Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→When we mess up, how to forgive ourselves and make positive changes?
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June 15, 2015 at 3:06 pm #78283Rose TattooParticipant
I feel like I’m slowly sinking.
About a year ago, I entered into a relationship with a guy who is very active in my community. I thought this was great, because we had a bunch of mutual friends and I thought “Finally, someone who loves what I love, and because he’s friends with some of my friends, that must mean he’s not a jerk.”
It was a very tumultuous relationship because in the end, he wanted to have an open relationship and be super promiscuous, and I didn’t. I broke up with him when it because painfully obvious that he was not interested in cherishing our relationship or in making it a priority. But neither one of us could stay away, and we never really stopped seeing each other. A few months later, I ended it again when, again, his disrespect for our relationship surfaced. Unfortunately, we have huge boundary issues. I set them (“please don’t contact me” – I’ve even blocked his number and on Facebook). But because we go to the same events, we inevitably run into each other, and then he comes over and sweet talks me and I can’t (or won’t or don’t know how to) walk away.
But that’s not even the hardest thing. The nature of the relationship and my inability to walk away has led to consistent bad behavior on my part due to the situation digging up old baggage about abandonment, attachment issues, and low self-worth. He has not been perfect either – he can be emotionally manipulative and mean when he gets angry with me. But I’ve done things like yelled and screamed and kicked things. Even though I’ve mostly done this in private (except for three notable times), it’s still mortifying. And he both downplays what I’ve done – he even calls me ‘hot’ when I get that angry – and punishes me for it, telling me about what his friends say about me, how crazy I am, withdrawing, etc.
There is no doubt that I’ve exhibited abusive behavior, and I feel appalled at myself. I’ve had a pattern of being this way – angry and lashing out. From a psychological perspective, I have huge emotion regulation issues, even some borderline tendencies.
And I feel so much guilt and shame, that I now feel like walking away from a community I’ve been in for over ten years. I feel like i have a reputation now for being dangerous and scary, and *I* feel dangerous and scary. There are one or two people who are pretty supportive, but in general I don’t talk to anyone there about how I’m feeling. I just feel so embarrassed.
And my best friend and therapist tend to downplay the incidents, telling me I shouldn’t feel bad, but I think they’re wrong. I should feel bad for acting out like a spoiled child!
I grew up with an angry, abusive dad, and always had issues with controlling my emotions. Not that it’s my dad’s fault, necessarily, but I know it comes from never really learning how to control intense emotions. I’m highly sensitive/empathetic, and this has all led to me feeling a lot of self-loathing , disappointment in myself, and even suicidal thoughts when I’ve felt that maybe I’m just a ‘bad seed.’
I’m embarrassed to be around a lot of the people in this community, and feel awful that he came in to it and immediately everyone loved him, while I’ve always felt like I was on the edges of the community even after a decade (I’ve felt this about most communities I’ve been a part of).
Because of this tumultous year, I’m really struggling at work and have been put on probation. I’m trying to do better, but I definitely still have issues with procrastination. I think I was burned out at work even before I met my ex.
I’m in therapy and will be checking out Sex & Love Addicts meetings because I know i have attachment issues that turn into obsession/fixation with partners.
But the anger is what really scares me. I feel like a bad person and not to be trusted. I don’t even trust myself. I’m 45 and I’m worried that I will never be someone who can develop a healthy, solid relationship or be in life without worrying, being anxious, or getting depressed or angry. And people around me seem to happy and balanced, with strong relationships and families, good at their jobs, and they seem to enjoy life.
I just feel like my boat has sprung a leak and I’m in the middle of the ocean.
