I don’t remember the number of times that my friends warned me not to shut down after it all happened. How many times they’d ask me not to lose myself. To avoid becoming bitter and lonely. To stay open, despite my pain.
“With what you’ve been through you have every right to never trust anyone again” they’d say “but please don’t let this experience change you from being the loving bubbly person that you are — time will heal. Stay open”
Yes, I am very lucky indeed to have such wise and loving friends. I count my blessings and am grateful for such levels of support — particularly during the early days after discovering the truth. At the time I thought they were referring to my ability to trust another romantic relationship. That was ok, because I was always ready with an answer. My well-rehearsed response would be along the lines of “It’s ok, because I know that my feelings were real, even if his were not — and I know for a fact that I experienced true love. So if I felt that with an empty soul, then when one day I find a real person, surely the experience will be ten times better?”
The thing is, though, I have discovered that real love has very little to do with me finding another person. That ”˜closing off’ does not just mean closing to the world and people that surround me. That yes, staying open is entirely to do with trusting and loving”¦. But loving who, exactly? And how”¦?
Rock And A Hard Place
As for all of us here, I’ve survived some pretty grueling experiences. My personal healing journey after the sociopath involved re-examining some of the old traumas that I thought I’d already dealt with. Re-opening the sealed emotions that were still hidden away, despite my honest belief that there was nothing left to discover. But there was. And to this day, there continues to be more.
There was a time when, to be frank, I was way too scared of going to some of the darker places that lay within me. Because I knew that re-discovery meant opening old scars and digging around in the old hurts. It was going to be painful, and I didn’t know whether I had the courage to go there — to really go there and find out what was within. To deal with ”˜whatever it was’ once and for all, so that I could be free and done with it. It was an almighty ask of myself — and there were many times that I felt overwhelmed by the enormity of the task I knew lay ahead. I became frightened that if I went to the places that were beckoning me, I might never find my way back out. That I’d die from the pain, or perhaps be held prisoner for the rest of eternity.
On the other hand, I knew that if I didn’t go there, then I was doomed to stay stuck in the living nightmare that had become my life. And that, by comparison, was far too great a hurt to live with. So, caught between a rock and a hard place, I felt pushed to the limit. I had to make a choice. And I made the choice to dive right in, hoping and praying that by facing my fears I would come out the other end.
Having made the commitment I discovered that in actual fact the pain was never ”˜too much to bear’ and neither was I held prisoner. Quite the contrary. Looking back now, I imagine the journey as a daily trek in to a dark mine. Each day hollowing out more rock, my body and determination becoming stronger as I continued to work. The job, by default, therefore becoming easier as I continued scraping away, emerging at the end of each day with a filthy face and a dirty great smile.
Reflections And Sunshine
And you know what? I never did reach any impasse. I never did find any really ”˜bad’ thing hidden there. But I did find something. Something that I had never in a million years imagined would be hidden there! Because underneath all the dark rocks and dirt, I found a diamond. I found myself.
I said earlier, I had honestly believed that I’d already uncovered and dealt with the emotional damage of my past. Because of that I believed that there was nothing left to discover. On top of that, I now realize that I had believed for many years that even if there was any discovering left to be done, it could only possibly be more of the ”˜bad stuff’ that I’d hidden away so many years earlier. It didn’t even occur to me that there might be good stuff to discover – DOH! And now I am thoroughly reveling in finding new stuff within — because I’ve finally tapped in to the real love that lies within me. And ever since the first tentative connection was made, it has continued to build. On a daily basis I am finding more ways to love and appreciate myself for who I am — yep, I’ve lived with ”˜me’ for close to five decades, but it feels like I’ve only recently started to know myself.
I am constantly chuckling at the reflections of this process of unfolding that are now occurring on nearly a daily basis. Just at the weekend, for example, I noticed a stone building by the river on a route that I’ve taken countless times over the nine years I have lived in my village. But I had never before taken any notice of the building. On Sunday I not only saw it, I went to explore. There I discovered the most beautiful ”˜lavoir’ (a covered area where the locals used to do their washing in years gone by) that had clearly been standing there for many lifetimes. There it was, an exquisite example of beauty and history right on my doorstep. Yet for so long it had simply been invisible to me.
As for my fear of becoming captive to the strength of the pain within? I now realize that I have been living my life as a prisoner for longer than I care to remember. The journey to cleanse my memories, my emotions, and my soul has ultimately proven to be my salvation.
