Wednesday, July 7, 2010

New Supply

Well, to my relief - in the oddest of ways, I learned that my NPD man has moved on to his next supply source. They are going away together for the weekend.  He was on the dating sites for a really short time and so this is not unlike what I could predict to be the behavior of a person with NPD.  In fact, I think that my need to be right about this diagnoses has just been validated.  The first genuine validation I have had thus far.  The divorce papers ironically were going to be served this weekend - never mind the ink not dry - it isn't even sighed yet. How do I feel right now?  Actually, surprisingly good.  He will do lots of great things with the new gal and she will have a wonderful time. Maybe he can find happiness in her - we all deserve it.

I feel a sense of guilt removed.  Burden gone.  When I saw his eyes the other day, they were blank.  There was nothing in them.  Maybe now, I can stop trying to save us.  I know how he is in life.  I can leave this alone and not push anymore.  He is incapable of meaningful relationships.  They will have so much fun.  I hope that she enjoys herself. She will soon enough feel his wrath.  I hope she is stronger than me.  He Needs a companion and adoration comes quickly and fluidly.  I can see the rewrite of my life in her eyes and I have never met her. He will cast a spell on her. I pray with all my heart for the girl.

I partially can't breathe.  I am partially elated.  I am numb and have a headache but I had that while waiting because I knew that he was up to something.  Ah thank goodness - I am okay.

Goodbye and hello.  I dunno  - but that part of closure I am okay with.


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Tuesday, July 6, 2010

The victim mentality

One of the hardest parts in dealing with a person who has a personality disorder of any kind is dealing with the victim mentality.  But I want to address it not only from how we view them, but from how they seem to view us.  It is my belief that they see us as the victims. They believe that we are hurting them and it is us that has taken advantage of their goodness, their generosity and we have taken their spirits. It is interesting to look at the dynamics of victims.  It isn't just a "poor me" mentality.

In my experience, my partner believed that he paid for everything and that I was merely a taker.  It did not matter that I worked for his company, or that I looked after the family home.  His view was that I was not working as hard as he was and so I was not working for our family.  This was untrue as I held a full time job, while raising my family and working on his business.  But, because I did not hand him the dollars, and because I got up later than he did, (I worked nights) that I wasn't sharing the load. When I complained that this was untrue and that I was confident that my input was equal to his, but different, he claimed that he was the "supplier" and that I showed no appreciation.  I thanked him every day of our marriage.  And abundantly at that! When I would discuss it with him, I was lecturing him and I needed to change the tone of my voice.

With every action is a subsequent reaction.  While you are in reaction you feel like a victim.  He believes he is the victim of your reactions.  Your reactions are caused by the verbal slander against your character and about what you believe about yourself.  What you believe about yourself is that you are giving your partner everything within your power to make them feel better about themselves.  You are the one who is doing the giving and they are the one that is doing the taking. See the role reversal?

Getting out of reaction is the difficult part.  I am far from out of reaction because I want my partner to take back the abusive words.  I don't want him to mean what he said - that in his view, I am a lazy parasite.  I don't want him to call be subsistent or the many other horrible words he uses to put me down and hurt my spirit.  It isn't true.  I don't want him to hate me - but he does when the venom comes out.  He means what he says.  I feel like the victim.  He believes that he is the victim.  The circle continues and in it's wake is crazy making and disfunction. The trauma hits us both.

How do we deal with it?  The first part is to recognize that there are numerous injuries at play.  A person who is narcisistic believes that they are correct in their view of your inadequacy.  You are not giving them what they want or suppling them with the adoration that they need. That makes them feel victimised. Narcissists have an empty cup.  They can't fill it and so they try to get their validation from other people.  When the supply does not suit their needs they use words like " I am not getting anything out of this!" or  " This is a waste of time" and " The counselors don't know what they are talking about!"  Sadly, they really don't get anything out of the conversation.  They feel that they are doing everything that they can to support you - but you are trying to do everything you can to change them. Narcissists don't like change.

When they have finished with you - you are disposed of like trash.   How do you not feel like a victim? And as a result you will find yourself trying to understand how someone can view you so badly.  That is the codependant part. I invite you to figure out what started the cycle.  I invite you to consider your reactions to the attacks.   How angry are you?  How can you deal with that anger  in really constructive ways.  When will you have finished with the anger?  How does it effect your every day life?  Have you stopped feeling?  Are you now part of the problem or part of the solution?  What does it mean to the rest of your life?

There is a lot to consider.  


















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Closure

Getting closure from someone who has NPD and BPD is the next best thing to impossible.  You have to ask yourself what does closure look like?  What is it that you need?  Is it validation or awareness or could it be that you are wanting to get back together again and you are trying to leave a window open?  What do you want or need?  What unmet needs are being ignored?  How is it possible to satisfy these needs in a healthy and productive way?

When you are dealing with an NPD/BPD, they see things only from their point of view. They can't look at the relationship in a healthy way because they are missing a part of their brain that has empathy.  They find themselves uncomfortable and they squirm when you are trying to speak to them.  The difficulty in this is that the person who does not have a personality disorder can't relate.  The project becomes difficult as the narcissistic source is replaced.  When the narcissist has replaced you there is  little chance that you will get through to them. You will likely continue to go unheard.

It is about crazy making .  A narcissist is a crazy maker.  There worse fears are projected on you and they cannot bear the thought of being less than perfect.  So, how can you compete with that? Sadly you can't.  You will want revenge. You will want to do something or say something to hurt them.  You have already caused Narcisistic Injury by approaching them in the first place.This injury is so deep that the person almost puts themselves in a torture box, that you will never be able to penetrate.  They are in a state of mental prison and your asking them to validate the black coffin can't come with words.  the words are simply not there and the burden of relieve must come from within yourself.

The most difficult part for me is looking into his eyes.  They used to be so loving but now they look like those of a scared puma.  They are ready to hurt you but they are also blank and there is nothing behind them.  It is a haunting  experience because while you were with your partner, the eyes gave you the love that you wanted to see so badly. Even if it wasn't real.  I do believe that narcissists love as deeply as they can but that love is easily replaced once they are faced with a less than perfect ideal.

How do you get closure?  You have to find it from within.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Blank stares

Hi there - haven't dropped by for awhile.  Thought I was handling things Oh so Well! Sadly, that is a crock. I am not handling the break up well at all.  The divorce and separation are complete and frankly that is the good thing. The hard part is dealing with the aftermath.  I wanted to be someone to him.  I am not.  I wanted to be loved and trusted by him - never gonna happen.  I don't like him anymore and I stress at the thought of seeing him and talking to him because I know that it will be another hour of unfinished business.  BPD and NPD men are victims and they don't see each other in any other way.  They don't listen, or hear - they don't see anything but how they are affected by the other and then they blame.  "It was You who made this choice - I just went a long for the ride".  He named his company after a God like presence.  The NPD in him needed to feel like a hero.  Hero's don't leave their wives when the going gets tough.  They stand up and do what needs to be done.  He lied.

And along with that goes the unfinished business of never getting any sense of satisfaction.  I have to be okay with that.  I am not.  I will never be okay with it.  I don't know how I can be.  Letting go of the reality is not the problem - logically I know what is going on, but mentally I can't wrap my brain around it.  I am getting a bit closer - but I still am far from understanding.

It is difficult to move forward when you have a death like this - but he is alive.  Answers should come. And they should come from all of this. Something should.

I am disjointed and tired. Heartbroken and confident that I know nothing yet about how all this works.  But there is something to it all.  I wish beyond all, than I knew what it was.
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Thursday, May 13, 2010

NPD - BPD

Often when people have BPD they have NPD and I from what I have read, they are completely intertwined.  I found a character on You Tube who discusses NPD eloquently. He discusses NPD from a male perspective but he also took the majority of Robin's symptoms and breathed life into my everyday experience.  I invite you to watch them if you suspect that your partner, like mine, is either BPD or Narcissistic. The videos are rather poignant and very true for my life. There are at least 12 of these short films. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=24sjYlydAuw&feature=related

If nothing else, I have found that the crazy making component of the disorder is the most difficult and yet one of the most important characteristics of these conditions. 
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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Back in the Trap. Out babe.

I am such an idiot. 

Back in the trap again - the one where he says something stupid and I have such a verbose need to strike back.  I know it.............I hit, bit, snipped at the buttons that he left dangling for me.  One bit of emotion, withdrawl of affection - you deserve it, no you don't ................he is in the cycle.

