Monday, October 15, 2012

Alone Isn't Always Lonely

I always knew that when the I finally decided to make my Stand against the NFOO, I would 'lose' them in my life.  I can't even type that word in the same sentence as my label for them without putting it in hashmarks; if we were talking face to face I'd make air quotes a la Chris Farley as I said that word in connection to the abusive members of my family of origin.  That's how distasteful the thought of fearing my 'loss' of then seems to me now that I can reminisce about the amount of time that I flat out wasted trying to make sure that they stayed in my life.

I'm just going to say it as it needs to be said; 'losing' my evil, narcissistic (and enabling) mother, my abusive, enabling, narcissistic father, my narcissistic (and sadistic) older sister and my golden child, enabling, younger brother as participants in my life is the BEST THING THAT HAS EVER HAPPENED TO ME.  Please note that the underlined, bolded, italicized and capitalized nature of the last part of that run on sentence is entirely intentional.

If only I could have shaken them sooner, I often think.  If only they'd been easier to lose.  Like single socks from a pair in the dryer, why couldn't it have been like that?  One minute here, one minute gone.  Such is life.

Oh, but I spent scads of time completely convinced that I simply wouldn't be able to continue living if I didn't have them in my life.  I convinced myself and everyone around me that No Contact simply wouldn't, couldn't happen.  It was unthinkable.

A big part of that deep seated, ingrained belief that I must not, ever, be cast out from the Crazymaker Clan was simply learned.  They had, after all, pounded this absolute truth of theirs into my head and heart from a pre-verbal stage on.  I was convinced before I could speak that I must never, at any cost, leave them or - more scary - do something that would give them a reason to kick me out.  I rebelled, sure, but I got burned enough times to come crawling back with my tail between my legs like the family dog.  I acted out only far enough to prove their point that I couldn't survive without them to myself, never realizing that they'd set me up to fail in just that way.

I graduated from high school with a 3.47 in honors classes drunk, literally drunk at my graduation, which always makes me wonder what I could have done with a little support.  But do you know that even though I had a four years older sister (who was only two years ahead of me in school as I moved up and she moved down, go figure,) who was IN COLLEGE at the time, neither of my 'parents' ever once even talked to me about what my post-graduate plans would be?  Wait, I take that back.  NM did tell me once, with that half-disappointed, half-gleeful smirk that N's manufacture so well, that they were sorry, but there wouldn't be any college money for Vanci, just not a single red cent.  They didn't have it.  NSis's college bills were just mounting up to too much.  And when I asked what I was supposed to do?

She told me that she was certain I was smart enough to figure it out.  I turned 17 less than a month before my graduation.  I didn't really have the tools to figure it out.

Nevertheless, they'd had me where they wanted me for some time, ever since I'd broken ranks and been yoked with the burden of keeping my father out of jail (for molesting me) and maintaining the family sanctity (at great cost to me.)

These people abused me in every way that a person can abuse another.
Worse, they made me believe that the abuse they heaped on me was my fault, and that I was deserving of it, They made me believe that my life would be worthless if I ever left them and eventually from the man they picked for me to marry.  (And when he abused me, it was my fault, too.)
They broke me down to the basest of levels and then pushed me further still into the muck when I tried to get out.

And I was terrified, horrified, absolutely pants-shitting scared to 'lose' them.

Getting away from my family of origin was like dying in inches.  It felt like I was ripping my heart to shreds on a daily basis.  It hurt like motherfucking hell.  But I did it.

Even though I was so convinced that I was unlovable, I did it.
Even though I believed that I would end up completely alone - for awhile I believed that DH (who is my second husband, for clarity's sake,) would leave me because it was so chaotic and nightmarish in my world- I did it.  (Please note, I found out later that he'd contemplated leaving me because of them, and stayed because I left them.)
Even though I was tearing apart every road I'd ever walked without yet having built any new ones, I did it.

