Trichotillomania....this is a word that I hate. I'm not sure what it is about the word, I just absolutely hate it. Maybe, it's because this is a word that I have let define me for over 20 years. This is a part of my life that I have kept hidden, lied about, been ashamed of and fearful that people would find out. It is a word that has kept me from doing many things that I once enjoyed in life....swimming, water skiing, having my hair and make-up done by others, wearing my hair down in a boat or with the windows rolled down.
I've talked about Trichotillomania (TTM) briefly in previous blogs, but never really shared my story with the word or how it has really affected my life. As a counselor, I believe that sharing your story is healing. "Every time you tell your story and someone else who cares bears witness to it, you turn off the body’s stress responses, flipping off toxic stress hormones like cortisol and epinephrine and flipping on relaxation responses that release healing hormones like oxytocin, dopamine, nitric oxide, and endorphins. Not only does this turn on the body’s innate self-repair mechanisms and function as preventative medicine—or treatment if you’re sick. It also relaxes your nervous system and helps heal your mind of depression, anxiety, fear, anger, and feelings of disconnection." (Rankin, L., MD, The Healing Power of Telling Your Story) I believe with every story shared, you continue the healing process. I've seen this with my dating/domestic violence awareness. I remember the first time I shared my story about being in an abusive relationship and the women who came up to me afterwards. It was scary telling my story for the first time, but as I got farther into the story, the more comfortable I became and the more I began to recognize the emotions the experience brought up in me...I felt them all as I shared my story....stress, anxiety, loneliness, and finally relief. Then when I had women come up to me and thank me for sharing my story and then to have them share their story with me, some of them this was the first time they spoke about it themselves, I was floored. I never imagined that my story would have an impact the way it did. And then when I shared my story at a middle school and the signs of dating violence and had a young man come to me after my presentation and tell me, "Miss. I just broke up with my girlfriend today and after hearing you, I'm glad I did. I was in an abusive relationship and I was the one being abused".....WOW!!!! I wanted to cry. By sharing my story, I was getting through to middle schoolers. Well, now I'm going to share my story with Trichotillomania.
First of all, I have to say that this is very scary for me. Scary because you never know what other's reaction to your story is going to be. I have been trying to recover from my TTM for over 20 years and I have to share my story for my healing, as well as to let the many others out there with TTM know that they are not alone.
TTM is a disorder in which the person has irresistible urges to pull out hair from the scalp, eyebrows, eyelashes, and sometimes other areas of the body. TTM has been referred to as both an impulse control disorder and an obsessive compulsive disorder; however, it doesn't really fit in any specific category. The cause of TTM is still unknown; however, in my experience, it is linked to trauma (something I believe most cases of TTM have in common). For some people, like model and actress Olivia Munn (Magic Mike), they pull only from their eyelashes; while others, like Paula Dean, pull out their eyebrows and eyelashes. Many other famous celebrities have also been reported as having had mild to moderate cases of TTM: Justin Timberlake, Katy Perry, Charlize Theron, Leonardo Di Caprio, Christina Aguilera, Victoria Beckham, Kate Beckinsale and Naomi Campbell. Many of these celebrities have only discussed their TTM in passing and Olivia Munn is the only one who has openly spoke out specifically about her disorder. TTM affects between two to ten million Americans, with more women being affected than men.
My TTM began for me when I was about 10 years old. My grandfather died and shortly after, I began being sexually abused by an older male cousin. The abuse happened a handful of times and I didn't know what to do with it or about it. He had told me not to tell and although I had been told my entire life not to let anyone touch me, I couldn't bring myself to tell. I was afraid that somehow I would be blamed or that no one would believe or worse yet...what my dad would do if he found out. I kept this secret to myself, while I began to develop internal anxiety and stress when I had to be around him. I was full of anxiety and shame. I wanted the way I felt inside to go away and I accidentally found that relief with TTM. I remember the first time I pulled. I didn't intentionally pull for a release or pleasure. I had an eyelash poking me in the eye and I pulled out the eyelash that was curled under. I wasn't expecting the release of tension that came with that pull. The only way I can describe is by comparing it to someone who cuts themselves. It's that release that you get from that brief pain...and it becomes addicting. From that day on, I have been a puller. It began with my eyelashes. I remember my grandmother noticing my missing lashes for the first time and I told her that I had tried to use an eyelash curler and accidentally pulled out my lashes. Then I began on my eyebrows. My parents were convinced I was shaving them. My dad would ground me and I was constantly in trouble for my pulling. I couldn't tell them I was intentionally and sometimes unconsciously pulling out my eyebrows and eyelashes. I was in junior high when I started pulling my hair. I thought if I started pulling the hair on my head, I would stop pulling my eyebrows and eyelashes. I pulled for nearly two years from my head before my mom noticed my thinning hair one afternoon after we had finished swimming. Just a couple of nights prior to that, I had been deeply depressed. I had been in sitting in my room for a couple of hours listening to music when I looked down and noticed a huge pile of hair next to my bed. I picked it up and threw it in the trash and looked in the mirror. That's when I saw the huge bald patch on my head. What had I done? Why had I pulled out my hair? Why couldn't I stop? I didn't like what I was doing, I didn't like what I saw in the mirror, I didn't like who I was. I felt like a monster, a freak. Why was I the only person in the world who did this to themselves? After sitting on the edge of my tub crying for about 30 minutes, I decided to pull my hair into a ponytail and go downstairs. I was flipping through the channels on tv when I stopped on an infomercial about wigs. It was while watching this infomercial that I realized that I what I was doing had a name and that there were millions of other people who did it to. It was called Trichotillomania. I sat watching the infomercial crying my eyes out. Crying out of relief that I was not alone and out of fear that the disorder had no known cure.
