By Joyce Alexander RNP (Retired)
We must never forget that we may also find meaning in life even when confronted with a hopeless situation, when facing a fate that cannot be changed. For what then matters is to bear witness to the uniquely human potential at its best, which is to transform a personal tragedy into a triumph, to turn one’s predicament into a human achievement. When we are no longer able to change a situation just think of an incurable disease such as inoperable cancer we are challenged to change ourselves.
Dr. Viktor Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning
I spent so much of my life trying to change others that it almost became a way of life for me. I was never very successful at changing others, but I never gave up trying. I have tenacity in great abundance and have succeeded in many endeavors, so I just knew if I kept on trying harder, trying different techniques, loved more, was more selfless and caring, that I could change the way others treated me. I could make them see just how much I loved them and was willing to sacrifice myself for them and they would treat me better because of that.
What I have come to understand, though, as I have started to heal from the wounds I allowed to be inflicted on me by those personality-disordered people in my life—people I loved very much, people I would have died for—is that the only person I can change is myself.
I had left my home, because my physical safety was no longer secure there, and was living in a recreational vehicle parked on some land by a lake that was owned by a friend. I felt very alone, lonely, wounded and destitute of all that mattered to me. During that time I had plenty of time for reflection, and it was also during that time that I found Lovefraud. I sat at my computer reading and weeping for 16 or more hours a day, and realized I was not alone in my pain, not alone in my woundedness, and that I wasn’t the only one in the world who was a smart, successful person who had come upon a situation I could not fix.
Man’s Search for Meaning
By chance I found Dr. Frankl’s book, Man’s Search for Meaning, which he had written after his years in a Nazi concentration camp, during which time he lost everything and everyone in this world which had meaning to him, except his very life. The book was not only about the horrors that he experienced and saw, but about his and other’s emotional responses to this horror. He realized that there was nothing he could do about his situation, but find meaning in the most awful of events. He saw that some people in the camps just gave up and sat down and died, and that others became cruel and bitter, and still others found meaning and altruism in helping their fellow prisoners.
Compared to what Dr. Frankl had lost, I had actually lost very little, as I had enough to eat, no one was beating me, etc., and I began to feel guilty for being in so much pain, but then I read his explanation of how pain “works” in us. He explained that pain acts like a “gas.” If you put a small bit of a gas into an empty container, the gas expands to fill the container completely, or if you put in a large amount of gas into a small container it compresses and still fills the container completely. So my pain was just as “total” as his was, it filled me entirely. I had no reason to feel guilty for being in such emotional pain. Like Dr. Frankl, though, I had no way to change the people who were hurting me. I had no control over what they did. No matter how nice Dr. Frankl would have been to his captors, they would still not have loved him or been compassionate to him or caring.
Out of my control
I realized that the situation with others is, and always has been, out of my control. My ideas that if I just treated others well, did loving things to and for them, that they would love me back were totally false. Not only did I not have the power to control others’ behavior or thinking, my own idea that I could do so was keeping me from taking care of myself.
Fortunately, unlike Dr. Frankl, I had the option of getting away from those who would have harmed me. I could run away. It was only when my very life was threatened that I finally did run away, literally in the middle of the night. Sometimes it takes a hard “wake up call” to get us to see that we cannot change others, that we do not have the power to make someone love us, no matter how well we treat them, or what we give them, or what we do for them.
As a mother, I thought that if I were good to my children, and taught them “right from wrong,” that they would respect me and adhere to these principles of doing good. In effect, they would develop a “moral compass” and have empathy and compassion. The truth is, though, that everyone has a choice about how they think, what they feel and what they choose to do. Other than brute force, none of us can “control” another person’s behavior, and no one can control another’s thinking except by “trauma bonding” or “brainwashing.” So instead of controlling, I ended up being controlled, being manipulated, and used by the people I loved.
Starting to heal
About the time I read Dr. Frankl’s book, and started reading Lovefraud, I also started to heal. I started to realize that as painful as it was to realize that those I loved, truly loved, and wanted to love me, did not love me, which was proven by the way they treated me. I started to redefine even the word “love” as an action verb, not a noun. I started to see that I could not control anyone else’s thinking or behavior, but that I deserved to be treated as well as I treated others.
Knowledge truly is power! Knowing that we cannot change them, accepting that we cannot change them, and then changing our responses to their behavior is our salvation. Starting with “No Contact,” which gets us out of their emotional influence long enough that we can start to think rationally and logically rather than emotionally, we begin to heal. We start to change our own thinking and our own behaviors. We learn to set boundaries for what we will tolerate and allow, not only with the psychopaths and how they treat us, but for how we treat ourselves. We realize that we deserve to be treated with kindness and respect. We deserve to have compassion for ourselves, rather than waste it on those who will not change. We can’t change the world, we can’t change others, but we can and must change ourselves.
