By Ox Drover
I’m sure we have all heard the old saying, “I cried because I had no shoes until I saw a man who had no feet.” This “old saying” is true, though I think it is made up to inspire some guilt in us for complaining about the small things we lack and make us aware that we are fortunate to have the many blessings that we do have, which many others are not fortunate enough to have.
Another one I remember is, “Eat your vegetables; there are children starving in China.” I always wondered why I couldn’t just send the hated vegetables there instead of eating them. It would solve two problems: I wouldn’t have to eat them, and the kids in China would be grateful for them. My son D has turned this phrase around to joke, “Drink your beer, there are sober children in China.”
All jokes and platitudes aside, however, the feeling of gratitude for what blessings we do have is, I think, an important concept for our healing. The encounters with sociopaths, sometimes for decades, have given us a feeling of destitution and emotional poverty. The thing that we prized and valued most—the love that we thought was shared between us and the sociopath—turned out to be an illusion. We have lost this vision of the relationship we thought was so important.
When my kids were very little, if one had a birthday, we would get the other one a “consolation present.” It was never as big as the birthday boy’s present, but it was a token to show that the non-birthday boy was not forgotten. One year when they were about four and three, we forgot to get the non-birthday boy something, and so my mother wrapped up a nice new shirt in a package, since the non-birthday boy did like clothes very much. When it came his turn to open his package he was all smiles, expecting some sort of toy I am sure. When he saw that his expectations were dashed and he had clothing, however, his little face fell. He had not gotten what he had expected. I was gratified, though, that he looked up, almost ready to cry I think, and said the most pitiful “thank you” that I have ever seen a child force from his lips.
Our expectations of our relationship many times turn out to be like my son’s expectations of what was in his package, very disappointing. Sometimes even devastation follows the exposure of the one-sidedness of the true relationship, with emotional, physical and/or financial abuse as well.
Walking down the street and seeing another couple holding hands, we may start to have a feeling that only we are alone, only we don’t have someone who wants to hold our hand. This feeling of “poverty,” of “not having” what others have, I think, fuels our feelings of worthlessness, abandonment and sadness, and the loneliness of wishing we had the relationship we thought we had. We feel deprived of what we deserve by someone else, or feel that maybe we don’t deserve more, or that we got what we deserved and if we had only worked harder, we might have managed to make it come true.
I think those feelings of deprivation, those feelings of poverty of spirit and soul, tend to drag us down further into the abyss of failure—a failure that keeps us from appreciating what we do have. A failure to appreciate just how important we are, and also a failure to appreciate that we have escaped the clutches of a bad relationship, even if that escape was painful.
The appreciation of ourselves, of our unique value and worth, is important to healing. To appreciate ourselves, I think we need to look at ourselves on this (U.S.) holiday of Thanksgiving and to enumerate and validate the many things about ourselves we do have to be thankful for. We need to count our blessings, and assess the many valuable characteristics that make us who we are.
Even if we have lost our “shoes” we still have our “feet” and while we may feel that we don’t have “as much as” someone else, we still have something that cannot be taken away from us, and that is the unique spirit that is ours and ours alone. The unique spirit that can be grateful and give thanks to the universe for new opportunities to expand that spirit in new ways we’ve never before explored.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
Setting boundaries… I just spoke to my father on the phone and had a deeper realization. While he and I are close, I never feel good enough in his eyes.. while I hear from others how proud he is of me.. so I grew up feeling disaproved of by a man, my father… so I try to pleased him.. then after my mother dies he dates this woman that physically is like myself.. petite with long dark hair.. even my sisters remark about this.. and they think that I am my father’s favorite while at times, I feel this but mostly I feel disapproved of.. so after talking to him on the phone, I have this vague unworthy feeling going on…and I am certain that this feeling is what lets me stay in relationships… I feel I ahve to be better on whatever level while the men aren’t really even good enough for me… but I think Ineed to be kind, considerate, understanding when they aren’t that with me…
Style1, just out of curiosity, could you identify the behavior that triggered this feeling? Is it something your father says, or the tone of his voice?
Star,
Thanks and I agree.. and it feels like a low blow to be rejected because of my age after I was kind concerning his issues.. and I agree.. that there is something off with him…
I also, agree that you can meet people anywhere that are bad and that are good.. internet or in real life… I have met just as many cons in real life… and on the Internet, you can question and talk before even meeting to ascertain and have things revealed.. just like with this Leukemia guy.. but had I met him in person, I would have seen his gauntness and turned from him…
I am peaceful but also melancholy in that, meeting good people that are who they are and not playing games and who are after things seems impossible.. I at times, wish that I could be like they are.. but then I wouldn’t have my soul and sleep so well and like myself … huh? And I wouldn’t look so young for my age…
Eyes… look into someones eyes … they say alot..
My last guy kept saying.. your eyes they are so beautiful, so clear… have so much light in them…. several men have been attracted to my light.. do I hide it? Or just be me and learn to be more discerning….? Boundaries and discerning… and self-aware and protective.. but then who can you let become close… ?? Learn to be self-centered and self-sufficient … well, I was and am.. and sitll that last guy slinked in.. as that is what attracted him to me…
gets confusing don’t you all think?