When my mom noticed my hair that day, I looked at her and began crying. For the first time, I admitted what I had been doing and told her that I had Trichotillomania. Mom worked for a doctor's office and had actually heard of the disorder. She made me an appointment with her doctor, who confirmed that I did have TTM and prescribed me an anti-depressant and referred me to a psychologist. I was a junior in high school when I began seeing my psychologist. Something I find interesting now, is that she never did an intake, which is the first thing I do with all my clients. She simply tried to treat my symptoms, rather than trying to get to the bottom of my disorder (my past trauma). While going to the psychologist, she wanted to work on my self-esteem, so she suggested that I purchase a wig. At this point, I had a very thin ponytail because the entire crown of my head was bald and wearing my hair in the ponytail was the only way to hide it. Mom took me to purchase a wig and I was more subconscious wearing the wig than I had been with my thin ponytail. However, having the wig on my head for 75% of the day, kept me from pulling my hair. We purchased the wig in the fall of my junior year and by winter my senior year, I was able to get rid of the wig and sporty a really cute pixie cut. I remember the day after I got my hair cut at school. I walked into my first period class with Ms. Myers. I had had Ms. Meyers for freshman English and she was our sponsor for Lions for the Lord (our school prayer group) and was blessed to have her again for senior English. When I walked into her classroom, Ms. Myers looked at me, walked across the room and with tears in her eyes gave me a hug and told me she was proud of me. We had never talked about my disorder, but she knew. That moment has stuck with me all these years later.
I thought this was a turning point for me and my TTM. For the next few months, I did really good about not pulling my hair. While I'm sporting my wig in my senior yearbook picture, I was able to graduate in 1999 with my own hair. I had a great summer, as I prepared for my first semester of college and thought things had turned around. Then two weeks before I left for college, my first love and someone who meant the world to me, committed suicide. I struggled through the next weeks to not pull. I was at Sam Houston with one of my best friends from high school and pursuing my broadcast journalism degree. I was still struggling not to pull, but was managing. That is until we went out one night mid-semester. Our suitemate was a bartender at one of the local bars, so we went to see her at work. It was $1 pitcher night, so a group of us girls were having fun. Then we met a group of older students, who invited us to go to one of the popular clubs in Huntsville. We hung out there a while and because we were underage and they were strict about not serving minors, we had to sneak drinks from the group we were with. I remember a guy brining me one drink and drinking it. Next thing I know, we are at an apartment complex at a party. There were people all over the place and a keg in the parking lot. A guy brought me and my friends a beer from the keg and we were all standing around talking. I needed to use the restroom and someone pointed me towards an apartment with an open door and gave me directions on how to get there. As I was walking to the restroom, I got a call from a friend. We talked for a good 10 minutes before I left the bathroom. When I finished our conversation, I hung up and walked out of the bathroom. I was walking down the hall when I was grabbed from behind and pulled into a pitch black bedroom. I remember having my phone jerked out of my hand and thrown across the room and was pushed onto the bed. I tried screaming and nothing would come out, I tried to fight but I couldn't move. I began going in and out of consciousness and just remember him being on top of me when I would wake up. I would try to scream and fight, but nothing. Somehow, he managed to get me to his truck about daylight, drove me to my dorm and dropped me off out front. I don't remember his name, what he looked like, what he drove....nothing. I went into my room and after my friend went to class, I climbed in the shower and sat under the hot running water until it ran cold. I began the struggle within myself to report to the police, but how could I report what happened when I couldn't remember anything and I had been drinking. Again, I worried that somehow I was at fault or that no one would believe. I chose to keep another horrible secret. After a couple of days, calls started coming into our dorm when I wasn't in by someone, who left messages saying to tell me that my boyfriend had called. I would call my guy friends asking if it was them and no one fessed up. One evening, a call came in and my suitemate told the guy I was in class. He told her he knew my class schedule and that I wasn't in class and wanted to know where I was. At this point, it had been a few weeks since I had been raped. I had already been experiencing signs of depression and had scheduled an appointment for a pregnancy test and STD exam at the college clinic. The clinic confirmed that I was not pregnant and had no STDs. The nausea and other symptoms I was experiencing were from a bleeding ulcer. I was under so much stress and anxiety I was making myself sick and I began pulling again. After being made aware of the last phone call by this man, knowing that he knew my schedule and was stalking me, I chose to leave school. I told my roommate and parents that I was failing my classes (which wasn't true) and that college wasn't for me. I packed up my stuff and moved back home.
