Monday, November 28, 2016

Somehow I Hope

There is a feeling somewhere between full on hatred and adoration. I'm trying to unpack this feeling and what it feels like. I'm trying to conjure it, I suppose. Because somehow, I can't necessarily feel the hatred that I ought to feel toward my narcissist.

Nobody gets this, really.

A good friend recently told me I ought stop seeing the world in "Narcissists out to get me..."

I had some explaining to do. So explain I did.

I told him how the thing that kept me trapped was not the fact that I see the world as a bunch of narcissists, but rather, my own wanting to see the best in people, in everyone, in my own narcissist for years. This was the piece that held me hostage for 17 years. And only now am I more free because I see his narcissism and that consequently, I can't heal him.

But, even still I'm not to the hatred point. There are times it seems close. There are times I wish for the relief of his non-existence which feels something akin to hatred.

And all the same, he has indeed, suffered so much. There is great pain. Regardless of his ridiculous choices to not deal emotionally with that pain, I cannot add to it, today. There is still a far off part of me that loves the idea of him becoming a different--healthy person one day. Perhaps, the new She will somehow conjure it out of him.

And even still there is this ultimate pain, buried deep that for me is that I would have given anything, maybe everything for him to just step onto the healing path that he never would step onto. And so, I watch my kids pained by a breakup, a divorce. I watch myself, and I watch a woman step into his life who seems kind, sweet, lovely, and good. And though my family gets angry at her, feels all the indignation in the world, I feel hope and gratitude at her being with and near him.

I suppose most ex wives are jealous, indignant, often aiming to thwart things for their husbands that are no more. Somehow, I feel nothing of that. All I feel is hope that somehow she makes him the man he could be. Somehow I hope, even still. Because being him and being her with him is enough burden on its own. There is no reason I need to somehow add to that. And nobody will get that unless they've lived intimately with a narcissist.


Saturday, November 12, 2016

Mr. Narcident

Predictably, a full fledged Narc being elected as president of the United States triggered trauma for me. Wednesday whirled. Looking out the window of the plane, I could not stop the tears. They seemed to just want to bleed out of my eyes, endlessly.

It wasn't about the losing. I didn't feel that strongly about the candidate I voted for. Except that she represented me. And for the first time I had the privilege of voting for a member of my own sex. I've never had that opportunity before.

Instead, it was about the denigrating things he has said--over and over--it was about those such as myself that are considered less than--it was about not wanting to be considered just a pussy that a man can grab or fuck in the alley if he has a lot of power or chooses to because he often can and damn it she wore "that slinky red dress" which somehow entitles him to rape her with a gun.

It was about being a woman who stands up to the male establishment and isn't afraid to enter the male dominated pant suit world, but then is mocked for doing just that. It was about being an intelligent woman, exceptionally qualified with massive experience going up against a man who has never held any public office, who has no experience to have the most powerful job in the world and being harshly chastised for sending emails in the wrong way. It was about the standards being drastically different for women than men. It was about having to out-think, out-play the narc just to escape the difficult marriage that occurred when too young where he had all the power of entrapment.

Melania voted. Trump looked over her shoulder. That familiar look of being controlled traumatized me because I recognized how it is no better to be "kept" by a rich, powerful narcissist. She may never get out. How do you divorce the president of the United States of America? Sounds more difficult than divorcing the average college professor narcissist who just wants to disrespect you by sleeping with his students.

It was about the children waking up afraid of deportation because they are darker skinned and speak Spanish. It was about the LGTBQ community being afraid. It was about Muslim families wondering where they should go now because they are all considered evil by the white house.

It was about the future feeling even more unstable. It was about the men that I've dated who "voted" for him all the while proclaiming how much they "loved" the idea of voting for a woman but just "not her." And yet all the while, the majority of the women I know somehow saw something different. Perhaps, they, like me, saw that the standards were and always have been different for her and most men in their sexism have never being able to see their own silver spoons. And this made me sad.

It was about remembering how many times, I've denigrated myself so that some man's fragile ego can withstand the fact that I am a strong woman. Educated. Intelligent. Doctored. Empathic. Compassionate. Aiming to make it in the world.

It was about wondering if she would have run for the most powerful office in the world by staying in her place in the "right" man's world-way, if she would have gotten in? Would it have made a difference? Would she have burst through the glass ceiling for us all? Or would it have ended in the same pussy-grabbing locker room scenario?


Sunday, November 6, 2016

Ode to the Ivories

Everything was so black and white about you.
telling
the story of clarity and morality in the world
never any grey realms
to sort out like spouses gone rogue.

People either struck the proper notes and
dissonance
didn't exist
or you were Stravinsky and you had some sort of free pass on
ushering in a new Rite, of sorts.

You held a space
like some sort of sophisticated therapist
parked
waiting with a tissue for the running emotions
to flood the chaise lounge.

And now you are gone somewhere else
banished
from my little world to some never-never land
where I can never see or touch you again.
But that isn't the worst part.
You were never about all the things he was about.
And now
it is as if someone
who once understood me is gone.

In your out of tune way,
You were always about
hitting
the center of the true note like one can with a Bach-Strad and singing "on key"
in a strangely Gramps sort of way,
meaning
charmingly lovable, yet off key.

Damn, I miss you.