You are welcome Darsha:)) Now we all have the privilege to go to Scotland for some paragliding in February and think" Bleh, I've weathered through worse storms."

What I'm posting below is something I worked on previously and I'll use it as the foundation of my self-awareness work. maybe, if you do something similar for yourself, looking at all aspects of yourself - not just virtues, but habits etc, you would discover way more power:))
"I think when a turbulent relationship with some devastating experiences fails, we tend to look for weaknesses in ourselves. After a couple of these relationships (low-grade non-grandiose Narc mom, 10-12 years of marriage with a difficult husband - but not cluster B- , 8 months with a high functioning cerebral narc and 2-3 months with a dysfunctional BPD with strong narcissistic traits and somatic narcissism -and yes, I had healthy relationships, too) I'm now of the opinion that some positive qualities we possess also contribute to our demise in these relationships. Plus, codependency is often stereotyped and doesn't always occur through our weaknesses, there are very strong and independent people who somehow come up with these patterns in relationships. And the last but not the least, these relationships have an abusive nature, and people tend to stay longer than usual in these relationships for a variety of reasons embedded in the nature of the relationship rather than their usual personalities. When I ask myself why I stayed, the following are my answers:
1. Inexperience: The first is usually the longest. Have a couple of relationships like this and it becomes easier to see patterns. Then you get out quicker. (The question of why I repeated is something I'm working on.)
2. Their experience: People who don't have necessary emotional, cognitive and whatnot tools to build long-time intimate relationships have honed their skills really well to attract and charm people. This is one of the basic things their emotional survival (and sometimes physical) depends on. They can be dysfunctional themselves but attract high functioning people. There is no way I could attract anyone if I was as dysfunctional as my last partner, yet he did it:)) We have different skill sets, initial attraction is their playground.
3. Rationality: I love this one. Rational people tend to remain in irrational dialogues and all sorts of unhealthy communication because they are rational and probably not arrogant. They simply think that the problem could be solved rationally, the argument could be put back into a rational framework with rational tools. Well, not in Cluster B. This results in the rational one becoming crazy. I now see this as my half-rationality when interacting with Cluster B, a fully rational person sees it for what it is and stops believing that this can be solved rationally at home.
4. Well-developed problem solving skills: My inner voice: "I have tremendous problem solving skills, they have helped me everywhere in my life. My partner seems a bit crazy, but no worries, I can solve this with my problem-solving skills." (This is where my codependency and controlling aspects of my character come into play, not through lack of independence and confidence but the other way around.)
5. Lack of acceptance (probably an ego thing as well): My inner voice: "I have spent an enormous amount of time in an ultimately pointless relationship. I lost a lot of things and a lot of time. This is very difficult to accept because I don't see myself as someone who falls for this kind of drama in other aspects of my life. I have to stay and sort this out for my ego's sake. Gosh, I can't have done this! I can't have done this! I'll stay and sort this out and prove to myself that I haven't done this! Empathy)
6. An observing personality rather than a judging one: My inner voice "I've never seen anything like this. What's he going to do now? Let me stay and learn." Well well, curiosity killed the cat smiley
7. Denial: My inner voice: "I'm not in an abusive relationship. I'm a high functioning, independent person. I cannot be abused, it's for other people. It cannot happen in my life. This is something else."
8. Guilt: My inner voice: "In the end of the day, I know my life will be OK after this. His may not be. I shouldn't leave him like this. Not right now. Maybe when he gets a bit better." Sometimes we stay out of politeness smiley
I sometimes feel engulfed but think it's very rude to admit this, especially if they seem to be "working" on the relationship.
Some elements of abusive relationships:
1. It works in cycles: The low is very low but the high is very high (compensation, otherwise nobody would stay). With the right amount of "high", we stay in these relationships. In abuse terminology, this is called "dosing."
2. Our confidence or belief in something is eroded even though we may not admit it.
3. We get used to the adrenalin high we get from fights and start missing it, too.
4. Sex is used as a control tool in these relationships a lot and at first we don't understand it. If there is a lot of sex we stay because it's extraordinary. Even when we start seeing it as a control tool, for a while we stay because what the heck, we are enjoying it. When there isn't a lot of sex, we again stay because we want to get it back (for ego-reasons).
5. We are trained, conditioned to lower our standards, decrease our expectations slowly. But this happens pretty slowly. Somewhere in the middle, we are simply grateful that there isn't a big drama that day. Lack of drama starts feeling good enough. At one point, I was simply grateful that my partner cooked and cleaned the kitchen counter huh Also, these days lacking drama are our only windows for problem solving. But we know what happens when we try to build boundaries or problem-solve. We are very tired emotionally so choose the easy road of just letting go, just for that day. Those days build up.
6. Our schema is confused. Being exposed to constantly contradicting behaviour does this to us. We can't act as soundly as we do in other things in life.
7. Illusionary comfort of the familiar: he is crazy but at least he is "my" crazy, and there is the semblance of a relationship at home. (This despite my being a very independent person.) "
Best,