Over the past years, my TTM has remained my coping mechanism. I finally told a couple of friends about the rape about 2 years after it happened. It made it real to talk about it, but it also helped. However, I didn't talk about it again for years. This past year, I made a choice because of some friends that I have made through pageantry to acknowledge that I am a survivor of sexual assault and I participated in the Denver Denim Days Fashion Show, in which the models are all survivors of sexual assault. With this, came a great deal of publicity for the show, advertising the models and the fact that they are all survivors. This forced me to confront my past and talk about it with the people I had kept it from all these years. I told my husband, my parents and my grandparents about what happened to me as a child. And for the first time in over 20 years, I felt like I could breath. I felt like a weight had literally been lifted off my chest. I have been managing my TTM pretty well for the past 5 or 6 years. I have had times of remission and then I have had severe flare ups, but none that have required me to have to wear a wig and it has just become a habit to pencil my eyebrows and wear false lashes. I feel like sharing my story and getting it out of me and bringing awareness to abuse through my advocacy and volunteering has helped me reduce my TTM and I'm hoping that sharing my story of TTM will also help improve the way I manage the disorder. Getting it all out and having no skeletons in the closet is scary. It's frightening, it's horrifying, it's freeing, it's liberating, and it's going to make a difference in someone else's life. While I worry about what others will think of me after reading my story, I can't help but think of how empowering it is going to be for someone else who has felt the way I do and gone through the things I've gone through.
This is me. This is my story. There are no more ghosts in my closet. My deepest darkest secrets have been revealed and once I hit publish, you all know. These trials and this disorder has made me the person I am, but it will no longer define who I am. I am not a victim of sexual abuse, domestic violence and TTM....I am a SURVIVOR and so are you!
The purpose of this blog began as a place to share my thoughts and experiences as an individual and a Mrs. Colorado Titleholder (2011-2014); as well as to educate and raise awareness of dating/domestic violence and sexual assault awareness. However, it is now a place for me to put the randomness that runs through my mind regarding, relationships, kids, mental health and just life in general.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Knowing What You Want In a Significant Other
For those of you who
are single, do you ever wonder if you’re going to find the right person or for
those of you who are in a relationship (dating or married), if you are with the
right person? You are really the only person who can answer that question, because
what the right person looks like for each of us is different. We all have
different values and qualities that initially attract us to people.
For the majority of
people, looks are the first thing we are attracted to. “According to the Harris Interactive, physical attraction does, in fact,
matter to both men and women. Seventy-eight per cent believed it was
very important. The rest were lying. But HuffPost reports that what is
interesting and less obvious is that it matters more in the first seven years
of a relationship than in later years. It seems that as marriage progresses,
physical attraction may be increasingly influenced by other emotional factors —
like good communication and shared interests — which probably help sustain
attraction even if looks change. The
survey shows that men are more likely than women to place higher importance on
physical attraction in their relationship. Fifty per cent of women said that physical
attraction was important, while 123% of men said it was. Women identified facial
features as being more important than body features, while men expressed a
preference for women who had surgically relocated their breasts to their heads.
A high number of couples (92%) agreed that their relationship was healthier
when both partners felt confident about their appearance. Over half of men and
women indicated that they would like their partner to pay more attention to
their physical appearance. The rest indicated that they would like their
partner to pay more attention to them.”
With
our initial attraction to a person lying in how attractive they are, the fact
that our appearances and bodies do change over time, and the statistics above
prove that we should not think we found Mr. or Mrs. Right because we are
attracted to their appearance. As mentioned above, after appearances begin to
diminish the relationships that will last are based on emotional factors like
good communication and shared interests. So, what do we want in our significant
other besides good looks? That is something many people don’t think about when
entering a relationship. I know for me personally, it was never something I
thought about. I just thought, “I really like this person”. I never thought about
what I wanted in a relationship or a significant other.
I
had a friend, who after her divorce, made a list of what she wanted in a
husband. A very detailed list, which at times I picked on her for (i.e.: he had
to like wheat bread instead of white); but she had the right idea. I think we
should all take the time to really think about what we want in a relationship
and a partner and prioritize those items. Then when we are considering whether
we enter into a relationship with this person, we look at the person and the
list and see how many of the qualities we want are in the person we are
considering and then determine if we can live with those qualities that they
don’t meet. I think if we all did this, we would see happier relationships and
possibly lower divorce rates; simply because we knew what we wanted and got it
rather than guessing about what we want or settling.
I
had never made a list before but have been thinking about my friends list a
lot, so I even though I am married, decided to make a list of what I would want
in a significant other if I were single. Here is my list and I encourage you to
create your own. And if you are in a relationship, make your list and see how
many of the qualities you want actually appear in your current
partner/significant other.
What
I Want In A Significant Other (It was really hard to prioritize after the first two):
Someone
who is spiritual and a believer in Christ.
Someone
who believes family is more important than anything, except the above.
Someone
who trusts me with everything and I can trust with everything.
Someone
who is a good listener and communicator.
Someone
who is my best friend and wants me to be theirs.
Someone
who loves children.
Someone
who understands and supports my career as a counselor, but also supports and
encourages my other dreams and goals.
Someone
who doesn’t drink or is only a social drinker.
Someone
who doesn’t use drugs.
Someone
who shares my same interests (music, movies, performing arts and art in
general, traveling, the beach, going to the lake, tent camping, hiking,
rafting, spending time outdoors in general, volunteering).
Someone
who understands wanting to make a difference in the lives of others and wants
to himself.
Someone
who works hard, but makes time for his family.
Someone
who realizes regular date nights are important, even after marriage.
Someone
who makes me laugh, but that I can cry to or with when necessary.
Someone
who understands my past and doesn’t judge me for it or use it against me.
Someone
who understands my past and encourages and supports me using it to help others.
Someone
who inspires my creativity.
