Lovefraud recently heard from Janine in Florida. Here is what she wrote:
In May it will be two years since I realized my ex-husband was a sociopath and every day I deal with the psychological nightmare that he has given me. I try so hard not to think about the destruction he has done to me…but every day it is there. Destroyed period.
How can one put this behind them?? Yes I have moved on with my life but every day in my mind what he did to me is there and will be in my brain forever. I have been told to forgive him and I do in a way because I realize how sick he is but it is still there!
Taken, abused, used, destroyed as a woman, as a human being and of course him shoving everything down my throat. Defaming my character, slandering me and doing his best to destroy my life. That is the hardest part, the man I helped the most in my life to live his dreams became my nightmare…I will carry this with me until my dying day.
Sociopaths charm their way into our lives, destroy us, and then leave. They go on their merry ways, and we are left with emotional train wrecks. Anger, shock, betrayal, disbelief, disappointment, sadness, shame, fear, grief, hatred, rage—all adding up to incredible pain. What are we to do with it?
I believe we must allow ourselves to feel it.
Facing the Fire
In 1993, I attended a workshop given by John Lee, author of Facing the Fire: Experiencing and Expressing Anger Appropriately. Lee talks about anger as a physical sensation that gets stuck in the body. Many of us walk around carrying decades of anger—childhood anger at our parents, anger from adolescent taunts, anger from previous husbands or wives. Unless we do something about it, the anger of the past stays there, affecting our present.
Anger builds into rage. Rage builds into numbness.
John Lee’s book offers techniques for dealing with our anger. Many of us try to intellectualize our anger away. This doesn’t work. Anger is a physical emotion that needs to be physically released. The idea is to do it without hurting other people or domestic animals. Lee suggests pounding pillows, twisting towels, stomping on the ground and breaking old cups and saucers into trash cans. We have to keep doing it until we experience a release.
To learn more on these ideas, read an interview with John Lee.
Experiencing the pain
When I finally learned that my ex-husband was a con man, that he had fathered a child with another woman during our marriage, that the $227,000 he took from me was gone, I had extreme anger—and all of those other negative emotions—adding up to incredible pain.
Luckily, I had employed John Lee’s techniques before—I tried them all, and found that punching pillows worked best for me. I also had a therapist who guided me in experiencing my pain. Because that is what needed to happen.
The pain had to come out, and the way to do it was physically. This meant punching pillows until I collapsed. It meant crying—deep, loud wails. It meant telling my ex-husband, emphatically, exactly how I felt—even though he wasn’t there to hear it.
Make no mistake, this is not pretty. It is best done in privacy, or with a skilled therapist. And it takes a long time, because there are layers and layers of pain—you dig one out, and another one surfaces.
But it works. I can honestly say that the pain is gone—not only the pain of the sociopath, but the pain I was carrying around beforehand that enabled me to fall for his lies.
I have recovered. I am happily remarried to a wonderful man. And I am peaceful.
Freemama
I’m so sorry for you. I’m sure not everybody would agree, but if I were you I’d at least communicate something to the new wife. A word of warning. There is lots of dialogue on this site about that.
But you obviously have to decided what is right for your family.
You may simply speed up her learning although she is unlikely to accept what you say.
I am sorry about your pain. I’m there too. Just remember, you’re winning here because you’re away from him. You are the winner. Stay close with your son, love him to bits, never criticize his father. He will eventually see the truth.
Dear (((((Freemmama))))))
Yes, this was a DELIBERATE knife in the heart….and he used your child to deliver the blow….and your child is innocent in it.
YOU are your child’s mother, and like Henry says, I hope and pray that this is a good woman who will be good to your son and love him, for HIS sake….it will make HIS life easier….and believe me, your son is young enough right now that he doesn’t really understand what a “mommy” is, but just keep on BEING a mommy and don’t worry about what is going on with your X….this can only hurt you if you allow it to. Looking at it from a LOGICAL not emotional stand point is the ONLY way you can cope with it.
Just keep on nurturing your son.
PS go to Dr. Leedom’s web site “parenting the at risk child” there is information there for you that may help you. Liane is a sharp gal and she is raising a child at risk for being “just like his father” a world class psychopath! Good luck and God bless you.
Freemama ~ I wish there were something I could say to make this easier for you.
You obviously love your son very much. Just keep showing him that YOU are his mama, and you ALWAYS will be his mama.
If your spath DOES get married to this new victim, perhaps she can be an ally in protecting your child.
H2H
I wish I had something to do with the pain.
I’m going on 4 weeks of NC. He’s fully back with his Ex.
I don’t know what’s worse, missing him (or, who I hoped he would be), or being angry at myself for not knowing that I was stepping into a big pile of shit.
Ugh. Tough weekend. I need hugs.
Superkid
Super Kid – Yep you stepped in a big pile of doo, takes a while to get the stink out of your system. Your on the right track, watch out for turd’s and here is a big HUG. But you also need a big BOZO button…I am still wearing mine…..oh my…
(((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((SK)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
consider yourself cyber hugged.
1stepr’s – Where is my HUG?
(((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((hens and his wieners)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
you know – that’s what i should do today – just cyber hug people!
i had a couple of bad toxin exposures (stupid car) and i feel flat like a pancake. so, i trying to lower my expectations, and just move slowly, and be gentle with myself about it.
and try not to puke.
sounds like a plan – here’s my HUG back at ya – please dont puke on me tho..