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Breaking free of a Codependent Love

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  • #77404
    mati gamboa
    Participant

    Hello dear ,

    I have experience a similar situation , I was in a relationship for over 2 years, I stayed just for fear of what would happen to my partner . I was invited to a co-dependents anonymous CODA is being over a year that I left the relatioship and have being in coda. I am extremelly happy I came to this program.I invite you to give it a try..
    Best of everything to you…

    #77412
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi sunshineinca,

    The good news is this is a long distance relationship. So you can probably change all your emails and numbers to be free of him and that will be that. Moving would be a bonus, depending on if he’s the type to make a Grand Gesture and drive/fly out to unexpectedly see you. Chances are he will not harm himself. Of course, it’s possible, but not probable. And if it is, you are NOT the person to support someone like that for the rest of his/your life. You are not trained. And a trained person wouldn’t get sucked in like that.

    Stay Strong!

    Inky

    #77415
    Inky
    Participant

    Another thought ~ If he does somehow contact you and threaten to kill himself, call the police. They will take him away and he will be held in a facility for a few days until it is deemed he is no longer a threat to himself. And if he is, well, he is now in a safe place. If he wants you to take his threats seriously, show him what seriously looks like. That you will NOT go back to him, so he cannot manipulate you that way. Suicide and its threats is nothing to mess with.

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 11 months ago by Inky.
    #77421
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear sunshineinca:
    My thoughts, free association type thoughts after reading your post twice:

    There are so many people in pain, so many people that need so much. And I am one of those people. I wish the world was a better place. I wish people were not hurting so much- and wouldn’t pass on the pain. It is overwhelming for me to think how much pain is out there, right this second, children suffering from neglect and abuse as I type this, people’s lives ending by violence; people’s lives hurt by abuse. This is a reality I have to accept. In my interactions with others- if I cannot or will not try to help- at the least my aim is not to hurt them (wouldn’t it be a better world if everyone aimed at not hurting another?)

    I can’t save the world- although I tried and tried hard to save one person, my mother: I can’t save a single person- my best shot is at saving myself. I am open to my own efforts to help myself.

    Thank you for sharing your story, sunshineinca. The man you are describing hurt you by handing you that “wonderful” gift of GUILT and false responsibility. He HURT you by doing that, not loved you. And like you wrote, you HURT yourself by staying in the relationship. So in the name of not hurting and not being hurt- wish he doesn’t get the chance again to hurt you and that you don’t put yourself knowingly in a situation again where you get hurt.
    anita

    #77428
    undercity
    Participant

    I worry about other people’s feelings too much as well, although I would say this one thing – do yourself a favour and don’t call yourself ‘a codependent’. You are not a codependent, you are a human being, and calling yourself by a pathological term that is generally seen as a negative attribute will not help you with your guilt, it will just add to it with shame. I don’t believe in codependency, or love addiction, or love avoidants, or whatever personally. I believe in normal people struggling with the individual obstacles and traumas they have come across at this particular time. We all have our own ways of coping, but I believe that almost every single one of us always does our very best.

    Feel free to ignore that, just my view, perhaps the labeling feels better to you.

    As for what to do about your situation. You are obviously a kind man and able to see that your ex boyfriend is a man in tremendous pain, with poor coping skills. You don’t need to change your opinion of him or think about what hurt he has caused (unless you particularly want to) to get over this. You have the valuable skill of seeing other people in shades of grey and having compassion for their suffering. So go you.

    As for looking after yourself, what I try to remember is that there is nothing I would be able to do. There is nothing I could do to take the pain away from them without inadvertently making it worse and the only way I can help them is by not helping. Then I remind myself that human beings are resilient and they are not as vulnerable as I expect them to be.

    I think you are right that your ex’s behaviour is emotionally manipulative, whether he knows that is another issue. I know for myself that I once blurted out during a break up that I didn’t think I would ever be happy again, for instance (it seemed this way to me because I had suffered chronic mental health problems for many years and had few memories of feeling good), but I know I didn’t mean that in a manipulative way, it just seemed to me to be a fact at the time. It may be the case that your ex is saying the things that seem to him to be the genuine truth, but we can all get caught up in things and be clouded by our own dreads and fears. We all get out of it too.

    Have faith in your ex’s ability to survive. He survived before you and he can get himself through this too. Also have faith there are other people around him to provide support and that your main duty now is to yourself, to help you feel less guilt over this because you haven’t – and I hope you know this – done anything wrong. You have rather done the best thing for both of you.

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