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Wisest Elder Ever
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#21
I really struggle with how to forgive the exact same thing. How to forgive the deliberate cause of emotional pain, deliberate abuse, lying, conning and covering up. Hugs
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Anonymous43949, Crazy Hitch
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#22
I don't know. My mother was the cruelest person I have ever known, and passed on ten years ago. I have never forgiven her. But I have closure. All that took was another person to tell me they saw through the perfect woman she disguised herself to be and thereby validated everything for me that I had been feeling. My two ex husbands were narcissists. To say I was walked over repeatedly is an understatement. I had a hard time letting go of my pain and vindictiveness but now I simply don't care. They are not my problem anymore. I hear they are each someone else's now. The biggest factor though is the new life I have built for myself now - one that none of these people can touch.
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Crazy Hitch, Fuzzybear
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#23
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This resonates with me too! It stems from issues with parents (for me). __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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unaluna
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Fuzzybear, unaluna
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Wisest Elder Ever
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#24
It resonates with me too, for the exact same reason... finding out that someone was taking advantage of my heart. And it stems from issues with parents
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Anonymous40643, unaluna
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#25
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Thank you to everyone for your insights and thoughts! I really appreciate your input, and every single one of you has me thinking about this more. I am quoting magicalprice's post since this really resonated with me the most right now. And @Divine your comment as well. That I gave SO much of my heart, my life and my world to someone who took full advantage of my heart AND who was NOT worthy of my heart and love, in the end. Yes, I moved mountains for him because I loved him THAT MUCH. Then to have him tell me he loved his ex more? AND then I learn he stole from me to secretly do drugs behind my back? On top of everything else he pulled that was SO wrong? No, I don't feel I self-sacrifice in order to feel worthy of love.... I just went to great lengths for this person BECAUSE I was SO in love with him. And I thought he was SO in love with me too. We did get engaged after all, and hoped to get married one day. It just takes everything away that was valuable and special at one point, for him to say he loved her more. He was wrong for me and it never would have worked, but still..... one would like to look back on their past relationships with fondness and nice memories... All I have is bitterness. I don't feel he used me, so please any other thoughts, please don't just tell me he used me. I really don't think he did. Deep down, I think he did truly love me, and was simply trying to hurt me with his words in the end. I think he is one messed up, very hurtful and cruel person that I got involved with. I no longer beat myself up over it though.... not like I was a year ago. For the longest time, I wanted revenge. And a part of me still does want the sweet taste of revenge. People always say the best revenge is happiness and moving on without them. And I am pretty much happy. But no, I don't feel I self sacrifice to feel worthy. I don't think I do that, at least. I give in love because that's what love is... you place the other person's happiness and well-being as important as your own, and sometimes, even more important if need be. |
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Anonymous43949
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#26
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#27
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#28
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#29
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#30
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#31
Golden_Eve, this will not be the last time you realize he was doing something behind your back. But answer me this: what does it matter now? He was a bad guy. He did bad things to you. He can no longer do bad things to you. You have moved on and are happy now. So you found out he did something years ago. What does it really matter now that you know exactly who he is? Why is it even a surprise? I'm not chastising you; I'm honestly asking why these things are bothering you? It sounds to me like you haven't moved on, you haven't finished processing the anger and rage. And I think the only way to do that is by dealing with your emotions and yourself and not expecting him to deal with them for you. Emotions don't just go away or stop. Even when you "process" an emotion, all you are doing is learning where it's coming from so you can then act/react appropriately. ANd that may mean to do nothing.
