Posts Tagged: love


28
Nov 09

Relationship 101

Speaking of good men …  there is a good man in my life.  Or at least there was.  As of the last couple days, there is some question as to whether he is still in my life.  As enlightened as I try to be, as whole as I want to be, as repaired as I pretend to be, I still don’t have a clue how to do this relationship stuff.

Narcissism Survivor or not, who amongst us does know how to do this relationship stuff?  The person who could write THE guidebook on relationships would rank right up there with God and the first person to ever roast a coffee bean.  Enough people have tried to write the definitive book on navigating the perils of relationships.  I’ve read plenty of them.  Either I’m a slow learner, or there really isn’t one primer that fits all cases.

Prior to leaving Mark, and for awhile after leaving him, I was convinced that I was never going to be in another relationship.  Doesn’t everybody go through that?  Sure, there are some who pass from one to another simultaneously, and they often readily admit their fear of living alone.   But most of us need a good healthy breather before jumping back into the pool.  I wasn’t looking when he came along.  I was still focusing on how pleasant my life was, in the unencumbered state of divorce.  I didn’t need anyone for financial reasons.  I didn’t have a fear of being alone.  Not like I was ever alone with two kids, anyway.  I was coping quite nicely, in fact.  I felt like I had the whole rest of my life ahead of me.  I could do the projects I wanted, read what I wanted, travel to where I wanted, enjoy the hobbies that I liked.  Okay, to be honest, there wasn’t much time for all of that because of being a mom.  But I love being a mom, and it’s nice to think that when Jen and Will aren’t needing me as much, I’ll be free to pursue whatever my heart desires.

Then he came along.  It started so innocently.  We spent months getting to know each other online because we live in different states.  It was perfect.  Even if I desperately wanted to jump into a physical relationship with him, I was forced to take my time because of the distance.  That was so smart, and so healthy.  There’s a lot to be said for getting to know someone without the process being clouded by all the physical stuff.

That was two and a half years ago.  In the meantime, there have been a few local guys that have called to invite me for coffee.   I’m not one who enjoys talking on the phone.  After a 45 minute phone conversation where a guy complains, non-stop, about his ex-wife, I’m ready to cut my left arm off.  Let’s just say that there are a lot of people out there with a lot of issues.  And my long distance friend continues to rise above.  And I continue to screw it up.  I am not spending any time worrying about whether he is a Narcissist.  He’s the furthest thing from.  I am spending too much time trying to figure out what my role is in a relationship.  You mean I’m not supposed to do everything?  Am I supposed to do anything?  What should I do?  I know I keep doing too much.  I know I can’t shut up about it.  I think I keep sabotaging things because I don’t have any faith.  I’m positive that it will end badly, because that’s what history has taught me.  Therefore, when things are fabulous, I set out to mess them up, just so I can get the inevitable over with. Continue reading →


26
Nov 09

A Great Marriage

A great marriage is not when the perfect couple comes together.  It is when an imperfect couple learns to enjoy their differences.
David Meurer

21
Nov 09

Believe

Believe that you have it, and you have it.
                                                                    Latin Proverb

18
Nov 09

The Unexpected

Never lose faith. 
Never lose heart. 
There’s always something unexpected
and terrific just around the bend.
Unknown

18
Nov 09

Crossing Paths

Jenny is bummed because her closest friend is drifting away.  Last year they were in the same class.  This year they are in different classes, and while we arrange for the girls to get together outside of class, the relationship is definitely changing.  Jen doesn’t understand why Hailey isn’t interested in the same things anymore.  Jen wants to know why Hailey doesn’t listen anymore.  That’s tough for a 2nd grader.  And it’s tough for a 2nd grader’s mom.

But the issue with Hailey opened up an interesting conversation for the three of us.  I was trying to explain to Jen and Will about friendships and relationships, in general.  I’ve gotten that email about friends, a couple times, now.  You know the one — it talks about how some people come into your life briefly, some come into your life for awhile, and some come into your life to stay.

