Last week, I experienced a bit of disappointment over an outsider’s judgment. Several years ago, I came to terms with the fact that some people will understand what we have been through, and others simply will not. I brought myself to the place where I didn’t really care what anyone else felt or thought about my situation. I forgave myself for choosing dysfunction and worked through the host of other issues associated with that choice. Then, I moved forward.
Part of my momentum had to do with the fact that I chose to take other’s beliefs and thoughts out of the equation. There is a fairly accurate saying about opinions, what they are like, and how everyone has one. So I came to realize that as long as I clung to what those who were not “in the know” might think, I could not do what was necessary to thrive. However, because we do not operate in a vacuum, from time to time, regardless of our resolve, the opinions or judgments of others may influence our feelings.
Ultimately, I suppose, whether or not we allow another person to make us feel bad is our choice, but the truth is that there will probably be moments, when perhaps we feel vulnerable or exposed, that another’s words or actions may simply leave us feeling lousy. When negative feelings strike, they may hit hard because what we encountered was so personal. Naturally, we have all encountered judgment at one time or another, but there is something about this that is different to me. We may find the closed minded, often ridiculous, opinions of others highly offensive.
What just happened?
For some reason, my recent brush with judgment got the best of me. For a few days after the occurrence, I felt as though I was functioning on automatic pilot, doing what had to be done, but still stunned, almost like a little bird who resumes flying after hitting a glass window. The incident began innocently enough, I think, with a quick question regarding something I had written about psychopathy. As I answered, I felt as though I was viewed as being “flawed” for allowing myself to have had such an experience.
Were my feelings accurate? Who knows for certain. Perhaps they were. Maybe they were not. However, I am able to interpret what is happening around me appropriately, so I say they were. Initially, I was disappointed in the individual for being unenlightened. I was also unhappy with myself for allowing someone’s ignorance on the subject to influence me. Either way, I walked away from the interaction feeling unhappy and a little frustrated.
Within a few days, I brought myself back around to the “good place.” I reminded myself that we are all different and that not everyone is able to understand psychopathy as we would like. I thought back to my earlier days, prior to my experience with an individual with psychopathic traits. Would I have passed judgment if I heard only bits and pieces of a story like mine? Unfortunately, I may have. Why is that? Well, I am positive that my imagination could not have conjured up the facts that became my reality. It’s not something most can relate to.
Creating good from bad
The more I thought about this, the more I realized that my feelings were probably not unique. I figured that if I occasionally struggle with such feelings, others may, as well. As a result, I created a short list of ways that can help remedy such feelings when they arise, or even prevent them from occurring.
Be kind to yourself. Make every effort not to engage in negative thoughts.
Do something nice for yourself. Promote wellness by doing things that make you feel good or that you enjoy.
Talk to a trusted friend or therapist. Try not isolate yourself, but talk to those who understand.
Simply expect to encounter some individuals, from time to time, who believe that your involvement was your choice, thus your fault. Some cannot comprehend the degree to which these individuals lie, con, and manipulate.
Accept that there will be some individuals who will not ever understand your position. Protect yourself from their views.
Try to learn something valuable from the experience. Determine what you learned and create a plan for future situations. If you walk away from a negative with a positive, then the encounter was not all bad.
Try not to dwell. Allow yourself to feel, but then release the negative feelings.
Hopefully, these help.
RaggedyAnn
From your posts, I had the thought that you felt disrespected here (the dilemma). I am NOT saying it doesn’t happen, that would be illogical. But it might bother an NPD more than it does another member who has very little empathy connection.
A comparison example:
I am a sensitive person so when someone does to me what my spath did (corrects me about what I think, substituting their angst for mine, and INSISTS they know my spaths intent/behavior when they have never met either of us), well, I feel that emotional pain most acutely; but other people who are not so sensitive/caring/empathetic might be totally nonplussed by such trespass.
I was trying to be helpful with a different perspective. Perhaps my intent didn’t work.
Nancy,
Meaning from Madness by Richard Skerritt..
Wow – thank you Linda – a powerful post for me…and the comments and insights added by others.
Kim Frederick…..I think what your friend said was not only highly inappopriate, but also a power play. She was vying for dominance and she reached into her bag of tricks and pulled out something she knew you felt defensive about. She took you off guard, and cloaked it in concern—
Thank you, thank you, thank you!
I have been stumped over and over by these comments and found my self freezing to understand and figure out how to respond.
Slimone….”What others think of you is none of your business”.
I struggled with this…how do I protect myself from what they think…(and so how they act)….you answered that for me, in part…I have some more processing to do.
