A Disclaimer

"Abuse" is a powerful word. Yet fitting. Some of the cruelest forms of abuse are invisible, hidden, covert and ambient. I am not a professional but I have de-coded the mind invading games of abusive people. Though I don't intend on making light of this subject, one has to have perspective when realizing how ridiculous the games are. Like the little man behind the curtain of OZ, once you strip away the ruse, YOU get your power back. If you can catch it while it's happening, you can avoid becoming brainwashed and a target to these types of people.

This site is for ANYONE who has suffered from an psychological abuser...and even those who ended up being abused in more overt or physical ways. Anyone who needs healing, of any sex, color, age, creed, background or culture. It doesn't matter if you dated, were married to, related to or worked for....anyone who's been abused this way can benefit. Abuse is not a "female" problem. It is a HUMAN problem.


"WHEN PEOPLE SHOW YOU WHO THEY ARE, BELIEVE THEM."-Maya Angelou

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robert bonfils, 1960

14.3.10

Being Ignored

When you are dealing with the personality disordered, the biggest and best advice that is given to you-is the "No Contact" advice. Meaning, if they call-don't answer. If they text-don't respond. If they email-you didn't get it.

Naturally, this works out much better for those of us who were lucky enough to either not marry nor have children with a person like this. In this respect, following the above advice is easy.

There are tips and tricks that you can utilize to still have minimal contact with the person if you are divorcing or have kids.

Yet, there's a couple things about this advice that is not telling the whole story.

The majority of the time-the psycho's cut US off. THEY end the relationship. We have come to notice, that the times where we TRIED to, or we began to back away-that is when we were "love bombed" and when not answering calls, texts and emails became incredibly difficult, as their manipulations stronger and harder to resist. And in the event we DID resist it-we saw how quickly this enraged them and then the phone calls became persistent, angry (why aren't you answering me?) and the texting blowing up your cell phone. Your inbox greeted with 10 emails a day.

At this point-if in fact you ARE truly done, and want nothing more to do with him-would be when you may have to get a restraining order, as my psycho's ex did. But when we are still teetering with the wonderment of if he is as bad as we are beginning to think he may be, this court press they apply can break thru to us like the big kid picking on the little kids in a game of Red Rover. Just break on through to the other side, and back into our lives.

No, typically what happens, is if we confront the psycho, and he sees that there is no more manipulation to be done, if we have caught him in something-and ALWAYS if he found someone else-he's done. That's it. Adios. Rarely even a goodbye. Actually, if you are lucky, you'd only get a goodbye. Usually, he'll leave on some high and mighty diatribe of how badly you suck as a person, he'll shock you and pull the rug right out from you by claiming everything WAS false-his feelings, the things he said, his love for you-and spontaneously combust leaving you to choke on the smoke when he's gone.

There is no chance for you to rebuttal. There is no chance for you to defend yourself, get angry, or try and understand why. It's a shock tactic they use. We are so blindsided by this-with the mantra of "How can someone who loves me or even loved me at all, be so cold and DO this?" We are stunned. Nice people don't do this. We are amazed at his level of upset, anger and rage and seeming hatred-coming out of nowhere like a comet about to approach the Earth. We usually didn't see it coming. We thought maybe we were about to spar and have yet another argument.

So we try to contact him, to see if he's "cooled off." Nope. He won't answer. You beg him to explain how he could just throw away all of it, disregard you like you are a newspaper from last week, without remorse, without regret, without kindness, without closure.

So you may chase. YOU now text, call, email, etc. And it's like they have died. They don't answer. EVER. No matter what tactic you use, no matter how much you try-stoic is an understatement and they GET OFF on you trying. Any attention-even if negative-is the power they desire, to make you mad, to make you squirm-things someone that truly loved you, wouldn't want to put you through for more than a day.

They will put you through it for the rest of your life. No matter how many years you invested, no matter how good the "good" times were when they were there, no matter how much feigned intimacy they gave, no matter how much you thought deep down you KNOW this man-you didn't know THIS. And this is devastating and the worst abuse of all. To discard and to devalue. They are masters of the silent treatment, which is a true sign of personality disordered people. People who love and have compassion, eventually communicate, to set boundries, to clear up confusion, etc.

You wonder how'd they feel if it was done to them. You just can't accept that they are so incredibly self-willed and controlled and could be so cruel, that you often don't stop trying. So now YOU look like the psycho, the stalker, the irrational imbalanced one.

So you MUST ignore them. Sometimes-this makes a psycho come back, once they see they don't have your attention but typically they won't come back until they are alone again and will test the waters, hoping you have "forgotten" their shitty ways. Most of the time though-they won't really care if you are ignoring them, if they are with someone else (and most probably-they are.) What's called "new narcissistic supply."

