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Love and Light from HEALING Creek


 I Was Addicted To "Love"
 



I don't really know if you or anyone else is addicted to love.  

I know I was addicted to "love" or what I thought was "love". 
 
It took years and thousands of dollars in therapy for me to say that sentence!
 
I didn't get it.  In the beginning, I probably didn't want to get it.  On a good day, I felt like I was starring in my own romantic comedy ... you know the kind where the girl meets the bad boy and changes him into the man of her dreams ... but I didn't seek therapy for riding off into the sunset!
 
Some of you know my story.  For those of you who don't, I'll share the abbreviated version. 



Most of the men in my life had been bad boys.  All of those relationships started off with the stars realigning to form a perfect heart for us to walk through ... Okay, I'm exaggerating, but you get my point ... When I fell for a guy, my path was magically lined with roses.  My heart would skip a beat when I heard their voice.  I would hang on their every word.  I could spend hours just getting lost in their eyes.  If there hand brushed against mine, I felt like I could feel their touch the rest of the day.  Everything about them was scrumptious.  I couldn't get or give enough.  It was better than drugs or alcohol!  It was in LO ... er, I mean ... ADDICTION.
 
It was exciting.  It was dramatic.  It had all the good girl-bad boy dynamics.  It was a roller coaster ride with spine tingling highs and gut wrenching lows. 
 
For me, every one of those addictive relationships ended with just as much drama and intrigue. 

The boys were bad boys.  Duh!  Bad boys don't have traditional standards.  Bad boys do whatever they want to do.  Bad boys can drink, smoke, do drugs, gamble and cheat on you, and sometimes, they can do all that before the rest of the world has finished breakfast!

I had to be honest with myself.  I liked the excitement.  I liked the idea of being able to tame a wild horse.  I thought I was up for the challenge!  I got thrown every single time.  I got hurt.  I didn't ever tame a single one.
 


The last time was the worst time.  For the sake of this conversation, I will call him Aydan (not his real name).  I ignored all the signs that the relationship was ending and hung on tight.  He was saying one thing one minute and something else the next.  I decided Aydan was just confused and needed my help. 

I drove over to his house, determined to do my best.
  The conversation went pretty well until the phone rang.  Aydan didn't answer the phone, but his whole demeanor changed.  He seemed anxious and distracted.  He tried to provoke an argument, but I was determined NOT to argue or let the conversation end on a bad note. 

Aydan had his own ideas.  Aydan got up and went to the other room.  I thought he went to get a beer, maybe go to the bathroom ... I was wrong.  I heard the shotgun being cocked before he walked through the door.  His face was red, almost purple and his eyes were dark. 
 
I looked down. 
 
Aydan was hollering but I have no idea to this day what he was saying ... I was lost in my own thoughts.  I thought of my family, my kids ... I thought I was going to die. 

I started praying, "Lord, I just ask You to surround this place with a legion of angels.  I ask that You cover us and this house with the blood of Jesus and keep us safe.  Thank You Lord for the peace of Your Holy Spirit.  In Jesus name, Amen."  It felt so good, I kept on praying.  I figured if I was going to die anyway, I may as well be speaking to the next One I'd see!
 
Aydan back off ... I believe he backed off because God answered my prayer.  I believe that even the worst storms end.  Thank you Lord!
 
I ran.  I got away.  I stayed away.
 


But even after all that, I still hoped ... I didn't understand why my feelings were still so strong.  My world was spinning out of control and I couldn't find my balance.  I was going through major withdrawal! 
I made excuses for him.  I tried to explain away his actions.  I kept wishing I could turn back time.  I curled up in a little ball and listened to "co-dependent no one will ever love you like I love you love songs".  I spent hours and hours, obsessively writing pages and pages of things I wished for ... I kept running over the relationship in my mind, looking for clues of why things got so bad.  I made myself miserable contemplating questions that had no answers! 

THERE WERE TOO MANY OBSESSIVE, CO-DEPENDENT, ROSE-COLORED THOUGHTS TO LIST ...
 
Why was I still hoping for a fairy tale ending?
 
Why was I even wishing for some sort of resolution?
 
Why was I willing to let him off the hook?
 
