- Post starter
- #25
Justmehere
Sponsor
I am frustrated! I wish I could understand what it is really about, because even though my friend has done some unhealthy things, it's not worth this anger. I think it comes down to feeling mad about my own unmet needs in my own life.
I am still frustrated with her too. I'm trying to take my anger as sign there are some unresolved issues for me, and that I need to hold my boundaries with her.
@Cashew - thanks for the strong support. It helps. :hug:s back to you. @lostandforgotten - you help me feel so heard. :hug: Thanks @Suzetig for encouragement too. :) @hodge - thanks for the reminder that I'm not responsible for her. :) @EveHarrington - you are right, she's got to be invested in her own healing. I'm realizing she isn't willing to do what it takes.
@RecedingMoonlight - Thanks for the reminder that I'm not responsible for her emotions... I think I also have to remember that I don't have to take them in either. Your example of how you handled things with your sufferer was really good! I think it's very similar to what I need to do with her, if I stay in the relationship.
I am reminded of what she explained she felt was supportive from her ex-boyfriend/abuser. He would act cold, distant, unreactive to her having severe flashbacks and panic to the point where is was not able to speak and vomiting for hours. It's good to not react... but he went further to the point of unresponsiveness. But she described him but having no response to her suffering or abusing her for her having emotions. In fact. the examples she gave me of him being "supportive" sounded more like a narcissists or sociopaths response to someone in pain, not one of healthy support and/or boundaried distance. He would do things that sounded cold, heartless, and self absorbed to me. She was able to identify they were in co-dependent relationship, he was abusive verbally and sexually. But I don't think she understands at all that when someone expresses this level of suffering, healthy people (or people trying to be healthy) have a response to it. I can't save her. I can't do much actually. But it's not gonna "fall off my radar." She matters. Her life matters. She has value.
@scout86 - thanks for the feedback! I think what you are pointing out is essential.
@ Anonymous poster - I think you have a valid perspective and I'm glad for the input. I'm not sure what is and isn't dissociation, and you are right, I could be giving her the benefit of the doubt too much. She is honest that she does remember the texts. (which doesn't mean it was or wasn't dissociative....) I am trying to understand her through the lense of my own experiences or how I would think or handle the situation. Years ago, early into my treatment for PTSD, I actually sent suicidal texts to my therapist and I didn't remember. I didn't initiate any contact with her to reassure her. My therapist contacted me about them and my response was a panicky "omg, yeah, I'm ok... I think... I don't know, I wrote that?! I guess I am not doing as well as I thought."
Most importantly, I was able to connect and understand my therapists concern and need to make sure I was ok even when I didn't remember.
I'm obviously not my friend's therapist, so it's a very different situation... but still, the lack of her understanding hey, yeah, I reasonably would like reassurance you are still alive... this is odd to me.I wonder if this is perhaps related to the long relationship with her ex-boyfriend and if she got used to having no response from him (or an abusive response). In the end, only she can tell me why, and I hope to ask her more to see if I can understand her experience better and what is happening here.
I think she may be crying out for attention. Maybe she needs it - but different than the kind of attention she is used to. I can't be the one to give her what she really needs. I do agree she needs to get into some kind of more intensive therapy, and DBT would probably be one great option. If she brings this subject up, I will be encouraging her to talk to her therapist about what he recommends.
@joeylittle - thank you for the great feedback. I think I know what you are talking about, and I'm thinking of areas of my life where I can have that ability to say, "this is my decision, accept it or not, it doesn't change" - in a way where I'm calm and I'm not trying to persuade the other person to come to any agreement with me. I think you are right on about the "unwinnable war to get other people to change." Bingo. I can only change me. Not her. I have to accept that she is where she is at. There is a kind of strength is not actually even trying to convince someone. Sometimes they listen more carefully, often they don't, but I don't get dragged into a war I can't win. I'm also clear about what my limits are without having them negotiated.
It is important for me to remember that I am at risk of getting too easily drawn in to having a different ending here because of losing others to suicide.
It is my hope to communicate clear what I need to stay in the relationship, to be able to have contact right now, and if she can't do it, she can't do it. This friend now... she will reach out for the help she knows is there if/when she is ready and make the changes needed to stay friends, or she won't and her life will carry on, or she will push everyone healthy away, or she will end her life.
I can't change what she will choose to do. I think this has been important for me to re-accept.
On the post it notes on my monitor, which I will see when on Skype with her, I actually put down (ok I know this seems really silly but this kind of thing has helped for work related meetings on Skype)
"I am letting go of the 'need' to convince her."
"I have made a decision to engage in healthy relationships."
"I will make clear what I need for this to be a healthy relationship."
"It's ok to say no, I can't do that without explaining."
I plan to tell her:
1.) I am not abandoning her. I'm letting her know what I need in order to stay in the relationship.
2.) I care about her a lot, and miss her and the way it was when it was a two way relationship.
3.) For now, I need to communicate with her on Skype only for the time being. We can text to set up a time to Skype, but that's it. No phone calls, no texts about other things. I need Skype communication.
I am debating about what else to say... I think that maybe it's best I keep this clear/simple and not over-complicate it (like I do most of the time. Sigh.)
Thanks all for helping me think this through.
I am still frustrated with her too. I'm trying to take my anger as sign there are some unresolved issues for me, and that I need to hold my boundaries with her.
@Cashew - thanks for the strong support. It helps. :hug:s back to you. @lostandforgotten - you help me feel so heard. :hug: Thanks @Suzetig for encouragement too. :) @hodge - thanks for the reminder that I'm not responsible for her. :) @EveHarrington - you are right, she's got to be invested in her own healing. I'm realizing she isn't willing to do what it takes.
