I have absolute utmost respect for single parents – quite literally, mothers; and I have a very heightened disdain for the respective absent fathers in society today.
I am a single mother.
Finding peaceful healing and growth after narcissistic abuse
I have absolute utmost respect for single parents – quite literally, mothers; and I have a very heightened disdain for the respective absent fathers in society today.
I am a single mother.
Fake it ’till you make it…doesn’t work in a marriage.
Wives use husbands.
Husbands use wives.
A marriage that has any kind of infidelity isn’t a loving marriage. It’s a marriage of convenience.
Women will often times use men for money, or stability, protection, security or .. even image.
Men can and will do the same – they will also use women for security (especially if she makes more money), image, and status.
Oftentimes, after being with the same person for years, you get comfortable with the lifestyle you have. It’s not that you love the person you are with [especially if you have been unfaithful!] – it’s just that you are scared.
You are scared to start fresh.
You are scared of losing the financial security.
You are scared of tarnishing your image.
You are scared of what family and friends will say.
You are scared of the unknown.
You are scared that you may end up alone.
Or.. you are scared that you can’t do better.
So you reason with yourself…
You get the point – it’s all material based.
Status quo.
Sometimes, you cling to the hope that things will miraculously go back to the way they were when you first met and things were good, fresh, new. Living long enough and knowing enough people, I’m here to say – that never happens.
It might happen for a short, brief period. But it won’t stick. Once things go bad, they stay bad.
Sure, briefly you can force it and be happy, temporarily – however, it’s always usually short-lived.
If one person has been unfaithful in the marriage, then that person does not love their spouse. And more than likely, the spouse does not love that person either.
You can’t cheat on someone and yet profess your love for them.
And if you have been cheated on, you cannot accept being treat like a doormat from the one you love.
Love does not allow that.
Unless of course both of you are worried about your image. What will friends say? What will family say? Good glory, we can’t have that! We have to show that we are a happy couple without problems!
So one spouse usually starts a massive social media frenzy of happy couple pictures.
Which may, to those on the outside, very surface level happy. But those of us who are deeper, and more insightful, know that this is a cover-up for a larger, deeply rooted problem.
On the bright side, it’s only a matter of time before the relationship is over. One or both will have had enough and call it quits. You can “fake it” — and play happy… suddenly trying to magically fix it.
But it won’t truly work.
If you have to tell your spouse how you should be loved, then it’s doomed at that point. It’s a miserable life and you can only choose misery for so long. It will catch up to you and you will want better for yourself.
Chances are, you don’t want to leave [yet] because you have. your fears..
Perhaps you are insecure and you don’t think you deserve better
Perhaps… you suddenly have an epiphany and realize the err of your ways and suddenly claim to have changed your heart (<<<insert sarcasm here…>>>)
You can’t suddenly change your heart in one day after a multi-year affair.
Perhaps… you are like the rest of society and you are too latched onto what “things” you would lose (money, house, vehicles, etc) and so you continue to accept a substandard relationship for “stuff”
It could be one week, one month, one year or one decade – but it will not be happily ever after.
No matter how many social media posts you conjure up to proclaim your happy family..
No matter how much you continue to lie to yourself about everything being “okay”…
No matter how many excuses you tell yourself or how many discussions you have in your head about why it’s probably “better” to stay…
The truth is, you were unfaithful.
And you were unfaithful for a reason.
You can’t take that back.
My ex husband was unfaithful. He did not and could not love. For him, love was control, power, and validation. By cheating, he felt important. Cheating helped him feel wanted, needed and special.
I stayed. And I’ll admit, all the social media posts were nothing but a mask to cover up how I really felt. I did not love him. I did not stay with him out of love or compassion. I stayed because of image, finances and my Christian obligation.
But looking back, those were all. poor and highly inadequate reasons to stay.
And one day, I realized I was not going to lie to myself anymore. I knew my heart and my heart was NOT with him.
Fake it until you make it doesn’t work in a marriage.
My mother struggled with borderline personality disorder when I was a young child. She was attentive, most of the time. But certain situations would trigger her fear of rejection and abandonment or childhood wounds and boom.
Just like that, she’d withdraw.
She’d isolate. Ignore. Not respond to us children. She’d give the silent treatment to my father. Nothing, and I mean nothing, would get her to come around.
It was hard, so vary hard, to understand what was going on when I was a child.
It was probably just as hard for my Dad – though in all honesty, it was challenging for different reasons. He was a narcissist who got supply from my mother. People with borderline personality disorder seem to be drawn to narcissists and vice versa – for a narcissist, they have an endless form of supply. Someone they can use and abuse. For the borderline, they fear rejection and abandonment so they are that needy, co-dependent person that sticks to the person with narcissistic patterns of behavior in efforts to prevent being alone.