And guess what?
I did feel lonely for awhile.  I'd gotten rid of or given up on everything that I'd ever thought I'd known.

There were no more phone calls (usually letting me know what next obligation I'd be fulfilling for them, but still, it was weird that the phone stopped ringing.)  No one showed up unannounced to borrow my vehicle and bring it back with less fuel in it than they'd taken it with.  No one needed me to run interference for them with someone in the real world anymore.  No one demanded that I drop whatever menial thing I was doing, like, oh, working, in order to take care of whatever that day's problem was.  No one randomly decided to pick my kids up or drop my kids off early or late from the agreed time.

And for awhile, the void left by these shitty contacts and violations felt like just that, a void.
It's like any other type of recovery; there's a period of time after we've taken the 'substance' out, be that alcohol or candy or drugs or abusive relationships, and it's gone.  But what's left is a gaping hole in our soul that the wind sort of just whistles through for awhile.  Eventually, we find something else - something new!  healthy! better! shiny! - to fill it up again.  But for awhile, we're just empty and hurting and feeling very alone.

And that, friends, that sucks ass.

But...
It gets better.  It really does.  Here's how it worked for me.

After the looming, evil, all-encompassing presence of the NFOO was no longer front and center in my life, I could see more of the landscape - both within and around me.  I started to discover something I wouldn't have expected.
I had hidden talents and interests that my time of indentured servitude to the NFOO hadn't allowed me the energy for.  I began, slowly, tentatively to explore those.  I started writing again.  I started cooking new things for special occasions; things that I'd always wanted to try but that hadn't been on the prescribed menu when I'd packed up my entire kitchen to go to the N's house to prepare meals for holidays previously.  (Really, that happened five years in a row.  No shit.)  I got sober, something that never would have been allowed with the N's in my life.

Eventually, I started to feel something more than sadness or anger.  I started connecting with the people around me - DH, the DD's, coworkers, long absent friends - again.  I was raw and probably talked to all of these people WAY too much about that, but most of them stuck around - weird, like they liked me or something! - anyway.  I started caring for myself: mentally, emotionally, physically.

Most days now, I am as happy and often happier, as I could possibly be.  I have a life.  I have my soul back in my possession; a little bruised and battered and I think there are some claw marks that will always be evident, but it's mine, and that's worth the world.

I have friends and I have fun and I have hope and I have joy and I have love in my life every single day.

I am not lonely, though I sometimes do feel alone.  But do you know what?  Alone isn't always a bad thing.  Alone is so much better that having belonged to a group of people whose 'care' for me was contingent upon my constant and repeated sacrifice of myself.

What was I afraid to 'lose' again?

Love,
Vanci

UPDATE and a PS:
I'm pretty sure that a post over at Ms. Door Mat's blog got me thinking about this.  Credit where it's due and all... Love, Vanci

50 comments:

  1. Vanci you are amazing. Thank you for sharing your triumph so honestly.

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  2. Ruth,
    Hi praise from an equally amazing lady. Thank you.
    Love,
    Vanci

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  3. Yes, exactly, you can't lose something you never had. And when you let go of that illusion then you're free.

    hugs,
    Q's Sis

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    Replies
    1. Q's Sis,
      Free at last!

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. This is what I was going to say. I've been feeling lonely lately as I move away from my FOO. But I've realized I was always alone. They were never there to begin with.
      Wonderful post Vanci. It has given me lots of hope when I needed it.

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    3. jessie,
      That's a hard realization to come up against and a tough thought to make it through. I'm glad you're here, and if I can give hope, well, pshaw, I'm a lucky lady!

      Love,
      Vanci

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  4. I am feeling some of that freedom, although I feel like I'm a little stuck in my own mud at the moment. However, I am exploring and pursuing things I never could do so long as my parents were in my life. But I still feel like I am a long way from knowing who I am, the scar tissue is still pretty thick. But I always have hope.

