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.
Breckgirl, I don’t want you to misread what I’m saying. I don’t feel like I’m lucky for attention from a guy. I get TONS of attention from guys. I just feel a certain kind of joy and aliveness in his company. I cannot describe it, and I can’t remember if/when I’ve felt this way before. I don’t think there is anything wrong with feeling this way, or that I should try to limit it in any way. It feels good. I get a lot of good feelings dancing with all the guys, but it’s different with him. I generally choose my friends based on whether it feels good to be around them. I don’t see this as a problem. It shows me the levels of joy that are possible. I think the problem is all the drama that my mind is creating around it – going into fear and limitation. “It will never work. It can’t be. Every time I like someone, I screw it up, he probably feels this way about a lot of other women” etc., etc. This is what I’m working on, so if there is any possibility for something happening with him, it will at least have a chance to flourish, instead of my pushing him away with fear. I definitely enjoy the feeling I get around him. He is a very special person. I have several people in my life who are very special – they are healers, and their presence lights me up inside. One is a massage client. Another is a doctor I met through work. And J is another one. I honestly think he recognizes something special in me too. But if not, I will just move on. In any event, I am just going about my life and distracting myself. One thing you said that stuck in my mind that is very helpful is to relax and know the right person will come along and that I am worthy of this person. That really helps. But at the same time, he is still someone who could potentially be very special to me. Most men don’t “get” me on a lot of levels. I feel that J does, and that is what makes me feel so joyful around him. I know I’m the prize worth winning, but there really are very few men who could truly appreciate a woman like me. I feel J is one, and that’s why he’s worth taking a risk on.
I just took my 6+ foot boa constrictor for a walk around the neighborhood and ran into my gorgeous rock star neighbor. He’s another one I crushed on for a long time (2 years) but never told him. It was clear looking into his eyes that he is scared. I could see it in his eyes, in spite of how really beautiful of a man he is. I definitely had a little charge talking to him – we have a lot of chemistry between us. And it’s a nice distraction from thinking about J. But J is definitely the TYPE of man I would like to attract. If he is unavailable, then I may consider hanging out in places where I’m likely to meet others like him. He does Tai Chi, which is a form of spiritual practice that has to do with being completely present. So maybe I can take up something similar or start going to some meditation groups. I don’t want to limit myself to only the salsa clubs because a lot of those guys are players. Granted, I have a lot of male friends I meet at the clubs, and I have a warm connection with them as well. But with J it is on a different level. I really can’t describe it because I’ve never felt like this before.
I will try to reign in my excitement until I know that something is actually happening between us though. And I always keep my options open. I actually plan to do that up until the day I marry, if that day should ever come. Without a commitment from a man, he will never get all of me to himself.
Star, You may not believe this, but, if there is one thing I am gratefull for, it’s that I finally quite believing in the perfect man, and ideal love. I finally quite looking for the right one and decided to become the right one.
I am so gratefull that I’m not still obssessing, second guessing, trying to figure him out, trying to decide my next move, kicking myself in the ass because I made the wrong move, blaming myself for being too forward, or not forward enough…playing hard to get, and then, spilling my guts….
I am done with all that. What you end up with is an ambivalent lover, who wants you when it’s convenient, and let the games go on, and on and on.
You said it in a nut shell, when you admitted your sel-esteem issues, your fears that you aren’t good enough, fears that you’ll scare him away, or that you’ll miss an opportunity…..
This is about you. This is an inside job, and no man will fix it, ever.
In
fact, nothing will change in your life and the path that your relationships take until you focus all that energy on you, and learning to be okay, just the way you are, and quite pouring everything you’ve got into an outside source.
I think it’s a trap into an obsessive relationship, the minute we try to make excuses, like, maybe he’s shy, or maybe he’s threatened, or maybe he’s intimidated….oh hog-wash. Maybe he’s not interested, or maybe he has really good reasons not to get involved at this time. It’s really a little manipulative and insulting to the man to think that he can’t decide what he wants because he’s too shy, or intimidated or, what-ever.
This rush to action is what love-bombing is and it’s what toxic people do…they do it because they confuse intensity with intimacy, and it’s usually disasterious.
I don’t entertain the hope for romantic love anymore, it’s just not that important.