So, for the journey, and for the real love that I am now feeling, I am once again inclined to thank my ex-husband, and all those who have done me harm over the years. I can’t begin to understand their intentions when they were being so cruel, but it doesn’t matter any more. What they did doesn’t matter any more either. Because whether it was intended or not, and whether because or in spite of their actions towards me, I have managed to find myself and re-connect to real love. The real love that was and always has been deep within me.
It turns out that it was not the ”˜bad stuff’ I was afraid of — it was the love. Not the darkness, but the light. Through diving in and facing my deepest fears, I have discovered the truth that it was no-one and no-thing that had been holding the real love back from me. In actual fact I had become my own jail-keeper. I had been holding myself prisoner over so many years. Even through years of forgiveness and self-development work, I had still been hiding my light under a bushel. It was me who’d denied myself the love and the light. I was the one who had closed myself off.
So, since I was the one who had locked the door I was also the one who could open it and let in the sunshine. And as I continue to let the sunshine in, the sunshine continues to grow within me. And as the light grows within me, so my life fills with more and more love.
It was here all along. It always has been. I just didn’t know it. But now I do know it — and I also know that others share the same light. Like me, though, many are yet to discover their own brilliance. It’s there. And I’m here as living testimony that, no matter how impossible it may seem at times, there is indeed real love after the pain.
With deepest love to all. Thank you.
Well, I thought this would be a good thread – a thread about finding real love – to share some interesting experiences I’m having through the salsa circuit. I’ve been taking classes for a month and am now part of a little community of salsa dancers. We are all having a blast dancing at the clubs and getting to know one another. There are two classes going on in the same room – one is the beginner class, which I just completed. The other class is one step ahead. I’ve gotten to know people in both classes, and of course, I dance a lot with the guys from both classes. Though I like them all, there is one in particular who has really impressed me with his qualities. He’s probably older than me and is not this really hot looking guy like the type I usually go for. He has a very warm, safe, but exuberant presence. I always laugh and have a great time when I dance with him. I also feel really comfortable around him, and we will often have our arms around each other’s waist in a friendship kind of way. He has this way of making me feel safe. I was talking to him tonight outside of the club and getting to know him. Like me, he is a healer, and we seem to be on the same wavelength. He is a second level Reiki master (as I am) and he does tai chi along with salsa. He strikes me as a truly kind and good-hearted, warm person. I just really enjoy his company. Whenever I’m out at the clubs, I will always look for him to dance with him. He is easily one of my favorite dance partners, and even though he’s a little more advanced than me, he is very gracious with my mistakes. There are many other men I’m meeting through the salsa circuit – I already have a crush on my teacher. I have a feeling that I may end up meeting someone really special in this community. The people I’ve already met – men and women -are really wonderful, and they are starting to feel like friends to me. Salsa dancing is really about the polarity of male and female energy. It’s such a great way to have that male energy in my life without sex. Salsa dancing makes me feel like a woman. Tonight, several of the men told me I looked beautiful (a good male lead knows that this will make a woman smile. :)) and a few of them gave me some gentle dance instructions while we danced, so I could follow their lead better. It’s an incredible way to be around men – sensual but non-sexual and non-threatening. I drink only water there, high only from the dancing. I come home energized and excited about life. I really wish I’d discovered it sooner.
Stargazer,
I think you are right that couple dancing, like salsa, is a great way to interact with men without the sexual. I used to like it immensely that we have a culture where we are free to dance on our own, but it also lacks the opportunity to dance together, except these day in a very sexual way (reggeaton for example).
While during the romantic period for example just a touch of a hand was a heavily charged contact, at least those balls with paired dancing were an immensely smart way to make men and women interact. Better even, in one such dance though they were standing with one particular dancing partner, they still had to go through movements with other people as well. It basically meant that each person danced with four others of the opposite sex in one dance.
I also find that our language is lacking in phrases to explain healthy romantic connections. For example when you mention how he makes you feel safe, it comes across as if you don’t feel safe without him, while I know that’s not perhaps what you mean at all. Instead you might mean you feel as if he is safe, or ‘know’ he is safe, or that he doesn’t give you an icky feeling. But it would sound strange to word the interaction in that way. Intead we’re stuck with phrases that picture interactions as if it’s someone else’s responsibility how we feel. No wonder spaths go out of their way to ‘make us feel some way or another’ and that before the ‘awakening’ we even believe that’s how it should be.
The ex-spath actively made me feel safe. That was: I felt actually icky and unsafe around him in my gut, but he was able to reassure that gut feeling, in the way he touched me, put his arm around me, just like he would reassure me that everything would be ‘all right’ when nothing was just by the tone of his voice.