Someone
who is not so focused on their needs, wants and desires that they forget about
or neglect mine.
Someone
who is adventurous and passionate and can be spontaneous.
Someone
who would rather be with me than anywhere else, but with the understanding we
can’t be together 24/7 (they just need to have that desire to be with me when
they’re away from me and miss me).
Someone
who believes in himself and has self-confidence without being arrogant and is
not afraid to admit when he is wrong or has made a mistake and takes steps to
fix the wrong.
Someone
who believes that a relationship is built on faith, trust, genuineness,
authenticity, openness, and total transparency.
Someone
who is not superficial or keeps things on the surface and lacks depth.
Someone
who doesn’t care if I’m all dressed up or wearing sweats with no make-up and a
ponytail.
Someone
who cares about their appearance, body and health, but that is not arrogant
about it or obsessive over it.
What
will your list of qualities include?
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Types of Abusive Men
In keeping with my dating/domestic violence awareness platform, I am reading a book by Lundy Bancroft called Why Does He Do That? When written in 2002, Bancroft had 15 years of experience working as an Abuse Therapist. Bancroft led groups and worked with men who were seeking counseling for being abusive or having an abusive nature. Bancroft wrote this book based off what he learned from these abusive men, as well as their partners.
In the book, there is a chapter on the types of abusive men. I am including that list with some of the central attitudes of those men as defined by Bancroft:
The Demand Man -
Has an "it's your job to do things for me, including taking care of my responsibilities if I drop the ball on them. If I'm unhappy about any aspect of my life, whether it has to do with our relationship or not, it's your fault."
Believes "You should not place demands on me at all. You should be grateful for whatever I choose to give."
Believes he is above criticism.
Believes he is a loving and giving partner and the partner is lucky to have him.
Mr. Right -
"You should be in awe of my intelligence and should look up to me intellectually. I know better than you do, even about what's good for you."
"Your opinions aren't worth listening to carefully or taking seriously."
"The fact that you sometimes disagree with me shows how sloppy your thinking is."
"If you would just accept that I know what's right, our relationship would go much better. Your own life would go better, too."
"When you disagree with me about something, no matter how respectfully or meekly, that's mistreatment of me."
"If I put you down for long enough, some day you'll see."
The Water Torturer -
"You are crazy. You fly off the handle over nothing."
"I can easily convince other people that you're the one who is messed up."
"As long as I'm calm, you can't call anything I do abusive, no matter how cruel."
"I know exactly how to get under your skin."
The Drill Sergeant -
"I need to control your every move or you will do it wrong."
"I know the exact way that everything should be done."
"You shouldn't have anyone else - or anything else - in your life besides me."
"I am going to watch you like a hawk to keep you from developing strength or independence."
"I love you more than anyone in the world, but you disgust me."
Mr. Sensitive -
I'm against the macho men, so I couldn't be abusive."
"As long as I use a lot of 'psychobabble', no one is going to believe that I am mistreating you."
"I can control you by analyzing how your mind and emotions work, and what your issues are from childhood. I can get inside your head whether you want me there or not."
"Nothing in the world is more important than my feelings."
"Women should be grateful to me for not being like those other men."
The Player -
"Women were put on this earth to have sex with men - especially me."
"Women who want sex are too loose, and women who refuse sex are too uptight."
"It's not my fault that women find me irresistible. It's not fair to expect me to refuse temptation when it's all round me; women seduce me sometimes, and I can't help it."
"If you act like you need anything from me, I am going to ignore you. I'm in this relationship when it's convenient for me and when I feel like it."
"Women who want the nonsexual aspects of themselves appreciated are bitches."
"If you could meet my sexual needs, I wouldn't have to turn to other women."
Rambo -
"Strength and aggressiveness are good; compassion and conflict resolution are bad."
"Anything that could be even remotely associated with homosexuality, including walking away from possible violence or showing any fear or grief, has to be avoided at any cost."
"Femaleness and femininity are inferior. Women are here to serve men and be protected by them."
"Men should never hit women, because it is unmanly to do so. However, exceptions to this rule can be made for my own partner if her behavior is bad enough. Men need to keep their women in line."
"You are a thing that belongs to me, akin to a trophy."
The Victim -
"Everybody has done me wrong, especially the women I've been involved with. Poor me."
"When you accuse me of being abusive, you are joining the parade of people who have been cruel and unfair to me. It proves you're just like the rest."
"It's justifiable for me to do to you whatever I feel you are doing to me and even to make it quite a bit worse to make sure you get the message."
"Women who complain of mistreatment by men, such as relationship abuse or sexual harassment are anti-male and out for blood."
"I've had it so hard that I'm not responsible for my actions."
The Terrorist -
"You have no right to defy me or leave me. Your life is in my hands."
"Women are evil and have to be kept terrorized to prevent that evil from coming forth."
"I would rather die than accept your right to independence."
"Thee children are one of the best tools I can use to make you fearful."
"Seeing you terrified is exciting and satisfying."
The Mentally Ill or Addicted Abuser -
"I am not responsible for my actions because of my psychological or substance problems."
"If you challenge me about my abusiveness, you are being mean to me, considering these other problems I have. It also shows that you don't understand my other problems."
"I'm not abusive, I'm just ____ (alcoholic, drug addicted, manic-depressive, an adult child of alcoholics, or whatever his condition may be)."
