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January 24, 2016 at 7:30 pm #93557AmyParticipant
You’re right. Too much of my emotional energy is going towards the wrong things.
The problem is, my child is my life, and his father will forever be a part of him. I’m having a huge amount of trouble separating the two of them.
I don’t think I’m focusing on him to avoid my own shortcomings. I’m fully aware of what they are and am actively trying to change things – He is not, and that’s possibly part of the reason why I’m concentrating on him so much.
My own family is just as dysfunctional. My own father is somewhat of an alcoholic, who has always been emotionally distant, and had a 15 year on-and-off affair throughout my childhood, and well into my teens. My mother knew about this other woman, but stayed with my dad “for the kids”. The second my youngest sibling finished high school, she moved out. There are some parallels. I take what my mom says to me with a grain of salt. She is a “people pleaser” and believes I should give my ex what he wants to keep the peace.
There is no doubt that my situation is complicated. I recently described my life to my therapist as a “giant, tangled ball of string, and The more you try and pull on the ends to Detangle it, the tighter it gets”.
Thank you for the compliments. You’re too kind.
It’s really hard to come up with any sort of plan for the immediate future, because I’m pretty much in limbo right now. I have no idea what move (if any) he’s going to make next. The ball is in his court to organise and facilitate my mediation requests. In the meantime, I’m driving myself insane with “what ifs”. I feel like I have to be prepared for every single scenario that may or may not take place. I cannot be caught off guard.
January 24, 2016 at 7:43 pm #93564AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
I am well aware, from reading your posts, that you are in need to forgive yourself for past mistakes, not to focus more on those, so that is not what i suggested that focusing on him may serve… Maybe all your anger about being powerless in your life, past and present, all that anger is directed at him. If you knew as a kid about your father’s affair of 15 years, maybe you were bothered by that and angry at your father…and at your mother for not making him stop his affair. Maybe that anger is still in you, fueling your newer anger at the man.
Good you see a psychotherapist. Hope she is a good one. i like your string ball comparison.
Do you feel there is any truth to long standing hurt and anger about being powerless in the face of injustice, of your father having the affair and nothing done to fix it? Maybe you having felt angry at your mother not asserting herself… and could this be helpful in your therapy?
anita
January 25, 2016 at 4:09 am #93597AmyParticipantI have no idea how to answer that question. I can’t personally see a connection, but I guess that doesn’t mean there isn’t one. I’ve never really dwelled on the whole affair thing.
I’ve just spent the last hour typing and deleting, typing and deleting. I really don’t know what else I can tell you. I’m just stuck and helpless to do anything. I can’t change the past, and I can’t move forward without considering him as well. If I want to move, I have to tell him. If I get a job, I have to tell him. If I get a partner, I have to tell him. Yet, he doesn’t have to do squat (well, he should, but he doesn’t bother).
I’m the one who gave up literally everything for our child – he gave up nothing. I’m the one who made the effort and broke my own back bending over backwards to ensure a solid relationship between him and his child – He did nothing. I’m the one who instills morals and values and supports age-appropriate boundaries – He just “wants to be his best friend”. I go to concerts, awards nights, exams, parent-teacher interviews, birthdays, play dates, Drs appointments – I don’t suppose I need to tell you how many of those he’s attended in the last 12 months. Yet, he wants to sit there and tell me he loves his child, and he’d “do anything for him”. I say BS! THIS is why I’m angry. He gets to do whatever the *blank* he likes, whenever he likes, and throw his money away of drugs, alcohol and women while I have a car that breaks down every 5 minutes, still wear my pregnancy clothes because All of my clothing budget goes on my child who has a growth spurt every 6 months, have to fight off debt collectors with a stick on a daily basis, and generally can barely get my foot out of the door most days. As far as I’m concerned, he has absolutely no right to call himself “daddy”, but legally, I can do SFA about it.
I feel like I’m just another example how the person who does the right thing gets beaten with a stick, and the one who’s in the wrong comes out on top. I absolutely loathe what he is doing to my child, and it’s putting so much pressure on me to pick up the slack. I’m not Supermom, but I feel like I need to be and that is way too much pressure for such a fragile person.I’m sorry for that little outburst, but that pretty much sums up where my anger is sitting right now.
