By AlohaTraveler
It took me a long time to clearly define that what the Bad Man was doing to me was… bad. Plain and simple, it was bad for me. Never mind if he was working through pain, never mind if he had suffered many losses or had an unfortunate childhood. Never mind. He’s a grown man. He was treating me in a way that I can only define as very bad for me no matter what his issues were. Really, it was unacceptable but at the time, I did not have clear boundaries as to what kind of treatment I would accept for myself before I would draw a line in the sand and say, “No more!”
There were lots of excuses he made up and to be honest, there were lots of excuses I made up to try to explain his erratic behavior and his consistent emotional battering of me. Early on, I told myself, “He lost his ministry. He lost his marriage and his five children. He lost his boat. Who am I to judge him? I don’t know what that would be like.” I thought he was a person in a lot of pain. I had a lot of pain too and so I thought that our meeting was designed by God. I am embarrassed to admit that but I really did think this was some kind of divine meeting. We were the same astrological sign (yes, another excuse!) and we had had our hearts broken and had many losses in the years leading up to our divine meeting. So, I was very gentle with him while he emotionally battered and tortured me. I tried to understand where he was coming from. I looked for the “1 percent truth” in the terrible things he was saying about me because I was so open and willing to work on myself. I accepted that maybe I didn’t really see myself as I was, and so his “coaching,” no matter how cruelly it was administered, I took in.
But this is all beside the point. I wanted to explain why I say “Bad Man.” I am not trying to be cutesy here. I started saying “The Bad Man” before I found LoveFraud. I didn’t know exactly what was wrong with him but more than that, I didn’t want to hear his name pass through my lips ever again. His name was once something that stirred me and I said it lovingly, but I didn’t want to hear it anymore. One of my friends started calling him “Captain Whack-a-doo” and “Emotional Black Hole. ” “Captain” won’t fit for most of you but feel free to use the EBH if you like. Hehe.
Bad Man sticks for me because I don’t know for sure what he is. But I do know for sure that he was so bad to me and bad for me. I like this term now because so many of us want to solve the mystery. We want to know the exact diagnosis, but why? What difference will it make? If your Bad Man was like mine, you were being abused. Who wants to be abused for any reason? Not me. I don’t know for sure if Bad Man qualifies as a sociopath but I know for sure he is pathologically disordered and that’s enough for me. I understand this fully now.
Many LoveFraud readers have struggled with this question. There are also the readers who look for loop holes. What I would encourage you all to do is ask yourself this question, “Is this man/woman good for me?” I think we know the answer to that. Over the years, I have dated men that were not a good match for me. I have dated men that were not that good to me because, well, they just weren’t that into me! (Get the book by the way, it’s a great one.)
But only the Bad Man was truly bad for my spirit and my emotional well being. Whatever his problem is, he clearly was not good for me. When I was with him, I was hurting all the time. Or I was stressing, anxious, angry, emotionally battered, sleepless, etc. I argued with him in my head all the time, because I never won any arguments in person. I was exhausted from constantly defending my choice of words, my past, my present, my future, myself. ALL THE TIME! I was just so tired. That doesn’t sound very good, does it?
If you are struggling to find the right answer, I understand how powerful that drive is but what if you let it go by simply admitting this person was not good for me.
I am pretty satisfied with my diagnosis. The Bad Man was bad for me. I am not a psychiatrist. I will never get to administer the PCL-R (though I would love to hear the results). Even if I don’t know the final answer, I do know that he was not good for me and my life is so much better having let him go and moved on. It can be such a long climb out of that emotional black hole. I learned a lot from hitting that bottom but I never want to go there again.
It’s been over three and half years since I left the Bad Man. I feel peaceful knowing that nothing like that will ever happen to me again. Now, I can spot a disaster like him from a mile away. If I see one coming, I could fight him off with my eyes closed and one hand behind my back. Better yet, I would just turn my back and let him walk on by.
Who’s your Buddy?
Loved the youtube! Yes, a very bad man! LOL!!!!
I like to use visual aides. :o)
Some of us learn by pictures.
XO
Oh no! I just watched it again! I didn’t realize the last thing she said was, “You’re a very bad man!”
Get it? “Bad Man”
I just cracked up!
You all are so awesome! I am so happy to “know” all of you brave people out there. An experience like ours is not easy to recover from but we are doing it.
Humor helps me.
:o)
Aloha:
Thanks for the great article. As usual, you are very succinct…bad is just…BAD. Regardless of the disorder, bad people are bad for us!
I love your sense of humor…and the video with the last words “bad man” was ooh too funny! Laughter is good for the soul, and for the healing process.
Peggywhoever
Hi ya all –
I’m still out here reading and absorbing……………..
I CAN’T call my x-p by his name-it refuses to come out of my mouth. I have 3 names for him. The one I use the most is Psycho Boy. 2nd is Peter Pan-because he’s the boy who doesn’t want to grow up and he lives in NeverNeverLand. 3rd is Craig Christ-from the irreverent song Steven Lynch sings. All 3 names make his blood boil-I love it!
Dear Besameanne,
Glad you are still here and reading and absorbing. It takes a great deal of time to get your “mind wrapped around” what they are, but reading and learning and absorbing is the only way.
Molly: I understand completely. I had the perfect excuse to contact my S this morning and I took it, UNFORTUNATELY. It started out ok and within two seconds he flipped (again) telling me if I contacted him “again” he would “press charges”. Once again my mouth hit the floor and I’m thinking WTF. I don’t know why I continue to think this person is human and can have a normal conversation. I haven’t had contact with him since I discovered all his lies in the beginning of January and here he is making it sound like I call daily! The definition of insanity: Doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results.
One of these days I will realize not even time changes these types of people.
swehrli,
Not even time will change these people. Correct.
I have noticed that they seem to think that if they keep saying something, it makes it true. Like he is acting like you are stalking him… and if he acts like it.. it makes it so. So he thinks.
When you feel like talking to him, talk to us. Someone is always here.
What would be powerful is take out your calendar and write “NO CONTACT” on today’s date. And then make it stick. I guarantee, you will feel better and better when you cut off access to your brain.. and you spirit… and you heart… and your soul… from this mad man.
NO CONTACT.
It is the only way.
All the best…. E
Dear OxDrover,
I’m getting along pretty good. I still have healing to do – mostly with the need to understand how I could have ever thought there was something about him worth caring for. I have to give him the credit for helping me get along as well as I have – he assaulted a woman, spent a month in jail before he got out on bond, out 2 weeks until he wrecked another woman’s car and left the scene of the accident, back to jail for 2 more months, out a week and assaulted another woman and, now he is a fugitive. I’ve turned him in for SS fraud, too, so I think he’ll get what he’s got coming soon. I get alot of peace from your level head and witty wisdom – you’re a good source of inspiration!