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Ready to pack it in - della

Well, I'm back. This may seem really stupid to anyone who reads this but can I get some feedback on this? I am so furious and at this point just about ready to call it quits in my relationship. My story goes like this. Saturday, we (my 2 daughters, my SO and myself) were all enjoying a movie and some pizza. My SO's dog (Web) has this awful habit of always trying to eat off your plate and he was standing over my daughter's plate drooling away just waiting for the chance. She got frustrated and said to my SO, "would you please get your dog away from supper?"My SO in turn said "Well, for that comment, come on Web, get Angi, go see Angi, that's a boy go bug Angi." I could see the irritation on Angi's face.

I asked my SO, "What comment?" "YOUR dog", he said. To try and lighten things up because I know he gets a little frustrated with us saying YOUR dog or MY house (we don't live together) I said to him "You know, it's a common thing in society that when the dog is good he's OUR dog but when he's bad he's YOUR dog. It's the same with kids, when the kids are good they're our kids but when they're bad they're YOUR kids." He gave me a dirty look and said that's not true. I said yes it is, you've done it yourself. "I have not", he said and that was it, he wouldn't speak to me for the rest of the night until I walked him home. Then he let it rip. He looked at me and told me he was SO angry with me. I wasn't really sure at that point what I had done that was so wrong. I could handle the I'm SO angry part but then he gave me this look and said "HOW DARE YOU" intervene when I'm trying to bring our family unit closer together!

I told him I said what I did to try to lighten things up a bit and to let him know that maybe he shouldn't take the statement "YOUR dog" so literally. He wouldn't believe me and went on to say that his relationship with my girls is still in the introductory stage (he has a wonderful relationship with them after 2 years of being with us) and I had no right to ridicule him in front of them. I was so angry, we talked the next day on the phone and he immediately went into the HOW DARE YOU statement and I couldn't stand it so I just said "NO, HOW DARE YOU" and hung up. I haven't spoken to him since.

It seems no matter what I say or for what reason I always end up defending myself or my motives. I can't stand being in a relationship where my partner thinks I'm constantly out to sabotage him or our relationship when I'm not, it's just the way he seems to perceives me. I'm honestly a good person. I broke up with him 1 and a half years ago because of an issue I had to solve with another man and I know that has given him cause to mistrust me but that was so long ago and it's in the past. I guess I'm really angry because he always just assumes I am only capable of the worst and there really is no convincing him otherwise, he just won't listen. I've read a lot of the postings here and talked to some people and I know I haven't picked the best way to handle this but I'm so tired of the fighting. I guess I'm hoping an outsider might see something I'm missing. I'm already afraid to say too much when we're together and now this has only emphasized to me how insulted or offended he becomes when I say something he doesn't like. This happens fairly frequently just thought I would use this incident has a typical example.

Thanks so much for allowing me to vent. Just sign me, ready to pack it in. della PS I just despise that statement "HOW DARE YOU"

From: wolfie (kim)

Dearest Della, I know you are not going to want to hear this but this has nothing to do with your SO. When you were with your husband, you felt less than - now you have chosen to be with your present partner and again you feel less than. Della, this is not about them! It is about you. What is really going on with you?? How do you feel? It sounds like your partner is mirroring a belief about you which says - I can't do anything right, I am an awful person out to hurt people etc. Della, this is what needs to be healed. The beliefs about your self!

There is A LOT going on with both of you beneath the surface and it will come up and come out in various different ways - believe me. When we are in relationship, our partner mirrors US. And the only way - and I mean the only way - to get thru it is when we stop blaming others and we start looking at self. Della, I just thought of a great book for you. I just finished it and it is called "Guilt as the Teacher, Love as the Lesson" by Joan Borysenko. Anyway Where do you start? Wherever your inner voice leads you - I was first guided to AA, then I was guided to the Big Book Step Study Process, then I was guided to Transformational Breath Therapy, then I was guided to other types of healing, then I was guided to a New Thought church (where I have been ever since) ......and I was guided to this book and that book and this and that and it will go on and on and on. But it isn't my partner - oh sure - it would be so easy to blame him but I cannot, it doesn't work. If I get mad at him or blame him then I am really getting mad at me and blaming me - for all he is doing is mirroring me. What I can do is thank GOD for the gift that he is. And he is!