‘
Sky,
I think it was that guide’s intent to get me spellbound. I had the intrusive images of him seducing me pop up for a couple of days more, despite what I had found out. But I used the effect to negate him in my mind even more. While I faulted him, I never contacted him. I just said to the image, “this is what you have done, by your own initiative, while married and having a child, and you enjoyed it. So, I’m happy that I’m traveling at the other side of Peru and meet other people. You’ll be forgotten soon.” It wore off in 2-3 days again.
I am now very weary of men who can make such a mind impression on me.
In the pub where I usually go, now works a bartender who I’ve known to work for a long time at the restaurant next to it. And he acts way more bold in the pub than in the restaurant. He’s brash, bold and at the same time acts myseterious. The first few times I was positively surprised by his brashness. But that has altered. I once made an observation of his brashness to women (not just me) to him, and since then he hasn’t given me the light of day anymore, but showers it all on my best female friend. And a pub mate of mine (looks tough, but an actual empathic human being) commented to me once, after I made a remark on the brashness of the bartender, that he didn’t like the guy at all. He was hitting on all the women, in a bold manner, and in his opinion not so respectful way.
In the past, I would have ignored my mate’s opinion. I don’t this time. It’s a red flag for me now about the bartender.
TTS:
Good for you! 🙂
I am so glad you didn’t invest any more time with this man. That is a huge plus…much easier to move on that way.
Kim,
just finished reading your link. It’s off the charts awesome!!
Everybody, I can’t recommend it enough. The information here is spot on exactly what I have been observing since my eyes became open 2 years ago, when I discovered the psychopath.
At first it was very difficult for me to believe. I thought what I was seeing was, that psychopaths are everywhere. Well, yes and no.
What this article describes is psychopathic and it is everywhere, but it is deeply ingrained in our culture. Men are aware of it and try to keep it secret because they know it is the source of their power over women. The power isn’t physical violence, it’s the “good cop, bad cop” ploy. They all know it. This is extremely psychopathic behavior but men think it’s normal.
When a psychopath tries to get other men to hurt one particular woman, it is this well of toxin that he dips into. He bonds to other men with this tool of deceit. What the other men don’t realize is that the spath is just fooling them. He actually intends to kill them, scapegoat them or use them as a patsy (whatever works) and is distracting them by pointing out a different victim.
I came here today to share my 5 month NC point with you all and to say thank you for thinking of me and your wishes along the way. There are a couple of you, here, who are so very special and important to me, so I am not going to mention names, specifically, but you know who you are. Your words are with me all the time.
This has been a very ‘rocky’ five months, after surviving not only a massive heart attack that almost took my life, after two major surgeries; but also I have had to battle with this bout of ‘spath flu’ in the midst of everything too.
I AM HERE TO TELL YOU THERE IS HOPE IN THE DARKNESS.
Your hearts are broken now but in time they will heal. I know that doesn’t seem very comforting, right now, but you will get past this and you will become a stronger person IN SPITE of it all INSTEAD of it all.
Five months. Wow: after almost nine years of being a friend to “IT”, the change is amazing and it has given me time for ‘clarity’ in my life. I am still working on the agoraphobia = not wanting to get out and associate with society but at least I am still breathing and that’s always a big plus.
One person I DO want to mention…CONSTANTINE: thanks for the poem…I saved it and it hangs on my bathroom mirror. xxoo
I hope and pray that you are all well and doing fine.
I think of you all often. I am on this journey – and I am starting to ‘piece myself back together’ again. NC is just that: NC. It works. If you just refuse to accept the garbage they spew and refuse to participate any longer, they will dry up and fade away from the lack of attention and just move on to their next victim.
FIVE PEACEFUL AND GLORIOUS MONTHS TODAY FOLKS!!!!!
Peace, love, joy and light to you all…
Dupey
xxoo
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Thanks (((Constantine))) So nice to hear from you. I trust you are well and doing alright. Five months. I actually had a few months before this period of NC as well. All total, it’s been about a year, not counting the spath intrusions. hehehehe
I sure hope you are right, that the worst stuff is over.
With violent and unpredictable spaths, it’s hard to tell when it’s over or not. But, with me, yes: I have actually had FOUR WHOLE DAYS SPENT IN REALITY in the past month and I am so overwhelmed: THERE IS LIFE AFTER SPATH. 🙂
Much love, hugs and kisses, Constantine…
Thank you for your support and sweetness….
Dupey
xxoo
Super Dupester: Congratulations!!!! “I Gotta a Feeling” by the Black Eyed Peas, is the song I am singing for you. (Recently broke both heels off my shoes dancing/jumping to it, at a wedding) Just the way I roll when I am happy. Shalom
Shalom: Shalom. xxoo
Your support means a lot.
Thank you. Hope you are well.
Dupey
P.S. Shalom: I am going to pull up that tune right now and make it a focal point on one of my webpages…I will dedicate to our friendship. Thanks for the wishes. xxoo