"If you challenge me, it will trigger my addiction or mental illness, and you'll be responsible for what I do."
Key points to remember -
- "Tremendous variation exists among abusive styles...Many men are mixtures of different aspects."
-"An abuser may change so much from day to day that he couldn't belong to any type and the partner can never make sense out of what she is living with."
-"An abuser of any type can have days when he turns loving, attentive and thoughtful. However, the abuse will come back unless the abuser has dealt with his abusiveness."
For more detailed information on these types and on abusive partners in general, pick up Why Does He Do That? Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men by Lundy Bancroft.
In the book, there is a chapter on the types of abusive men. I am including that list with some of the central attitudes of those men as defined by Bancroft:
The Demand Man -
Has an "it's your job to do things for me, including taking care of my responsibilities if I drop the ball on them. If I'm unhappy about any aspect of my life, whether it has to do with our relationship or not, it's your fault."
Believes "You should not place demands on me at all. You should be grateful for whatever I choose to give."
Believes he is above criticism.
Believes he is a loving and giving partner and the partner is lucky to have him.
Mr. Right -
"You should be in awe of my intelligence and should look up to me intellectually. I know better than you do, even about what's good for you."
"Your opinions aren't worth listening to carefully or taking seriously."
"The fact that you sometimes disagree with me shows how sloppy your thinking is."
"If you would just accept that I know what's right, our relationship would go much better. Your own life would go better, too."
"When you disagree with me about something, no matter how respectfully or meekly, that's mistreatment of me."
"If I put you down for long enough, some day you'll see."
The Water Torturer -
"You are crazy. You fly off the handle over nothing."
"I can easily convince other people that you're the one who is messed up."
"As long as I'm calm, you can't call anything I do abusive, no matter how cruel."
"I know exactly how to get under your skin."
The Drill Sergeant -
"I need to control your every move or you will do it wrong."
"I know the exact way that everything should be done."
"You shouldn't have anyone else - or anything else - in your life besides me."
"I am going to watch you like a hawk to keep you from developing strength or independence."
"I love you more than anyone in the world, but you disgust me."
Mr. Sensitive -
I'm against the macho men, so I couldn't be abusive."
"As long as I use a lot of 'psychobabble', no one is going to believe that I am mistreating you."
"I can control you by analyzing how your mind and emotions work, and what your issues are from childhood. I can get inside your head whether you want me there or not."
"Nothing in the world is more important than my feelings."
"Women should be grateful to me for not being like those other men."
The Player -
"Women were put on this earth to have sex with men - especially me."
"Women who want sex are too loose, and women who refuse sex are too uptight."
"It's not my fault that women find me irresistible. It's not fair to expect me to refuse temptation when it's all round me; women seduce me sometimes, and I can't help it."
"If you act like you need anything from me, I am going to ignore you. I'm in this relationship when it's convenient for me and when I feel like it."
"Women who want the nonsexual aspects of themselves appreciated are bitches."
"If you could meet my sexual needs, I wouldn't have to turn to other women."
Rambo -
"Strength and aggressiveness are good; compassion and conflict resolution are bad."
"Anything that could be even remotely associated with homosexuality, including walking away from possible violence or showing any fear or grief, has to be avoided at any cost."
"Femaleness and femininity are inferior. Women are here to serve men and be protected by them."
"Men should never hit women, because it is unmanly to do so. However, exceptions to this rule can be made for my own partner if her behavior is bad enough. Men need to keep their women in line."
"You are a thing that belongs to me, akin to a trophy."
The Victim -
"Everybody has done me wrong, especially the women I've been involved with. Poor me."
"When you accuse me of being abusive, you are joining the parade of people who have been cruel and unfair to me. It proves you're just like the rest."
"It's justifiable for me to do to you whatever I feel you are doing to me and even to make it quite a bit worse to make sure you get the message."
"Women who complain of mistreatment by men, such as relationship abuse or sexual harassment are anti-male and out for blood."
"I've had it so hard that I'm not responsible for my actions."
The Terrorist -
"You have no right to defy me or leave me. Your life is in my hands."
"Women are evil and have to be kept terrorized to prevent that evil from coming forth."
"I would rather die than accept your right to independence."
"Thee children are one of the best tools I can use to make you fearful."
"Seeing you terrified is exciting and satisfying."
The Mentally Ill or Addicted Abuser -
"I am not responsible for my actions because of my psychological or substance problems."
"If you challenge me about my abusiveness, you are being mean to me, considering these other problems I have. It also shows that you don't understand my other problems."
"I'm not abusive, I'm just ____ (alcoholic, drug addicted, manic-depressive, an adult child of alcoholics, or whatever his condition may be)."
"If you challenge me, it will trigger my addiction or mental illness, and you'll be responsible for what I do."
Key points to remember -
- "Tremendous variation exists among abusive styles...Many men are mixtures of different aspects."
-"An abuser may change so much from day to day that he couldn't belong to any type and the partner can never make sense out of what she is living with."
-"An abuser of any type can have days when he turns loving, attentive and thoughtful. However, the abuse will come back unless the abuser has dealt with his abusiveness."
For more detailed information on these types and on abusive partners in general, pick up Why Does He Do That? Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men by Lundy Bancroft.
Friday, January 3, 2014
Love or Infatuation?