Star,
Well, he tells you about himself.. and what he is doing directly and, of course, I inquired.. then I tell him about me.. then he warns me about something… then he tells me that he is doing something and needs to get back to it.. I think it is his tone.. his self-absorption. He is a narcissist.. and was an alcholic, very functional and successful and takes care of his family, moral, kind, manners, prominent .. and that makes him who that he is.. he expects alot… and I am the best of his lot and my sisters are jealous of me to some extent.. and they exclude me and he holds me out as special but then treats me rather negatfull but he does that to others also…it’s confusing.. I just always felt that I was not good enough for him… even when I succeeded… he says good going but it doesn’t seem sincere.. thisis going to sound weird.. but I think that he wanted a woman like me as a wife.. instead of my mom who was subservient and quiet.. I make noise and stand up for me.. He told a friend that I always tell him the truth and that I am always right.. It blew my mind when I heard this..
I don’t feel good enough.
Style1,
That behavior of him always being the one to cut a phone call short reminds me of a long-time male friend of mine that I once dated for a year or so. We have stayed friends, but I notice every time we talk, he is the one who has to go. He usually goes into a long thing about what he has to do….. I have noticed this always makes me feel also rejected/unworthy of his time. As a result, I am beginning to limit my contact with him and keep calls short on my end. It hurt me for a number of years without my even realizing it. I consider it a form of emotional neglect.
If your sisters are jealous of you, no doubt they experience that same feeling of emotional neglect and imagine you are the one getting the “love” they’re not getting. I think this is one of the reasons my sister always hated me.
Style1, I also think it’s harder for men to talk about feelings. Sometimes they get overwhelmed, especially if they are introverted. I don’t know your father but it’s possible he thinks more highly of you than you realize but just can’t verbalize it. He may even feel threatened by a strong woman and not know how to respond. I’m just throwing out ideas because I don’t know the situation.
Dear Star,
Yes, no I am not so concerned with looks of someone, but on what is INSIDE, but because many men are MORE CONCERNED about looks etc than what is actually inside, I realize there are ONLY A FEW men in the world I would have even with “an apple in their mouths, baked on a platter” so since there are relativly fewer men “available” and even of the ones who are actually “available” I woudl not want 99.9% of them anyway—so the statistical chances of a ‘relationship” tht I would be interested in is pretty slim, but I DO have RELATIONSHIPS, just not romantic ones—but that is OK with me now. I dont’ have to have a romantic relationship to be “complete”—and frankly there was a time when I felt that without it, I was NOT WHOLE. Now I realize that ONE is a WHOLE NUMBER, not just “half of two.”
Star,
I think that you are correct. Dad makes me feel that something is always more important than I am. And He does that to us all.. A couple of years ago, I was visiting him. He had been ill and a friend was with me and I hugged Dad and when we left the house my male friend asked, “Is your father ever affectionate? You were trying to give him love and he was so cold.”
And I thought about it. Dad is cold.. but in a loving way. I mean he tells me that he loves me and on occasion is very thoughtful. But it is kind of wierd. And he can be very cold of he is upset with you. I am sure that it is a form of emotional abuse. But on other levels, he is a good father.. Like us all, good and bad.. and yes, he has trouble expressing himself .. I can’t intellectually know all that but I still don’t feel good enough when I am around him and if I am supposed to be the favorite.. think how my sisters might feel…I am sure that they way that I was treated affects the men that I chose or that are attracted to me…THat is why this last one.. that was so affectionate was nice in ways.. He showered attention on me… it felt suffocating but I had never had anyone give me so much time and attention, phone calls, texts, flowers.. I didn’t trust it and it hurts when I questioned and then realized .. he was being evicted the day that he moved into my house. I felt slapped in the face. His attention was out of his need for something. I do think he had affection for me.. but he could have easily been for the next woman with a house and resources. He did buy me things, etc. He wasn’t cheap considering his circumstances. It is all confusing to me at times.. and I just got back from working out with a client that is moving away. It is like change and more change and I feel alone just now.
I often had the feelings what is it that men want? I am a gourmet cook, an interior designer, I keep an emmculate house. I am a former ballet dancer and keep myself in really good shape. I am kind, intelligent, moral and adventuresome.
I always feel with men that I am not enough. Like with this last one. I had a well-decorate house, a car, money, do my projects, workout, cooked him incredible meals. I turn heads when out.. he always commented how beautiful that I am. I cared for his dying mother.. and I became exhausted with it all..then when I met his daughter and she was an emotional basket case. throwing up on me that she had been molested by her mother in the first 24 hours that I met it her.. it was all tooooo much.. I felt dumped on, drained and what wasI getting out of it. I didn’t feel secure, happy, content, I got lots of attention and complitments but I also gave a ton… I do not know anymore how people get togther or why??? Men just keep wanting more and more.. He told me that he needed a supportive woman.. what woman could’ve or would’ve been more supportive? I was never sexually attracted to him even though he is handsome… so that was wierd and am sure hurt him.. but he didn’t seem all that sexual attactually.. I don’t know.. going through a down spell..
people need to be willing to work on themsleves.. and he sure gave lip service to that when we first met.. but in the end I got the blame for most everything… even no saying you’re welcome to his thank you… so why aren’t I ‘good’ enough… My father told him that he was lucky to have met a woman like me. and my father liked him.. he ‘thought’ that he was a man that could take care of his daughter but it was facade.. but we made a good looking couple.. it is all bizarre to me just now… I feel a bit alone now..