Oh sure, he has his issues and his fears but it not up to me to figure them out for him. All I can do is keep looking at me and work on becoming the woman I am meant to be. As I change, the people around me reflect that back to me. You see, it really is all about us. I have a different version of the serenity prayer - it goes: God grant me the serenity to accept the person I cannot change, the courage to change the person I can, and the wisdom to know it's me!

From: Dean

Hi Della!! I can relate totally! I too was in a relationship and she had two girls. I had been divorced for several years and she was just getting thru a divorce. The first two years we were together we made good progress and her daughters really liked me. I then took a job promotion, which meant moving, but I was still the same distance driving time from her. Well, things started to turn south as I worked in my new position. We had split before the promotion, but got back together in a short time (2 months). I can't speak for your SO, but I can look back and see myself......I was not happy with ME! I was so unhappy that I projected that unhappiness on everyone and everything around me. We split again in April and have talked on many occasions, but I can tell the hurt is still there with her for the way I was.

I finally came to the realization that I had to change and work on ME before I could be good for someone else. I'm happy to say that I have quit my job and went out on my own venture, which has really reduced the stress I was feeling, and also started seeing a therapist to help me better myself. I had despised myself for what I had become and didn't like what I saw. I guess you might say that I finally saw the light! I knew two years before that I was heading down the wrong road, but it was ME that had to realize that despite what my SO said of what she saw. We are still speaking even though she started seeing someone else, and that has now dissolved. I only hope that the future will bring us back together, but if it does not, I know I will be a better person because I helped myself.

Maybe your SO is feeling the same type pressure that I was? If so, he has to come to terms with it and nothing you can do will change that if he doesn't want the change himself. I know this may not mean a lot, but I wanted to share my experience with you because it sounded so similar. I was a short fuse to a bomb waiting to explode and ever little thing set me off...no matter how trivial. I am glad I am on the road to healing as it feels great to reach that point of recognition!

From: wolfie (kim)

Dean, You said that Beautifully!!!!!! You are well on your way Dean!!!!!! Congrats in all the work you have done!!!! Again, thank you for your kind and thoughtful words to me!!!!

From: Bernd

Repressed anger always comes out sooner or later, in ways that sneak up on us and backfire, and skew our judgment. In many relationships - and I sense this happening in yours - we walk a tightrope, trying to “control” our real anger in a situation, because we’re scared of being abandoned, or having our anger backfire on us, if we let it out honestly. This isn’t something we do on purpose - we’ve learnt all too well as a child that letting out our anger was dangerous. Getting appropriately pissed at our parents or other adults meant a good swift slap to the face, spankings, or even worse abuse. Sometimes it was mental and emotional devastation they laid on us, that did as much damage as if they had hit us.

What I sensed in your posting was that you were hoping to hold up his words to Angi up to the light, so he could see how inappropriate they were, and turn things back around by calling off the dog. Instead, what you got was angry defensiveness from him, which left YOU even angrier, and the battle escalated until both of you were royally pissed at each other. Both of you tried the best you could to put your choices in the “best light” (him by saying he was trying to “bring our family unit together”, and you by bringing up the our/your comparison). I suspect both of you are prisoners of a well-learned blame game, where the rules are whoever’s “wrong” loses power. It’s a very real fear, because “losing power” sets you (or him) up for even more hurt. The one lying down is the one that gets stepped on the most.

There are a few simple rules of thumb that help me to deal with my own anger struggles. First, when I pull up the past, I fog up the present. The more I can stay focused on what’s happening here and now, the better chance I have of finding a win/win solution. I sense what you really wanted to do was to get the dog off Angi’s case. If so, getting up and physically moving or shooing the dog, or asking Angi to come and sit with you would have helped you take care of the immediate problem - the dog. None of those would have required your partner to change a thing. If he reacted, you have the right to choose whether you want to discuss it then, or later. If he didn’t support that right, you have the right to ask him to leave, or leave yourself. Yes, it feels risky, but as you’ve discovered, the “less risky” route usually ends up being the most trouble.

