I used to wonder exactly what it was that people were talking about when they said that an event or comment triggered them. I had a text book understanding, of course, but could not think of an event that personally triggered me, bringing back overwhelming feelings stemming from past abuses.
Recently, however, it happened and I experienced something I never had before. Honestly, I am surprised it took as long as it did. It was not a proud moment, as retrospectively, I can now think of about five different ways that I could have better handled the situation. At the same time, I wouldn’t really have changed it because of what it taught me. My reaction was honest, showed me that my priorities were in fact, intact, and also allowed me to further learn about myself and the severity of what I lived through.
The scene unfolds
The event began in a benign fashion. It was a simple matter. I started out with words, a simple conversation. I felt those words fell on deaf ears, since nothing changed afterwards and the individual involved did not seem to understand just how important and significant the points I raised were to me. Some finger-pointing ensued, although I tried to keep that to a minimum on my end. At the same time, I truly felt that all was not being done to prevent the situation from escalating. Nonetheless, I tried to make it as clear as I could that I was not interested in assigning blame or going to battle, but rather, finding a solution.
It did not work. As a result, I moved up the chain of command, involving the next layer of authority. At this level, I felt less placated than I had with the person on the first rung of the ladder and had hopes of being heard. This person acted swiftly and did what it took to attempt a solution. However, it appeared that things were stalling and beginning to move backwards. Frustration set in, as we began moving opposite what was necessary.
I tried to speak gently, but firmly, yet the accusations began flying toward me and some of the others involved on my end. Suddenly, I began feeling just as I did with my abuser, on the defense for something I had done my best with. I did not feel that anyone was willing to take responsibility for the matter at hand. I had owned the part that I could, but would not accept all of the blame because it wasn’t all mine to take and doing so still would not improve what needed improving. I recognized that more intervention was necessary and moved toward making that possible. In doing so, however, I lost my cool. It was not major, but it was clear to me that my emotions drove my reaction. I could not understand why I felt as though I was on the battlefield over something that did not need to be a fight. Why was I meeting with resistance over something everyone involved should have wanted to solve? Why were my concerns being overlooked and my efforts to solve a problem shut down? Why was I not being heard?
Swimming against the current
Regardless of the reasons, I felt time roll backwards, leaving me feeling overwhelmed by the unfolding events and ineffective in my attempts to solve anything. It was hauntingly familiar, but I also recognized that I had never had such feelings before outside of my experience with my individual with psychopathic features. I struggled with my reaction, wondering how and why it came to that. Soon, I figured it out. The goings on had triggered me.
In the end, things worked out as we pulled together to fix the problem. We really were a group of people who did want to solve things, but had to put some issues aside in order to get there. There is no doubt that each of us could have said or done things differently. However, ultimately we did what had to be done.
But the experience taught me something valuable and proves that we do not escape our past abuses unscathed. It took me a little time to realize that I had been triggered and that the events of the current occurrence had less to do with my upset than my past. I found this especially interesting since I no longer feel this way when dealing with my individual with psychopathic features. I fully understand what that individual is about and how he operates. As a result, I am no longer shocked or surprised by any of the actions or behaviors. They are all relatively predictable. However, I was shocked that I still carried what I had lived with me in other ways.
Just another curve in the road along the path to recovery
I believe each of us does to one degree or another. Becoming aware of this allows us to correct for it and deal with it. With that, it may offer us the opportunity to become healthier than many who are never forced to confront their feelings. There should be no shame in our experiences. We lived through some incredibly unbelievable things. The only shame would be if we failed to acknowledge them or swept them away, refusing to admit they exist.
Since my realization, I have concentrated on employing coping skills that afford me peace. After what we have encountered, there may be times when we must mentally talk ourselves through situations that stir old memories of the abuse. This may take a bit of training or trial and error, but we can do it. It’s just part of the learning process, that like all else, begins with our understanding of the disorder we were touched by. Recovery from anything is almost never free from obstacles. This is no different and simply one we must become aware of.
Most importantly, we must not beat ourselves up if we do not handle things perfectly every time. Look around at others and realize that few do (not that that is a standard by which to gauge ourselves or make excuses, but rather to realize the fact that we are human.) However, if with each experience we grow and learn, we are making progress. I think that is a positive thing. Here’s to our successes as we live and learn!
