By Ox Drover
Yet Being Someone Other is the title of one of my favorite books and sometimes I think that title applies to me as well, at least since I recognized the post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that has become such a part of my life these last six years. Now I’m “someone other” than who I used to be. I’m not the same person at all. I no longer think like that other person did, that FIRST ME as it were. The NOW ME is different.
This was a very disturbing thing for quite some time as I had to get used to things being gone that I had depended on previously. I had to make adjustments to the changes in myself, sort of like a teenager has to make adjustments to larger feet and longer legs, and for a while becomes quite clumsy as they learn to use these appendages which have suddenly changed in dimensions. I felt very clumsy for a while, and still do to some extent. In other ways, I feel like an amputee that is having to relearn to walk with only one leg, or to use a prosthetic leg. To me, this is quite unsatisfactory. I want the old me back, the familiar me.
Worst of all I think, is that my mind doesn’t work the way it did, and it keeps on changing. At first I couldn’t read at all, not even one sentence, as I was in shock and couldn’t retain the words from the first of the sentence long enough to add them to the last words of the sentence in order to make sense of it all. That was frustrating and scary. I’d watch a movie and enjoy it, and then put the same DVD in the next night and not realize I had seen it the night before until maybe near the end when some specific line would make me realize I had seen it. Then I would feel so stupid that I had watched it again, not remembering.
I talked to my psychiatrist about this and she reassured me, “It will get better, it will come back,” but I didn’t believe her, and even after six years, she is only partly right. It has gotten better, but I realize and finally accept that it will never be the same. I am Someone Other than who I was before. I still have word finding problems like a stroke patient, seeing the image of a tree in my mind, yet not being able to find the word “tree.” It is as if my brain is now made of Swiss cheese, with large empty holes at random within it. I stutter when I talk, trying to find the words I want to express myself, and sound to others as if I have the early onset of dementia. I apologize to them for not being able to find the word I am seeking, and explain why, or try to, but not really knowing if they believe me or not, or if they are simply humoring me to be polite. I don’t talk as much to strangers now, the New Me doesn’t want to have to explain. The Old Me never met a stranger, or was reluctant to exchange conversation with someone they just met.
I have found that for some strange reason the muscle memory of typing which the Old Me always did well, though not quite intact, is actually better for producing words and thoughts than verbally doing so. Though I now have problems spelling, and will use the word “here” instead of “hear” and not realize it until I read back through the typescript. Sometimes my spelling is so bad on more complex words that even spell check doesn’t know what I am trying to say to fix it, so I have to go back and find a simpler word that I can still spell, so my vocabulary has decreased by a large percentage.
Reading, which has always been one of my passions, is still a passion for me, but now instead of reading at breakneck speed, reading by phrases at twice or three times the rate most people read, I am again reading word by word at about 200-250 words per minute which is about average speed. I also know that my memory of a series of numbers, which was once quite extraordinary, can’t even extend to the seven digits of a phone number long enough to dial it.
Through the last six years the Now Me has gone through many changes, some quite painful, and has had to navigate through the rapids of multiple episodes of grief, make decisions while not fully functional as far as logic is concerned, and reinvestigate what my core beliefs are, and which direction my moral compass should point.
The feelings have been sometimes like that feeling of unreality you have inside a house of mirrors at the county fair! You end up holding out your hands in front of you to touch the things you think you see in order to navigate because you learn you cannot trust your eyes to navigate your way out. The Now Me must learn to use other senses besides sight to move by. Sometimes I’ve had to close my eyes and grope in the dark to find the path out of the maze because if the Old Me tried to find her way out by sight, she would confuse the Now Me.
Time has helped to calm the fears of things being different, of be being Someone Other than the Old Me. I’m learning to adjust, and to accept the Now Me and not grieve the way the Old Me was. There is really nothing in this life that is constant except change, and though the PTSD does seem to cause this change to accelerate at what seems like a breakneck speed, in many ways the Now Me has adapted well to these changes and is learning to care for herself in ways that the Old Me never was able to.
I saw a video a while back of a two-legged Border Collie working sheep at a dead run. One of the things I’ve learned in my years of having and raising collies is that they are a “can do” breed and ”working,” which to them is play, is very important to them, and if there is any way they can succeed in doing that, they will find it. I didn’t see that two legged dog sitting down whining on the side lines, but running as hard as she could go, doing what she loved. It was only when she sat down that she fell over, so I intend to keep on running and being and appreciating that the Now Me, while not identical to the Old Me, is still able to do what I really want to do.
“Now all the pain and anger is back.”
E72…..quite contrare……it has never left.
It’s only part of the rollercoaster.
You see….this is the point.
