Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Harnessing your suffering

How did we all get so screwed up? Putting aside our damaged parents, poverty, abuse, addiction, disease, and other unpleasantries, life just damages people. There is no way around this. Not all the glitter and concealer in the world can cover it up. We may have been raised in the illusion that if we played our cards right, life would work out. But it didn’t, it doesn’t.
~Anne Lamott, Almost Everything

It didn't. It doesn't. She speaks the truth, doesn't she? 

I fell firmly in the if-I-just-do-everything-right camp, then I'll sail through life. I never dreamed that the guy I married, the guy who wasn't the cheater that I dumped before I met the guy I married, would turn out to be a cheater too. I thought he was the most principled man I'd ever met. I was so certain of that. Not a doubt in my mind.
H'mmm.
My running partner, who's still reeling from betrayal and a husband who just doesn't quite get how devastating his emotional affair was, said that it was as if, in the midst of an argument, her husband had punched her in the face. Even if he somehow apologized, even if he felt terrible about it, there's no way to un-punch someone. And no matter that it only happened once. No matter that he just acted on impulse, that he didn't "plan" to punch her, forever after he's someone who just might punch her in the face. 
We all got punched in the face, didn't we? And not all the glitter and concealer in the world can cover it up.
And it has nothing to do with whether we played our cards right. 
That's the thing with hope, with a naive conviction that life owes us ease and pleasure and safety. Eventually, all of us, every single one, faces a reckoning in which we come to understand that life will hurt us. And when your heart is broken, out of betrayal or loss or grief (which are all pretty much synonymous), it doesn't matter whether you're sobbing into a silk pillow or a gutter. 
But you know what does matter? What we do next.
Maybe not immediately. You're allowed to stay down until you've had a good, long cry.
But then...
Then it's time to consider your options.
And hopelessness – cynicism – isn't one of them.
It's tempting. It's so tempting to just decide that life equals pain and that nobody will ever love you and that you might as well just get used to being miserable. I see people like that all the time. They're angry and bitter and if they laugh at all, it's brittle and at someone's expense. 
I understand the impulse. It's wrongheaded, I think, but I get it. Just armour up and treat every relationship – from the grocery store clerk to your boss to your sister to your ex – as warfare. Better to hurt others than be hurt, right? Better to eat than be eaten.
But what if there's hope for something better that isn't just rose-coloured glasses to soften the truth? What if what we do next comes from a belief in our own goodness, in our own strength? What if our next step comes from a place of self-respect?
That sounds good, right?
Cause sure, life will damage us. Just ask my yoga instructor who's buried two children from suicide but who remains the most open-hearted woman I know. She's turned that pain into compassion for others. She has nursed her students through cancer and the death of a spouse and diagnoses or mental illness. She doesn't hide her pain, she harnesses it.
Not right away, of course. She honoured her grief. She cried a million tears. And then...she decided to keep living in spite of the damage life had inflicted. There's no glitter and concealer on her pain. She wears it. But she wears it in a way that's a badge of strength and resilience, not bitterness.
We can wear that badge too. We can harness our pain too.
It happens every single day here on Betrayed Wives Club. A woman comes aching with grief and loss and you all rush to her, using your own pain and your own stories to lift her up, to remind her she's not alone, to invite her to follow the light of those further ahead.
And that's the point of life, I think. Not to avoid the inevitable damage life inflicts but to wear it as a badge of strength, a symbol of our own resilience. 
None of us is spared. Maybe their pain won't be betrayal but it will be something. And maybe something that the rest of us know nothing about.
For the newly betrayed here, let yourself absorb the grief and the loss. Cry your million tears. Your next right step can wait for now.
Those of us further along, let's reimagine our pain as a badge of strength. Let it remind us to keep our hearts open because closing them won't prevent further pain, it will only prevent further joy.
And let us use our hope to create change in our lives. Hope that uses the tools the self-respect, self-care, compassion to build. 
Life rarely works out the way any of us think it will. But, as long as we accept our screwed up, damaged selves as nonetheless worthy of deep self-love, it will work out. 

21 comments:

  1. I had this thought last night as I was laying with my 3 year old waiting for her to sleep - man, life sure hasn't turned out how it was supposed to. This is NOT the life I thought I signed up for.

