For many years, my
family kept this hunk of shininess here, thinking there was a chance it could
be the real thing.
There existed the hope
that, yes, indeed, they struck gold!
Now, I have
inherited this hunk of shininess, only to discover it was, in fact, “Fool’s
Gold.”
As I’ve learned more about
Narcissistic abuse, I’ve discovered one of its most important tactics: “future
faking.”
A future faker uses
promises, inferences and intensity to simulate intimacy and to keep control of a relationship or a
situation.
Indeed, I have
repeatedly experienced this device, although I didn’t know what to call it.
It’s sanity-saving to recognize that what I went through had a name.
“Someday…”
A large component of my
personal experience with emotional fool’s gold or “future faking,” involved the
use of this word. Such hope and promise were contained within it. The assurance
that, no matter what hell or pain someone goes through, “it will all be worth
it…someday.” I noticed that, while the persons and circumstances of my
experiences may have changed, that “someday” element was consistent throughout.
Future Faking: Just Be
Good Enough:
Alright, let’s start from the
beginning.
Being anything “enough” was
at the epicenter of the “someday”/ future faking promise. The dangled carrot of
“If you’ll just be or do this, then you can have this reward” was way more
dysfunctional than any goal setting. This was all about conditional love, worth
and acceptance. I learned I could not possess any of those things unless and
until I met the proper specifications. Most of the time, the rules
were never clearly and fully declared; it was the insecurity of never quite
knowing where you stood.
But keep striving, because, after
all, “someday…”
The first few times I tried for the
glittering, someday prize, things seemed shiny, innocent, even fair. Yeah, of
course I need to try for these things. They don’t just come automatically.
But gradually, as I performed and
completed tasks, missions and behaviors, with no promised reward to show
for it, I started seeing how the goal posts just kept moving.
Achieve this. Okay, achieved.
Now just achieve some more.
Okay, done.
More movement of the goal posts.
And it never stopped. It quickly
set in how this was a game I could never win. I could never be “enough” at
anything, because the enough ante was always upped.
Future Faking: Someday,
They’ll Die:
So, learning that lesson as
a behavior baseline, I was now old enough, ready enough to be taught some finer
points. Morbid, macabre points,
Coming from an abusive dynamic, it
was inevitable, I suppose, that certain
family members would come to view death as the surefire escape of the hellish
existence. Yes, there were suicidal thoughts and even attempts. But it went
further than that. Certain individuals would, in fact, make “someday” promises
to me, like “someday, when this person dies, we’ll be able to do whatever we
want.”
So,
as a child, I looked at that person’s death as that hope for better days.
I
know. It sounds adorable.
But,
surrounded by adults who were supposed to “know better,” what else was I
supposed to ascertain from the message?
“When
this person dies, we’ll be able to do whatever we want.”
That’s
quite a powerful promise.
And
that statement laid groundwork for other mistaken beliefs to be taught:
Future Faking: Someday,
We’ll Be Able to Do What We Want:
This included some dream career,
which further promised “happily ever after,” and worldwide traveling. Underscoring
everything, in the subtext, was the even more vague, but gleaming promise: “We’ll be happy.”
So, as a child, navigating abuse, I
waited with this adult who promised the happiness and perfection that hinged on
another person’s death. We waited for years… decades. Inevitably one day, some
twenty-five years after this promise was given to me, yes, this persona did
die.
And there was no radical
transformation, at least, not of the happy, “we-can-do-whatever-we-want”
variety. There was no perfect dream career. There was no perfect international
travel.
There was just unrealistic
expectation and spent energy, funneled into the “someday.”
And, as I watched and learned all
about the disillusionment from this trusted adult, who was supposed to know more
than I did, have the answers and make them actualized, I learned another
dysfunctional lesson: I better get to work and achieve, already!
Back to the salt mines. And maybe,
this time, I’ll get what I want.
Future Faking: Achievement:
I became an overachiever, yes. I’d seen what
stagnation produced. I’d seen the disappointment faces on adults as they waited
for an answer to materialize that didn’t. I saw how passive inaction led to
nowhere, nowhere I wanted to go, anyway.
So, action, achievement, performance, awards,
accolades, striving. That was the name of the game now. This time will be
different. The goal posts won’t move. I’ll successfully achieve.
I was the cliché overachieving kid, winning good
grades, awards, ribbons and trophies. I did this, with the hope that the
designated prize of the moment would finally seal the deal: I was
enough; I did enough.
But those moving goal posts again.
It wasn’t long before grade school turned into high
school, which turned into college, which turned into adulthood, with me
still chasing.
And, even though I may have “won” something:
attention, an award, some achievement, a coveted relationship, the insidious
lies of future faking were still not quelled: “Just Be Good Enough,” “You’ll Get My Love and Approval,” “You’ll Get Promoted” still existed, just out of my reach.
I chased and “hung in there,”
believing If I just sacrificed myself enough, exhausted myself enough, then,
certainly, the golden promise would be mine. It would not be Fool’s
Gold. It would be the real thing.
It kept me humiliating myself in
harmful relationships, as I convinced myself they’d love and accept me if I
changed in a certain way.
It kept me expending energy, time,
effort and resources because I believed somehow “this time, it’ll work.”
It kept me waiting, waiting for
some illusive perfection that would make up for all pain.
It was just a matter of time, after
all. “Someday…”
Meanwhile, I learned about what
it’s like to live manipulated, used and discarded, as not only other persons
exploited me for their own purposes, but I did that, as well, to myself.
Sadist…meet masochist.
What was going on here?
As an adult, wasn’t I supposed to know
better? So, why wasn’t I doing better?
Because I still believed the Fool’s
Gold was its actual 24 Karat, much more promising, cousin.
And it was never going to be that.
All is was, instead, was shiny illusion. Manipulative promise. Toxic hope. It
was my volunteering to wait, seemingly forever, on a mirage. No refreshing
water, only desert.
I was choosing to do that.
The Future Faking had no time restriction on it. It didn’t suddenly expire when
I turned eighteen. It wasn’t restricted to childhood innocence and other
people’s behaviors.
Future Faking, waiting on some form
of toxic hope, was now something I had knowledge about. And I could choose
to accept or reject its frustrating terms.
Future Faking: The Promise of Fool’s
Gold:
Believing
in the hope of “when” can, indeed, be Fool’s Gold. It’s further exacerbated
if/when we give our power away to a faulty promise. Sometimes, that’s at the
hands of an abuser. Sometimes, that’s simply our own unmet needs running amuck,
desperate for some cure-all to make all the pain go away. We become our own abuser.
Future Faking, with its
shiny allure, can place demands on unrealistic “happily
ever after.” It can keep us hanging on, staying in abuse, tolerating our
devaluation, stunting our personal growth, living in pain. We tell ourselves,
“I just need to hang in there, because, after all, someday, it will be
worth it.”
And
it rarely is. When we compromise our characters, our health, our well-being,
our autonomy or any other thing that is precious to us, with the hope that
Fool’s Gold, will, in fact, become real gold to us, we are
ones left dull and lifeless.
If
it feels like someone is using the hope of “future faking” to keep you
controlled and staying put, in any context, if it feels like you can never be
good enough, do enough, please enough, be enough, that’s abusive. If it is us who
are self-imposing this, that, too, is abusive.
Life,
love and personal goals are never meant to be unreachable, ever-moving
targets.
Pursuing life and
future in a healthy way is our true treasure. Its promise lies in the imperfect
process of accepting unflinching truth of who, what, when, where and how we
are. Each of us can embrace that today.
Copyright © 2022 by
Sheryle Cruse
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