Guest guest Posted March 22, 2005 Report Share Posted March 22, 2005 This is great, cntbreathe! Ooo, I think this is so important! I wish we could get a thread going about specifics. I'd love to hear people's stories about the early good and bad signs we've experienced in our attempts to gather non-Nadaish friends and acquaintances. Ivorysoap >>>>> > Also what I began to notice is that friends I would always make had > Nada qualities and were not healthy friendships they were very > enmeshed and eventually went bad. Somehow along the way I managed to collect a few friends who did not have these Nada qualities, the > realtionships were not enmeshed and I learned how to have some > healthy realtionships. I guess I was lucky but what I do now if at > first I'm really attracted to someone, I question it, I don't trust > my own judgment because they usually have Nada qualities. It's the > casual and sometimes unnoticeable relationships that usually wind up being the best for me, they start off slow and very cautious because of my lack of trust. They're not overly dramatic. Maybe there are some good people around you that you don't even realize could be your friends. I would consider trying to get your own circle seperate > from Nada. > cntbreathe > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2005 Report Share Posted March 22, 2005 I was just thinking about sharing my experience with having to build basically an entire new life after a relationship with a now ex-boyfriend ended due to domestic violence issues when you suggested starting this thread. It doesn't involve anyone with BP but the circumstances are very similar (setting boundaries in unhealthy relationships). I had been living with the now ex-boyfriend for almost 4 years when I realized the relationship was not healthy and what I was experiencing was verbal and emotional abuse that had escalated into physical abuse. Our lives were very enmeshed as he had helped me start my business and managed to convince me to be a 49% shareholder (thankfully I stood my ground and insisted on being the majority at 51%, but he did want to be in control). We also had some joint investment property interests. It took me 3-4 months to seek legal advice and plan how I would extricate myself from this relationship. When I was ready, I asked him to move out (I owned the house we lived in, his name was not on the deed), and over the next three weeks all hell broke loose. He apparently had anticipated something, because prior to my asking him to move out he filed fake mortgage papers against the house - in an amount to wipe out all my equity. While he told me he spent the first few days in shock and mourning the end of our relationship, I later found out he spent that time calling every utility that had his name on it (some were joint, some he opened for us just out of convenience) and made arrangements to have them all disconnected...but he never told me. Keep in mind I work from home, so having things like your phone service disconnected, and a block put on the numbers so you have to get new phone numbers to get your phone reconnected are a big problem. He had the " this number has been changed to " message point to his new phone number. I had to call all my clients and prospects and somehow explain why the abrupt change in phone numbers had happened. He never relayed one message to me. It took us 5 months of legal battles and a 13 hour mediation to finally sever all ties. I ended up paying him a large chunk of cash to just go away. I share this because throughout this whole ordeal I was very traumatized emotionally, not to mention the financial strain. Its hard to run a business when someone is trying to take it away from you and foreclose on your house at the same time. At first I reached out to various mutual friends, hoping someone would be willing to step in and convince him what he was doing was unreasonable. To my surprise, what happened instead was most of our mutual friends took his side, because I was airing our dirty laundry inappropriately. That was a big slap in the face. Its when I first realized domestic violence is something nobody talks about. No wonder it is so prevalent! So I decided to just step away from all our mutual friends and not reach out to anyone - it was just too painful and I didn't need to be rejected any more. I waited to see who reached out to me. I changed churches, I changed health clubs. I even shopped at different grocery stores so I wouldn't run into him. In hindsight, it was a very healthy choice, as eventually it came out who my true friends were. During this time a handful of our former mutual friends reached out to me. I learned alot about boundaries and what real friends do, friends that liked me for me. I had never experienced that before. While I wouldn't wish that experience on anyone, I had alot of personal growth and certainly an improvement in self esteem as a result. Theresa, I was thinking of you when I shared this. Its hard to start over with new friends, new church, and for you, a new homeschool group. But if you do, you will develop new relationships, and you will quickly see who your true friends are in your existing relationships. Its much more peaceful and much healthier than always trying to second-guess someone's motives. Jeanine > > This is great, cntbreathe! Ooo, I think this is so important! I > wish we could get a thread going about specifics. I'd love to hear > people's stories about the early good and bad signs we've experienced > in our attempts to gather non-Nadaish friends and acquaintances. > > Ivorysoap > > >>>>> > > Also what I began to notice is that friends I would always make had > > Nada qualities and were not healthy friendships they were very > > enmeshed and eventually went bad. Somehow along the way I managed > to collect a few friends who did not have these Nada qualities, the > > realtionships were not enmeshed and I learned how to have some > > healthy