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.
I still pop in once in awhile to read, don’t post very often. I am stuck too, in my recovery. Just can’t get past the grief stage. I have stayed NC, & yet the what if’s still bombard me. Unfortunately I had a former classmate feel it necessary to update me on my exspath’s where abouts with the beotch he left me for, & got hit right in the face(& heart) with photos. I unfriended this person & anyone else who might have deemed it necessary to share this info with me, but the scabs were ripped open again. Here I am at square one again…
Sstile54, I’m so sorry you’ve experienced a setback, and what a great move to “unfriend” people who would attempt to continue the damages! At one point, I got off of FB, entierly. I deleted my profile and stayed off for MONTHS. I was so weary of reading everyone’s narcissistic announcements that they were “sad, today,” or “just had lunch and, this is what I had,” etc. When it came down to the truth, the people on my “friends” list were not my “friends,” at all – just another name that bumped up the “friends” tally, and nothing more. There were 3 who actually CARED about my situation and would ask me how I was doing. Once I separated myself from that FALSE “community” and began to rely upon REAL LIFE interactions, I realized that “friends” is defined by people who speak to me using their mouths, not messages or texts.
Sstiles54, did you ever engage in counseling therapy just to help you along your Healing Path? Sometimes, all of the reading and discussion is helpful, but real interaction on a face-to-face basis with someone that “gets it” can really open some doors to serious progress.
Come back to LF more often, Sstiles54. You’re an important and priceless part of this Universe.
Brightest blessings
Tea Light, you are absolutely right. Slimone was just putting into words the way I was looking at my situation. I wasn’t at all offended by Slimone. I was just devastated by that line because that is exactly how my ex feels. She just beautifully captured it in words. And that rejection still hurts so bad.
I know that I still have lots of work to do to start believing in myself more. I think that once I really, really love myself, I won’t think twice about my ex-spath’s opinions of me. I won’t have any desire to clear my name and repair my reputation to anyone from that scene.
I’m a work in progress. One step forward; a step and a half back. I’m getting there. Thank you to all for your support.
Welcome back Stiles, sorry you got slammed…..people who do that sort of thing are not “Friends”—-and too many people seem to “get off” on doing that kind of nasty thing! Pox on’em!
Stiles don’t give up on getting over the grief….keep working on it, stay around here. That pain and grief is like cat chiat, if you don’t clean it up and get it out of the house it continues to STINK…just pretending it isn’t there and walkin around it is not going to get rid of the STINK. We have to clean it up and that’s difficult some time, especially if the pile is big enough and been there long enough to be a real problem to clean up, but it is worth it in the end. Getting rid of the “cat” helps too. LOL
Thesisterhood, ((((HUGS)))) We’re ALL works-in-progress
Brightest blessings
Sisterhood,
My P sperm donor ended up becoming very rich and famous after I left his employ…after he raped me and beat me until my face was a pulp…eventually I think he was afraid someone would “tell” about this, tell the TRUTH. Actually I told only my egg donor (she didn’t believe me) and my husband who DID believe me. But anyway, the arrogant P sperm donor self published a 1200 page book, with 7 chapters of it telling how I had tried to “seduce him.” And other lies.
AT first I was FURIOUS. Then it got worse, after his death this book became FREELY available on the internet. Again I was FURIOUS…but then I thought. You know, my sperm donor was so crude, rude and indecent that NO ONE liked him and 99.9% of the people aorund him knew him for a consumate liar…so no one that knew him would believe a word of what the book said, and then ANYONE who knows me would NOT FOR ONE MINUTE BELIEVE A WORD OF IT BECAUSE THEY KNOW I AM NOT LIKE THAT. So what did that leave. The ONLY people who would believe a word of his book are people who did not know either him or me and Since I do not know those people or care what they think about me why should I worry about what his book says? Now, I don’t worry about what his book says. I KNOW THE TRUTH….and anyone who believes the lie is not important in my life anyway.
So, think about what the “opinion” of these people really amounts to in your life? Does their believing in his lies really injure you?
There are people who like to “gossip” about “dirt” about others….those people will enjoy passing on that kind of story, but I no longer worry about those people either.