It's actually new... to me. I'm not sure if it is new in general. I don't do passive aggressive. No, just no. Not even. I'll call her out on it and give her a chance to try again one last time. But if she keeps engaging in it... I can't do that. It's going to be the end of the relationship.Does she pull this kind of stunt on you often? Not that it really matters. Once is too much. It's like, baaaaaack that shit up. Now. Try again, without the manipulative BS, or bite me.
@RecedingMoonlight - Thanks for the reminder that I'm not responsible for her emotions... I think I also have to remember that I don't have to take them in either. Your example of how you handled things with your sufferer was really good! I think it's very similar to what I need to do with her, if I stay in the relationship.
I am reminded of what she explained she felt was supportive from her ex-boyfriend/abuser. He would act cold, distant, unreactive to her having severe flashbacks and panic to the point where is was not able to speak and vomiting for hours. It's good to not react... but he went further to the point of unresponsiveness. But she described him but having no response to her suffering or abusing her for her having emotions. In fact. the examples she gave me of him being "supportive" sounded more like a narcissists or sociopaths response to someone in pain, not one of healthy support and/or boundaried distance. He would do things that sounded cold, heartless, and self absorbed to me. She was able to identify they were in co-dependent relationship, he was abusive verbally and sexually. But I don't think she understands at all that when someone expresses this level of suffering, healthy people (or people trying to be healthy) have a response to it. I can't save her. I can't do much actually. But it's not gonna "fall off my radar." She matters. Her life matters. She has value.
@scout86 - thanks for the feedback! I think what you are pointing out is essential.
Well said. I can clearly define to her what works for me and what a good friendship through difficult times looks like for me. She will either say she can try to do that, do it or not. It's probably really important that I do this all the more, in light of her recent very unhealthy relationships and possibly skewed perspective on what is healthy.There might be a point in letting this run awhile and see where it ends up. But only if you can keep it in perspective and not get sucked in to the drama. Have a clear idea of what a friendship looks like to you and what appropriate ways for friends to treat each other are. Stick to your guns and see what happens. It's in HER best interest to learn to deal with other people straight up and dump the whole "poor me" thing. You can give her the opportunity to continue the friendship and learn something about playing well with others. She can chose to accept or reject the offer.
@ Anonymous poster - I think you have a valid perspective and I'm glad for the input. I'm not sure what is and isn't dissociation, and you are right, I could be giving her the benefit of the doubt too much. She is honest that she does remember the texts. (which doesn't mean it was or wasn't dissociative....) I am trying to understand her through the lense of my own experiences or how I would think or handle the situation. Years ago, early into my treatment for PTSD, I actually sent suicidal texts to my therapist and I didn't remember. I didn't initiate any contact with her to reassure her. My therapist contacted me about them and my response was a panicky "omg, yeah, I'm ok... I think... I don't know, I wrote that?! I guess I am not doing as well as I thought."
Most importantly, I was able to connect and understand my therapists concern and need to make sure I was ok even when I didn't remember.
I'm obviously not my friend's therapist, so it's a very different situation... but still, the lack of her understanding hey, yeah, I reasonably would like reassurance you are still alive... this is odd to me.I wonder if this is perhaps related to the long relationship with her ex-boyfriend and if she got used to having no response from him (or an abusive response). In the end, only she can tell me why, and I hope to ask her more to see if I can understand her experience better and what is happening here.
I think she may be crying out for attention. Maybe she needs it - but different than the kind of attention she is used to. I can't be the one to give her what she really needs. I do agree she needs to get into some kind of more intensive therapy, and DBT would probably be one great option. If she brings this subject up, I will be encouraging her to talk to her therapist about what he recommends.
@joeylittle - thank you for the great feedback. I think I know what you are talking about, and I'm thinking of areas of my life where I can have that ability to say, "this is my decision, accept it or not, it doesn't change" - in a way where I'm calm and I'm not trying to persuade the other person to come to any agreement with me. I think you are right on about the "unwinnable war to get other people to change." Bingo. I can only change me. Not her. I have to accept that she is where she is at. There is a kind of strength is not actually even trying to convince someone. Sometimes they listen more carefully, often they don't, but I don't get dragged into a war I can't win. I'm also clear about what my limits are without having them negotiated.
It is important for me to remember that I am at risk of getting too easily drawn in to having a different ending here because of losing others to suicide.
It is my hope to communicate clear what I need to stay in the relationship, to be able to have contact right now, and if she can't do it, she can't do it. This friend now... she will reach out for the help she knows is there if/when she is ready and make the changes needed to stay friends, or she won't and her life will carry on, or she will push everyone healthy away, or she will end her life.
I can't change what she will choose to do. I think this has been important for me to re-accept.
On the post it notes on my monitor, which I will see when on Skype with her, I actually put down (ok I know this seems really silly but this kind of thing has helped for work related meetings on Skype)
"I am letting go of the 'need' to convince her."
"I have made a decision to engage in healthy relationships."
"I will make clear what I need for this to be a healthy relationship."
"It's ok to say no, I can't do that without explaining."
I plan to tell her:
1.) I am not abandoning her. I'm letting her know what I need in order to stay in the relationship.
2.) I care about her a lot, and miss her and the way it was when it was a two way relationship.
3.) For now, I need to communicate with her on Skype only for the time being. We can text to set up a time to Skype, but that's it. No phone calls, no texts about other things. I need Skype communication.
I am debating about what else to say... I think that maybe it's best I keep this clear/simple and not over-complicate it (like I do most of the time. Sigh.)
Thanks all for helping me think this through.