Tag: toxic relationships (Page 1 of 6)

Abuse Role Reversal

I was in an abusive relationship earlier this year, but unlike the union I designated as such in the past, this one held a wild abuse role reversal. Instead of the more familiar role of the victim, this time, I was actually the abuser! 

How fascinating it was to play this opposite role, as the well-intentioned and loving human being that I am. I felt like a really good actress who had accepted a really bad role in an even worse movie. Who casted this thing? Me? A villain? Yep. Turns out we can all be a villain in someone’s story.

When called upon my abuse by my victim – my very own knee – I looked nervously at this new role in the abuse script. I’d never even glanced at my ex’s lines or read his in-depth character portrayal. I’d only known what my childhood trauma had decided about my seemingly villainous co-star, and what the internet and abuse world told me was true about our relationship.

My knee had been trying to let me know it had been perceiving me as abusive for a long time, but I hadn’t been listening. It finally had my attention, but only because it was screaming at me, and I couldn’t escape it. It’s hard to run from one’s knees without them. 

The knee insinuated that along with being physically abusive by rescuing my traveling palm tree from a bug attack (as detailed in my last post), I’d also been emotionally abusive!

It was hard to look at this. So, I responded to the accusations like someone with narcissistic personality disorder might have. I didn’t take responsibility. I made excuses. I reverse-blamed and conveyed the message that my knee was too sensitive by minimizing the damage I’d done.  

“I’m not entirely certain taking you for granted constitutes ‘abuse,’ knee. Overall, I practice stellar self-care, don’t you think?” 

My knee threw its brace across the room. Oh crap. This thing is pissed. 

“When massage therapists ask what to focus on, how do you respond?” the knee asked rhetorically.

The question made me cringe. Between you and me, and apparently my knee, I tell them to skip my legs. That’s right, just withhold all love and care for the parts of my body that do the most work and keep me mobile. 

The knee’s more boisterous siblings – my shoulders and back – had commanded all the attention, and I’d let them. But I hadn’t meant to be neglectful!  

I apologized to the knee, thinking it would understand. It perceived my apology as the generic and meaningless type I used to scoff at in my victim days, once I’d finally hit the “fight” phase of my relationship. 

“What are you actually sorry for?” the knee asked, just like I used to. On the rare occasions I’d received apologies, they had felt insincere.

“For making it seem like I neglect you when I get massages.”

“It doesn’t seem that way. It is that way.”

Listening To the Body

As I contemplated escape routes that didn’t involve my knee, it began to rattle off its long laundry list of additional issues with me. I did not want to listen, but I had absolutely no choice.

It had been trying to communicate, for months, that I needed to actualize creative projects, like publishing the books I’ve already completed instead of working on the new ones, and letting people know about my energy healing work with BEST (BioEnergetic Synchronization Technique).

I also had to get back in the habit of making my choices intuitively, not with my indecisive mind, which had somehow found its way back into the driver’s seat and had been procrastinating a decision.

The common theme between my knee’s complaints was my hesitancy to move forward. Apparently, knees don’t like stagnancy. 

Subtle messages had failed to get my attention, so the knee had to up the ante. 

This was when I’d gotten really abusive, according to my knee. Because when I finally started paying attention to its cries, I’d tried to heal it externally, while still ignoring its emotions and needs.

“I thought you would want to walk again!”

The knee rolled its eyes at yet another excuse. My desire to heal it wasn’t the issue – it was how I’d gone about it. My intentions had been in the right place, but my demonstrations were questionable at best. I’d misdiagnosed myself online (how shocking!) and since I was in an area where I know a great chiropractor, I went in for his opinion. He told me it was a strained PCL and gave suggestions to facilitate healing, most of which I ignored.

In case that hadn’t been abusive enough in my knee’s eyes, I took my mind’s suggestion to go back for another adjustment, just three days later. The first one had been helpful, so this seemed logical. The knee responded to me listening to my oft-wrong mind instead of my ever-wise body by blowing up. Literally. I had never seen a more swollen knee, but I was about to.

When I called to report the swelling, my chiropractor’s staff told me the knee was “compensating.” I didn’t know what that meant, exactly, but I figured they did – so I went back for yet another treatment.

“I told you how much that hurt me,” my knee said. “So you did it again?!

“I was trying to help you!” I defended.

This time, I finally heard myself – and the knee.