Why couldn't I just face the fact that there are bad people in this world?
 
That kind of thinking was sending me down the wrong road.  It might have been good for me to get those feelings out, but it was also dangerously close to the same thing that a drug addict does when they talk about their first high!  It isn't anything but ... 

Addictive Thinking!

I remember thinking, "Maybe, I just misunderstood?"
 
From a stronger part of myself, a single thought rose up, "What is wrong with you, Taylor?  It is kind of hard to misinterpret a loaded shotgun pointed right at your head!  Wake up!"
 


Just like an addict, I was looking for a "fix", or maybe, it's more correct to say, "a way to fix everything"!
 
That's what being co-dependent is all about.  Co-dependents learn early to live the lie that if we just be a little better, if we just try a little harder, then everything will be okay and we will get the love we are missing. 

Aydan had so much anger and a need to release it.  I had an equal need to try to convert his anger, his crimes, his punishment into the love and acceptance I wanted so badly.  Some of us waste whole lifetimes trying to be good enough for someone to love us. 

Of course, Aydan was abusive before that last day.  He called me names and criticized me constantly.  I hated it when he pushed me or slapped me but I always found a way to make his bad behavior tolerable.  I didn't know that abuse has a cycle.  I hoped it would get better.  I didn't know that abuse always gets worse. 
 
The gun was the last straw.  From the moment Aydan walked into the room with a gun, something inside me snapped.
 
Guns are NOT negotiable.
 
Before that, I had bought into all the lies ... the lie that he couldn't help himself ... the lie that his past was stopping him from having the kind of life everyone else has ... the lie that I needed to understand ... the lie that I could make things better ... All those lies are nothing but ...
 
Addictive Thinking!
 
I woke up!  It was like I was seeing Aydan for the first time.  Of course, I saw his anger.  It was all over the place!
 
BUT look what it took to wake me up!



That experience changed the way I looked at myself and when the view of my self changed, everything changed!  I was determined to fight back because no matter how bad things had gotten, I had survived.  I was alive!  I had lived through the worst day of my life.  After all that, I couldn't go anywhere but up! 
 
I had to take ownership of my own path.  I had to accept responsibility for my part in the nonsense in my life.  There was a little girl inside me that wanted someone to make up for all the hurt I felt as a little girl.  None of those "Bad boys" wanted to take care of my needs!  I was only valuable to any of them as long as I took care of their needs.  The minute I showed any need at all, I immediately diminished in value to them. 

I had to stand on my own two feet and find my own value.  I had to forgive myself.  I even learned to forgive the ones who had hurt me, because that is the only way I could truly be free to grow past them.
 


Addictive Thinking ALMOST Got The Best Of Me! 
 
That is what ADDICTION looks like ...  but ... That is what RECOVERY looks like too!  Addiction only felt like REAL LOVE because it's the closest I had ever been to love!  But Addiction is NOT LOVE.  Addiction takes away from our lives.  LOVE adds to our lives.
 
Getting over addiction of any kind is not easy.  I was like any other addict.  Addicts don't want to give up what we've got or what we think we have got.  We deny the negative effects of our addiction on our lives and the lives of our families and friends.  We minimize and justify our wacky ideas about TRUE LOVE, but deep down, we know we are missing the boat.
 


In the beginning of recovery,
I asked my therapist, "I hear what you are telling me about the difference between addiction and love, but if this isn't real love, why does it hurt so much?"
 
He just smiled and said,   
 
Addiction is REAL!  It does HURT!  It hurts to be an addict and it hurts to stop being an addict ... but it's worth it.
 
He was right.  It was worth it. 
 
Healing didn't happen in a straight line.  Recovery is messy business.  It calls up every thing in our lives and requires that we take a long, hard look at ourselves.  It wasn't always easy for me to look in the mirror.  I didn't always like what I saw.  There were breakthrough moments!  There were epiphanies!  I loved those moments of accomplishment, but I learned to welcome the lows too because they are part of the process.  It is the natural rhythm of things.  We don't have to fear one moment.  We can embrace and welcome each moment and every mood.  There is beauty in it all. 
 