realtionships. I guess I was lucky but what I do now if at > > first I'm really attracted to someone, I question it, I don't trust > > my own judgment because they usually have Nada qualities. It's the > > casual and sometimes unnoticeable relationships that usually wind > up being the best for me, they start off slow and very cautious > because of my lack of trust. They're not overly dramatic. Maybe > there are some good people around you that you don't even realize > could be your friends. I would consider trying to get your own > circle seperate > > from Nada. > > cntbreathe > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2005 Report Share Posted March 22, 2005 I was just thinking about sharing my experience with having to build basically an entire new life after a relationship with a now ex-boyfriend ended due to domestic violence issues when you suggested starting this thread. It doesn't involve anyone with BP but the circumstances are very similar (setting boundaries in unhealthy relationships). I had been living with the now ex-boyfriend for almost 4 years when I realized the relationship was not healthy and what I was experiencing was verbal and emotional abuse that had escalated into physical abuse. Our lives were very enmeshed as he had helped me start my business and managed to convince me to be a 49% shareholder (thankfully I stood my ground and insisted on being the majority at 51%, but he did want to be in control). We also had some joint investment property interests. It took me 3-4 months to seek legal advice and plan how I would extricate myself from this relationship. When I was ready, I asked him to move out (I owned the house we lived in, his name was not on the deed), and over the next three weeks all hell broke loose. He apparently had anticipated something, because prior to my asking him to move out he filed fake mortgage papers against the house - in an amount to wipe out all my equity. While he told me he spent the first few days in shock and mourning the end of our relationship, I later found out he spent that time calling every utility that had his name on it (some were joint, some he opened for us just out of convenience) and made arrangements to have them all disconnected...but he never told me. Keep in mind I work from home, so having things like your phone service disconnected, and a block put on the numbers so you have to get new phone numbers to get your phone reconnected are a big problem. He had the " this number has been changed to " message point to his new phone number. I had to call all my clients and prospects and somehow explain why the abrupt change in phone numbers had happened. He never relayed one message to me. It took us 5 months of legal battles and a 13 hour mediation to finally sever all ties. I ended up paying him a large chunk of cash to just go away. I share this because throughout this whole ordeal I was very traumatized emotionally, not to mention the financial strain. Its hard to run a business when someone is trying to take it away from you and foreclose on your house at the same time. At first I reached out to various mutual friends, hoping someone would be willing to step in and convince him what he was doing was unreasonable. To my surprise, what happened instead was most of our mutual friends took his side, because I was airing our dirty laundry inappropriately. That was a big slap in the face. Its when I first realized domestic violence is something nobody talks about. No wonder it is so prevalent! So I decided to just step away from all our mutual friends and not reach out to anyone - it was just too painful and I didn't need to be rejected any more. I waited to see who reached out to me. I changed churches, I changed health clubs. I even shopped at different grocery stores so I wouldn't run into him. In hindsight, it was a very healthy choice, as eventually it came out who my true friends were. During this time a handful of our former mutual friends reached out to me. I learned alot about boundaries and what real friends do, friends that liked me for me. I had never experienced that before. While I wouldn't wish that experience on anyone, I had alot of personal growth and certainly an improvement in self esteem as a result. Theresa, I was thinking of you when I shared this. Its hard to start over with new friends, new church, and for you, a new homeschool group. But if you do, you will develop new relationships, and you will quickly see who your true friends are in your existing relationships. Its much more peaceful and much healthier than always trying to second-guess someone's motives. Jeanine > > This is great, cntbreathe! Ooo, I think this is so important! I > wish we could get a thread going about specifics. I'd love to hear > people's stories about the early good and bad signs we've experienced > in our attempts to gather non-Nadaish friends and acquaintances. > > Ivorysoap > > >>>>> > > Also what I began to notice is that friends I would always make had > > Nada qualities and were not healthy friendships they were very > > enmeshed and eventually went bad. Somehow along the way I managed > to collect a few friends who did not have these Nada qualities, the > > realtionships were not enmeshed and I learned how to have some > > healthy realtionships. I guess I was lucky but what I do now if at > > first I'm really attracted to someone, I question it, I don't trust > > my own judgment because they usually have Nada qualities. It's the > > casual and sometimes unnoticeable relationships that usually wind > up being the best for me, they start off slow and very cautious > because of my lack of trust. They're not overly dramatic. Maybe > there are some good people around you that you don't even realize > could be your friends. I would consider trying to get your own > circle seperate > > from Nada. > > cntbreathe > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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