Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Purpose of Boundaries

I believe in setting boundaries.
I think that learning how to set boundaries around our homes, hearts, lives,souls, spouses and children and family of choice is a mightily important step for ACoNs to take.
Most of us weren't taught in childhood - when we should have been taught - to establish those crucial lines, buffers, stop-gaps and walls.  We weren't taught that we have a right to defend ourselves in body in spirit or mind.  We were taught that defending ourselves was tantamount to inviting increased pain, at least I was.

Learning how to defend myself and more importantly how to protect myself, has been a hard fought uphill battle of the last few years.  I've had to relearn stores of data in order to correct the system glitches that the Narcs implanted years ago.  It's involved serious contemplation of all the relationships around me and often I've been forced to the realization that some of the relationships I had - which I'd once thought were normal and healthy - were seriously messed up.

I've discontinued long term friendships with people whom I truly thought were on my side because as I've learned to control my controllables (read: ME) I've had to face the fact that many of these people were using me for my extraordinary Scapegoat Superpowers.  I've discontinued my relationship with sweet alcohol as I've become healthy enough to understand that what release I found in its tickly bubbles was both short-lived and false (plus, you know, it just plain quit working.)  I've discontinued doing the dance of the FFA - that's Fake Friends of America, you know what I'm talking about; the people who invite you to purse parties and talk about how fat they are and what diet pills work or brag about how super special their kids are and compliment you on your haircut and sharpen the knives of gossip and fakery incognito so that they can slip the blade in when you turn around to see what was on that plate of crudites.  I don't want anything to do with relationships that involve more than, oh, let's say 5% vague falsery, and only as it regards those subjects that fall under the heading of TMI, basically any topic involving the word 'discharge'. I'm okay with friends lying to me about that.

So, essentially, I have learned how to have a small amount of honest, truthful and full-disclosure relationships with other real people.  This is a good change in my life.

I have learned how to protect myself from potential relationships with dishonest, untruthful and sneakily fake relationships with fake people and their fake intentions.

Here's the thing, though.  Narcissists and those controlled by Narcs aren't either one of these types of people.  They're a whole different banana.

Now that I've taken a somewhat circuitous route around the ballpark, here's what I've come here to say tonight...

Locked doors keep out honest people, but thieves know how to pick the locks.
Fences make good neighbors, presupposing that the groups on both sides of said fence are willing to respect it.
A country's border doesn't mean anything once the rockets are launched.

When I began on my journey to learn how to protect myself, I thought that setting and holding boundaries would protect me, sure.  But I also thought that I was teaching other people how to treat me, that I was saying, "Hey, this is the line and I will only tolerate behavior that doesn't cross it," so that those others would stop crossing that line.  This is a natural thought process, I think, to a normal person.  When I drive, I stop at the line before intersections, not in the middle of them.  When I fly, I stop at the line on the floor that I'm not supposed to cross until the TSA lady waves me through.  That's what lines are for, designation of a change in the plane of existence.  Before the line, I do one thing.  After it, another.  It makes sense.

But Narcs don't respect lines, especially lines drawn by the Scapegoats, the ACoNs, the children, those whom they wish to control - basically everyone that they allow in their lives.
Locked doors, fences, unlisted numbers, space boundaries, borders: all these things are red flags to the bull-Narc's eyes.  They must possess, own, control, have it all.  I'll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too, and your children and your money and your spouse and your house and your time and your food and everything else you've ever had or might ever have.  That's the only boundary acceptable to a Narc; I get you all, or you get nothing.

So what have I learned?  I learned how to draw boundaries because I needed to learn how to do so in order to keep myself safe in the world.  I learned how to be clear, so clear, about what I need, what I'll accept, how I will accept it and the circumstances under which I will walk away.

I've learned that the people around me who respect these boundaries are the people in the world that I might potentially have a relationship with.  And those who cross these boundaries once are people whom I might still have a relationship with, as long as we can have an honest conversation about the line-crossing and come to an agreement that it won't happen again.