June 15, 2015 at 7:40 pm #78297AnonymousGuestDear Rose Tattoo:
Underneath my Tourette Syndrom and OCD (since 5 years old) other anxiety and mood disorders, disordered eating (most difficult and still ongoing) and Borderline Personality Disorder is a hurt and scare child. The childhood ongoing trauma, through decades of no healing and unskilled living, morphed into symptoms fitting various diagnoses. BPD was the basis for my first serious psychotherapy (CBT/ Dialectical/MIndfulness) at the age of 50, following my first relationship with a DECENT man whom I married at 49.I hope you see hope in my story as far as your age is concerned. I learned that no WAY was the hurt and scared child part of me going to come out except in the context of a SAFE, honest relationship and in that context it has been taking over four years of therapy to get to a good place, eventually. And I still fear, I still feel the distress this very evening, trying not to be troubled by my disordered eating (my most difficult challenge still, daily).
No way for healing for me alone, by myself or in an abusive or otherwise dysfunctional relationship.
You didn’t ask for anyting specific in your post, so well written… sinking in the middle of the ocean. Let me know if you’d like me to share anything else with you. I wonder about the tattoo by your name, a rose in fire, is it???
anita
June 16, 2015 at 5:04 am #78312MattParticipantRose Tattoo,
I’m sorry for your suffering, and empathize with the feeling of a sinking boat. Sometimes when we become confused and overwhelmed, there is a sense of being stuck in an unworkable pattern or environment. This feeling can be very convincing, but it is never true, is just a feeling. Taking certain steps can raise the boat and get us moving again. A few things came to heart as I read your story.
Anger. A very fiery emotion, very explosive. But not unnatural. Rather, it is exactly natural, very normal, and reveals the issue, but is not in itself the issue. Consider: imagine someone stabbed you with a poisoned knife. The knife itself is sharp, and cuts deep. And then there is the poison, which brings much confusion. The knife here represents the boundary, the decision not to let him in again, and the poison is the feeling of being crazy when it hurts.
Consider: when our boundaries are invaded, stepped past, and ignored, our body responds very naturally with aggression. The anger you’re experiencing is normal, usual, a protective force that comes up to prepare you to fight off an attack. Like a knife sliding past your defenses, into your skin, and the wound radiates a fiery scream. All normal, all usual, all exactly a natural result.
Then, in addition to the knife blade, there is poison. He is charming, smiling, political, and venomous, and points his finger at your anger and calls you crazy. It’s not just him, many people (yourself included) call female fire crazy and irrational. As though a woman in pain, and screaming, is somehow broken or low for screaming. For having a feral, animal protective force that gets in the way of being a pretty little china doll. The result is a feeling like something is wrong with you for being so emotional.
But this is not yours, dear sister. There is nothing wrong with your emotions, they are working correctly. When you’re inna situation that dishonors you, your body responds with fire to alert you or others that serious shit is happening.
This combination pokes the hole in your boat. You feel angry, and ashamed that you feel angry. Meanwhile, because you feel like you are sinking, you remain more vulnerable to his charms, and so get more holes poked in your boat. Compounding that is the social isolation, where he tells people how crazy you are for not just taking the dagger with a smile. But don’t despair, dear friend, there is always a path toward joy. Always a way to fix the boat, and start rowing toward the sunrise.
The first step is validating your own emotions, accepting them, like we would give tender love to a child that is crying after falling down and skinning their knee. Of course the emotions well up. You’ve had some difficult history, and have been stepped on by yourself and others. Very natural to make mistakes like that, and the resulting emotions are automatic, unavoidable. You need hugs, not judgements. You need your warm arms to surround yourself, encompassing, validating, understanding, comforting. Consider: any wise and empathic being in your social environment, upon hearing him tell his tales of your hotness would see him as the twisted one. Like hearing a racist speak, the heart does not get on board with false and toxic words and think less of the race. If someone out there hears his charming poison and thinks less of you, that’s their weakness. Their ignorance at the fire and claws momma bear has to protect her beautiful daughters from trespass. The rose has thorns for a reason. Not crazy. Protective.
