By Joyce Alexander, RNP (Retired)
I often go to auctions and flea markets looking for “hidden treasures” to add to my collection of pottery and handmade baskets of split oak. One of the things I have learned to do is to look for subtle or hidden flaws in the things that I like to collect.
It isn’t uncommon to find pottery items that have been chipped or broken and then carefully mended. Sometimes the cracks are very subtle and difficult to detect. It isn’t unusual for me to see an item and get all “excited” about it, then upon closer inspection, find that there are some hidden cracks.
I got to thinking about the “hidden cracks” that are found in dysfunctional families as well. In my own, for example, we as a group tried to keep our “cracks” hidden from the community. As a teenager I frequently had something I wanted to do nixed by the adults with the phrase, “what would the neighbors think if they knew you did X, Y or Z?” It didn’t seem so much to be the actual act of doing something, but more about what the neighbors might think. Usually the thing I wanted to do that was denied was going to a school dance.
As I was growing up, I never thought of my own family as “abusive” or “dysfunctional,” though I did see other families with problems, such as alcoholism, infidelity or wife beating. My family would gossip about these people derisively, and I thought that our family was “better than” these other families because we didn’t engage in such antisocial behavior. (Little did I know!)
My uncle, the alcoholic wife beater
However, my mother’s brother (who I believe was a psychopath) was an alcoholic and a wife beater, but these facts were kept hidden from me and from the community at large until I was an adult. At that time, my uncle and his wife had (gasp!) gotten a divorce and he moved from out of state, where he and his wife had lived for many years, to our small farming community and built a house on part of my grandparents’ lands. (The part intended for him to inherit after my grandparents died.)
Of course, with him living in the community and being a “public drunk,” it was now no longer possible for my grandparents to hide either his alcoholism or his beating of his frequently changing girlfriends, who would run to the neighbors with black eyes, seeking immediate shelter. The cat was out of the bag and the community knew about my uncle’s antics. Even with this exposure in the community, my grandparents and my mother tried to keep up the façade, and seldom talked about what was going on with my uncle.
On the infrequent occasions when he would show up at our little local church and sit through a sermon, the hope was that he was finally getting sober. When he would go to rehab at the VA and spend a few days or weeks, the hope was again rekindled that this time he would change. Of course he never did.
My son, the murderer
When my son Patrick was arrested in Texas for murdering Jessica Witt in 1992, I, too, tried to keep up the facade of “being a nice normal family,” and kept the facts secret from all but my closest friends. If one of my extended family of cousins, or someone from the community, asked about my kids and where they were and what they were doing, I said that Patrick “lived in Texas and worked for the State of Texas.” This actually was “true,” as he was required by the Texas prison system to have a “job” inside prison. It wasn’t a “lie” I told myself, just not “the whole truth.”
Of course it was deception; it was hiding the crack in my “pottery” and trying to pass it off as “whole.” I felt shame that my son was a criminal. Somehow him being a criminal, a psychopath, reflected on me, and on my family. We weren’t really a “nice normal family,” but as long as I could keep the truth, the whole truth, from the community, then I didn’t have to feel the public shame of my son, my beloved son, being a common criminal, a monster. We could pretend to be a “nice normal family.”
Afraid to admit
When I first started writing articles here on LoveFraud, I posted them under my screen name of “Ox Drover,” because I still wasn’t ready to come out of the “closet” and admit publicly that my family was not “whole” and “normal.” Not ready to admit that I, as a mental health care professional, had failed so miserably in my own life.
As I healed, though, I came to realize that the shame is not mine, and should not be mine. I have done nothing “wrong.” I am not the one who killed Jessica, and I am not the one who should feel shame for Patrick having done so. Patrick is the one who should feel shame, though I know that he is actually proud of how violent his crime was.
I still don’t walk down the street with a sign of my back proclaiming “my son is a criminal,” but I no longer pretend that he isn’t, and if it is appropriate, I tell someone the whole truth, rather than cover it up.
Speaking in open court
Like many communities, especially small ones, the gossip flows hot and heavy. I have no doubt that people “talk about” the things that happened to our family back when the Trojan Horse psychopath, that my son sent to kill me, was arrested and caught having an affair with my other son’s wife. Both he and she went to jail/prison for trying to kill her husband and stealing money from my mother.
The day that I stood in front of the judge at the bail hearing for my daughter-in-law and the Trojan horse psychopath, and told in open court, in front of people I knew, what had happened, that they had been caught trying to kill my son, stolen money from my mother, and had taken “dirty pictures” in my mother’s home, I was so nervous I literally couldn’t see further than the ends of my eye lashes. My heart must have been beating 500 beats per minute as I stood there, baring for the entire community, the shame of our family falling apart.
It shouldn’t have been my shame, though. The people who did the bad acts should have owned it, but they didn’t. In fact, when the judge spoke to my daughter-in-law about her ties to the community (before he set bail), he asked her who she had in the community and she actually said, “Well, my husband’s family.” I almost choked that she would say such a thing after trying to kill her husband. The judge set her bail at $150,000. The district attorney said that without my “speech” to the judge, the bail would probably have been $2,500 or less.