Second, I need a time-out in many situations to get in touch with what I really need to do most. If Lynda isn’t willing to give me that time out (btw, she IS willing and supportive), I have the right to take it anyway. Removing yourself temporarily from the situation - and inviting Angi to come with you - is your right. Whatever spin he wants to put on it is his problem, not yours. Once you have a chance to get recentered inside, you can come back, and make crystal clear what is acceptable to you (if the dog stays, bothering the kids is unacceptable) and what is unacceptable (I will no longer accept having the dog nearby when we eat).

Third, when I don’t stay focused and simple, I can get off track and derailed quite easily. I refuse to argue. If someone is truly interested in working a problem out, I’m willing to talk. But if they want someone to dump on, I refuse to be it. I’ll remove myself from the room if I have to.

Lynda and anyone else are free to think what they want of me, and my motives. If they want to put negative spins on them, I’ve learned to let them. That negativity robs them; I have no wish to let it rob me as well. “You are entitled to your own opinion”; “I hear you, but my decision stands”; “I don’t deserve to be treated this way, let me know when you want to talk without dumping on me”. Those are some of the phrases I use, and I repeat them like a broken record. I refuse to be drawn into arguments I don’t want.

As much as he says he’s trying to build a relationship with Angi, his actions at the table certainly said otherwise. Angi was clear in how much she disliked having the dog drool over her plate. Supporting her right to voice such things, and being an ally in helping HER find and carry out solutions is one of the best gifts we can give our kids.

I agree with Wolfie’s points about partners being mirrors of each other. My reading is that both of you had difficulty with anger and communication long before this relationship happened. And whatever you don’t heal in this relationship is very likely to crop up in the next one. Drag, eh?

That doesn’t mean you should stay - or leave. That is a very individual choice. But if some of my guesses ring true, beginning a search on how to express and feel your anger in healthier ways will help you get steps closer to where you want to be. There are some excellent books on anger, and the hidden things that go on between partners when communication leads to battles.

There is nothing in what either of you are doing that you need to blame yourselves over, or feel shame or loads of guilt over. You were each given broken hammers as children, and told you could straighten nails with them. You’re finding out the hard way that the tools you were given just seem to make a lot of the nails more crooked. It’s hard to build a home with crooked nails, and unfortunately, the broken hammers don’t work any better on heads.:)

See if you can get some good reading and journal writing under your belt. Reaffirm your right not to get drawn into battles that no one wins. Explore the power of “acting”, instead of “reacting”. It may look like a long haul, but God has a way of giving us a tandem bicycle, with him/her pedaling in back. Hope some of this helps.

From: della

Once again everyone, your words have helped me immensely. Dean, thanks for responding. I know he does have issues to wade through. I don't think he's willing right now. He has said he has had enough of counselors. I guess I can't worry about what he decides to do with himself. I know I have never met another person who worries as much as he does. Money seems to be a real big issue with him these days and I think he gets frustrated with me because I really don't think about it too much. I consider getting to the end of each month a creative challenge for me and if I get there I am a happy camper.

Once again Wolfie, you hit me with that mirroring factor.:) I was thinking more this was one of his issues being mirrored this time. Couldn't quite figure out what it was because I was so damned angry. You're right again but I'm confused, so, I'm supposed to let his accusations and insults just go right through me? Stop explaining what I really mean when I say something? (or defending myself) And just let him go on having these rather dismal opinions of me? Can a person really be happy that way? I'm really trying to get this "I'm an awful person" issue of mine out of the way :) but it's really frustrating having my SO constantly throwing stuff like this in my face. I am finding that I am starting to think a bit more positive about myself but I still find it important to know I'm okay in his books as well.

Bernd, thanks. Anger is a powerful emotion and it really takes your self control away. I haven't been working the way I should for days, just can't focus. You offered some great suggestions and you make it all sound so easy.When I think of using some of your suggestions I get a big smile on my face not only because it will be such a pleasure to see the surprise on my SO's face but also it will give me a sense of self control. It just makes so much sense.

From: Dean

Bernd, After reading your response, it really it home with me. It is almost a exact replica of my relationship with my ex-SO! I can relate to the hammer theme.......both of us were brought up this way, but now we have to find new ways to drive the nails straight. Sorry to have butted in on your response, but it really hit home!

From: Bernd

Just a quick one. I find that the "Go with the Flow" posting by Aveena really helped me, and you may find it helps you with some of your questions about taking insults, and explaining yourself. If another person "hands" me an insult, I don't have to "take" it in; letting it flow OVER me just like water takes away a lot of the sting.