Which translates in real terms to " I am in the cycle".

So now that I am in it, I get to decide.  Do I want to play or do I want to stop responding all together.  Look, if he needs to feel like he has the upper hand - let him think that way.  So what.  It doesn't have to affect you if you don't let it. 

He was an abusive man and he knows how to play the game.  You are wanting, as usual, to change the mind of a man who isn't capable of changing his tactics.  You keep wanting him to react like a normal person would. He can't.  He can't - and I repeat again - He CAN'T............and no amount of compassion will ever stop him from creating drama in your life.  You are the only one who can end the drama. 

He is in Cycle. You don't have to be.  You don't have to react or lower yourself - he doesn't and won't get it.
Not today, tomorrow - never.

In just a few short weeks ....................this will all be done. You won't have to worry about being nice or being kind, or being afraid.

Almost there.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

And there it is.

Never offer a person with BPD an olive branch.  Their communication field is way out of wack.  Their perception is confusing and you think that everything is fine - then wham.  They come back at you with resentment and anger and they just don't see their contribution to the problem.  They are perpetual victims, "just trying to get through". There wrath or hurt or anxiety or frustration has no bearing on you.  You have no idea what is going on in their heads. They have no idea what is going on in their heads. They see themselves as golden.  They offer so much, martyr so much and are complete lucid and without rational acceptance.

Robin was abusive - I left - he feels he was taken advantage of entirely.  He is the one who had to put up with so much of me. He is angered that I put him in the position - he is frustrated that I am actually asking him to sign the paper work.  Yes, I instigated the separation.  Yes, he needed to create agreement. I broke the agreement because I filed before he was ready.  I did what all people do - I abandoned him. That wasn't the deal. 

I am the one who is taking advantage of him.  I am the one who has stolen his money, his time, his hours and hours of labor to support my parasitic needs while he toils hour upon hour.  As always, it is more than my dilemma that is on his pallet.  There is the tax man, the WCB man and the others who take away his spirit.

I can't help but feel sorry for him.  It never comes one at a time - always in bulk like Costco almonds. 





Today the Realtor came and put a sign on my lawn.  I experienced some of the deepest pain I could have ever felt.  Robin is punch drunk and he will be for a while.  Contrary to his thoughts, I have nothing but compassion for him.  He can't cope and as usual is spiraling out of emotional control.  He needs a fix but he can't get it. 

I feel compassion, sorrow for him, and even pity.  It bothers me to see him so low.  I don't wish that on anyone.  I don't know how to address it and it is better that I don't. 

I dunno what this life holds - but I hate to think that I caused someone pain.  But be clear - I did my best in the relationship and I couldn't have done any more. 

This man needs help. Tonight - as all the nights I shared my life with him - I pray for him to receive it.

So much keeps happening

The Realtor popped his sign onto my lawn this morning.  I cried. I know what happened, understand it and all, but I need to feel the sorrow as well. And I am. Wholeheartedly. The good news is that once this phase is all over, a new beginning for me shall arise and like a Phoenix, rising from the ashes, a new life will be born.


It seems to be hard for Robin but I dunno.  He had his blow up, partially instigated by me as I couldn't handle waiting any longer for what would be inevitable.  It wasn't too bad but he still hasn't signed the paper work.  He sent me a note suggesting that he thought that we could still work it out.  I said no - not until the past is burned away and gone sufficient enough so that it doesn't matter.  I am not sure when or if that time will ever come. I doubt it though. Once people move on it is pretty rare - especially under these circumstances - for them to ever fully recover. The damage is too deep. 


If it wasn't for the emotional and verbal abuse - descriptions to describe me as a parasite, or subsistent - well maybe we could.  I will always be a parasite to him and he will always want to control my being - how much I work, when I work or even why I work.  I am better on my own. No major stress when you are having to simply rely on yourself.  It is a frightening experience when you are being judged by the person who's arms are supposed to be the safest place in the world.

In all honesty, a part of me is afraid.  I don't know what will happen to me. I don't know what I will do when the house is fully gone and I have to rely only upon myself.  I will have no job initially, no source of income, a boat but not a real home, friends who love me - the golden ticket.  It is happening all so fast and yet I do not wish for it to slow down for if it does, I fear I will return to the familiar.  That is not where I belong anymore.


Wish me luck dear cyberspace - I am on the adventure of a lifetime. Hmmmm....

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

False alarm? Or, the calm before the storm.

Well, so far all is quiet.  No major shifts in the earth's proverbial plates. No major messes - simply silence from Robin. Unusual silence considering the enormity of our separation, the ensuing sale of the house, an unexpected audit from Workers Comp, and untold other stresses.

Isn't it funny that after all this time I am still walking on eggshells. Still insecure that a bomb will drop and take my otherwise peaceful existence and fill it with drama, drama, drama. It is an interesting observation.  I still find myself making excuses for what he has said or done. I am still find my self ducking for fear that things will explode in a moment.  I have a lot of healing to do.  A lot of restful, respectful personal inventory to dissect and notice, then lay aside and let it melt away from the fabric of my new life.

I notice my breathing. My sleeping. Neither of which is really calm.  I am ready to flight if I need to as I no longer wish to fight. I hope that this part of the journey is a bit easier than the last.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Full Moon

Something strikes me today, something I have not thought of before.  I wonder if the full moon causes persons with BPD to go into reaction.  The full moon is imminent this week and Robin is antsy, grumpy and is extremely down.  I know this because it is April, and because he emailed me in short, crisp sentences entirely unlike his usual correspondence.  I am not mind reading, but I know his writing and his communication well.  I can hear his voice on paper. I wonder if there is a connection.  My friends tell me not to concern myself with his stuff. That it is water under the bridge.  I wish it were easier to let go.  It isn't as if I couldn't find someone else easily.  No one tells you who you will love and no one understands why they choose the people that they share their lives with - even the destructive ones.  I love Robin - don't want to be with him right now - but I have a lot of respect for the good stuff we shared. The bad was destructive.  I know that if you are a wife and you have a husband who has this condition, that the balance is challenging at best.  We know what is right and what is clearly wrong.  But a sense of empathy pervades. 

Just a thought. Looking back, on my memories I wonder how many of those days were attributed to the moon. Worth the mental note if nothing else.

.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Grateful moments

Monday morning. I look around my home and take in all that surrounds me.  My king size bed laden with four pooches, double french doors open and a breeze gently moving the sheers. A peaceful and surreal morning.  Soon this will be a memory.  Soon the love that I had for this house will be nothing more than a memory.  It is just a matter of days now before strangers stroll through these halls and people begin to plan for their own futures here. The sounds of him calling my name have grown silent here.  A daunting silence.  The drama within these walls has hushed.  I am scared.

Even though his BPD was so difficult to live with, he was only really bad every four months.  It is nearing the end of April now and I can almost predict that a blow up will ensue in the coming days, weeks or possibly hours.  He is not here for me to witness it particularly, but I am certain that an email or some other form of communication will follow suit. Of course, there is the off chance, that I won't see it at all. That he will have a different vessel to place his predictable action.  I know it is not for me to worry about.  The separation agreement is in place and there are few minor details that would require mutual consent or communication.

The toughest part is that I feel sorry for him.   Robin was so wonderful in so many other ways that it is hard to throw away the baby with the bathwater.  The things that I miss about him are abundant.  The deal breakers may be few but they are severe.  No woman, no person should be abused. Ever. And even if he can't control his words, it shouldn't be my life sentence to be the wall for which he can plummet his dissatisfaction with the world.  I am not certain that he feels any compassion for me, albeit he seems to show it for others.  I don't really understand why I am the target for his aggression, except that I have been a safe place for him to fall. Now he must find a different place to release his tensions. 

I spent the weekend staging the house.  I think it is a metaphor for my own life.  For many years, I have had to be in a particular position in order to be acceptable to Robins pallet.  There is no room for individuality when you are staging a home for sale, nor is there room for personality.  People want to see their own personality reflected in the home they wish to wear for the coming years.  Robin needed me to reflect his needs, his personality, his positive attributes, his mirror image of who he believed that he was but I didn't effectively do that. Or at least, I didn't do that in his view of himself.  I did take on his anger eventually. When I began to fight back and take back my needs, I behaved irrationally from time to time.  The overwhelming hurt would bubble to the surface and in the hopes that he would see how he was treating me, I would mirror his true behavior.  Once I even broke down a door, as he had done so many times before. I had hoped that it would teach him that he could not treat me badly.  That what he did was crazy making at it's finest.  He did not put those two ideas together at all - he merely began to see me as nuts. I stopped trying to teach him that way - it was entirely unsuccessful.  At the end of the day, the best thing for me to do was to stand at a distance in front of him until he was through.  Then, when he had finished breaking whatever was in his path and had stormed dramatically out of the house, I would go to my room and sob.

