Bill of Rights

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Trauma Vs. Serenity







The truth about betrayal trauma is that at least 86% of wives of addicts are suffering symptoms of PTSD. This number was given to me this week at my support meeting.  It's on the rise. The last time I look at a number from Dr. Keven Skinner of Addo Recovery the number was in the 70 percentile.

Regardless of those numbers, trauma feels exactly like all those words in that graphic at the top of this post.  Fear is a huge driving emotion in my personal trauma.  No matter how much I try to talk myself down off the fear ledge, it is huge, it is real and often comes uninvited.

In the beginning of all of this, I thought, 'if I could only just be more _____________" then he wouldn't need this addiction. Right?  I thought is was my fault in a lot of ways.  I thought I just wasn't enough for him.  

Wrong!

Then I found the 12-step program for family members of addicts and the answers to why I'm triggered, or why I was sick to my stomach and shaking all the time, why I numbed all my feelings and felt so lost in my own marriage.  

In 12-step I found the tools to help me recover.  

The new support group I attend has their own approach to the 12-step model which includes the use of the Serenity Prayer.   As we discussed the topic the week, this reference to serenity came up a lot. Along with a process model for dealing with trauma -- that I'm sure is familiar.  It wasn't part of the Healing Through Christ program, so it was new to me.   

Here is the process:

    1.  On your knees
    2.  On the phone
    3.  In the box

What is this ' in the box?' 

What I learned is:  It's a surrender box. A box where you write down what you are going to surrender to God.  It is the do-able portion of the first three steps of the 12-step program.

S-Anon:
1.  We admitted we were powerless over sexual addiction - that our lives had become unmanageable.
2.  Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God.

Healing Through Christ:
1.  Come to understand and accept that we are powerless over the addiction of a loved one and recognize that our lives have become unmanageable.
2.  Come to believe that the power of God can restore us to spiritual and emotional health.
3.  Decide to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God the Eternal Father and His Son, Jesus Christ.


Surrender = Sanity = Serrenity



Today I surrender my husband, my marriage, and my inability to fix what is broken on my own.








Here's a link to more information on the surrender box if you are interested. A jar works, a journal works too.  Surrender in a way that works for you.  



Boundaries Continued -- and an Analogy

I really appreciate all of the feedback I received on my recent boundary changes.  I first learned the concept of boundaries when I took the first betrayal trauma program with Addo Recovery

At that time, H was deep into acting out.  My first reaction was something like; 'Great! This will go over like a lead balloon.'   It did.

What the heck, right? I wrote up the boundaries, thinking it will help me define what I need to feel safe.  It did somewhat. Today, those same initial boundaries are right here at the top of my blog.  

H never saw them.

It took me about three years or more before I finally printed them off to show him.

He was angry.
He said they are punishment.
And left the room.

I felt stuck.  I felt like I had no control or power even thou H accused me of being controlling.  With some flip retort to the effect of; 'If you get to make boundaries, I get to make boundaries."  For the next few weeks, when I made a request of him or needed something, he'd holler on his way out of the room, "That is against my boundary.'

Epic fail!

Until I realized what I needed was rules for my safety that have a pre-determined action I complete.  No matter how ugly H gets when we talk, he is not going to leave the house.  Either I have to go, or I need a response that I will follow through with; like walking away.  

This is exactly what that new set of boundaries is for --- permission to walk away from the crazy-ness.


Wish me luck! 


Now for the story.  This is from a friend's therapist, shared with permission, in her words (minus personal information - of course.)




BOUNDARIES: Just wanted to share an analogy my therapist gave me when explaining boundaries. He (her therapist) grew up on a cattle ranch and he told me that when you move cows to a new pen, the first thing they do is walk, single file, along the wall of the pen. It doesn't matter if all the hay is in the middle of the pen. The will do this in a 10ft x 10ft pen or in a 10 mile grazing area. As they walk along, they push against the fence, testing the boundary around them. They are cows so they are likely to graze along the way, but overall, they stick to their survey of the fence. Once they find the area is secure, they will go to the middle, or where ever they want.