Triggered, yes. A very good article indeed. Unfortunately, I find myself in a constant state of being triggered. My situation with the spath in my life is not over yet. I find that people in my circle are sympathetic, but in no way can they begin to relate. Although he is no longer in my home, as hard as I try, I’m having a very hard time getting the insanity of the last 3 years out of my head. I have some decent day’s, but generally most days I fight to keep my self from snapping. While the parasite is neatly burrowed into his elderly father’s house, Here I am without a job again, and am wondering if I may lose my house some months in the future. I could go on, but I’m sure everyone knows the story, because we have all been there in some form or fashion. I
Just find myself, constantly triggered…
Linda, thank you so, so much for this article! Triggering is a major issue for me, right now. Actually, I’ve always had myriad triggers and did not realize what they were, or how to manage them.
I’m learning, very, very slowly, how to recognize these triggers and how to thwart their progression. I’m typically usuccessful, but I’m getting better, over time.
I agree that survivors of abuse will forever carry those triggers – how could they not? Those abusive experiences formed indelible impacts upon my self-perceptions, and nearly all of my healthy “Self-isms” were shattered in my first marriage, and this second experience has sent me over the edge.
Thank you, again, for this validating article.
Brightest blessings
I’m ‘trigger central’ at the moment. It is just my mind clearing things up that I may have missed as things were happening first time around. It’s enlightening, but really I don’t need it. I feel I am healing very well, so I find them a nuisance more than anything as I want to forget, not remember. I have been flooded by ghosts of former spaths with the latest attack. Things I hadn’t thought of for years are becoming clearer than they ever were. I hope they are helping me mentally on some level, otherwise I wish they would just pissoff!
Today I am dealing with jitters and angst I haven’t felt in quite awhile.
Just a few months ago I was feeling life was taking a good turn – finally.
Our family home had a buyer to finally sell it – finally we would get away from N’s O/W right next door to me and the kids. The deal fell apart 3 weeks ago.
There is another piece of property N bought in his greed – he built a Portuguese BBQ and lost interest – that he will soon lose to back taxes – we had a deal on that and it fell through.
His lawyer wants to hit me with $8,000.00 back business taxes N owes from when we were married.
He got engaged Christmas Eve to SKANK next door – never even warned the kids – especially my son who was there to see it all unfold. N is well aware the kids see his relationship as bizarre and what he is doing to their lives as pretty detached.
N’s niece is getting married New Year’s Eve – the kids chose not to go. It is my son’s 14th birthday and he has little interest at spending it at the wedding – even if it is with his dad who he adores – God help his good heart.
My D-19 has little do to with dad and Nothing to do with the O/W. She chose not to go because her cousins have not reached out to her in 5 years. D had Scoliosis surgery – traumatic surgery – and no one reached out. She had a severely broken ankle – plates and screws – last summer just when she finished recuperating from her back surgery. She was stuck in a chair from August till September – no one reached out.
But now – the ULTIMATE MANIPULATION !!!!!!!!!
Dad offers to pay for a plane ticket so her girlfriend can come out from OHIO and be D’s guest at the wedding. I hate that my daughter is pimping out her physical presence for a plane ticket. She says it’s not manipulation if she knows what he is doing. Now – last minute – he says he will pay only half. D can’t afford to absorb the other half – but she will. I am having no part in any of this – not giving a gift, not buying the kids formal outfits – this is his deal.
D also sees some shock value in taking her girlfriend and showing the family she is Bi/gay. WTH?
He has no money to keep support current
He has no money to pay college tuition
He has no money for back expenses he owes for 5 years – $10,000.00 from hospital bills, braces, doctors etc. It’s all on me.
I am so unable to cope today . I have had many things happen in life – but I try to be a good friend, a good mom , I was a good wife – how did my life become a LIFETIME movie.
I am not a headcase – been to counseling with one who specializes in Narcissism. Keep reading and working to recover.
When you have kids with an N – how do you recover fully?
It never stops – the torment, taunting, voice-mails, e-mails.
I moved here 24 years ago to have a good life – and now my family is broken, my kids are hurting, N is on his third marriage, the O/W declares victory after 22 years now that she wears his ring. This is nuts – crazy – we do not deserve any of this insanity.
Linda, you said
“In doing so, however, I lost my cool. It was not major, but it was clear to me that my emotions drove my reaction. I could not understand why I felt as though I was on the battlefield over something that did not need to be a fight. Why was I meeting with resistance over something everyone involved should have wanted to solve? Why were my concerns being overlooked and my efforts to solve a problem shut down? Why was I not being heard?
