My dragonslippers
Four years ago, my abusive marriage ended. I thought that the passing of four years was long enough, and that I would be “over it” by now… I was wrong. Over the past couple of months I’ve been swept up into flashbacks, as well as experiencing anxiety and dissociation for no apparent reason.
The other day, I was feeling good, and thought that the storm had passed… but now, it’s back with a vengeance.
The good thing about the four years since the marriage was over, is that I can more clearly see how we reacted to each other to create the disaster that was the marriage. It’s easy to say that I walked into the marriage because of old patterns… one therapist told me that I married a man just like my father, after all. But that’s a nice square box to place the experience in… the reality is so much more complicated. My childhood was my training for my marriage… it taught me how to ignore my own needs in favour of others, to consider myself worthless, and not expect to be treated with respect. His training involved systematically having his self-confidence destroyed; suppressing his anger, to the point where it exploded without warning; and thinking that domination equated to power.
He needed control, but didn’t want it… and I didn’t want control, but needed it.
That one line is possibly the most accurate summary of the marriage. How it presented was sometimes funny; but more often than not, painful. Now that I’m a little further away from the situation, I can see the links between such things as his jealousy and my actions. The best example that I can think of to describe this dynamic, is my fear of going outside – he once commented that one of our male neighbours always seemed to be going outside when I was; which was a huge red flag to me. It meant that something was wrong, and that something needed to change, as anything that bothered my husband, meant danger. I couldn’t stop my neighbour from going outside, but I could. So began another layer of my social anxiety.
There are lots of little examples like that…
Reading this, people will wonder why I stayed with him for so long. It’s a perfectly reasonable question… I lived in fear of him for eight years; he abused me regularly, and was constantly in trouble with his employers. But that chaos echoed both of our pasts, so it seemed normal. I didn’t go to work with visible bruises, and he acted almost childlike in public; so I would often be seen as the bossy one. No one looking into the marriage would say that anything was wrong.
Probably the most obvious example of why I stayed within the marriage for so long, is shown by his reaction after his final attack on me… The attack happened on a Sunday afternoon, and after his panicked phone call to my mother, he settled down as if nothing had happened. When I went to get medical treatment the next day, he accompanied me into the examining room, where he laughed about the injuries and how he had caused them. He repeated this laughter when he dropped my medical certificate into my workplace to say I wouldn’t be in for at least a week. It wasn’t until later that day, when my brother arrived that any sort of reality started to creep into his awareness. He hid the chair broken during the attack, and tried to pretend like nothing had happened… but my brother took him aside and said that he needed to move out for a while.
When my brother went home, and my mother arrived; there was a further dawning of awareness for him… he was always desperate for my mothers approval, and that was obviously missing. Suddenly he couldn’t cope. This is when the twisting of the story began in earnest. Two nights in a row he took off in his car… on one night he threatened suicide, and on the other night he threatened suicide and then told that police that he was too scared to return the house. This showed how he could act when faced with a situation he didn’t like.
On Valentine’s Day, he left me to return to his family. It was then that his twisting of the truth became more obvious… suddenly there was no attack, but instead, I was making it all up. I broke the chair and caused the injuries to myself. This version of events is what he was going to defend the Protection Order with… thankfully, I had the medical report detailing the attack, and all of his documentation which included a letter to a former supervisor apologising for assaulting him… When his lawyer saw the documentation, the Protection Order defence was withdrawn.
When I look at this incident, I can see why I doubted so much of what happened within the marriage. I was dissociative, so often doubted my version of events anyway; but he encouraged me to doubt things by twisting them back onto me, and playing a totally different role in public. This situation reminds me of a quote from the book Dragonslippers: This is what an abusive relationship looks like:
‘You know, it’s interesting…work…politics…. It’s really so easy to control other people. You just have to cause dysfunction. Once someone feels insecure, you can do anything you want with them.’
This was said by the abuser within Rosalind Penfold’s relationship. I entered the relationship with my ex-husband already insecure… all he had to do, was to keep me in that place and he could do whatever he wanted. That’s why my attending therapy was seen as such a threat, and why he enjoyed my dysfunction so much.
I’m glad that I’m now physically free of him… I just wish that I was psychologically free as well.
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Now playing: Headless Chickens – George
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Being
Everything we see, or experience leaves an impression on our being… is it positive or negative, and does it balance out over time?