    You're post really helps me keep it. :)

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    1. vicariousrising,
      I'm so glad that you have some freedom, even if it doesn't feel like total freedom... yet. I have some pretty thick scar tissue, too, and I know what you mean about not knowing exactly who we are... yet.

      Hope is a good thing, hope is a good thing, hope is a good thing. There, I said it three times so now it's true.

      Love,
      Vanci

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  5. "Getting away from my family of origin was like dying in inches. It felt like I was ripping my heart to shreds on a daily basis. It hurt like motherfucking hell. But I did it."
    Vanci, you have described above exactly my life. The biggest fear I ever had was that I'd end up "alone." My NFOO's mantra was "the clan, the clan," "she's the only mother you've got," "he's the Father, dammit." Now, as I back away even more from my NF, and my enabling co-dependent sisters, I'm starting to feel my boundaries solidify. Not like hard glass--that can be shattered; but like a silicone membrane, that lets in what I want and keeps out what I don't want. I talked with my NF last weekend and for the first time ever, I thought to myself "wow, this guy really is a jerk," and it did not give me the slightest twinge of guilt. I felt entirely unimplicated. He is; I am not. Period. His personality disorder is not mine; it does not compromise me or my life. Like you, I scraped through high school decently, with no interest or support or care or attention from either parent. I worked my way through college. I got grants for graduate school. I completed a Ph.D, entirely without any financial help from my NP, and with a lot of sabotage, frankly, from my NM. Like you, the designated "black sheep" of the family, I've actually had the most successful and stable life of the children. I've been a professor for a long time now, with a huge extended family of former students who are now profs, lawyers, doctors, loving parents, and my lifelong friends. My NFOO thinks "CS has chosen to be ccompletely alone and isolated." Because I left the Clan. My NF actually uses that word. Nothing could be less true. I have a long-lasting legacy of mentoring, friendship, and love that I've created, even though I am divorced, and child free. Knowing that, feeling it, owning it, I can listen to my NF and feel intact, and safe.

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    1. CS,
      Isn't it funny how we're not allowed to be successful unless it's the success that they divine for us? Well, not funny like Jerry Lewis funny, but funny like interesting. :)

      I remember the first time that I realized that NSis had crossed over into enemy territory; she was 34 and living at the NP's house with her husband and son and my 28 year old GCYB. All of them, living in that house together couldn't control NM's pill popping; somehow I was the reason that she kept doctor shopping and overdosing. I remember NSis saying, "You don't even know what's going on, Vanci, you're NEVER HERE!" Even though I was making the 30 mile round trip to their house every. single. day.

      And for the first time, I thought, "Well good for me at 30 years old! What the hell is wrong with you?"

      I'll take alone and isolated (from the crazy) any day!

      I'm glad that your knowledge helps you to feel intact and safe.

      Love,
      Vanci

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  6. OH VANCI!! I am CHEERING and WHOOPING - this, THIS entry you wrote right here is what I hope future searching ACoNs find - THIS is why (i think) we write!

    "...'losing' my evil, narcissistic (and enabling) mother, my abusive, enabling, narcissistic father, my narcissistic (and sadistic) older sister and my golden child, enabling, younger brother as participants in my life is the BEST THING THAT HAS EVER HAPPENED TO ME."

    OH, we are all such warriors, with so much to inspire each other. This made me feel so powerful, Vanci - I'm holding up my virtual lighter to you because you are a rock star. Thank you, thank you!

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    1. Hi Gladys,
      And a WOOT WOOT right back atcha!

      Oooooh, a rock star?
      Quick, give me some aquanet and spandex!

      Glad to lend out my power any day. Thank you for reading and commenting. Now... Pour some sugar on me, yeah!

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. Really? you had to give me THAT earworm?!? Of all the rock songs in all the world, I have to have THAT going in my head when I get in the shower? Oh, I'll be SINGING IT. And the dogs will be howling in response. And it's ALL YOUR FAULT.

