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Communication in relationships – when it’s good and when it’s not

Healthy communication in a relationship is very much that. “We’ll figure it out together”.

The ability to calmly talk through any issues that may arise together. That’s not to say that there won’t be times when you get annoyed with each other or upset about something your partner says or does. However, if you have a healthy relationship and healthy communication behaviour, you can figure most things out together and feel good about yourself and your partner.

There is no need for raised voices, shouting, name-calling or other poor behaviours such as giving someone the “silent treatment” or acting cold and distant. All of that? That is emotional abuse.

Storytime

This example is from a previous relationship I was in and I share it here, so that if anyone recognizes a similar pattern within their relationship, then you will know that it is not ok – it is abusive.

I won’t say when the relationship was in my life or who it was with – but they know. They read my blog and recognised themselves (and um, if they recognize themselves, then they have recognized the truth). They have left nasty comments on a previous post. No problem, that’s why “delete” exists! However, I will not be silenced.

Have you ever started a conversation with someone and realized that they are not hearing what you are saying? I don’t mean that they cannot hear your words or voice, but that they are participating in a completely different conversation in their head.

I was opening a conversation with my then partner on a matter that was worrying me. It wasn’t about them; it was about me, a concern I had regarding a possible scenario in a public context that I was worried may play out. My aim in bringing it up was to air my concern, seek reassurance and ease my worry. I thought I was in a safe space to talk about it.

Instead, my partner started getting defensive and argumentative about the unlikeliness of my worry actually playing out. Which is fine, but I watched his face morph from warm to cold and closed. I realized that he thought I was somehow criticizing him, but I was baffled as to why.

All that evening and the entirety of the next day he barely spoke to me. Only “yes” or “no” if I asked a direct question i.e. “would you like coffee?” Otherwise, he ignored me completely. And this was in my home.

That evening I plucked up the courage to broach the issue. He was lying on my bed reading (and ignoring me as he had done all day). I sat down and asked him to tell me why he was so angry and how could we fix it.

He started screaming at me and calling me names. When he stopped, I asked him to tell me what he thought he had heard me say the previous evening and when he finally did tell me, he attributed words and context to my conversation that literally never happened or were never actually spoken.

He had spent the day bottled up in his anger and replaying the conversation and over and over and catastrophizing the whole dialogue.

I talked him through it and explained again my rationale in what I was trying to say, that clearly it didn’t come across particularly well and that it had triggered in him an anger that was all consuming. I eventually talked him off the ledge of his anger and he calmed down.

But to get there, to a place where he stopped screaming at me and calling me nasty names took an enormous emotional toll from me. I am ashamed to say that this was not the first time he had lost his shit and screamed and yelled at me, backed me into a corner, given me the cold shoulder and/or the silent treatment for days at a time. But like many of you, I tried to rationalize the behaviour. Don’t.

I asked him (and not for the first time) why he resorted to calling me nasty names as it is hurtful as I would never say such things to him as I would not like to cause him pain. His response? “Good, I’m glad you’re hurt.” That comment. Those words. I had already known I had to leave this unhealthy relationship, but knowing that he was genuinely happy that I felt hurt, that is next level and  sent chills down my spine.

When someone is that enraged, cortisol floods your body in response to fear. Cortisol is the “fight or flight” hormone and is triggered in high stress situations. It’s not good for your body to be producing high levels of cortisol on a regular basis. Read more about it here (click the link).

One of my last and lingering memories of this man is him lying on my bed, his face set in an ugly rictus of rage, screaming abuse and vitriol at me. When I reflect, he actually looked quite unhinged. Not long afterwards the entire relationship imploded. Unsurprisingly. But every single day I am grateful that it ended. I wake with joy each and every day knowing that this person is no longer in my life.

My message to you is this – do not tolerate this type of behaviour. Recognize it for what it is, emotional abuse, and make every effort to leave. This was not a regular disagreement or minor spat. This was a pattern of damaging behaviour that impacted on my emotional well-being and my physical health as well.

Run, don’t walk.

Reach out if you need to talk or need help.

