You asked, and this is going to be a long one... .
In a nutshell, the reason I stayed is because I was never taught as a child that I deserved to be treated with respect and love. I was taught that it was my responsibility to make everyone happy, and if things weren't going well, then it was my responsibility to make them LOOK like they were going well to everyone else. Boundaries? What's that? I honestly don't remember ever being told that I could have boundaries; it was in all sincerity a totally new concept to me. I learned it at the age of fifty after a 25 year marriage to a uBPD, drug addicted man.
This is a topic I have thought about a lot in the last 12 months. It wasn't until I had been seperated from my now exh for several weeks that the thought "how in the world did I allow my life to get in this condition?" really started to come to the front of my mind, and I posed that very question to my therapist.
He gave me a DVD series to watch, along with reading the companion book, called "Bradshaw on The Family". It was a huge eye-opener for me concerning the impact that my family of origin had on me and what I could do to become emotionally healthy. More info here if you are interested:
www.johnbradshaw.com/index.htmlI don't have many clear memories of childhood and I am not sure why that is, but I have decided it is common among 'adult children' from dysfunctional families. I have learned that what I experienced as a child profoundly impacted my relationship choices, though, whether I have clear memories or not.
My parents were drinkers, although not the wild party-going type. Both worked, and as soon as they got home in the afternoon they would pop open a beer and drink until supper was ready a few hours later. Then they watched tv for a while and went to bed. I remember my dad once getting arrested for DUI, and I remember a few 'drunk' episodes but for the most part drinking beer after work was just what they did and it didn't seem to cause them any real problems.
We were church-goers, spent Sunday after church at my grandmothers (paternal) who was a widow (my grandfather died when my dad was 3) and lived with her two unmarried sisters all of whom were extremely religious. Dad had one married brother with three kids and we spent lots of time with his family while our parents drank together. Mom had two sisters and one brother; her family was always strange. Youngest sister never married, drank a LOT. Oldest sister married, no children, highly critical and snobbish. Grandmother was also a widow (that grandfather died when my mom was eleven). As you can see, not much male role modeling going on in my family... .
I had a brother who was eight years older than me. He was the 'darling' of the whole family. Very smart, involved in lot of high school clubs, etc. Beta club, high academic achiever, the teachers loved him. He got a scholarship to a very prestigious college in Nashville. I don't remember him as having many friends, not like my boys have had. There definitely were no sports, hunting, fishing, etc. All academics-which I am not saying is bad, please understand. He spent all his free time with my grandmothers and aunts... .
When I was in fifth grade, my brother came home from his first semester in college looking like a different person. He had been an overweight brunette who dressed mostly in suit and tie, but now he was a thin blonde wearing the fashion of the late sixties... .you might guess where this is going... .he announced that he was homosexual. It was 1969, understand the culture of the time. My parents were completely devastated. My world was turned upside down and I was only eleven years old... .
The way that my parents chose to deal with this situation is, I believe, what really set me up to stay with my exh for 28 years... .
They isolated. They covered it up. From their perspective, the absolute worst thing that could happen would be for anyone to find out. They lied to every single member of my dad's family and to all their friends. I was instructed to lie to every one, too. I was told that if anyone asked about my brother, to tell them *whatever* as long as it wasn't the truth. I learned at a very early age to be an excellent actress... .
In spite of the extreme stress this whole thing was putting on my family, NO ONE ever mentioned any type of counseling. I was just expected to deal... .
My parents became increasingly depressed. The drinking increased. The most prevelant memory I have of my mother is that she drank beer through a straw out of a tupperware glass while chain-smoking and saying over and over, "What am I ever going to do?" and "what will the neighbors think?" My dad was hurt and angry, and he used me as an surrogate spouse, emotionally speaking. I don't have any memory of sexual abuse, but then again I just am not really sure... .
My feelings were never of any importance. The only feelings that were of any importance in my family were... .everybody else's. I became my parent's parent, in an emotional sense. My needs were just non-existent. I wasn't to upset mother because she was so worried, I tried to cheer up daddy because he was so sad... .I was to deflect any questions about my brother... .I wasn't to question anything HE did, either, heaven forbid!
Then came high school... .I started high school as a good student, popular, a cheerleader, active in stuff. Until the questions about my brother started... .I had the same teachers, and they all just loved my brother so much. He was 'most likely to succeed', where was he, what was he doing, how is college? Lies, lies, lies... .older sibs of my friends asked questions, too. Looking back, I have no doubt that lots of these people knew the truth.
In the early 70's, my brother started the procedure to have transgender surgery. In 1974, I no longer had a brother. I had a sister. Again, you have to put it in the context of the culture at that time. Now, thirty-plus years later, these issues with my brother/sister might not have had such an impact on my life because of the way society has changed regarding acceptance of them. But to an already messed up teenage girl in 1974, whew... .
So I turned to the 'wild' crowd, because they didn't ask any questions and I had completely internalized the idea that if anyone found out about my brother that my life would be ruined... .I started smoking and drinking and using drugs. I became sexually active which, I now believe, was an effort to prove to myself and anyone else that I was not 'like my brother'. I know now that this behavior was a cry for help, a cry for someone to see ME, to care about ME, to value ME... .but no one did. I graduated from high school in 1975, and the drug culture had become a pattern of behavior that would last for several years after high school.
Enter exh in 1979. I met him in a bar. He completely swept me off my feet. I had never been treated like he treated me. He was a few years older. He had his own business. He owned his own home. He was recently divorced, but it was all her fault... .He was so much 'better' than the guys I was used to. He was always 'showing me off' to his friends. He always had money. He always had pot, then coke. We partied. We traveled. I moved in with him.
And then I got pregnant. I had been using lots of drugs, and he made it abundantly clear that he didn't want to be a father. I went for the abortion by myself. A 'choice' which further destroyed any self-esteem that I had. But afterwards, he became so loving, so attentive. I put the whole thing out of my mind. We were perfectly happy again. Until the second pregnancy... .
Again, he immdeiately reacted horribly. He was cruel, abusive, wanted me to abort. But I had drastically cut back on the drug use, and I had educated myself about the potential danger to the baby. It was very early and the risks of harm was low. Abortion was not something I could do a second time. I told him I would have the baby with or without him. After a couple of months of raging, he grudgingly went to the county court house and we got married in a 30 second civil ceremony. Because, of course he couldn't let me have his baby and not marry me because of "what people would think of him", which of course was all my fault... .see the connection?
So began 25 years (with two more babies) of abuse, both physical and mental, emotional blackmail, and total financial control. And 25 more years of me making everything look so perfect to the outside world while I was slowly dying inside. 25 more years where every abusive incident was turned around on me until I had also internalized that the way he treated me was all my fault. I think you all know the rest of that story because you lived it, too.
Whew... after re-visiting this stuff, it is a miracle from God that I am no longer married to this man. It is as if I have been awakened from a very long, very bad nightmare. It hasn't been an easy year, but that doesn't matter. I am, at age 51, finally learning how to be me and that being me is ok.
If anyone read this long, thanks for listening. It actually helps to write this stuff out. You should try it! xoxo