A rollercoaster relationship. Up and down. Unstable.
Insecure. Uneasy.
Ever been involved in one of these suckers? Are you in one now?
As an abuse survivor, I have had my fair share of unhealthy
relationships, and, at the center of them all, was the intermittent, unreliable
quality of good treatment versus toxic treatment. It didn’t announce itself
with trumpets and obvious signals, and often, that’s what added more fuel to
the blindsiding fire I felt seared by.
Sound familiar?
The rude awakening, whether executed by a blatant or a subtle
method, can range be everything from a passive-aggressive dig we only catch
twenty minutes after it’s been said, to the full-on physical slap, kick,
or punch to our person, threatening our very lives.
But usually, the common denominator, no matter what method is
chosen, are such questions we seem to ask ourselves, like…
Why can’t they always act loving, kind, and affectionate?
Why are their moods so unpredictable?
Why don’t the happy times last for long?
Based on my personal experience, in an attempt to answer
those questions, here are a few of my theories.
They don’t love us; they only love what they get from
us.
“Narcissistic supply” is a well-trotted out term used to
describe how we are used and abused.
The person choosing to mistreat us often does not love
us. They only love the supply, in a myriad of forms, we provide for
them: emotional, financial, sexual, convenience, ego-driven supply, for
example. Whatever it is that we represented to- and give to-
them, they love that. They don’t go any further to recognize our
individuality, our humanity, our needs, or our feelings.
We are an object, a means to an end, something to be used.
And they may have absolutely no clue, whatsoever, that they
are viewing us as such. They may be completely convinced they love us,
that this intermittent, unstable, using way of relating to us is, in
fact, love.
Or, of course, they may fully be aware they do not
love us and are using us for their own purposes.
A more constant and healthy solution? Our self-love needs to be
consistent.
If we feel we are deficient in the love experiences within
our lives, we will often put up with, and settle for,
mistreatment, neglect, and all forms of abuse. We may operate from the
principle of “well, something’s better than nothing.” Therefore,
as long as we get an intermittent “I love you,” hug, gift, or met need, from
time to time, we will endure the insult, the slap, the exploitation, or the
prevalent misery.
“Well, something’s better than nothing.”
That’s music to the abuser’s ears, as they often employ their
choice of intermittent behavior, be it good, or bad, loving, or cruel, unintentional,
or deliberate.
As harsh, impossible, and unwelcomed as it may be to hear and
apply this, we need to love ourselves so fully, unconditionally, and doggedly,
that we raise the bar on what is considered acceptable and unacceptable, when
presented in a love context.
Many of us have been groomed, from our families or origin, to
accept abuse as love, all when we were helpless children. We were victims, who
should have never experienced that. We should never have learned those lessons.
Now, as recovering (because it is a lifelong, unfolding,
ongoing process) adults, we can choose to pour the same amount of focus,
energy, effort, and passion into ourselves, as we have poured into our
intermittent abuser. Therapy can help with that. Information and education
about abuse can help with that. Deciding we are worth healthy, safe, and
satisfying love can help with that.
And again, to relieve some of any potential perfectionistic
pressure, accepting it is an ongoing, imperfect, and compassionate, self-compassionate
process, at that, can help.
Choose to take that tiny baby step toward that help right now.
Another possible reason for an intermittent abuser’s
mistreatment of us?
They have decided we are responsible for their
happiness and fulfillment.
Talk about a no-win situation.
Yes, we were assigned a job, without our knowing it.
Many of us, have been employed like this since childhood.
Whatever the case may be, however old we are, whatever stage of life we find
ourselves in, the abuser has abdicated their responsibility to take charge of
their own level of personal happiness and fulfillment. Here’s where some of the
“walking on eggshells” feelings pop up for us, the “or else” mentality of
performing to a certain level. We feel the pressure to entertain, to allow them
to live vicariously through our lives, our successes, our dreams.
That is, if we are allowed to have our dreams,
and not solely live out their unrealized or failed ones.
What’s that? You and I didn’t always want to become an
attorney or a doctor, yet we find ourselves in law or medical school? Par for
the course, because our abusive “so and so” wanted that dream but couldn’t get
there. But now, through us, they see their golden “second chance.” And, hell,
yes, they’re going to take it!
So, what, if we don’t want it for ourselves? A minor
detail, because, after all, this realized dream, goal, this attainment
of whatever is desired, is all that matters. Eye on the prize.
The abuser’s myopic perspective, therefore, becomes our
vision.
Still no matter what we do, if we achieve this object or
realization of happiness for the abuser, it doesn’t deliver. There will,
inevitably, be something wrong, something imperfect, something unfulfilled, in some
way.
Trying harder won’t solve things. But do we think we’ll get
permission to ease up? Do we think we’ll be able to avoid having to pay for the
rest of our lives? Not so fast.
We failed at our job description’s criteria. We didn’t achieve
those much-desired results of our abuser.
Plus, an added fun feature. What if we did realize a goal or
a dream that makes our abuser happy, only to encounter their jealousy of us for
achieving it, instead of they, themselves generating those results? Ah,
yes, the green-eyed monster. Now we are their villain, “rubbing it in”
as we, according to our abuser, “flaunt” the success in front of them.