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    3. Gladys,
      Be careful. I could have listed a plethora of bad hair '80s rock ballads instead. I once had a boyfriend who listened exclusively to a Best of Ballads of the Scorpions CD as we drove around aimlessly in his mother's mini-van. Don't make me open up that arsenal.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    4. Just to prove there are bullets in my musical gun, I fire back with THIS that I danced to in red high-heels and Cyndi Lauper hair...
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JwNDDKsaYYE

      OH this song makes me so ANGSTY.

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    5. Darlin'
      I listen to the Cure for breakfast, and have an entire Cyndi Lauper collection. I married a man who already owned all of the Time/Life, "Best of the '80s" and "Guitar Rock" series, and who bought one of the ten copies sold of "Slash's Snakepit" on the day it was released in all four stores they shipped it to. I listen to Bon Jovi while cooking on weekends.
      I could quote, right now, all of the lyrics to Duran Duran's "Hungry Like the Wolf" or Billy Idol's version of "Mony, Mony."

      I own The Best of Depeche Mode parts one, two and three, as well as the tribute CD done in about 1996 in which such gleaming beacons of angst as the Smashing Pumpkins and NIN did tribute versions of DM songs.

      Tread carefully, you're on a minefield of bad, bad music here. (But, having been censored out of the entire '80's and most of the early '90's by the NParents, I love all this crap like a loon.) My DD's actually play a game of getting bad lyrics stuck in everyone else's head, which ends when one person starts singing the song that another snuck into a conversation, and the instigator shouts out, "I win!" They won't play with me anymore. :(

      Love,
      Vanci

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    6. I BOW TO YOU. *I'm not worthy!!*

      Lady, you crack me up. Our ULB band needs to cover some of these tunes. Imagine the WAILLING that would be happening!

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    7. Gladys,
      I'd DIG that. I'd be headbanging and crowd surfing allllll niiiiight looooong. I'm a rocker baby, through and through!

      (And oh, what a sight that would be. ^shiver^)

      Love,
      Vanci

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    8. You guys, 80s music was the best. No matter what your tastes were, there was something out there for you. I also had Cyndi Lauper hair and actually went to a Duran Duran concert. Loved Depeche Mode and Pet Shop Boys. Rocked out to Rush. Oooh, now I'm feeling nostalgic.

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    9. (sways back and forth with her eyes closed due to the overwhelming pressure of the angst)

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  7. Vanci and CS, your experiences mirror mine so much, it would be creepy if we hadn't all come out the other side, alive and kicking.

    Growing up my NM used to say, "Without your mum, you have nothing." and looking through the lenses my NFOO had provided for me, I actually thought that was a nice thing to say!

    The hardest thing for me was, I thought I "had" to deal with societal expectations regarding my obligations toward such elderly parents. Thankfully, I learned not to care about the opinions of others.

    In the end, the crap dished out by my NF, who was strongly supported by my NM and the NGC, became so utterly bizarre that I was left with no choice but to go full-on NC.

    Yes, it's weird not to have calls or guilt inducing letters. I've discovered that weird can be wonderful. Weird can open your life to other opportunities.

    Best of all, being alone sure beats being surrounded by assholes!

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    1. mulderfan,
      I know, the purveyors of All Mothers are Good Mothers and Father Knows Best just drive me batshit crazy.

      Still, even now, I come across people who say things like, "But couldn't you find it in your heart to forgive... I mean, he/she is your FATHER/MOTHER." Like that means anything.

      I'm grateful every day for this great and wonderfully rich life that I have without the N's, particularly because I know that they never would have tolerated my being so happy. As you say, fuck 'em.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. I've also gotten the "He's your FATHER" or "She's your MOTHER". One of the last things I said to my NFOO was, "You are not going to abuse me" and their reply was, "We can do whatever we want". Like Mulderfan's NF, my NPs were so malignantly abusive that the only choice was to walk away and deprive them of their scapegoat. Unfortunately, to the extended family I'm now the "ungrateful wretch" and I lost all relationship with them. Mulderfan is in occasional contact with a cousin--are any of you in contact with distant relatives?