I was trying to explain to Jen that she and Hailey had paths that were headed in the same direction for awhile.  They liked the same things, told the same secrets, and giggled at the same time.  That was lovely for awhile.  But people change, and sometimes their path takes them in a different direction.  That’s not a bad thing.  It’s a little sad, because you still wish that person’s path was along side yours.  But it’s exciting to think that you will be bumping into another person, who may be on the same path as you.  And then, at some point, your path will change, and you will veer off in a new direction.  I wanted them to see that they should be happy that their paths intersect with other paths for lots of reasons.  They should see the benefit of those crossings and not be so blue when the paths head off in new directions.  They get to take all the things they learn, and  all those shared experiences with them on their own new path.

Of course, that led to my talking about how Mark and I were on the same path for awhile.  I wanted them to understand how grateful I am that my path crossed with Mark’s.  If it hadn’t, there wouldn’t be Will and Jenny.  Naturally, they both wanted to know why my path wasn’t the same as Mark’s anymore.  I started to give them that tired old excuse  about how people grow and change, and blah, blah, blah.  But my kids are pretty visual.  I wanted to give them something that would drive the point home.  I explained that Mark and I were sort of driving down this path, but it was like we were in two separate cars.  I guess I wasn’t comfortable in his car, and he didn’t particularly like my car.  His car was fancy and pristine.  His car was very organized.  You couldn’t drink coffee in his car or eat Goldfish Crackers in his car.  Booster seats never really fit properly in his car.  My car had plenty of room for booster seats, graham crackers, granola bars, wipes, bikes, stuffed animals, books, papers, crayons, and frisbees.

One day, as we were headed down our path, side-by-side, in our two separate cars, it was like my hand involuntarily (or maybe not so involuntarily) yanked on the steering wheel,  my car went out of control, and I crashed right into his car and caused a seriously messed up demolition.  I reminded them of those cool demolition derbies that they see on T.V., where the car is totally trashed, but the driver jumps out, arms in the air, grinning from ear to ear.   I tried to explain that I had been ready for a new path for awhile.  I wasn’t happy traveling that same path with their dad anymore.  In order to head out on a new path, I made the choice to not be married to their dad any longer.  I pointed out that divorce is a lot like a demolition derby.  There’s a lot of messed up cars, but usually everybody walks away intact.  Some drivers, of course, come out of the derby much happier than others.


16
Nov 09

Friendship

I get by with a little help from my friends.
John Lennon

16
Nov 09

Narcissists and Friendship

A very dear friend called this weekend.  We’ve known each other since college.  She’s one of those special friends that, although we may not get to visit as much as I’d like, when we do talk, we pick up right where we left off.  She’d been reading my blog and thought maybe I needed a call.  I didn’t realize I was sending out an S.O.S.  That’s a beautiful thing about good friends, they often know you better than you know yourself.  They can tell when you are feeling vulnerable, they can appreciate your successes, they know your different phases.  They can tell you to quit taking yourself so seriously, just as you can do that for them.

When I was first dating Mark, I was curious about the fact that he didn’t have any friends.  Actually, there was one guy that he would do a few things with, but he was kind of an odd duck.  He didn’t have any friends, either.  I just assumed that Mark poured himself into his business, and he didn’t have any time to cultivate friendships.  Funny how you can so easily turn a negative into a positive when you are in a new relationship.  Then, when Mark and I had been married for awhile, I would think to myself, “Well, I guess he just prefers to spend his time with me when he’s not working.”

I would have killed to be a hunting widow or a golf widow.  Every healthy relationship needs those spaces where you go away, get a new perspective, and come back to look at your partner with fresh eyes.  You don’t need to go away for a long time.  Maybe you need an afternoon break, or a weekend break.  Never having a break from your partner is like never changing the sheets on your bed.  They can get pretty stale and smelly.