As I’ve descended into the depths of suicidal ideation and intent over the last few months; these sorts of questions, have played on my mind. I questioned why I was here, what my purpose was, and how far I had fallen short of meeting any expectations – my own, and my perception of what others expected of me. I could say that I was caught in the thinking, but I wasn’t… I was still working, existing, and being “normal”. However, everything was very superficial, and in the moment. I had no concept of anything long-term, and all I felt was the confusing extremes of nothingness, or utter chaos.
Earlier this week, I had to go to Wellington for a conference. Not only was the conference in the city where my father lives, but it was going to force me to interact with a group of strangers for long periods of time without any downtime. This was the proverbial straw that broke the camels back; all of the emotions that I’d been bottling up from the different stressors over the last few months, came bubbling to the surface. In my rather typical fashion, I didn’t tell anyone what the problem was; instead, I descending into mute chaos, unable to even pin-point what was going on. All I knew, was that I had to go to Wellington, and that going to Wellington was going to be the place where I tried to destroy myself – either physically, or psychologically. There was so much rage at the thought of being in Wellington, that I was barely able to function.
Most people would have tried to avoid going to the conference. Most people would have tried to communicate with their therapist about what was causing the chaos, especially after asking for an emergency session because things were out of control. Not I. Nope. I sat there, almost mute. Allison tried to encourage me to talk. I shut down further. She tried different techniques to try to encourage me to open up, and I dismissed them. All I could do was scream internally, and not say a word until the very end of the session, when I mentioned that I wouldn’t be seeing her at the usual time because I was going to be in Wellington at a conference. A nice parting cry for help… too little, too late.
I went into the weekend, planning my own demise. It was going to be spectacular!
Possibly the only reason why those plans weren’t carried through, was that a friend I hadn’t talked to in a while contacted me. Thankfully, they know me well enough to understand my warped codes… my signals of distress… the warning signs that I was planning something very bad. They pushed through their own problems, and forced me to confront my own. They tried to be a voice of reason, when I wasn’t prepared to hear anyone, or anything. They listened to my rants about no one understanding… countering my rant with simple questions regarding how I was communicating. They know me all too well… I can walk out of a conversation sure that I had said A, B, and C; only to realise that I might have said A, B, and C… but it was buried amongst the rest of the alphabet in such a way that there is no way that anyone would be able to understand what I was really trying to say.
As part of this interaction, I wrote one of the most honest emails I’d written in a long time. I laid out how out of control things were, what had caused the chaos, and the reasons why I had been slowly withdrawing from everything for months. I tried to show how much I was failing at everything, and that I could see no reason to keep on going. I thought I laid it all out very nicely… my friends counter point was that I wasn’t a quitter, so why was I quitting now. It seemed a pretty weak argument. It didn’t change my plans for self-destruction. I flew to Wellington with everything set.
What I hadn’t counted on, was the quiet determination of my friend. There were texts to see how I was. Often arriving at a point when I was about to jump off the metaphorical cliff. Those seemingly simple acts kept that part of my brain that seems determined to heal, somewhere nearby.
I honestly don’t know how I made it through the conference. There were triggers everywhere… crowds, noise, alcohol, hotels… and one of the worst… a former team leader. A woman who seems to know exactly how to push my buttons in a way that will tear me apart without thought. This time around was no different. My colleagues and I met her outside our hotel, as she was waiting for someone to come and pick her up. She greeted us with a smile, and then said that she had recognised me because of the tattoo on my right shoulder-blade. As this tattoo is quite low, I said that I was surprised that she could see it… she said she could just see the top of it, and then grabbed my jacket and blouse, pulling them down to expose my back, and show everyone what she had seen. This invasion of my personal space was too much. I immediately dissociated, and lost the rest of the night… in one move, she had shown that my personal space was meaningless, and could be invaded at any moment without consent.
So now I sit, having made it through the conference in one piece, despite my best efforts. I’m left wondering where to next. I sent the email to my friend, to Allison as well. On Thursday we had a very difficult session. She admitted that she didn’t understand my code. I told her I was difficult, and that every other therapist I’ve seen has said the same thing. She read things in the email that she had no idea about. All I could do was mention how difficult I am to work with. I hide. I avoid. I cloak unbearable pain in pretty words and say them as if they were nothing. When she doesn’t understand, I take that to mean that the unbearable pain is indeed nothing. So, I withdraw even further.
Yes, I am difficult. I would hate to be the therapist that tries to help me heal. Part of me thinks that this is Allison’s way of easing me out the door. Another part of me thinks that the fear of that, is a good distraction from having to deal with the pain of what happened in Wellington, and what led up to it.