Others don’t ‘do’ things to us of which we don’t allow.
We may have ‘seen’ things…..but ignored, or not even realized what we were involved with.
BUT….in every toxic relationship…….there ARE red flags.
The outcome depends on what we CHOOSE to do with them.
If we are totaly honest with ourselves…….we will see them.
Today…..AND yesterday……
It’s about being raw and honest with ourselves……
Yes…..we were ‘victimized’…….BUT…..it is our choice to keep blaming the spaths or whomever in our lives for the continual outcome.
Once we open our eyes and remove the rose colored glasses….we no longer need to remain the victim……
Over time, some become comfortable with victim status. It becomes their identity……and safe zone…..allowing them to blame others for ‘where’ they are/are not in life.
Only when we CHOOSE to take control, and see the forest for the trees……..is when we allow things to be good in our lives consistently.
It’s easy to blame things in our lives.
After the Cancer diagnosis, I was angry…….then I became ‘used’ to being a cancer victim…..and the attention it ‘got’ me. Then as I began to heal…..I was scared of losing that attention and the lifestyle of dr’s and the routine I was in…..dr this, dr that, research this, treatment that…….calls coming in ONLY directing attention at ME.
I had never been the focus of all conversations before……I liked it…..even though it was all negative…..not lunch planning conversations, or kids, or travel plans etc……
THEN…..I ‘milked’ it longer…….THEN…..I got tired of being the topic of my conversations ( I had lost touch with others lives)……and THEN….I stopped talking about myself being the C victim.
THEN……I was tired of the whole medical crap totally!!!!
THEN……..I wanted to be over this cancer crap totally…….
THEN…..I started asking my friends about THEIR lives….steering the conversation away from me……
I started telling peeps when asked…..I was fine. They wanted more….I thanked them…..I said….all’s good with EB now. (Even though I was still not in remission)………
I just got tired of being a victim…..I got tired of cancer being who I was.
I wasn’t the focus……being a victim of cancer was. For me AND others.
To be honest…..Cancer saved my life!
I allowed myself to be the victim to my parents, a victim to my husband and a victim to my health. a victim to whatever I layed victim for….
I will NEVER refer to myself today as a victim…….I AM a survivor……
A survivor of Domestic Violence.
A survivor of a spathstic relationship.
A survivor of Cancer, strokes and disected internal carotid artery.
A survivor of incest.
A survivor of Rape.
I SURVIVED!
I have/had a choice to survive……
I followed the plan……
I had options……..remain a victim…..or suck it up…..and do something to move in that direction I desired.
Being a victim is tiresome and lonely……repetative and boring.
Really, like I tell my kids…..no one cares about where you’ve been, it’s just an unfortunate gossip blip for them…….it’s what you do with it to take ‘it’ somewhere that peeps take notice of.
Everyone has a story……EVERYONE……..we will only be heard, when we are back on the tracks of survival again!
We all have dreams….hopes and plans……
BUT……honesty with ourselves, removing the victim tattoo and taking the hits along the way……and expecting them……will get us to where we eventually wish to be.
Heavens E72
I feel close to people on LF as to my ‘real time’ friends in many ways. LF peeps have more intimate details of my life that anyone else. When you do the RANT IN CAPITALS thing – tell me to ”GET OVER IT, and that I HAVE A PROBLEM’ it genuinely hurts. Also the implications that I’m not a ‘real’ friend etc etc cos I’m on the internet, when I’ve really put time, thought and efforts into my posts to you.
I’m too funky to get mad for long tho; – so if you wanna be mates again just send me a ‘nudge’. My view is that the Spaths are to blame and we targets need to stick together.
Shana 31 – thank you for sharing your story with me. I’m healing lots from hearing about this and learning to move from being ‘self righteous’ towards the other woman and have the whole ‘there but for the grace of god thang.’
We have all been hurt and we all deserve to heal and feel happiness.
Blessings
Delta 1
Dear EB,
You rock baby! You are so right! We have to choose what we “are” and who we identify with—the victim, or the survivor.
We make our choices, and sometimes those choices bite us in the azz. Things happen to us (like the cancer) that we don’t have a choice about, but we have a choice about how we REACT or RESPOND to the thing that happens.
I know I have IGNORED red flags MANY times, and that was my choice. Now, I am trying to make better choices for the future.
Choosing to depend on myself to supply my needs…and not looking to others to supply my happiness.
EB-
Ditto OX!
E72,
Hang in there, this too shall pass.
Dear Delta1,
I think we posted over each other—-I’m glad that you feel that LF peeps are worthy of hearing your story, because sharing our burdens makes them easier to bear.
