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!
Style1:
You sound like an amazing woman! Any man in his right mind would feel lucky to have you. And that’s the key, “in his right mind’. There are so many disordered people in the world, and there are even those who are not disordered but envious of others accomplishments and/or overly greedy (well maybe that still counts as disordered I don’t know).
There are also good people who encourage their friends and loved ones, who celebrate their successes. I hope that you find someone who can appreciate all that you have to offer.
Sounds like you’ve run across too many people that the old adage was written about: “give them an inch and they’ll take a mile”. Normal people are appreciative for what they are given and don’t become greedy and demanding for more and more. His whole family sounds dysfunctional, and that’s got nothing to do with you.
Repeat after me, “I am amazing and any man in his right mind would feel lucky to have me!”. Hope you move out of your down spell into an up spell soon.
style, Please don’t allow him to make you doubt yourself. This is the power they have even after they leave. You are a warm, loving, giving person and the right man will come along. I, too, have questioned my worth given what I was told about myself by my ex P.
I’m not a man, but I think what you have to offer is so much. Trust in time that person will come to you. I’ve come to find that timing is often in God’s hands and I believe He puts people in our lives when we are ready.
In a way, I can thank my ex P because he taught me all about red flags and I use that knowledge today.
Recently, I heard from an old b/f. Now, I haven’t seen him in 2 years and have communicated now and then by email. He has sent me kisses and hugs, e-cards and all that stuff. I haven’t responded to any of that stuff. I kept it as a friendly, distant friendship. He told me he wanted me to take him to have some dental work done and that I was the ONLY person he trusted to take him there and get him safely home. Red flags went up all over the place. How can he say that after not having seen me all that time? My answer to him was “NO”. Something wasn’t right and I’m so glad I got that right away. Somewhere along the line I’m learning lessons and they work.
You ARE an amazing woman!
Sending hugs, Cat
F of a borderline and Cat.. thank you for the pep talks… I showered and feel better.. just alone.. I am lonely … and I enjoy being alone but I am lonely and that is okay.. yes.. I agree.. it is in God’s hands if and when couples come together.. and yes, his family was terribly troubled with an intense past full of illness and dyfunction.. all families have some but his wow….and I knew from the get go something was off.. and I didn’t give my whole self… This is not my first time at the rodeo.. 10 years ago I had a 4 year relationship with a man that I really did love .. and he turned out to be bad news… and I hadn’t really allowed myself to even hope that their might be man until this last one… so I am just I don’t know.. I need to focus on my projects and with this down time because of the holidays.. it is nice as time to relax but holidays can be rough as everyone on here knows in that the memories good and bad from all the ones before..
I have really worked on myself.. and am proud that I saw the red flags with this man so reserved myself and delayed his push into marriage…geez had I married him.. what a nightmare.. but this recent man telling me that he wants a younger woman.. just was like another nail …
I don’t know how to be any better… if I am not good enough at whatever age.. this is who that I am… and I actually haven’t met a man that is good enough for me… I think that I intimidate many men… then they try to put you down.. men don’t like a smart woman..
It freaks me to read about the ladies on here that have given men money… NEVER NEVER NEVER DO that anyone EVER!
It makes me sick actually… once a man I was dating forgot his wallet and I paid for a pizza etc and it pissed me off….
and we had been friends for years…I don’t respect a man that doesn’t pay for a woman…
That is one reason I didn’t respect the man that I was last with.. a man should buy the house.. and care for the woman not the other way around… I don’t think I loved him because I couldn’t respect him. I felt he slinked into my life. He commented once.. I have other places I could go..
I mean DISGUSTING.. that made me feel so warm and loved…
I just feel kind of beaten up tonight so thank you for your pep talks…I really appreciate them and am thankful…
They all say they have other places to go, always have a back up, someone on the back burner, one or two old gf’s or bf’s or both if they are bi…..they sofa surf, bed hop, etc etc… what wonderful people they are NOT
He meant moving in with his daughter and her husband.. college kids… or this older couple that were friends with his mother and that is where he is now…
Style says:
“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.”
Style1, I’ll marry you! LOL I may even consider switching teams for someone with these qualities.