Abuser No More

How many times had my ex told me he was trying to help me while saying and doing things that felt abusive? Yet, if he was in front of me all these years later, acting those same ways, I wouldn’t see him as being abuse toward me. I wouldn’t see him as being anything toward me. 

His volatile relationship with himself had nothing to do with me, even when we both believed it did. Forget fight or flight – today, I wouldn’t even blink at his unconscious words or actions. I would recognize his hostility as the insecurity it was and say, “Thank you for being one of my greatest teachers.”

Before I could make that transformational shift, I had to go through the victim phase, during which I very much believed I was in an abusive relationship. Sometimes, in order to make necessary changes in our relationships with ourselves, we need to project our self-abuse onto someone else. That doesn’t make it feel any less real. 

Thanks to recalling how it felt when I did believe I was being cruelly abused, I could understand how my knee felt, make true amends, and ensure it knew how much I loved it. 

I took it to Dr. Sue Morter’s alumni retreat in Nosara, which was like taking a Disney-obsessed child to the Magic Kingdom. I’ll continue sharing that miraculous healing story and more about the retreat and magical Costa Rican adventure in my next post! 

As for those massages I got on the beach in Playas del Coco before the retreat, mentioned in my Costa Rican Redirect post? I don’t need to tell you what areas I asked my massage therapist to focus on, and I didn’t have to tell her, either. My newly empowered knee ascertained its needs and asked for what it wanted, assertively and gracefully, without a trace of codependency.

Rapid Healing

I was on crutches the day I left for Costa Rica. Just over a week later, I carried a marginally heavy baby tree to plant on the beach while volunteering with Costa Verde, an amazing nonprofit committed to reforestation and other environmental efforts.

The full circle tree moment felt like something out of a dream.  

So did surfing and hiking to this magical waterfall and a volcano a few short days later. 

Healing can occur immediately when we understand the real reasons for our injuries and illnesses, implement the messages our bodies are trying to communicate, and release unprocessed emotions that are creating interference with our natural ability to heal.

I’ll detail this in future posts. Contact me for more immediate info by filling out the form at the bottom of the page.

And stay tuned for The Relationship Ride, which will be available for preorder this November.

The Relationship Ride

Is It Narcissistic Abuse?

“How do I know for sure if it’s narcissistic abuse?” It’s the question I am asked most frequently by clients in the early stages of disentangling from toxic relationships, and my answer surprises them – beyond understanding that you’re not losing your mind from all the gaslighting, it doesn’t really matter. If you are living the dreadful experience of narcissistic abuse, that is your current “reality,” whether or not that person has narcissistic personality disorder or just an abundance of narcissistic traits and abusive tendencies. Their official diagnosis, or lack thereof, does not have any bearing on you.

When your hand gets burned, does it matter if that happened via a stove burner or hot pan? Does it matter what type of stove or pan? The result is the same, as is the remedy – you need to remove your hand from the irrelevant source of the burn and attend to healing it.

Would your trauma magically convert to healing if it turned out your partner, family member, etc. wasn’t a narcissist, but rather, just someone who behaves like one? 

Spinning your wheels trying to ascertain whether someone is a narcissist is a time and energy-sucking trap, one that people can get stuck in for a long time as they keep their focus on “other” instead of bringing it home to self.  

Would the anguishing pain, anxiety and confusion melt away with proof that your partner “just” has anger management issues? Would the abuse hurt any less if it wasn’t technically narcissistic abuse? Someone else’s diagnosis is their journey – how they affect you is yours.

I was recently reminded of this while working with a company I’d invested in to help me publish Love Without Traffic (the novel). Last month, I still hadn’t received one completed “done for you” service, all of which were to be delivered in advance of my original publishing date, which came and went months ago.

Was the company short-staffed? Were too many new people working there? Did I just happen to get assigned a book production liaison who was better versed in ineptitude than integrity?

What difference did it make? The “why” was not my challenge. What mattered was what I did with it.

First, I tolerated the delays. I made excuses for them. I don’t do this in personal relationships anymore, so it was interesting to see this old, dormant habit popping up in a new way. 

Then, when my patience wore off, I unconsciously drifted into control mode, trying to make the company deliver what was promised when I signed up. It was easy to fall into the trap of giving my power away and trying to force them to meet my needs instead of meeting my own. My efforts felt a lot like trying to get an ex to change, instead of accepting, against the will of my heart, that this was not going to happen.