    And clear as day - I started to "hear" all of the things that were "supposed to happen" ... and didn't ... and life is BETTER for it!

    I'm not quite in a place to say "my husband's affair was the best thing that ever happened to me" ... but I am at a place where I'm done letting it be a place of bitterness in my heart.

    I recently told my WH that I was sick of simply surviving (if I could only survive this week that you're gone ... if I could simply survive this month where X, Y, Z was revealed ... if I could simply survive the holidays). I am DONE simply surviving ... it's time to fucking thrive! I'm done living in bitterness ... I'm done letting the anger grow roots ... I'm done letting this shit storm be the one single source of definition of what my life is, was, or will be.

    I refuse to be that woman who was injured all those years ago still complaining about how life didn't turn out the way it was supposed to. Because maybe it didn't ... that's ok ... maybe it turned out better than it was supposed to!

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    1. I can't WAIT to be there too! Closer everyday but still trying to survive for now. Merry Christmas Kimberly!

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    2. Brava to you Kimberly. That can be a real turning point. I had that moment of clarity myself many years ago. I got tired of my own moaning, tired of my tears. And that's when I knew it was time to begin inching forward in a way that was moving toward something instead of just away from the pain. I knew that I had changed and it was time to grow into that new me who was waiting.

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  2. Elle, what a post today so strong. Your right but it goes further. Shit festivals happen in everyone's life, they just don't look like it. My hair stylist is one of the hottest looking woman know, she is also the funniest, loving and caring person. She told me her secrets last night while she was styling my hair. He was a heroin addict for nine years. Went to rehab and they let her stay to get better, she did hair for the facility. She wanted children, got pregnant and her son died as she delivered him at 6 months. She waited, got pregnant, her daughter died at 6 months in her arms as a still birth. Then she married this horses ass then divorced him in 6 weeks. She gave me so much good advice last night. She told me to detach from the outcome. Just let it go, no expectations. She said she doesn't have time to pity herself. She is in this life just a short time and she refuses to waste it on pity. When her mind triggers she prays for someone she knows. From the outside she looks like she has everything but she had shit festivals too, different but still life changing. She refused to date until she is settled within herself. What a powerful woman. I have seen her melt down and pick herself up. She has such good energy around her. Your right Elle none of us is spared.

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    1. She sounds incredible, LLP. Everybody has a story of pain though some are so removed from it that they don't even realize it's ruling their life.
      That she's able to use her painful experiences as a catalyst to pray for others is incredible. Next time you see her, tell her that I'm going to do exactly that. When I begin to descend into self-pity, I'm going to use that energy to pray for someone else. Pray it forward. ;)

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  3. My mother in laws devastating stroke, my son's mental health and behavioural difficulties and violent meltdowns, drugs dabbling, school refusal, (he's much better now but still skipping school in his final year before (he hopes college), financial difficulties and continuing debts relating to husbands start up business difficulties and malevolent court case brought against company (prevents any investment), my husband's coldness, discovery of emotional affair, porn use costing thousands, lies on financial matters, more emotional affairs inc last year after 'reconciliation' on the first one, my lovely 12 yo nephew and kids best friend dying suddenly last January, my other sister's struggles with her newly diagnosed non verbal autistic son and husband who is clearly and alcoholic and bringing on health problems. I've had to work hard on my mental health, mindfulness, rewiring techniques, course on techniques to use against depression and anxiety running, reading Steven Stosny, Pema Chodron etc. What I am learning from my readings and practices is about holding life lightly, all these struggles and triggers and emotions and grief and the pressures of things that aren't and can't be 'fixed'. I'm learning about how we have to try to breath in, or breath with all the pain and confusion and to breath out light and have gratitude and reach out to others as the next Wednesday's word post says. My husband has been lucky and just received a steady well paid job, so he will have to leave that joint start up and he's having to sit with the anger and guilt trips of the others involved as he makes the best choice for his family. My son is trying for college even though he struggles. My other kids are doing their best despite the shock of this year and their cousin's death. I've been working alongside my sister as she uses her art and craft work to help her through this awful experience, my parents (who were with my sister by coincidence when my nephew suddenly died and must be traumatised) and the rest of the family and my sister's husband and other children, we're all pulling together, as is the wider community. We are living alongside and despite these expriences, like the hair stylist, we have to try to live our best lives and breath out light to those around us. As I read and meditate a fog is clearing and I see my husband trying to be different and reaching for new things, I notice the weight I've been carrying in my heart and chest and know it will take a while but I'm learning to see things new and move away from the dark mindset it has wrapped around me.