I remember a few years
ago (okay about 10) when I was working as a store manager at Body Central, one
of the other store managers coming to Texas from Florida, to help me open my
store. One evening while we were working, she got a phone call. She stepped to
the backroom and took the call. When she came back out, she had a huge smile on
her face. She had been on the phone with her husband of 13 years. Having been
divorced and being in a not great relationship at the time, I was in awe of
her. We started discussing their marriage and their relationship. She said that
because they both traveled a lot for their careers and they had children, they
didn’t get to spend as much alone time together as they wish they could; but
that they called each other multiple times throughout the day whether they were
both home or not. She also shared that she, after 13 years of marriage, still
got butterflies in her stomach every time she saw her husband…if they were
meeting for lunch, he was coming home from work, they had just spent the week
apart…it didn’t matter, the butterflies were still there. I was amazed. I
remembered that butterfly feeling, but had not had that feeling in my then
current relationship in a very long time. I found myself thinking about that. I
wanted that. I wanted to find the person that would give me butterflies in my
stomach for the rest of my life. Then I began to wonder if that butterfly
feeling forever could really exist. Is that what love really was? Was it
infatuation? Was it a combination of the two? What is this feeling all about
and how do you keep it?
I set a goal for 2014 of
strengthening my marriage and my relationship with my husband. Relationships
are hard. Love is hard. And it is even harder for those in relationships that
are troubled. I’ve been looking at my past relationships and my relationship with
my husband and doing some evaluating. What can I learn from the past to improve
the future? What can be done to bring back that butterflies in your stomach
feeling? I began doing some investigating into marriage, love, infatuation and
romance and I’ve found some important information.
There is a difference
between love and infatuation. I’m sure we all know that deep down. What we
forget sometimes is that a person who is in love can also be infatuated with
the person he/she is in love with; but the person who is infatuated with
someone, may not really love them. We need to know the difference between the
two and one way of knowing whether it is love or simply infatuation is to ask
yourself important questions. “Does this relationship bring out the best in both
of us?” is one of the most important questions you can ask. If the answer to
this question is no, you should re-evaluate your relationship. If the
relationship is not bringing out the best in both of you, the relationship is
unhealthy and more often than not, not going to last. Another question to ask
is, “Are you in this relationship alone?” If you are not thinking and planning
together as a pair, consider both of your plans before committing to something,
or postponed or given up your dreams for the other person and not restructured
your dreams together, you are in the relationship alone. A one-sided
relationship will not last the test of time. These are things you don’t think
about or see when you are infatuated with someone. When you are infatuated with
someone, you put your blinders on and see only what you want to see. You are
not seeing the other person for who he/she really is and you are not seeing the
relationship for what it really is.
So, back to those
butterflies. Is it possible to still have that butterflies in your stomach
feeling after years in your relationship? I believe so, but I believe that you
have to be in love with each other (not a one-sided love), that you have to
keep that infatuation by being on the same page from day one and you have to
create romance and intimacy on a daily basis. Is it possible to get that
feeling back after it’s been lost? I think with hard work, you can become
reconnected with your partner and regain some of those beginning of a
relationship feelings, but again, it takes both parties in the relationship
working because a one-sided relationship gets you nowhere.
1. The test of time. Love benefits and grows
through time; infatuation ebbs and diminishes with time. Are you in a rush to label certain feelings “love,” or do you
have other words to describe these feelings? Do you save the word love for
something better than feelings? If you find yourself “falling in love” often
and early, only to be later disappointed, perhaps remembering this first test
of real love will save you future heartache.
I was listening to the
radio today and heard a song that made me think about that story. This lady,
even after 13 years of marriage, still viewed her relationship in its beginning
stage…the infatuation stage. That stage where you can’t wait to see that person
again, when you get butterflies in your stomach just thinking about them, you
get excited when you get a call or text from them and your heart starts racing,
when the only place you want to be is where they are and when they’re the only
person you want to spend time with, when there is passion and excitement around
every corner. THAT stage! But can that stage actually last 13 years, 20 years,
25 years?
I think that butterfly
feeling goes away, when the infatuation disappears and we begin to really take
a good hard look at our relationships or significant others. We are now seeing
them for who they really are and they really aren’t what/who we thought because
of the blinders we saw them through in the beginning. You may realize that you
are moving in opposite directions, that you or your partner were ignoring
things that should have been addressed in the beginning of the relationship,
that you want different things out of life, that your goals are no longer the
same, that as a couple you are not in the same emotional place or on the same
spiritual level, and the list goes on. This is when you have to make a
decision. If you’re dating when you lose the infatuation, do you break up and
move. If you’re married, do you get a divorce? What if you have children
together? Or do you try to rekindle that infatuation? I think the answers to
these questions vary from person to person and couple to couple. There is no
right answer. It is ultimately a matter of what you see now versus what you once
saw and if you can live with the person the way you really see them now. You
have to decide if you can live with someone who is not on the same page as you.
There is a lot to consider and sometimes, when we are infatuated, we forget that
we may not be seeing our significant other the way they really are…and they may
be showing us who they really are, but we have our blinders on and can’t, won’t
or don’t see it. So, this is where we have to take a deep look at ourselves, as
a friend recently made me realize during a conversation about a different
topic, and determine what we have done in the relationship to contribute to the
problems. For some of us, it may be that we had blinders on. I know I’ve worn
blinders in the past. People, not even romantic relationships, have shown me
who they really are and I chose not see it until later. For some of us, we may
be contributing to the problem by enabling the unbecoming actions of our
significant other. Whatever problems are going on in a relationship, we must be
willing to examine our role in those problems rather than to simply blame the
problems on the other person.
