May 11, 2009
Recognizing the Real...
They say there's a silver lining behind every cloud. I guess the silver lining of the sociopath cloud is learning to recognize the real.
I've been nurturing a relationship with a man who is for all intents and purposes not "my type", but who is the kindest, most loving and giving person I've ever met. We have tons in common and he treats me not only like a human being, but like a woman who is beautiful, desired and loved.
I'm not sure I that I would have been capable of loving him if I hadn't gone through what I did with my ex-sociopath.
It is a bit ironic that it took being destroyed to find happiness. Pink wrote, in her song "Crystal Ball" that, "I wouldn't trade the pain for what I've learned." When I first heard this lyric I thought, "I sure would trade the pain...", but now I think I wouldn't. I am satisfied loving a man who is pure and real and wonderful and who is , for all intents and purposes, not "my type"... because what I've learned is that he is EXACTLY my type. :D
I love you John! xo
I've been nurturing a relationship with a man who is for all intents and purposes not "my type", but who is the kindest, most loving and giving person I've ever met. We have tons in common and he treats me not only like a human being, but like a woman who is beautiful, desired and loved.
I'm not sure I that I would have been capable of loving him if I hadn't gone through what I did with my ex-sociopath.
It is a bit ironic that it took being destroyed to find happiness. Pink wrote, in her song "Crystal Ball" that, "I wouldn't trade the pain for what I've learned." When I first heard this lyric I thought, "I sure would trade the pain...", but now I think I wouldn't. I am satisfied loving a man who is pure and real and wonderful and who is , for all intents and purposes, not "my type"... because what I've learned is that he is EXACTLY my type. :D
I love you John! xo
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2 comments:
Hi, Laura:
I'm also a victim of a pathological narcissist. I took it very hard because I'm not a terribly strong person... my narcissist discarded me in May of '07 (after only a three-month involvement), and it's only been within the past couple of months or so that I've even started to recover.
I'm still at a point right now where it's difficult for me to comment at all, where my self-esteem is so low that I can scarcely even talk to people at all, let alone disclose my identity, so I have to post anonymously for now, but I wanted to thank you for your blog because what you're sharing is helping me.
Best,
P
I too believe when we get to a time in our life’s, where we can again believe that love isn’t a bad word or something that we got wrong. Also it’s a time when we began to see that indeed we are healing from a “bad” experience and that love isn’t a lie.
Many of us walked away from these toxic relationships believing or thinking that we are to blame for the failure of that relationship and in short failed in love.
We all were told in many ways that it was “us” that were unlovable. When we start to see those lies as projections from our ex s/p and that in fact it was them that are unlovable.
They prey on our weakness of love. For they see love as a weakness. They see it as a weakness for many reasons, but one is because they themselves are unable to bond with other people and therefore are unable to know what love is.
But when we start to know it’s okay to love and be loved and that it is not a weakness. Then we are in fact starting to heal and also we start to move away from this lie which was one of many given to us in the “name of love” by those who will never know true longstanding bonding and the love this brings with other people.
When we are able to reach out in sympathy and with empathy to other people albeit with strangers or love ones, we also at this same time give ourselves the gift of LOVE...
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