There is no straight line to healing after an encounter with a psychopath. No clearly defined path that says, step here, go there. For most of us, there are no tools in our lifeboats that will aid us in the process of letting go so that we can move on to live and laugh and love again.
Healing from such an encounter takes energy. It requires a personal commitment to doing what it takes to clear your mind, body and spirit of his or her lies. Healing takes time.
When I first got my life back after the psychopath was arrested I looked at the devastation around me and cried. How could a once vibrant, successful, loving woman have fallen so far from her path? How could she have lost her grace and dignity by loving such a man? I didn’t want to believe that woman was me. I didn’t want to believe my life had crumbled to such disarray. But to heal, I had to accept what was and let go of my disbelief that it couldn’t be true. It was true. I had loved a man who lied. I had fallen into his web and let go of all that I had held true.
Stepping Into Acceptance
That was my first step. Acceptance. Acceptance of my life that day, in that moment. It was in tatters. My home was gone. My life savings evaporated. My belongings disappeared. I had to accept where I was at without falling victim to wishing, ”˜if only’. I had to accept that I had done things that hurt my daughters, my family, my friends, myself. I had to accept that in order to keep the appearance of that relationship alive, I too had lied, deceived and manipulated. In giving into him I had to accept that I had given up on me to the point that I no longer existed as a separate individual. I had conspired with him in my destruction. I had to accept I was a victim of abuse.
Acceptance was hard. Facing the truth of what I had done and what I had become hurt. But, to be free of the past I had to face myself and love myself for the wounded, abused woman that I was and acknowledge that I did not have to stay there. I had to accept that only I could create the change in my life that I desired, that it was up to me. If I wanted to move beyond his abuse, move away from that painful place I found myself in, I would need to find my courage and turn up for myself so that I could step into forgiveness.
The Gift of Forgiveness
And that was my second step. Forgiveness. For all that I had done and said and become that hurt me and everyone in my life. For, no matter how blind or stupid or gullible I had been, no matter how unintentional my actions, I had betrayed the sacred trust I entered into when I gave birth to my daughters. In my betrayal of that trust, I had broken my commitment to be a conscious and loving mother that they could count on to be there for them when they needed me.
Truth was, I hadn’t been there for them. In keeping myself locked in that man’s unholy embrace, I had hurt them. They too had suffered through what he had done, who I had become and what had become of me. For all of us to heal, I needed to forgive myself and to ask for their forgiveness and be willing to accept their right to be angry without picking up their anger for them. In forgiveness, I could lovingly let them move through their pain without forcing them to let it go before they were ready. And in giving them that grace, I gave myself the grace to feel my feelings, without having to deny them, denigrate them, or escape them through searching for myself in someone else’s arms.
My Commitment to Myself
Through forgiveness, I found myself taking my third step. Commitment. To myself, to my daughters, to those who love me. Through my commitment to do what was loving and necessary to get what I needed in my life, I made a commitment to turn up for me, without fear, without judgement, without hesitation. I made a commitment that I would honour my journey, no matter how painful, and keep myself safe on the path to healing by not falling back into remorse, self-denigration, self-abasement and guilt. By committing myself to love myself, warts and all, I gave myself the grace and space to move into my fourth loving step.
Embracing Gratitude
Gratitude. Yes, he had hurt me. Betrayed me. But I was alive. I had the chance to heal, the opportunity to begin again. By stepping into an attitude of gratitude I chose to create harmony, not discord, with all my words and actions. To bemoan what he had done, to focus on his misdeeds would have held me pinioned to the pain of his passing through my life. I deserved better. And so, I embraced gratitude and let regret and remorse go. I did not need to get even with him. I did not need revenge. What I needed was to find my peace of mind, to create a life of harmony without him in it. Every night I wrote out my list of gratitudes, I thanked my angels, God, the Divine. I gave thanks for my life, my daughters’ lives, the love that filled my heart and the opportunity to make amends.
Making Amends
Making amends was my fifth step. Making amends does not mean putting straight other people’s lives. It doesn’t mean righting the past. It means, staying true to who I am today. To keeping my commitments, my word, my promises. It means consciously choosing each step of my journey with dignity and grace, treating my world and everyone in it with integrity, being honest and open about my feelings, my life, my journey. Making amends means asking those I have hurt what they need and being committed to do what it takes to give it to them. Making amends means knowing who I am today and being the best me I can be so that I can live my sixth and final step without reservation.
Living with Grace
There is no easy way through the pain of having loved a psychopath. But, no matter the darkness of the path, the rocks and potholes strewn across the way, the fierce winds that blow or stormy seas we navigate, living with grace gives me the courage to face life’s ups and downs without losing my way. Like a sailboat aiming for shore, my journey is not a straight line. I continually correct my course without losing site of my objective. Standing in my ”˜I’, staying focused on my journey, I am not pulled from my centre by the winds that blow around me. With grace, I turn up, pay attention, speak my truth and stay unattached to the outcome. With grace, I am free to be all that I am meant to be, confident that my best is good enough.
Star,
I bet EB could find out 🙂
2 cop.,
Nice thinkin in keeping documentation. I wonder if they’ve stopped to think that you’d even bother to fight any of it. that just dawned on me the other day. Spaths are really stupid that way. They think that once they bite you in the ass, and bite it good, you won’t go lick your wounds and bite back HARDER….I don’t think they think that far ahead with all their entitlement, grandiosity and arrogance 🙂
So that sounds as if it could be in your favor 🙂
LL
LL-I’m sure they don’t have the slightest idea that I have anything planned. The HR lady got off thinkin she was intimidating me but I let her know how stupid she was on day one. I think she totally forgot about the first confrontation she had with me. I’m just plottin right now but I’m ready to put my plan into action so I need the pitbull.