January 25, 2016 at 4:49 am #93598AmyParticipantI’d also like to add as an afterthought (I’ve calmed down a bit now lol), that I think there’s a lot of grief hidden in there as well. I feel like I destroyed my only opportunity to have a solid family. I don’t feel like I could possibly go into another relationship, let alone find that elusive person who would not only love me, but the extra baggage of my kid who is not theirs. I fear for how my child would react to having to share me with someone, after X amount of years of having me to himself. I don’t trust men anymore (this could perhaps be where my dad indiscretions comes into it), and I don’t trust myself to choose the right man.
I had always imagined my children to have mom and dad together, celebrating achievements, sharing tears, travelling together, etc. My child will never have a full blooded sibling (never even have any siblings – on my part anyway). That is no longer a reality. It may not seem like such a big deal to some, but it is to me. Now the best I can hope for is a blended family. I’d also like to add that there’s nothing wrong with blended families. It’s just not what I’m used to and not something I wanted for myself. I actually don’t even think I know any blended families… Wow, that’s weird for this day and age. Maybe I’m more sheltered than I thought.
Yep. Definitely grieving over the loss of that dream.
January 25, 2016 at 9:04 am #93607AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
I am positively impressed by you as I read these last two posts: my goodness, you are so very honest, direct, clear! You wrote of yourself that you are fragile (post before last)- you are, I suppose, but I also see strength! Great strength in your honesty, directness, clarity of thinking…!
The image or thought that comes to my mind as I just read these is of a person (you) waking up to your present life and you just can’t believe how messed up it is, as if it is a bad dream. I “hear” you saying something like: “This can not be MY life, no way! This is not what it is supposed to be! All wrong, all wrong… ” And you are banging your head against the wall, figuratively, “No, no, this cannot be it; this cannot be my life!”
Am I correct? If so, the word Acceptance comes to mind as a desirable goal because it is a prerequisite to change. You can change only what you accept first… resistance to what is real is futile. And this is what I see you doing, resisting what is indeed your life.
You are correct in that your life is not fair, how you bent over backward and he does nothing much, and even less since he has a live in girlfriend. And… life is not fair for many, many of us. It doesn’t take any of the unfairness that you are experiencing, but the bigger perspective, the bigger picture can be helpful.
I have many more thoughts but I don’t want to make my post too long because what I wrote so far is more likely to be lost. What do you think so far?
anita
January 25, 2016 at 3:05 pm #93681AmyParticipantHi Anita
Yes, you’ve pretty much summed it all up.The honesty and clarity comes from the fact that I WANT things to change. To not be these things is fooling myself. It is what it is and I am not delusional (I don’t think) about the reality of the situation.
I can accept that this is my life, and that is what makes me so depressed. That I have to – no, am FORCED to – resign myself to a life with no momentum. I’m grieving for the loss of everything I valued. Somewhere along the line, the very things that defined me as my own person faded away. I’ve changed and absolutely hate who I’ve become. I went from a strong, independent, kind and loving person to a meek, fragile, angry and terrified one.
I’m interested to hear what else you have to say.
January 25, 2016 at 6:43 pm #93703AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
First thing I thought, before I read your post above, and after I wrote you the last one was your strength. I mentioned your honesty and clarity of thinking but after the post on a walk I took, I thought about the strength, that energy of yours. I thought about the combination of the Honesty, the Clarity of thinking and that Energy, that strength and I thought to myself, what an amazing combination and what an incredible potential.
As I read your last post, i am thinking … no I don’t think you are delusional about the reality of the situation. Like I wrote, your clarity of thinking is amazing to me. It is the lack of emotional acceptance of the reality of the situation that is lacking, this is why you feel stuck, why you are more distressed than you would have been if you emotionally accepted the situation.
You wrote that you changed from a strong, independent, kind and loving person… but I do see you as strong. You wrote you changed to a “meek” person. Meek? No way are you meek. No way. Not possible, I can’t imagine me being wrong about this. I don’t think you were ever meek… even though yes, I only know you from these posts.
Terrified, I believe you are that, and I do hope this will change. This is why I suggest aiming at Emotional Acceptance of your situation. At my worst life situations, circumstances I lived in which would make yours fancy in comparison… I remember I had to accept those situations to survive mentally. I was not healing at the time, just surviving and to just survive I had to stop giving myself a hard time about living in those situations. There was calm in that. For you, I wish acceptance because it will be easier for you… and then I wish that you would do the healing process sooner than I did.