Just imagine...someone calling me stupid, or a jerk, and me saying "thanks!" sincerely! How long would they keep trying it? Why would I say thanks? Because they're helping me practice my "water thing". I can't get good at it if I don't have practice, eh?:) All for now. Looks like you're getting some insights and peace. Good. You deserve it.

From: della

I haven't talked to my SO since the incident I described above. I know if I don't call him this silence could last....well, forever. In the past I have ALWAYS been the one to make the first move to patch things up and try to get all of the walls back down.(except once when my 15 year old, without my knowledge, intervened). So I'm thinking if I want to resolve this I have to call him. My problem? I have no desire to call him. This is the closest I have felt to being relaxed in the last year. It's like taking a breath of fresh air. I just seem to feel real empty when it comes to any emotion towards him. Is that my anger talking? I'm thinking of just letting this ride for awhile although I hate leaving things the way they were I feel like I really need time for me right now. Comments?

From: Bernd

I think the two opposing feelings you're getting (wanting time for yourself, and hating leaving things as they are) are actually 2 pieces of the same pie, i.e. not as conflicting as they appear. Time by yourself will give you time to look inside and see more clearly WHY you hate leaving things. It might be fears of abondonment, or old tapes playing that it was "your fault" that brought you to being the peacemaker in the past. It would make talking about what happened, and finding win/win solutions for both of you harder, because your fears would be more in the driver's seat than your inner voice.

I suspect that if you use your alone time to take a breather, and also spend some time alone with yourself checking out your feelings - or lack of them - inside, you'll get some insight that will help you do whatever is best for you next - whether it's calling him, or not. Just try to find out what feels best for you inside the best you can, and go with your best guesses. That's all I can ever do. Those are my thoughts della.

From: cool

What a cool reply. Hey, you forgot to mention that you can erase old tapes and make new ones, so that those old tapes do not keep restricting your life (if you think that there is such a thing as "tapes", and if you think that those tapes mess-up your life). An easy way to do this is to do intensive soul searching and find out what those tapes play, and then re-condition those old tapes into new ones. There are many differents "ways" that people make new tapes, and you should talk with others who you trust and who know how to do it. If you do not know anyone, then try to find some. Ask around, or post some listings on the internet, or talk in the chat room. It is time to take control of your life and not let the old tapes tell you what to do.

From: della

Did some searching this weekend and yikes! the things that suddenly appeared in front of me were pretty scary.

I thought about what you said Bernd and took a look at my past marriage and my current relationship. The similarities blew me away. Both men are way above average intelligence but not so high up on the social scale, fairly strict disiplinarians (everything is black & white, there is no grey where they live) , they are so strong in their beliefs that there is absultely no argueing with them, they are both loners and both are very jealous and possessive. Both men on the outside are the type of man you want to take home to mom. In a relationship though the jealousy and possessiveness is not something I find easy to deal with. And yes, I'm the one who ended my marriage. A lot of mental and verbal abuse towards my girls and myself.

So I think of Wolfies question to me "was there something in my past childhood or life that made me feel useless or like I could do nothing right?" At first I thought no, my childhood was pretty normal. But I was really a rebellious young girl. I put my parents through a lot, not coming home at night, wanting to kill myself because of a relationship I had with a certain boy, I got pregnant when I was 17. Now, I look back on all of these things and think they really helped me become who I am today. Not in a bad sense but stronger I guess. I remember sitting at the kitchen table on so many occassions with my mom and little sister and my mom saying things like "don't do this or this, you don't want to end up like Della did", "Della has always been the black sheep of the family"and other things like that.

So I have to ask myself. Do I attract these men into my life in hopes that by being with them eventually I will see the light and be a "good" person? (in my mother's terms) Keep me in line so to speak? As teachers maybe? Another thing I find interesting is that the only man I think I really love (and I still think about him everyday) is so much like me. And so different from these other 2 men. And yet when the opportunity was there for us to be together I pretty much ruled him out as bad for me even when all I wanted to do was work through our issues and be with him.

I can't believe how this stuff is just coming out of nowhere. My hand gets tired before I get a chance to get it all written in my journal. Does any of this make sense? Does anyone have any insight they might like to share. So how do I go about taping over the old tapes and getting on with my life. Have been practising the positive re-enforcement thing. Are there any other suggesstions people would like to share? Thanx yet again for just being there to listen. And thanks for giving me so much to think about.