Time will tell. Time will tell if it really is worth the pain of being.
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Now playing: Counting Crows – Round Here
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Fragments
Fragments… just bits and pieces flying around inside my head.
That’s what the last week has been like. Nothing tangible to hold onto.
The only constant are feelings of disgust. I feel dirty, disgusting, sub-human… unclean. I don’t think the layers of filth can be, or will ever be, removed. It is part of me as surely as the colour of my eyes. It is a part of me, and I am a part of it.
I think I could handle it, if all of the fragments flying around my head were of horror. Horror has the ability to sweep you away in a dissociative haze of lost time. But when there are everyday scenes intermingled with the horror, it makes you pause. You pause and look. You turn the fragment around, inspecting it from all angles. You look into the heart of it, and only then do you see the horror. The unmitigated horror of seeing how brazen and normal the abuse was. In those everyday scenes, you see the range of emotions on the faces around you – discomfort, curiosity, embarrassment, and the knowing smiles. What they don’t know, is that they are being manipulated. This is part of their entrance exam into the Old Boys Club. They all pass. Even the ones who question the young girls presence in a place she shouldn’t be, with their joking protests quickly turning into silent observation.
It was the perfect scenario. There was no obvious abuse, but it was implied. Every person in the room probably knew that something was wrong, but there was nothing tangible that they could take to the authorities. It opened the door to silent consent, and they walked through. They became accessories; and in order to ease their own conscious, they will stay forever silent. They didn’t see anything, after all. Just a young girl with her father walking by the shower room. He might not have known that the team were in there. They’re both hearing impaired, after all.
It changed the way those men looked at me. Some of them turned away more quickly. Some saw through me more readily. Some smiled, and beckoned me over more often.
Then the memories of horror draw you into their grip. Grounding techniques are lost in the wave that overwhelms and batters your mind.
But still, you force the smile and talk inanities to the person asking about patron upload problems.
You pack up the box of horrors for another time. Stamp down the lid and push it backwards. You hope that you never have to look at the box again. But, you know you will. Not because of the memories in the box, but because of the emotions it evokes. There is anger at looking at the horror, and anger at looking away. In a world of no-wins, I walk the minefield of navigating the present, while trying to understand and heal from the past.
It’s all done in the hope of having a future. My father took me past the shower room in order to have a future that he wanted. I walked past that shower room because I had no concept of choice. Despite often losing my way, I do have choices now. I have choices based on experience, education and understanding. The only thing more soul-destroying than the abuse, is seeing how I seem to make choices which encourage, or perpetrate self-abuse.
I know that there should be a positive note to the end of this, but there isn’t. I sit here at work, looking at the huge pile of work that is expected of me. I feel the effects of the medical problems which I was told yesterday will require minor surgery. I feel the dissociation starting – the slight fuzziness at the back of my head which is creeping forward steadily. It’s difficult to find that positivity, when the layers of stress in the present, add to the layers of horror from the past. Your head becomes a maelstrom of emotions, and the only relief is dysfunctional coping.
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Now playing: Tracy Chapman – All that you have is your soul
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Asking for help
I’m told that asking for help is one of the strongest things that a person can do. There is a strength in the vulnerability that comes from admitting that you can’t do something by yourself. It’s an indication that you’re not perfect… not the self-sufficient island of invincibility that you’d like to think you are.
It stinks.
It hurts.
It feels impossible.
Over the last few months, I’ve had the urge to cut off my hands during therapy. I know that this is about wanting to reach out for help, and not being able to do so. It’s about punishing those parts of myself who want to reach out. It’s about not allowing weakness.
I learned early on in life that weakness was not acceptable, and made life difficult. Any sign of weakness could be used against me. If I was scared of something, then I could be taunted with it. If something hurt, then it could be prodded. I was confused by being hurt by people that, five minutes earlier, had been laughing and teasing me. All of this meant that I saw my only option as being to draw inward, and showing no outward sign of vulnerability. I was often called stuck-up while I was growing up, mainly because I did everything possible to keep myself separate from those around me. I didn’t think that I was better than anyone else, I just didn’t trust anyone (including myself); so my only protection was to withdraw and project a veneer of invincibility.
That veneer of invincibility is now being threatened. There’s a needy part of me wanting to reach out to others for help. But that is being resisted. I’m showing more signs of dysfunctional coping. I’ve withdrawn any meaningful communication with everyone. I’m having to take medication every morning, just to face the prospect of work. I’ve withdrawn as much contact with people as is possible. All I’m doing, is trying to fly under the radar.