Sky,
One of the main reasons I have not told my parents about the spath is because my dad would say “I told you on-line dating was a bad idea”. I have beat myself up enough for putting myself out there as a target & certainly don’t need to hear it from anyone else.
Ox & Aussie, thanks for the support. My cousin & his fiance are very nice and have been together 10 years already, so their wedding has been long anticipated. I AM happy for them, and will try not to let my grief get in the way of celebrating. Wearing waterproof mascara just to be on the safe side though.
Aussie, true too that setting boundaries has been a challenge for me. I do love my friends and family but there are definitely times I feel taken advantage of, or at least my feelings not considered. I’ll keep “practicing”.
Good night –
ValleyGirl –
” my dad would say “I told you on-line dating was a bad idea”. I have beat myself up enough for putting myself out there as a target & certainly don’t need to hear it from anyone else.”
You could always tell them that MINE was introduced to me by very old, very good friends who had “known” him for YEARS. They are decent people are have been completely horrified to discover what he really is underneath the nice-guy act. (She even comes to court with me as my support person…)
While it is true that online dating is scarey, dangerous turf, there are just as many of us who have been targeted in “real” life, without any computer enhancement.
Guys, the backspath worked for me. All I wanted was to get him off my reptile site and out of my life. I have now been spath-free for 2 years. If I found out what happened to him, I would be inviting him back into my life by proxy. I don’t really want anything to do with him. Out of sight, out of mind. If he ever appears on the reptile site again, I will deal with it then. My guess is that he moved back to Arkansas. He supposedly has family there unless he lied about that too. They will probably take care of him since he doesn’t want to work
Oxy, where did you find the statistics on tattoos and Hepatitis C? One of my reptile site friends is a nationally reknowned tattoo artist in the Chicago area. I thought I might pay him a visit some day to get one myself. But I don’t want to get Hep C. I have never heard of that statistic.
Star, Back about 9 years ago while I was director of student health for a college, one of the mothers brought me a newspaper article about a study of Hep C and tattoos. I no longer have the article or the information on the study (I found it) but it was done on NON-prison tattoos, so just professionally done ones. OUt of a LARGE number of people done, 30% with any tattoo had Hep C. If they had COLORED ink in addition, it went up.
First off this study does NOT prove that the tattoos CAUSE the Hep C, because it did not control for other possible causes, but it does show a CORRELATION between the people who get tattoos and the people with Hep C. Hep C IS at some points sexually transmittable under some conditions, but just because a person HAD IT ONCE doesn’t mean that they will easily transmit during sex. There are frequent cases where husbands and wives one will have it and the other never get it. But also where one gets it and the other does too. There may be some new studies out on the transmission sexually but I haven’t looked any up lately you can go to the Centers for Disease control and look them up if you are interested.
I PERSONALLY am convinced that the transmission of Hep C IS DONE SOMEWHAT IN TATTOO joints….not sure how, but from most likely incompletely sterilized instruments or reusing of inks. They never did find out how that dentist in Florida who was HIV + gave HIV to 5 patients…but they did prove he did transmit it somehow. Since that time years ago the sterilization of dental hand sets and instruments, taking into account the back splash of saliva and blood onto the handsets means they must also be sterilized.
So, just to make sure I will buy a NEW GUN and NEW INK and then get someone else to do the tattoo…call me paranoid, but that’s okay, cause you’d be right where disease is concerned.
I realize that tattoos are “popular” and “fashionable” now, but they are a permanent addition to the body, and I just imagine how one would look on some 80 year old body versus how it would look on some “cute young thing.” LOL I would not want something FOR DECORATION that would not WASH OFF.
As for a lot of the piercings that are done now—I’ll pass on those too…I’ve seen people with tongue piercings that nearly died, seen horrible other infections too. I’ve got pierced ears and that’s enough—actually more than enough.
I’ll just decline to share any kind of intimate bodily contact with anyone unless I know their status from a lab report….yep, that’s me, paranoid as heck! If someone doesn’t care enough about me to wait til the lab report comes back, he doesn’t know me well enough or care enough about me to share my bed.
Thanks, Oxy, that never occurred to me. I know you can get Hep C from acupunture needles as well. Something to think about. Did you ever see the SNL skit about lower back tattoos? It’s pretty hilarious. A young woman got “Pretty Lady” tattooed across her lower back when she was about 20. It showed time lapse photography as whe aged. When she was about 70, it looked like “Pretty Sad”. LOL
I have wanted to get a redtailed boa constrictor tattooed around my arm for a while, but it’s just a fantasy and not practical. If I ever did it, I’d drive to Chicago and have my famous friend do it.
And Oxy, I know you and Henry are going to hook up one of these days. You two should know each other’s sexual histories very well by now. LOL
NY Legal Question.
My attorney is advising me that until the court signs the divorce and custody papers, anything that I might find/prove against my X in the meantime is a non-issue-inadmissible in court.
She states that my findings would have to substantiate a change since the divorce. (until the court signs, the divorce is not final.)
However, the other opinion is that; whatever I catch him doing, he is doing against an agreement WE both have signed. examples my be, placing our child in day care when is supposed to be daycare and/or leaving our son with his GF during HIS visitation, working while receiving UI and not reporting it.
Anyone?
Thanks.
FAD