When I remember all that was, it makes it easier somehow to let go.  These walls, the walls that cared for me and my son, these walls that sometimes were nurturing when Robin was not in the honeymoon phase of his cycle, these rooms are covered in triage.  I have lovingly patched up the holes, filled the crevices, lovingly painted their problems away and still I know in my heart that they cry.

My prayer for my beautiful home is that she will be rewarded with a loving family that hears laughter and feels warmth. I am eternally grateful for all she has given me. My love for this house is as deep as the heart shaped skyline created by the hundred and fifty foot cedars that surround her. She deserves happiness and peace.

And frankly, so do I.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

One of them there days

I remember when I was marvelous! Wish it were today.  Part of the process of a split, any split, is the mourning process - the bargaining part. The part where you know that what you want is poison, but you are willing to dance with the devil, for a weee shot of the good stuff. The stuff, that made you think that marriage would be happily ever after, blissful and all too sublime.  When you say goodbye, you don't get to dream about those days anymore.  The wistfulness is gone. The deep, penetrating eye lock, the one that eats at your very core with a wanting that can't be explained.  I miss that.  That - and the touch.  The solid hand on my back, leading me into the direction he wants to take me and the openness of that chance.  We would become best friends. So ten years later, memories upon memories. Good and bad.........

 My best friend called today to put me in perspective.  Thank God for best friends.  But in spite, and despite all her words, all the recollections and reminders of why I left - I still have a hole in my heart. I love you Robin. I can't tell you - it will mess up the divorce. I don't want to be BPD hoovered. Nope. But, it does not stop me from loving you or missing you - sometimes desperately. 

Just one of those days. 

Thursday, April 22, 2010

It is okay that it is all about me today

The roller coaster ride of emotions is liken to the Niagra Falls.  On the one hand, people are influenced by the sheer power of the water, but from an emotional standpoint - I wish that I didn't feel like such a grand tourist attraction.  My friends, in their desire to be helpful, don't understand why I even shed the tears.  They lovingly tell me that Robin is better off gone from my life, and that I really need to move on and be okay with this all. And, even though I know that they are right - the mourning process is still one that is clearly, on it's own time.


All of last week I took off of work so that I could prep the house for my Realtor to come in and tell me of our combined accumulation.  I am nervous but in a good way.  The hardest parts are over now.  I have sorted the photo's, burned a whack of crap and am beginning to feel detached from that element of my life.  It was particularly difficult to go through the pictures.  Much like the death of a loved one, this kind of break-up is absolute and without answers.  And no matter how much I want him to be different, it will  never be unless he can take account for his abuse.  I love the man - but I detest the disease.  If it were not for the abuse, I suspect we would have lived happily ever after.   That part makes me mad.  Boarderline Personality Disorder kills people.  Kills their spirit and leaves a train wreck that can't be understood.  What happened? How did it get like this? Who are you?  No amount of questioning can ever provide the straight answers.

For all of that, today I found a dozen more gray hairs and several more wrinkles from all of the tears I have cried.  On the upside, I have packed a lot of boxes, and been flooded by the generosity of friends whose undying support, is a grateful diversion.  They keep me in check, even when I would rather check out.  I have much to do, and many more days ahead.  It is the nights that are the hardest.  Clean sheets, a fresh comforter, a cold beer and a chick flick.  I will get through - at least for today.

The most important lesson for me today, is self care.  I took care of Robin to the exclusion of all else and now I can choose to take care of me.  I may not really know who I am anymore, but I do know that I am important, beautiful, kind and worthy of respect.  Tonight, it is okay for it to be about me.

Can't wait to taste the popcorn.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Waterfalls on the Inside

Driving home tonight was so difficult.  I finally understand what people mean when they say that they "are crying on the inside".  It is a rather unusual place.  I recall my mom saying it a lot, and that was a woman who struggled with life and had some really tough choices to make.For me, inside, it feels like a sheet of rain pelting through my chest. There is a thin layer between my lungs and my breasts that heaves like water coming over a waterfall. It is thick. It isn't coming from my eyes, though at any moment and without warning, the dam may burst.  Everything hurts, my back my legs, my shoulders and arms.  It is a dull thickness that permeates into my core.  I don't really feel myself.  I feel a bit like a zombie.  A little punch drunk.

Upon walking into my house, all I saw was a shitload of work.  I can't imagine where I will begin.  I don't recall ever being such a horrible house keeper, but I can't bring myself to attention long enough to get anything done.  It just isn't that important right now.

He called today. I didn't answer.  It is better that I don't, for I don't know what I would say.  Secretly,  I am pretending that he is calling to apologize for everything he did over these last ten years, and that he was so very wrong for being so abusive.  A vow to be a better husband, a better man.  But he can't be any of those things and if he did tell me - I couldn't believe him.  They would be nothing more than a smoke screen and the cycle of Oz would begin again.

This is the part I want to remember.  The part that hurts.  The part where I am still logical enough to know how much was said and done to bring me to the end of my rope.  Some time down the road, I may remember things differently, and romanticize  the loving feelings again, but they will only ever bring me back here - to sadness.  That is why I am writing it down.  I want to remember how much of it is the illness and how much of it is the denial.

I think I will watch Walt Disney's Pokahontas.  When she makes the decision, for "just around the river bend," I always cry over that movie, but they are tears of strength not defeat.   I, like she, stands strong and takes the tougher road. 

"Something wonderful waits for me, just around the river bend."

The Yo-Yo effect.

Each day that I rise, I ask myself if I have made the right decision.  Each day, I remind myself why staying is not an option.

I saw the lawyer again yesterday, not quite finished the draft process of the separation and divorce agreements.  I was really frightened because I did not know how Robin would react to receiving the papers. When you are dealing with a person who has a skewed view of fairness, it is tough to make a move without fearing the consequences. 

Robin phoned yesterday 3 times, which in itself is a reduction of calls. I couldn't take even one of them. I was afraid that he would hoover me in again and I would be back at virtually square one. It was not worth the risk.  I asked the lawyer if I should inform him of the ensuing documents, and he felt it would be wiser to let him know first by email; that way if he did get violent the lawyer would be able to intervene with a restraining order as part of the package. He left the decision to me. So,  I wrote a clear and very concise message explaining that I had made the decision to end the marriage. i had it read by a good friend to ensure that I had not left any wholes in the wording.

He left a cold reply in return.  Frankly, that was a surprise. I assumed he would be much more volatile and perhaps explode. He didn't.  He called again today, but this time left no message. I just checked my email, and nothing.  I question if this is the calm before the storm.  It always gets quiet just before the big boom.  I am bracing myself for the worse.

I finish work today and then I am off for a few days.  I need to have a few things that he had damaged in the past repaired, and in some cases replaced.  You can't very well sell a house that has the front panel kicked out of it.  I cleverly turned it into a pocket window with some plywood and a little paint.  But, it is not the safest, nor the prettiest patch job. In all honesty,  it gets a little expensive replacing doors. No noe could tell from the road of my expert patch work, but upon knocking at the door it is as plain as day.  There are lots of those kinds of patches all through the house. I have patches upon patches in some rooms.

Don't get me wrong. The house doesn't look like some low end trailer trash unit, on the contrary, it is rather lovely but it has felt the war path of Robins anger. I am not some gigantic overweight woman with a roller in my hair and a cigarette hanging out of my mouth.  I am not shrieking at the top of my lungs " Stanley, get in here!" while scratching my ass in the kitchen in my unkempt, over sized plaid dress. In fact, my home and my appearance don't fit the profile of a domestic war zone even a little bit. As I walk through, I remember the events and when I take the time to reflect upon them, I wonder again, how I could have ever let my life take such a turn.  I shake my head.

He will undoubtedly come.  It is just a matter of days, or weeks or even hours.  He will come and be charming, offer assistance to help prep the house so that he will appear to be okay with the choices I have now made for my life.  Dr. Hyde, will also arrive but to what degree, only time will tell.