If, they find a weak spot in the fence, they will push until they break it and then all the cows will leave the pen. So you repair the fence and put the cows back in. You might expect them to go around the pen again, not this time. Now, all the cows will make a beeline to where they got out the last time and they will push with all their might against that fence. So your repairs need to be stronger than even the rest of the fence. The new fence has to be double strong. Once the cows realize they can't break through here again, they will resume their pen testing and then graze. However, no matter how long they are in the pen, if they find themselves over by that area, they will randomly test it again. 

So it is with people and boundaries we put up. Once we establish a boundary, the people around us will test it, looking for weak places. If they find a weak place, they will exploit it. And then, when we repair the fence, they will try even harder to break it where it was once broken. As has been mentioned here before, the right boundaries often cause anger and frustration in people around us because they are used to exploiting our weakness in these particular areas or it simply means they have to change how they interact with us. But that doesn't mean we should back down. Rather, we should prepare ourselves for the push back, and don't waiver. And if we do break once, make sure we double our barrier in that area the next time. 

And in reality, boundaries are healthy for everyone. They create safety for us and for those around us. Just like how fences create safety for cows. Sometimes the good they do is hard to see and we push and want to escape them. Respecting each other's boundaries is important in any relationship: work, kids, marriage, friends etc. 






This is a great story, but then maybe it is just because I like cows.
In one of the comments in my last post, there is a link to an amazing essay written by that commenter.  I recommend reading it.  If your boundaries are working for you - I take my hat off to you.  I know many women whose boundaries are working. Some because their loved one is in good recovery, others because the spouse is more willing to comply.  


Likely, I will be adjusting mine as time goes by.  
It's a learning process, right?




***Additional resources on boundaries can be found in  Dr. Adam Moore's presentation at this year's SLC UCAP:
   http://utahcoalition.org/project/how-do-i-set-boundaries-in-recovery/

What boundaries are:
  * Used to define limits of relationships
  * Healthy responses to violations of self
  * In place as trust is rebuilt
  * Protection against repeated harm


Tuesday, September 8, 2015

New Boundary Time



For the past several weeks, I have been in a long, drawn out conversation with my sponsor. We've hashed out and re-hashed my situation and the boundaries I had in place for my safety when H initially re-entered the family home to live.

Unfortunately, the boundaries I wrote up landed on a hard heart, deaf ears,  and a retaliatory spouse. When a good recovery idea backfires, my only known response is to hunker down and numb out.

I can't compel H to honor my boundaries.  I can't reason with him to see the sense in them instead he sees punishment.

H's way is to sweep issues under the rug and pretend they are not there.

Something along this line...

 














It is just deception.

You can walk on it.  You can smash it flat and unrecognizable.  You just can not heal it or fix it.


After a really great 12-Step meeting at SA Lifeline today, I realize that all the negotiating and reasoning is making it worse.  As long as H is not in real recovery, he will not be humble enough to talk out problems.  They need to go away fast in order for him to survive.  


My end goal is my serenity.  I need to feel safe in my unsafe situation.   The following is my attempt to protect me.  I'm open to any feedback.


Boundaries:

1.  Personal Safety Boundary -
    A. I won't engage in conversations where there is cruelty, compelling, manipulation or yelling
    B. I won't be in a vehicle or store with you when you carry your weapon when I do not feel safe in the relationship

2.  Spiritual Safety Boundary -
     A.  I will not engage in conversations that chase the spirit out of the home
     B.  I will leave the room when the spirit is driven out by yelling, or discord.

3  Recovery Boundary -
    A.  I will evaluate my safety regarding your recovery work based on the following:
          1. Humility
          2. Honesty
          3. Accountability
          4. Willingness to surrender to God




Friday, August 21, 2015

Will This Ever Go Away?



I just want to know -- will I ever be able to get away from the memory of all of H's actions?

