silverhopes!
So good to read you again. And the tone of your post, the language, the thoughts, the atmosphere is so changed, I'm glad, really glad for you. You've come so far, acknowledge that and honor it.
I've been spending more time in the high room up in the snow-capped mountains (thank you DM)
You're very welcome. I'm gratified that something that I've shared has been of use to another one of us. As it was for me, your private room is a refuge. A calm, safe environment.
Has anyone else here found reading about boundaries to be helpful?
Yes. Very. From my sexualized upbringing I didn't know how to say, "No." And the only way that I interacted with people was primarily sexually for many years. Boundaries for others and boundaries for _me_ was a very good thing to learn about. For me, setting boundaries both ways helped me discover what real self-worth was all about.
the people around me have real trouble respecting those boundaries
Gently, silverhopes, those are not healthy people. They're being entitled and selfish and disrespectful. They think that their desires are more valuable than your desires. That is entitled, selfish, disrespectful thinking. It isn't healthy thinking. It is pushing boundaries, like children, to see what is acceptable behavior. And boundaries without clear, enforced consequences aren't really boundaries and teach other people how it is acceptable to treat us.
Remember the SI line "we train others what is acceptable behavior by what we accept"? (I've also seen it as "we train others how to treat us by what we accept".) If we accept unacceptable behavior by not enforcing consequences then we train them that violating a boundary has no consequences. That the boundary is, in fact, not a boundary at all.
it's hard to make sure that working on these things doesn't translate to feeling "less than", nor blaming myself for the abuse
silverhopes, whom I am proud to call my friend, _you_ are not responsible for _their_ bad behavior. I know that you might be able to think that what I said above about training people how to treat us makes us responsible for their behavior. It does not. We are not responsible for them choosing to act badly. We _are_ responsible for how we react to it.
I agree that it is a fine line - we're not responsible for the abuse. We are responsible for enforcing consequences - or not. That is our action. Absent consequences the abuser thinks that that is okay behavior. The abuser is _still_ responsible for their choice to engage in abusive behavior. For the good of ourselves and others we have a societal duty to enforce those consequences.
The distinction is hard and I don't think that I'm making a good showing of teasing out the difference. Trust me on this one? We are not responsible for being abused. Abusive behavior is _their_ demon, not ours.
H and I had a very bad fight last month. I haven't been the same since. Mentally, it's very hard to determine reality and focus, and my thoughts are scattered and don't make sense. Has anyone here dealt with this?
Sadly for both of us, yes. After xwgf lied, cheated, and walked out I had a very hard time dealing with it. I thought that we were for keeps. We had always agreed that the relationship was more important than pride, ego, etc. and that we would always talk whenever something was a problem. She fell back into (or never really left behind) her old behaviors of lying and leaving. My world was shattered, my thoughts confused and conflicted, what I believed didn't match what _was_.
It took time. I actually wrote down what I observed as fact and then went back and re-read it later when my thinking got muddled. I would write down her actions and her answers to questions and then re-read, re-realize, and re-think the differences between actions and words. It took me a while to figure the difference and I still did the "pick me" dance.
I didn't value _me_ at all. I learned that behavior young. CSA, beatings, beratings, cursings, all that contributed. I hear what you are saying and validate that it is so.
Has anyone else found it helpful, when you're overwhelmed, to go back to the basics?
Oh, yes. Revisiting those beginner techniques for becoming grounded again. Breathing, being in the moment, rebuilding that sense of self, discarding _again_ those outside values that lessen us, The 180, again, to focus on us. Build that foundation again (quicker the second time, maybe since we've done it before) so that we can expand the healthy bubble around us.
And your paragraph about being sexually healthy and healthy sexually - spot on, IMHO. Take the time for you. You can't heal him, the very best that you can do is create an environment in which a reasonable person can be happy. Their choice to be happy is on them. I feel odd and unsure saying this next because I don't have a good handle on it sometimes, but do be aware that sex can be a healthy and healing and bonding thing. Bonding isn't always about sex, but between healthy marrieds sex is always about bonding. I think.
And Little Silver, the smaller hope, is well I trust?
Even in your trouble your post, the tone, the questions themselves, has/have a vibe of "I'm better." I do hope that I've aided you.
PeaceLily210, welcome. Thank you for sharing. You have been heard.
First, good on you for seeking help, for sharing, and for getting better. That can be very hard to do. For a few of us here touching is an odd, scary thing and the internet hugs of SI ((huggedpersonsname)) is an odd thought. We do fistbumps because they are human contact, but very reserved and safer for some of us.
Have a fistbump of I'm so very sorry that you went through that }{
At this point I don't even think I questioned if it was right or wrong anymore.
My profile story starts with some similar points. Your statement
At this point I don't even think I questioned if it was right or wrong anymore.
I completely understand. Understanding how the world works is what we're supposed to learn about as kids. And physical, mental, emotional, verbal, and sexual abuse give us such a skewed understanding.
When I look back, every man I've ever been in a relationship with has had a distorted ... view of women and their worth
Gently said, interacting with that distorted view was your normal. Normal might be scary but there is a certain odd comfort in normal. We know that we can survive normal. Change, even change for the better, is scary and, for us, scary is terrifying and possibly life threatening. So we do that thing called "recreating the abuse."
The rest of your post shows how hard you've worked on healing and getting to a realistic view of things. That was really, really hard, I'm sure. The telling and re-telling took a tremendous amount of courage and dedication.
PeaceLily210, thank you again for sharing your story. There's a tremendous amount of hope and healing in it.
If I could make a small suggestion? My story in part II starts on about page 14. Edith was posting then. That woman's writings have a grace and poise, a quality, that make them (at least to me) very uplifting to read.