By Ox Drover
I was led to believe as a child that we should “love unconditionally” and that we should “forgive unconditionally.” This was the rule around our house. I did start to notice, though, that while I was to apply this “unconditional forgiveness and love” to others, those same people did not always apply it to me.
When my children were born, I felt the first real and true “unconditional” love I had ever felt for anyone. I would gaze into the crib and watch my child sleep, little fists curled up, ten perfect little fingers with ten perfect little finger nails. The warmth of this truly “unconditional” love swept through my heart and made my eyes tear up with joy.
Even when my two-year-old son poured a full box of fish food into the aquarium and I had to clean it out and change the water the second time in a week, I did not stop loving him or hold a grudge against him for his behavior. I took the responsibility for his actions because I had left the fish food where he could reach it, and he didn’t know any better. I laughed as I cleaned out the aquarium that I would be so dumb to leave it where he could reach it a second time.
As my children grew and became more independent and self motivated teenagers, I would occasionally become quite frustrated and even angry with them for some of their behavior, especially defiant behavior, but it never dawned on me to not forgive them, or to hold a grudge or to stop loving them, no matter what they did, or even to fear them. I had no concept at that time, that one of my children might actually wish in a long term continuing way to do me harm. My love for them was, I thought, absolutely “unconditional.” Just as my love for my mother, I thought, was unconditional. No matter how angry I got, I knew that I loved her and no matter what she did that upset me or hurt me, it never dawned on me that I could ever stop loving her or that the things she did actually came from a deep down desire to control me, even if this resulted in my harm.
Though there was somehow a difference in how I was required to give her “unconditional forgiveness” and forget about anything she had ever done to me, while she would frequently and critically remind me of things I did as a defiant teenager, I still believed I loved her unconditionally, just like I loved my kids unconditionally, no matter what they did or said.
Throughout many years I held on to this belief, which, I am finding out now, is a fantasy. There are behaviors so heinous that I can no longer love someone. So, in truth, my love for my mother and even my love for my children is not truly “unconditional.” In truth, forgiveness does not include trust and a resumption of a relationship with that person if what they have done is so heinous that you fear them.
I realized that fearing a person precluded me from actually loving them. When you love someone you trust them. When you don’t trust someone, you can’t really love them. WOW! What a revelation for me! If I am afraid of a person, I cannot truly love them. I can be angry with someone I love, I can even be furious with someone I love. If I am afraid of a person, can’t trust them not to hurt me intentionally, how can I love that person at the same time? For me, it was impossible.
I might love the “fantasy” of them, but not the actual scary person that is the real them. When I realized, finally, that my psychopathic son wanted me dead and I began to be afraid of him, I realized the man sitting in a prison cell was truly evil, malicious and dangerous. I also realized I was a fool if I did not take the threat seriously. Then the “love” I had felt, that I had believed was truly unconditional, seeped out, and one day I realized it was gone.
My other biological son, who was at that same time married to a psychopath himself, had distanced himself from me, disappointed me, and to some extent devalued me, which saddened me, but I still loved him ”¦ because I was not afraid of him. In spite of everything, I realized he would not ever deliberately hurt me, or want to deliberately hurt me. Yet, I realized that if he became dangerous to me, or I started to fear him as well, that I would not be able to continue to love him either.
When my “good” son’s wife (now ex-wife) tried to kill him after he found out about the affair she was having with a psychopath, his “unconditional” love for her also evaporated. He started to realize that she was dangerous. Before the attack on my son with a gun by her and her boyfriend, my son had found out about the affair and offered to “go to counseling” and to “work it out” with her. He loved her, and her affair was not something that made him afraid of her. It was only his fear of her after the attempted murder that made him able to detach from his love from her. His love that he had thought was unconditional, his commitment to the marriage that he thought was total, was destroyed by the fear for his life.
I had always thought my loyalty and commitment to my family members and friends was total and unconditional. When I started to experience true fear of some of these people, it made me realize that the only unconditional love in the universe is God’s. The Bible tells me to “love” my enemies and pray for them, but the “love” commanded in the Bible is not the feeling, in my opinion, that we normally call, in English, “love.” The “love” commanded for our enemies means to do “good to them” rather than seek revenge, but it has nothing to do with the “love” we feel, that “squishy” feeling I had leaning over my infant’s crib. It was not that loving commitment to my child that meant I would have thrown my body in front of an attacker, freely giving my life to save my child.