The dysfunctional cracks in our family became totally public in that courtroom, and then again, a year later, when I had to testify at my son’s divorce hearing. I never did figure out why my daughter-in-law even showed up for the divorce hearing, along with the “support person” from the domestic violence shelter, where the court had released her when they let her out of jail, because she was homeless and had no other place to go. I found out later she had told the people at the shelter how she had been “abused” by her husband and his terrible family, especially me, the “mother-in-law from hell.” I never did understand why the support person with her from the shelter couldn’t figure out that my daughter-in-law was the one on probation, not her family.
Focusing on myself
Time has passed now, and I have started to focus on myself, my own enabling, my own cracks, and how I have patched them. The whole thing started out by focusing on “them” and how to cope with “them,” but now I am focusing on myself, focusing on the things I need to do to heal myself.
While a pottery vessel that is cracked can never be made “whole” again, it can still be functional and beautiful. I even sometimes now buy a piece of pottery I like, or a basket that has been mended, or one that needs mending, because I realize that being marred by chip or two doesn’t distract from either the beauty or usefulness of an item. Just as the “mended cracks” in my spirit and in my life I think don’t detract from either my own beauty or usefulness.
I also realize that the patina of wear and use in an antique item doesn’t make it less valuable than an identical item that is “new,” instead, they add to the value. We may not be a “nice, normal family” like my grandparents and my mother pretended we were, but there are some fantastic individuals in it, and those that are not “fantastic individuals” aren’t going to slime the rest of us with their shame. I’ll hold my head up both in my home and in my community, and if others gossip about us, that’s okay. If they are talking about me, they are leaving some other poor soul alone!
If you look closely you may see my Mended Cracks, but I’m no longer ashamed of them.
God bless.
Oxy, just click in the photo to see the whole quote!
Snow – it takes me to the google search page…
Click on the very first photo. I’m on an iPhone and it works differently
Breckgirl, thank you for sharing your meditation and dream imagery. I thought of the lyrics from the 70’s song by Bread, ….and when my love for life is running dry,
You come and pour your self for me……
Water is a symbol of the unconscious and I used to visualize a well…I was the well….
And then there is the song by, Emmylou Harris, “Searching for the Water From a Deeper Well.’
Breckgirl,
wow, what powerful imagery. It’s so vivid and true. When we pour ourselves out for spaths, there is nothing left for any of the people who are able to use and appreciate us.
I’m still studying them, and I learn every day, mostly about myself. I find it amazing the power they have over our emotions.
I KNOW a spath when I see one, yet they overpower my emotions all the time, EVEN when they are as blatant as the nose on their faces. I FEEL compelled to try to fix them. It’s so strange. I don’t know how they do it.
The best example I can give is the story about my little spath sister. She had her own coffee catering business, that I helped her set up and did her bookkeeping for her. All she had to do was provide the coffee service and be nice to her customers. She was hired by a realestate agent to serve coffee at an open house, (years ago when the market was hot). She accidentally calculated the tax wrong by 25 cents. The bill was over $600. Guess what she did.
wait for it.
yep, she billed the client for the 25 cents. The client was incensed.
I know you all may not believe me, but this is typical spath behavior – particularly if the spath isn’t very smart. It is an example of LACK OF GRATITUDE. All that spaths can do is count points, like in a game. They don’t get the value of good will. Some of them do, to a point, but then they screw it up because they never really understood it.
OK so you all might think I’ve gone off the subject, because I was talking about what I learn every day about spaths, then I went off about the 25 cents.
But the point is, I TRIED SO HARD TO EXPLAIN TO HER WHY SHE SHOULD JUST ABSORB THE 25 CENT LOSS. The agent could have recommended her to so many more clients, etc…
I don’t have to tell all of you this stuff… you know. My point is, why did I try to fix someone’s thinking, who is not fixable? I thought LOGIC would prevail. But it never did. Like Breck Girl explained, I was pouring my energy into a cracked pot. It was just going to waste.
My sister might seem like she’s really dumb to you. But she isn’t dumb, she’s just SOOOOOOOOO SELFISH that she can’t overlook 25 cents. She’s the one who once told me, “Skylar, it’s ok to be evil, everyone is evil, you’re evil, I’m evil, my husband and your husband are evil. Everyone – except mom- is evil.”
I know some spaths that are geniuses. They would never fuss over a quarter. But they still screw up in the same manner. Their lack of gratitude makes them lose out in the long run.
They are all the same, just different in degrees. We can learn alot from spaths — about how not to be.
Breckgirl,
Both a very powerful meditative vision to use as well as the dream.
Sky,
Right on the money with lack of gratitude. When I bought spath a gift (for Sinterklaas, Christmass and his brithday) three times his utter selfishness showed. The Sinterklaas gift was a cellphone. He was always using my cellphone and took it along that I couldn’t use my own anymore, plus my cellphone had not a limitation financially. So, I decided to buy him a cellphone and a refill paycard (and could buy his own paycards afterwards). He happened to come along with me, so I told him. For me cellphones are something to phone someone. Don’t need something fancy. But he started to sulk when he couldn’t get an IPhone (I had no money for that). I eventually ended up negotiating with him. A phone that looked flashy enough, but was affordable enough… It still was more expensive than my own cellphone. But I was flabbergasted at the fact that he was so greedy, irrational and ungrateful over the cellphone gift.
