Showing posts with label narcissism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label narcissism. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

My heart may be broken, but I didn’t cry...





A while back, someone told me about the movie “Regarding Henry.” I don’t remember who. It was in the midst of the haze--the months when I couldn’t help but be someone else, because it was as if I had fallen, hit my head, become unconscious. I was tied to this man in marriage, and when he was injured, so was I.

Someone looked into the haze, and something I said about the days sitting in a hospital, talking to a comatose invalid who didn’t even know who I was... something I said made this person think of the movie. I mentioned that I had picked the DVD up from a yard sale, but had never watched it. “Should I?” I asked.

This person was quick to reply, “No! Not now. Maybe later, but now it would probably be too close to home. It would make you cry.”

Since Todd cleaned out our bank account and made it clear that he has no intent to share any of his disability money with the family, I have been struggling to figure out how I’m going to pay all the bills. 

“Whose money is that?” he asked when I mentioned the disability money he had transferred out of the family account right when the mortgage was coming due. (Even though he’s staying with a friend rent-free.) 

It’s too soon to turn the kids’ lives upside down by going out and getting a regular full-time outside-of-the-home job yet... not in the midst of all this turmoil, not in the middle of the holidays... So, I’m selling things. Anything I can.

My wedding ring paid for a month of indoor plumbing. Two days after we moved back in the house, the water was scheduled to be cut off (because Todd had intercepted the mail I was having held at the post office so I could keep up with the bills, and he had ignored the water bill, allowing late fees to accrue.) 

A month of indoor plumbing: That’s what it came to. Over two decades of marriage, and the symbol of that union boiled down to being worth no more than a month’s worth of showers and flushes of the toilet.


The two are inextricably connected in my mind now: my wedding ring and the ability to flush the crap out of my life; my wedding ring OR the ability to flush the crap out of my life. Take your pick. You can’t have both. It’s profound, I think. I’ve always loved a good metaphor. I don’t think I could have ever dreamed that one up on my own.

The month of flushes has passed. Now I need to pay the bills without the asset of a wedding ring. (The metaphor goes on.) I have to find other things to sell. Since there’s a good chance that we’ll end up losing the house, I figured I might as well sell even the little things... even if they don’t make a big dent in the bills, it will be less to move or less to put in storage as I try to sort out what goes and what stays in this new life. So, I’m listing some of our DVDs on E-bay.

“Regarding Henry.” I still hadn’t watched it, but I listed it... and since I hate to waste anything, I decided I’d watch it before letting it go. Would it make me cry? I’ve cried enough. Why be a fool and induce more? But I was lonely, and sometimes movies make the best of friends. I felt like crying with a friend would be preferable to being alone. Maybe a good, identifiable movie would be like a shoulder to cry on.

As I watched Annette Benning’s character sitting by the bedside of her character’s husband (played by Harrison Ford--Hans Solo) ...first in the I.C.U., then in a regular hospital room, then a rehabilitation hospital... the journey portrayed was very familiar. But I didn’t cry. It was factual. Not emotional. Benning said, “I think this is teaching me to be strong,” and I nodded.

As Harrison’s character rehabilitated, the familiarity dwindled. He was inconsiderate and selfish before his brain injury, but his blow to the head made him nicer, more empathetic, and less selfish. Ah, the imagination of a screenwriter! I remember one nurse telling me that the injury would likely change Todd... warning me that things could be worse--that head injury victims frequently get mean.

I asked her the hypothetical question: “What if things were bad before the accident?”

“Well,” she said. “He could get nicer.”

I asked if that sort of thing happened often... she shook her head. 

As I experienced Todd’s agitation through every step of recovery--beginning with the long hours of trying to keep him from pulling off his restraints, when he would shove one hand in his pants in search of feces as the other hand grabbed at his IV and ventilator lines... He would get so upset when I tried to keep him from doing himself harm or creating an unsanitary (and stinky) mess--I dreaded his return home too soon.

Benning’s character couldn’t wait to get her husband home. She had something I didn’t have. 

Todd wanted to come home long before I was ready to receive him. And he was bright enough to figure out what it would take: He needed to “be good.” He stated that understanding repeatedly, and he strove to “be good” for the rehabilitation staff. I liked having them in the room because he would be nice when they were there. Maybe there was hope that the slim chance the nurse had mentioned--of a brain injury making a person nicer--might be the miracle my family would experience...

Maybe.

Maybe not.

Fast forward. We know which direction that one went!

So, I’m watching the movie alone in my bed. Watching Ford’s character become kind and noble. Near the end, Benning embraces Ford, and something sparkles. A big sparkle. It’s a honking big diamond ring on Benning’s hand. She still had that symbol. He still loved her. Perhaps he loved her more than ever.

Bridget and Todd’s story is different.

I was reading through the transcript of our court case--seeing all the blatant lies Todd told to make himself look good at the expense of both his wife and his daughter’s reputations--at the expense of the chance of either one of them ever trusting him again.

It was sad, but I didn’t cry.