OH, CAN I EVER RELATE TO THAT….in dealing with things at work (I think the medical profession has the most narcissistic and psychopathic staffs iin the entire business world!) And I can relate to that with dealing with my egg donor and trying to get her to see what needed doing…NC with Patrick. LOL
When you are RAW (even though there may be a scab over the wound) or backed into oa corner that resembles the situation with the psychopath, yep you get triggered and it is EASY to lose your cool, to respond by becoming defensive, or aggressive. It is NOT EASY to maintain our cool in those conditions no matter how much “training” we have.
Learning “first hand” what a trigger is is a growth experience for you as a mental health professional. I have a friend who is a P-survivor and she is now a mental health professional and her insight because of her own abuse is awesome. She works with abused kids.
O, BTW Great article.
new life, darlin’ nope, you do NOT DESERVE this and neither do your kids. All the family DRAMA RAMA is always going to be going on as long as you are mandated to have contact with him. Sorry your house sale fell through so you could move away.
All I can suggest is that you do as much as you can to collect what he owes you, and not assume the bill for his taxes. I assume that you know about “innocent spouse” clauses that if you invoke that may exempt you from having to pay taxes that HE OWES because you knew nothing about what was going on. Check into that and see if any of it applies to you.
In the meantiime, try some meditation of some kind, yoga or whatever…and see if that doesn’t help your anxiety some. (((Hugs)))
Newlife08, yes, the triggering goes on and on, especially if there are children in common and a constant barrage of legal issues.
I agree with OxD that it might be better to try to recover what you’re entitled to and just encourage the daughter to simply back out, entirely. The spath father is just manipulating more drama/trauma, as they ALWAYS do, and they ALWAYS use a “family” event or crisis to capitalize on those manipulations.
There’s another recent article that actually addresses the techniques of managing the anxiety. And, I would suggest that the first step in managing the anxiety (oh, boy…I sure identify with the anxiety, too) is to acknowledge the situations, and separate each situation from the other and sort out which situations are within your own control, and let the other situations over which you have no control be placed on the back burner. One minute at a time, sometimes, is the only way that I can manage my anxieties.
Brightest blessings
Although this happened almost a year before I left my husband,it’s a ‘trigger’ as far as I’m concerned.Because of the terrible strain of living with a spath and still privately trying to grieve my mother’s death-when a family friend died,I had a meltdown…..in a public place,a grocery store!After comforting my husband over the death,I decided to go out and do some necessary grocery shopping.I got through the shopping part just fine.It was when it came time to pay the cashier that my mind suddenly ‘went blank’ and I panicked when I didn’t find the money where I usually put it.I suddenly began to wonder if I ‘forgot’ to bring the money with me!Fortunately,I was with a friend who paid for the groceries,and later when I was able to calm down,I did indeed find the money in my purse-in a different pocket!I rewinded the ‘tape’ in my brain,and realized that my husband had been acting so needy while I was getting ready to go that I wasn’t able to to pay attention to what I was doing!Soon,I was having anxiety attack after anxiety attack!When it started affecting my breathing,I knew it was time to consult my Dr and she put me on Cymbalta.
Blossom4th,
Anxiety attacks can be terrible. I’ve only had ONE in my life and it was AWFUL. I have had patients with them though. Medication can help but the MOST HELPFUL THING is to RECOGNIZE what it is when it is happening. Don’t panic and think “oh, my God I’m having a heart attack.”
Panic attacks are REAL and the same hormones that would be released if I threw a poison snake into your lap are released and you get the “fight or flight” situation of stress hormone over load.
Recognize what it is, realize you will not die, and to help you calm down, if you can EXERCISE…this will help burn off the hormones. Walk as far and as fast as you can.
The not remembering were you put your money is typical stress reaction or even PTSD. I still lose things on a regular basis. So don’t let that panic you, it is normal to be sort of “light headed” or “forgetful” during all this stress.
I’m glad you have such a wise doctor and that you had the courage to leave the asshole. TOWANDA! That’s the Love Fraud BATTLE CRY (from Fried Green Tomatoes)
Ox Drover,
I remember Fried Green Tomatoes with fondness (smile!)
I will have to remember that hormones are released in an anxiety attack.Fortunately,I haven’t had any since leaving my husband!The Cymbalta has helped greatly,as has finally getting the sleep I need and being able to relax from my body and brain being on ‘constant alert’.The counseling sessions have been so helpful,too.
As for losing things…..well maybe we’re in one of those new groups of mentally ill!Pretty much sounds like it encompasses the whole population!