I had to make changes in the way I look at myself and the rest of the world to survive.  I couldn't keep the idea that there is good in EVERYBODY because that's just not true.  I couldn't keep the idea that if I tried a little harder and worked a little more, everything would magically turn out okay, because sometimes, in spite of our very best efforts, things don't turn out okay.  It hurt to give up that idealistic view of the world, but the seasoned view I have now is not so bad.
 


Tomorrow, I will talk about addictive thinking in a less personal way ... If you see yourself or someone you care about in my story, the next post might be helpful ...


Posted by kktaylorcc at 12:11 PM - 6 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Is It Love Or Are You Addicted To Love
 


One of the toughest things for me to understand was that some of the things I called "love" weren't really "love" at all, but addictive behaviors.  I think I was more in love with being in love than the actual person ... It took me a while to see that I wasn't attached to any of them as much as I was attached to "the idea of them".  Melody Beattie (author of Co-Dependent No More) explained the difference between love and addiction way better than I can:



The Difference Between Love & Addiction
  


Love                               
Room to grow, expand; desire for other to grow.
Addiction

Dependent, based on security and comfort; use intensity of need and infatuation as proof of love (may really be fear, insecurity, loneliness).  


Love 

Separate interests; other friends; maintain other meaningful relationships.
Addiction
Total involvement; limited social life; neglect old friends, interests.  


Love

Encouragement of each other's expanding; secure in their own worth.
Addiction
Preoccupation with other's behavior; dependent on other's approval for own identity and self worth.  


Love

Trust; Openness.
Addiction
Jealousy, possessiveness, fears, competition.  


Love

Mutual integrity preserved.
Addiction
One partner's needs suspended for the other's; self-deprivation.  


Love

Willingness to risk and be real.
Addiction
Search for perfect invulnerability - eliminates possible risks.  


Love

Room for exploration of feelings in and of relationship.
Addiction                                                                   
Reassurance through repeated, ritualized activity.  


Love

Ability to enjoy being alone.
Addiction
Intolerance - unable to endure separations (even in conflict); hang on even tighter.  Undergo withdrawal - loss of appetite, restless, lethargic, disoriented agony.  


Breakups:


Love

Accept breakup without feeling a loss of own adequacy and self worth.
Addiction
Feel inadequate, worthless; often one-sided decision.  


Love

Wants best for partner, though apart; can become friends.
Addiction
Violent ending - often hate the other; try to inflict pain; manipulation to get the other back.


One-Sided Addiction
  
Denial, fantasy; overestimation of other's commitment.  Seeks solutions outside self - drugs, alcohol, new lover, change of situation.



No wonder I was confused!  It helped to look at the differences because it gave me something concrete that I could work on.  One thing for sure ... I needed to stop living for everyone else and start living for me!  

Melody Beattie said that too: 



Live Your Own Life
  

We may be in so much emotional distress we think we have no life;  all we are is our pain.  That's not true.  We are more than our problems.  We can be more than our problems.  


Just because life has been this painful so far
doesn't mean it has to keep hurting.
Life doesn't have to hurt so much,
and it won't - if we begin to change.
It may not be all roses from here on out,
but it doesn't have to be all thorns either.
We need to and can develop our own lives.
  


We take into account our responsibilities to other people, because that is what responsible people do.  But we also know we count too.  We try to eliminate "shoulds" from our decisions and learn to trust ourselves.  If we listen to ourselves and our higher power, we will not be misled.  Giving ourselves what we need and learning to live self-directed lives requires faith.  We need enough faith to get on with our lives, and we need to do at least a little something each day to begin to move forward.

 

We can learn to trust ourselves again.  Most co-dependents have been "taking care" of everyone in their world for a long time.  Just stop.  Let everyone fend for themselves for a little bit and direct all that energy toward taking care of you.  It might feel a little awkward at first, but I promise it's worth it! 

I wish all of you could share the view I have now.  I love seeing women (and men, because men can be co-dependent too) discover how much they really have learned and how capable they really are.  It is truly beautiful to see people turn their energy inward, learning to take better care of themselves, trying out new boundaries for themselves and others, getting back in touch with themselves and their true feelings ...

Does that sound like a tall order?  Does that sound like an impossible dream?  It's not!  None of us changed ourselves and the way we lived all at once.  We recovered, one day at a time, one lesson at a time, one step at a time ...  