This recent release of the Ashley Madison hack has put me in a tale spin.  Enough to finally get up the nerve to ask H if he had anything he hadn't come clean on -- he better get it out now.

One last chance.

He seemed clueless of the ramifications of his profiles all over hook-up land.

Ummm...your job -- your security clearance....if not to mention your marriage that is hanging by a thread.

Hello!!!


Back in my policing days I found him on the majority of these places.

It made me throw up and shake uncontrollably (and this is just the tip of the trauma reactions).

Some of his profiles had our home town and his name, information about children.

  and some of them...the most despicable lies about our sex life



This mess with AM isn't helping to keep all that at bay either.


My heart breaks for those that had no clue of their husband's debauchery. Their hearts will break.  Oh,  how well I know that pain.


My heart is still in pieces from this.

 - I am still trying to find myself -- the me I lost when the first disclosure knocked me over and each disclosure that followed distanced me further from that me I used to be.

 - I am still trying to figure out if I can stay in this marriage
      If I will ever feel safe to love again.


 - I am still trying to figure out if I've forgiven enough so that my soul isn't in jeopardy.  And let me just tell you, I am not a super saint when it comes to forgiving the massive amounts of infidelity that has affected my 26-year marriage.

 - I am still trying to figure out what trust looks like with H and in this marriage.

 - I am still trying breathe -- because whether you want it to or not -- a memory, a trigger, a pain, come sflying up in your face and knocks you back.  Down. Hard.

Thank you, Ashley Madison, Plenty of Fish, Craigslist, and the myriad of other places where cheaters find cheaters. Where addicts can never find what they really need. Why?  Why did you think this would be a good idea?  Does making money off of broken hearts, trashed marriages and families and damaged people make you feel successful in your business endeavors?

Because right now, right now while I am re-living all of this pain, fear, fight, flight, and trauma.  Right now while my PTSD has run a-muk....

I'm hurting -- again.














Thursday, August 20, 2015

When Talking Does Not Work

I can have conversation after conversation with most people. I can speak on a variety of topics, some better than others.  I might be a little shy in the beginning, but for the most part -- I like to talk.  To everyone -- except H.

With him -- 
I don't start the conversation correctly.
I say words that have a different meaning to H than to me.
I speak in absolutes.
 or my favorite "You expect me to align with everything you say"

Oh, the list of complaints goes on and on. 

I want to bring up an issue and find a way to resolve it.
H hears only complaint or criticism.

It feels hopeless.

We have this mess of a marriage and no amount of silence will bring resolution.


I read something once that made a lot of sense to me.

" Your brain has to have rich blood flowing in order to work properly. If you feel threatened, those resources are directed to a primitive part of your brain, the reptilian brain.
The frontal cortex, which deals with executive functioning, gets shortchanged. When your reptilian brain gets the majority of resources, your primitive or animal-like response is to feel compelled to win, as if your very existence were at stake, no matter how minor the issue was that started the process.
In order to improve your communication and your relationship, you have to learn how to rebalance your brain’s resources before those primitive responses create more problems for you. The frontal cortex is turned on when you are thinking logically or rationally deciding an issue. How does this information translate into action that can change your relationship? (http://www.marriagesherpa.com/blog/marriage/communication_arguments)

Oh great! I'm trying to resolve an issue with a reptile! 
     (no offense intended -- I need a little humor to lighten my frustration)


Seriously, now, I know I'm not always right. I know I don't see things from the same perspective.  My objective isn't to be right.  I'd like to see if we can make some progress in some of the issues ruining our marriage.

Mix in the hijacked brain of an addict and I just do not have the tools for this.  

I'm weary of the battle.  I find it is easier to just go to my room before he comes home at night and avoid interaction.  

I'd like to be happily married and feel like we fought this battle of addiction and won.  I just don't know how to do it without talking out some of the ugly stuff that happened, being willing to be real and vulnerable.

Time isn't my friend right now. The more time that goes by without making progress, the more distance, damage, and despair exists.  

