Guest guest Posted December 31, 2005 Report Share Posted December 31, 2005 Hi All, Long-Timers and Newcomers Alike, What a year it’s been for me. After I’d already devoted a huge part of my life and resources to understanding and overcoming what I endured, I joined this group, which many of you started attending long before I did. I read SWOE and UBM. I was shocked and amused, relieved and overwhelmed, cried and calmed, weakened and strengthened. I’ve got some things to say that I believe may sound overly dramatic to normies (people who aren’t non-BPs), but, I’m confidant that you’ll all understand. You’ve helped me understand, to “get it”, to open my eyes to the effects of dealing with the BPD and other PDs of my mother, older brother, and other people with whom I’ve lived, worked and done business over the decades. Like many of you, my veil of ignorance and denial has been lifted, my onion’s been peeled and my covers have been pulled as never before. As a teenager, I thought and told people (far too many, and they never understood, anyway), that “I had a difficult childhood.” It took me decades of time, thousands of dollars and thousands of hours, and a chance comment from a friend that led me to read SWOE and begin this latest chapter of my healing, recovering and overcoming journey. Since joining this group, I realize I had my own Mommie Dearest. This group has provided me with an unfolding horror of stories and an education I never wanted. It’s also provided me with a camaraderie and sense of belonging I’ve never had with any of the many other support groups I have or am in. Like the late actor/director Reeve said, I’m a member of a club I never wanted to belong to. I’ve never felt so understood in my life. (I had to stop writing there for a minute to let another sob out.) My childhood and teenage home environment was like a constant spiritual, emotional and mental war zone, and a frequent physical war zone. It was, and, to this day is, potentially lethal, exhausting, and traumatically stressful. Like a country, city or people under siege, I have continually fought off attempts to weaken me, drain and undermine my resources, conquer me, and enslave me for the benefit only of my perpetrators, while feeling, with considerable justification, that at any moment they may choose to or will find a way to finish me off. I tried as hard as I could for decades to curl up into a spiritual and emotional shell of protection. From time immemorial, many people have had to protect themselves from other rivals, tribes, vigilantes, death squads, their own governments, despots, tyrants, and invaders. I’d heard of genocide, fratricide and infanticide. Still, for most of my life, I never imagined I’d need to protect myself from my own FOO. My nada didn’t just try to kill me long ago. She’s STILL TRYING to kill me and probably has been since before I was born. She won’t stop. She and my older brudda are trying to complete the job. It doesn’t matter to me whether it’s spiritually, emotionally, mentally and/or physically. They’re all murderous to my mind, soul and body, and I need all those parts to function as a human being. No one in my FOO sees or believes any of this and they won’t help me. I am alone in that group. I am not alone in this and other groups, and in the world. I feel STUNNED about a number of posts the last few days, including replies to posts of mine. Stunned about the levels of cruel, destructive, sadistic, inhumane, monstrous behavior many of us have endured, and stunned about the levels of experience, strength, knowledge, wisdom, and hope we’ve learned, cultivated, nourished, built, and maintained over the years. I want to reply to so much of it with thanks for sharing here, teaching me more about courage, guts, determination, tenacity and the endurance of the human spirit in the face of a long, exhausting, painful struggle. What I read here and elsewhere reminds me of one of my eternal thoughts: I don’t know how I got through it. The struggle continues. Maybe, one reason I did was to share some of my experience, strength and hope, as many of you have, to help each other and generations to come. Like others have said, I wish myself and all of you a healthy, happy, serene, safe, secure, and peaceful new year. May it be a time of further healing, recovery, growth and harmony with the family and world of your choice. One Non-BP Recovering Man __________________________________ Yahoo! for Good - Make a difference this year. http://brand.yahoo.com/cybergivingweek2005/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2006 Report Share Posted January 1, 2006 > > Like the late actor/director > Reeve said, I'm a member of a club I never > wanted to belong to. I've never felt so understood in > my life. > > (I had to stop writing there for a minute to let > another sob out.) - Yes and so did I as I read that, having joined just two days ago... I know what you and he mean. I so don't want to be here, but am so glad I found you all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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