This is factual. My finger is empty. It has been empty for a long time. Even from the start, it was only the bare minimum that Todd could get away with. Even then, I should have seen that he was willing to spend all sorts of money on himself, and yet he would half-heartedly apologize for the diamond on my ring being so small. It didn’t matter to me because I was busy “writing” a romance. Facts didn’t matter. Emptiness could be filled with the swoop of my imagination.

I tried to embrace Todd, to hope for the best, to believe he could change... but when I tentatively reached my arms around him, there was no sparkle... no glimmer. 

My hand is empty.



Friday, September 21, 2012

What Would It Take to Get Me Back?


Some people have insinuated that I'm being unfair to Todd by not calling him or telling him what he would have to do to get us back.  One pastor went to visit Todd and had the audacity to call me up and, based on that one little visit, say that he didn't believe Todd posed any threat to the children or me.  So that's all it takes to surrender your trust to someone?  A cursory glance at the surface?  Really?  

This is going to take some time, and I'm not going to let anyone guilt me into taking hasty action.  As I've said before: Todd has my phone number, I haven't turned my phone off, and I've already spelled out our problems over and over in the past, only to be ignored.  I've  stated them, addressed them in letters, and poured out my heart in the private journal he violated...  He knows what to do.  It just doesn't fit into his self-centered MOA.


It has occurred to me that Todd would have to really woo me and wow me to ever break through the protective barriers to my heart that I have built up in response to him.  I am leery, cynical, ultra-cautious...  Anyone who wants to break through would have a tough row to hoe.  

I stumbled upon this blog about Dating After Narcissistic Abuse, and it got me to thinking... not about dating, because, like the author, I am serious when I say "I would rather BE ALONE than ever go through an abusive relationship like I had with [Todd] the narcissist."  It got me thinking that even though I don't believe Todd could ever fix things so as to regain my trust, that since the only slim chance would include wooing me all over again (with the distinct disadvantage of my eyes being wide open this time) some of the points in this article might apply.  (Not that I'd even accept a "date" with him...)

The blog author broke down her dating process into three points:  


Number 1 -- Going Slow because "I VALUE MY INTIMACY."  That means not moving back in with Todd because some pastor who has probably never been abused a day in his life says it "should be okay." 

Number 2 -- Discernment -- thinking, asking good, thorough questions to determine if the person is worthy of trust.  And getting answers -- real answers.  (It takes time -- and reexamination -- to run the lie detector.)

Number 3 -- Boundaries -- "Maintaining two very separate identities," and (I LOVE this) "Not being responsible for someone else's moods," and "Not taking the bait to save or rescue. Caring for someone with considering myself and being sure that my need for reciprocity is met."



Those things are crucial.  There can be no short-cuts, especially when one is starting out with so many penalties.  


Monday, May 30, 2011

What Have I Done to Help Him?



















Here's something I've been chewing on...

New Life Live: May 27, 2011



Did this comment from the first caller come straight from my blog or what?

“I have no more emotional energy for him, and I just want to move on and be able to start taking some action for my life and for my kids.... I keep my emotional distance from him because there was a lot of belittling—a lot of devaluing—of what I was presenting to the table....”


The counselor's reply, also, seemed in step with some of the things that I've been grappling with.


“Sounds like to me... that you’ve really held onto some big resentments toward him... and he’s given you... fertilizer to grow the resentments... and then you combine this justifiable resentment... down inside you really feel you’re entitled to more than what he is bringing to this marriage. So, you’ve got this entitlement and this resentment causing you to have absolutely no interest in a life with this man....”


The question of "What have you done with respect to counseling . . . and assessment [for his depression]?" kind of ties in with the challenge one of the "anon" comments issued of speaking up so that Todd will have the opportunity to make right choices . . . but then also takes it to a level of not just calling things out and expecting him to deal with it, but also basically holding his hand and leading him to initiate his own recovery.


The counselor advises the caller to say this to her husband:


“We’ve been through a lot. We’re kind of stagnant and I’m getting pretty miserable. And I know that back there in the back when we got together there was a lot of love and emotion and affection for each other. I want to see if we can find that again. And here’s what I’d like you to do—I want you to go to [counseling] with me and that’s all that I’m going to ask you to do....” If he doesn’t go or won’t go... “If you’re not willing to do that—give me one weekend—I’m going to file for legal separation.”


The ". . . there was a lot of love and emotion and affection for each other . . ." part feels like a lie, but otherwise, this really fits. Maybe I'm "making a lot of excuses" for not doing what good advise has told me to do. I am tired. I don't have the emotional energy. I don't know that I really even want things to work out . . . but I know that both Todd and I need to get emotionally healthy if there is any chance of things working out. I'm content working on me now. Perhaps I need to find the boldness to at least say:


“If you want me... I need you to do the emotional growth that I have been doing. It’s a combination of emotional and spiritual growth, and I need to see a part of that...”


Since I don't have the energy, I'm just going to share a few more great quotes from this show:


“Whatever you do to get out of limbo, you’re going to have to do something pretty drastic and different in order to get out of this limboville.”

“Narcissists don’t get help unless their world is really rocked.”


This was great:


Kids learn a lot from a parent’s reaction to someone who is unkind... that means getting some support for yourself...