 

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Move on – no, seriously. Move on!

I was watching this guy on TikTok, Paul Scanlon. He’s a mentor and is big on self-awareness and being true to your authentic self.

One of his videos made me laugh and almost spit out my morning coffee!

He basically said: “Don’t blame a clown for acting like a clown. Ask yourself why you keep going to the circus.”

Well then.

Ok.

So today’s message is simple. If you are entangled with a toxic person who literally acts like a clown (aka – gaslighting, emotionally abusive, narcissistic behaviour, lacks empathy and compassion and treats you poorly). Then leave the circus! 🤡

Take the broken pieces of yourself and take the time to heal. Nurture yourself. Practice self-care. If you haven’t already read my blog post on self-care after a relationship breakdown (click the link and it’ll open in a new tab, then come back, I’ll be waiting).

You need to look after you. Don’t worry about them. Clowns will be clowns, they literally just move onto the next one and start their appalling behaviour all over again.

But don’t worry. Karma is real. You won’t necessarily know when or how, but rest assured, karma is waiting for them in the wings and when she strikes, they won’t know what hit them.

You focus on you. Love and nurture yourself. Surround yourself with your people who love and care for you.

Do something special for yourself. Stop the spiraling thoughts. Focus on every positive thing in your life, even the small ones. Be grateful you are here and that you have another day to make your own.

You have got this! I believe in you, because I believe in myself too!

 

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Mindful March and what the heck is closure?

An interesting thing came across my radar today.

It’s “Mindful March” from the Action for Happiness website (click the link for more detail). It’s a downloadable and printable calendar that has a mindfulness reminder for every day.

I’ve downloaded the calendar and put it up on my fridge as a daily reminder for myself, I’ve even added it to my Google calendar on my phone in case I need a reminder during the day when I’m at work or out and about!

Today (March 4) is “notice how you speak to yourself, and choose to use kind words.”

Mindful March calendar

It is too easy to be self-critical and speak poorly of oneself or have negative thoughts. I regularly hear friends berate themselves for something they feel they have done wrong (regardless of if they have or have not), or feel that they have caused to be done wrong to them.

If someone has done you dirty, that is entirely on them. Not you. Be kind to yourself and recognize that you are worthy of kindness and respect.

It reminds me of a friend of mine who recently went through a relationship breakup. Every time I see her she is wondering what she did wrong, she berates herself for her perceived failings. She is stuck in a spiral of regularly texting this man that left her and receiving no reply. She constantly states that she wants “closure”, she wants to understand what went wrong. She is stuck in a negative downward spiral of self-doubt, recrimination and sadness.

My feedback to her is to stop texting. Just stop. That she should block or delete his number from her phone. I have said that you cannot ask for “closure” from the person that has caused you pain. She literally wails that she must have closure.

The thing is – closure from a relationship breakdown is a myth. The person who broke it off is never the one you should reach out to for closure. The minute that person walked away from your life is when closure happened. It’s done and over.

What my friend wants is to understand. However, there are things in this life that we will never understand. We can only process our feelings and understand what it means to ourselves and from there move onwards into a new life. It is not easy and sometimes you may feel you are stumbling rather than progressing forwards, but you have to keep moving and trust me, it will get better.

My friend says that she wants to be like me. Strong and certain and with a clear forward focus. It’s lovely of her to say, but it’s not always easy for me either. I tell her that she does have that inner strength, she is an amazing woman worthy of love and kindness and more recently I have seen her smile and she said that she feels something has shifted within her in a good way. There is that glimmer of light that it will be ok for her.

For me? I am my mother’s fierce daughter. I have been forged in the fires of life’s trials. I always emerge at the other end stronger, more compassionate and having learned something valuable about life that I can take forward with me.

Be kind. To yourself and to others. And if someone does you dirty, do not blame yourself. It really was not you, it was them!

 

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Never give up!

…and don’t settle!

Don’t settle for mediocrity. I know, I speak from experience! I have settled for the mediocre and it does not work. Value your self-worth and expect reciprocity.

