WhiteDespair
The Temporary Problem is Life
- Oct 24, 2019
- 837
I was going to write this in another topic. And, it became an absolute mess and much longer than I anticipated. I didn't want to overwhelm someone's topic with this monstrosity. This is why I am here on SS wondering what to do with my bus ticket.
Grow up "raised" by an alcoholic bipolar single mother who worked the night shift. 6th grade was when it fell off. My mother convinced me that my Dad was horrible and I broke contact with him. Mom tried to CtB. At some point during all this mom got really drunk one night, came into my room and started holding me. Regardless of how I complained or squirmed she wouldn't leave me alone. I managed to get free and tried to sleep at the kitchen table. She followed me. The closet. She followed me. Then, the couch. She followed me. I managed to throw her off me. She said, "You hurt me. You hurt me." I ran to my room and locked myself in. The last thing I heard that night was her trying to pick my lock with a knife. That never really stopped. Whenever she wanted to she would come into my room and into my bed. It didn't matter if I physically kicked her out, told her to leave or complained in front of others. It made no difference. If she wanted that physical closeness she'd climb into my bed. I still do not know whether or not she was looking for sex. It's awesome to think those thoughts. Didn't remember that one until I had a legitimate anxiety/panic attack at 2am when sleeping next to my college girlfriend for the first time. I bolted from her apartment. She was probably very confused.
Then, there was the everyday neglect. She stopped making dinner when I wouldn't eat. I later pieced it together that I would ask at 5pm. She wouldn't get up until 6. Then, 630-7pm would be something from a bag heated in a pot. I remember getting yelled at because I didn't like mom's teriyaki chicken (frozen Tyson thighs) and preferred my friend's mom' (grilled chicken breasts with teriyaki sauce). Eventually, she stopped making dinner altogether because I got fed up waiting until 7pm or later for dinner so I stopped asking. Then, my diet was pretty much PopTarts, Hot Pockets, Frozen Taquitos, TV Dinners, Chey Boyardee and Campbell's soup.
There was no interaction with her. I asked her many times to play Monopoly or poker because I was kinda smart and wanted the advanced games. She would always say no and instead want to play Connect 4 or war. There were enough times I won twice in the same game that I'm convinced she was drunk and war has no strategy. She was vindictive as well. On several occasions she would use the fact that I didn't go to see a show with her as justification as to why she wouldn't take me to a show. My interactions would be doing nerdy/geeky stuff until 5pm after school and then playing video games all day.
Throughout everything she destroyed my sense of self-esteem, self-actualization and self-confidence. My successes were treated as failures and my failures were treated as castrophes. I excitedly told her that a diorama was put on display in school. She berated me for not having the paper on display as well. I told her that I aced writing classes in college. She wanted to know about the others. There was no encouagment. Only negativity and belittlement. The best example is the difference between mowing the lawn for my mom ("You missed a spot!" "Where did I miss?" "Over there!") and my Dad ("Lawn looks good, buddy."). I missed every spot even the ones that didn't exist.
The only interaction I would have with her would be when she was screaming at me to do stuff, telling me to do stuff at 8am which I promptly forgot when I fell back asleep, saying that she wanted the communication whenever I suggested that she should write me a list because I'd forget when I fell asleep, getting a pot of water tossed on me (and the mattress ruined) when I told her I didn't feel like getting yelled at, seeing her sitting on the toilet, smoking a cigaratte, panties around her ankles, letting the dog drink from the tub, seeing her never close the door when getting ready for work, having her smile and act nicely to me whenever she wanted something from me (usually to get her meds from the pharmacy because she was embarassed) [it took me months and years and maybe not 100% over it to realize that when someone smiled at me it didn't mean that they were trying to extract value from me], saying "I love you" but really meaning "I hope you don't make it home tonight" so the words lost all meaning, getting swung at when the emotional and physical abuse wasn't having the desired effect, having a police report filed (no charges) when I had to physically restrain her just to get out of the house and over to my friend's house to get away from her [I seem to recall noticing that I would have to hurt her to protect myself during her earlier drunken escapades], getting that police report thrown in my face whenever she felt like it [like when I took home a medal in college karate. I stopped going to karate and I enjoyed it], dealing with her inconsistant rages, depressions and sort of normalcies so that telling her one thing would be okay at night and leading to getting sceamed at in the morning. Eventually, I became so completely numb and dead weight that when I got fired from a minor job because of a miscommunication (my fault for not writing my schedule down and being poor at communicating) that she started screaming at me for losing the job. I did only and exactly what she told me to do regarding the job search [I started the night before]. She placed her hands around my throat and tensed them. She didn't squeeze. I don't know if I would have fought back.
