Learning to Leave Unloving Lovers and Unfriendly Friends
Published on September 23, 2013 by Jeanne Safer, Ph.D. in The Last Taboos
Betrayal is Gender-Blind
Heartbreak: An Equal-Opportunity Destroyer
Out of the blue, the woman who had once been my closest friend and confidante left me a message that she was in the hospital. We hadn’t spoken in two years. I decided, after several days of agitated deliberation, not to call her back.
It was one of the hardest, and smartest, things I’ve ever done.
At first I was gratified—even thrilled—to hear her voice again, speaking my name. “Hello, Jeanne,” she said, informing me of her whereabouts, in the slightly stilted tone that I remember she uses when she’s uncomfortable: “I’m getting some tests, an MRI and some others. I think I’m all right. We’ll talk over the weekend.” My first impulse was to try to reach her immediately. But something about her message and the way she delivered it, both what she said and what she omitted, gave me pause.
I remembered all too clearly our last conversation. Then I had been the one in the hospital—for an entire month, with a dangerous but curable form of leukemia—and I had asked her to come and see me when I felt desperate for her company and some edible food, and she neither came, nor called, nor sent me anything, abandoning me on one of the darkest nights of my life. It took her two days to call me back with some sort of lame excuse (the food in the hospital was just fine, she thought). She had used the same tone then. She promised to call later and explain, but she never did.
“Why on earth would you call her back?” said my husband, who knew the whole story. “Be careful.” His pronouncement seemed so bald, so final, so devoid of hope. It disturbed and frightened me because I didn’t want it to be true. Here was my chance to get back the one woman in the world who spoke my language when I thought I had lost her forever.
We had been soul mates and professional colleagues for twenty years before she vanished, each other’s bulwark in life. She was brilliant, mordant, and astute, and I loved that she never suffered fools. Our conversations were my stimulant and my solace; “I’ve never talked to anybody the way I talk to you,” she told me once, and I felt the same way. But even before she deserted me, the fallout from an extended marital crisis had made her increasingly self-absorbed and subtly demanding, and I found those conversations less mutual as time went on. Her fuse also got much shorter, and I, who prided myself on addressing problems in relationships, somehow never felt I could reveal my growing discontent without risking the fallout of her displeasure.
Despite her shocking behavior, I missed her so intensely that I wasn’t ready to give up on her yet, so I made excuses for her, putting the best possible spin on that twenty-second message: Clearly I wasn’t forgotten. She was seeking me out; she was turning to me in her hour of need. Maybe she felt all the things I hoped she felt, but couldn’t put them into words. Maybe she was reaching out, in her way. Being hospitalized must have brought me to mind. Maybe she identified with me, felt sorry about the way she had acted, and wanted to make amends. It must have taken a lot to make that call; after all, she risked getting me on the phone, and then she would have had to explain. I was glad that I hadn’t been home, because caught unawares I would certainly have followed my first instinct and engaged with her, even if all she wanted was advice. But shouldn’t I at least give her the benefit of the doubt after two decades of intimacy, acknowledge the effort, and send her a brief email asking what she wanted to talk to me about?
I couldn’t immediately see the message for what it was: the presumptuous, self-absorbed expression of a person who now only thought of me to make use of me—for support, for attention, for the medical expertise I had often provided for her in the past. I couldn’t accept that anybody who could leave that message, regardless of what she had once been to me, was no longer capable of apologizing, or worth being given the opportunity. The person I wanted back in my life didn’t exist any more, and hadn’t for years.
The first sensible thought I had was to do nothing, to wait and think it through. If she was sincere, if I really mattered to her still, she would certainly call again. I listened to her message twice more, and asked my husband to listen as well in case I was misinterpreting. So much seemed at stake that I felt I had to be careful; onefalse step and she might retreatforever. The fate of the relationship seemed entirely in my hands, a thought that in itself should have tipped me off to its precariousness.
Then two songs came into my head. I found myself singing them aloud, over and over. “Cry me a river, cry me a river. I cried a river over you,” I belted as I walked around the apartment pondering my options. This bitter torch song segued into Linda Ronstadt’s “You’re No Good.” the unofficial anthem of all reformed masochists—and of masochists trying to reform. I hadn’t thought of it since the Seventies, and very satisfying it was to sing:
Feeling better, now that we're through
Feeling better to be over you
I learned my lesson, it left a scar
Now that I see what you really are…
But why, I suddenly asked myself, was I singing about exorcising a tormented love affair after getting a cryptic call from a former friend? Because the state of mind that she evoked in me—the paralysis, the desperate attempts at self-control, the justifications that couldn’t justify, the anxiety that a wrong move on my part could doom it, the strangulated fury, the feeling that parting would be unendurable—was exactly the same.
I had heard that same heedless tone she used, in far more brutal circumstances, from the first man I felt I couldn’t live without. He was a wry, lithe, elfin-eyed graduate student with golden curls and a BMW motorcycle who was on a six-month fellowship in the sciences from another university, and I was an intense, lonely eighteen-year-old sophomore. My parents’ marriage was disintegrating and I made him my refuge, though he could not shelter me. I would do anything to have him reach for me, even though his tie to me was ambivalent at best, even after he told me he preferred an old girlfriend in another state. The night before he left town forever, my darkest until the one on which my friend forsook me, I waited by the phone that never rang. When he finally came to say goodbye the next morning just before he rode out of my life, he explained gratuitously that he had been consoling another women who was broken up by his leaving. Unprotesting and dry-eyed by force of will, I let him kiss me goodbye and promise to stay in touch.