June 16, 2015 at 5:25 am #78313MattParticipant(My phone started acting up, had to post mid-post)
Spending time sitting accepting, and understanding the natural quality of these intense emotions will help with the holes. Not a baby throwing a tantrum, a rose showing her thorn. Normal. Beautiful.
The second step is doing better with self nurturing activities. When we don’t self nurture, we become sluggish, compressed, feeling like giving up on our own happiness. Laziness. Procrastinating. Like, we don’t have the fuel to make anything right, so we go into the garden and eat some worms in self pity. This is also normal, and self nurturing provides the fuel we need to make lasting positive change. It bails the water out of the boat and opens its sails.
For this, consider adding nurturing activities to your daily life. My favorite is metta meditation. Metta is the feeling of warm kindness, and helps reach deep into the subconscious and rekindle our love. Consider searching “Sharon Salzberg guided metta meditation” on YouTube. Consider a gratitude journal, writing every day about things in your life that sparkle, things you are grateful for, everyday blessings that get ignored. There are many others, such as walking in nature, listening to its sounds, seeing its motion. Expressing yourself with a brush, instrument or other mediums. Taking a bath with candles and aromatherapy. Help yourself find a tender space, and rest, recharge, rejuvenate your warm heart. Let the outside and inside conditions move you toward opening up the space.
Finally, consider following through on your boundaries toward that man. As you grow more self nurturing, your boundaries toward him will be more easily enforced, but you will need to use your willpower. You know he isn’t worth it, so when his crocodile smile comes around, his sweet tasting poison enters your view, don’t be fooled. He stabs it in, and your body does not like it, experiences pain after the pleasure, so do what you need to do to keep your little boat safe. You’re worth protecting, a marvelous piece of nature, a good hearted being. Don’t let charisma pu you away from what you know is right.
With warmth,
MattJune 16, 2015 at 10:37 pm #78362kristenfParticipantHey Rose Tattoo,
I really related to your post. I’ve also had a history of acting out in anger in relationships and acting like that “spoiled child” you described. And I used to justify that behavior by focusing on what the other person was doing to me. When I was finally forced to change my ways after nearly losing a man that I loved very much, I discovered that the only way for me to forgive myself and move on was to stop acting like that. It sounds so simple, yet is so so difficult. With the help of therapists, journaling, books, guidance, an accountability partner, MUCH willpower and self-control, and lots of prayer, I was able to change my ways. Never was I able to forgive myself until I was able to consistently act level-headed, support myself emotionally instead of depending on him, and pause before reacting. Until I could start acting like a real grown-up. Then I found forgiveness, my relationship improved DRASTICALLY, he even started behaving much better because he was being treated better, and now we both get to feel good about ourselves and be in a healthy relationship. We are still together today. It’s not easy, but it’s possible. And so worth it if you’re willing to give 110% to changing your behavior. It took a lot of time, definitely did not happen overnight, but it happened. And honestly, I don’t even get the urge to act in my old ways anymore, because I’ve spent years practicing new behavior and it’s just become normal to me.
Hope that reached you in some way.
KristenJune 17, 2015 at 1:12 am #78365ShareeParticipantHi Rose Tatto,
I’m sorry to hear that you are going through such a rough time.
Your boyfriend sounds very manipulative, and I think it is normal to feel angry over this. It seems like you are judging yourself very harshly for your outbursts, and while it is not ok to be violent or to physically hurt someone else, there is nothing wrong with being angry and expressing your feelings. I am wondering (though I am not a psychologist!!) if your abusive father has something to do with these feelings? As in, if you witnessed him being aggressive and violent perhaps you are subconscioulsy afraid of becoming like this if you get angry too and so judge yourself very harshly when you feel anger?
Don’t be embarrassed about it amongst your friends, people in your community who have any real insight or know your boyfriend well will see that he is a player and a user and I’m sure would not be judging you. Be kind to yourself, stand your ground and take your rightful place amongst your friends and let him go. I do believe the more you love yourself the more likely you are to attract a good man that will treat you well.
Blessings xo
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