I feel the need to remove myself from this as it adds another level of pain I cannot repair.









Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Re-doing Boundaries

Steel barbs

  • Lately, my boundaries look more like this photo than what they are supposed to feel like.
    Mostly because H does not respect boundaries. He refers to them as ultimatums.  When I bring up boundaries, I get a barrage of all things he thinks I am already controlling. 
    I decided to do some study on boundaries -- again. I really like this quote and feel it speaks to the why and how of boundaries.
"We have, as individuals, every right to feel what we feel. We have every right to express, not repress, our emotions. We have every right to set our own boundaries, but no right to set boundaries on others. No right to force our boundaries on others."

I got with my sponsor the past couple weeks to talk over boundaries. Mine felt outdated and in need of making more current to the issues now than at the time we were separated.  She suggested I start with my triggers.

Triggers:  sex, cell phone, money, daughter, work computer/phone -- maybe others -- and not in any order of importance. Just thinking off the top of my head.

Sex:  I already have a boundary (of sorts) in place when I moved him into the guest room.  This one I will have to revisit should the discussion begin about him coming back to my room.

Cell phone:  This one is a big issue for me.  It has been the source of triggers and problems between H and I for years.  So, I got brave and broached the topic with H.   He's always had a smartphone.  There would never even be a discussion about it. I have a smartphone.  So there!  Needless to say, I wasn't heard and this discussion did not go well.

...and this is as far as my boundary re-work has taken me.  

What would be the point of having boundaries that are seen as a control mechanism that causes even more contention in the relationship? 


I'm hanging by a thin thread as it is right now.  


..and I'm confused...


I talked to S about putting a browser protection on H's phone. (S has little to no understanding about addiction and we disagree on points all the time.)  He thought I would be too controlling and taking away H's agency by doing so.

Ugh!!

Can I cry now? Please?



My life is in 3D chrome knot 










  •  

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

School Break = Blogging


Finals are complete.
As are sitting in the grade book (I know, no humility there.)
Finally, I have time to catch up on my blog.   

I have a month off, which means cleaning closets, planning the upcoming school year for D, and not thinking about writing a single paper the whole time.

In other news:

I bought my ticket for Togetherness in October.  (Here's the link if you haven't registered or are not familiar with Togetherness: http://www.togethernessproject.org)
I am going to be counting down the days.


On the homefront:


Blame-shifting -- abusive -- crazy-making days.

I'm reading a book a friend loaned me about verbal abuse.  I need to read it because I always think what goes on is my fault.  I feel caught up in crazy land with no escape when H and I talk.

This is the list I'm evaluating at present.  I need to see what fits, what makes sense, what feels like truth -- and most importantly what if anything I can do to avoid the trap I keep falling in.

The Verbally Abusive Relationship
   How to recognize it and how to respond by Patricia Evans


Verbal abuse is a kind of battering which doesn't leave evidence like physical abuse does. However, it can be just as painful, and recovery can take much longer. The victim of abuse lives in a gradually more confusing realm. In public she is with one man, in private he becomes another. 
Often, for the verbally abused woman (man), there is no witness to her reality and no one to understand her experiences. Friends and family continue to see her ex, the abuser, as a really good guy and, certainly, he agrees with them. 
The verbal abuser, while maintaining his charm with others, always takes his abuse behind closed doors. It is a means of holding power over his wife/partner.
Many women and some men leave a marriage and come back into the singles' world with the diminished self-esteem that comes from a verbally abusive relationship. 
The fact that many of these women (men) have never even realized that they were being abused, makes it easy for them to enter another abusive relationship.
According to Evans, a verbal abuser is an insecure person and immature person who is looking for power and control over another.
In order to help you recognize abuse, remember that all forms of verbal abuse are methods of manipulating you for the purpose of establishing power over you. The following are some of the forms of verbal abuse the author helps you recognize.

