By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Many times our friends, in an effort to be helpful, but not actually understanding what we have been through in a “break up” with a psychopath, may tell us, “It’s time you move on with your life, and start dating again,” or words to that effect.
Any time you lose something important in your life, you suffer what is known as “grief.” It doesn’t matter if that something is a break up of a relationship, a job, a death of someone you love, or you lose the Miss America Pageant when you expected to win. Anything that was important and is lost causes grief.
Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, MD, an internationally known psychiatrist, studied grief in the terminally ill and wrote a book called On Death and Dying. It is a classic text for nurses, physicians and others who work with patients who are terminally ill.
You may ask why the grief she studied in the dying is the same grief we experience in other instances. Grief is grief, and one of the important aspects in dealing with grief is time.
Importance of time
I have learned about time that there are some things you just cannot rush. You cannot get a baby in one month by getting nine women pregnant. Healing from a significant loss is one of those things that cannot be rushed.
One of the things that seems to be consistent in failed relationships, especially with psychopaths, is the intense trauma experienced by those who have been abused by this class of individuals. It doesn’t matter if the relationship is with a psychopathic parent, psychopathic child, or psychopathic lover, the damage is intense. The grief afterwards is equally intense, and takes time to resolve.
Stages of grief
According to Dr. Kubler-Ross’s research, grief can be divided into several stages. Denial is the first stage. This is where the acceptance of the problem, the loss, is denied, because it is just too huge to comprehend “in one bite.” We tend to think, “No, no, this cannot be the truth; there must be some other explanation.” Denial, short term, is protective. It keeps us from having to acknowledge something that is too horrible to comprehend all at once.
“Sadness,” which is pretty self-explanatory, is another stage. As well as “bargaining,” or trying to figure out a way to “fix” the situation so it doesn’t have to be permanent. “Anger” is another normal part of the grief process. Any time we have been injured, we will feel a normal anger. The final stage in healthy grief leads to “acceptance” in which the grieving person comes to accept the reality of the situation and moves on with their lives.
Unfortunately, the grief process leading to acceptance does not proceed in a straight line from denial to acceptance. It vacillates back and forth, from denial to anger to sadness to bargaining to acceptance and back again, seemingly at random.
The death of a spouse, as an example, may take from 18 months to three or four years to adequately be resolved, in even a healthy grief resolution. Trying to “move on” from a huge loss too soon leaves us vulnerable to making poor decisions. Many people who have suffered emotional and other traumas from the psychopathic experience may try to ”move on” too soon and become vulnerable to getting into a relationship wit another psychopath.
I thought I was rescued
After my husband’s sudden death in an aircraft crash, I was totally devastated by his loss, especially in such a dramatic fashion. I felt alone, lonely, old and unlovable, and I was perfect fodder for the first psychopath who came along looking for his next “respectable wife” to cheat on. He love bombed me, and I thought I had been rescued from my sadness and my loneliness.
I was fortunate that I got out of the relationship before I married him, because I caught him cheating even before the marriage. I kicked him to the curb, but it broke my heart to do so. I ended up wounded again when I had little in the way of resources.
Not long after that trauma, my son decided to have me killed. I was again devastated by the realization that my son was truly a psychopath. I had denied it for decades, but was forced to finally face my emotional trauma.
Not completely healing from the trauma of my son killing Jessica Witt in 1992, I had failed to appropriately resolve my grief over that loss ”¦ the loss of the son I idolized. He wasn’t physically dead, but he was “dead” as far as a relationship was concerned, and I had difficulty admitting to that truth.
Adequate time
Time alone won’t heal us; I wish it would. But not giving enough time, and work, to grieving does not allow us to come to acceptance of our loss, and leaves us vulnerable to the next psychopathic trauma.
Be kind to yourself and give yourself adequate time to work on the emotional devastation you have experienced. But not only time, give yourself the gift of working on your grief issues. It is work, too. It is hard labor, harder than digging the Panama Canal with a teaspoon. There will be days, weeks, maybe months, when you will feel like you are not making any progress. Times when you feel like your pain will never end.
Given time and work, though, it will end, and you can come to acceptance of the losses you have suffered. You can then “move on” in a healthy way. God bless.
Louise
My husband spread the smear that I was violent. The ONE time I slapped him, and I admit I did, it was b/c he said “what is wrong with M____ is that she is just like you”. The blood drained from my face. I knew ALL that those words meant. He’d been trashing me for years and she went along with HIM thinking there MUST be a REASON why dad thinks that of mom (he had been lovebombing her). I SNARLED back at him, “Don’t you EVER say that to her!” and he smuggly replied, in a slimey tone snidely saying, “I ALREADY DID!” And I LOST it and my hand automatically slapped him HARD. I’ve NEVER stuck up for myself, but to do that to my baby, who was rejected by her birth father, and to be wooed by him and then so horribly rejected when she’d done ALL he wanted to hurt me…. and he said THAT? She knew then, that I had done NOTHING to earn his contempt, b/c she knew SHE didn’t. And from then on, she HATED him. And on my husband’s part, he didn’t even notice. I didn’t want to stay with him, but he had charmed her so that when I wanted to divorce him, she was going to chose HIM, so I stayed, b/c I sure as hell wasn’t going to give HIM full access to my only child. IT was HELL. My slapping him? YEs was used to prove I was violent and if they killed me, it was in self defense against violent me. ps I have SEVERE arthritis in my hands. It was IMPOSSIBLE for me to hurt him.