They will make sure to punish us for that.
We chose to pursue none of this. Yet here we are…
We’re damned if we do; we’re damned if we don’t.
A more constant and healthy solution? Our self-acceptance
needs to be consistent.
A lot of this is about choice, personal choice. Accepting, or rejecting,
personal responsibility for one’s behaviors and actions is a matter of
personal choice.
That includes the level of happiness and fulfillment.
And, unfairly so, it’s going to take extra hard work on our
part to recognize and apply separating our self-acceptance, our sense of self,
for that matter, from theirs, and their self-rejecting spirit.
You and I are going to need to fight, however secretly,
personally, and valiantly, to find, create, and maintain anything that brings us
joy, having nothing, whatsoever, to do with our intermittent abuser.
We cannot count of their satisfaction levels to be stable.
They are, often, miserable people, refusing to address much their bigger issues
like depression, addiction, or anxiety. That is their choice to make,
unfortunately, a poor choice, at that.
But we need to constantly remind ourselves they- and their
choices- and not us- and ours.
It is a constant, hard-fought, hard- won battle. But we are
worth so much more than being absorbed by an unstable person, who, at best,
is only capable of forcing us to create and execute a constantly moving target,
unrealistic, and oppressive to achieve and maintain.
Our happiness and fulfillment, sad to say, will be more
mercenary for us. It will exist, spiting the intermittent abuser’s desperate
and cruel world view.
It will be an act of defiance on our part, to be and remain
ourselves in these hostile surroundings.
Further expounding on yet another possible reason for an
intermittent abuser’s mistreatment of us?
They choose not to deal with their own issues; we are
a much more convenient scapegoat for their problems.
This extends beyond the happiness issue we just dealt
with. This speaks to any and every emotion, experience, feeling, dream,
expectation, frustration, or circumstance.
Well, there’s nothing like an abuser being thorough,
huh?
As mentioned before, many times, our intermittent abuser
refuses to deal with the deeper, more complex issues, that are beyond our scope
of solving. Addiction, abuse, trauma, depression, anxiety, and any kind of
mental illness struggle are included in that. This is the realm of professional
treatment. The answer does not reside with us simply “trying harder.”
But our intermittent abuser insists THAT IS the
answer. And, of course, when we fail to solve things for them, we are
scapegoated as the villain, the bane of their existence, the reason for their lot
in life.
Again, the abuser’s thorough, covering it all, huh?
A more constant and healthy solution? Our self-regulation
needs to be consistent.
The intermittent abuser, unfortunately, has rejected personal
responsibility for their own healthy self-regulation.
Therefore, once again, we need to be mercenary about
addressing and maintaining ours.
It can be difficult to separate our self-regulation issues
from that of our abusers, especially as we try to survive their inability and
unwillingness to self-regulate in the first place. We cannot change them, fix
them, help them, save them. Brutal, especially if we love them.
Nevertheless, we must love ourselves, accept ourselves, and
take responsibility for our own self-regulation.
Are we depressed? Anxious? Struggling with our own mental
health? Again, what are we doing about our own lives and their corresponding
issues?
Are we an addict, even if that addiction is to our abuser?
How are we dealing with the answer to that question?
Are we only “okay” if and when they are “okay?”
Part of our healing involves regulating ourselves, with or without the
cooperation and permission of our abuser.
And here’s a secret: we will never get either from
them.
They are not hard-wired to allow for our separation from
them, or our healing from them. It serves their best interest if we
operate from a place of disease, dysfunction, low energy, and confusion.
Clarity can give peace, and, with that peace, the ability to make better
choices. Intermittent abusers don’t want that, typically, for us.
They want us desperately making unhealthy and unsafe,
destabilizing choices, because, that way, they can continue to have the upper
hand.
And that is a must for abusers. They must be all-powerful,
while we remain power-less.
Discerning Between the Two:
The intermittent abuse and abuser we experience, therefore,
can often require a shift in focus. We need to change the emphasis from them, to
us, instead. We must be focus number one.
Many of us have never been allowed that. We have been at the mercy
of reacting to the abuse and the abuser. Intermittent behaviors, be they
desired or hated, have kept us off-kilter.
Again, it comes down to separation. The intermittent factor we
have experienced demands we examine, discern, and separate.
Is what and who we encounter dependable? Is this person,
relationship, experience, word, or deed dependable? Healthy? Safe? Loving?
Trustworthy?
Or are there extreme, destabilizing conditions which confuse and
torment us? What are they? Name them!
Do you and I feel loved… consistently or conditionally?
Yes, there are changes and fluctuations to life, moods, and
experiences, but there should not be the widely swinging gamut of
personal treatment from one human being to another. That is about an
unhealthy abusive pattern at work, not the regular changing vicissitudes
of life.
Mistreatment is NEVER normal. Abuse is never normal.
Love is… and always should be the norm. And it should not
hurt us to our core or threaten our lives.
We deserve lives that are consistently ours. No matter what
the intermittent abuser thinks about that, we still deserve that
consistent stability.
Let’s keep working and living towards that reality.
Copyright © 2022 by Sheryle Cruse
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