I feel like a yo-yo.  The ball drops down, and along the string  it comes back up. It is held by the child I married and the yarn that lets it down, is all bawled up.  The yo yo is made of a shiny red lacquered wood and if the child decides, he can use it as a weapon to take my spirit out. I can almost feel it approaching my head. Up and down, up and down. 

I have grown out of the game.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Day 8, Hit with a Ball Pean Hammer

There is something therapeutic about writing a blog. The having of a vessel for my memories and feelings to sail upon, swiftly out of the closets of my mind and into the welcoming sea. It doesn't matter if anyone reads them, merely that I freshen up what hurts and give myself some room for growth and movement.

I picked up the mail from our box today. Inside, an assortment of bills and a rejection note from a credit card company. It pissed me off. When you are in a relationship with someone the credit card companies leap through impossible cracks to hand you money, and when you apply as an independent, you appear as a beggar. It is insane how as a wife, the world works for you in such a way that you can have whatever you want, but you can not make a decision. I recall trying to change something on my cable bill, and because the name on the account was Robin's, I had to call him and seek permission in order to make the change. He then, had to contact the cable company to inform them that I could in fact have a say in what we would have in our home. It wasn't just the cable company, it was the hydro, the water people - all of the utility companies and of course all of the banks.

I realized back then, that in about a minute, my existence here in this house, could be crushed. At any moment, he simply needs to make a phone call, and I won't have so much as running water and therefore by extension, not a pot to piss in. I am angry by this. The man is an abusive, cruel and sick person, and he still has all the power. Oh yes, I can walk and I have. But, I am the one who is spending money on the hotels, in the hostels, or sleeping on friends couches while he luxuriously lays in the home I created. If he realized what he could do with a phone call or two, well, I can see his twisted smile now. I am sure, had he realized the extent of his power, he would surely take me down to the river to drown me.

There is anger rustling deep within me. This isn't the ticket to the bus ride that I bought. I feel quite emasculated actually, instead of powerful for choosing a better life for myself. Now, don't get me wrong, I don't feel like a victim either, just annoyed that in this day and age with women working as hard as they do for the money they make, why the husband still has so much control over the decisions in a home. And why mine, can have a mental disorder and still be the cock on the walk. I shake my head.

I look around my house and glare at the patch marks I have sculpted on the walls, prepped for touch up paint and I wonder, what life will be like for me without him and this house. The rain beating on the skylight feels like my spirit feels. Gray, dark and a bit lost. I don't need a man, or company, that isn't it. It is just a feeling of waste. I thought I had made the right decision when I married him. I thought he would be my prince and instead of living happily ever after, I find myself recalling the notes I would scribe over years, to convince myself that I was worth more. I try to come to terms with the fact that he doesn't care, and no amount of reconciling will ever make him fully capable of giving me the life I deserve. It is so sad.

People that suffer from BPD aren't capable of true love because they are wired differently than other people. They have impulse control issues, and high level BPD's are much like grown up children who have silly childish temper tantrums. When something doesn't suit them, they shut off all elements of logic and instead find themselves in reaction. The reaction very much resembles those of a small child who is unable to use his or her words to explain their pains. They act out irrationally and without warning, but high level BPD's experience a different kind of modification than more serious degrees of the condition. These people have situational reactions. They are frightened of the authority figures in their lives and therefore they don't have the hissy fits that they have with their close partnerships. High levels wouldn't dream of going to their boss and using ridiculous profanity, or smashing things, but they don't hesitate to behave inappropriately with their mates or closest relationships. The reason seems clear; high level BPD's trust their partners not to leave and push the package as far as they can to create a reaction in us so strong, that their biggest fears are fully realized. The replay of their childhood abandonment. They need the push. They feel loved by the push, and the drama that comes only with their intimate relationships. They have such a skewed view of themselves that we, as their mirrors, become the vessel for their weaknesses and their biggest fears. The projection of their lowest selves is the vision we reflect back upon them.

When we leave them, they can become the victims they truly believe that they are. There is no remorse for their behavior, merely emptiness.

I recall when Robin would talk about his twin brothers arriving on the scene when he was just five years old. As he told the story, I was touched and deeply saddened for this child of Manic Depressive Parents, who had difficulty relating to each other. Robin was terrified about living that life in his own marriage, and sadly, I believe he created much of their relationship in our life by replication.

He was a beautiful little English lad, complete with nicker shorts and golden hair. He possessed a naughty grin and deep blue gray eyes, with super long blond eyelashes. He appeared in his pictures as a happy little tyke. full of mischief and wonderment. Then one day, the close relationship that he had with his mum and dad seemed odd and they picked up his toys and in what sounded like a fairly fluid motion, the family moved to a bigger home. Shortly after, his brothers would arrive to the new house, and the connection that he had with his parents was shared. An unequal share at that. The babies naturally took up all of his mummies time, and the fun that Robin once had, was gone.

School would begin and when it did, there would be no time for play. He went to a elementary school that did not allow fun or drawing or impropriety. He told of a story where he was off of the school grounds, walking towards the building and eating a sandwich on the street. As he entered the school yard, his teacher saw him eating. Upon returning to class, he was brought up to the front of the room and slapped hard across his tiny face. The teacher looked at him and said that eating on the street was an embarrassment to the school. He never played in his elementary years again. He studied, because that was what all good boys did and he did not want a repeat of his childhood trauma.

I think that the combination of these events became catalysts to his life with BPD.

Let me make a note, much like most people who suffer from this disorder, Robin does not believe that he has any kind of ailment. He entirely dismisses it. His diagnosis comes from my own independent investigation of his behaviors and symptoms. I have discussed these traits with my own counselor and she concurs that Robin possesses a significant proportion of the traits that characterize this disorder. In addition, I have spoken with our marriage counselor, and other social workers whom have agreed that Robin carries an abundance of the common patterns of a person who has BPD and Narcissistic Personality Disorder.

It is important to note that many people are never diagnosed. Having said that, if you live with a person who has these qualities, a diagnoses only allows the doctor to use his prescription pad. Unless the condition, is in it's extreme form, where suicidal tendencies and extreme violence are prominent, making the diagnosis is difficult at best and requires cooperation from the patient. I invite you to visit BPD Central for a complete list of the traits associated with this disorder. High level BPD's function very well and they go through cycles of up and down behaviors, and consistently change views between hero worship and hatred. There temperaments are volatile and they explode with little warning. Again, I invite you to consider the symptoms carefully. It took me well over a year of the ten years we were together, to finally come to terms with his behaviors. For the first 6 years, I blamed myself and I internalized a lot of the abuse. It did not belong to me. Once determining that this was his disorder, a huge relief followed and things he had done and said became a new normal. The condition is very clear. It was like a huge burden was lifted and I could understand what I was living with.

Anyhow, at the start of this entry I was talking about the mail and how I was feeling frustrated by the fact that I would be starting my life over again. Had I known in the beginning that he had BPD, I am not sure I would have stayed. I would have made a different choice, or perhaps learned sooner how to detach. I have talked a lot about the condition as it relates to Robin, but not so much as to how it relates to those who don't have the condition.

In my situation, I don't really know what normal is anymore, I just know what isn't. I am so used to waiting for the ball to drop, that I go through incredible phases of highs and lows about leaving this life and starting again. After living with a person who has BPD, you are inevitably on a roller coaster of your own and it takes a while to look at yourself with clarity. Plus it is really hard work. On the one hand, I am pretty excited. I have my sailboat, my sanity (although at the moment that is a bit questionable), and a pretty good outlook that it will be okay. But I also have this incredible sense of guilt. I mean, if Robin had Cancer, heaven forbid, I wouldn't leave him. If he was diagnosed with turrets, I wouldn't be thrilled, but I wouldn't leave him - and so I have to ask myself why put myself through the start again process. My little voice chit chats and says "Give in, give him the money he wants (he equates me to a yearly dollar value) , let him get stupid once every four months, he'll be good in between. " I tell myself it would be so easy just to let him be who he is, accept it, and not take his stuff personally. And then, I look at myself in my own mirror and I know, that abuse is wrong. Mental condition or not. No one has the right to hurt you on purpose.

It is my life and I only have one. When this is all over, and I have found myself again I will be stronger for it, with or without the extra credit card. His voice in my head will quiet over time. I will be able to breath in and out in my own home, without fear that my belongings will be kindling for the fireplace. I will be able to see myself again as the beautiful, smart, fun, energetic, healthy person that I am, and not the words he uttered in lunacy.

