By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Wearing my “nurse Joyce hat” is part of what I am, although I am retired. Even though I am no longer in practice giving out specific medical advice to patients and billing insurance companies, Medicare and private payers for the advice, I still am inclined to look at things from a medical point of view.
One of the things I used to teach my diabetic patients about their condition was that I was the “coach” and they were the “team.” I could not get out on the field of life and play the “game” they had to do it. But if I were not a good “coach,” and didn’t teach them the “rules of the game,” they were not going to be able to play a good game. I told them that diabetes is a “do-it-yourself treatment plan.” They had to control their diet, their exercise and their use of medications in a wise way. It took all three things to successfully control the condition and prevent the side effects from literally killing their bodies, one organ at a time. In fact, lifestyle is one of the biggest things in any person’s health, not only in those with diseases like diabetes.
I have not always been a good patient myself ”¦ I have eaten too much, exercised too little, smoked cigarettes, and so on. I’ve put my needs last and others’ needs first. I am GUILTY of this, so I am not just throwing stones at someone else’s glass house. However, I have finally made a vow to make some changes in my life and my behavior, and put myself first. To make my own health a top priority.
Stress and illness
Back in 2007, during the “summer of Chaos,” I was living in my recreational vehicle with my adopted son D, hiding out on a friend’s property at a lake, while the man my son had sent to kill me was living in my mother’s home, conspiring with my daughter-in-law and my son, Patrick, to kill me, take over the family finances and ultimately to leave Patrick the sole beneficiary of the family trust. I was in such a stressed-out condition that I was a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual wreck. I scored about 1,500 points on the Holmes and Rahe Stress Scale, and a score of 300+ is over the top.
My immune system had almost shut down, leaving me prey to Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. Though I was obviously “sick,” I was unable to realize that I had been running a continual fever for weeks, before I finally got to a physician to confirm my illness. He was very concerned about my condition and actually thought I had cancer, because my “labs” were so out of whack. Stress does a number on our immune system, and as well on our ability to think critically and make judgments that are logical.
Dealing with psychopathic attacks, and the gaslighting that goes along with them, as well as the doubts we have about whether or not we have contributed to our own downfall, or whether we are at fault for what has happened to us, the frustrations we have in trying to “mend” the relationships with the psychopaths, and the grief responses that we experience in coping with the losses of perceived loved ones ”¦ all these things do a “number” on our bodies and minds.
Care for yourself
When you fly on an airline, the cabin staff gives you instructions on what to do in the event of an emergency. They tell you that if you are with a child when an oxygen mask falls down, that you should put the mask on yourself first. The reason for this is that if you don’t take care of yourself, you cannot help others who are more helpless.
Many victims of psychopaths have small children that depend on them for emotional and financial support ”¦ and dealing with a psychopathic co-parent, poverty, loss of homes, finances, job changes, fear and frustration tend to make it difficult for the victim to focus on him or herself first! If our children are, or have been, abused, we would want to put them first because that is what a good nurturing parent does. Put the child first. If the child is sick, you stay up all night with them, depriving yourself of needed sleep, and then go to work the next day.
Well, let me suggest that you change your perspective and put yourself first before everyone. You cannot take care of your children or your job or your finances if you are not healthy. If you do not put your own health as a priority, mentally, physically, and spiritually, you cannot do an adequate job of caring for your other responsibilities.
Real danger
When the world was crashing down around my head, and my life was literally in danger from the “Trojan horse psychopath” my son had sent to kill me, I worried about my house. I worried about my shop and barn; I worried about my animals and couldn’t make the logical decision to get the hell out while I was still alive and walking. Then something shocked me out of my denial and I started to act.