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    3. I should clarify, I really only lost my NPs and the NGC.

      Because of my older brother's abuse, I've never really had a relationship with his daughters. As children their father kept them from us and as adults, they have blamed the family for his dysfunction and I got tarred with the same brush. Since his death, I've tried, without success, to establish a relationship with them. Both nieces keep in touch with the NPs but openly admits they're in it for the money! Little do they realize, they're not even mentioned in the will because the NPs maintain they "sided" with their mother in the divorce.

      Except for my two cousins, all other living relatives are back in England and we've never kept in touch.

      I consider myself extremely lucky because anything my NFOO says or does has no impact on my daily life. Just wish I'd been smart enough to realize that sooner!

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  8. I have recently (at 51-years old) begun trying to build relationships with my sisters, because when I went NC/LC with the parents, I threw the babies out with the bathwater and went pretty LC with all my sisters.

    The joke is that I put myself in the Witness Protection Program.

    For some reason I had to not be around ANY family, and my sisters weren't the problem - I just think by the time I was 30 I was so apt to be triggered by ANY of them that I went away from ALL of them. The sisters don't understand. I can't really blame them, and I guess in war you would call that 'collateral dammage'. It's really unfortunate NOW. But I needed the space so badly THEN.

    I had to make a choice at the time. I chose the only thing I could for my sanity.

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    1. Gladys,
      My experience differs in that I never thought I would lose my relatinships with my sister and brother, especially me brother as we were tight. But I underestimated the power of the NParents, and declaring a cease fire with dear old mom and dad was all it took for NSis and GCYB to turn on me. THEY cut off contact with ME.

      It didn't make any sense to me then, and it was like a shot through the heart (tee hee,) but I understand now that the clan dynamics kept them firmly ensconced in their roles while I chose to silngshot myself out of it. They're accountable for choosing that, and I'm responsible for my choice too.

      Somehow I think I got the better end of that stick. I hope that your relatinship building excercise with your sisters works out well for you, or at least causes no harm. (That it doesn't give love a bad name, so to speak.)

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. Good grief, spell check much, Vanci?
      especially *my brother
      *slignshot
      *relationship

      Grammatically incorrect love,
      Vanci

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    3. Just prior to my laying down boundaries and going through the final stages that ended in NC, my younger brother and I were tighter than we'd ever been. When he turned to the dark side, he was far more cruel than the NPs had ever been because, unlike them, he actually knew me and so his aim was perfect.

      Now he outright hates my guts because all of the responsibility for the NPs has fallen on him. HE ordered me never to contact him again as I am destroying his health. Nice lady that I am, I complied!

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    4. mulderfan,
      Yeah, your experience with your brother closely mirrors mine. Apart from my nephew, who was barely three at the time, the 'loss' of my brother was the one that hurt the most, as he was the one that mattered the most to me. And his attempts to harm me cut the deepest.

      I was in line at for school registration about six weeks ago with my youngest DD, and the people in front of us abruptly left. Who was standing right in front of us? GCYB and his (aparently, if I can trust the small town grapevine,) stepson who is the same age as DD. It was so obvious from the looks he kept giving me that he HATES me.

      BTW, I held my ground and refused to move. And I heard you in my head the whole time, saying, Fuck em over and over again. There's a post in that experience that I've been meaning to write.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    5. Vanci, There's definitely a post about the one who ran with his tail between his legs and the one who stood her ground. Guess he has something to be ashamed of!

      You make me thankful I live an hour away from my bunch and none of them own a car!

      Hugs, mulderfan

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  9. AAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!
    *s.l.i.n.g.s.h.o.t.

    *&^%!
    Love,
    Vanci

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    1. lol. I hate my fingers sometimes...

