of the goings on, while he had nothing to offer but misdirected anger. I was sitting next to complete emptiness, caught in a spinning vortex of rage.
Although younger in the dream than in reality, my soul felt experienced. I felt abused and beaten from years of things starting out normal and morphing into disasters. I was exhausted from replaying seemingly benign occurrences repeatedly in my mind, trying to figure out where I went wrong.
We rounded the corner from the library. As we crossed the train tracks and headed for the village’s downtown, he exploded. “You are such a…(insert mean, vulgar, and insulting expletive.”) He raised his hand to me, with his accusing index finger in my face, a breath shy of grazing my eyes.
Back to reality
With that I awoke. At first, I was shocked and a little upset. How had I allowed this person to enter my dreams? Then, I settled in, once again, content. I NEVER have to live through scenarios such as these again. Not with him or anyone else. The understanding set me free, regardless of any residual nonsense that may continue.
Words and blame must come to mean nothing. We must accept that their belief systems and the “codes” that they live by are not only flawed, but perverse. We must no longer seek explanations for things we did not do – from anyone – including those they have lied to us about. Time will tell those tales.
Although, I don’t really need to re-live a snap shots of the craziness, I ultimately saw it as a positive reminder of the journey. Was the dream symbolic? Perhaps. Maybe there is reason behind my presence on the upper level, while he headed to the basement. Maybe it’s nothing more than my preference for books over magazines. I’m going to try not to read more into this than necessary. The simple truth is that this experience, good or bad, is part of me. To expect that this would never surface would be unhealthy. Dreams help us do the work our conscious minds sometimes cannot and can help us bring us order and peace. When an occasional dream, replaces the living nightmare, we can’t go wrong!
Linda, thank you SO much for this article – I needed to read this at this point.
As I’m typing, I literally have tears starting in my eyes – I want desperately to begin having those types of dreams that “mean something” by way of my personal recovery. I’ve had a series of nightmares, disturbing content, and discomfort, and I can’t really say that any of them left me with any “understanding” of my recovery.
Sharing your recovery gives me hope and a true belief that a day will come when I actually “feel” as if I’m finally recovering. Thank you, thank you.
Brightest blessings
Oh…Truth, you are welcome!
I think the scary stuff comes first. That’s normal because these are traumatic things we have experienced.
Blessings to you too!
Linda
Thanks for a good article, Linda…I agree that we dont’ always know why a particular dream happens on a particular day, and I’ve had my share of dreams about my situation…some that were like yours, and others that were more “symbolic” and had a repetitious “theme” about them until I finally got what the “theme” meant.
In those dreams I always had a cart or a wagon hooked to my oxen or my horse and I would come upon something stranded or helpless and I would leave the wagon or cart to go and rescue the poor helpless thing (puppies, old ladies, baby chicks, baby pigs) and while I was rescuing the helpless things, the horse or oxen pulling my cart would wander off and the cart would wreck and over turn.
Boy! Talk about symbols that were clear and easy to read. I discussed these dreams and the “theme” that seemed to recur about my own enabling others, taking care of others while my own “wagon” (READ: Life) WRECKED! From that day forward I started changing myself and my responses to “rescuing.”
If your dream did nothing but again reassure you that YOU NO LONGER HAVE TO TOLERATE THAT KIND OF BEHAVIOR, THAT YOU **WILL NOT** TOLERATE THAT KIND OF BEHAVIOR! Then it was worth it!
Once I “got it” –the message from my subconscious–the dreams stopped.
Hi Linda,
Thank you for the article. I am in recovery from my spath. I still wavier from time to time about is he truly a spath. All I can say is thank you Donna for this website. I have found so many answers about spaths and about why I feel the way I do. So I just wanted to thank everyone for sharing their story.
Linda, may I comment on your dream? Or would you prefer to leave it in the realm of “let it go, it’s not important anyway”?
Linda, thanks so much for sharing your dream. Like you I try not to read to much into them, but believe they serve a purpose, it is the inner self trying to communicate, and they sometimes cut through resistance in our “awake” state, and inform us of deeper realities.