My counselor said it best, she said: You will find happiness again. You will be able to get out of your own head and see the world for what it is, but he never will be able too.

I can pity his situation, but not make it a life sentence.

I reach for my tea.

Day 7, El Boca, El Shutta

I got an email from Robin today. A friendly little note that says - gee, haven't spoken for a while; hope you are well. I guess you don't have any thoughts about my last little note about our financial future together. Oh bite me.

I am not sure sarcasm suits me very well, but I haven't had much sleep in the last few days and so I am a little punch drunk I think. Going through the motions and playing the waiting game while my lawyers drafts up the paper work, is leaving me on pins and needles a bit. Like I said, so much of me wishes this was just a bad dream, but alas, it is not.

One of the major symptoms of BPD is the yo-yo factor of being on a pedestal, and then off a pedestal within the same breath. One minute you are adored, and in the next second and without warning, you are worse than a sea slug mating is a cesspool. There is no logic. One day, Robin and my son and I were just hanging out, watching TV, doing nothing in particular. Robin was a great cook, and he started to make a stew or something. It seemed he was enjoying himself and we had all been laughing and enjoying our time together, when all of a sudden Robin slams the knife down onto the kitchen counter. He walked over to the sink and began seething. I casually looked up, and asked if he was okay. He threw a glass and it ricocheted off of the counter smashing onto the blue tiled floor. I calmly asked what was going on, to which he replied " You guys just sit there and take, take, take, while I slave over this stove. What is the matter with your son, can't he get up and peel the carrots without being asked to contribute? Can't you see I need some help in here?"and with that, he stormed into the laundry room and blew the breaker. The power was shut off. " I pay for this power, and I will decide how it is used." he growled. He stood at the kitchen sink facing us - complete with the look that I had grown so accustomed to, and oozed anger from his pores. We quietly apologized. We couldn't say or do anything. I stood, pushing my son behind me, and asked how I could help. He stormed outside. I turned on the power and continued to work on his concoction. Silence filled the house, but the air was thickened in a deep blanket of dense fog. The storm had arrived. Tread lightly.

I don't remember much else. Just that the day had been spoiled. Another family day, stressed and without so much as any warning. I recall, the next day he told me how wonderful I was and how lucky he was to be married to me. How I looked so young and beautiful. As if nothing had happened.

When I read the email a moment ago, it reminded me of the cycle.

One minute his behavior hurtful and cruel, the next a note with the sweet salutation "Love Robin xo". The idea, I am sure to show what a lovely person that he is, and that of course there was nothing wrong at all. If anyone were to read the emails, they would appear to be caring and loving and logical. Why would anyone think badly of Robin; he is trying to work things out with you Ann. He closes the note with " I will call you later to catch up". I could hear the nonchalance of that accent.

I began to write a reply - and in it, I told him off, and then like a bolt of lightning, my intelligence kicked in and screamed at me, that that was exactly what he wanted. A response. Any response was better than my silence. And the words I would send would fulfill his need beyond anything I could predict. He would be satiated. A twisted kind of comfort that I had grown entirely accustomed too. Part of the ride.

I thought better of it and abruptly erased it. Hearing myself, my own justification for what he has done, doesn't serve me in the least by sharing it with him.

It is what he wants me to do. No, silence has more impact for me right now. Preservation and patience. I know what I know. I am back on his little footstool again, and he will try to swoon me. No, there will be no reaction this time. My spider senses are working overtime.

There is a certain predictability with BPD. It goes in cycles that can almost be measured on a graph. When the burst of anger has passed, there is a honeymoon stage. A stage where you can do no wrong because the major flair has exploded and the building of the new cycle of tension hasn't yet fully formed.

It is a bit of a sweet place, because you know that you will be safe for a little while. It is also the most dangerous, because that is the time when the people who suffer from BPD are the most charming. And they are charming. I received flowers every week, whether I needed them or not, during this phase. I am courted, romanced and spoiled rotten during this phase. Nothing I do is less than wonderful. As the tension begins to build, snipes slip in, without really being noticed. They are small. Orders start appearing in the form of "you are not busy, you can do this or that", and in the desire to please, the jobs get done without question. Truth is, I would complain a little bit, because I had an agenda of my own that needed my attention, but to keep the peace I would inevitably comply. The cycle builds in unnoticeable baby steps from an external point of view, but internally my body would quietly begin to rumble. I knew an explosion would be coming due and I tried painstakingly, to do everything right in order to avoid it. It could never be prevented.

There is a term for those who live with partners who have BPD called "walking on eggshells", and it is true metephor. It became a household term, along with a few others, like Oz and Hoovering, by a wonderful support team named Randi Kreger and Paul T. Mason. Their book "Stop Walking on Eggshells" is considered the BPD Bible. If you want to understand BPD behaviors, this is the best first line of defense. You can find their books all over the internet and at most major book stores. There is an accompaniment workbook that will help to identify your own feelings, and understand how your contributions to the problems of BPD surface and perhaps fuel their issues. It is a guide to help sidestep major problems and although each person is different, there are enough commonalities to make this a usable tool kit for surviving and understanding who you are involved with. The book has certainly helped me and frankly, it gave me a resource when I thought I was going crazy.

The BPD behavior is so odd, and so difficult to wrap your head around, that partners often feel that it is them that are the crazy ones, but it is isn't us at all. BPD, and Narcisstistic Personality
Disorders are commonly intertwined and the conditions effect every part of the relationship and it also creates a codependency over time, like nothing else.

I am constantly amazed when I go back into my memory about how much responsibility I took for his behavior. How I would try to prevent explosions from happening, how I would even martyr myself to justify his choices. I can only revisit these events and try to watch them as though I were watching a movie. Then in hopes of further understanding, question myself with "Did I say something to trigger him. Why did he chose to make us afraid of him. What was he afraid of?" Then I ask myself why, why did I stay, year after year?

It is a process. It is hard to remove oneself from the situation. The good is so unbelievably good and the bad, well it is equally tough. I kept saying, " but he only does this four times a year ", and then I would allow myself a little more time to process. It would be okay, over and over again I would tell myself. It never was.

Yesterday, I expressed a feeling of depression. I feel low today, but not really depressed. This is a tough road and there is much to be done, and much to be felt.

But not in his email. No, not again. The cycle will be broken.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Day 6, Cold bones

I got into my jeep and began my journey to work. Frozen to the bone, I felt the enormity of the tasks ahead of me. Depression, like a fog, hits gently. You don't even know that you are there, until you look in the mirror and notice the sallowness of your face, and feel the weight of the hairbrush as you valiantly try to stroke your mane. I am tired today. Almost too tired to write. But, I will not stay down for long. I need to wrap myself around this and keep going forward one baby step at a time. There are bound to be tough days. I comfort myself in the allusion of a sunny beach. Without luster, I glimpse at my side mirror and bully on through the traffic until I reach my destination. The papers aren't ready yet. The lawyer has not contacted me yet, and I am feeling nervous. Should I warn Robin about them; be kind, let him know that I am not ever coming back. Or should he just be served them cold complete with the little blue tab on the top left hand corner. I feel sick. I can't call because I know, I know he will have something to say about Heather, and the misunderstanding that he called my friends adamantly about. I don't want to hear it and I don't want to get sucked in, but I long for days when we were happy and that this was not my life. The life I knew was one that was not ending in divorce. The one that I knew was void of pain and I was in the honeymoon period of the cycle. The one that I convinced myself that everything would be okay and that this would pass. I pictured his face and the same disgusted disdain he presented to me when he screamed at me on New Years Day of 2010: "Look at you, look at you. who would ever want to sleep with you. You are fat and gross. What do you produce. Nothing. Sure I could take a pill and get it hard and stick it in ya, but it would do nothing for me. Look at you." The words typed don't do the moment justice. He spit and looked evil when he spoke. I sat in a chair facing him while he proceeded for over a half an hour to tell me just how inadequate he believed I was. If I had of moved, the escalation would have surely turned into an assault. I knew it that time. I knew it like I knew my own name. Finally he stood, and slammed out the front door and the clock that he gave to me as a wedding present, click clacked off the wall and landed on the floor. In silence, I walked to the end of the hall and closed the bedroom door. I locked it.