Take heart Louise. What will be, will be. The futures not ours to see. Just take care of yourself for now. Don’t close off, just strive for emotional health and I think the rest will fall in place. Best, Katy
KatyDid:
I’m glad you slapped him. He deserved it in my opinion! I am not a violent person, but if I am pushed to it I could be…we ALL have the capability to do so when we are pushed.
Don’t ever feel bad about slapping him. I have a question though…if she hated him, why would she have chosen him if you would have divorced him? That part was a bit confusing to me.
I feel for you…I can see what an awful situation that was for you. So sorry. 🙁
KatyDid:
Sigh. I know. It will all work out. I do have faith in one thing…if God has someone for me, He will make our paths cross.
Louise, I can see how that’s confusing. I wanted to leave a few years earlier when she was 13, but by then he had made her his ally and if I left, she would have chosen to stay. She was MY child, not his bio child, and I chose to stay b/c I could not leave her behind.
When he said that terrible thing and I slapped him, she was 17 and almost graduated high school. He had stolen all chance of her having a dad, he stole ALL her childhood and when she was no longer going to be his image, his showpiece, he DUMPED her like a 5th grader dumps their girlfriend.
And that someone that God has for you? You betcha you will know his value, b/c you know the dregs that are out there.
KatyDid:
I see. That makes more sense now knowing the timeframe. That’s really sad.
I hope I am able to see someone’s true value. I hope it won’t be someone trying to dupe me agan. I am confused. I am so afraid that someone will only put on an act to get to me. I just don’t know if I can ever trust anyone again. But I do have to trust God. He is the only thing I really have.
Louise, katydid, the psycho’s attitude to his two sons is what made my internal alarm start blaring so loud inside I started getting panic attacks in the midst of having become a brainwashed zombie due to the lovebombing. Son 1- psycho destroyed his mother (he told me proudly a week before my NC began that he had engaged her in s&m activities including , apologies to the squeamish, piercing her labia HIMSELF at home but this was ok as “our son was always asleep in bed”. Really? How did he know the son never heard or found anything that disturbed him? They lived in a modest sized apartment.) During that divorce she called the police on him as he threw her to the floor (‘accidentally’ he told me with NO emotion then said with minor irritation that ‘the police asked me some very unpleasant questions’, no shame no remorse – minor irritation). Mother and son end up in a hostel for the homeless during the divorce while he’s in a new apartment after new targets on the ski slopes. He freely admits ‘my son hates me, I’ll never see him again, there’s no point talking to him he’s just like his mother’. The son somehow pulled through has a gf and works as trainee manager of a petrol station. He rings his grandmother twice a year that’s how psycho knows any news at all. Psycho is embarassed that son 1 works in a garage, this is not high status enough so all his narcissistic projection is now being aimed at 6 year old son 2, who ‘will be an engineer’, ‘will be a very successful tennis player’ ‘will speak 3 languages’ etc. Psycho likes that son 2 looks identical to him at that age. Unfortunately for son 2 papa was plotting to send him thousands of miles away with his unsatisfactory mother to her parents’ home because he wanted to live with me. Son 2 is distraught crying in school bedwetting etc . Wife 2 threatens divorce if he tries to force them out meaning he’d lose the apartment. Which he views as his. So he dumps me and then paternalistically tries to get me to agree to be his mistress so he can continue watching bdsm porn and masturbating on the bed he shares with his wife whilst ‘caring’ for son 2 when she’s at work.
Their wives’ lives are a nightmare Louise as ours became when they were in them. Not all men cheat. Not all men lie. Hang in there floating like a butterfly x
Louise something I read here the other day resonated with me ,I have walls up now too like you as cannot ever risk this happening again it’s almost killed me. The advice was make someone earn your trust. Your trust is not there for the taking. It’s essential to give it cautiously to those who value it and want to earn it, because they see value in you
KatyDid, I didn’t just slap the exspath, but I experienced a full-on rage-induced attack! And, the exspath just STOOD THERE and didn’t attempt to leave, stop me, push me away, or ANYthing!!! I’ve never experienced that kind of reaction in my entire lifetime, and that includes incidents with the first abusive exspath!
The most morbidly humorous aspect of my loss of control was that he made a domestic violence complaint and I was actually arrested for DV!!! I will never, ever, EVER be in such a volatile state of mind, again. And, I’m quite adamant about “never again” with regard to a romantic relationship because I honestly don’t believe that any man will ever earn my trust, again. And, I’m no spring chicken, nor do I have anything to offer in the way of a relationship, so I’m pretty resigned to this, and it’s okay.
I can be valuable all by myself, and without the approval or validation of another person.
Brightest blessings!