I have found that I can VALIDATE my own truth, and II don’t need my egg donor to believe me, or anyone else to believe me, I KNOW WHAT HAPPENED, THAT’S A FACT. It is like when Columbus was the only one who believed the earth was round, everyone else thought it was flat. Did that change the shape of the world? Nah! So what others believe doesn’t change the TRUTH.
Tealight,
I wrote: And, now, he was loving someone else”probably because she was awesome and lovable and not a walking mental health example of child hood gone wrong.
Exactly. It is NOT factual, it is the false perception we have of ourselves, and the fantasy about what the spaths ‘new love’ looks like. We are still stuck in our self loathing and are not being compassionate toward our own suffering and loss when we think this way.
We are still dismissing ourselves with this kind of stinking belief about ourselves, and we are creating romantic fantasies about him and the new TARGET. This only furthers our feelings of being unlovable.
The cycle has to be broken. It starts with compassion for OURSELVES.
the sisterhood…I am sorry for all the terrible suffering your early years have brought you. I so understand….
fixerupper,
You outlined, above, exactly how these disordered people find the places where we have doubts and difficulties (and EVERYONE has doubts and difficulties, so we are NOT weirdos, or weak for having them)….and then they zero in on them, and use them as ammunition to blow us out of the water and increase our sense of not being able to get it ‘right’. They insinuate that in order to be with them, because they are sooooo grandiose, we have to be perfect.
In other words we need to not be human.
It’s exactly what the sisterhood’s ex is doing. Giving the impression that he is totally smitten with his new victim, because he knows that the sisterhood has unresolved feelings of being unlovable. So he is STILL throwing poison arrows into her childhood wounds. He is just playing a game. It is a game for them. Where as for us it is REAL.
This is what they do. And they enjoy it. They like that it riles up our feelings and keeps us from moving forward.
Slim
slimone:
You wrote:
“You outlined, above, exactly how these disordered people find the places where we have doubts and difficulties (and EVERYONE has doubts and difficulties, so we are NOT weirdos, or weak for having them)”.and then they zero in on them, and use them as ammunition to blow us out of the water and increase our sense of not being able to get it ’right’.”
“GET IT RIGHT.”
O-M-F’in-W!!!
This is exactly what my spathic ex-gf said in her ‘parting shot’ at me: ‘You’ve had enough time to get it right.’
I really am thinking of pasting some of her nasty letters here.
I couldn’t ‘get it right’ according to her words, but, she sabotaged, gaslighted, moved the goal posts, manipulated and just plain old jerked me around for all of that time – while she was cultivating other ‘targets.’ She even insisted that I get into and stay in therapy so that she would be ‘assured’ that I was ‘O-K.’
I never had a chance! When she glared at me and berated me and ‘shut me off’ from sex and affection it would leave me tending to my wounds – which hurt my ability to work at my job, our ‘relationship’ and the projects I was doing for her.
This is the kind of realization that triggers the PTSD.
What kind of creature does this?
fixerupper,
Your spath was looking for whatever you valued, so she could devalue you in that regard. Being a true human being, you didn’t hide what you valued: being useful, competent, a provider. She saw what you valued and targeted that by trying to get you to compare yourself to someone else.
They all do that. They have different versions of it and different applications for it, but it is the essence of what they do: “Look what the Joneses have that you don’t!”
I used to have a nice slim and muscular figure because I exercised a lot. I was sort of addicted to exercise. (I’m fat now, btw 🙂 )
Anyway, we went on a double date with another spath minion of his and the minion’s gf, Heather. Heather was beautiful and much younger than I, she had a nice figure but she tends to gain weight on her butt. When we were in the car, both the spaths started condemning Heather for having a fat butt and comparing her to me and telling her that she should exercise like I do!! WTF?
In this case, they were using the same strategy of comparing one person to another, but they were using it in a different application. In this application, Heather was supposed to feel bad and this would make her hate me. I think it worked. The spath knew he couldn’t make me envy other people, it just didn’t happen. So instead, he made other people envy me by doing and saying certain things. They don’t care how they hurt you, they’ll find a way.