When I Knew My Mother Did Not Love Me – Letting Go and Moving On.

There have been times throughout these years  when I’ve come to know something without a doubt. Whether it’s a reality of my situation or about myself that I’ve until that moment denied, or it’s a reality of someone else in my world that affects me, or it’s a reality of LIFE – it’s been a defining moment that I’ve never forgotten.

Unfortunately the path to insight and enlightenment never runs smoothly – I found most of these occasions oh-so-painful. Because why do we hide the truth from ourselves in the first place? Mostly because it hurts too much? For me, that’s definitely so.

After I left home, I still held on to some fantasy that my mother did, deep down, love me as a mother. That the imaginary mother I’d spent my life hoping would emerge would come out and show her ‘real self’. It’s hard for someone who never existed except in my dreams, to show their ‘real self’.

 

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I hung on to anorexia for many years in the hope that “my mother will love me, and then I’ll be okay, and I’ll be able to get better.” I don’t know what it was that I actually expected from her. Maybe it was just for her to acknowledge the pain that she’d caused me for so many years. Maybe it was for her to just care. I saw other patient’s parents and loved ones come into the hospital all the time, always hugging them, supporting them.  Going into ward rounds with them (ward rounds being the most emotional and terrifying part of our week!). Wanting to be a part of whatever it took to help their loved ones. In comparison, I was very alone. My case workers went into ward rounds if they had the time, and I really appreciated that. They came to visit me. Friends sometimes came too, as long as they weren’t the friends I’d made on that very ward – because there is a ‘no past patient’ visitors policy for good reason. But there wasn’t anyone to hold me and tell me it was all going to be okay and remind me that there was more to life than this. Not that, in hindsight, having that happen would have ‘set me free’ like I imagined it would.

There are LOTS of people who don’t have anybody, and lots of people who might have families but struggle with them immensely so I know I’m far from alone. But it’s very hard to avoid feeling abandoned and uncared for when you are locked up in hospital against your will,  trapped and frightened.

The bottom line is that even had I had the most supportive family from the start, even had my mother come in and apologised for the hurt and abuse, hugged me tight, promised me she wouldn’t hurt me ever again, told me she cared, whatever – even had that happened, it wouldn’t have helped me eating disorder wise. That is something that I’ve slowly had to accept comes down to me alone.

 

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It’s been very, very hard to let go of this imaginary loving, supporting mother. Very hard. I had to admit to myself that she’d never really loved me and that she didn’t love me now, at all. That she would never love me. She wasn’t capable or willing to love me. That all she knew was how to cause harm and she wasn’t going to start changing in her 60′s (as she was then, she’s now in her 70′s) from the person she had been all her life long. She doesn’t even want to change. She’s happy being a malignant narcissist. And yet, I always held tight to the hope that somehow she would change, and the erroneous belief that this would be the key needed to unlock my illness and allow me to heal.

My moment of truth came about five or more years ago. (It’s hard to keep track of when things happened, the fifteen years of continual  hospitalizations are a long blur to me. I even have had quite a number of people come up to me and say hello, start reminiscing  about “this time when we..” and I cannot  remember ever having set eyes on them in my life!)

I had been transferred from the ED unit with heart problems to the emergency department for safety’s sake, later to be transferred to cardiac care. It was there that I was told that they were not expecting at this stage that I would live through this night. The constant purging had dropped my potassium so low that my heart was struggling, and several days of IV’s hadn’t brought it up at all either. My other organs were also starting to fail and in tandem with being emaciated and weak, I was in huge trouble.

At that stage, I still had my mother as my next of kin. (I now no longer have any family next of kin – two special friends have that honour, and they not only would be prepared to be there if needed, they volunteered for this.) My mother was called by the emergency department staff and asked to please come in right away, as her daughter was in a critical condition and not expected to survive the night.

My mother lives an easy 5 minute drive from the hospital. She also, at that time, was driving everywhere all the time, long distances, short distances, daytime, night time, everywhere. There  wasn’t any need for her to even go through the city area as she was on the same side of the city from the hospital.

But this evening (it was about 6pm I remember) her response was something along the lines of “I can’t come in. I couldn’t possibly drive there at night”.

The nurse who called her didn’t give up with that – and she was actually furious when she told me of this response. Not just that, but the nurse who had come down with me from the ED unit and who sat by my side for the next 12 hours, indicated to bring the phone to her and started telling my mother off. It didn’t work.

It was at this moment, that I realised without a doubt, that my mother did not love me, never had, never would. I could no longer deny that.

She didn’t even care if she never saw me alive again.

I made it through that night – it was one of many expectations of me not living that I defied. But the part of me that had hoped my mother could love me, that died.

It still has been years between that revelation, and me being able to totally cut her loose. I remained in touch, kept taking her calls and holding on through the inevitable screaming fits. (We never saw eye to eye, and our conversations would always degenerate into her offending me, or me offending her.) I don’t know why I bothered, but some part of me couldn’t stop trying.

 

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Despite all the abuse – physical and emotional, the neglect, the craziness with food, turning a blind eye to and enabling the abuse from others – I kept forgiving her. I used to be endlessly forgiving. Maybe too forgiving. I gave every excuse in the book for her actions. At some stage, I had to wake up and realise I was flogging a dead horse here.

This all has had a huge effect on me in eating disorder terms. I had to face up to the fact that it really didn’t matter whether my mother loved me or hated me, I still had this disorder, I still had to deal with my problems, I still had to choose ultimately whether I wanted to live or die. I also came to the conclusion over time, that even had my mother been different, the most loving, caring woman on earth – I would still have this eating disorder and still be unable to heal from it just for having her support.

