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My mom used to tell me when I was young to not get married too young, make my own money, have my own friends and interests. Keep my self identity (old fashioned word now) when married. She always had great advice.
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No you are missing the point. You should have more curiosity about your own emotional reaction. What attracted you to a guy who takes sparkles? Why did you continue to stay as he tried to take your sparkle? Shifting the attention to him is a diversion from the real issue - your choices. |
One reason (of many) that I knew it was time to kick my DH out was that my daughter (who was like maybe 3 at the time) told me that I looked very sad one day as I was buckling her into her car seat. I almost pasted on a fake smile and told her "I'm not sad honey, every thing is fine." But, I realized in the moment, that I would be teaching my child that sad looks don't really mean sad people and that would make her tremendously confused as she grew up. Instead, I sad that it was so grey and cloudy out that it was making me feel a little blue. I was sad because I was actively planning in my head how to engineer the situation so I could break up with my DH and force him to leave the house by the end of the week and what kind of custody schedule would be safe and what kind of child support I would ask him for. It is really important (and hard) to make sure your kids understand that they are not responsible for their Mom's mood, and that they are not responsible for their Dad's lack of commitment as a parent and partner. (It was hard enough to get myself, a grown woman, to understand that I was not responsible for, nor could I change his choices.) |
| I was involved with someone who eventually seemed irritated by the very qualities that he was originally attracted to in me. I finally concluded that he found the biggest, brightest, bestest tree in the woods that he could — so that he could feel better about himself by knocking it/me down. He wanted both a trophy and a handmaiden — very different from the dynamic when our relationship began. Once I saw the light, I left. I’m sorry that it took me so long to see what was happening — but I also understand why it did. |
“Why do abused women get abused? Must be their choices.” Gfy |
This is a great analogy. I’m glad you are free of him and hope you got your sparkle back! |
That was a rough one for me to read. When I look back, I can see how my now husband of 25 years started doing this even while dating. But the love bombing in between those criticisms just left me unable to see what he was doing. I noticed a few years ago how much happier I was when traveling with just my teenage daughter and not having him around. He robbed me of a lot, and I wish I had left long ago. |
Well, in some cases it’s because we never had the freedom and the support that it usually takes to realize and develop our power — without getting punished for it. Some of us may have never seen genuinely supportive positive relationships, let alone experienced them first or even second hand. So, if you grew up in an intact family, with loving parents who celebrated your growth — and their own — that’s a lot like being born on third base. You seek that in your relationships because that’s been your lifelong experience. Not everyone gets anything even close to that. |
To clarify: By “intact” I meant something more like “committed “ — not necessarily married. |
| It's crazy seeing the amount of comments blaming women for experiencing emotional abuse. |
| Some men get a thrill out of "taming" a woman by tamping down her personality. They like that they can exert such a strong level of control over her, that she'll completely transform herself in his image. It's very dark and insidious, and the only solution is to leave. |
It's well-known that "killing the sparkle", meaning the abuse, is very common when women are vulnerable. Like when pregnant and having infants. Most women who eventually divorce or at least realize that their sparkle has been killed, saw the first issues when they were pregnant/had infants. The choices in those circumstances are very limited as you perhaps can imagine. |
They are responding to the typical DCUM narrative: Men are always at fault for anything suboptimal in women's lives. The common sentiment is that women are never at fault for the breakdown of their romantic relationships. I can't recall a single divorced woman on this board ever admitting that she bore any responsibility at all for her divorce (which is funny considering the countless threads about evil female friend groups and difficult mothers and mothers-in-law). |
Why the recommendation for a new therapist PP? And meds? This therapist made an accurate observation and suggested an exercise. The exercise prompted emotional work and insight — and going beyond that to process some of those insights and possibly get useful feedback here. By my standards, that’s excellent work. |
It’s even crazier if those comments are coming from other women. |