I found these 12 Tests of
Love that I’d like to share. Are you really in love or is it just infatuation?
2. The test of knowledge. Love grows out of an appraisal
of all the known characteristics of the other person. How well do you expect to know the person you marry? Or how
well do you know your spouse? Infatuation quickly decides it knows everything
it needs to know. Genuine love creates an atmosphere of such interest that the
other person opens like a flower.
3. The test of focus. Genuine love is other-person
centered. Infatuation is self-centered. In your
most important relationships, to what degree is your attention focused on what
you are receiving from them and to what degree is your attention focused on
meeting the other’s needs?
4. The test of singularity. Genuine love is focused on
only one person. An infatuated individual may be “in love” with two or more
persons simultaneously. In what ways have you
realized that it’s much easier to work on problems in an existing relationship
where singularity and faithfulness are maintained than to create a whole new
set of problems with another person?
5. The test of security. Genuine love requires and
fosters a sense of security and feelings of trust. An infatuated individual seems to have a blind sense of
security, based upon wishful thinking rather than careful consideration;
infatuation is blind to problems. Security grows and flows out of deep
awareness of the other person’s character, values, and track record.
6. The test of work. An individual in love works
for the other person, for his or her mutual benefit. People in infatuation only think of their own misery. They
often daydream of unrealistic objectives and ideals that neither they nor their
partner could ever actually attain.
7. The test of problem solving. A couple in love faces
problems frankly and tries to solve them. Infatuated people tend to disregard
or try to ignore problems. How good are you and
your partner at seeing problems and working on them? Do you find that you gloss
over hard issues in your relationship or face them squarely?
8. The test of distance. Love knows the importance of
distance. Infatuation imagines love to be intense closeness, 24/7, all the
time. If circumstances require
you to be temporarily separated from the one you love, that will teach you a
lot about the quality of your relationship. If there is not a sense of
separateness, a distinct life, relationships with other people, and healthy
balance, then the relationship is probably a lot more infatuation than love.
9. The test of physical
attraction. Physical
attraction is a relatively small part of genuine love, but it is the center
focus of infatuation. Now don’t read “small
part” to mean “not a part” in what I just stated. If your heart doesn’t skip a
beat now and then and you don’t feel real attraction for your mate or the
person you plan to marry, I’d call that a problem.
10. The test of affection. In love, affection is
expressed later in the relationship, involving the external expression of the
physical attraction we just described. In
infatuation affection is expressed earlier, sometimes at the very beginning.
Affection tends to push toward greater physical intimacy. Without the control
of the other aspects of genuine love, affection spends itself quickly. It gives
the appearance of making the relationship “close,” but the closeness is
artificial and fragile.
11. The test of stability. Love tends to endure.
Infatuation may change suddenly and unpredictably. In infatuation the wind blows here and you’re in love. The
wind blows there and you’re in love. Not so with real love. Real love is
stable. There is a commitment. The test of stability can hardly be applied to a
relationship measured in days or weeks.
12. The test of delayed
gratification. A
couple in genuine love is not indifferent to the timing of their wedding, but
they do not feel an irresistible drive toward it. An infatuated couple tends to feel an urge to get
married—instantly. Postponement for the infatuated is intolerable.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Happy New Year (2014)
Wow! I can't believe 2014 is already here. Where did 2013 go?
2013 was full of ups and downs, as is life. While at our church New Year Eve Party last night, a former pastor offered a simple devotional. This is my interpretation of that devotion.
We can choose to look forward or backwards. If we look backwards and focus on the negative, we will not be successful moving forward. If we look backwards and focus on the positive, we can succeed in the future. However, we cannot change the past. It is what it is. All we can do is live in the here and now and look forward to the future. We should not stress over the past. We can take what we've experienced and learn from those negative experiences, but we must find the positive in those experiences and then apply what we have learned to the future in order to be successful.
What better way to start a new year, than with a new attitude. I've set my 2014 goals for myself and one of those goals is to motivate and encourage others. With that being said, I would like to share with you something that was shared with me from the first female Mayor of Alamosa, Colorado.
Here is "A Life Changing Procedure" by Zig Ziggler:
The eyes are the windows to the soul. So, to become the person you are capable of becoming, each evening, just before you go to bed, stand in front of the mirror alone, and in the first-person, present tense, look yourself in the eye and repeat with passion and enthusiasm paragraphs A-D. Repeat every morning and every evening from this day forward. Within one week you will notice remarkable changes in your life!
A. "I _______, am an honest, intelligent, organized, responsible, committed, teachable person who is sober, loyal and clearly understands that regardless of who signs my paycheck, I'm self-employed. I am optimistic, punctual, enthusiastic, goal-setting, smart-working self-starter who is a disciplined, focused, dependable, persistent positive thinker with great self-control, and am an energetic team player who appreciates the opportunities my company and the free enterprise system offers me. I am thrifty with my resources and apply common sense to my daily tasks. I take honest pride in my competence and appearance and am motivated to be and do my best so that my healthy self-image will remain on solid ground. These are the qualities which enable me to manage myself and help give me employment security in a non-job-security world."
