Editor’s note: The following letter was written by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “Panther.”
This little bundle of words comes from a new survivor. I write this hoping that I can find these thoughts to be consolation for myself, as well as to share them with others for the same reason. Through reading various Lovefraud articles, I’ve realized that the veterans have so much invaluable advice to offer. However, at times I wonder how the voice of a survivor sounded right after the break. The reason this matters to me is because the veterans seem so much stronger than I feel right now. I cannot help but wonder, as I read through their wise words, if they have something I don’t have, which enabled them to get over this. Then I doubt myself, as the sound of my own trembling voice seems meek in comparison. I reason that I don’t have what it takes, like they do.
But this isn’t true, and I want to be a little voice here on Lovefraud that says:
“I’m still shaking in the aftermath. The voice of my oppressor is still ringing in my ears. My legs feel too weak to stand, and I don’t feel strong enough to overcome this ”¦ you’re not the only one.”
It’s been less than one month since I went No Contact. That isn’t to say that I haven’t felt an icy presence reaching for me across this void I’ve put between myself and that monster. Emotionally, I’m always slapping away an invisible hand that seems to be grasping for my heart—and sanity. I don’t know whom to trust, and I cannot see clearly. The whole world looks a bit like it’s covered in a giant rain cloud, and I feel as though I’m trying to navigate my way down a crowded highway as this huge cloud hangs so low in the sky that I cannot see even a few inches in front of my car.
Looking Back at the Disaster
The last thing I’d ever want to do is look back.
Yet, today, I actually did just that, and I was surprised at what I found. It was hard at first to peer far enough into this disaster to see more than a house torn to bits by a hurricane. At first, that’s all I saw. I saw my dreams shattered and thrown all over the ground like the china cabinet he punched one night. I saw my keepsakes covered in dirt and strewn around, like my body was every time he put his violent hands on me. All my savings were blown away with the strong winds, and they weren’t even in this mess for me to go collect with time. My cat, who had been a best friend throughout the torture, lay dead under the rumble now. There was nothing that this hurricane hadn’t destroyed of what I once called my life.
This is what I saw at first, which made me want to look ahead, never back. Also, everywhere I read, survivors are told to focus on the future, keep their eyes on new horizons. How was I to grapple with pummeling down this road in a beat up old car, directly into a dark and blinding cloud, while feeling like a bombed out, empty shell where once a human used to be?
Aha. Where once a human used to be. And who was she?
Again, I looked back. This time, past the rubble. Past the destruction. Surely, if there was a pile of destruction, then there must have been something to begin with. Right? You don’t end up with a toppled over house unless you have a house in the first place!
So then I saw beyond the broken pieces. I saw the whole house. I saw what I had built. Yes, me, just little ole me who is sitting here feeling so weak and unable to accomplish great things. I had accomplished many things, and this mess scattered behind me was a testament to what I had done with my life and who I had been before the hurricane. Yes, I had dreams. I pursued those dreams, and many of them, I accomplished. This means that I must have been an ambitious person, with healthy goals. I was someone who spent her time here on Earth trying to live a positive, productive life. Also, yes, I had savings. I had taken care of myself, stood on my own two feet, well enough to think of a rainy day. This means I was a responsible woman, someone I could count on. Yes, I had keepsakes. I didn’t accumulate random clutter. What I bothered to hold onto in life had meaning, which means that I was perhaps a sentimental woman, someone who placed more value in love and friendship than in material possessions. And, yes, I had a cat. I had made a commitment to care for another living creature, and I had followed through with that commitment every day. He was a happy cat that trusted people. That means he grew up with someone who taught him that he could trust, which means I was a trustworthy, dependable person at some point
For the first time, looking back was actually useful. There I saw a woman who was ambitious, productive, and positive. She was someone she could count on. She was trustworthy and dependable. She was capable of making commitments and keeping them. I also remember how much she trusted other people and in the good of humanity. It was only a matter of time, I suppose, until someone who didn’t deserve the benefit of the doubt came along and exploited a character trait that I should not be ashamed of. Yes, I’m wiser now, but having a generous, loving, trusting, and forgiving heart is nothing to feel stupid about.