Resisting is futile. I may have had other thoughts earlier, now it is not so important. What is most urgent is emotionally accepting that this is your life. Look around, see everything that you are seeing, all of it and take it in, breathing it all in, relaxing into it, relaxing into what is your life.
Can you try to do that… and write me again..?
anita
January 26, 2016 at 5:48 am #93741AmyParticipantMaybe meek wasn’t the best Word choice. I don’t know. I feel that way. Weak. Intimidated. Powerless.
I agree that there’s not a lot of emotional acceptance of the situation in me. I’m still (6 years later) in “omg, I can’t believe this is happening to me” mode. I dont WANT to accept the situation, because its so effing depressing. The second I stop trying to make things better, and pushing for resolution, it’s game over. I do not want this life. This is not who Amy is supposed to be. I have a chain around my ankle, which is stopping me and my child from flying. I can reach for the skies, but know I’m not going to get off the ground.
I just can’t accept that this is my life and this is who I am now. I can’t.
January 26, 2016 at 9:52 am #93756AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
This is the promising energy, strength I was referring to: aiming at reaching for the skies, as you put it. Even your stubbornness in I wont Accept this Reality! comes from this strength I am talking about. And I am not writing this so to make you feel better, so to strengthen you, not at all. I am sincerely, authentically feeling your strength and pointing to you what I feel, what I see in you.
I am with you, I fully understand that your life circumstances are not okay with you and I understand very much how intensely, how passionately you want to change these circumstances, take off the chain around your ankle and fly. This is a strong passion and i believe if there was a mountain in front of you and you knew that if you climbed it, your life circumstances would change, that you would do it, no matter how tall the mountain is, no matter the obstacles. If you saw the way, you would take it on!
My suggestion of Emotional Acceptance of your circumstances is a step on that figurative mountain. It … looks like if you accept your circumstances, you lose, but this is not true. For the purpose of changing your circumstances it is necessary (not an option) that you accept these circumstances for now (stress on: for now).
To get on that figurative mountain, to change your circumstances, to be who you want to be (which you are already inside” it is the part in you right now that wants to free itself and fly!) you can’t do it from the resisting, rebelling state of mind that you are now. Think about it: all these years that you did not accept, emotionally, your circumstances, how has it worked for you? Did it work? I don’t think it worked, so why keep doing that?
When you emotionally accept your circumstances, all your circumstances, every single one, past and present, then you will be in a different state of mind, calm, relaxed, understanding, mature. From there you can fix a good spot to fly from, so to speak.
What says you?
anita
January 28, 2016 at 12:50 am #94031AmyParticipantWell, whatever strength you think I may have disappeared pretty quickly. Those last few days I was fuelled by that anger. Now, I’ve hit another brick wall, and no matter how close I think I am to ending this Hell, he throws me another curveball. How can I accept it when he keeps on keeping on? Don’t get me wrong, the anger is still there, but there’s only so much time the body can keep pumping out adrenaline before you crash.
I’d like to go 1 day without stewing over this mess I seem to have gotten myself into. Just one. I was in hospital today (yesterday? I don’t even know anymore) and my phone rings. It was him. Out of all days and all times, he calls me at my weakest and most vulnerable point. I wasn’t even focused on him for the first time in forever, and he still managed to weasel his way into my mind. Like, “Hey! I can sense I’m slipping from your mind. Just a reminder that I’m not going anywhere, and there’s nothing you can do about it”. Coincidence? I don’t know. I feel like the universe is trying to tell me something.
January 28, 2016 at 10:05 am #94059AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
You know the term “driving under the influence” or “operating heavy machinery under the influence of..” I came up with a parallel term: “operating under the influence of strong emotion, or “operating under the influence of distress”- we are not meant to be distressed on and on and on. It exhausts the body, the brain and keeps you weak. Too weak, to unclear, to foggy to see what needs to be done.
Physical anatomy, physiology is telling you: too much distress, cannot operate. Help!
There is no other way for you but to lower that distress. In your mind (operating under the influence of strong emotion) you figured: I can’t calm down until and unless this man is out of my life!
And as you stated, you can’t get him out of your life (unless you run away with your child, cut all contacts with the people currently in your life, and start a new life elsewhere… which is a possibility!)