I put my foot on the brake, and unconsciously drive up to the red light. I knew what I was doing, but I felt nothing but the heat of my tears over the remembrance as they slowly burned my cheeks. I knew what was happening to me, and I knew what he had said, but I desperately wanted it all to be just a bad dream. I turned on the radio and romanticized my bravery. He would be a memory soon enough I told myself. But, I knew that there would be more days like this and in the next few days particularly, I needed to brace myself.

Once the papers were received, what would happen then? I feel my heart race and I look towards the heavens and I ask for redemption. I feel cold in my bones.

I drive on.

Day 5, Big Boat Home

Well, what a grand time I had at my friends house. I am on the ferry now, returning home to my chaos. I take a breath and look out the window.

Even though I am on the ferry, I can't help but reflect on how wonderful it is to sleep on board my boat and to reconnect to my core. When Robin and I first experienced problems in our marriage, I bought a sailboat. I needed something that was simply mine. I had been in and out of hotels or staying on friends couches. As I put all of these ideas to print, I remember why I left, and the stories come like floods into my remembrance. As there are such whirlwinds of thoughts as I express them I am sure they will seem a bit disjointed, so please dear readers bear with me. As they slowly unravel, the madness of my life will emerge and the pieces will come to make sense.

How did I get to the boat decision? Well, one of my girlfriends knew that I was struggling and she came to my rescue and offered me a room in her basement. She and I had known each other for over ten years, and she had known me when Robin and I weren't even a glimmer. In fact, she had known me when I was with Charles. She called and upon hearing of my situation immediately came to my aid. She said that the room I could stay in was her husbands favorite space in the house. It was iconic. Everyone in the neighborhood knew of that room. It was an odd place. Her husband was a huge fan of Scarface, and he created a room that was aptly a replica of his icon's office, complete with closed circuit television, an over sized leather chair, a crystal carafe full of whiskey sitting upon a chunky black desk and adorned with the script of the movie. The room was painted a bright red and had shiny black marble floors. Painted in black and red on the wall was a giant globe with the words "The world is yours". This room was something beyond words. I will share more of that story another day, but suffice to say, this room gave me an odd courage. I tried to decide what I would do and one night in the darkest room I had ever slept in, it came to me. Amid the Tommy Gun's and the photo's of Tony Montana, I returned to the pleasantries of the sea.

Boating has always been important to me and when I was in my late teens and early twenties, I lived on one that resembled an old toy Barbie boat. I loved the life. It was one of my favorite memories and so when Robin and I first started the separation roller coaster, I knew that I needed something that was mine. I did not want to feel homeless ever again. Especially, when my future with Tony Montana would be a temporary leg up on a new view of life. Having said that, the first step to independence had begun. My boat was love at first sight. I found her on Craig's list, right around the time that the famous book "The Secret" had begun it's hype. The owner had carefully chosen photos that would give a good feel for what the boat had to offer. I was captivated. I thought it would be impossible for me to buy her. I had some money, but not really very much. I just kept seeing her in my mind. I knew she would be mine, so I went to the bank, and convinced the loans manager that she was a steal. After looking at the internet picture printouts, the manager agreed and within about a month from viewing her, test sailing her, and having her properly surveyed,she was mine. From the moment go, I knew this would be a strength and wehn I am at my lowest, I dream of her. There are lots of wonderful stories I will share about my vessel later, but for now, back to the ferry ride to the mainland.

My friends party was spectacular. Her house filled with the smells of delicious food, prepared lovingly for her family. She is an extraordinary hostess and her grown boys are a delight to be around. She became a two time grandma this year and she particularly glows in the presence of her beautiful grand daughter. The house was full of noise, and laughter and joy and I was in the center of a new hope for myself.

I have always wanted to be connected to a family. I wanted that for my son but sadly, I have not been a good provider of a family for him. My first husband, my son's dad, was a boozer. When the choice came between a sack of beer or diapers, I chose the diapers, while he chose the beer. Charles was a good man, just not a dependable, fully functional adult. I know that sounds awful, but raising my son alone had much better odds, than watching him witness his fathers lack of control. It is said that second marriages don't work out, and in fact the statistics are pretty much lean that they work out less than first time marriages by and far. I would not be a statistic however. I chose better. I did not choose an alcoholic a second time and I knew the first time the error I had made. I was young when Charles and I met and I married for freedom. I did not marry for the right reasons and I knew it even the day that we exchanged vows. I was just too much of a coward to walk away. So after about 14 years, we ended and we closed our relationship as friends. Today, we are still extremely respectful to each other and he participates in our son's life as best as he can with the limitations of his world.

When I married Robin, I thought I had upgraded. Unfortunately, I turned in one mans lack of boundaries for another. In retrospect, my son and Robin are close, and I wanted a better father for him. In fact, they get on well, but I think it is mostly because I have been a strong buffer between them. Especially, when my son was a small fry. I had great hopes of providing for my baby the most nurturing of families complete with a loving step father and a doting mother. I wanted a warm comforting family for him to grow up in. Instead, I put him in the lines of fire. He saw, and heard horrible things. I wanted to protect him, but he didn't understand when I would call the police and have Robin removed after he had smashed another door down or thrown his glass against the walls so that the fragments shattered like explosions in a war. That guilt is probably the biggest burden I carry. When you bring kids into this life, you have such high hopes for what the future will be for them. It is so hard to see those dreams destroyed. For my son, mommy had failed not once but twice. The feelings that I had at my friends party, were reminiscent of my hopes and dreams. A house full of laughing children, and grandparents lovingly blowing up balloons.

I felt a paradox of what I had wanted and what was too late for me to create in my now 18 year old's life. How could I recoup this? One of the other reasons I bought the boat was to reconnect with my son and invite him into something wonderful. I keep that in mind as I look into the future.

I gaze back out the window and realize we are about to dock. The journey to my house another two hours away. I feel numb inside. Happy for my friends life, but numb for my own. The tears well up as I disembark.

Day 4, Movement

Everything is set. I have canceled my trip to Mexico and from the 10th to the 17th of April, I will prepare for the sale of my home. It sucks actually. I know this sounds bad, but I wish he was dead and then I could stay in my house, and have a little bit of money and live happily ever after instead of starting life all over again. I think every woman can relate to me. I think we all want our spouses to be dead once in a while. We don't really mean it, but when you are hurt, the fantasy becomes more and more pleasant. It takes away some of the pain. Having said that, Karma as a general rule is my best friend. Karma has been good to me and over the years, the universe has been particularly kind to me.

My friends have always told me that I wear rose colored glasses. For the most part, I think that is true. I would rather see the good in people and be screwed once in a while, than see the bad and feel horrible everyday. I don't really want Robin to die, I just don't look forward to moving. I know that my future is bright, and there is something quite wonderful about being on my own and writing a new course of life. I have thought about of tons of things I would like to do and some I have begun the process of doing already.

There is a deafening silence in the present. I drive down the road and find myself crying. I feel every pang and remember who Robin used to be. How he just isn't the person whom I believed he was. It catches me off guard sometimes. Then I start to obsess about the stuff I wish would have happened, instead of what did. At that moment, I reach up and look into my rear view mirror and I catch a glimpse of my weeping eyes and I know that I need to pull myself together. There are a lot of people who depend on me. I depend on me. On my rear view mirror I keep a collection of elastic bands that I use to pull my long hair away from my face. I slip one off and I place it around my wrist. The next time I think of him, I will thwack myself. A good pull is a great motivator to stop a compulsive thought. I turn on the radio and begin to sing to Bon Jovi's Lost Highway... " I'm bustin' lose and lettin go....out on this open road.....hit the gas and get away on this lost highway......."

As the day progresses I turn back to the tasks I have at hand. Prepping the house for sale. It will be a long process, divided equally between working and commuting the hour it takes to get back home. I had great plans for that house. I wanted to create an English garden in the front yard, abundant with colorful flowers. Peonies, Lazy Susans, Shasta Daisy's, roses and assorted butterfly bushes, all vibrant with summer color and a gentle fragrance that offered sheer delight to whomever would visit my castle.