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    1. FOH,
      I am so awed by your ability to transcend and transform so much pain into something that's giving you strength and compassion and resilience. You are amazing. I bow down to all that you and your family have endured and how beautifully you're pulling together. Life will still be hard some days. But it can also be beautiful. Brutiful, as Glennon Doyle calls it.

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  4. The only words I have for this post is thanks for the constant reminders of how to survive no matter how long it takes! I’m going for a new pair of glasses today and I’m hoping that they help me see life with clearer vision as the ones that I have been wearing for two years have never felt right and I’m tired of adjusting them every time I’m trying to see truth...

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  5. This post speaks such truth. I've been visiting this site every week since my husband dropped the bomb that he'd had a year long affair with someone from work, and was leaving me to go marry her and raise her child. He didn't follow through with his plan, and because I love him (and to my own astonishment, his bomb didn't obliterate my love for him), we're working it out. But it has produced such suffering, the likes of which I can hardly wrap my brain around. LLP, you got the same advice I did, which was to let go of so many expectations from my H. It seems counter-intuitive but the person who was supposed to love, honor, cherish, and protect me didn't do any of those things, and so I, too, am learning to detach myself from any expectations regarding him because I've learned I can't make him love me, I can't make him honor me, and I can't control this outcome. I keep hope for love, a full life, health, and kindness in my heart, but I have no expectations anymore regarding my H. If he's thoughtful, I am thankful. If he tells me he loves me, I enjoy the words. If he says he's sorry again, I am thankful for the words. But I never expect anything, and I don't look to him anymore for my source of protection, happiness, or self-esteem. I look to my Higher Power, I look within myself, and I work on my own self to develop those things. Never again will I have those expectations of him.

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    1. Anonymous,
      I'm so glad that you've found comfort here and so sorry for what you've gone through. But I honestly think you've found the key to happiness. I've spent much of my life trying to release expectations -- of everything from a friend to a job to my children to my marriage to a dinner I'm cooking. Just keep showing up, doing my best and taking life moment by moment. So hard to do. But I aspire to achieve what you have.

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    2. Oh, Elle, I hardly feel like I've achieved anything. Giving up those expectations is still new, and I don't feel happy for it ... I still feel a tremendous loss. This new world I'm living in: What is it? All I know is the source of my happiness (this belief I had about my marriage) is now a huge source of pain and disappointment. I don't know what else to do BUT give up those expectations. Or risk CONSTANT disappointment! I'd really like joy that follow this, but I guess it's still too new ��

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    3. Healing from betrayal is so hard. And it takes so long. And yes, even when we lose the anger, we're often left in this state of limbo. We don't feel the rage or sadness but we also don't feel much of anything.
      We call it the plain of lethal flatness and it can offer us something of a rest from the roller coaster ride. But we don't want to stay there.
      As much as you can, seek out whatever does give you even slivers of joy. For me, it's walking the woods, especially with my dogs. It's paying attention to little things, like birdsong, or a moon on a clear night. What is it for you?

