
Dunno what else to say, so here's another one.

Oh hell - group hug!

Moderator: Fist and Faith
Ok, I've had some sleep and now I can face this post.Sorus wrote:Lorin - /hug
I've been avoiding this forum, but this line resonated with me:
I've been typing out and deleting a reply for the last hour, and most of it is going to stay deleted because even after 20 years it's still not something I'm comfortable talking about.lorin wrote: I do not want to do to others, to people that are important to me, what was done to me.
My mother did not commit suicide. She's still alive. She did use the threat to manipulate me through my entire childhood. It made me the person I am today - responsible, self-destructive, and almost completely incapable of trusting another human being.
There's a part of me that wonders if I would have been better off without her, and I hate myself for thinking that.
I wanted to say something upbeat and inspirational, but the best I can offer is, you're not alone.
I am not sure what anniversary you are talking about but I do know anniversaries are dangerous. They are a time when you need to do things to protect yourself. I know that one of the reasons I am thinking about my mother's suicide now is because I will be coming up on that date soon. Find places to be, people to talk to. You, like me, are very isolated. It is good that you put your stuff here. It is brave of you.Sorus wrote: I realized something earlier this year, looking back with that big anniversary approaching.
I am going to be honest here. It may happen. You may find one day that she has made that choice. And in the end what I discovered was there is nothing you could or can do about it. Of course this is the intellectual part of me saying that. The child in me screams and cries and feels all the guilt that was intended for me. You cannot control her decisions.Sorus wrote: All the time I spent walking on eggshells was essentially useless. At best I could prolong setting off a trigger. Maybe I prevented it today, but it's going to happen tomorrow.
And most importantly, and I wish more than anything I could tell my past self this - it wasn't my fault. Yes, what I said set her off, but it would have happened anyway because that's just how she was. Is. There is a part of me that feels I did lose her twenty years ago - not the ultimate loss, but something vital nonetheless.
Then there's the part of me that has never stopped walking on eggshells, the part of me that automatically assumes the worst every time she doesn't answer her phone. Because for all the hell she has put me through I do love her. And I can't fix her. I can't save her from herself.
And we're all messed up. Every last one of us.
This is really not something I have ever talked about, and for a long time I did think that I was alone.
Thank you all for being here.
Hey, you don't have to apologize to me. I just have a thing about this issue, for a number of reasons.lorin wrote: You and I, and many many others lived through a nightmare of selfish manipulation (sorry Vraith).
I don't know if I am past it, to tell the truth. I feel it bubble up every few secondsrdhopeca wrote:That said, I was still surprised...shocked really...when I went back to therapy to find out how much I ended up talking about and going over and over again my personal move history as I outlined above. I was, or so I thought, 20 years removed from that sort of issue. But now I have kids, and some of the triggers I was encountering with them seemed to come out of nowhere, as if I'd stepped outside myself. So I finally tried to talk to someone about where the f**k this sudden, uncontrolled anger was coming from.
And we ended up back on all my moving and how nothing matters and so on and so forth. I was amazed how much it came back to that, and how much it likely impacts my relationships today with my wife and my two beautiful children. Even with parenting courses, even with a good faith effort, every now and then I just go bonkers. I realize every parent loses patience and yells at their kids sometimes, but I couldn't ever tell why it would happen and why it was so uncontrolled.
I guess my point is, like you said, Lorin. You may think you are past it. You may think you understand it. But all it takes is something, some crisis, some exhaustion, and it comes back to you. Scary feeling.
I think it should be that a parents love for their child trumps everything else. That a parents drive to protect and nurture their child should be primal and a priority. When a parent commits suicide he or she puts his or her child's safety and well being behind his or her own needs. Therefore, to me when a parent does this he or she is selfish. Granted, my perspective is tainted with my life. I have been fighting these feelings all my life. I have sought therapy, sought medication, sought ....well everything. I manage them. But they are there, in the shadows. I would not, ever inflict my death on a child. I would never do that so consciously or unconsciously, I have never had children. It is without a doubt my greatest source of pain but the unselfish thing was not to bring a child into this world only to turn their life into a nightmare. My family line is damaged. There is a long line of suicide and self harm. I will not, not, not be a part of it. I will not do this to a child. Neither of my two brothers have children either.Vraith wrote:Hey, you don't have to apologize to me. I just have a thing about this issue, for a number of reasons.lorin wrote: You and I, and many many others lived through a nightmare of selfish manipulation (sorry Vraith).
It sounds to me like your mother [and Sorus'] had other problems. There are many possibilities, and this is common...way too common. Sometimes depression, suicidal impulse/ideation/tendencies are the illness/primary themselves...but quite often they are a symptom/secondary of another problem.
I almost always feel driven to make this point when the issue of "selfish" [and the related] come up. Saying it's selfishness isn't much different than saying it's demon possession in effect...as long as people believe it, real understanding and answers will be hidden. [for those connected/affected as well as the sufferers themselves].
Other people's selfishness is a comforting stance for people to take...lot's of people. We humans use it all the time. It's very flexible.
I'm not saying we use it consciously often...but we feel it, are viscerally impacted by it.
For instance, you might [or might not] be amazed at the number of people connected to dead or permanently disabled heroes who feel exactly what people are describing related to suicides/attempted suicides.
Some of it is just [heh---just. merely. only. cuz it's so easy] our old friend grief. But not all of it.
The media tends to show us all the people proud and strong...though sad, of course, especially at first...cuz Dad covered that grenade, or Mom dove into the rip-tide. They don't show us the others [and often the SAME ones, when they're alone] permanently wounded and struggling with the selfish S [or D] O B.
The only real way to make "selfishness" a defining feature is to believe what...hmmm...Avatar, I think? believes...that everything we ever do is selfish at root.
I'm sorry for your losses, Morning.Morning wrote:I lost my best friend at the age of 7,
my first "real" infatuation / girlfriend at 16,
a good friend at 19,
all four grandparents within a 5 year period (one from infallible suicide) and
after a hard breakup from a 7-8yr domestic partnership,
met a girl with whom I thought stuff could begin anew. We had 2 months of idyllic passion and planning, then they found stage III liver cancer, and she died pretty quick. This was last year.
Thx, Ali. But you know what's worse? I've seen people take a lot more and a lot harder.aliantha wrote:Sorry for your losses, Morning. That's a lot to take in in one life.