But even this did not break the spell. To my astonishment, he actually did write and call me over the next year, often to ask advice about other women and to tell me about his travails with them. “You’re the first person I think of when I want to talk,” he said, and despite everything I was gratified to hear it because it meant I was special to him. When he came back to see me briefly the following summer I welcomed him with a combination of vengefulness and excitement.
My entire adult life, my long career as a psychoanalyst, and thirty-three years of marriage to the man who showed up every day I was in the hospital as well as every other day, had not severed the bonds of hunger, despair, and enraged humiliation I buried in 1966. My reactions to my friend’s call catapulted me back to my long-lost lover and exposed a wound that had never healed, that I had not even realized I bore. I knew the outlines, but the full brunt of the experience had lain, unmetabolized and radioactive, a template I thought I had excised long ago, until I heard her voice.
The parallels between these two people from opposite ends of my life were both eerie and enlightening. The common denominator was that both seemed so essential to me that I would do anything to keep them, to the point of ignoring information that would make a more rational person flee. Betrayal is gender-blind, and sex is a sufficient, but not necessary, component. A woman can hurt you as much as a man. Oscar Wilde was right about friendship being more dangerous than love because it lasts longer.
Masochism is an equal-opportunity destroyer, and crumbs from the table are the same, whether they are offered by men who kiss your eyes and then turn away, or women who prize you and then disappear when the going gets rough. It can hide behind the most beguiling facades, and it can seduce you at any age if your history makes you susceptible. The trappings of midlife empathy can be as deceptive and compelling as adolescent passion, as skin-deep as beauty. And the cure is the same: walking away. It took me almost half a century to realize this, and only three days to do it.
Source : http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-last-taboos/201309/learning-leave-unloving-lovers-and-unfriendly-friends
On a personal note: I can relate on many levels. I am a masochist, I like pain, rough sex, ect. But when it comes to my friends masochism takes on a whole new meaning and I cannot stand for that anymore...I have had many friends (and family members) like in this article and I have been heart broken time and time again. Did I finally say "enough! get out of my life!"? No. Not until recently when I realized that I am worth more than what they see me as or how they treat me. I am not just a person you come to when you need help or when you want to be center of attention. I have needs to...I need help from time to time...and where were you? You left when I needed a friend. And note that I am not talking about the friends that have moved or lost contact but when we reconnect things are like we never parted. I am talking about the ones who used me, my kindness then abandoned our friendship cause it no longer fits in your life. I will not apologize for cutting you out of my life. And yes, this also includes some of my family members...I will no longer welcome you with open arms just so you can break my heart all over again!
Mel Schwartz - A Shift of Mind
To communicate effectively, what you think I said is more important than what I'm sure I said.
If my message falls on deaf ears, I need to work toward solving that. If I don't succeed, I'll continue to feel frustrated.
I'm responsible for my communication being heard clearly. So if I think you'll be reactive or defensive to what I have to say, I need to be thoughtful in how I say it. I want to find a way to help you not be reactive, for that will obviously help me. Your gain is my gain.
The goal is not to win, but to be heard and understood. Consider that before you start your communication and you'll certainly benefit.
On a personal note: everyone knows communication is key in any relationship (work, friends, romantic, ect.). But how many of us actually understand that others may not fully understand what we are trying to say. Tone and delivery play a role on getting others to hear and understand our view. There have been many times my tone was off and my point was taken the wrong way. I have been working on that.
For those of you that know me...you know that I am not very close to my biological family. That being said...my extended family...the people I surround myself with today and that are here for me when I need it most...THEY ARE FUCKING AWESOME!!!!
I have been needing the DSM5 (Diagnostic & Statistical Manual) for my psych classes but have not been able to afford it. Today I get a call from Momma (Las Vegas) and she tells me that I will have the DSM5 this FRIDAY!!!!!! I about cried! My own mother has not once supported my decision to go back to college, so for Elizabeth (aka Momma) to do this without me asking....it just shows who cares and wants me to succeed and who is proud of what I have accomplished thus far. Thank you Momma! I love you!!
Mel Schwartz - A Shift of Mind
The most important relationship you will ever have is not with your parents, your children, your spouse or you loves or friends.
The relationship that will impact you far more greatly is your relationship with your thoughts. They may be your worst critic or your best ally -- or fall somewhere in between.
Your thoughts and their ensuing feelings will paint the landscape of your life. Learn to choose them with care and you can enjoy a masterful life. http://ashiftofmind.com/
I follow Mel on FB and it seems that on most days, the things he says fits what is going on in my life or how I am feeling that particular day or even what's going on in a friend's life. Today, I have been thinking about a friend...she is so wrapped up in others (making sure they like her) but then she wonders why she is not happy with herself or her life. And when I read this, it just hit the nail on the head. I will be forwarding this link to her. If she would just focus a little more on herself then she could see that life is what SHE makes it and it doesn't (or shouldn't) be based on others.
Many of you may have known me as HisRainingLove and/or as PsychWardSiren.... well since I do not have the time to run both profiles I have combined them....RaynesAsylum is born....I would hope to think those that followed Siren's journal entries would pick up here as this journal will be for mostly psychology related topics and school papers. This section (mental ramblings) will be just that...ramblings. (lol) It may contain psych related topics or how I feel on that particular day...
I hope you enjoy and always feel free to comment at anytime.
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I look forward to reading your journals!
your journals are always interesting,looking forward to reading more :)
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