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.
Star,
I see the ‘I’m doing it all wrong’, and ‘why am I so scared to ask him out’ type of thing as a sign that something inside of you knows it’s not the right time or right man.
First of all the feelings you have at the moment are attraction and the desire for the opportunity to bond. Since you haven’t dated each other yet at all, actually telling him how you feel is not an appropriate thing. Meanwhile the desire wishes to hurry things up and this makes you want to put stuff into action, and when you don’t you end up blaming yourself and starting to fear you’ve been giving wrong signals of not being available and such…
Stop interpreting his behaviour in reference to you. Stop wondering whether that look, thta touch, that avoidance, that early going home is in direct response to you.
A man doesn’t need you to tell him that you are available for him, nor any coaxing. If he wants to ask you out, he’ll ask you out. If he doesn’t ask you out, then that does not necessarily reflect badly on you. He might ask you out, he might not. But if he can help a woman out of her sweater, and can ask her to dance, he’s well capable of asking her out too. So, please stop beating yourself up over it. For years I beat myself up over it, if the guy I wanted to ask me out didn’t, and time showed that these men weren’t even really relevant to my life and never would have been. What is holding you back imo is valid reasoning (wrong timing, too much wishing before actually knowing, …), more than fear.
Thanks for responding, darwinsom! I feel a little more relaxed and released today. He truly is a special man, but you’re right, if he doesn’t feel that way about me, then I can’t make him. Several of my friends and a recent massage therapist I saw have all told me that I just need to ask him out or at least tell him how I feel. But I agree with you – it’s not appropriate. However, I don’t think I can continue to dance with him week after week without some sort of communication, because I do have my feelings stirred up. I feel that I have stumbled across someone very special. But the salsa scene is filled with players. If he is not one now, he will likely turn into one after dancing with so many different women and having them all swoon like I do. I probably should now find a 3rd hobby where there are a lot of men who aren’t players. Sigh. I will see him in class again on Thursday. This is so difficult for me. I’m accustomed to men just asking me out.
Star, I think this Salsa interest can be a really good thing, if you can love it for what it is…..an opportunity to feel sexy, and feminine…to enjoy the dance and the attraction, the dynamics between men and women….to feel a mans arms around you….all good stuff….and maybe he will ask you out….but maybe not….so? Maybe he’s there because he wants to experience all the good stuff without any complications, maybe not…..so? Is your interest in dancing Salsa just an attempt to find a man, or do you genuinely like Salsa for the sake of salsa?
Your desires are already too big….your expectations, your fears, your plans, your doubts, your disappointments…are spoiling something that should just be fun. Why? What is so damned important about nailing down a relationship? Just lighten up and have fun.
Starz,
I think this guy knows how you feel already. You mentioned before you didnt want to be the one to ask him out first. Just enjoy the classes and let him ask you out or not.
Stars you have worked on your self esteem so hard..it’s really all about how we feel about us. We cant find someone to complete us and make us whole..our live’s are our’s and their live’s are theirs. Happy ever after only happens in fairy tales and movies, just chill and have a good time with everybody at the dance place.
read somewhere that a person should feel complete all by themselves. I know personally i dont need a woman to feel that i complete her. i think confidence is really sexy. i love it when my wife stands up for herself. when she does, it usually means i am about to eat crow as it were, but the attraction i feel for her when she does far outweighs having to admit i was wrong.
rgc
i had another pretty good weekend. noticed that occasionally my wife reads things into my comments or actions. if i try to help when i see her struggling, she may interpret it as criticism. i conveyed to her about three times this weekend that a statement or action wasnt meant as a critique. do these spaths make you feel like everything they say or do reflects upon you? so you stay in a state of “what can i do better”??
she diddnt seem nearly so sensitive to these things before.
rgc
Hens, I’m very confused because some of my friends here (male and female) are both telling me that this guy won’t necessarily know I think he’s special if he sees me flirting and dancing with all these other guys. They tell me guys are not good at reading signs and that I need to be upfront and blunt with them. That’s what’s confusing. I also know several guys who are happily married who said their wives made the first move because they were too shy. I just feel that life is so short to let opportunities pass me by. Also, I don’t need this guy to complete me. I just have a special feeling for him. I don’t think there is a problem with letting myself have feelings for someone. I cannot help or stop the feelings anyway. I just don’t know what to do about them. I went through this for 2 years with the neighbor and I don’t want to go through it again. I might just have a talk with him after class on Thursday and be done with it. That way if we’re not on the same page, at least I can let it go and move on.