It so happens that I awoke this morning from a dream in full panic mode. My heart was palpitating wildly and I had serious chest pain, tightness in my throat and a full on sense of doom. So much so that I thought about going to emerge because at my age, with high BP it could be a heart attack coming on and that is what it felt like. I called work at great peril to take a few hours to recover.
The dream was random, but illuminating. He was in it. He was handsome and gorgeous like in the beginning. Without going into all the bizarre details, it centered around a young blind child, with the body of a newborn, but walking and talking coming to me for help. I took him with me and set out to find the place that would shelter him. I got instructions on where to take him.
Then I am very high up on a sailing craft, at the bow, lying motionless, with nothing to prevent me from slipping over the bow. The boat is rocking gently.( I am afraid of heights and not a swimmer) He is standing in front of me, with his back to me, between me and the safety of the cabin.
The water below me is crystal clear and turquoise, I know it is really deep, and would protect my fall, but it looks only 2 feet deep because I can see the bottom. I am looking for the place to take the child, but see only a spit of land with a big grey institution on it. Not a safe haven. To my left I see an island city. I know where I need to go.
Finally I tell him to go away and he complies.He goes away.
I awake in full blown doom and panic. But grateful that it was just a dream, grateful that my children are grown and standing tall, grateful that he is long gone. (4 years) Grateful that I am alone in my own bed, under my own roof, as tenuous at it may sometimes feel.
Truth be told, as much as he has fought to destroy me, during and after, he has done it remotely, with cunning and lawyers and malice and not a shred of caring for our shared life or children or history. Like with a remote control.
Maybe the dream was telling me that slipping off the bow into the waters would not be my worst fate, or that finding the place to shelter the child was really the most important mission.
I don’t know who the child represented. But the child was young and innocent and blind, but knew enough to find me, knew I would help.
Peace and love, A
Fire away, Kim. My rough draft included a dream analyzer’s perspective. I deleted it because it was weird. But I feel like I know what you might say. Go for it!!
Linda
Total symbolism, Oxy! Yes. Mine are few and far between. But I don’t mind them. I almost feel like they remind me of where I have come with this.
Zachman, Donna’s AMAZING! She tapped into the truly uncharted territory with this site.
Anita, our dreams sure are wild sometimes and I do believe there is some meaning in all of it. Dreaming does serve a purpose. Maybe the water symbolizes your ability to recover from the things you didn’t think you could. As bad as things in the situation were, you recovered. So interesting! And thanks for sharing.
Thank you all for the thank you’s!
Zachman, welcome to LF and never waiver….it really doesn’t matter if he fits 9 of 10 criteria for psychopath or only 3 of 10, or only 1 of ten if he is TOXIC, mean, nasty, dishonest…what difference does it make if he is “diagnosable” or not?
If a person is harmful to you emotionally, financially or physically, you do not need them in your life.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER and will give you strengt to stop your waivering. Keep on reading and learning! It will get better and easier, I promise! again, welcome. God bless.
Okay, Linda.
You and your x visit a library together. A library is a place where you go to do research, or learn something, or maybe just to entertain yourself, but, either way, you go there together, but then, split up, and go your seperate ways, with an agreement to meet up, at an agreed upon time, later.
You went upstairs, and gathered books. This “upstairs” signifies an intellectual approach…you are in the rational world…the world of logic, and order. You are probably doing research, or garnering information.
He, on the other hand, goes under-ground. He goes to, da-base-ment…..get it? Does it resonate with you?
You were waiting for him at the agreed upon time, at the stained glass windows, ( a symbol for the spiritual, but, also, a symbol of seeing the world through rose colored glasses) He makes you wait. You finally go to da-basement to find him, and are met with the question, “why didn’t you come sooner?”
Am I making myself clear?
You were on entirely different levels in your relationship, and having any kind of a relationship with him was always a lowering of your standards, and a debasement.
De-basing yourself to be with him was a good thing, wasn’t it? What did you do wrong…wasn’t that what you were supposed to do? Get my point? I think your dream is bringing to light the very nature of our dillemna….just how much of ourselves are we willing to sacrifice?