From: wolfie

Dearest Della, congratulations on the work you are doing!!!! It sounds to me that you are starting to see certain patterns, you are starting to see what you are attracting and why. You are starting to see what is really going on within YOU. Because, as you know, it is always about us!! These old tapes you talk about - we ALL have them! That is what a "reaction" is. In a sense, we have lost the moment - we are reacting to things of long ago - our tapes are automatically running - trying to protect ourselves. The first step is Awareness - and it appears that your awareness is growing. What takes practice is when you feel a reaction coming, you take a deep breath - get back to the moment - and ACT in the way of Love - instead of reacting based on fear. It is a lifetime process I feel. I think it is easier when you have someone - like some kind of support group or therapist - to talk with and help you thru. Anyway, hang in there!!! Awareness is a gift! And the first step!!!!!

From: della

This morning I had to get up at my regular 4:30 to deliver papers. I was a little late so I knocked on my daughters bedroom door and asked for her help. (this is only the 2nd time I have done this this summer) After bugging her a bit and raising my voice to get it through that she didn't have a choice she got really angy and was saying any nasty thing I'm sure that would come to her mind. In the end (I was standing in doorway) she yelled move! and slammed the door almost in my face. Normally that would have been my cue to react in a similar fashion and lecture her on selfishness, respect, the works followed by the silent treatment to try and keep my anger in check and let her know she had pissed me off or I might just let her rip and then she would really know. Well, I took a breath and said "I am water, I will not let her anger affect me, it will pass right through me." So I waited for her and we eventually made it to my route. For the whole hour and a half I just let it pass through me and didn't try to make her feel bad by being overly pleasant or overly nasty. I just enjoyed my walk and the peace and quiet that I get at that time of the morning. I really let it pass through me.

On the way home, rather than not speak I offered her a cigarette. My daughter broke down in tears and said "Mom, I am so sorry for what I said to you and how I acted." Imagine my surprise. She cried all the way home. When we got home she was still crying so I put my arms around her and said "Angi, sometimes we say or do things we don't mean or we regret, that's okay, it's all part of finding out who we truly are. I love you." (plus it was pretty early, even I don't like getting up at that time) :) She cried some more. You know, it felt really good to see that she was dealing with her actions and what she had said and I wasn't. I let her own her feelings. I can't explain how good that made me feel and how much I loved her at that moment.

Too top the morning off, there was a beautiful sunrise so I went back outside. I just stood there and watched and listened and you know, I really felt like I was part of something wonderful, something beautiful.

Such a warm and peaceful feeling. Is all the work of discovering yourself (the reading, the positive re-eforcement, the meditation, the letting go, the honesty, the hurt we sometimes feel on this journey, that feeling of fear that might sometimes seem a little overwhelming ), is it all worth it? YOU BET. I guess I'm feeling pretty good today and I just wanted to share that with you. I hope everyone has a nice day.

From: della

Talked to my SO on the weekend for the first time in over 2 weeks. The first time we talked we pretty much ended it and then he called me back. Said he couldn't just let me walk out of his life. I can't seem to part from this guy and yet we keep hurting each other and it all seems so senseless. I have been feeling pretty emotional since our talks...headaches, tears, the works. What a wake up call. I seem to dismiss the men I have relationships with so easily. I've gone out with this guy for over 2 years and yet I can turn off in seconds and just say that's it, I'm outta here and walk away. About 11 years ago I lived with a guy for about a year, my divorce got too heavy for him I guess and he left. It took me 2 years to even set foot out of my house. If my friends wanted to visit they had to come to my place. I swore I would never let someone do that to me again. Guess I got pretty good at keeping people out. I can't remember leaving a relationship since, feeling anything but relief. If my SO hadn't called me back last night that would have been it. I know I love this guy (I wouldn't be feeling the way I do right now if I didn't) and truly want him to be my life partner. I feel so empty inside and can't bring myself to just let go. To just love him.

I made an appointment with a councellor for this weekend. I think it's about time. Guess I just needed to say these things. Thanks for listening. Now I'm sitting here at my desk at work crying again. Yikes. Must be Monday! :)


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