Seeing Past the Mess
I’d like to ask new survivors to try this themselves. Try looking past the absolute destruction in your history. Try to see the destruction as an actual testament to what you were, because if there hadn’t been something to destroy, this wouldn’t have happened in the first place. Sociopaths look for someone who has something they can take away or ruin, whether it be money, love, intimacy/sex, trust, or emotional support. By the very fact that we were targeted means that we were carrying something of value to begin with, and I’m guessing that most of us, if not all of us, can take credit for the great people we were before we were targeted.
Look to your past to remember what an amazing person you were, even though it might hurt to know that this person was destroyed. But look anyways to remind yourself that you are strong, even in these moments when every step feels like a monumental achievement. We will never get back whom we used to be, not 100%. However, it might be a mistake to assume that we are not still fantastic, even if we don’t feel it right now. And, with the added wisdom of our experience, I bet we’ll build an even better house now, one that a hurricane cannot knock over.
Panther, I have just read your article. Very nice indeed!
I love it! Bankers are now in the same league as lawyers…As they should be.
Ana,
hmm…?
Skylar;
I worked in the financial services industry. It was at the end of my tenure there that I met my x-spath. I have not talked about the other spath in my life, my employer.
I was an honest front-line manager in a place filled with spaths, narcissists and other toxic personalities. My career was ruined by them when I was illegally terminated.
While I did take legal action and was somewhat vindicated by the award, while significant to many, it was not enough to compensate for my physical and emotional damage. The system works in their favor and even when we were in good-faith negotiations as requested by them, they pulled legal games.
You can imagine the toll having both a romantic spath and an employer spath can have. The combination did not do my physical health any good. No wonder I needed open heart surgery, lol!
PTSD is often discussed here and I really believe I might suffering from it to some degree. Friday, I am discussing it with my psychologist.
My symptoms including lingering depression, loss of interest in most things, social isolation, flash panic attacks and insomnia. Right now, the insomnia is my biggest issue as I never, ever feel rested.
I have always been a bit introverted but I need to find work and I am having great difficulty in my job search, but it has occurred to me that PTSD may by exacerbating this.
One can imagine the difficulty having to look for employment in a field full of sociopaths. I feel like a soldier being forced back to the front line. 10 years ago, I saw the financial service industry as the key to my dreams. It was exciting, high-paying and I was optimistic. Today, I am a shell of what I once was…
BBE,
I completely understand what you are saying. I feel like a shell too. That was the intent of the spaths, to leave us feeling like a shell because that is what they are. They are nothing but a facade. It’s not even skin deep. Inside, where we have a core of values and identity, they have a black hole of need.
So they try to take our values and our identity. BBE, wallstreet is probably not for you because you are someone who cares. Maybe you can find some way to apply your financial knowledge to a worthier cause. The non-profit sector? Maybe start your own non-profit toward a cause you believe in. Try to find something. I know it’s hard because the spaths shatter our beliefs.
Some lyrics from the Counting Crows’ “For an eggman”
Einstein’s down on the beach staring into the sand
Cause everything he believes in is shattered
What you fear in the night in the day comes to call anyway-ay
We all get burned as:
One more sun comes sliding down the sky
One more shadow leans against the wall
The world begins to disappear
The worst things come from inside here
And all the king’s men reappear
For an eggman, on and off the wall
Who’ll never be together again
Albert’s waiting in the sun
On a field American
For the cause of some inflated form of hit and run
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2hv2-1vquI
I posted something as well. It was there and now it is gone.
Now it is back!
BBE yea, my posts are acting screwy too…not there, then there, then gone.
Its here now…
I find this post inspirational and just what I needed right now. I am also currently 1 month NC and still in the turmoil stage of this, reading everything I can about sociopaths. I’m trying to understand the abuse I endured, when it happened, how I felt when it happened, how he turned it on me, and trying to forgive myself. My therapist is out of town for the next 3 weeks so I am literally surviving through reading this site daily and it has brought me much comfort, understanding, and love for myself. At times, I feel lucky because he never lived with me, rarely interacted with my children, and did not empty my savings. There are many things I wasn’t willing to compromise on…because of my children. I recognize that they saved my life, literally. But that doesn’t make the abuse I did endure any easier to live with.