Several years into our marriage, Mark would rant about how I prevented him from going on his mountain adventures.  He felt tied down and never got to take off like he did before we were married.  I had heard the stories of his adventures.  In most cases, he was by himself.  I think he was angry with himself for not wanting to go by himself any more, and so he directed the anger at me.

Narcissists are lousy at friendship.  They aren’t interested in carrying on a conversation unless the talk is all about them.  And they sure aren’t going to spend any time worrying about someone else’s issues, feelings or concerns.  A close friend of ours was going through a divorce.  I had invited her for dinner.  I wanted her to know that she had our support while she went through a difficult time.  We shared some beers on the front deck, and we just let her vent.  That’s what friends do.  At one point, Mark got out of his lawn chair and headed into the house.  I thought he was getting something to drink.  He didn’t come back.  He didn’t come back for dinner, either.  I made some excuse for our friend, saying something like, “Oh, Mark hasn’t been feeling well.”  I had seen him do this before — get up from the dinner table, or simply leave a room in the middle of a conversation.  His rudeness astounded me.  After the friend had gone home, I asked what had happened to him.  He simply said, “I was bored with the conversation and wasn’t interested in sticking around for any more.”  That is precisely why he’d find himself alone on his mountain trips.


13
Nov 09

When A 15 Minute Trick Doesn’t Cut It

I’ve been around the block a few times — sometimes even stomping my feet while I make the pass.  I know that, in some cases, a few deep breaths, or a glass of water, or a handful of nuts, or a self-imposed time-out just won’t do the trick.  Hell, I’ve even chugged the glass of water, grabbed the handful of nuts, marched outside, and come storming back in to start scrubbing the floor.  By then, I’ve gone way beyond the 15 minutes, and it’s still not working.

This is when I get serious.  This will sound like a contradiction to the 15 Minute Tricks, but it’s necessary to get inside my head for this approach.  I force myself to sort through all the tangled thoughts that are swimming around in my brain.

An aside …  One day I’m getting my haircut by this gal that I love who runs a beauty shop with her sister.  They are chatting about this book that one of them is reading.  It has something to do with “Women are Spaghetti and Men are Waffles.”  How can you not enjoy an analogy like that?  Besides, I absolutely adore spaghetti.  I guess the premise is that women have every thought they’ve ever had wrapped around every other thought they’ve ever had.  And all those thoughts are standing at the ready to wrap around any new or potential thoughts.  Men compartmentalize their thoughts into neat little boxes, like the sections of a waffle.  I’ve got to get that book.  Anyway, I find that I’ve been enjoying thinking of female brains as plates of spaghetti, and male brains as a bunch of boxes with lids.  (I don’t really like waffles.  And I admire a guy’s ability to put a topic or thought into a box, put a lid on it, and return to it later.  Sometimes they decide they don’t like, never have liked, that thought, and they never go back.  I wish I could do that.)

So I’m going with the plate-of-spaghetti analogy.  In that plate of spaghetti, or pile of thoughts, there are usually a couple thoughts that seem to be festering among the other relatively innocuous thoughts.  The plan is to ferret out the one or two thoughts that seem to be poisoning all the others.  The poisonous thoughts are the ones that do me in.  I can deal with all the mundane issues.  I begin to sort out the thoughts.  I’ll see if there’s anything I can do about them, and take some kind of action.

Maybe your laptop is away for repairs.  Maybe your laundry is multiplying and making its way down the hall.  Maybe toys are littering every corner of the house.  Maybe your mom can’t seem to find a way to say anything without hurting your feelings.  Maybe the leaves are piling up and waiting for you to go at them with a rake.  Maybe the furnace only comes on when you fiddle with the switch on the thermostat.  Maybe the person you want to spend the rest of your life with lives 2000 miles away.  Maybe you haven’t the slightest  clue what to fix for dinner. Continue reading →


1
Nov 09

What We Discard

The things people discard tell more about them than the things they keep.
Hilda Lawrence

31
Oct 09

Understanding

Seek first to understand, then to be understood.
Stephen R. Covey

31
Oct 09

Can You Connect With A Narcissist?

