Re-reading this thread, I realize that I don't measure up to my abusers.
I just don't care enough for them to consider their various achievements, or wonder how good or bad their life is.
I'm trying to heal and grow as much as I can. I struggle to enjoy life as much as possible. It's about me, not them.
Some of us find comfort in the idea of being more successful than our abusers -- whatever success encompasses in our minds. From what I understand, it's not so much the comparison between one's success and his/her abuser's that is helpful, but the various underlying thoughts we put behind it. Like "They didn't break me", or "They wanted to destroy me and they failed", "I'm proving them wrong", "My abuser was in fact jealous of my light/intelligence etc.", "I take pride in my accomplishments", "I broke the cycle of violence".
Such thoughts can bring confidence, pride, courage, hope, some sense of consolation or justice. And that's good. Anything that helps is worthy to be held on to, as long as needed. But what helps one person won't necessarily help everyone.
For some of us, evaluating our success resonates with our low self esteem issues. And the idea of comparing our achievements with the ones of our abusers reminds us of what we couldn't achieve because of the abuse. Obviously, there is no comfort in that. And I don't think being reminded of one's achievements will ever make up for what was lost, what couldn't and can't be achieved because of the abuse. Losses need to be mourned.
@RussH,
I think it's generous of you to share what helps you. Your thoughts on success do bring comfort and reassurance to some people in this thread. So it's worth it.
But I don't think you can convince those who find no comfort in it to feel the way you do. They/we just don't. And that's ok. It doesn't mean you shouldn't have shared your thoughts, nor that you're wrong to benefit from them. It just means that we are all different. Different stories, issues, losses, frustrations, needs, hopes, world views, stages of recovery, etc.