If, one day, I should trip over a genuine companion, friend…who later beomes a lover and partner, so be it…but, I will be damned if I give up my life in the pursuit of something that hurts.
Guys, this is starting to feel a little negative to me. I am not particularly “looking” for a perfect man. I’ve dated many men who were much less than “perfect.” I just so happened to meet someone really special that I like. It’s very rare, and I wasn’t expecting it. It can and does happen for people. And yes, it does have me a little discombobulated, and THAT is what I need to work on, not my feelings for a guy, but how to enjoy them and to go after what I want without fear and anxiety. Sometimes love *can* happen. You don’t always have to walk away from every good thing you feel for someone. Sometimes you can enjoy those feelings and it’s not always a bad thing. It feels like such a downer to read all of these posts. My main issue is fear and anxiety. Not the fact that I met someone special that I really like a lot. There is NOTHING wrong with that.
http://www.hindyassociates.com/love.html
Not trying to rain on your parade, Star. It’s your parade. Just sharing my experience.
Kim, Oh hogwash..
Ya know I say the same thing’s you do..Kim…..but be honest with me, don’t ya really wish we didn’t feel this way? Do you waaay back in the deepest part of your heart yearn for that human connection with one special somebody? I do. But I dont think it will ever happen so I just make the most of being alone.. Sure there is alot of good sense in what you say..but I mean dont you still day dream a little bit about Mr. WHERE ARE YOU?
Hens, I can’t honestly say it never enters my mind…once in a blue moon, but I pretty quickly run that thought right out the door, because, I’m much happier now than I was trying to chase it down or make it work.
I have spent way too much time searching for my knight in shining armour…it was THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT THING IN MY LIFE. The fact that it was that important was a set-up….I was automatically the person with less power, less control…I just cared too much, it meant too much to me.
I can honestly say it doesn’t mean that much to me anymore.
I think the odds of finding the love of my life, at this point are slim, and maybe that’s a part of it, but I really am okay with it. I feel free and I like it.
Ok – Well I gave up on finding a Knight in Shining Armour, but a hunk in aluminum foil would sure be nice.
Hens, for me, I think it is my life lesson. It is the one lesson I am on this earth to learn, at least this time around. Yes, a hunk in tin foil sounds like a hoot right about now, I could never just enjoy the hoot…it had to be the great romance of my life, every time, and it just became oppressing.
I escaped a disfunctional family system by getting married at 17, and becoming a mother. Then, divorced him, and living on wel-fare for a couple of years, then met my super heroe in a white suit and married him, thinking he would rescue me, but, alas, he was a narcissistic….sex addict….womanizer…abuser, ( I always forget that part, why is that…the cheating I never forget…) then, my father died, and I took my inheritance and left….finished a college degree…but, I always knew, I had never really grown up and had to take care of myself, and honstly, I was afraid.
That is what I’m doing now. I did everything backwards. But, I am learning that I can do this by myself.
My relationships with men were always tinged with some kind of power imbalance. Now, I am taking care of myself, and I don’t have to accept shoddy behavior from anyone.
Star -You write:
“but how to enjoy them and to go after what I want without fear and anxiety. Sometimes love *can* happen.”
There is an enormous difference between going after what YOU want and “love happening” – which is organic and grows out of knowing each other. You have mostly described lust not love. And you know lust is okay as long as you recognize what it is and what it is not.
Kim is absolutely right – it is an inside job. You seek an outside source to fill you. The feelings you so enjoy – not that they are not enjoyable – but they are more important to you than you protecting your own self… come from the attention of others rather than from your own secure love of self.
The fact that this is starting to feel negative to you may be because instead of being able to absorb the honest and concerned reactions generated by your posting of your thinking and possible behaviors – honest concern from women who have been there – you reject it out of hand as raining on your happy parade – maybe you do not want to examine honestly that you are sowing the seeds of your own destruction…
You have received a fairly consistent reaction across the posts here and you reject the message – so you will go post about it somewhere else and then possibly some where else until you get the support for indulging in unhealthy behavior patterns that will most likely not yield the thing you seek – a loving relationship with someone you find desirable and who also desires you.
As St. Paul exhorts – when the people in one town are deaf to your message – he suggests one shake the sand from their sandals and move on to others who ears are open.
Good luck to you.
oh my