This isn't to say I wasn't a petulent little brat. Of course I was. That is how I was "raised." I know I engaged in behaviors to help me survive. I know I never learned pro-social behaviors. I didn't really have a chance.
After mom put her hands around my neck she called my aunt for backup. My mom did that whenever she needed a hand. My aunt was right there to help her. She didn't act as mediator or arbiter. She took mom's side and, because I was the child, I was wrong. The only person who would have protected me and looked out for me was my Dad and my mom had so thoroughly convinced me that he was the most awful person on the planet that I didn't get in touch with him until college and that was only because his number was on a webpage. I remember crying in my car because that was the only place I could talk freely.
All my aunt did was think I was greedy (I got boxes of cards from mom instead of packs which the other kids got, and I made the unpardonable sin of saying I wanted all of the McDonald's X-men toys at my elementary school graduation) [I am convinced that my mother could only show her love and affection through material means.], chide me for behavior issues (she worked with special needs kids and never put my bad behavior together with my lovely home life, or she chose not to see it) and contributed to the Lie of Normalcy. That is the when my mom and my aunt convinced me that my life was normal, standard, everyone has it. Yes, all the abuse, neglect and misery was normal. It was normal for me because that's all I hqd and all I knew. This is your life. It is normal. Being abused is normal. Being manipulated is normal. Your life is normal. Who's coming over for Thanksgiving?
As a small aside, there was extreme isolation as I never wanted to bring people home to see my mom walking around with only a nightshirt which barely covered her panties. My family was belitted and demeaned. I can see the icey hatred in mom's eyes. The same thing happened with friends. Mom taught me that image was more important than substance and you better be as perfect as your image. That also means that the answer to "are you okay?" is always "yes" regardless as to whether or not you just spent 44 minutes deciding whether or not to whip your car off of the freeway. Every time I went to her for help I wound up having myself or my problems belittled by her. Eventually, you just stop. You stop reaching out for help. You stop trusting. You stop letting people in. You react viciously when someone gets too close. You live in a state of living death wondering if it's real or if you're just a phantasm drifting through the lives of the real people.
While touched on briefly elsewhere mom had codependent and spousification tendencies. So, she sabotaged my attempts at independence to keep me enthralled to her while simultaneously projecting spousal roles (man of the house, etc.) onto me. I had no training in that regard. I had no contact with my family. Mom made sure to villify and cut them out of my life and convince me that they're evil people. One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't see my grandmother before she died because my mind was so polluted against her. She wanted to see me before she died and I wouldn't see her. My Dad can forgive me because I "had my reasons." I don't know if I can ever forgive myself. I miss my grandma.
I am here because of 26 years of everything above smashed into the true me. That is the strong, competent person that I am now (moreso anyway). I see who and what I could have been if I had a functional life. I'm cycling through periods of rage and sadness. I absolutely adore collapsing on the floor when I get home, my body in a singular emotional contraction, for 15 minutes at a clip. I love getting a little better and getting smashed in the teeth with the realization that this could have been me the entire time. I lovw the fact that the drugs no longer work because the Prozac and Adderall have antagonistic properties. I love the fact that I have no hopes or dreams or plans for the future. They were either beaten out of me or dismissed. People say to visualize what you want out of life. I love that there isn't anything there.
The only constant thing I've wanted for the past 2 decades is death. In high school I took like 16 Advil and fell asleep. My friend came over later, woke me up and we did stuff. A few years later when I flunked out of college (mom's encouragement was "you won't be here next year" and "you don't know how to work" and "worthless" when I flunked out). I was working at a summer job between semesters. I took a whole bunch of stuff from the medicine cabinet. All OTC like Advil, Nyquil, etc. I remember waking up in the middle of the nightand vomiting blue specks into the toilet. In college I took Adderall and did double shots until I blacked out and wound up in detox. I woke up elated that I almost died. That didn't last too long. A couple years ago I went to go see a show. Had some Adderall and drinks. Went to a strip club. Maxed out my credit card, did coke and champagne with the strippers (they offered) until I blacked out. I only made it home because of the kindness of a taxi driver. Great guy. I sometimes wish he let me feeze to death on the streets.
I look back and I see the only thing that I wanted was death. I look forward and I see a void. I'm here trying to figure out whether life and the effort I'd have to put into it is actually worth it considering that my life is half over and whatever I do manage to get will be less than what I could have gotten if I had a functional life.
CtB is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. The temporary problem is life.