It had been my choice to remain in such a painful relationship as long as I did. How long was I going to make that choice with a company I’d paid to help me? It was easy to stay stuck due to a belief that I had already invested so much time. How much more delayed would my launch be if I left? How much money would I lose?

With all the lack of accountability and sizable gap between words and actions, it felt a lot like narcissistic abuse. I could also make a strong case that I was experiencing dishonesty, manipulation, minimizing, ghosting, table-turning and even gaslighting. This was fascinating, since narcissistic abuse is one of the themes of the novel. Was the company run by a pack of sociopathic internet marketers? Did it set out to scam me and other customers? Or did it just seem that way? 

It doesn’t matter! The answer is their journey. What I did with it was mine. Regardless of their why, the result was still the same. The only thing that mattered was that the program wasn’t working for me, and my efforts to change that had failed. During my second attempt, I was given an abundance of bonuses that sounded valuable. But two weeks later, the carrots hadn’t filled me in any way. Plus, it dawned on me that the bonuses would tie me to this company even longer. And what would lead me to believe I’d receive the bonuses in a timely and professional manner if none of the other services had been?

That’s when I decided to pull my hand – and my book – off the stove. I’d chosen self-publishing because I wanted to maintain creative freedom. The time had come to see that I felt more like a hostage, unable to move forward until this company did what they’d advertised when I signed up. Even if I lost every penny by pulling my book, it was the right choice. 

So, I called to inform them that I was doing so. They tried to talk me out of the choice with more empty promises but when it became clear I wasn’t going to change my mind, their tone changed. Suddenly, it was my fault none of the services had been completed, because, for example, I wouldn’t accept the formatting issues “no one else would notice.” Like two title pages and links that didn’t work?

Was this usually helpful man, one of my two favorites at the company, minimizing and table turning to protect his commission? To save his ass? Did he really believe in this company and the work he was defending, or did he have to, for a paycheck?  It didn’t matter the reason, or if he’d been the amazing human he originally showed up as or had been charming me all along for the sale. That was between him and himself.

The awareness of this helped me remain loving and grateful for all the support this particular company rep had attempted to give me up until that point. I didn’t defend myself. I simply stated I had a right to an error-free book and reiterated I was pulling it.

He then told me I would end up investing even more money with another company for the done-for-you services than the inordinate amount I’d invested with them, suggesting I couldn’t do it on my own. 

We shared this conversation at the base of Grandfather Mountain in North Carolina, just before I set off on what turned out to be the most dangerous solo hike of my life, complete with cables and ladders along the side of very steep cliffs. When I got to the top, I thought, “Well if I just did that, I can figure out how to publish a book!”

It was a triumphant feeling, as was the moment I was granted a full refund, a rarity for this company. I had to invest a lot more time and energy in obtaining that, but it was well worth it.  

The time I thought was wasted turned out to be a great blessing. Any experience of narcissistic abuse can be, once you take your power back from the crazymaking and learn what it’s there to teach you. 

As usual, life knew what it was doing. Shortly after pulling my novel, inspiration arrived to first publish a different book – one which I’d almost completed several years ago. This would give me an opportunity to make rookie mistakes while self-publishing a book I wasn’t as attached to getting into the hands of the masses. 

It would also give me a chance to build a base of readers who would be excited for Love Without Traffic when I publish, since the books are connected in interesting ways. Like Love Without Traffic, the new book will be of interest and support to anyone growing through narcissistic abuse and other relationship challenges. 

I’m grateful for the experience with the company that led to this. While it looked like they “should” have done things very differently, it turned out they were honoring the exact soul contracts I needed. This is what all the “villains” of our lives are here for. But they only get to help us along our path if we let them.

The first step in doing so is letting go of the need to identify them.

Whether narcissists, pans or hot stoves, they’re going to be what they are regardless of what we want them to be. All the time and energy we waste trying to change them is time and energy we need for ourselves.

What’s one way you bring your energy home to you today? While you’re contemplating that, I’d love your help naming the new book!

Thanks to the last contest resulting in such an amazing name like Love Without Traffic, which also became my mission’s name, I’m currently hosting a contest to name the book I will be publishing first. I’ve decided to move the contest to a Facebook group. Join us! https://www.facebook.com/groups/namemynovel

I posted additional photos from that destiny-changing hike and will be sharing more of the story on the Love Without Traffic page on Insta and Facebook. I’ll be getting more active on social media this summer. Here’s the link for FB. See you there!:  https://www.facebook.com/lovewithouttraffic

 

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