So many great posts and insights….definitely an ‘aha’ moment for me……..a sense of finally understanding and release.
Thanks all.
KatyDid, I am sorry, I find your words confusing. I thought NPD were part of the population having “very little empathy connection.” And “totally nonplussed by such trespass” is hard for me to interpret.
I think you are saying I may have blind spots about other people? I know I do. We all do. I’m known in real life as the opposite of “failing to consider” though [even got called a case of ‘excess empathy’ here by somebody at one point]. I definitely have failed at least once in this forum. But part of my trouble has been “considering” the WRONG people for other posters’ tastes. Either pariahs, damaged people, or people too abtracted for some other person’s consideration or carefulness or interest. Empathy, delicacy, ability to consider are exactly why I never say out loud many of the things I’ve seen other say here [or heard of, in case of of some deleted things]. And in my disagreements, it has at times been the other parties to a disagreement that seemed to me to be exhibiting narcissism. I definitely do not want to get into it though, and doubt that you do.
As for respect, respecting a stranger is a civilized person’s default mode. Often that ends up quickly forfeited by a person’s words or deeds. Clearly there are some folks with zero respect for me. There are some folks who do not have mine or whose statements or attitudes don’t. Some people’s demonstrations of their disrespect have been pretty free-wheeling. Or instead, almost fixated. And the assembled constructions to support it also weak or plain dishonest.
I have done something along Oxy’s suggestion at this point.
I should clarify something, though. I spoke of the NPD thing because I experienced an example of how much damage can be done when a diagnosis is misapplied, possibly incorrect. Or even causes terrible destructive misinterpretation of something happening. (the hospital story) It’s something to be extremely mindful of on the internet and here. Human nature: Our beliefs in our insights can trick us. Our arrogance about it can trick us. Amateur diagnosing of people, especially on line! can have awful results or just wrong ones. And the temptation to pathologize what challenges us, what hurts our feelings or scares us, what interferes with thinking highly of ourselves, or what is simply new to us is something I try not to get lead into without the data to justify whatever conclusion. But as you have implied, a truly intelligent person is constantly considering other perspectives, different possibilities, not declaring immediately that he “knows.” When one’s reach exceeds one’s grasp, watch out.
I do very much appreciate your intent, and hopefully I got your point, even if I don’t think it applies to me fully.
Nancy,
It’s nice to see you again.
For understanding N’s, I recommend,
“Why is it always about you? The seven deadly sins of narcissism” By Sandy Hotchkiss.
Another one is
“Freeing yourself from the narcissist in your life. At home, at work, with friends.” By Linda Martinez-Lewi
How to flush the WTF bucket by kim frederick. The main premise is just do it. WOOOOOOOOOSH.
RaggedyAnne
I observe that many have blind spots about ourselves. I assume I have one too. Logically, the best way I can uncover my blindspot is if someone else discloses it to me. Therefore when I see someone struggle with their blind spot, I want to help them see it, just as I would hope they would reciprocate for me. But since it does not apply, I have wasted your time.
I think NPD are VERY sensitive to slights against themselves. That’s their blind spot b/c they are limited in being aware when they perpetrate those same slights against others.
However I still think you have higher expectations from others than they can or are willing to offer you. Perhaps what you seek is not the purpose of this blog and that’s why the disconnect in meeting your needs?
KIM! Where do I place my order? Can I pay with 3 low monthly payments of $9.99?
It sounds like a good book to have in the bathroom!
Skylar, Back when spath and I were leaving Pa, and I was just waking up to spaths infidelities, in denial, still, but so confused, realizing he was a stranger, but hoping against hope, we could recover our initial state of inlovedness…I was in recovery for alcoholism, for two years, meetings, therapy, codependancy treatment, ACOA stuff…..I had a dream I was in the bath tub, and their was a turd floating around in it…..I took a wash cloth and tried to grasp the turd so as to remove it, and the turd turned into mush and poluted my clean bath water with a shitty kind of mud. How does anyone get clean in that? After studying Jung, and other dream anylists, I realize that water symbolizes spirit, and the connection with the true self, via the unconscience. My water of life was being systematically shittied by a turd who needed to be removed. Later, I realized I was trying to get clean in a toilet.
Kim,
ewww…
That is so interesting. I get it, you were trying to cleanse yourself with AA and ACOA. Always working on fixing yourself, but the problem was the turd in the bathtub kept sliming you.
Amazing. Dreams are so powerful and intuitive. It’s the right brain trying to tell us what it knows. It always knows.