Knowledge is power. It’s GREAT that you have identified the feeling and the thought process (not good enough) that happens when you are around your father. Only when you make this connection can you consciously work on that erroneous thought. However, you may need to sit quietly with that “feeling”, writing about it, trying to describe it, and letting memories surface around it. Sounds like you have not gotten to the bottom of it yet, and that will probably be a big healing for you when you do. You go, girl!
Oxy, I totally understand what you mean about men being so visual and a culture that is so focused on youth and physical beauty. It really sucks. In spite of how I feel I am so much more interesting and available than I was when I was younger and teasing boys, I would still have plastic surgery in a second to make myself look younger. It just becomes depressing for me to focus on the reality of how few men there are for a woman my age. I feel attitude is so important, and we can increase our odds of attracting men by being really positive about it. One of the prohibitive factors for me in dating is not so much my age but my IQ. I rarely ever find men that are intelligent or interesting enough to hold my attention, never mind one that is moderately attractive (at any age). Anyway, I have a feeling if I end up meeting a guy it will be someone a little younger anyway. I may just not be the marrying type, and I’ll be okay with that too. I’ve certainly had many opportunities, and they weren’t all smucks. Some of them were wonderful and would have made great husbands. Anyway, with all this rambling I was trying to say that your point is taken, and I totally get where you are coming from.
You know, the worst part about spending the holidays alone is trying to defend it to the people in my life. They look at me with such pity. Their looks of pity doesn’t match how I feel inside. So sometimes I just lie and say I had people come over. That’s something they can relate to.
Star..
Who cares what someone else thinks!?.. I have cooked huge dinners for many, gone to two family dinners in one day, had visited friends that had many over, and it’s been just me and another and have spent several alone..pretty soon they all run together….
More people than you think…are envious of those alone…
when I had tons of people around me … there were times that I thought … how great that it would be to be alone.. so it’s just where you are at any given time.. no big deal…
I have a girlfriend married to a man and together they have six kids.. and she would love time alone…I just made past primavera and now am sipping wine sitting in my bed.. munching on ginger cookies.. does it get any better?… not much!
Style1,
I really don’t care what they think. I just can’t stand the look of pity. Them projecting all their beliefs onto me. Ugh.
Oxy,
Wow!!!! You said it… And, I’m going to repeat it!!!
“A while back, I tried to help someone who presented herself as an “abuse” victim, but before too much time had passed I realized Ii was “walking on egg shells” to keep from “offending her—”as soon as I recognized this, I realized that she was conning me with her pretense of being an abused victim, at BEST she was a co-abuser in her former relationship, she felt entitled, as a “victim” of course, to not do anything for herself, but to have people tip toe around her and not upset her. Well, let me tell you, when someone else is providing the roof over your head, you are the one who should be accomodating to them, not the other way round.
I make the rules in my house, if I say “no smoking” you better not light up a cigar and then get mad at me for pointing to the NO SMOKING sign! You do NOT have a God-given right to smoke IN MY HOUSE.
If you want me to drive you somewhere because you don’t have a car, don’t gripe because the car you USED to have was better than the clunker I drive.
Any time you feel yourself being “taken advantage of” by someone you are trying to be “nice” to, RED FLAG. Anytime someone criticises you for giving them a gift because it wasn’t what they wanted, anytime someone tells you what a “bad” or “inadequate” person you are, compared to them, RED FLAGS!!! RUN!!! ”
RUN!… RUN!… RUN!! The sooner, the better. When we wait too long to recognize the Red Flags, when we make excuses, and justify, minimize or give the benefit of the doubt (more then once), we become self-abusive. I am SO guilty of doing this most of my life. In the name of being nice…In the name of family, because blood is thicker then water…In the name of being a “Christian,” we deny ourselves the right to protect ourselves.
In my sister’s effort to guilt me for setting boundaries with her, she said…”Then, Christ is not in you.” WOW!!!! Really?
I responded, “Jesus teaches if we are not welcomed (respected) in our own hometown, we are to dust our feet off, and move on. He didn’t say, stick around, because you are blood, and allow them to abuse you. Furthermore, I don’t recall where the Bible instructs us to belittle, devalue, demean, guilt, those that set boundaries with us, either.”
She sent an email response, “So how does it feel to break someone’s heart just so you can prove you are in control?”
Hmmm….
I didn’t respond. And, I won’t.