When I interact with the man I’m now in love with in that peaceful, none obsessive way, I try to phrase it in my mind how it is… I’ll think ‘I can see that he respects me,’ ‘I note that he is being supportive’, ‘I note he’s letting me know where he stands’. So, basically I make observations about his behaviour and actions without connotating emotions to it yet.
Then I ask myself several questions, “What do I think of this?”, “What do I feel?” And the answer to the second question often leads to a third question “Why do I feel like that?” And it sets me on a totally different path regarding my emotions than if I were to ask myself “How does it make me feel?”
Example, observation: “I note he’s letting me know where he stands.” Answer (1), “What do I think of this: there’s nothing wrong with that.” Answer (2), “How do I feel: I feel surprised.” Answer (3), “I guess I must give myself some time to get used to the idea and check later how I feel.” And I also start to wonder and do a self search why I feel surprised; what does it say about me. Meanwhile “How does it make me feel?” would have given me completely different answers such as “Flattered or grateful or special, etc…” But those answers are now beside the crucial point to me.
Example 2, for the observation, “I can see that he respect me,” answer to question (1) would be, “That’s very good.” The answer to question (2) is, “I feel safe”. The answer to question (3) is a new question “how come I feel safe?” “Because I have the space and time to make up my own mind, and I’m doing exactly that.” This gives me more self guidance and self-realization than “I feel respected” does.
Example 3, for the observation, “I note he’s being supportive.” Answer to question (1) would be, “That’s very caring.” The answer to question (2) is, “I feel more healed.” So the new question becomes “How come I am more healed?” And the answer to question (3) is, “Because I had the courage to reveal something of myself that I’m scared to reveal and so acknowledged something about myself out loud.” Again, I get a completely different answer than if I were to wonder “How does it make me feel,” because the answer to that obviously would be “I feel supported.”
It seems just semantics at the surface, but it actually leads me down a totally different path. With the spathic partner of my best friend I constantly thought “what he just did there was bad,” and the answer to how I felt was “disgusted” almost every time again, but also “shocked” or “surprised” and of course the “why is that?” made it undenyingably obvious that he was as rotten and a jerk as could be. Meanwhile the answers to “How does it make me feel?” would have had somewhat more positive answers because he did attempt to wrap it in flattery and getting personal in a buddy and confiding way.
Basically the answer to the question “how does it make me feel?” is often just a replicate of the actions… In other words the actions ‘make’ me feel how they are intended to make me feel. And if the person is not toxic that’s ok, but it’s not ok if it’s an action from a spath because then it would blindside me of their manipulation. Instead I just regard it as an action or behaviour I can judge to be a proper or a bad one, and separate the feeling altogether to find out the true basic feeling state I’m in and discover something entirely different than the action intended to have (both the good as well as the bad actions in all those examples). The last question is about self-empowerment or makes me see the action in a clearer light.
In any case, Stargazer, if you hadn’t been phrasing actions and feelings in such a way yet in your mind, I think it would be very helpful for yourself and your interactions. And if you already do, more power to you 🙂
Oh, I checked on the book again that I wanted to recommend… I had the title wrong, “Fearless Loving” by Rhonda Britten. Although some titles of chapters may rise eyebrows, such as “Everyone is innocent”. We know very well that not everyone is innocent. I think I have to reread that chapter to see whether it’s fully recommendable or not. But the book is mostly about loving yourself, exercises to learn to peel off your emotional responses like an onion, (re)discovering who in your past life and present life actually does give you love, regarding yourself as innocent, and learning to stand by your own feelings and empowering yourself to say ‘no’.
Ok, skip the innocent chapter… I just checked her blog and she believes ‘love’ will cure anything, that people do bad things because they are in such pain that if only someone would comfort them those things won’t happen anymore over time.
star, sound’s like you may have already met someone special at the dance class. dont dismiss mr. nice guy because he is not hot ~! those hot guy’s will break your heart every time..
my next BF will be older and uglier than me..just sayin.
mwah!!!!! hens xxoo
HOOPY MOONDAY!
Dopey Doopey
HENS!!!!!!!!!!! ROTFLMAO!!!!!
Hens, but what if the older and uglier man is thinking just like you and wants an even older and uglier man than himself? 😉
darwinsmom: sounds like it could become a vicious cycle.
😛
Dupey, I think things would become ‘ugly’ real fast 😀
darwins, well then we will both be shit out of luck…I am like Oxy I have a better chance of winning the lottery than finding a good man..so until then I will just LOOK at the young hot one’s, I have been known to do a u-turn to get a second glance at a hot jogger..just sayin