Thank you for taking the time to read or briefly skim this. For much of this stuff it is the first time I ever admitted and stated it in public. That's a step in a direction.
Grow up "raised" by an alcoholic bipolar single mother who worked the night shift. 6th grade was when it fell off. My mother convinced me that my Dad was horrible and I broke contact with him. Mom tried to CtB. At some point during all this mom got really drunk one night, came into my room and started holding me. Regardless of how I complained or squirmed she wouldn't leave me alone. I managed to get free and tried to sleep at the kitchen table. She followed me. The closet. She followed me. Then, the couch. She followed me. I managed to throw her off me. She said, "You hurt me. You hurt me." I ran to my room and locked myself in. The last thing I heard that night was her trying to pick my lock with a knife. That never really stopped. Whenever she wanted to she would come into my room and into my bed. It didn't matter if I physically kicked her out, told her to leave or complained in front of others. It made no difference. If she wanted that physical closeness she'd climb into my bed. I still do not know whether or not she was looking for sex. It's awesome to think those thoughts. Didn't remember that one until I had a legitimate anxiety/panic attack at 2am when sleeping next to my college girlfriend for the first time. I bolted from her apartment. She was probably very confused.
Then, there was the everyday neglect. She stopped making dinner when I wouldn't eat. I later pieced it together that I would ask at 5pm. She wouldn't get up until 6. Then, 630-7pm would be something from a bag heated in a pot. I remember getting yelled at because I didn't like mom's teriyaki chicken (frozen Tyson thighs) and preferred my friend's mom' (grilled chicken breasts with teriyaki sauce). Eventually, she stopped making dinner altogether because I got fed up waiting until 7pm or later for dinner so I stopped asking. Then, my diet was pretty much PopTarts, Hot Pockets, Frozen Taquitos, TV Dinners, Chey Boyardee and Campbell's soup.
There was no interaction with her. I asked her many times to play Monopoly or poker because I was kinda smart and wanted the advanced games. She would always say no and instead want to play Connect 4 or war. There were enough times I won twice in the same game that I'm convinced she was drunk and war has no strategy. She was vindictive as well. On several occasions she would use the fact that I didn't go to see a show with her as justification as to why she wouldn't take me to a show. My interactions would be doing nerdy/geeky stuff until 5pm after school and then playing video games all day.
Throughout everything she destroyed my sense of self-esteem, self-actualization and self-confidence. My successes were treated as failures and my failures were treated as castrophes. I excitedly told her that a diorama was put on display in school. She berated me for not having the paper on display as well. I told her that I aced writing classes in college. She wanted to know about the others. There was no encouagment. Only negativity and belittlement. The best example is the difference between mowing the lawn for my mom ("You missed a spot!" "Where did I miss?" "Over there!") and my Dad ("Lawn looks good, buddy."). I missed every spot even the ones that didn't exist.
The only interaction I would have with her would be when she was screaming at me to do stuff, telling me to do stuff at 8am which I promptly forgot when I fell back asleep, saying that she wanted the communication whenever I suggested that she should write me a list because I'd forget when I fell asleep, getting a pot of water tossed on me (and the mattress ruined) when I told her I didn't feel like getting yelled at, seeing her sitting on the toilet, smoking a cigaratte, panties around her ankles, letting the dog drink from the tub, seeing her never close the door when getting ready for work, having her smile and act nicely to me whenever she wanted something from me (usually to get her meds from the pharmacy because she was embarassed) [it took me months and years and maybe not 100% over it to realize that when someone smiled at me it didn't mean that they were trying to extract value from me], saying "I love you" but really meaning "I hope you don't make it home tonight" so the words lost all meaning, getting swung at when the emotional and physical abuse wasn't having the desired effect, having a police report filed (no charges) when I had to physically restrain her just to get out of the house and over to my friend's house to get away from her [I seem to recall noticing that I would have to hurt her to protect myself during her earlier drunken escapades], getting that police report thrown in my face whenever she felt like it [like when I took home a medal in college karate. I stopped going to karate and I enjoyed it], dealing with her inconsistant rages, depressions and sort of normalcies so that telling her one thing would be okay at night and leading to getting sceamed at in the morning. Eventually, I became so completely numb and dead weight that when I got fired from a minor job because of a miscommunication (my fault for not writing my schedule down and being poor at communicating) that she started screaming at me for losing the job. I did only and exactly what she told me to do regarding the job search [I started the night before]. She placed her hands around my throat and tensed them. She didn't squeeze. I don't know if I would have fought back.