Supply equals demand. Yet with them-don't supply it, they will STILL demand it. If not-it is a blessing. After all, when logic kicks in....even if they did turn around to give "closure"-could you believe a damn word they are saying?

I remember one psycho who did the devalue and discard who has twisted it so brillantly it leaves my head spinning. He kept insisting that it was troublling him that I kept contacting him and that surely that made me the crazy one. He repeatedly asked me to stop contacting him. He made it seem like I was the one who was stalking him-when he was the one that had hugely fucked me over. I don't know if it was rebellion, rage at being controlled, rage at how he messed with me-but when I finally woke up to all of this stuff...I called HIM out on it.

I thought about him again intensely in a way that made me wonder if he was okay, and I caved to see how he was. Not to re-establish contact, not to engage, but to know if he was alright. I don't even know why I was asking, because if he isn't-nothing I could do. In any event-all I asked was a simple "yes" if he was okay. I realized-he's STILL controlling me. I didn't do anything to warrant this, I never understood why he treated any contact with me like some emotional herpes-I don't want anything from him and yet I can't even inquire to his well being without it being "drama".

So-I suppose from now on-I just can never do it. If he landed in a hospital now paralyzed from the neck on down....well, I wouldn't even send a card. Hey-he wants to be left alone.

I think that his wish will ultimately come true in more ways than one.

Mostly, we just want to hear "I'm sorry." Or "I don't want to hurt you." We want to hear a closing speech of "You are a great person, thank you for this, etc." Even in the worst "normal" break-ups, there is that time of recognizing the love and fun that you had together, and honoring it.

That won't happen with a psycho.

It takes a lot to stop trying to attempt communication as we are coming out of it. We sometimes keep testing the waters. Sometimes, we want to know if they are still alive. It's complex and strange, as we are well rid of it-but when we have those weak moments of doubting ourselves and they give NO feedback at all, we can enter a fantasy world again that buffers the pain by thinking they aren't that bad. So we attempt the contact again. And every time they ignore it, we get hurt all over again. I think though, its a necessary part of the healing process-because the more this happens, the more is simply cements the truth: The person you are dealing with has bad wiring in their head. Period.

9 comments:

  1. I've spent the past nine months wondering how, as a human being with compassion and true feelings, anyone can have the audacity to just walk away from a marriage/relationship as if they haven't a care or responsibility in the world. How they can be so inhuman as to even deny that you existed, let alone the marriage/relationship. If they truly meant it when they said "I love you" or took their vows, how can they even think of treating you this way? I suppose it takes a special kind of monster to behave as such....

    Mine has also spent the past eight months playing the on again, off again "silent treatment" game. I realized how much emotional distress this was causing myself and my family and, after an epiphany, realized how he was doing this to continue to avoid responsibility for anything he had done and also to continue to "control" me. I sent Cease and Desist Orders through my attorney and have since cut off all communication except through attorneys. It's far from cheap or easy but it had to be done for my own sanity.

    In any event, I wanted to share an interesting article I saw on NPR last night. Apparently France's government is considering making psychological/emotional abuse a crime and punishable as such. I believe, from what I read, they are considering this measure because 1 in 10 woman in that country fall victim to domestic violence. Their government is aware that the psychological/emotional abuse is, often times, a pattern of behavior that leads to the physical violence.

    Here is a link to the article if you are interested:
    http://womensrights.change.org/blog/view/france_proposes_tagging_psychological_abuse_measures_against_domestic_violence

    I wonder if the U.S. will consider this as well? ;)

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  2. Was just headed out the door, when my email alert went off. I read this comment, and while there is so much to say about it (Good for you, btw)-THANK YOU SO MUCH for this article!!!

    This is INCREDIBLE. I have always wondered why it ISN'T a crime. It should be.

    I don't know if the US could ever adopt it but I do know the courts would be DAMNED CROWDED if so.

    I am going to have to do a special blog post on this alone....this is one reason that DOCUMENTATION is SO IMPORTANT.

    Thank you so much for sharing this article. I hope that it will give us some hope, and consequence for them....because even France seems to know-these men WONT CHANGE.

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  3. You're welcome, my dear! I found a little bit of hope in reading that article as well. It also brought to mind, in my own situation, that if France adopts these laws...how quickly will the entire EU follow?

