By Ox Drover
“The Road Not Taken” is always out there beckoning to us. I should, I could ”¦ Why did I do that? Why didn’t I do that? Regrets!
Having been involved with a psychopath, and reeling from the devastation in the wake of the relationship, leads us to ask ourselves what might have happened if we had made other choices.
I question myself—if I had chosen differently, would the relationship have been a success? If I had dated John or Frank instead of the psychopath, would I now be happily married in a solid relationship? If I had just done things differently, like I started to, would it have been better? If I had just gotten out of the relationship sooner, or later, would I now be better off?
With our regrets, we beat ourselves up for being so stupid to put up with the abuse. We saw the red flags of suspicion early on, felt the sting and pain of his words, his disrespect, yet, now we regret not paying attention to ourselves back then. How much better our lives would have been if we had only listened to our own intuition, to the things we really knew, really saw, but brushed aside, thought we could fix.
We searched for the words, the perfect words, to explain to him how he was hurting us. Why couldn’t we find those perfect words, the ones we were so sure would make him treat us better?
Regret is normal
Regret in the past choices we have made in life: Go to work and get married, or go to college and get an education. Have children, or wait. According to those who study regrets, having regrets as we mature is a normal, natural and a universal human emotion. Neal Roese, Ph.D., a psychology professor at the University of Illinois says, “Regret is a very complicated emotion that involves all these things (pain and fear) coming together—it’s raw feeling plus all the complicated imaginings of future possibility.”
Another psychology professor, Carsten Wrosch, Ph. D., at Concordia University in Montreal, has linked regrets to many physical and social problems, which include sleeping problems, headaches, migraines, panic disorder and even skin conditions.
Henry David Thoreau said, “To regret deeply is to live afresh.”
Letting go
If we continually dwell on our past mistakes and missed opportunities, this consumes our ability to live and enjoy the present. Letting go of regrets though, is not a one-time event; it is a process of disentangling ourselves from them.
One of the ways suggested to start to let go of our regrets over past decisions is to consider it final. I find that when I have a decision to make, once I finally decide that decision is final, anxiety about making that decision seems to go away. Looking at that decision later, whether it turned out to be good or bad, I am more able to accept it.
People who study regrets and decision making also note that if we can “fix” a past mistake or correct it, our regrets tend to hang on longer and be stronger, but if we accept the fact that we made a bad decision that can’t be fixed, we tend to let go of it more easily.
Having regrets for past decisions, and especially regrets related to our relationship with the psychopath(s) in our lives, is normal and natural. As long as we hang on to those regrets and try to second guess ourselves, though, it impedes our healing and moving on.
Letting go of those regrets, the self-recrimination for our part in the relationship, for not finding the perfect solution, for not leaving sooner, or any of a thousand other choices we made, will be an ongoing process. But it will lead us, if we let it, to using those choices to make a better life for ourselves now and in the future.
Dear ICthruhim,
I would like to add my WELCOME here as well. I’m glad that LF has helped you in your recovery. I know that it has meant so much to me. I learn more every day. Some days I take a back step, but more often than not, I feel like I have been “reborn” and my old life, my pain, the nightmare(s) are behind me.
I am glad tha tyou were able to get the attack on your son prosecuted and him in prison (where he deserves to be) I hope you and your son are able to support each other in your healing paths.
Again, welcome, and please do add your voice to the rest of us, each story is important, though there are so many similarities, but nonetheless EACH voice is very important. (((hugs)))) and my prayers for you and your son.
Thank you all for your warm welcomes and kind words. I will take all the prayers I can get! Although my son is ok physically, pychologically he did not fare as well. The horrible incident that occured was finally drastic enough to make me open my eyes, however there had been much verbal and mental abuse toward me and my son leading up to that day. So my son had quite a breakdown after we got the SP out, and he has been in theraputic mentoring home. It was another painful thing to go thru, but I hope to have him back home with us next year. My youngest son who was 8 at the time witnessed the whole event, and suffered anxiety attacks for a while, but is doing well now. My daughter who was 17 at the time also witnessed most of it, and as I was getting him out of my home that morning, he finished everything off by saying incredibly filthy and vile things to my daughter! So none of us went untouched, but we are working on healing together as a family. My 3 kids and I all pulled together and all testified at the trial which was also incredibly stressful, but for once some justice was served! Thanks again for letting me share. One thing I am thankful for is that we had no kids together 🙂
ICthruhim:
WELCOME darling! Welcome.