I had trouble waking my son D in the mornings. I just could not get him out of bed. I became very frustrated with him. Why the heck was it taking me from 7 to 10 a.m. to get him to get up and get a cup of coffee and start the day? Well, finally I got it out of him that he had been staying up all night from midnight to daylight guarding me with a gun because he was concerned that the Trojan horse would come during the night and kill us. No wonder I couldn’t get him out of bed. He hadn’t suddenly just become lazy; he was exhausted from over 30 days of no sleep. Of course, he was putting me first! So we both decided to put ourselves first and get the heck out of Dodge. Leave the house, leave the farm, save our lives.
It was at that point that I started putting myself first. I realized that I could not guard this house 24/7 from sneak attacks, and that the house was not nearly as important as the lives of D and myself. So I decided that I needed to put myself first, not the house, not even the animals. In fact, as we snuck our essential things out of the house over a period of a few days, we left the outside animals in their kennels, vulnerable to the psychopath, because I knew as soon as they were gone, the Trojan Horse would know we were gone. The dogs went with the last load of important papers. In a week we had “disappeared.” As much as I loved my dogs, I knew that my life had to come before theirs.
Beginning recovery
Slowly over the summer, even though I was safe, the stress continued to weigh upon me, and then I got sick, which added more stress. It takes time for the effects of stress on our minds and our bodies to decrease. When I realized I was sick, I started taking care and seeing physicians. I also got EMDR therapy, and spent time on Lovefraud, which I had finally discovered. I consulted with a minister friend about my spiritual health as well. I started, for the first time in a long time, putting myself first. I was way behind the eight-ball, so my recovery did not come overnight.
When the Trojan horse and my daughter-in-law were arrested, in August, I waited a few months and moved back to the farm in the RV, though I didn’t yet feel safe moving back into my house. I literally lived in the RV, parked near the house.
Even with the worst of the danger had passed, I had not “cured” myself of either the lack of critical logical thought, or of lacking in boundary setting. Learning to put yourself first is a step-by-step process, and one that if you are anything like me, you have to learn from scratch, as you have probably never done much of it in the past.
I allowed some of the peripheral psychopaths and users in my life to move in on me ”¦ and when I caught them stealing from me, I was literally embarrassed that I had “embarrassed them!” DUH! I had to learn to set boundaries for everyone, even those people that I cared about. I confronted them and asked them to leave my farm. I set boundaries for my mother when she showed no desire to process the devaluation and discarding she had done to me when I was being attacked by my son. Then she started to lie to me and to send him money and support. I went essentially NC with her, except for necessary legal business as co-trustees of our family trust.
Mending my ways
I decided to quit smoking and to mend my ways on diet and exercise. Stepwise, I started putting myself first. If I needed rest, I let the dishes sit. Let the floor go unswept. Confronted people who were being unfair to me, even if it meant the cessation of the relationship entirely.
Having fewer “friends” who added stress to my life left more time for those people who added peace and pleasure to my life. Taking care of me ”¦ going to the doctor on a regular basis for checkups and follow ups, doing what my physician suggested, those were all things that added to my physical improvement. As I improved physically, I also improved emotionally and mentally.
When I did have something that was a stressor, such as some long-term relationships that I realized were not healthy, probably hadn’t ever been healthy, and weren’t going to get healthy because the other person wasn’t willing to make any steps in that direction, I was able to sever these relationships with a minimum of pain and stress.
When stressful “life events” occurred that were not connected to anyone being “out to get me—” like flat tires, the car conking out, my dog being lost, I was able to weather these storms much better than I did back when I was not taking care of myself.
Self-esteem
Not only did taking care of myself help me in every aspect of my life, from physical health to mental health, but my own self-esteem started to grow as well, because I was recognizing that I AM IMPORTANT TO ME. I am willing to do what it takes to make myself healthy. I matter to me.
Take stock of what you are doing to take care of yourself, and examine those areas in which you are not taking care of yourself. Don’t try to fix them all in one day, or one week, or one month, but do start to look at where you can make some progress in putting yourself first. Putting your own needs above all else. Get a medical check up, check into therapy, try to keep change to a minimum. Don’t make big changes unless absolutely necessary for your safety or security, and in those cases, where your safety and security are concerned, do whatever is necessary to ensure that you are safe!