Think of all that energy you have spent on helping/changing/fixing everyone else and imagine what would happen if you changed one thing about yourself every day or even every other day for the next year ... How much better do you think you would feel a year from now?  Think about how good it would feel to feel better than you feel right now.  It's possible! 

We'll talk more tomorrow ...   



(excerpts from Co-dependent No More by Melody Beattie)



 

Posted by kktaylorcc at 11:19 AM - 25 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 The Gift Of Light
 






Then ... I Was Beguiled
Caught Up
Entrapped & Ensnared
Alone & Afraid
Lost

BUT
 
Today is a new day and a better time
and best of all ...

I AM NO LONGER
beguiled,
caught up,
entrapped and ensnared,
alone and afraid
lost ...

I AM FREE
of those things that hampered me !!!






Posted by kktaylorcc at 10:50 AM - 22 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Pisces Birthdays On Blogstream
 





http://www.astro-uk.dircon.co.uk/pisces.html
Pisces - Water - compassion, imagination & sacrifice
Feb 19 to Mar 20


     


Feb 19  ~  Whit's Whittlings by Whit's Whittlings


Feb 23  ~  Mr. Blog of Happily Ever After by Mr and Mrs Blog

 
Feb 28  ~  
Deb's Diddies... A Wandering Mind by deeej


Feb 28  ~  Out of the mouth of Spud by Pamela


March 1  ~  Lucy's Hubby
You can leave greetings at Lucy's place:
Lucy. by Lucy.


March 6  ~  Go Heels by Rusty Dusty


March 6  ~  A New Day by happyornot


March 8  ~  
Bella's Gotta Brand New Blog! by Bella

 

March 9  ~  A Life Examined by Gina2
 

March 15  ~  fungus bungus by Lorna Heartston
 
 

March 18  ~  Starbeamer by Cuddle40
 

March 20  ~  Texas and Beyond by RoieVanBib


     


If I have forgotten anyone,
please let me know so I can add them too!
We have a lot of birthday cake!


Posted by kktaylorcc at 9:51 AM - 4 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
 Melody Beatty Called It Un-Dependence
 



Ron introduced me to a new word yesterday - "inter-dependent" ... Melody Beattie uses the word UN-dependence in her book, Co-Dependent No More:



Un-dependence
 

Whether co-dependents appear fragile and helpless, or sturdy and powerful, most of us are frightened, needy, vulnerable children who are aching and desperate to be loved and cared for.  

This child in us believes we are unlovable and will never find the comfort we are seeking; sometimes this vulnerable child becomes too desperate.  People have abandoned us, emotionally and physically.  People have rejected us.  People have believed us, let us down.  People have never been there for us; they have not seen, heard or responded to our needs.  We may come to believe that people will never be there for us.  For many of us, even God seems to have gone away.  

We have been there for so many people.  Most of us desperately want someone to finally be there for us.  We need someone, anyone, to rescue us from the stark loneliness, alienation, and pain.  We want some of the good stuff, and the good stuff is not in us.  Pain is in us.  We feel so helpless and uncertain.  Others look so powerful and assured.  We conclude the magic must be in them.  

So we become dependent on them.  We can become dependent on lovers, spouses, friends, parents, or our children.  We become dependent on their approval.  We become dependent on their presence.  We become dependent on their need for us.  We become dependent on their love, even though we believe we will never receive their love; we believe we are unlovable and nobody has ever loved us in a way that met our needs.  

Needing people too much can cause problems.  Other people become the key to our happiness.  I believe much of the other-centeredness, orbiting our lives around other people, goes hand in hand with co-dependency and springs out of our emotional insecurity.  I believe much of this incessant approval seeking we indulge in also comes from insecurity.  The magic is in others, not us, we believe.  The good feelings are in them, not us.  The less good stuff we find in ourselves, the more we seek it in others.  They have it all; we have nothing.  Our existence is not important.  We have been abandoned and neglected so often that we also abandon ourselves.  

Sometimes, no human being could be there for us in the way we need them to be - to absorb us, care for us, and make us feel good, complete and safe.  

