Late last year, I accidentally broke a couple of glass
candles over our kitchen floor. Shattered glass was everywhere. What
only took seconds to splinter throughout that kitchen/dining room space took an
hour to clean up, in several stages.
I started sweeping the area, getting the larger pieces into
the dustpan. Next, I thoroughly canvased the kitchen and dining room areas with
wet paper towels, catching the more miniscule pieces as they glinted in weird
spots, like half opened drawers, and even my cat’s food and water dishes.
(Don’t worry, I complexly switched out those dishes with
clean ones).
Yes, I spent an hour scouring the areas, scanning all
surfaces and crevices for any lurking, sharp glints. I thought I’d successfully
swept/mopped/cleaned up all remnants of the candles.
Our home was safe once again. Problem solved.
Sure enough, three weeks later… while walking in between
rooms, I got a shard of glass stuck in the bottom of my foot. Maybe it wasn’t
even a shard, maybe it was more like a sliver. Teeny tiny. Barely seen.
But felt? Oh, that was a different story! Being lodged
firmly in the bottom of my heel, I was keenly aware of its existence,
with each step I took. I tried homemade remedies involving a piece of Ivory
soap applied to the area, held in place by a Band-Aid. No success. I finally
bought a nifty gadget that removed the sucker after a week. (But not before I
spent my birthday with this irritating affliction lodged in my heel. Happy
birthday to me).
The sliver taught me about the triggers that often lurk
around the issues like abuse and addiction. Sometimes, we engage in a false
sense of security about those very issues.
We tell ourselves we’ve dealt with our pain. We’ve been to
therapy. We have participated in self-help seminars and healthier coping
strategies. We’re all good.
When the calamity of our issue or disaster happened, we swept
and mopped it up. All clean now. We covered every nook and cranny. Nothing to
see here.
And then, whamm-o!
We’re in pain again.
I had recently left a longstanding and abusive relationship.
I had been in therapy, received counsel and support from other trusted
individuals. I was employing better coping strategies and behaviors. I was all
better. I was healed, even (I can hear you snickering, by the way).
Not. So. Fast.
Lulled into a false sense of security, buoyed by an
enthusiastic confidence at the freedom and my deliberate decision to emancipate
myself from the situation, I, not surprisingly, found myself within another dysfunctional
dynamic.
I initially got caught up in the feeling that I had successfully
broken all dysfunctional and abusive cycles, once and for all (again, I hear
you snickering).
Yes, I had a case of the “ta-dahs!” Woo-hoo! I made it!
Never mind this
latest person disrespected my time, was late for appointments, and did not
follow through; their lip service did not match with the corresponding action. Never
mind that I reverted to old patterns of codependency and poor self-care. The
red flags were there. And yes, I saw them. I just chose not to acknowledge
them.
And, like my afflicted foot, I tried to work with the
irritation, doing my best to work around the discomfort. I operated from the
principle I had done my healing work. I was not vulnerable to abuse any longer.
I had changed. All the glass was cleaned and cleared up.
But, again, not so fast.
That pesky little sliver persisted, as communication with
this individual resulted in confusion, tears, and a diminished sense of self.
What was that all about? Huh. I thought I had moved on.
Yeah, I moved on, alright. I had unconsciously replaced the
abuse I believed I had “left,” with another party who could still hurt me…
because I was allowing it, through my own denial of reality.
Ouch.
There was and is regret about that. I work on processing just
what it all meant. Contemplation about spent time and lessons learned abounded.
I did learn that the behaviors I have around my abusive experiences are still
my Achilles’ heel. I can make progress; I have made progress.
But I am still a finite, vulnerable human being, who will
never arrive perfectly healed and bulletproof.
Quite the contrary.
The bullets can, all too easily, pierce me, especially if I
neglect to take care of myself, in all the necessary ways I need to.
Like the broken glass, things concerning our personal issues
do not tend to surface…until much later. Seemingly, from out of nowhere.
Triggers. Ah. Yikes.
Yep. There we are.
I didn’t know that was still there.
The poking irritation of my glass sliver reminded me
otherwise. I was reminded of my Achilles’ heel.
However, being reminded of this can now work to help me get
where- and to whom- I need to be.
So, yes, there’s value in my Achilles’ Heel.
Copyright © 2020 by Sheryle Cruse
No comments:
Post a Comment