The house is rustic but had a sixty thousand dollar renovation a couple of years ago, complete with a new roof and skylights in the main living area and in the kitchen. I chose everything from the tiles to the paint and even though it is far from perfect, it has a certain charm to it. The tile looks like something you would find in the Caribbean Sea, a rich blue wafted with purples and lavenders. Truly amazing floor with heated tile to keep the tootsies warm. In the center of the kitchen, an island with a Gen-air range and ample storage space. The kitchen cabinetry was hand made by some family friends and boasts a beautiful stained-glass door on one of the cupboards. All of the appliances are stainless steel and the counter tops are a faux black marble. It is a truly lovely place to hang out. The open floor plan leads to a sunken living area and has rich wood floors. The living room has a double french door and looks much like the one that was at our honeymoon hotel. The hearth on the fireplace is a tile made replicating a natural stone found in the Lake District in England. I chose it because when we visited Robin's homeland he remarked how he loved the area and the stone so very much and that it reminded him of his parents, and his favorite man Pop, whose ashes were all laid to rest in the Lakes Area of his homeland. I felt it was the right tribute to his family.

Over this last year, I have spent considerable time separating myself from the house. Almost every day I am there, I offer gratitude for this place I have grown so attached to but I know deeply, that now that I can not return to this marriage, the house must be home to someone else. In a way, I feel that I have prepared it lovingly for another family. It is hard to leave but it would be harder to stay.

I have a lot to do to get her ready. She needs some minor repair work done. Having said that, the process of removing myself has started. I have packed more boxes in my mind than I have actually finished. But each day, I try to pack a little more and that makes me feel sad.One can't be happy about saying goodbye to a life. You can be imaginative as to what your life will become, but it is difficult to watch dreams go unfulfilled.

Yesterday was Robin's birthday. I sent a simple Happy Birthday, void of embellishments. I imagine Heather has called him to wish him well, so he won't be completely sad. Someone remembers him. I am sure he will go skiing, or snowboarding or do something with his day. I am also sure that he is thinking of me. I think he must be thinking a little bit about us, because this will be the first time that there is no communication on a special day. It is also Easter Weekend. I will go to my friends home on the island and visit her family. We will laugh and enjoy the day. And, I will think about Robin. I will wish him well, and I will be melancholy. I loved him after all. The true mourning process has begun.

Another pull on the elastic.

Day 3, Crazy Making

There is a certain amount of satisfaction one gains in knowing that your friends have your back. Got a call from my girlfriend on the island, who told me that Robin had contacted the proverbial straw that broke the camels back of our divorce, and ripped him apart at the seams. It was tough on my friend, but it was redemptive for me. Now, don't get me wrong, I am not pleased that my friends had to be subjected to the rantings of a mad man, but I will tell you that it is important to get validation when you are married to someone who has Borderline Personality Disorder. Someone else could see a reaction in Robin. These were no longer just accusations from a disgruntled wife. Robin was showing somebody else who he was and he wasn't holding anything back. I am happy. Happy that someone else could say to me "What is up with that?" Someone else to hear the anger, and someone else to witness the behavior. It has been such a secret for so long. My secret. I would tell people but no one would believe that such a charismic man would behave like a loonie bird. I shouldn't be happy because it makes me sound vengeful. But I am. I am tired of wearing his stuff like a suit of armor. I am being witnessed.

BPD is insidious. It is crazy making at it's finest. Countless books have been written about women and BPD, but rarely are there any discussions about effects that it has on the male population. This disorder, for men, mostly masks itself in Narcissism. Men deal with the disorder differently, but many of the same “I hate you, don't leave me" behaviors apply”. Now, I am not and expert on BPD and men, but merely tell my own journey out of Oz. It is a strange place to be.

But I may be getting ahead of myself. You see I neglected to explain what happened in the first place. For several weeks, Robin and I have been playing the same dance tune over and over again. Deeply, neither of us wants to end the marriage; there is an odd connection in our dysfunction that makes it hard to completely break away. This extension of our familiar dance steps began when Robin recently went to Mexico. While there, he explained in a lovely card accompanied with a gift he brought back from his sanctuary, that he had a chance to deeply reflect on our lives together and had hoped that we could work it out. According to his scribe he wanted to talk. I sat in silence upon reading it. I was open, but fearful of another round of discussions.

The dialogue reopened, I knew it would only be a matter of time before we would be in the same place and as it turned out, the discussions would in fact, return to a usual point of reference. What do I produce? How do I contribute to the relationship on a monetary scale. Only this time, the detail of my financial statements became the inventory for my value. I was mortified. In all of the notes and letters of recent weeks, none professed love. Oh, yes, there was the proverbial “love Robin”, but as every woman knows, a salutation is not a form of love.

So, I did not respond. Then to the island Robin went to meet with our karate friends. My girlfriend said that when he walked into the room, he was like a peacock on the strut. There were mixed reactions to his presence. Some thought he had come in to steal the other Sensei's thunder. Others were happy to see him, and still others wondered why on earth he was there. Of course, as a surprise to all involved, the senior technical committee felt obligated to ask him to lunch. One of the members of the committee has a reputation of being a bit of a gossiping goose. Whether consciously, or subconsciously, Robin knew that the information that he would share over lunch, would find it's way back to me. So he spoke. “Last Night, Heather and I spent the night”.

To the shock and awe of all, the phone went ablazing. “Ann, you won't believe this” “You won't believe this! Robin stayed at his ex wife's house last night!”.

When I heard the news I was driving my ricketty old jeep. I pulled over, and to my own surprise found myself shouting over and over “ He did what?” “He did what” My heart raced rapidly, my blood pressure raising, the mortification of it all. For ten years, Robin had told me that Heather was trailer trash. She was morbidly obese, talked too much, was too loud, too drunk, too insane too, everything. He was horrible about her, and suddenly, out of nowhere, he was spending the night? I screeched, I reacted. I called him. “You stayed over at your ex wife's house, Are you out of your f)(&*(*& mind?” I am sure that at that moment, I sounded like the crazy person that he had made Heather out to be for all those years. The completion of the mold that he had begun to create and build me into, the replica of Her was in it's unravelling. Looking at our history, Heather and I had started out much alike. Both beautiful, both slim, both outgoing gregarious people who were fun and well liked and who would become, heavy, tired and worn out by his disease. And now it was I who was trailer trash. Now it was I whom he could say was nothing but shit. He had molded me and viewed me the same as he had viewed her for so very long. But, now in it's usual crazy making form, she would be lifted from her chains and they would be able to communicate again because he had a new vessel for hate. And it was I that he could blame everything negative of the relationship on and he could go back to the comforts of feeling idolized again. You see, She loved him. She couldn't go on after they had split and in fact, had never shared her life with a serious relationship again. She dated on and off of course. But he would set her up to take all the love that he could no longer justify with me and chanel it into something familiar.

It was the bottom for me. The absolute, no holds bar end. I pulled into my driveway and wanted every last remnant of his belongings out. Out, out, out! I called my friend back, and I tried to work through the tears. I wanted everything of his broken, but what would that accomplish, except for me to actually be the crazy one.

The tears weren't about us ending, but about anger. I was angry. Angry that he would have told her about me. He would have used the same words to describe Heather, to describe me. He would have told her that I was fat, and took advantage of him. He would have labeled me with everything that he had once labeled her. I would be the new enemy. I felt sick. I felt my head spin. How could this be?

He wrote me an email justifying his choice to spend time with her. The nail to the coffin had been set, hammered and life as I had known it was now really gone. I couldn't forgive the infidelity. It didn't matter about the sex, the intimacy laid in a different arena. He was not a sexual man, she told me so herself a few years back in a statement that all too soon after we were married, would become my truth as well as hers. But, he had gone too far now. BPD drama had shown its head again. I hate her, but since I don't have you anymore, and I need to be validated by someone, if not you someone familiar. Anyway, upon receiving Robins email about his justification for seeing Heather, I pulled myself together and graciously replied that “It was no longer any business of mine”. In response, he wrote a scathing email back saying “If you didn't care, why did you yell into the phone?” There were no salutations at all. Just four lines.

Which brings me to the beginning of this entry. I did not respond to those lines, and so he called the person who told me and apparently screamed into the phone that I was to be called post haste, and that the story must be recanted. He fervently claimed it wasn't true. Robin was clearly upset and angry that I had learned of the tryst. He told our friend that he had stayed at some hotel, and that the story must be repaired. He yelled. He demanded. He used profanity. He demanded some more.

Again, the traveling road show would visit my city.“You won't believe who just called!”

A shudder and a smile simutaneously crossed my lips. I would never go through this alone again. The heavens were listening.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

March 30, 2010, The Tough Stuff

Mr. B was a gentle man and when I sat down in his clean, but plain office. I knew that it was time to close the door on Robin and I for good. I thought I would be scared. Instead I was relieved. All the other times that I exerted my independence were nothing compared to this day. Today, I took control of my future.