This isn't to say I wasn't a petulent little brat. Of course I was. That is how I was "raised." I know I engaged in behaviors to help me survive. I know I never learned pro-social behaviors. I didn't really have a chance.
After mom put her hands around my neck she called my aunt for backup. My mom did that whenever she needed a hand. My aunt was right there to help her. She didn't act as mediator or arbiter. She took mom's side and, because I was the child, I was wrong. The only person who would have protected me and looked out for me was my Dad and my mom had so thoroughly convinced me that he was the most awful person on the planet that I didn't get in touch with him until college and that was only because his number was on a webpage. I remember crying in my car because that was the only place I could talk freely.
All my aunt did was think I was greedy (I got boxes of cards from mom instead of packs which the other kids got, and I made the unpardonable sin of saying I wanted all of the McDonald's X-men toys at my elementary school graduation) [I am convinced that my mother could only show her love and affection through material means.], chide me for behavior issues (she worked with special needs kids and never put my bad behavior together with my lovely home life, or she chose not to see it) and contributed to the Lie of Normalcy. That is the when my mom and my aunt convinced me that my life was normal, standard, everyone has it. Yes, all the abuse, neglect and misery was normal. It was normal for me because that's all I hqd and all I knew. This is your life. It is normal. Being abused is normal. Being manipulated is normal. Your life is normal. Who's coming over for Thanksgiving?
As a small aside, there was extreme isolation as I never wanted to bring people home to see my mom walking around with only a nightshirt which barely covered her panties. My family was belitted and demeaned. I can see the icey hatred in mom's eyes. The same thing happened with friends. Mom taught me that image was more important than substance and you better be as perfect as your image. That also means that the answer to "are you okay?" is always "yes" regardless as to whether or not you just spent 44 minutes deciding whether or not to whip your car off of the freeway. Every time I went to her for help I wound up having myself or my problems belittled by her. Eventually, you just stop. You stop reaching out for help. You stop trusting. You stop letting people in. You react viciously when someone gets too close. You live in a state of living death wondering if it's real or if you're just a phantasm drifting through the lives of the real people.
While touched on briefly elsewhere mom had codependent and spousification tendencies. So, she sabotaged my attempts at independence to keep me enthralled to her while simultaneously projecting spousal roles (man of the house, etc.) onto me. I had no training in that regard. I had no contact with my family. Mom made sure to villify and cut them out of my life and convince me that they're evil people. One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't see my grandmother before she died because my mind was so polluted against her. She wanted to see me before she died and I wouldn't see her. My Dad can forgive me because I "had my reasons." I don't know if I can ever forgive myself. I miss my grandma.
I am here because of 26 years of everything above smashed into the true me. That is the strong, competent person that I am now (moreso anyway). I see who and what I could have been if I had a functional life. I'm cycling through periods of rage and sadness. I absolutely adore collapsing on the floor when I get home, my body in a singular emotional contraction, for 15 minutes at a clip. I love getting a little better and getting smashed in the teeth with the realization that this could have been me the entire time. I lovw the fact that the drugs no longer work because the Prozac and Adderall have antagonistic properties. I love the fact that I have no hopes or dreams or plans for the future. They were either beaten out of me or dismissed. People say to visualize what you want out of life. I love that there isn't anything there.
The only constant thing I've wanted for the past 2 decades is death. In high school I took like 16 Advil and fell asleep. My friend came over later, woke me up and we did stuff. A few years later when I flunked out of college (mom's encouragement was "you won't be here next year" and "you don't know how to work" and "worthless" when I flunked out). I was working at a summer job between semesters. I took a whole bunch of stuff from the medicine cabinet. All OTC like Advil, Nyquil, etc. I remember waking up in the middle of the nightand vomiting blue specks into the toilet. In college I took Adderall and did double shots until I blacked out and wound up in detox. I woke up elated that I almost died. That didn't last too long. A couple years ago I went to go see a show. Had some Adderall and drinks. Went to a strip club. Maxed out my credit card, did coke and champagne with the strippers (they offered) until I blacked out. I only made it home because of the kindness of a taxi driver. Great guy. I sometimes wish he let me feeze to death on the streets.
I look back and I see the only thing that I wanted was death. I look forward and I see a void. I'm here trying to figure out whether life and the effort I'd have to put into it is actually worth it considering that my life is half over and whatever I do manage to get will be less than what I could have gotten if I had a functional life.
CtB is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. The temporary problem is life.
Thank you for taking the time to read or briefly skim this. For much of this stuff it is the first time I ever admitted and stated it in public. That's a step in a direction.