Do not allow anyone to disrespect you! Ever!

The mediocre will just pull you down to their low vibrational energy.

I am a published author and I enjoy writing. Feedback on my work is always positive and motivating and for that I am grateful.

I came across a person in my life who absolutely hated that I write and was always ready to criticize and put me down. I actually shut down my first blog because of the incessant criticism and negativity.

Then my daughter bought me a writing journal and a couple of writing related books for my last birthday, with a comment that I should re-start a new blog and go back to what I love.

I can’t thank her enough and the other wonderful people in my life, women & men who have encouraged me to not only re-find my voice, but to speak my truth and to recall my intrinsic value as a human being.

My blog is steadily gaining followers and a big shout out to each and every one of you! I love you all 😍 I’ve also created a FaceBook page for my blog and that is also gaining followers. I’ve made use of targeted advertising on FaceBook to increase my reach. I know not everyone likes to see ads popping up in their feed, but I’m trying to broaden my reach and I’ve found it to be successful with very few detractors and those I’m happy to ignore. If you don’t like it, scroll on by!

So don’t give up. If you have a dream, chase it. Channel your inner strength, believe in yourself, ignore the naysayers and reach for the sky!

…and that low-vibration person who constantly criticized me? Yeah, who? 😂

strong woman self worth

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How to stop a narcissist in their tracks!

Disengage. Ignore. Give them no oxygen. 

According to the Mayo Clinic: “Narcissistic personality disorder is a mental health condition in which people have an unreasonably high sense of their own importance. They need and seek too much attention and want people to admire them. People with this disorder may lack the ability to understand or care about the feelings of others.”(Mayo Clinic )

If you ever have the misfortune of being involved with such a person. Run.

Things to look out for that indicate this type of personality – some of these I know from personal experience interacting with such personalities, other indicators come from well-regarded research:

  1. They have an unreasonably high sense of self-importance and require constant, excessive admiration (Mayo Clinic);
  2. Controlling behaviour (trying to tell you what to wear or what not to wear, isolating you from friends and/or family);
  3. Consider themselves superior to everyone around them;
  4. Manipulative behaviour. “when a person uses controlling and harmful behaviors to avoid responsibility, conceal their true intentions, or cause doubt and confusion. Manipulation tactics, such as gaslighting, lying, blaming, criticizing, and shaming, can be incredibly damaging to a person’s psychological well-being” Very Well Health
  5. Throw temper tantrums to get their own way;
  6. Self aggrandizement – make themselves sound important, even when they are not;
  7. Be critical of everyone else;
  8. Take advantage of other people;
  9. Lie to get what they want – literally, they will lie about anything to get their own way;
  10. Belittle other people to make themselves feel superior (Mayo Clinic)

Often narcissists suffer crippling low self-esteem (even when aiming to appear superior), they are riddled with insecurities and often self-loathing.

They have secret feelings of insecurity, shame, humiliation and fear of being exposed as a failure. (Mayo Clinic)

There is a common misconception that narcissists target weaker personalities in order to control and damage them. However, a narcissist will often target intelligent and emotionally strong people, they see it as a challenge. If they can control, subdue and damage the self-esteem of a strong person, then the narcissist feels better about themselves. As if they have confirmed their perceived “superiority.”

These people need treatment, yet they are unlikely to recognize their own behaviour. They lack insight and self-awareness and they blame everyone else for their problems, they try to make themselves out to be the victim. Literally. They never acknowledge that they may be in the wrong and they never apologize for poor behaviour.

On a final note, this is what the Mayo Clinic has to say:

“People with narcissistic personality disorder may not want to think that anything could be wrong, so they usually don’t seek treatment. If they do seek treatment, it’s more likely to be for symptoms of depression, drug or alcohol misuse, or another mental health problem. What they view as insults to self-esteem may make it difficult to accept and follow through with treatment.”

That is really sad. Sad for the narcissist as they desperately need treatment and, in spite of their damaging behaviour, they are often depressed, moody and unhappy and suffer lifelong misery. Sad for the people that unfortunately get entangled with a narcissist as they will be emotionally damaged by the encounter.