On a thread on Lovefraud some time back, a blogger (whose name I no longer remember) wrote that it is noble of us to throw ourselves in front of a bus to save our loved one, but not when the bus is being driven by the psychopath we are trying to save! I can’t think of a better analogy that this one.
In the end, I realized that no healthy love is truly “unconditional.” I also realized that boundaries are healthy, and that I needed to learn to set boundaries. I needed to protect myself from attacks, and that my fear or distrust of someone precludes me from having a relationship with that person. Fear precludes me from loving them.
For most of my life I tried to live up to the fantasy of “unconditional love” for those in my family, even those in my family who were psychopaths. It never felt right to me, but at the same time, I was committed to this stance because it was what I thought was “normal” and “expected.” When my family devalued me, when the “unconditional” love from them depended on controlling me, using me, abusing me, and then instilling fear into me, I finally “saw the light.” I realize now that real love is kind, love is caring, love is respectful, love is many good things, but it is never about control, never about punishment, never about deliberately inflicting pain or fear. Healthy love is never completely “unconditional.”
You spoke my truth. I do not love my mother. I do not love my daughter. They both are hateful, cruel, manipulative sociopaths.I’m their favorite prey. I have wasted many years feeling guilty about this. I tell myself I love my dad because he never did anything DIRECTLY to me. Except turned a blind eye to the incredible abuse and hatred my mother directed towards me. But I can’t make myself say the words “I don’t love him”. It scares me too much .He’s the only human that tells me “I love you”. I have an inability to bond with people. I stay alone and quietly live my life. I have worked all my life with dogs. Training/handling/showing for all areas of competitions for their owners. I also train deaf and/or blind dogs so they can be placed with loving people. I train search and rescue dogs and I also do mountain search/rescues. So I’ve used my loner status to my advantage. I give these dogs everything I have inside. My mother did not kill the deeply loving and sensitive person that I am. She tried, but even as a child, I was “stronger” than her. Letting go is freedom from pain, guilt and the blame game.
Thanks for a great article. I’m not alone with this any longer.
‘My mother did not kill the deeply loving and sensitive person that I am. She tried, but even as a child, I was “stronger” than her.’
wow. what a comment!
Yes you are. very strong.
Hi redheeler:)You are not alone even if you have ‘loner status’
The people here are just fantastic.
xxxx
Redhealer: Yes, I “misspelled” your name. My Australian shepherds are my healers. When I was reeling with shock from the betrayals, I could turn to my dogs and give and receive love. They don’t suddenly turn and bite me. And they “get attitude” when they perceive that I’m not being fair in parceling out the love and treats. In short, they act the way people are “supposed to” in relationships — trustworthy, reliable, and affectionate without some twisted agenda.
I know that there are people who are as loving and trustworthy as my dogs. I’m finding that there seems to be a higher percentage of those sorts of people who are among those of us who have been targeted by sociopaths!
Animals do heal the wounded soul. They can only give unconditional love. Even the abused deaf/blind dogs that come to me. Love gives them back their true nature. I have a deaf heeler and he will discipline me for unfairness. I respect that immensely. Its not mindless control meant to hurt and demean. Animals can help those of us who have been severely injured by sociopaths learn to love again, live again.Step back out in the world and be seen for who we truly are. Its a slow process, but one that brings great rewards.
I’ve always said it should be mandatory that young couples wanting to marry and have babies need to observe the wolf family first. See how a real, loving family in progress behaves and take notes-there will be a required test! They have to pass or they can’t marry and bear young.
Dear Red Heeler,
Thank you for your comments and your sharing of your past. I trained Border Collies as working dogs, and used to breed them but just have my one working dog now and believe me I KNOW how wonderful they are. I applaud you for working with the intensity of search and rescue dogs. Before my husband died, we were planning on training S&R dogs (I used to do obedience trial training) but after my husband was killed in a plane crash I gave up the idea, I just didn’t have the strength at that time. maybe sometime in the future.