When my therapist was helping me process emotions, specifically anger and anxiety, first she had me explain the physical sensations so I could recognize them and then exert some physical control over my body by breathing or stretching or doing whatever I could to change it from the physical standpoint. Then it was talking about where the emotion was coming from and what I could do to resolve the emotion, whether that was resolving to remind myself that it's done and over or actually taking an action to talk to someone personally who I needed to resolve something with. I think you need to keep reminding yourself it's done and over. There's likely more stuff he did that you don't know. No reason to even care or be surprised. I'll give an example: I had to fire someone at the end of 2018. She did not complete any work in the 6 months she worked for. I know that. I knew that. Still, 6 months later I come across assignments or tasks that she had not completed that she was responsible for. I don't get angry at this point. I expect if she was the last person working on it that it's probably nowhere near complete or a crap job done. Because that's what kind of employee she was. When you run into memories or leftover business of his, expect the behavior he's shown you to expect - lies, deceit, theft, cruelty. I think the reason this has dredged stuff up for you is because you keep expecting him to realize the error of his ways and beg your forgiveness. It's not going to happen. I think part of forgiveness is to stop expecting things from people and just accepting them for who they are. You have to accept that he's a bad guy and likely will always be a bad guy. Doesn't mean you have to tolerate him in your life, of course, but you have to just accept that's who he is and that's what kind of behavior you're going to get, and still may uncover, even years after the fact. Forgiveness comes differently for everyone. I think before you can forgive you have to understand why you are so angry still. And as others have said or insinuated, I don't think this is actually about forgiveness for you. Forgiving someone doesn't mean you can never feel anger at them again. Forgiveness is like mindfulness. It's a daily practice. It's not an instantaneous one and done. Also, this guy really used you and mistreated you. I mean, just, I would be super pissed if I was used that way too. And I would still be. I think when you find yourself feeling these feelings again, since it sounds like you want to move past the anger because it's taking up space in your head and giving you stress, is to practice mindfulness and being in the present. What I mean is reminding yourself to be in the present, ie: he's not here, he's not with you, you've moved on, he can't hurt you anymore so it really doesn't matter; what's in the present, right now, this moment, is whatever you want to give your time and energy to. As they say: don't let him go on living rent free in your head. He already stole enough from you without giving him free space in your brain too. __________________ What if I fall? Oh, my dear, but what if you fly? Primary Dx: C-PTSD and Severe Chronic Treatment Resistant Major Depressive Disorder Secondary Dx: Generalized Anxiety Disorder with mild Agoraphobia. Meds I've tried: Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa, Effexor, Remeron, Elavil, Wellbutrin, Risperidone, Abilify, Prazosin, Paxil, Trazadone, Tramadol, Topomax, Xanax, Propranolol, Valium, Visteril, Vraylar, Selinor, Clonopin, Ambien Treatments I've done: CBT, DBT, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), Talk therapy, psychotherapy, exercise, diet, sleeping more, sleeping less... |
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#32
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Love... well love is really complicated, isn't it? There's a lot of reasons people can say things that betray what they feel. I think the point is that, his sincerity and how he really felt about you is something you'll probably never fully get closure on, yet at the same time, it seems to be one of the main factors that is lingering now and making you feel unable to let go of this past experience. Man, I know how much it hurts to hear words like that that make you start to question everything you had experienced up to that point. That sense of betrayal. It hurts, but because of that pain you are kind of going back and forth and around in circles here. On one hand you're saying what he did was horrible and inhuman and on the other hand you're insisting that he wasn't using you because he really loved you. So the way I see it is that you are simultaneously of two minds about what happened and you're not sure which one to believe. Probably it's somewhere in the middle.... and even both sides can be true at the same time. But then again, even if he 100% did love you, the fact of the matter remains that, did he treat you in the way you want to be treated? No. Even if he DID love you, that's no excuse to treat you that way. So to me it looks like one problem is that it seems like you wouldn't feel as bad about what he did to you as long as you don't have to doubt that he loved you. If he loved you then somehow it feels less unacceptable. So then because he said those words that cast doubt on his feelings, then that's where all of those things start to feel that much worse, then you REALLY feel taken advantage of and then you find yourself needing closure on how genuine were his feelings, which is the one part of this picture that you can't get closure on, so then it's impossible to move on. So the point is, you have to separate "did he love me" from "were his actions cruel/did his actions hurt me." Love is not an excuse for any of this. It doesn't make it any less bad. |
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#33
Eve- I had a thought....do you have to forgive?
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#34
I had to comment on placing other people’s well being and happiness on the same level as yours or even above yours because you love them.