This is the contradiction that I’m living with – needing to fly under the radar, which by definition, means being self-sufficient and invisible; and parts of me needing help.
One is seen by society as being strong; the other weak.
One has kept me alive for the last 30 odd years; the other is what led to so much pain in the past, that I don’t know if I can go there again.
Even if I wanted to ask for help, I don’t think that I know how to do so. The stumbling efforts that I’ve made towards asking for help, have been a disaster. I’ve sent emails which have been misread and caused more pain. I’ve called crisis lines, and not been able to communicate how badly I’m coping, or ended up in the Police holding cells. I’ve gone online to talk to friends, but ended up being unsafe instead. So I obviously don’t know how to ask for, or accept, help. I don’t know what positive help looks like, and I’ve lost all sense of safety.
But, I’m still turning up to work everyday. I’m still playing the game.
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Now playing: Adele – Rolling In The Deep
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Reminders of the past
When I was growing up, my father’s anger dictated the mood within the house. The image of him sitting in his lounge chair, while the waves of silent anger came pouring off of him, is one of my consistent flashbacks. The fear I feel when seeing that image, is immense.
Closely associated with my father sitting in his lounge chair, is him watching the rugby games which seemed to be broadcast every weekend. During the broadcasts, everyone in the house had to be silent. The only spoken words were demands for more beer, or food.
Then there was the rugby club. Another of my constant flashbacks and a place associated with abuse, chaos and neglect.
All of the events associated with those flashbacks happened over 20 years ago. They seem so far away, and yet so close.
One of the things keeping them close is the Rugby World Cup that is underway in New Zealand. For more than a month, there have been daily reminders of rugby and it’s importance in the nations psyche – I wake up to rugby news on the radio; every third or fourth car has a different nations flags flying proudly from their windows; there are billboards on the side of the road; there is a supporters display covering half of a wall in the building that I work; rugby is prominently in the newspapers; it’s on every television channel (even the ones proudly advertising that they are NOT the home of rugby); it’s on the Internet… it.is.everywhere. I can’t avoid it… believe me, I’ve tried.
Last night New Zealand won a place in the World Cup final. Another week of heightened publicity before it’s all over. I honestly don’t think I can cope. I’ve become more withdrawn and stilted over the last few months. The chaos this event has caused has been added to the other stress I’m experiencing, and it’s become more and more of a mess inside my head.
The constant refrain in my head is that I don’t need anyone… that I don’t need help… that the only option is to run away. I know that thinking is dangerous, but it’s all I have.
Perceptions
I’m often curious how others perceive me. At work this past week, I’ve been used as a manager, mediator, problem-solver and substitute therapist… yet every night as I left work, I had to fight the vivid thoughts of suicide. Am I really that good at hiding my internal chaos, that people don’t see the stress that I am under; or do they not care?
The nature of my dissociation, means that I can compartmentalise and hide the chaos. Just like everyone else, I have a “work face” that I present to those around me. But even with each “face” we present to the world, things show through. Over the last three months, my eating has become more of a problem… to the point that my jeans are now, literally, falling off me. Isn’t that a visual clue of the chaos that is going on behind the scenes? Yet, no one mentions it… making it like a dirty secret that exists in plain sight.
I became curious about this, after reading We must see past what it seems… a post about Melody’s struggles after her husband suffered a brain injury, and they were forced to sell many of their possessions. When they put their farm equipment up for sale on their property, a neighbour complained about the eyesore it created… Melody’s husband response -
“Sir,” he said, “There was a time in this country, in this community…when if you drove past your neighbor’s house and saw every single thing they own was for sale in front of their house…and that their lawn had not been mowed for weeks….that you would stop and say….WHAT IS GOING ON, SOMETHING MUST BE TERRIBLY WRONG, WHAT CAN I DO TO HELP YOU?”
When did society, as a generalisation, stop caring about the people around them? I know the research behind the disintegration of the community, and the individualisation of the population… I get that… but it also makes me sad, and more than just a bit frustrated.
In her blog post, Melody asks what would happen if we each wore a sign which told of the struggles and fears we are facing. Would seeing such a sign change the way in which we act towards each other? I’d like to think it would, but would it? For a start, would the signs we wore be honest? Part of the reason why we have a “work face”… “party face”… “school face”… etc, is so that we can protect ourselves a little from the harshness of the world, and to fit into the group that we find ourselves in. So would you want to wear a sign saying “I’m going through a painful divorce” (one of the signs on Melody’s blog post), in all of those situations? I doubt that many of the signs we would wear would be G rated, or appropriate in all situations.