He was also using my IPod all the time (this was a new one I had bought after he ‘lost’ or rather ‘pawned off’ my previous one), and taking it everywhere. Even asked me whether he could take it back to Nicaragua with him for the supposed 3 months he’d had to stay there before being allowed back in the EU. Told him no, though. But instead I was gonna buy him a MP3 player for christmass. Again he tried to haggle. But this time I held my foot down, telling him that we only had so much in the bank and I was only willing to pay so much out of it for the MP3 player. I let him pick the model that fell within the range himself. He ended up calling me a cheapskate who only bought stuff that broke fast (I guess he took the MP3 player to the beach in Nicaragua against my advice and sand is never good for apparatus). And that says the man who used his cellphone to call people and say “Call me back” so they’d call on their money instead of his.
Since the whole divorce thing from his ex-wife was a real hassle it was I who ended up gonig to Nicaragua for a visit instead, and during he’d have his birthday. I bought no electronics (since he told me I only bought cheap stuff that broke too soon) but I bought a very nice shirt in Egyptian cotton. He loved to dress smart and his best shirt had been ripped during a New Year’s fight. So he knew he was getting a gift, but I had kept it a secret. When he got it, the first thing he said was, ‘Oh, I thought you bought me an IPod’. And then he complained it was too warm a shirt: about a SUMMER shirt in EGYPTIAN cotton.
That was the last time I ever bought him a gift. He knew very well there was a very limited budget, and he knew himself how to buy the cheapest groceries and turn it into a great meal and wanted me to be grateful of him for being so economical with food. But the moment he would get something of his own (which he either ended up breaking or losing) then he forgot about all of that and resented me for not buying the most expensive out there.
My mom later told me that when I slipped the info about his reaction to the shirt (she went along to help me find a shirt for him) she suddenly realized, “That man is no good.”
Joyce, I think that it’s a fear of shame – fear-based-shame – that causes people to keep their mouths shut.
Perfection…we have that idealization drilled into our heads from the times that we’re born, I think. We must be perfect, in every way. Some of my best students were former-perfectionists. There is no such thing as “perfection” either in the arts, or in Life.
Your article has inspired an idea for me, once I’m settled. A body of work of imperfections that are both alarming and acceptable.
I am a sum total of my good decisions, bad decisions, and seemingly benign decisions. Factored into that sum total is the flawed system of core beliefs that I was taught, as a child. That system of beliefs was faulty, and my inner child is screaming to color outside of the lines.
Thanks, again, for such a powerful message.
Brightest blessings
Dear Breckgirl, I couldn’t help but have tears fill my eyes when I read your post…and visualize the little pitcher. I also have a couple (not a collection, just a couple) of pottery pitchers that I love and use…broke one the other day and it was like losing an old friend as I tossed the fractured pieces out.
Yea, truthy, that fear of shame, that fear that the world will know we are not perfect…I’ve lived that way my whole life. Only “perfect” is “good enough” and if I am not perfect then I am not okay, and so I have to hide my “not perfect” things so no one knows I am not perfect because if they found out I was not perfect the world would end. And “round and round she goes, where she stops no one knows”—-but I have finally realized that no one is perfect and I don’t have to hide the fact I am not perfect either. Or pretend my family is perfect.
Yea, standing up in that court room was definitely hard…my son D asked me later if I had seen the judge’s face as I was talking> I said “No, I couldn’t see past my own eye lashes” and that was true, I couldn’t see anything in the court room though my eyes were open. He said the judge looked at me, and his mouth dropped open, then he would look at my DIL and the Trojan Horse and then back at me, and by then I would have said something else that they had done and his mouth would drop open more and he would look back at them, his head swiveling like someone watching a tennis match. LOL” I don’t doubt it either.
It was a vindicating moment for me though, as my egg donor’s attorney that had FOUGHT so hard to keep the Trojan horse psychopath and my DIL in control of my egg donor’s home (and money) and sneered at me and called me names was back from vacation that morning and just HAPPENED (thank you Jesus!) to come into the court room and see me before court started and asked me what I was doing there and I pointed over to my DIL and the TH-P sitting in orange jump suits changed to other inmates and told him what they had done.
We don’t always get the vindication that we would like, but that was a vindicating moment for me. Erin Brock’s vindication was when her X was arrested for drug dealing and it was in the local news paper…after he had told everyone else what a skank she was. Sometimes we get the vindication and sometimes not, but it really doesn’t matter if the world sees the truth or not, we just have to hold on to our own truth even if no one else believes it or not.
Columbus may have been the only one that believed the world was round, but it didn’t change the shape of the world because he was the onnly one who believed the truth. We just have to hold on to what is RIGHT and TRUE whether others believe it or not.
Is this where the term “crack pot” came from?
I just thought of that. Maybe….?
Does anyone know?
Eralyn, good question. 😉