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  6. I'm feeling so angry lately. But I think it is new stuff that looks like old stuff. On the one hand, I'm so mad that my ex is just blissfully riding off into the sunset, saying that the OW is a broken, damaged person (glad you tossed aside me and your kids for that) and he's mad about it (probably blaming a woman for his choices and unhappiness yet again) and in the same breath telling me he's dating someone else. And I'm hurt and angry. And I've realized its not just about the cheating and divorce. It's that this man never did anything for me that didn't suit him, that there was never a time I can recall when he did something just for my sake. He never encouraged me or supported me when I was down, never told me he loved me or that I was still OK when I was so hard on myself about my appearance, never went on a bike ride with me because it would be nice for me and help me with my goals because he wouldn't be able to ride at his pace, always had to be smarter, faster, stronger, would not spring the extra $9 so I could have a salad when we ordered pizza. He never helped with christmas, when I was sad after losing bladder control because my pelvic floor muscle got completely cut in half during childbirth, he was resentful that I didn't feel like having sex with him, when he could have had some empathy for that huge loss I had just experienced. And I'm so fucking angry that I wasted my life on this selfish broken damaged person. And that he's still treating me that way. I feel like, with the exception of my kids, I have wasted my entire adult life.
    I need to let go of the idea that he is riding off into the sunset to be happy with someone else. I need to let go of the idea that he will ever wake up and be a better person or that he will ever, ever, ever be capable of really understanding how much he hurt me and for how long. And I think, as I am learning what not settling for crumbs looks like, I am feeling angrier and angrier with him (and myself) for the crumbs I survived on for so long. I think I saw him as a much better person than he was. I think I also need to just be angry about it for a while. This part is new, I think.

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    1. Hi SS1
      I hear you loud and clear. I can relate to everything you said, and I get your anger. As you know, I've been dealing with these feelings for....such a long time.
      It just sucks. We gave so much time, love, support to these guys who turned out to not deserve an ounce of our love. Where do they get off to treat us, their (ex) wives so appallingly? and bend over backwards to do what they can for the skanks in their lives. We will not settle for crumbs or disrespect any more!
      Let's face it SS1. Our exes are just really shitty people.
      A mans worth is measured by how he treats his wife and children - and what they have to say about him.
      You and me, have nothing nice to say about our exes.
      Mine has also gone riding off into the sunset with his new skank whore - leaving 99% of the parenting to me. He really just wants to enjoy the "single life".
      So we know these guys are selfish, self entitled shits, and I don't think we'll ever really get through this, but here's that word "time". I'm hoping for you and me and other women in our position, time will lessen the pain and memories so we can be in a place of peace. But for now, we can be angry, and angry together.
      Hugs
      Gabby xo

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    2. SS1,you are seeing him now for sure. I'm so proud of you that sounds like a huge step forward for you. Looking a the past, your relationship must have been painful. Although your post is anger, disbelief, hurt and then reality, this sounds like a giant growth spurt. Good news there is nothing to pine away for anymore. Cheaters many times cannot empathize with anyone or put themselves in anyone shoes but their own. No more crumbs for you, I can tell. He does sound like an asteroid asshole. When he does come down from whatever space he is in, he is going to be burnt up on entry.

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    3. "asteroid asshole" LLP you have a gift. Thank you for making me laugh out loud. I hope you're right and its a growth spurt.
      And Gabby, yes, they are just selfish entitled shits. Thanks for the support.

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  7. Anonymous Dec 12, How did you get so smart? I still expect my husband to do x y and z but my life does not fall apart if he doesn’t. It’s what i do and how hsndke it when faced with his lack of whatever. You are all so inspirational to me these days. Thank you

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  8. Anon 6.42 12 December. I love how you have/are dealing with your h betrayal. But i struggle with the no expectations. I’ve seen and heard friends take a different path after betrayal and say they don’t expect anything anymore but if that’s the case then why not be on your own. I did exactly this for many years prior to divorce and looking back I can see I was just settling for crumbs. If we don’t expect from the ones who broke us then why do we stay? .. it’s just a thought xxx

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  9. Sam A, I hear you. I had those same thoughts, too, early on. Still do: why am I here? But I still love him, and one of the things his affair has taught me is that my suffering is greatly compounded now because of how much expectation I'd unknowingly placed on him. HE - and not me, and not God - was the source of my happiness, purpose, and self-esteem because I was "so proud" to be married to him ... Well. I DO have expectations about boundaries and communication and respect, but I don't have expectations anymore that my self-esteem, purpose, and happiness will come solely from him. It's not fair to him, and it's sure as hell not fair to me because, frankly, he SUCKS AT THOSE THINGS, right?! So I think it's about the kind of expectations you release. You deserve better than crumbs. We all do.

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  10. Anon thank you for that insight I’m nodding my head to everything you have said.. great words of wisdom.. : ) xx

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