(This article is copyrighted © 2012 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
It can be hard to hate or despise even the most terrible human being so long as he’s inflicted his cruelty on others, but spared you. Take a sociopathic relative, even a close one.
If somehow he compartmentalized his life, lived a “double life—”in any case, if you learned that he treated you (retrospectively even) with an exceptional, aberrant mercy that he denied his victims, you might very possibly remain “loyal” to him. You might still even “love” him.
Various defenses are pertinent—such as denial, dissociative and other self-deluding mechanisms. Gratitude may also be present, expressive of a different defense mechanism: the “monster,” after all, spared you, but not others. He exempted you from the cruel fate he inficted on them, who were helpless to protect themselves, as you were too, only he spared you. So it may seem as if he were somehow “protecting” you from the “demons” he unleashed on others.
This kind of analysis can engender, as I say, a form of “gratitude” and “loyalty” towards the victimizing individual; it is a variant of “identifying with the aggressor.”
Now it’s true that many, discovering the unseemly truth about someone close to them, even if they were spared the individual’s predations, will modify their view of the individual, bringing it into conformity with reality.
But not always.
I stress: sometimes the monster will retain his “backer.” And the chief point I stress is that his “backer” will probably be under the sway of twin, interrelated and twisted forces of logic—if he didn’t do this to me, then how could he have done this to them? And if he did it to them and not me, then he must have somehow “loved” me?
In either case, “I exculpate him.” In this way, I can remain “loyal” to him,without feeling I’ve transgressed my value system.
Thus disbelief (enabled by denial), mixed and confused with the fantasy of having been a special, exceptional object of his “love” (thanks to which he “amnestied” you from the cruel fate to which he subjected others) supports the rationalization to “stand by” him.
We are strange in the sense of this contradiction: on one hand, we are highly prone to judging others; on the other, we have the capacity to utilize defense mechanisms in the service of “withholding judgment” whenever the need arises.
We do both regularly—that is, regularly we relent to the tendency to judge, while often simultaneously exercising the detachment necessary to “not judge” sometimes disturbing individuals and their alarming stories of transgression.
Many professions, like that of psychotherapy, require the capacity to “suspend personal judgment” just so its practioners can work effectively with a wide range of stimulating, and sometimes disturbing, information.
Families have been torn apart by this psychological dynamic in a sometimes brutal clash of dichotomous positions. I’ve seen this more than a few times. A violator in the family has wrought it shame, perhaps public shame. The violator has perpetrated terrible things now known to the family.
Some family members revise their view of the individual and come to despise him, want nothing more to do with him, have sworn the individual out of their lives.
Other family (especially those who weren’t personally victimized by the individual) may “stand by” the individual, “retain” their faith and belief in him; and thus a rift between the “factions” occurs, adding another layer of nightmare to the trauma precipitated by the violating relative.
This is a preliminary examination of this very complicated subject, to be explored in further depth ahead.
Louise,
NEWS FLASH: NO one can “make” you feel guilty if you do not allow it.
They may say things to TRY to make you feel guilty, but YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BELIEVE THEM…you are arguing with your LOGICAL SELF. Which says “I can not take my mom into my home and care for her properly.” But then your inner child that is listening to those others who want YOU to care for her so they don’t have to step up to the plate tell you “well, you should feel guilty for x, y or Z”
DUHHH???? Well, noooooo! Listen to LOGICAL SELF not to those people who are trying to lay a “guilt trip” on you. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO ALLOW IT.
So, when you start to feel “guiltY” say to yourself OXY SAYS THEY ARE TRYING TO LAY A GUILT TRIP ON ME, AND I DON’T HAVE TO TAKE IT. And that is true. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO TAKE IT.
Being the “”guilt trip queen” myself I can definitely relate to other people saying I SHOULD FEEL X, Y OR Z….well what i feel is MY BUSINESS not theirs. People told me that I “can not give up on Patrick, he’s your sssssonnnn” WEll, duh? He already killed one person and has tried to have me killed by one of his ex convict buddies and I SHOULD not give up on him?
NO ONE is allowed to tell you HOW YOU SHOULD FEEL. Your feelings are your own. There is no one in the entire world who can dictate what you should feel.
Your mother may WANT ( or think she wants) to move in with you and all her troubles will be over, but your LOGICAL MIND knows that is not true. Listen to your logical mind.
My egg donor thinks that when Patrick gets out of prison and comes to live with her that he and she are going to be eternally happy…well that isn’t gonna happen, and I’ll do my best to prevent it from happening (him getting out) but you can’t convince her of that so she thinks I am her enemy. His enemy, yes, hers, no…just not her puppet any more.
Don’t let them guilt you into doing something that you know will end in disaster, Louise. You don’t have to allow it or play the role they have assigned you in the family drama-rama. (((hhugs))) and God bless.
Louise, The last time I tried to walk on water I got wet ~! You can only do so much and it’s good that you understand your limitations…
Hens,
I am waiting for you to turn water into wine. Then I’ll bring the cheese. 🙂
Oxy’s Eggdoner will be blessed if her grandson remains in prison b/c I’d predict that if he lives with her, she will try to control him and if it pisses him off, he has no conscience about offing her.
Katydids….:)
I have NO doubt that if his friend had been successful in killing me and making it look like a suicide that “grandma” would have fallen down and hit her head some how and passed away. She did keep falling and hurting herself, broke her hip once, hit her head really hard once before….then Patrick’s brother would have had some kind of accident cleaning his gun or some such thing….maybe a hunting accident, and then it would have all been Patrick’s. If his minions thought he would share with them…well, they would have been soooo wrong.
hens:
I know. I am trying. I do understand my limitations, but no one else seems to. It’s easier said than done when everyone is telling you what to do when you know in your own head what you need to do. Good to see you tonight.
Oxy:
I know and I agree with you 100% about the feeling guilty bit. Believe it or not, I do tell myself that all the time when I am on the phone with my mom when she is once again begging me to come live here. I feel so bad, but under my breath I am telling myself to NOT feel guilty because I KNOW it wouldn’t be the best decision. I tell her that, but she starts saying, but why??…it would be nice for us to live together…I wouldn’t bother you and we could do things together, blah, blah, blah. This is when she is being lucid and not forgetting everything every two minutes. I am just going to have to NOT feel guilty about this and do what I have to do. It’s not a good situation at all to be in, but somehow I will get through it just like I have everything else. Thank you for your support.
hens:
Thanks for the Tippi info!
Louise, one of my former massage clients was in the same position with her mother. Her mother had Alzheimers and my client was elected to take care of her (by the other siblings) because my client’s husband was recently deceased and she didn’t have any kids. She let herself be guilted into it and she was miserable. Every week, she’d come in telling me stories of her mother’s abuse and how she was trying to tolerate it. Eventually, her health (my client’s) got affected. She had a burst retina in her eye or something like that, and almost went blind. She had to have surgery and needed constant care. That is what it took for her to say no to her mother. After that, she finally stood up for herself. Her mother ended up moving out of state to stay with several other siblings. And my client recovered from her eye surgery. The moral of this story is……just say no.
I know I would never be in the position to take care of my mother. Of course, my mother never really took care of me so I don’t feel too guilty about it.