      In forging new relationships with my sisters, I am VERY careful to keep my truths intact. Because of the distance I created, the narcs had exactly that opportunity you speak of to tell their versions loudly. While I was gone, I was smack-talked, there is no doubt. And distance time-wise has not really been helpful either - people DO want you to 'just get over it already'. They saw the actions against me, but didn't experience the feelings and emotions I did. Memories become sort of murky the further you get away from the events, and sometimes people get exhausted trying to sort their stuff out and then having to listen to me sort MY stuff out.

      So I tread gently, I know my truths and my boundaries, I respect their boundaries, and I take a LOT of time to process stuff.

      Thank you Vanci.

      (I hope I don't get any new wrinkles over thinking all these DEEP THOUGHTS.)

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    2. Gladys,
      Good for you in keeping yourself safe. I hope that it works out for you.

      I'm certain that if you do get any new wrinkles, you'll turn them into an asset.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    3. Gladys, I can imagine their words: "Geeeze, why aren't you OVER this already? All they did was tear out your heart and stomp on it for 18 years!" Or the classic, "Why must you hold a grudge? People make MISTAKES!" Mistakes are looking the other way while walking and treading on someone's foot, saying sorry, and being more careful in the future. Your NP tried to destroy you, and they're not the least bit sorry.

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  10. Ohhh-"..the wonderfully rich life that I have without the N's...they never would have tolerated my being so happy." YEESSSS! Ms. Vanci, you nailed it again.
    Oh, the intrigue! The sabotage! The triangulating and back-stabbing! Not to mention the back-drop of constant Narc Crap Crack (say wha?!) called Drama! Those people were absotively exhausting.
    Yk, the way you describe the first period of hard core NC when they're not frantically (while trying not to appear "frantic") attempting to herd you back in IS different. After DH died in typically shell-shocked wired-tired fashion I couldn't sleep. I laid in bed on "my side" and willed myself to go to sleep. (Of course it didn't work.) Everything familiar was strange and somehow not real. Among acquaintances and colleagues my identity changed literally over night from "TW" to (cue creepy background music) "The WIDOW" as in a conversation I overheard between two colleagues, "How's The Widow doin'?" I never changed my last name when I got married so I always WAS and always WILL be "TW." Then it was time to renew the car insurance and it went up precipitously. So I called the same Insurance Broker we'd used for years and asked what the deal was with THIS dramatic increase and was told since DH "expired" (what, was he produce or somethin'?) I was now considered a higher risk because I was "single."
    Well now, wait one: I was NOT the one who, on a beautiful, bright, sunny 70 degree day while driving out of town had a BEE fly in the window, causing me to drop my lit cigarette out of my mouth, on my shirt, set myself on fire and while attempting to prevent imminent self-immoliation was distracted by the smoking shirt while using both hands to put out the smoldering mess as my vehicle (Look! No Hands! Or feet either!) continued in a forward motion and plowed dead center into a telephone pole that just happened to be where it belonged and I wasn't. HE was the one who had the head-on collision with the hapless phone pole, NOT ME. Don't cha think getting RID OF possibly one of The Tundra's most distracted drivers would be a GOOD THING? I ask y'all wouldn't ya think?!
    TW's "Rules of Life" #1: Life is unfair. Or if it is fair it's fair in a way I don't comprehend but that doesn't matter. Accept YOU will continue to be the purveyor of all KINDS of misery inflicted on the left-behind NFOO by your mere absence. You will "hear" all kinds of dasterdly deeds you have done or inflicted upon the NFOO. You will be portrayed as a porn-star-crack-smokin'-unfit-for-human-consumption-biggest-looser-WITH (mayo or mustard on that?) MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES. Y'all, where you were once gum stuck to the bottom of their shoe, you will now be transfigured into a serial murderer of helpless infants.
    There WILL BE SILENCE. Sweet, quiet, privacy. It's not gonna feel comfortable or home-y right away. After DH died, I finally figured out one of the "issues" was how QUIET it was at night-the guy was a world class snorer. (I now know how people who live in the flight paths of major metro airports sleep.) And if you just give it some time as Vanci said, it WILL get better...and better and better yet. On every last measure of well-being, your life will improve dramatically. In fact, I'd wager you're actually going to GET a life called your own.
    You will "come home" to where you always belonged: To YOU.
    TW
    (PS: I now sleep in the middle of the bed. The geriatric cat snores. It's ALL good, or at least a whole lot better than it was 20 yrs. ago. ;))