Thank you darwinsmom and kim frederick for the replies about the tarot cards. I’ve had a few readings with other decks and layouts through the years but have only ever used the Motherpeace deck. So it’s very interesting to learn about other decks, particularly since you are both using decks that are cornerstones in tarot.
Thanks too for saying it’s good to see me here, kim! I am here mostly lurking.
Stargazer, I’m glad to read that you are taking heed of the salsa dancing situation. Over the weekend, I heard a very interesting piece on NPR about music and why we evolved to have music.
http://www.npr.org/2012/08/26/159998889/a-pachyderms-ditty-prompts-an-elephantine-debate
What connects to your situation is the idea mentioned that the same oxytocin that gets released during sex/orgasm gets released when people make music together. I can easily imagine that salsa dancing has the same effect.
My heart goes out to you because I am in essentially the same place as you. I want you to find love and give me hope of finding it too! 🙂 I think you’ve gotten good advice here although changing your hopes and expectations is easier said than done.
rgc, I am largely a lurker here and haven’t read all of your postings. I have seen some others here give you some advice to focus more energy on yourself and less on your wife. With all due respect, I feel a smothered feeling when I read your postings about your wife’s healing process. As a result, I easily imagine that your wife must also feel smothered by your concern. For example, in your post above, maybe she’s not more sensitive, maybe she’s learning to tell you how she really feels. All of your study of spaths, while helpful, also seems to give you a third point of the triangle and a convenient place to focus away from the real issue, which is your marriage. I wish you the best working through all this and I hope these comments are helpful for you.
Kim, I took up salsa just because I really wanted to learn it – I love to dance, and also I thought it would be a good way to meet guys. It was all fun until I started having feelings for J. I didn’t expect to meet someone like him. I didn’t even know men like him existed. He has made quite an impression on me. I wasn’t particularly looking for someone – he just came along. If I were the guy and he was the girl, I would just ask him out. But because I’m a girl, I feel like I have to wait. It doesn’t seem fair. I honestly cannot help how I feel and to whom I’m attracted. I am just human after all. I’ve had a lot of contact with many of these guys, long enough to really get a feel for them and bond with them in some ways. I have all kinds of little harmless crushes. But J is special. I honestly don’t know if he knows. Though I tell him how nice it is to dance with him, etc., he also sees me flirting with other guys, hugging them, and being a social butterfly. Guys can be insecure, too. This is what my friends think is happening.
Sparklehorse, oh great, I’m having oxytocin released dancing with all these guys and they are not having the same effect. LOL Figures. Story of my life. I guess I’ll be looking for a different hobby now.
Star,
your bottled up feelings are gathering a momentum of their own. Since you have had a limited social contact with this guy, you can’t really “know” him well enough to feel so strongly. If you do, something is getting skewed.
That said, it’s time to take the reigns and do something about it. Just ask him out for an after salsa dinner or drink. Make it casual. Tell him it would be nice to get to know each other better. DON’T tell him you have “feelings” for him. That will scare the crap out of him. And if he was a spath, it would make him salivate. Maintain proper emotional boundaries, just get to know him better outside the salsa setting.
The salsa social setting is different because it allows people to break through boundaries, be sexy, flirtatious, touch etc… and all of this is sanctioned in the name of dance. Theater is another setting that allows boundaries to be broken. I guess that is why human culture created these little “release mechanisms”. However, once outside of those venues, boundaries should again be strictly enforced.
If he agrees to meet with you outside the salsa setting, remember to maintain emotional boundaries. It isn’t just for your protection, boundaries are also to help HIM feel comfortable. Eventually, you will probably become closer, but take it slow.
I’m no expert, obviously. This is just what I think based on my learning for the past 3 years of trying to figure this out. And of course, nothing ever happens all neat and orderly when it comes to human relations, so play it by ear, but remember the bottom line is boundaries on your emotions.
Also, think about the consequences. If you and he become an item, then you break up badly, you will hate to see each other at the salsa group. One of you will have to quit. Maybe that’s what he is thinking about and that’s why he hasn’t asked you out. That’s why being VERY casual and VERY slow will allow either one or both of you to “bow out” of the relationship gracefully if it doesn’t seem to work out. Then you can maintain your salsa friendship.
I think it’s a risk worth taking though, as long as you go really really slow.