As I sat down, I felt my heart race. Was I really done. Could I ever look at Robin again without feeling let down, and broken. How is it possible that I could have put up with so much and not come sooner. I had prayed, hoped upon hope, that this day would end and I would not cry anymore.

Lucky for me, that is what happened. I told my story and as we speak, the documents are being drafted. By the end of next week, Robin will be served.

Did I have it in me to go through with it? After all, I loved him. But could I take one more ride on the roller coaster; the same coaster that I have been on ride after ride, always leading to a broken heart and a beaten spirit.

No. This time it would be different. This time, I would cry and cry but I would eventually find myself in a new life. A safe life.

I walked out of Mr. B's door somewhat relieved. I had made the decision and now the hard part was over. Day by day I would remember, but day by day I would become stronger.

Day One, The file.

I never imagined that I would be in this place. I turn 47 in September of this year and after ten years of living with a man whom I adored, I have let myself out of Oz. You see, here is the thing about being in an abusive relationship. Most of the time, you find yourself shocked that you allowed yourself to even be in it. I come from a family of strong women. Women who would never tolerate any sort of abuse, backbiting, alcoholism, drug abuse or any of the taboo determiners some families vocabulary. I am a tough gal and I don't deal with that kind of stuff. Yes, it sounds bad but I am just too good for crap like that. That stuff is for other people and I am not one of those people. I don't have bruises on my face or on my body. In fact, I am a pretty good looking lady if I do toot my own horn. How did this happen to me? I am an intelligent chick with an extremely positive outlook on life, and I am very well liked by most people. In fact, no one would expect that I had ever experienced the deep scarring that verbal abuse leaves behind, nor the twisted sense of security by staying in a toxic environment. I just don't fit the proverbial profile.

Robin, my husband; was a 7th Dan, International Karate Champion. Born and raised in England, he was scholarly, handsome and extremely dashing. The kind of guy, that when he walked into a room, people knew he was there. Upon first meeting, he swept me off my feet. He had a crooked grin and a set of eyes that could penetrate the Berlin wall. He knew how to charm a girl, and that accent...that accent would make a woman feel like a temptress with a single word. He smelled erotic. He was haughty, and daring, delicious and dedicated. I deserved a man like this and I decided that pursuing this prince was well worth the adventure. So, off into the depths of a deep relationship I ventured. He charmed me and spoiled me with gifts almost everyday. Cards, notes, romance abound, Robin was every girls fantasy. The car door was opened, the hand consistently reaching for mine, the glowing eyes and the deep mouth kisses that lingered for what seemed to be hours and leaving a deep want for more. Everything we did was magical. Walks in the woods, travels to weekend retreats, fine dining and extraordinary little heart stickers carefully hidden in secret corners. When discovered, they would leave a feeling of admiration and frankly, I felt loved. He was too good to be true. I would live happily ever after with him. I would forsake all others to stand by his side. I would involve myself in his life, his friendships, his goals. I would be his partner in life. When he proposed and placed the half carat ring on my hand, I couldn't wait for our life to begin.

For the first two years, Robin was a man among men and when we wed on March 21, 2003, I felt like a princess. We married in a tiny church, our rings blessed by a minister, who was almost as old as the antique chapel. It was a small wedding, only about a dozen or so people invited. The church was almost a hundred years old and was complete with old wooden pews, and a large stained glass window. It was quaint, and rich in history. We said our vows to the soft sounds of the ministers voice. It was a pretty ceremony, and while we told each other of our commitments, a ladybug perched herself upon my gown. It was the stuff that Walt Disney makes movies about. The stuff that little girls pray for their whole lives. Our vows said, and a new life had begun. As the flashes went off around us, I felt a little like Lady Dianna. My husband reached for me on the stairs of the old church, careful lifted the skirt of my gown, so as not to step on it, and kissed me deeply.

Just before we had gotten married we had purchased a house in the country. We found a rancher style home, with an acre of land and a few chunky old paddocks in the back of the property. I am a bit of an artist, and so we talked about how we would build an art studio in the back of the property, a place where I could eventually sit and paint my old age away. He would build for himself, a Dojo, where he could practice his craft, and perhaps teach karate classes to a few special students. It was the beginning of a dream. I looked forward to the day when I would be able to paint, and watch him do Kata and Kummite. He was brilliant at Karate. Utterly, poetry in motion. But as time went on, little did I expect, that dream would become merely a vapor.

The first time that Dr. Hyde appeared, I was cooking in the kitchen. I can't even recall what he was angry about. It was like a gray shadow had overtaken his face, and his usual steel blue eyes, had turned to black, or so it seemed. His demeanor became one of a fighter, a boxer in the ring ready to take on the world. I was amused by it. In fact, I thought nothing of it at all. The first strike to the door with his fist punctured a whole in it about the size of a frying pan. Still, not really clear what was going on, I looked at him like he was an alien and then I said to him, "And we did this because...?" He retorted by kicking the rest of it off of it's hinge. Standing in awe, I looked at him and wondered what would happen next. I was silenced.

He did not touch me, but he left the house and went to the back of the property. It was a dramatic scene and sadly, one that would repeat itself every four months, almost like clockwork for near eight years. It was not always a door, sometimes it would be other things that would become fireplace kindling, but each event more violent than the last.

When it initially happened, it could be compared to a poltergeist. Or better yet, if a person grew up in the 70's and 80's they may recall the story of the "Incredible Hulk", the guy who turned green and then would run away after he damaged whatever it was that had made him turn into the creature. Afterward, the Hulk would feel a sense of unknowing and shock at his own body. Well, that was Robin. His entire presence changed and he was not the person that I knew. Sometimes he would yell a primal scream that was so deep that it could be felt in another country, yet on other occasions, it was a silent brooding and a threatening glare. The purpose, always was to instill fear into me. It worked. Every time.

But I digress, and so I will return to the initial day he changed. After he had kicked down the front door, I was suitably flabbergasted. That, and totally lost in a sea of confusion. But like most strong women, I knew that this first incident would need addressing so that it was not to be repeated. While he calmed himself down in the back yard, I picked up the door and leaned it against the wall,then I grabbed a blanket to cover the open hole.

I decided that although I wanted to talk this through, it was best to wait until the seas had calmed. I did not know what I would say or how I would say it. It was so uncharacteristic of him to behave in this way. There were no red flags to set it up. Nothing unusual. Just an immediate and violent outburst. I knew that anything that I said would have to be in caution. I would not know what I was up against.

I can't honestly remember what happened next. It was all a blur. He didn't hit me, that I would recall, but he did not have any real sense of remorse either. His view of our marriage, had changed in that instant. We had not been married long. He didn't seem to feel regret, but said words to the effect that he had felt unappreciated. I had somehow taken something from him. That he had produced the things that we had entirely and that I didn't have gratitude for what he brought into our life. I didn't understand.

Everyday, up to, during and thereafter, I would thank him profusely for everything. And, if you knew me, you would know that I am always over thanking people. I would hug him over and over, constantly showing my joy over what he had done for us and for our home. I would send him notes, make his favorite foods, carefully prepare his lunch each day for work, and always remind him of how attractive and dashing that I thought he was. Unfortunately, it did not matter what I said to him. His belief was firm and held strong. He had "made a mistake by marrying me". I was devastated.

For Robin, the cup was never full enough to satiate his need for appreciation. I recall internalizing this event. I never wanted to see my front door off of it's hinge ever again, but my eyebrows were merely raised on that night. Normal people would not kick down doors. Honestly, at first, I chalked his behavior up to a temper tantrum, and tried to view it as a one off, but that would not be my truth. Each episode, to come would be worse and more uncalled for than the last. Each episode would begin to attack my character as well.

I did not equate his behavior to a mental illness initially. In fact, it took some months for me to understand what his triggers were, and those were evasive at best. Much later in this life I had chosen, I would come to terms with what I would come to believe as BPD. Boarderline Personality Disorder. I was in OZ. The violent outbursts would become a volley between me being on a pedestal, and me being nothing better than trailer trash. This was not at all what I had thought would be my life.

In the following posts, I will share my experiences mixed with my present detachment from Robin. It is a hard place to be, somewhere caught between the person whom I believed he was, to the person he actually is and the effects that the trauma has had on life as I know it now.

Lucky for me, I can see a rainbow slowly appearing in the distance.