Most importantly, I've learned that the people who choose to trample my boundaries are the people that have no place in my life; they're the Narcs and the users and the abusers.  They're the lock-pickers, fence-jumpers, rocket-launchers and it's best to A) Stay the fuck away from them, B) Call the police when these people show up.

I set boundaries for me.
Anyone who chooses to cross them is doing nothing more than giving me absolute proof that they don't deserve to be in my life.

Love,
Vanci

11 comments:

  1. They're the lock-pickers, fence-jumpers, rocket-launchers - perfect analogy!! Love this post!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Perfect!

    Funny twist for me. A certain party in the other camp set a clear boundary of "Don't contact me ever." and being somewhat sane I've honoured it. Guess who just stepped over their OWN LINE?

    Poor bugger just couldn't live without me!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I LOVE THIS POST. The part about the FFA explains my feelings at that damned Bunco party - you said it perfectly.

    You're right, too, that it's easy to tell the narcs from the rest of the herd by how enraged they get over boundaries. NORMAL human beings would respect and (possibly) discuss.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ohh, how right you are Ms. Vanci: "Call the police." This is the *only* "authority" I've ever seen them respect. If anyone else was attempting to gain entry to your residence, vehicle, your kid's school, stalking you/your FOC, attempting to contact you after you've made it plain you do NOT wish to have any further contact with them etc. you'd be on the phone to Law Enforcement immediately. Status as a "Family Member" or NFOO "Ambassador" does not confer an exemption or a "Get Out of Jail Free" Card. Boundaries without consequences are simply empty gestures on your part and perceived as "threats" by them. So make their day memorable ;)
    TW

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My narc-of-choice has a long association with the constabulary who have been called upon often to escort him from local businesses where he is prone to make scene if he's not treated in just the right way. "Normies" just walk out and take their business elsewhere but the nut-bar likes to make a huge scene and be escorted out by the cops. Center of attention or what?

      Having his reputation precede him would be a great help if he showed up on my doorstep. I just wish I still had my German Shepherd!

      Delete
  5. "That's the only boundary acceptable to a Narc; I get you all, or you get nothing."
    That would make no sense at all except to an ACON. And it is a perfect example of their pretzel logic.
    I learned something from this.
    I never knew what crudites are.
    My horizon has been expanded.

    ReplyDelete
  6. "I set boundaries for me.
    Anyone who chooses to cross them is doing nothing more than giving me absolute proof that they don't deserve to be in my life."

    Perfectly said, Vanci. Boundaries for me are more like a litmus test for the personality disordered. And they've helped me to give myself permission to enforce consequences.

    And Q, clearly you have not been to enough purse parties or smelly candle parties. Crudites and back stabbing abound.

    ReplyDelete
  7. If crudites are mostly celery sticks you won't be seeing me at one either.
    I guess if a bought a candle they would let me eat it right?
    That would hold me over until I could find something that used to have a pulse.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sigh. Lovely post. Spot on. Just. Sigh.

    "Locked doors, fences, unlisted numbers, space boundaries, borders: all these things are red flags to the bull-Narc's eyes. They must possess, own, control, have it all. I'll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too, and your children and your money and your spouse and your house and your time and your food and everything else you've ever had or might ever have."

    All they want is control. And that's saying something considering that I'm a control-freak myself. But I truly don't want it all. I want to keep safe what is mine and be left alone the rest of the time. They can have their money, they can have their gossip, they can have their sad, pitiful, desperate and lonely little lives. They can have each other. All I want is a happy healthy husband and happy healthy children, and for them to leave us alone.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Not understanding boundaries encouraged me to seek counseling. I learned that I did know what they were but key people in my life ignored them. Then I learned to defend them. Here's the weird part, I was accused of being unreasonable, unforgiving bully. Say what? Yup, I was just terrible for setting boundaries. I like your thought that if a person respects my boundaries once they are clearly defined then that person is someone I want to be friends with. Excellent post.

    ReplyDelete