    I'd also love to hear your opinions on the Violence Against Women Act and the International Violence Against Women Act that is now before Congress. :)

    I hope you are having a good day! :)

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  4. Here is another article for you! :)

    Vanderbilt University released results of a study on March 14, 2010 entitled:
    Psychopaths' brains wired to seek rewards, no matter the consequences.

    http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-03/vu-pbw031210.php

    Interesting stuff too! Scientific proof of what we, who have lived with one, already knew. :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Fantastic, thank you.

    Well, with the act in Congress, its almost a double-edge sword. In regards to restraining orders and OP's, now the courts will grant them to any woman who claims to need one.

    This is both good and bad. Good that the women that need them will get them, bad in that now the divorce system has been known to abuse them, which then renders them "unimportant"-in other words, seems to cancel out the seriousness nature of the OP. They aren't meant to be a standard in divorces, but more and more attorneys are advising women to get one, since there is no longer a burden of proof.

    So its a catch 22-you don't want to not grant one and then a woman ends up dead, yet, you also don't want to give them to men who don't deserve them.

    And unfortunately, statistic show that it is when a woman gets a restraining order is when her chances of death increase.

    I like the "tagging" idea most. ;)

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  6. Also (these are great articles...you should start a blog!!!)- I find the possible link between psychopathy and dopamine fascinating.....

    All of the psycho's I have known have been alcoholics or addicts-mostly to drugs that enhance dopamine levels......

    Though there is no "cure" for psychopathy, maybe without an over-active dopamine center, they wouldn't be so focused on themselves and immediate gratification.

    Perhaps it is what we've wondered all along-they are kinda born that way, or have some bad wiring! :)

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  7. Mine isn't/wasn't an addict. So, trying to find "reason" has been near impossible for me. However, on this website (link below) and in Dr. Hare's book, "Without Conscience", it is said that they (science) believe a lot of it is genetic. There is doubt as to it being a learned behavior but, instead, an inherited factor. Of course, those traits that make them psycho are always made worse with addiction. :(

    I agree with you about the OP. There have been far TOO many cases where women who have needed them got them and they end up dead regardless. I'm of the opinion that most times they aren't worth the paper they are written on.

    As far as our Congress considering the International VAWA....I respect the fact that other countries have women who need this sort of protection. However, I am of the firm belief that WE need to take care of our own first. Our system, in general, has been a huge failure in this regard. How can we possibly help women of other nations when we cannot even get our crap together here?!

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  8. The very system here that was designed to help my best friend, is what led to her demise. She lived out in the state of Oregon. After the first time her husband became physically abusive to her-the state actually picked up the case. They didn't care whether she was willing to press charges or not.

    Instead, they mandated a forced separation. The problem with this, is my friend was the breadwinner of the family. As shitty of a person he was, he still cared for and watched her two young boys all day while she made the money to support them all. Without him-finding childcare immediately would've been impossible, since she had moved over 3k miles away (part of his isolation of her) from family and friends. They simply couldn't afford the child care, and since she was still married-was given no benefits either.

    The state told her that they would be doing periodic checks to make sure that her husband was out of the home. They told her, should they find that he IS still in the home-they would TAKE HER CHILDREN AWAY.

    Talk about victimizing the victim further......

    So, not only was he not out of the home because in her already fragile and fearful state, she couldn't have him just abruptly leave (note the state did not try and help her secure childcare or different housing)-but they NEVER CHECKED UP ON HER ANYWAY.

    Because of this, her faith in the state and the system faltered, and she didn't utilize the things needed to actually break away from him once and for all. And when she decided to leave him on her own, with no support, aide or help in how to safely do so-that's when he killed her.

    So yes.....we need to deal with our own infrastructure first. While the abuses in the states and the EU may not be as overt as it is in other cultures-well, that almost makes it worse, because what you can't see, you can deny is a problem.

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  9. I am so terribly sorry to hear about your friend, Hon. It's terrible. I assume he is locked up now? I hope the children are ok?

    Unfortunately, I went through the physical violence end of this for a long time and really felt stuck too. Several times I called the police but never got a PFA issued against him (until after he left and for another reason). I know, at the time, my thought was, "He is only a conditional permanent resident in this country and I signed paperwork stating that I am responsible for him and anything he does." Lame, I know, but it is true. Immigration made me sign that form before allowing him over here. The forms also confirm that he will not become a ward of the state for any reason...AND, by the time he would calm down and come back home...it was as if nothing had ever happened...in his mind anyway.

    You know, honestly, other than incarcerating any man who even threatens to do harm...what is a good solution for prevention and what punishment is a viable deterrent for these crimes?

    The police in most places don't seem to care one way or another about Protection Orders and the Court hands them out like candy. Obviously that isn't working.

    ReplyDelete