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    1. TW,
      You are so right - it's so often not fair, and I'm absolutely 100% positive that the NFOO spends a goodish amount of time collectively and as individuals bashing me, making shit up about me and smearing it like a mural on the walls of whatever house they're in at the time. I've had total strangers confront me about things that I never did, but the NFOO said I did. How dare I?

      The one thing that they absolutely cannot tolerate, the one thing that fires them up like they've got TNT shoved into their unpleasant places, is to be ignored.

      I don't respond, I don't react, I don't retaliate and I don't acknowledge because, to quote myself from an earlier post, ZERO is the number of fucks I give about them. But it still makes me happy to know that they are infuriated by their lack of ability to affect me.

      Coming home to myself, as you so aptly put it, was discovering that all of the good, all of the comfortable and happy things that I'd always wished for as part of home in the NFOO (but never got) had always been the parts of me that I was willing to contribute. Keeping those Vanci rays of sunshine to myself and the people who truly deserved them in my newfound life is the best, greatest feeling that I have ever known.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. I'm pretty damn sure my sweet little old NPs tell anyone who will listen that I don't visit because I have MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES. The thing of it is, ever since I was a little kid they have threatened to lock me up in the nut-house. The only things that have changed are; they no longer scare me and I don't give a flying fuck what they say about me or if their listeners believe their lies!

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    3. Two big thumbs up, Mulderfan. Once we get past a 'certain age', nothing scares us anymore. Bring it, narcs. Tell me I'm crazy one. more. time. See what happens. I'LL show you CrAzY.

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    4. mulderfan,
      Your post made me think of one of my favorite lines from Kurt Vonnegut, though I can't remember which novel it was (perhaps Slaughterhouse Five or Breakfast of Champions?)
      "You can take a flying fuck at a rolling doughnut. You can take a flying fuck at the MOOOOOOOON!"

      Lol.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    5. TW: "You will be portrayed as a porn-star-crack-smokin'-unfit-for-human-consumption-biggest-looser-WITH (mayo or mustard on that?) MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES."

      TW, have you met my NFOO? That's eerily close to how they describe me.

      Delete
  11. I read this and chant to myself, "Someday, I'm going to be able to go NC. It is possible. I will survive. Keep working." I wish I'd figured out I'd survive when I was still in a position to to do something about it. I've never given up, but right now I needed the boost to keep trying.

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    1. Judy,
      Here's my chanting for you:

      "I know you can, I know you can, I know you can."

      Love,
      Vanci

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  12. I love all these posts! For myself I feel that family is who I choose to be my family. Being genetically related to someone doesn't mean much unless they treat you right.

    Q's Sis

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    Replies
    1. Q's Sis,
      I couldn't agree more, but I think we have to unlearn what's pounded into our heads that our bio/donor "parents" and siblings are people that we have obligations to before we can choose our families.

      I'm glad that you like the posts. :)

      Love,
      Vanci

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  13. Thank You Vanci.
    I don't know if I influenced you in some way with this post, but I cried, and I thank you from so deep down. It spoke to me :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. HI DM!
      I think that your post the other day was the subcoscious trigger that got me thinking about this! Okay if I post the link to it?

      I'm so, so glad that this post spoke to you. It really, really, really does get better.

      Love,
      Vanci

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    2. No problem at all, but no credit is due. I just wondered.
      It really was heartening. To read from someone else's experience is encouraging.

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