As I grew up, my mothers triggers became worse. Her silent bouts went for longer periods of time – for days, then weeks, then months. Imagine, as a child, having to care for yourself because your parent won’t acknowledge or speak to you? It was such a sad, confusing and aggravating thing to deal with as a young adult.
Now, I’m an adult – my mother has since passed on. My father, while he is still alive, still struggles with narcissistic patterns of behavior – and as a result, I have discontinued that relationship. But the fears of abandonment, and rejection are still there. In full force .
For the majority of my marriage, I largely felt alone, misunderstood and unseen. I took care of the children in great depth, the household was maintained and I was motivated to keep busy by way of working. Eventually, my unhappiness led to a breaking point in the marriage where I was not willing to work on it to make it vibrant again – it would never be vibrant because there was no connection with my (then) husband. Every day was just a day at surviving the next.
I was over the moon. This person made me feel things I have NEVER felt before. But then… boom. He was gone. For weeks at a time, only to return, and leave again. Compound this over the course of several years – running, returning, ghosting, not responding, blocking, unblocking — it hurts, so massively, to be in this separation. Separation hurts – because it stirs all the wounds you have been carrying – rejection, abandonment; it makes you feel unloved, unworthy.
Here is the person that seems perfect in every day, that makes you feel over the moon happy, that you have connected with more intimately than you have ever imagine and whom you have loved more intensely than you have ever loved anything. Up until this separation, they seem to feel the same way about you. But suddenly it stops. They leave you on read, then they block, and disappear without a word. They don’t say why. They may not even know why. How can someone you feel so connected to just suddenly ghost you one day when everything seemed to be blissful the day prior?
The person on the receiving end of the rejection can’t seem to walk away quite that easily because they wholeheartedly love the one that is indecisive. Cue now rejection wounds, abandonment wounds, betrayal wounds, and all of the traumas you have buried since childhood. They are now already shaking loose, they are rising to the service. And you are going to have to FEEL them. It is painful.
Previously, you never knew these issues were affecting you. You may have been with a karmic (boyfriend/girlfriend/spouse) that NEVER made you feel this way. And that is because that karmic relationship was “safe”. It may have not been the relationship of your dreams, and it may have been emotionally unfulfilling but it was safe.
And what’s safe is comfortable, even if it’s toxic.
It’s hard to face the truths because it’s hurts to confront our old traumas. It hurts to feel that old pain. And separation is a challenging time. And this situation continues to repeat itself… conversation, then left on read, then boom – they ghost you, block you and weeks later they return as if everything is fine.
Every time this happens a new layer of wounds is brought to the surface to be healed, again. And again. Until the runner leaves, yet again, in fear that these feelings he/she feels are not real, or to escape the fear that he isn’t capable of this kind of love, or he will get hurt. His fears of rejection, abandonment, low confidence are core wounds – instead, he’s living in his ego – comfort, money, materialism, or religion, because he can’t bear to succumb to a life of discomfort without those items. The runner hurts in a way, but the journey doesn’t get easier.
Fear is a program deeply rooted in us. It began as children – and it was programmed in our brain. You can’t fear the connection with that person. You must embrace it, and in doing so, embrace yourself.
The runner will tend to have a stoic nature.. they’ll try to fake happiness after meeting you, they’ll even run back to their regular life. They’ll try to stay in their old patterns and resist new changes to ward off possible triggers. The runner will even forge new connections, immerse themself in work, social media, even the outdoors – they’ll try to forget what they are feeling.
They’ll run from the present. They’ll do this because they are running from uncomfortable feelings, from words, from believing — you run from God.
If you have met someone who runs, you will go through severe emotional distress – all of your core wounds will be triggered. Your twin will upheave your life, they’ll turn everything upside down. Their presence will make you realize that you have been lying to yourself for years – it’s likely that you won’t even know just who you are. Deep down, you’ll crave a higher, emotional, spiritual, and physical intimacy – but you’ll go through every emotion imaginable when that person deserts you, ghosts, blocks, and even leaves you on read.
It is in those times, you must be thankful for this time. By triggering your core wounds of fear, rejection, abandonment, you’ll grow as a person. You’ll become a better person, you’ll start to love yourself and your own company. You’ll grow in your understanding of others, become more patient and tolerant with your children, and even yourself.
In essence ,you will become your TRUE self. For without those triggers, you would have never realized just how much love you have given to everyone but yourself. Eventually, earthly things become less interesting and old patterns become annoying. Use positive emotions of gratitude for those old things; use gratitude and compassion towards those who are still stuck in earthly ways – money, status, “stuff”, and superficial relationships.