Yes it’s something we often do when we love: our family or a romantic partner. But you got to get to know the person first (if they aren’t family). Know if they are right people for you to place their well being above yours. And you can love people without taking them on and financially supporting them. You can love without doing all that. You shouldn’t put other people’s needs first if you barely know them and can’t even trust them 100%. You got to put yourself first golden |
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#35
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#36
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#37
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But golden seems to struggle with moving on without actual forgiveness and him acknowledging wrongdoings. There is also ruminating issue and wanting to follow up with him. I am not fully understanding this need but I respect the fact that’s what golden eve does and that’s what she wants. I am not sure it’s attainable though. Hopefully eventually it all gets settled one way or the other. This dude took enough space in Golden’s head! She deserves to be free of him |
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#38
@seesaw @divine1966 @magicalprince @sarahsweets
Thank you all! @seesaw, I thank you for your thoughtful reply! Yes I've tried the logical route as well. To logic and reason my way through my emotions. Even that doesn't work well right now for me. It's my emotional state I am dealing with, which is not rational or logical. I never learned how to process and deal with anger and rage very well. And all my anger and rage rose to the surface again when I learned that he stole from me to buy drugs behind my back. He even pretended someone had "dosed" him at a concert I took him to, when it turns out, he had done drugs secretly without telling me, asking me if I wanted him to go to the store for me (that's how he bought the DXM for himself with MY debit card). And no, I should not be surprised to learn this -- and that's exactly what I had written in my journal about it: no surprise there! @magicalprince, thank you as well for your thoughtful insights and reply! You hit the nail on the head. IF he did truly love me, somehow it makes it less of an insult to my self-esteem and less of a blow to me. IF he didn't, and if it all truly was a lie and he loved her more, then I made the worst mistake of my entire life and it was all a BIG JOKE on me. I was the fool. I was foolish to begin with to get involved with him, but if this is really true? My self esteem and self worth go down the drain... what a colossal mistake that was so very costly to me in SO many ways. If he did love her more, then why did we even get engaged?? And that's what this really is about, I think... is about my self esteem and self worth, and I am battling to feel good about myself. I am battling to place this in its proper place so I can throw it in the river & leave it there for good. How can I feel good about myself given this situation? He tried to destroy me emotionally, and well, perhaps it actually worked. Maybe that's the real root of all of this.... I want SO badly to put him out of my mind for good. But it haunts me and it's SO hard to stop the feelings and thoughts, even though I am newly married. So, like I said above, logic and reason don't do me any good right now because my emotional state does not match any of my reasoning or logic. @sarahsweets, yes, perhaps I don't need to actually forgive him. Maybe like seesaw said, it's more about forgiving myself, though I thought I already had a year ago. At the same time, I guess I just feel like the biggest fool in the world. And I never wish to live with regrets.... I do regret the entire experience, and that's also what I am living with. I say in my happiness blog to eliminate regret from one's life in order to truly be happy. I am a hypocrite then, because I cannot seem to do it myself on this one issue. @Divine1966, yes you're right.. though I've been through those thoughts before.... I know the mistakes I made... though I probably repeated the same mistake again with my current husband by getting involved too quickly. Then again, things are really good now between us, and things have been great lately. Knock on wood!!!! I wish I had the answers, but what I do know is that my self-esteem has suffered a huge blow... and that's at the root of this. Last edited by Anonymous40643; Jun 24, 2019 at 06:27 AM.. |
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#39
You're missing the point. There is no quick fix. It sounds like you are looking for a quick fix.
__________________ What if I fall? Oh, my dear, but what if you fly? Primary Dx: C-PTSD and Severe Chronic Treatment Resistant Major Depressive Disorder Secondary Dx: Generalized Anxiety Disorder with mild Agoraphobia. Meds I've tried: Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa, Effexor, Remeron, Elavil, Wellbutrin, Risperidone, Abilify, Prazosin, Paxil, Trazadone, Tramadol, Topomax, Xanax, Propranolol, Valium, Visteril, Vraylar, Selinor, Clonopin, Ambien Treatments I've done: CBT, DBT, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), Talk therapy, psychotherapy, exercise, diet, sleeping more, sleeping less... |
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#40
“my self-esteem has suffered a huge blow... and that's at the root of this.”
That’s precisely it. I can assure you that you will eventually stop reeling from this. For those of us who ruminate, we do eventually find our own closure and move on. When you cut your skin, it eventually heals. So does your heart and mind. Some of us take longer than others. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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