But outside making a new life for yourself with a different name, that man is in your life. If you continue to connect him being out of your life with becoming calm, then you will not win (oh, yes, unless he is no longer alive, but let us not go there, please… prison comes to mind…)
You got to find a way to be able to see yourself calm while this man is in your life.
How to do that, is the question, that it has to be done, is not a question.
??? How to do that.
anita
January 28, 2016 at 1:55 pm #94106AmyParticipantSo now back to my original question: How do I go about doing these things?
January 29, 2016 at 11:02 am #94231AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
Do you mean how you get to operate calmly, is that your question….?
To go about your life in a different way, you have to operate from a different state of mind. You can’t do anything differently for long if you function from a distressed brain.
It is like you are in a rain storm, very windy and you struggle to get from point A to point B. The wind is pulling you this way and that, and you are uncomfortably wet and cold… and you ask: well, how do I make it better? You can wear a thicker coat, I suppose, carry weights so that you are more securely attached to the ground…
But what if you can stop the rain and the wind?
Oh, if only we could change the weather…. But wait, we can change the weather so to speak, the weather in our own brain. Every time a person feels calm after distress, as a result of having a hot bath, or taking a long walk… every time, the person changes the weather in their own brain.
To answer your own questions, whatever they are at any one time, quiet down the weather… then there will be a bounce in your step, a clarity of vision: point B will be clear, and the way to point B will be so much easier.
Can you work on relaxation skills in the therapy you are attending? Do again what worked in the past for you (exercise, guided meditation, anything like that…)
What if you post again after such, when the weather is calm…?
anita
January 29, 2016 at 2:51 pm #94253AmyParticipantAh, see, in the past my go-to tactic was to run away. Stressed out at my job? Quit. Unhappy in a relationship? Bail. Friends being nasty and vindictive? Cut off contact. I was always able to get a new job, a new man, new friends as there was literally nothing tying me to any of those things. There were no repercussions, and these things simply disappeared from my life. No mess and minimal fuss.
I can’t apply that tactic in this scenario. He even infiltrated my dreams last night. Actually, he wasn’t even a key feature in my dream. It was mostly about the girlfriend.
We were working together, and she had her newborn baby with him at work with her. She was ignoring the child and begging for people to help her. At one point while I was changing the baby’s diaper for her, she kept saying “you need to help me. He’s drinking too much and abusing me and my child”. I kept shaking my head at her and saying “I told you so. I warned you, but you wouldn’t listen to me. He will kill you one day, and it will be your own fault. You’re too difficult (which is still to this day his excuse for abusing me). You’ll never get rid of him. He’s herpes personified (lol! – Even in my dreams I’m hilarious). You got yourself into this mess, you get yourself out of it.”
Needless to say I woke up from that dream with a huge “woah!”. The way I interpret the dream is that I played the role of my own subconscious, and she was me. Even my subconscious thinks I’m screwed. It’s not just a surface problem, it’s deeply, deeply ingrained.Meditation, yoga, going for a long walk isn’t going to change anything. I’ve tried the meditation and walking several times, and all it does is give me more time to think and dwell. I also have Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, which means I pay for any energy I Use for days afterwards. That includes emotional energy. As you can see, I’m in a vicious cycle that I can’t break. Even my social worker gave up on me after 6 months. Her words were “I don’t know how to help you anymore”. That’s pretty discouraging to hear. A professional person, whose JOB it is to help can’t even help me. I have to do this all alone, which is what brought me here.
I guess I have no choice anymore but to accept it. To “give up”, so to speak. I’ve lost 6 years of my life, and so much more trying to fight. I did all I could. I just can’t protect my child anymore.
January 29, 2016 at 3:12 pm #94255AnonymousGuestDear Amy:
Yes, you do have a great sense of humor even in your dream!
You can’t run away now, because your child, your responsibility as a mother. You care so much for your five year old that even though you are dying to run away, needing to run away, to have nothing to do with that man, every inch of your body and soul wanting nothing to do with him.. you are not actually running away. This must be a very strong love you have for your child, a very strong sense of responsibility. There are mothers who run away, as you probably know.
Do you remember the first experiences of wanting to get away so badly from someone? And did you? I mean, did you feel this intensely about having nothing to do with someone else, before?
anita
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