Many of us expect and need other people so much that we settle for too little.  We may become dependent on troubled people - alcoholics and other people with problems.  We can become dependent on people we don't particularly like or love.  Sometimes, we need people so badly we settle for nearly anyone.  We may need people who don't meet our needs. 

We may find ourselves in situations where we need someone to be there for us, but the person we have chosen cannot or will not do that.  

We may even convince ourselves that we can't live without someone and will wither and die if that person is not in our lives.  If that person is an alcoholic or deeply troubled, we may tolerate abuse and insanity to keep him or her in our lives, to protect our source of emotional security.  Our need becomes so great that we settle for too little.  Our expectations drop below normal, below what we ought to expect from our relationships.  

Imagine getting credit for the behaviors we ordinarily mortals do as a matter of course.  What is so lovable?  No response?  The answer doesn't come, but the power of being emotionally stuck is far greater than the power of reason.  

Ultimately, too much dependency on a person can kill love.  Relationships based on emotional insecurity and need, rather than love, can become self-destructive.  They don't work.  Too much need drives people away and smothers love.  It scares people away.  It attracts the wrong kind of people.  And our real needs don't get met.  Our real needs become greater and so does our despair.  We center our lives around this person, trying to protect our source of security and happiness.  We forfeit our lives to do this.  And we become angry at this person.  We are being controlled by him or her.  We are dependent on that person.  We ultimately become angry and resentful at what we are dependent on and controlled by, because we have given our personal power and rights to that person.  

There is no magic, easy, overnight way to become un-dependent. 



Here are some ideas that may help:

  1. Finish up business from our childhoods, as best we can.  Grieve.  Get some perspective.  Figure out how events from our childhoods are effecting what we're doing now.
    ... Of course he had never been there for me.  He was an alcoholic.  We had never been there for anyone, including himself.  I also began to realize that underneath my sophisticated veneer, I felt unlovable.  Very unlovable.  Some where, hidden inside of me, I had maintained a fantasy that I had a loving father who was staying away from me - who was rejecting me - because I wasn't good enough.  There was something wrong with me.  Now I knew the truth.  It wasn't me that was unlovable.  It wasn't me that was screwed up, although I know I've got problems. It was him.
  2. Nurture and cherish that frightened, vulnerable, needy child inside us.  The child may never completely disappear, no matter how self-sufficient we become.  Stress may cause the child to cry out.  Unprovoked, the child may come out and demand attention when we at least expect it.
  3. Stop looking for happiness in other people.  Our source of happiness and well-being is not inside others; it's inside us.  Learn to center ourselves in ourselves.
  4. We can learn to depend on ourselves.  Maybe other people haven't been there for us, but we can start being there for us.   We can trust ourselves.  We can handle and cope with the events, problems, and feelings life throws our way.  We can trust our feelings and our judgments.  We can solve our problems.  We can learn to live with unresolved problems, too.  We must trust the people we are learning to depend upon - ourselves.
  5. We can depend on God, too.  He's there, and He cares.  Our spiritual beliefs can provide us with a strong sense of emotional security.  I can find comfort and security in knowing that God is always watching over my life.
  6. Strive for un-dependence.  Begin examining the ways we are dependent, emotionally and financially, on the people around us.  

We can do it.  We don't have to feel strong all the time to be un-dependent and taking care of ourselves. 



We can and probably will have feelings of fear, weakness, and even hopelessness.  That is normal and even healthy.  Real power comes from feeling our feelings, not from ignoring them.  Real strength comes, not from pretending to be strong all the time, but from acknowledging our weaknesses and vulnerabilities when we feel this way.
 

Many of us have dark nights.  Many of us have uncertainty, loneliness, and the pang of needs and wants that beg to be met and yet, go seemingly unnoticed.  Sometimes the way is foggy and slippery, and we have no hope.  All we can feel is fear.  All we can see is the dark.  

You can get through the dark situations, too.  You can take care of yourself and trust yourself.  Trust God.  Go as far as you can see, and by the time you get there, you'll be able to see farther. 

We can do anything we want to ... one day at a time.



Posted by kktaylorcc at 8:59 AM - 2 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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  About Me
Author: kktaylorcc
From Healing Creek, USA
 
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