Friday, September 22, 2017

"Every New Beginning Comes From Some Other Beginning's End." - Seneca

I have spent a great deal of time on  introspection and reflection and have come to realize that everything that we do, every reason for our choices, our behavior, our accomplishments and our mistakes had to begin somewhere. I started to look back on all the significant, intimate relationships in my life and noticed a pattern. They were all abusive in some way, shape or form. Emotionally. Mentally. Physically. Where was it that I learned that this was acceptable behavior?

Have you ever had one of those moments where you were being hounded by the same question, in different forms, coming from multiple people? You end up hearing comments that seem relentless, then you get frustrated and in your head you blurt out some random, sarcastic answer (usually out of anger) and it dawns on you...ah ha! This is exactly what happened after hearing the same thing over and over. "How do you end up getting with these men?"

In less than a week's time, I heard that question multiple times. There were comments made like: "You've never had the best luck with men." "You don't exactly have the best track record with men." "Why is it everyone you've ever been with seems to love you in the beginning, then want to kill you?" 

The last of the comments came from my father who, on that particular day had managed to spike my blood pressure a few points, and in my head I yelled "YOU DID! YOU TAUGHT ME THAT AN EMOTIONALLY ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIP WAS ACCEPTABLE!" The proverbial "light bulb" went off and left me with the inter-cranial quandary, "Why did that pop into my head and why did it feel dead on?" Because it was.

Please, don't get me wrong, I love my father. My father is a Vietnam Veteran. The soldiers that returned from Vietnam were the first to exhibit documented behaviors, such as personality changes, sleep disorders, severe mood swings, increased suicide post war etc. The Medical community finally put a diagnosis to these behaviors as "PTSD" Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I don't mean to seem insensitive, but no shit! I don't believe that Vietnam era veterans were the only soldiers to suffer from this, but you have to consider the generations before them. No one talked about ANYTHING! You were a soldier. You were trained to kill. You killed. It was your job. End of story. For most, that story never ends.

The military teaches you that emotions will get you killed. What it doesn't teach is that just like everything else; emotions have a time and place. They instill in you a fear of becoming emotionally attached to anyone because the enemy will use that person to control you. To some extent, I think my father feared showing any emotion towards us, especially in public, because he feared that we would be endangered as a vehicle to eliminate him. With the emergence of Guerrilla warfare in Vietnam and the fact that our troops, very well were hunted, I can see where that was a rational fear. The other side of PTSD that you don't see is the long term effects it has on families and children.

As a child growing up in the mid-70's, early 80's, I was already an outcast. I was the daughter of a soldier which meant that there was a great deal of family oriented, school functions that my father was not available to attend. This was frowned upon for some reason, probably because the Vietnam War was the most unpopular in American History. There was no support for the war and soldiers were ridiculed and spat upon when they returned. I am also part of the first generation in which having two incomes was essential to survive economical decline. Divorce was becoming more prominent and was seen as a failure (especially on the part of the wife) and if you were Roman Catholic you were ostracized from the church. I was a "latchkey kid". Mostly, the emotional abuse from my father was emotional unavailability. 

I remember most of my years as a child being more like what I imagined boot camp was for my dad. You had a routine, strict schedule, heavy discipline but what I remember the most was the way he talked to my mom and to us. It was as if the more that he criticized, the more he yelled, the more he pointed out your flaws, the more it would encourage you to do better? In reality, the only thing it accomplished was feelings of never being good enough and never being worthy.  I spent my whole life trying to make him happy, wanting him to be proud of me, not wanting to step out of line and disappoint him, or my mother, or anyone.

Sigmund Freud was correct when he said that a woman will look for a mate who resembles her father and a man will look for a woman who resembles his mother. The most formative years for a child where they learn all their foundations are between 2 and 6 years of age. Even though they do not comprehend what they are learning, that is where their foundations for adulthood begin. I know that my father did not have intentions of creating this world for us, nor can I blame him for the fault of his parents, but this is where the abuse started.

I am also part of one of the last generations that society ingrained in our heads that as women, we would only be accepted if we found an acceptable provider (husband), had children, maintained a household AND were the first to be expected to have an education as well as maintain a job to help provide. At this time, the man's responsibilities didn't change much. Men weren't "stay at home moms"; they didn't cook, clean or help take care of the children. Their only responsibility was to bring home the larger paycheck and maintain the home repairs, vehicles, yard maintenance, etc. It's no wonder why the next diagnosis was "postpartum depression." (Just a side note, when I cannot explain why I am depressed, I always say I am still suffering postpartum from when I was born, lol.)

I am not blaming my father, or my parents for any of my life choices, nor their consequences. There is no blame to be had. We live in a world where unfortunately, we are "brainwashed" into some sort of ideal existence that is seemingly all part of a larger agenda that none of us had a hand in writing. We are of a higher species primarily because of our ability to communicate, but have been told to sit down and shut up most of our lives. How is this conducive to growth? In all honesty, one of the main reasons that my last relationship turned physically violent is because I refused to sit down and shut up. I stood up for myself. I stood my ground. My brute honesty is one of my greatest advantages and my biggest flaw. I call things like I see them. I am neither critical nor judgmental, but if you truly don't want the answer, I am not the person to ask.

While it seems quite simple, and is terribly over used...."Why can't we just all get along?" I was raised Roman Catholic and while I no longer follow an organized religion, there is one thing that holds true and I still believe in....


"Treat Others as You Would Be Treated."

No comments:

Post a Comment