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.
TeaLight, as long as the lesson is learned, that’s the bottom line – doesn’t matter HOW we get the message. And, good for YOU for being open to the message. It takes a LOT of courage to see the lesson and do “the work” to build the boundaries and accept our own foibles.
Moon, I did not realize that you worked for members of Dragon Lady’s family, as well! Oh, my – sticky wicket, to be sure!
I agree with Skylar’s questions about how much is enough, and how much is too much to tolerate. It comes down to a pinpoint when these situations are finally exposed for what they are, and I’m confident that your decisions will be made for YOUR benefit after some thoughtful instropection. Seriously. You’ve recovered enough to make good, sound, reasoned, and insightful decisions.
Brightest blessings
Truthy,
it’s the one gift that the spaths left us: insight.
After our experience with them and the years of introspection, recovery and blogging about it, we can see the emotional vampires more clearly now. They’re EVERYWHERE!
It boggles my mind that I never saw people the way I see them now. The patterns were all there, but they blinded us with the drama, the charm, pity and rage. We couldn’t see the forest for the trees.
Skylar, yepper – and, I do not give one fart in a windstorm whether or not people “like” me, ANYMORE. I make my decisions and choices with regard to my own self-preservation, and my son’s. Yeah, it may seem selfish to many, but those in recovery from spaths “get it.”
Brightest blessings
MD & Louise
I would think the spaths came into our lives for a reason- personally I think by being involved with a spath it made me realize that I needed to start focusing on my inner self – why did I continue to put up with such disrespect and stay with this man for as long as I did? Obviously for some reason I felt I didn’t deserve any better, but why did I feel that way?
I think sooner or later in my life I would have come across a spath, I’m just glad that it happened now rather than later. I’ve since realized my 1st husband from 18 years ago was a spath too, but up until now I didn’t realize he was a spath; so I had a “pattern” that I need to put an end to.
Louise, I do tend to agree more than disagree with your statement about men and cheating. I have huge trust issues and living with mistrust towards someone who you love and care about can eat at your soul… It’s horrible! But I have to have some belief / optimism that there are men out there who have morals…I don’t want to condemn all men because of my spaths actions, if I did that I feel like I would have let the spath distort and have more power over my life than he ever deserved. I’m not going to let him control my thinking and my belief in men based on the monster that he is….. Love yourself, be content in your own life, set up your boundaries and one day you may be able to slowly open up your heart.
Sky. Thanks for your insight.
“KatyDid says:
HEY! Did he take ya skinny dipping? NO? Then he didn’t LOVE you. That’s why he wiggled his come hither to me and I had that accident” ”
Oh, boy! You just triggered a memory. Skinny dipping in a Cape Cod kettle pond under a full moon.
“skylar says:
Truthy,
it’s the one gift that the spaths left us: insight.
….
It boggles my mind that I never saw people the way I see them now. The patterns were all there, but they blinded us with the drama, the charm, pity and rage. We couldn’t see the forest for the trees. ”
At a memorial service I heard this said:
“The woods give strength to those with the courage to see what the trees know.”
So, I guess it means that if we can absorb the information and the knowledge from the ‘trees’ and put it to use without getting distracted and wrapped up in them – we can see and understand the forest.
I never heard of the burning sage thing…hmmmm. Sounds like something I need to do. Where do I find a bundle?
Native American spirituality. I know I did it wrong but it was like a cloud that separated the past from the present, and it smelled good. I had a shaman who was a good friend to me. But I don’t live there anymore so I can’t get it from her. I think a new age store would have it, or Amazon. They are like Harrods, they have everything!
Moondancer,
YOu know we all have to make enough money one way or another to live, and sometimes we have to “eat shiat” from a boss or a job we do not like in order to do that. BUT…and here is the rub, JUST HOW MUCH SHIAT are you willing to eat in order to make a buck?
I had a job once, turned out it was the highest paying job I ever had, and the boss was a psychopath. I had been WARNED before I took the job but the boss was love bombing me trying to hire me and I was greedy and I took the job. Fast forward 6 months, and I was enjoying the money and the job even, and BAM!!!! one day she just WENT OFF ON ME, screaming and name calling and throwing a FIT> I found out the next day that she had done that to EVERY PERSON in the office at least once, but everyone needed their job so much they were willing to put up with that.
FORTUNATELY for me at the time I COULD quit and I did, the very next day I turned in my resignation letter because I would not live under the sword of that kind of rage going off at random again…and I wasn’t gonna miss any meals because I quit.
It turned out I took a 2 day per week job at about half what I had been making there, but equal to what I had been making beofre I took that job, and good benefits and my dad got sick a few months after I took the 2 day a week job but I was able to be there for him, and spend more time with my husband (not knowing that a year after I took the 2 day a week job he would be killed.)
So sometimes things that APPEAR AT THE TIME to be a “bad” thing turn out in the end to have been a good thing. I don’t regret quitting that high paying job, I realized that I didn’t have to “eat shiat” to make a living and sometimes you just aren’t willing to put up with someone mistreating you. Every time I drive by the corner where that office is, I think about all the people there who put up with her abuse just to get a pay check because they are afraid if they leave they will starve. I’m glad I wasn’t one of them. I thank God every day for the extra time I had with my husband before he died, and for the time I was able to be there with my step dad when he was going through his final 18 months with Cancer.
But only YOU can make up your mind how important the money is from that job, but the thing is that NOW YOU KNOW WHAT SHE **REALLY** THINKS OF YOU– you’re just a hired hand, because FRIENDS don’t do each other the way she has done you. And yea, she won’t find anyone to cater to her whims etc like you have done at any price…so do what you have to do financially AND emotionally. It’s really a SHAME because SHE lost a FRIEND, and all you have lost is your fantasy that she was your friend.
Louise
here in Scotland it’s called a “smudging” set, or you can buy just the little sage bundle for about £2.50($5)…..?
New Age/Asian/Pagan/Celtic/Native American craft shops etc. should stock them. 🙂