1. Withholding: a purposeful, silent treatment.
2. Countering: a countering of your ideas, feelings, and perceptions, even going so far as to refute what he misconstrues you to have said.
3. Discounting--a putdown of you or something you hold dear.
4. Blocking and diverting--this is a sneaky, covert way of violating your dignity.
5. Accusation and blame: generally involves lies about the partner's intentions, attitudes, and motives. The author states that accusation and blame is present in all verbally abusive relationships.
6. Judging and criticizing: lies about your personal qualities and performance.
7. Trivializing and undermining: abusive behavior which makes light of your work, your efforts, your interests, or your concerns. The abuser attempts to dilute meaning and value in your life. Undermining might occur when your partner laughs at you, for example, when you burn yourself cooking. It is also jokes at your expense. Undermining is occurring when you feel a "so-called joke" is mean rather than funny.
8. Name calling: no one has a right to call you degrading names. Name calling is verbal abuse.
9. Ordering: Telling you to do something, rather than asking, or making decisions for you or for the two of you without your input.
10. Forgetting and denial: the trickiest form of denial is forgetting. Become aware that forgetting is a form of denial that shifts all responsibility from the abuser to some "weakness of mind." 
11. Abusive anger: this seems to be closely linked to the need to "blow up," to dominate, to control, to go one up, and to put down. Any time you are snapped at or yelled at, you are being abused.
12. Threatening: Physical threats and sexual threats aside, verbal threats are an effort at manipulation. For example, a threat to leave, stay out all night, or take you home immediately is a manipulation for power. The threat of "pending disaster" is designed to shatter the partner's serenity as well as her boundaries.
If you counter the abuser or attempt to explain yourself, you will probably be met with such statements as, "You're going into one of your tirades again," or "You're much too sensitive," or "You're just trying to start a fight" or "You don't have a sense of humor."
If you are in a brand-new relationship and see warning signs of verbal abuse, the author suggests you might be wise to let the relationship go. It is not likely that a man (woman) who needs to dominate and control will change easily, if at all. 
It is also likely that when the newness of the relationship wears off, he will become more abusive. Verbal abuse can become physical in time and physical abuse is always preceded by verbal abuse, according to Evans.
If you are in a long-term relationship, you can respond to the abuser as the book suggests and soon discover for yourself whether or not your mate is willing to change and stop his abusive behavior. 
The author writes, "If you have been verbally abused in your relationship, you may have discovered that explaining and trying to understand have not improved your relationship. Therefore, I recommend that you respond in a new way--a way that will make an emotional, psychological, and intellectual impact upon your mate."
The abuser in your relationship may change when he finds that you do know when you are being abused, that you have set limits, that you mean what you say, and that you will not take behavior you don't like.
If the man in your relationship remains abusive, it is not only not your fault, it is not even your responsibility. 
The book tells you how to counter verbal abuse to see if your partner is willing to change. The author writes that you will know about that willingness within a month or two because he will either have stopped abusing you or he will be continuing to abuse you.
She writes, "If he is deeply concerned about you and cares about your well-being and if he wants a healthy relationship with you, you may see results in the first week."
The book also has a good chapter on recovery from verbal abuse.
Whether you are a victim of verbal abuse or the abuser, this book will give you true insights into the underlying dynamics of the verbally abusive relationship. If you are a single person, it will help keep you out of a (another) abusive relationship.
Although Evans primarily addresses verbal abuse of women, she states that much of the book applies to men, too.
Book Review: Copyright © 1999 CyberParent. All rights reserved

The section in red is what I am dealing with presently.  H's line is: "I'm learning I just have to suck this all up and align with your truth or you won't be happy."   Facepalm!

Avoidance is my go-to survival technique right now.  We can't have a conversation without it turning sour.  We haven't had counseling since the second month he was home.  We have yet to see our priesthood leaders together in the past 14 months. 

H thinks my hurt has ruined me.  Really?  
I think his actions and lack of honest recovery and his out of control anger ruined our marriage. 
I don't know??