God bless.
Liz, the idea is not to let her think she can’t affect you, but to get to a place where she truly doesn’t affect you. What she thinks about you doesn’t matter.
Anyway, if you are really serious about losing weight, I have your answer – Zumba. Since I started doing it, the weight has just dropped off me. I actually had to start eating more to have the energy to do it. It is more fun than I’ve ever had exercising. Doing it 5-6 days a week is a joy and not a chore. If you like to dance, you will love it, once you learn the steps. Before Zumba, I struggled to get that last 5 lbs off. Now my friends are worrying that I’m too thin. I’m down to 123.
Star-I’m working on getting to where she doesn’t affect me. It’s harder since she still hasn’t moved, but it’s getting easier. I went through the whole mourning thing for several weeks and now I’m in the anger stage. That is good for me now since it keeps me alert and ready for whatever she throws to try to lure me back. She isn’t aware yet that I am purposefully trying to cut off contact. Her ego is so large that she still thinks that I’m infatuated with her. She came out and ask if everything was ok with me yesterday, since I rarely see her, and when I do, it’s grey rock and brief. Once she realizes what’s happening then she will start the games-just going by what she has always done in the past.
Thanks for the idea about Zumba. How does it work for those of us who can’t dance and appear totally uncoordinated when we try? Maybe there’s a class around that will work into my schedule.
G1S
Got to agree. Living a happy life is the best revenge.
Liz, I am lucky with my rockstar neighbor. If I gray rock him once, he just disappears, and I have to go out of my way to bring him back. We actually reconnected as friends and gym buddies for a while before my most recent trip to Costa Rica. He even drove me to the airport on a Friday night, the weekend of his birthday. He opened up to me one night on the phone about all his insecurities with women and his body, his depression, etc. It was very revealing and surprising. But throughout all this, I still found myself wanting him and him just not showing the right kind of interest. I thought long and hard about whether I should chase him (again). But I decided that if anything is gonna happen, it needs to come from him. And it hasn’t. So I just appreciate that he is a great neighbor and leave it at that. He’s probably incapable or doesn’t want a relationship – at least with me. I have come to realize that a professional rockstar’s lifestyle is just not conducive to a monogamous relationship. His loss. He’s still hot. It’s just one of those things that will always taunt me. But I TOTALLY relate about how hard it is not to let a neighbor you’ve had feelings for affect you. I have just accepted that he affects me. Maybe someday that will change. Of course I slept with him in the past, and that doesn’t help. Lesson learned about sleeping with men I’m not in a relationship with. My attraction toward him comes and goes, depending on what else is going on in my life. I suspect if I find a great guy to get involved with, he will be history.
Regarding Zumba, I had two left feet when I started. It can take months to really learn the steps and get comfortable with the routines, then you start building muscle memory. After doing it for 6 months, I’m totally hooked on it. I missed it while I was out of the country. If you are doing Zumba, you can pretty much eat whatever you want. But if you also eat very healthy, the weight will just fall off of you. Go watch a class and see if it’s something that looks like fun to you. The fun factor can sometimes overcome your inhibition about looking like a fool out there. And no one is watching you anyway – they are more worried about doing it right themselves anyway. Everyone flounders till they get comfortable with the steps. Just do it!
One of the added benefits of joining a Zumba class is that you now have a new group of acquaintances and can make some new friends.
Lizzy, good for you…you know yourself that YOU CAN do it, eat healthy and eat the right amounts…it is just up to us to make up our mind to PUT OURSELVES FIRST….and when we want that cookie, to say NO to ourselves too. NO to ourselves when we want that cigarette.
If we allow EXTERNAL things to rule us, then THEY are in control of us, not US. We must be in control of ourselves and we can choose to be or not.
We can say “Oh, heck, I want a cigarette and I am upset with X so I will have a cigarette and it will make me freel better.” or we can say “Oh, heck I am upset about X and I really do want a cigarette, but I am going to do what is ADULT, AND HEALTHY AND PUT MYSELF AND MY HEALTH FIRST.”