Sometimes people are triggered by other people’s questions or comments…it happens, but because we are communicating in text instead of “in person” many things we say can be taken out of context. When I first came to LF a regular poster who only comes here from time to time now, Aloha, and I were pounced on by another poster here for the fact that we mentioned that each of us is responsible for our own choices….and she did not believe that she had any choices. Because we accept responsibility for our own poor choices, does not mean we are blaming the victim for the abuser’s behavior. But, that was the way she took it, that we were “blaming her” for the abuser’s behavior.
No matter how poor our own choices are, that does NOT excuse the abuser’s behavior. i.e. the old “if she didn’t want to be raped she shouldn’t have worn a skirt above her knees” excuse. Even if a woman walked down a street naked, it does not excuse someone raping them. Doesn’t mean her choice was “wise,” but still doesn’t excuse the rape by the other person.
Each of us played some part in our own abuse—ignoring a red flag or two, making other poor choices—but we must accept that part of the entire story. Accepting that part of it, our own responsibility for our own choices, helps us to prevent that happening again in the future. We have to acknowledge our own mistakes and poor choices before we can correct them. That is a painful process. We have to acknowledge them, and then decide how we can make better choices in the future. If we don’t acknowledge them, we are doomed to repeat them.
Acknowledgment of our poor choices may be very painful, I know my own acknowledgments were painful, and made me feel pretty ashamed of myself. It is the thing that AA does, have the person stand up in the room and say “I’m Suzie, I’m an alcoholic”—that acknowledgment of what the problem is. Accepting that we are NOT perfect. Accepting that we do make mistakes, and that we do make some BAD choices even though we knew they were bad at the time we did them.
I hear people say about someone, “Oh, he made a mistake and robbed a liquor store”–NO!!!!! He did not make a “mistake” in robbing the liquor store, he DELIBERATELY CHOSE to rob the store. A MISTAKE is adding 2+2=5 and not realizing it. A DELIBERATE is choosing to do something you know is wrong. BUT acknowledging you made a BAD CHOICE and that we do not intend to make that one again is progress.
I have a long list of poor or bad choices I have made, fully knowing they were not good choices at the time I made them. I have forgiven myself for making those choices, and will do my best not to repeat them again. I accept that I am not perfect, and that I have given in to temptation—but that just means I am HUMAN. Being human is okay.
Hey Silvermoon,
Where ya been baby?! Missed you, how in the world are you!
Hey ErinBrock
Your posts are so brave and honest like your namesake. Gosh your strength is like a nuclear ray that I can feel from accross the sea. You’re like a big old bolt of electricity up the jacksie (a** in cockney rhyming slang!) and god luv ya fer that.
Oxy -Fanx 2.
Delta 1
Silver:
Miss ya darlen…….
🙂
Hope your doing well!!!
I get the impression, you too are on the off ramp from spathsville hwy.
Delta:
Thanks for that!
This nuclear ray sometimes explodes too close to home…..and the fallout is NOT pretty!
🙂
Erin Brockovich was/is a HUGE inspriation to me…….she is one kick ass woman (thats an american term) 🙂 Heehee!
I wanna be just like her when I grow up.
Oh you wonderful posters. I so appreciate your words esp when fully honest.
While I am not of the level of bible quoting, I have a solid relationship with God. So my life attitude flows from that.
I believe that sometimes God thumps us on the head. BUT if we ignore him, he gets out the 2×4.
God also gives us boundries. These PROTECT us from those who would do us harm. Yes there are s-paths. But this is the one instance where their evil tenticles can’t reach us if we are honorable.
Marriage is a boundry (what God has joined together, let no one put asunder). No matter what a honey says, Married means MARRIED! When you go with a married person, you removed God’s protection for you and evil was done by you and to you. In this way you participated in your own abuse. If you ignored the boundry of marriage, YOU transgressed and YOU paid a terrible price (God hitting you with a 2×4? telling you to cease your selfishness?). B/c you had no business inserting yourself into the marriage, NOTHING was the spouse’s fault. ALL was the consequence of you removing God’s protection.
BUT! God also provides for redemption. A wonderful gift. That I can accept what I did was wrong, nothing made it right, and no matter the honey’s manipulations, God’s ordained boundry was for ALL of us. BUT, I can learn and by FEELING the harm I did towards others, I connect to my humanity by finding compassion towards the wronged spouse, AND ALSO – no less important!- compassion towards myself. Lastly I can make amends, the least of which is KNOWING I will NEVER transgress a marriage ever again.
In this way, we beome more human. We grow into “being someone other”. Simply more beautiful.
That’s my view. imho!
Another of KatyDid’s rules for a good life:
NEVER seek your joy from someone else’s heartache.