Sorry for your experience, but I’m glad you have chosen to stand up, protect yoruself and your son and continue the healing process and journey into enlightenment!
Learn, remain strong, educate and protect you and yours.
We’d love to hear from you, thanks for having the courage to join us!!
XXOO
EB
Hi ICthruhim:
…”my SP is now in prison”..
Wow, I wish I could say that.
I am glad you decided to take the plunge and post with us.
You are in a really good place.
I love your name.
It’s been several days since I’ve been here. And I’m in such dire straits! HE’S BACK! But is he! After 2 months NC and the last encounter him telling me to leave him the fuck alone and NEVER call or text him EVER again…..after him kicking me in the stomach he’s back! He called and simply said….check your messages. In them he wrote how he was so wrong and so sorry. That I had some really mean things but they made him open his eyes. That the OW had lured him in with her money and he had been blinded – that he should have known better. I listened and he kept telling me how much he loved me. But the instant I softened (and I did)…..two days later he’s acting like before. He doesn’t want to talk but he answers my text and gives me an excuse. I know where this is going but I don’t want to take a chance to mess things up.
WHY is that?? I could be in the drivers seat……say FUCK YOU and tell him to leave me alone for good.
My love for him was so real but he’s proved that it didn’t mean anything by making the choices he made. So why do I keep allowing myself to fall back. I always say love doesn’t die…it fades. And I can prove to him that we can be good together. But why? And WHY does he keep coming back and saying these things? What is wrong with him?
I’m rambling on and lost all over again. When he called I shook and my stomach got sick! Why this control???
Sarasims,
It is difficult to maintain no contact and at the same time check messages, text, emails, phone calls…
If you truly want to remain N/C you need to erase messages without listening, delete emails and text without reading etc.
OR better yet change your number and email account.
Otherwise he will have the power to lure you right back into his web.
Given an inch…..He will take a mile. You can’t give him that inch.
Dear Sasra Sims,
you WANT to believe the lie, but you KNOW IT IS A LIE, and yet you sooooo want to believe it.
The whole relationship was a lie, on HIS PART, on your part it was a FANTASY. Sure it is hard to give up that fantasy, it hurts to realize there is NO SANTA CLAUS, and even if there was, HE IS NOT IT.
All the excuses in the world won’t erase the TRUTH, and the truth is that HE LIED TO YOU, HE HURT YOU, HE KNEW HE WAS HURTING YOU AND HE DID NOT CARE.
What more do you need to prove that this man is TOXIC to you? I do not need a crystal ball to tell you that he will do to you AGAIn what he did in the past.
WHY? Because that is what Ps do, they get their “jollies” manipulating people and lying and getting away with it.
Hun there is NOTHING for you to MESS UP, EXCEPT YOUR OWN LIFE, the “relationship” with him is a fantasy!
Sure, it hurts, but STAY NC and do what WITs told you to. DO NOT READ, not listen, and stay NC 110%. It is for your own protection. Believe me, my dear, we have been there, we know how it hurts to let go of the LIE. ((((hugs)))) and my prayers for you! STAND STRONG. You can do it!!!
Sarasims,
Please understand that you need to look at breaking off with him as you would breaking an addiction.
This is literally true. Sociopaths instinctively know how to manipulate their victims in a way that causes psychological attachments and even chemical changes in the brain. These chemical changes, Dr. Liane Leedom has written, follow the same pathways in the brain as drug and alcohol addictions.
That is why it is so difficult. You might want to read:
Why you can be addicted to a sociopath
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2007/04/13/motivation-needing-wanting-and-liking/
Sarasims,
You cannot afford to have contact with your mythological creature while you still believe his lies. His lies have a magical spell on you and untill the spell is broken you can’t see him for what he is. Everything is foggy and unclear.
The way to break the spell is to read more books on narcissism or go to the sociopath websites and get your fill of magical creatures there. Your mind has not fully understood what he is. When it does, you won’t have any problems.
It’s crap bc all I wanted was for him to be here doing this so that I could throw it in his face and “get even”. Kick him when he’s down!!! But when the opportunity presents itself – I DONT have the courage to do it!!! I hate myself for that!