So what is the alternative? One of the big things for me, is something as simple, and complex, as respect. If we respect each other, then we don’t need to wear any signs, because we’ll be treating each other as individuals with unique needs, wants and problems. We’ll be seeing each other… really seeing each other. Seeing past the protective sarcasm, to the hurt underneath.
Of course, if we did this all the time, or were particularly empathetic, then our emotional reserves would be constantly running on empty… but I do think there’s a balance. I think we can treat each other with respect, without losing ourselves in the process. I once read a story about a domestic abuse survivor who used to go to her children’s weekly sporting events with evident bruises… she said that many of the people there would look at the bruises, and some would come up and ask why she didn’t leave her partner, even offer to help her leave. But the one person who made the difference, approached her, and simply said “I’m here if you ever want to talk”. There was no judgements or advice, just a respectful opening. There was no promise of help, or saving the woman, but a respectful, gentle opening of a door.
It’s this sort of respect that can change lives.
How many times when you were a child, did an adult get down to your level, and really communicated with you? I don’t remember one incident of that happening to me, and maybe it wouldn’t have changed anything… but maybe it would have… who knows?
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Now playing: Brooke Fraser – Deciphering me
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Locked up
The other night, I was locked up in the Police holding cells. I wasn’t under arrest… I was being assessed under the Mental Health Act. I’m still struggling to see how this is an appropriate way to respond to someone with mental health issues.
The events leading up to my detainment are fairly complex, but the event which triggered the Police involvement was when I abruptly ended a call to the crisis team. I know that wasn’t the wisest thing to do, and even though I said “goodbye”, the end of the call was abrupt. This hasn’t been an issue in the past, but for some reason, this time they contacted the Police.
A unit was sent to my house to “assess me”. As I had stamped everything back down after talking to the crisis team, I felt sure that this would be nothing more than a formality… I was wrong. The two Police who turned up, said that I didn’t appear happy; so they suggested that they take me back to the station for an assessment by one of the local crisis team. As I knew that this “suggestion” was not really a suggestion, I went along with them.
This is when things started to get really weird… I was sitting in the back of the police car with the female officer, and she read me my rights – my criminal rights… you know those ones they recite to people in handcuffs in television programs… the ones where I have the right to remain silent, and everything that you say or do can, and will, be taken down and used in a court of law… those rights.
I sat there rather stunned, but agreed that I understood my rights. She assured me that I wasn’t under arrest, but that assurance came too late… my mind raced to when my father used to take me to the police station with him for the raffle draws, and specifically the time when the policeman put me in the cells to show me what happened to “bad girls”.
When we got to the Police station, things became surreal… I was processed – my property inventoried; my jacket taken (because it had ties); my shoes and earrings removed. I asked to keep my phone because of my anxieties, but that request was denied.
I was then taken from the intake area to the desk, where I stood within the red square on the floor, and was questioned about my criminal past (or lack thereof). Thankfully I was wearing jeans which are about two sizes too big, so I could drag the excess material down and stand on that, rather than the cold concrete floor.
Then one of the worst things I have ever experienced… I was taken to a holding cell. The sound that the door made as they locked me in was incredible.
I sat on the stainless steel bench, shivering uncontrollably, trying to keep it together. I tried to focus on a spot on the floor of the cell and stay present. The internal noise was incredible… screaming… yelling that this is what you get for telling the secrets… voices saying to shut up… urges to self-injure… everything came in a rush.
When the crisis team came to assess me, he joined me in the cell. A man I didn’t know sitting between me and the door, in a small, locked cell.
He asked all of the usual questions, and I reassured him in all the usual ways. All I wanted to do was go home… that became my goal. Anything to leave that cell.
He agreed that I could go home.
I know that the crisis team, and the police need to be aware of the safety of their staff… but how is this an appropriate way to handle someone with mental health issues? At no point was I violent. I never raised my voice. I never even looked any of them in they eye. I was compliant and answered all of their questions. So why was I put in a locked cell which is usually used for criminal suspects? I don’t understand.
I remember asking if I was under arrest when they were processing my property. The policewoman said that I wasn’t… but yet, I was being treated like a criminal.
All I did wrong, was ask for help. Don’t worry, I won’t be doing that again.
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Now playing: Audioslave – Doesn’t Remind Me
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