B. "I _______, am a compassionate, respectful encourager who is a considerate, generous, gently patient, caring, sensitive, personable, attentive, fun-loving person. I am supportive, giving and forgiving, clean, kind, unselfish, affectionate, loving, family-oriented human being and am a sincere and open-minded good listener and good finder who is trustworthy. These are the qualities which enable me to build good relationships with my associates, neighbors, mate and family.
C. "I, ______, am a person of integrity, with the faith and wisdom to know what I should do and the courage and convictions to follow through. I have the vision to manager myself and lead others. I am authoritative, confident, and humbly grateful for the opportunity life offers me. I am fair, flexible, resourceful, creative, knowledgeable, decisive and an extra-miler with a servant's attitude who communicates well with others. I am a consistent, pragmatic teacher with character and a finely tuned sense of humor. I am an honorable person and am balanced in my personal, family and business life, and have a passion for being, doing and learning more today so I can be, do and have more tomorrow.
D. "These are the qualities of the winner I was born to be and I am fully committed to developing these marvelous qualities with which I have been entrusted. Tonight I'm going to sleep wonderfully well. I will dream powerful, positive dreams. I will awaken energized and refreshed; tomorrow's going to be magnificent and my future is unlimited. Recognizing, claiming and developing these qualities which I already have gives me a legitimate chance to be claiming and developing these qualities which I already have gives me a legitimate chance to be happier, healthier, more prosperous, more secure, have more friends, greater peace of mind, better family relationships and the legitimate hope that the future will be even better."
Repeat this process the next morning and close by saying, "These are the qualities of the winner I was born to be and I will develop and use these qualities to achieve my worthy objectives. Today is a brand new day and mine to use in a marvelously productive way!"
Here's wishing you the best and a 2014 of love, joy, peace and prosperity!
Here are my goals for 2104. What are yours?
2013 was full of ups and downs, as is life. While at our church New Year Eve Party last night, a former pastor offered a simple devotional. This is my interpretation of that devotion.
We can choose to look forward or backwards. If we look backwards and focus on the negative, we will not be successful moving forward. If we look backwards and focus on the positive, we can succeed in the future. However, we cannot change the past. It is what it is. All we can do is live in the here and now and look forward to the future. We should not stress over the past. We can take what we've experienced and learn from those negative experiences, but we must find the positive in those experiences and then apply what we have learned to the future in order to be successful.
What better way to start a new year, than with a new attitude. I've set my 2014 goals for myself and one of those goals is to motivate and encourage others. With that being said, I would like to share with you something that was shared with me from the first female Mayor of Alamosa, Colorado.
Here is "A Life Changing Procedure" by Zig Ziggler:
The eyes are the windows to the soul. So, to become the person you are capable of becoming, each evening, just before you go to bed, stand in front of the mirror alone, and in the first-person, present tense, look yourself in the eye and repeat with passion and enthusiasm paragraphs A-D. Repeat every morning and every evening from this day forward. Within one week you will notice remarkable changes in your life!
A. "I _______, am an honest, intelligent, organized, responsible, committed, teachable person who is sober, loyal and clearly understands that regardless of who signs my paycheck, I'm self-employed. I am optimistic, punctual, enthusiastic, goal-setting, smart-working self-starter who is a disciplined, focused, dependable, persistent positive thinker with great self-control, and am an energetic team player who appreciates the opportunities my company and the free enterprise system offers me. I am thrifty with my resources and apply common sense to my daily tasks. I take honest pride in my competence and appearance and am motivated to be and do my best so that my healthy self-image will remain on solid ground. These are the qualities which enable me to manage myself and help give me employment security in a non-job-security world."
B. "I _______, am a compassionate, respectful encourager who is a considerate, generous, gently patient, caring, sensitive, personable, attentive, fun-loving person. I am supportive, giving and forgiving, clean, kind, unselfish, affectionate, loving, family-oriented human being and am a sincere and open-minded good listener and good finder who is trustworthy. These are the qualities which enable me to build good relationships with my associates, neighbors, mate and family.
C. "I, ______, am a person of integrity, with the faith and wisdom to know what I should do and the courage and convictions to follow through. I have the vision to manager myself and lead others. I am authoritative, confident, and humbly grateful for the opportunity life offers me. I am fair, flexible, resourceful, creative, knowledgeable, decisive and an extra-miler with a servant's attitude who communicates well with others. I am a consistent, pragmatic teacher with character and a finely tuned sense of humor. I am an honorable person and am balanced in my personal, family and business life, and have a passion for being, doing and learning more today so I can be, do and have more tomorrow.
D. "These are the qualities of the winner I was born to be and I am fully committed to developing these marvelous qualities with which I have been entrusted. Tonight I'm going to sleep wonderfully well. I will dream powerful, positive dreams. I will awaken energized and refreshed; tomorrow's going to be magnificent and my future is unlimited. Recognizing, claiming and developing these qualities which I already have gives me a legitimate chance to be claiming and developing these qualities which I already have gives me a legitimate chance to be happier, healthier, more prosperous, more secure, have more friends, greater peace of mind, better family relationships and the legitimate hope that the future will be even better."
Repeat this process the next morning and close by saying, "These are the qualities of the winner I was born to be and I will develop and use these qualities to achieve my worthy objectives. Today is a brand new day and mine to use in a marvelously productive way!"
Here's wishing you the best and a 2014 of love, joy, peace and prosperity!
Here are my goals for 2104. What are yours?
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