My brother has big, chocolate brown eyes.  When he is conversing with you, his eyes are focused on you and nothing else.  His gaze is warm and welcoming.  He doesn’t make you feel like you are being interrogated, he makes you feel comfortable and accepted.  My sister-in-law laughs when she talks of how my brother knows everyone in their neighborhood, their dogs’ names, and who might be ready for a pick-up game of racquetball.  He can be intense — in a good way.  You get the feeling that he is interested in what you have to say, and he wants to know more.

I get energized from connecting with people.

(I admit that connecting with others is a way for my hole to get filled.  I know… I’m supposed to do that from within.)

My kids and I will be looking for something at Target, and I’ll ask a clerk for help.  Invariably, while she’s leading us to the widget that I can’t find, she’ll tell us about the time that she bought the same widget; how her husband thought she was crazy, but that it did exactly what the product was supposed to do; how her mother-in-law bought the same thing, and now the whole family swears by this widget; and on and on …

I can’t get out of a store without hearing the makings of a life story. Continue reading →


28
Oct 09

Holding Back

It’s not who you are that holds you back, it’s who you think you’re not.
                                                                                        Anonymous

28
Oct 09

Filling The Hole

I can’t sleep — again.  Jenny woke at 2:30 a.m. and came in my bed.

In the old days when I couldn’t get back to sleep, I’d lay there thinking about what I was doing wrong, what I needed to change, or how I could do better.  Now when I can’t sleep, I think about how far I’ve come, how I really am doing well, and how I can’t wait to write on this blog.

If you have never tried journaling, you need to.  I’ve written in diaries or journals – and now this blog – my whole life.  A journal provides a guarantee that you will always be listened to and heard.

Anyway, now it’s 4:00 a.m., so I might as well get up, fix some decaf tea, grab some graham crackers and start writing.  It’s funny how as my fingers fly across the keyboard, my head seems to empty of all the thoughts keeping me awake, and my body loses its tenseness.

Tonight I was thinking about my theory –  it’s not an original theory.  It’s an amalgamation of a bunch of different theories that I’ve read about in all the self-help books that I’ve devoured over the years.

I believe we all have a hole in our soul.  Some call the hole a void or an injury.  I don’t like “injury”.  It’s too dramatic.  “Injury” leads to the word “victim”.  I don’t like walking around thinking that I’m a victim.  It sounds helpless and hopeless. Continue reading →


24
Oct 09

Acceptance

You can either  hold yourself  up to the  unrealistic standards  of others, or ignore  them and  concentrate on  being happy  with  yourself as  you are.
Jeph Jacques

24
Oct 09

One Day At A Time

If you’ve read this far, you have most likely suffered from a relationship with a narcissist.  Sometimes I find myself thinking that every time I turn around, I find a new person who has been in a relationship with a narcissist, or has discovered, finally, that they were raised by narcissists.  Narcissism is very pervasive in our culture, and it seems to be getting more prevalent.

At this point, if you haven’t checked out my disclaimer page, you might want to do that.

I will remind you that I AM NOT A PROFESSIONAL on the survival of narcissism.  I’m not there yet.  I do believe that I’m headed in the direction of becoming a professional narcissism survivor.

Surviving with narcissism is a work-in-progress.  I am having way more good days than bad days.  I guess that means it’s working.

These aren’t magical steps that will cure you overnight.   These suggestions will not have you waking tomorrow morning with a plan for how your life will dramatically change.  This is a slow and steady process.  But because it is slow and steady, it takes.  It will last.  You will eventually see that you’ve modified your behavior.  You will become pro-active instead of re-active.  Your kids will see that you possess a power they didn’t know you had.  You will respect yourself and know that you are worthy of a healthy life. Continue reading →