Unless you are particularly mentally strong, recognize the behaviour and take action to keep yourself safe. Run. Run and don’t look back. Disengage. Ignore. Give them no oxygen.

compulsive liar traits

 

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Gaslit…

Much has been written about gaslighting behaviour in relationships. It’s a term that has entered into psychological literature and the current lexicon when talking about emotionally abusive relationships. See this link for more information What Is Gaslighting? What You Need To Know – Forbes Health

Gaslighting is, in essence, a behaviour whereby one person manipulates the thinking of another person. Primarily to make the other person doubt their own reality and be easier to control.

It’s a concept that I have found interesting to read about and something that entered my own life at one point in time. So I thought I would share my experience of that time.

I was once unfortunately involved in a relationship with an absolute master manipulator. His skill was unsurpassed. He had a lifetime of manipulating, lying to and controlling the women in his life. I was just one in an endless stream.

It started early on, probably in the first couple of months, if not weeks. His external façade was charming, slick and had an appearance of warmth and bonhomie.

I recall one evening when we had dinner together, shared a bottle of wine, and were relaxing and chatting during and afterwards. Not chatting about anything controversial, just pleasant conversation.

All the sudden he pointed a finger at me and said: “I need to tell you something about yourself that you do not want to hear”.

I was taken aback, to be honest I was pretty sure that I did not want to hear something that I “did not want to hear”.

He continued and said: “You need to know that you can be really cold and remote, and I have to tell you”.

I was shocked as we had been having a lovely, pleasant meal and chat. In fact, our whole early relationship to that point had seemed to be warm and friendly. I was very open with him and trusting and I’m fairly sure that I was not in the least cold or remote.

I said that I did not feel that I am either cold or remote. He insisted that I was and that I had to be told.

Hmmmm….

This same conversation happened at irregular and surprising intervals. Surprising, as they always came after a lovely meal or time spent together (always when drinking wine – so my mind was never quite sharp enough).  Always when I was feeling very warm and loving towards him. Afterwards I was left feeling hurt and upset and a bit shaky. It aways felt a bit surreal (that is one of the ways many recipients of gaslighting behaviour describe it, I didn’t realize that until I read more about it) and I felt that I had slipped into the twilight zone. It always began in the exact same way. The script was always the same. “I need to tell you something you do not want to hear…” followed by the accusation of coldness/remoteness – when I was always the very opposite of that.

I disagreed with him, and he insisted that he was correct and that I just did not realize what I was like, and he had to tell me – repeatedly.

I would puzzle over this when I was on my own. I really am not a cold or remote person. But I started to doubt myself. Was he seeing something in me that I could not? He said it often enough and randomly enough that it caused me to constantly examine my behaviour and emotions when I spent time with him.

Eventually I checked in with family and friends who have known me either all my life or a great part thereof. I just needed a reality check, no-one who knows me well thought what he said was true, they always confirmed that I am the exact opposite. Heck, I even called my ex-boyfriend for his feedback/advice. I figured that an ex would not pull any punches in being honest with me – even though we were no longer together, we still stayed in touch. I asked him if during our relationship he ever found me to be cold or remote. He was really surprised and said absolutely not. He said I was always warm and lovely, and he could not imagine anything further from who I am as a person.

The next time the script came up I finally said: “I’m neither of those things and I do not accept you saying that about me”. So that one stopped.

Over the next couple of years, the script changed. It always began with the “I need to tell you something you do not want to hear…” Followed by a description of some terrible flaw of my character. Sometimes the comments were quite ludicrous, and I would just quietly disagree, and he would get angry and keep insisting. Then the next day he always acted like nothing had happened or been said and he would act completely normal. Again, very surreal.

Fortunately, it no longer worked on me. I recognised it for what it was – gaslighting. Never again did I doubt myself in that relationship, however I do realize I should have left a lot earlier. I recognised what he was doing, I made a choice to stay for the companionship, but in the end, nothing is worth being treated poorly.

I am right where I should be quote

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