Spoon I like what you wrote “respect my R U L E S”
You had written down all the traits about my ex-husband (informed police about physically abusing me) and ex lover (whom turned over to the police as a sexually preying on his own children).
I’m now in 2 therapy groups to work through these issues and don’t want to date. If it means I have to be with wack-jobs just to have a companion then; I rather learn to live alone.
I felt like I was going crazy in these relationships both individuals like to play mind games about the reality of what was going on and day to day involvement with them.
I’m at peace and am starting not to feel crazy anymore. Had to get an OP on the sexual predator.
Now I’m feeling comfortable around people again and laughing again too.
I’m still not the same person before these 2 relationships.
Wow this article I definitely feel sorry for what she went through. Her own child betraying her and trying to kill her what a mind/heart fk. Wow this is very painful reality some people are forced to exist in. How horrible for her. I’m glad she’s safe now.
Interesting though it took these therapy groups for me to realize these 2 men sick traits are the exact hell I grew-up in.
A male friend told me after I kept saying “I want to stop attracting these really sick evil wackjobs. Why am I?”
He told me that they aren’t picking me; I’m picking them. I didn’t know what the hell he meant. Now I’m learning that he’s right.
My friend divorced his wife as mutual understanding his wife was dealing with the craziness of healing from her past childhood sexual abuses done to her. I wonder if what he said to me is a dido for him.
Dear Oxy,
What a heart wrenching story. It’s amazing that you have turned this sequence of events into something positive. What you have learned is that you must take care of you. Positive self regard. That’s a strong message, Ox.
You always write with such humility and you come across as wanting nothing but to help others to “see” that despite terrible things happening to them, they too can prevail and recover.
Bless you. I draw so much from what you have to say.
Ox Drover, Hi
Life reflects what is on the inside of us. If one is looking to the outside to define them, to fill a primary need then the outcome is out of one’s control and you just get what someone is willing to give. Usually that is just their leftovers. We want to take care of ourselves first. And to do that we need to take responsibility for our emotional selves along with what we think, say, actions and non-actions, those we let in our lives, how we treat others and how we accept being treated by others. Short list. Another way to see it we need to rise above our base survival programing. Past our automatic programing of limiting beliefs we have created.
“We do not see things as they are. We see things as we are.”
Anais Nin
Hi, raised by sociopath
Glad your getting help and it’s working for you. Sometimes for me it took beating my head on a pole to get it in. 🙂
Gaslighting a piss ants MO.
Someone once told me that before we get into marriage or any serious relationship. We should enter it out of “want” not “need.” With “want” we are choosing. With “need” [compulsion] we have no choice. What do we have when the intensity of In-Love fades? The answer is what your really shooting for.
Your friend is right in most cases. We pick those we believe fill our needs. In a sense to complete us. Or those that seem normal to us. And coming from where you did. Normal takes on a whole other meaning.
In his case most likely [guessing here] she needed him and he need to be needed. Great to be needed. But neediness get’s old. Like trying to be it ALL for a spath. If it wasn’t for trauma bonding and our inborn propensity of the Economy Theory of sparing our energy and a few of the others. Then we wouldn’t stay as long. Cause meeting someone else’s neediness day in and day out will eat you alive from the inside.
Keep working at it. It’s not that we are bad or broken. It’s a puzzle. And few make it out of childhood with much more then just a few pieces. We either grow or stay where we are at.
Since you were raised by sociopath. Unfortunately you where just a kid that was caught up in a spaths cycle of sickness. It wasn’t you. It wasn’t you. It wasn’t you. It wasn’t you. It was it. It was wrong. It did it to you because you where there and it was it. Not because you where you. You where just a kid. The kid did what the kid had to do. Survive. Which is good. Now rip it out of your head and your heart. And grow to live, laugh, love. Always the best revenge.
My 2 Cents.