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.
Karma, no. You’re fine. No overstepping. I’m OK. I need to lose a lot of weight and exercise.
Parallelogram, wow. I guess what I said triggered you big time. Thank you for sharing all of that.
Your teacher was a godsend, I think. To let you know how things are supposed to be. I’ve read that is what children need to hear. Sometimes all it takes is one person to plant the seed.
I make it a point to say in front of someone I suspect is being abused, adult or child, that nobody on this earth was created by God to be abused therefore, nobody is entitled to abuse. If somebody says that they probably deserved the abuse, I tell that is a bad excuse for bad behavior. Nobody deserves abuse (or neglect.)
I am very grateful that you shared what you. I have a question. Did your spath know about what your family did and did the same or was it just a fluke that he and his mother did what they did?
I can see that there are good sides to the worst of things. I’ve noticed that I’m much calmer overall. Things that would probably upset most people roll off of me, sometimes unnoticed, because I have been through much worse. It comes down to perspective for me.
Anyway, I am glad that you finally got the lump out of your throat. 🙂
Parallelogram,
wow. I had all these things I was thinking as I read your post, and then when I finished, I didn’t know what to say, but I’ll try because your post deserves an answer.
It does seem that we re-live, re-enact our previous traumatic experiences. over and over and over again.
That teacher may have saved you. She gave you a glimpse of something more than your family could. Or, it may not have been her that saved you at all. It’s possible that the saving was in you all along and that’s why your family targeted you as the scapegoat. You were born a good person — they hate good people.
Regardless of the reason, you are an amazing, resilient person. Thank you for sharing your story. I’m so glad you made it through that upbringing.
Thanks for sharing your story, Parallelogram. I have to confess to having a big lump in my throat as I write. Yet over and over, on reading people’s posts, I am awed at the resilience and strength of this community, despite what people have gone through. My encounter with a spath was very short (5 months in total, of which 6 weeks was ‘romantic’) and yet did me so much damage (although I now recognise with hindsight that I had a boss who was a mega ‘Snake in a Suit’, with whom I worked for ten years!). I take that 5 months and try to multiply the damage over 10-25 years – and am boggled. Yet you are all still standing. Many of you have become Warriors against abuse in any form. Others have become Healers, reaching out to people who have suffered as you have. I am filled with admiration and the deepest respect for you all. x
Skylar, interesting that you caught that similarity – abandonment issues, absolutely.
I don’t need to rehash my childhood experiences, at this point, unless it were to validate how the shame-core is so pervasive. Suffice it to say that I had a very similar background as many others, especially Grace’s. Being forgotten at camp, school, etc….I know that it wasn’t intentional, but it was a side-effect of the dynamics of alcoholism in our family. I’ve come to terms with forgiveness for my parents, long ago.
But, I never WORKED out those kinks in my psyche. Since the discoveries about the exspath, I’ve only begun this arduous process, and knowing that those experiences had a direct impact upon how my system of beliefs were formed has been an absolute epiphany – thank you ALL for sharing very painful experiences.
My feeling is that this mutual “baring and sharing” of our personal experiences provides external validation that is so vital to my healing. Learning how to validate myself is another matter, but I’m reading, learning, and working on this. For you all to disclose these painful experiences and hurtful events requires an extraordinary amount of courage and resolve, and that fact is a clear indication that we’re not laying down and curling up. We’re all fighting to recover.
I don’t think I will ever be able to thank Donna Andersen enough for having the pluck and determination to start this site. You’ve all been a godsend for me, and may you each be blessed with the most healing energies.
Brightest blessings
Truthspeak, I agree 100% with you re. the ‘baring and sharing’ and how it provides external validation for each of us. Like you, I am so grateful for Donna for starting the site. I hung around the edges for a few months before I plucked up enough courage to post – I suppose I was afraid of what people would say, & too stunned (that ‘rabbit in the headlights’ feeling) to do anything other than simply survive from day to day. It is wonderful to know that all of you truly understand and ‘get it’. It has also been very empowering for me to find the ‘vocabulary’ for spathology. Words like ‘gaslighting’ , ‘cognitive dissonance’ etc. describe so exactly what goes on. Donna’s latest book ‘Lovefraud’ is really superb and I would really recommend it to anyone who hasn’t yet read it. I ran through the checklist and All 10 Red Flags were present in the behaviour of my exspath! I will never be duped again. Hugs all.
Ash, Donna turned her experience into something positive – TRULY positive. I don’t know where I would have been had she not built this site, and I don’t want to imagine.
Knowing descriptive definitions is so very helpful. If I know what it is (with respect to myself), there’s a chance that I can do something about it, like cognitive dissonance and shame-core.
Brightest blessings
Thanks Truthy {{hugs}}.
op
A continuation of the conversation I posted yesterday…
M ask for something appropriate, Ill give it.
H its not about winning, its not a power play, its about me needing to know you can and will put me first (referring to his request I send him a ‘video’ we made-we’ve been broken up for 1.5 years)
H you dont get options here..of course you can put me first ON YOUR TERMS
H send the video thats what I asked for then we can set a date for dinner
M i will not send the video, this has been established
H well then we have nothing to talk about
H i wanted something from you that represented so much more than the video, and again you showed me that its what you want.
M im asserting my right to say no and thats right now.
H you dont get to tell me why i am doing what im doing cause you dont know me or what i need from you (MOST LOGICAL THING HES SAID-EVER) All i needed from you was for you to send me the video…it would have been so beneficial in so many ways and your inability to do what i wanted or needed is just a reminder that my wants and needs are backseated to yours. the only way we will ever sit in front of each other again is if you send it to me, and im not making threats. YOU do not get to tell me what i want or need but you are more than able to deny me again…its really what ive come to expect from you. the simple fact is this…if you cant put me first i cant be with you.
You’re in a power struggle with a spath…YOU are in the power position and he wants to take you out of it. It’s that simple. On the other hand, he has power over you, because he knows you want him….he is dangling himself like a carrot, thinking you will fall for it, and send him the video….(the power you still have as long as you don’t give it up). He know’s you’re an empath, so he employs shaming techniques to throw you off the scent, ie, he says your’e a power freak and only think of yourself, and cannot and will not put him first, (you’de be a fool to put him first) and that is what he wants, for you to be a fool, for him, and I gaurantee that you will regret it.
He’s playing a cat and mouse game with you. I would burn the video, and completely close any avenue of communication. That will be the ultimate win….for you.