I’m sorry that your mother and your daughter are psychopaths and target you. MY P-son (I also had a P-sperm donor, and my egg donor is a toxic enabler) targets me as well, and my egg donor cooperates with him so I am NC with both of them, do not trust either, and if a “squishy feeling” in my heart is “love” then I do not love either of them.
I’m not a “loner” but at the same time I am not into big crowds of people I barely know and confine most of my socializing with people I know and trust and have eliminated the users and liars out of my circle of “trust.” My dogs don’t lie! Well, I may have to take some of that last statement back I have a Jack Russell that will “fib” once in a while and tells me he needs to pee when he is just wanting outside to chase the cats or squirrels!
I agree with you about a “test” before being allowed to reproduce! Unfortunately if you looked at the pedigrees of most of us, we would not have been allowed to reproduce because of the genetic components in our back grounds with psychopaths! Unfortunately, there are too many of them in the world. My family is rife with them. Actually, though, my biological son has decided NOT to have children because of the large number of Ps in our family tree on both sides of his family. As much as I would love to have grandchildren, I can’t say that I disagree with his choice.
Redheeler said: “Animals do heal the wounded soul. They can only give unconditional love.”
Animals really are great! I have four and they have been a great comfort and joy to me. They are also very good judges of character. Now I always pay attention to my dog’s “opinion” of a person. I think they have a primitive instinct that zeros in on a person’s true character.
OXDROVER:
I can’t speak to my son about his girlfriend and sometimes it reaaly gets to me. Yes, both his girlfriend and her mother KNOW I am onto them, “have their number” as you say. And Yes i know they HATE my GUTZE. (I have only met the mother TWICE in three years!! The second time, she invited herself into my home and refused to leave!! She was evil incarnate. I went no contact with her immediately.Her daughter is well on her way to full blown devil personified. She talks in this weird voice like “Pebbles” off the flinstones. She tries to pretend to be nice to me but she can’t quite do it. I told her the truth of what I thought of her and her mother when they were both in my home and my son had been in a serious car crash because of her,(I nearly lost him). But I nearly lost him again after that argument AND HAD TO MOVE OUT OF MY OWN HOME TO GET AWAY FROM HER>SHE REFUSED TO LEAVE. (Yeah..I went to live with the dentist psychopath)! Anyway, that is all ancient history now. I wrote my son a note yesterday. Just expressing my concern about how run down and thin he was looking and how I was worried she was running him into the ground.) I have given him my car as his was written off in the car accident (he had a punctured bowel and bad internal injuries). I had to move into a bedsitter after the P dentist and so he went to live with her and her insane family and became the chauffer, cleaner, cook etc.
Well, here is his reply:
May 26 at 11:36am
In response to your other message:
If I listened to you I would have no Girlfriends or friends in life.
Before Gillian you used to tell me Angus was narcissistic because his mother was.
Then it was brad
Now its Gillian
Do you see the pattern??
You need to understand the truth of the matter mum:
It is YOU who is the most NEEDY person in my life. I spend a large amount of my free time (and not so free time) running around for YOU.
Gillian has supported me more then you know.
For the last 3 YEARS that YOU have leaned of ME… I have leaned on Gillian and my friends
Who knows maybe I will get hurt in the future but it is you who hurts me the most now.
I need you to also understand that I need you to be HAPPY for me to keep surviving so I LOVE helping you and seeing you smile at the end of a hard days work. but you need to concentrate on YOUR life before you even consider helping mine. Help yourself to Help me…
But dont EVER pretend to THINK you understand Gillian or any of my friends.
I love you mum
Thankyou Oxy, I am going to get my PHD in “niceness” after your post. If thats what it takes to keep my son alive, I will start buying the bitch birthday cards, xmas cards and go the whole hog. I am staying NC with her mother though. She is a really evil psychopath.
PPS: He just turned 20
Tilly,
I would be interested to hear what advise Oxy has for you.
But I know what you told me about your sweet son on
Mothers Day and I will never forget it. HE IS a sweetheart.
I think if I were you because of his age I would not mention your dislike for the girlfriend. It will just manage over time to have him uncomfortable around you if she is there with him.
Unless you had reasons to fear for his life (with this girl)
I would welcome him to come over any time and even if that has to include her sometimes. This way at least you can see how the relationship is with your own eyes.