This has been one of the scariest revelations over the years for me – that there is nothing outside of myself, that can change this. Take away every single reason, influence, everything – and I would still have this. This includes being scared of weight gain, wanting to lose weight, being scared of eating, feeling unloved and unsupported, hating myself, being scared to either live or die, dealing with my past, getting anything from the eating disorder at all – I would still have my eating disorder.

It truly has a life of its own, and I truly believe I was born with it lying dormant in me, just biding it’s time for the right conditions and triggers to be present. Take them all away and it’s still part of me that I’m going to have in me forever. I wish I could rip it out, but I can’t – I can only do my best to manage it, like a diabetic must manage their diabetes for life.

Don’t get me wrong - I do believe complete recovery from an eating disorder is possible. I’ve personally witnessed a number of friends achieve this. I just don’t think that it’s possible for everyone, and most likely not myself. There are things I just can’t undo – how can I unlearn how to purge at will, for example, which has been the biggest stumbling block to maintaining my weight for years – because even eating my meal plan, I have that outlet in which I can undo all that good work in just one split second’s weakness. And how can I oust the ED voice from my head, when it’s been there all my life? I can live with it, grow stronger than it, refute it, but I can’t see it not ever being there. Even more, I have a feeling that the C-PTSD and the haunting remnants of my past will never give me much peace either, and all that is very much tied up together.

Even lately, when I’m still maintaining my weight, I’ve started ballet, still working on getting a job (and still hopeful), am doing art classes, more social, more active than in all the more than a decade previously – I haven’t been coping. Every day is a battle – the social anxiety in particular is a huge problem. It often takes me several attempts to get to classes or appointments because I’ll start out, chicken out and come back home, only to turn around again and head out again. I just don’t understand the level of absolute FEAR that keeps popping up for simple everyday things.

The C-PTSD problems, especially the constant dissociating and the abundance of triggers for this everywhere I go, also haunt me big time. It frustrates me because I want to move on, I’ve left my past behind. I do get pangs about just ‘cutting off’ my entire family like I did – but I’m able to see that it was my only choice and that they only will ever keep hurting me if I keep giving them the chance too. So usually when I think of them, I shake my  head and say “Pfffft”. And yet they still follow me everywhere like shadows that only I can see.

Life itself is overwhelming and most days, I’m just not coping with it at all. It is extremely tempting to go crawling back to the disorder because I know it will kill me if I relapse – and that would at least mean it was finally all over with. Because I am SO TIRED.

There still is that ever-present urge to keep living though. To keep fighting, and so I do. That belief that everything that happens is for a reason, and the knowledge that even though I still have so far to go, I’ve come further than I thought possible, and that I already have had people say they have been given hope or inspired by something I’ve written or done or said. That really is an important one for me – my priorities have changed so much over the years – from everything being about me being successful and the best I can be, to wanting to do the best that I can do with what I have. If I can just live a functional life, be happy and content, give Shalimar as happy a life as she could have, and most of all, leave this world in some way a better place for my having been here – that’s all I want now.

The only chance I have of achieving this comes with continuing to fight – but also in letting go. Letting go of past dreams, letting go of past hurts, letting go of people who I used to not be able to imagine living life without. It means grieving all that I’ve lost or will never have. And it means growing up.

I’ve come to realise that there is a part of having an eating disorder that is very childish. Someone once mentioned in a blog – (I cannot remember who, or I’d link you – if it was you, please let me know!) that to have an eating disorder is a bit like throwing a childish tantrum. I’m not happy with the world and with my life and with myself? Time to throw myself down on the floor and kick and scream and hold my breath till I turn blue. Or refuse to eat, throw it up, throw the dishes at those trying to make me eat, throw it in their faces. It’s still a tantrum, whether it’s someone or something else I’m rejecting or my very self.

But not only do I need to grow up and take responsibility for being alive, but I also needed to do a lot of growing up in order to leave my mum behind. True, she never mothered me – but in my imagination, she did. That, at least, was something I clung on to, and I had to give that up like finally parting with a security blanket or favourite teddy bear.

Most of all, I had to learn to start parenting myself. I don’t have much of a clue how to do this, but I’ve started with being kinder to myself, practising self acceptance, and being firm with myself, too. I’ve read a lot of information online to educate myself as to why my mother is the way she is and why, particularly sites like Daughters Of Narcissistic Mothers, which have made me realise how far I am from being alone.  I guess it’s a start – the main thing is that I’m not even relying on the fantasy of having a mother to soothe myself any more.  Neither am I letting my absent ‘mother’ torment me as she did for all that time. I don’t have a mother. I never really did.

 

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I know that whether a family is supportive or unsupportive varies widely among all of us. Eating disorders are not caused by parents/family. They might contribute in some, sure. But they don’t cause it. And for all of us, in the end it comes down to us alone against the eating disorder – only we can fight our own battle.  But support and being loved do make a difference, as does feeling alone, feeling unloved, unsupported, and being constantly in battle with our family.

How has your family relationship affected you in terms of your eating disorder? Have you ever had to cut someone close to you off completely? How did you get through this? 

A huge thank you to everyone for yet again reading through such a long winded post, and for all your comments – your contributions are always so thought-provoking to read!

 

I don’t take kindly to being called a hypocrite by a hypocrite. 

I’ll warn you here – a wall of text is coming at you, and it’s not pretty.

I have thought long and hard about what my response to the recent drama that has erupted should be. There is no easy way to deal with this, and a lot of people have been burnt.

I was going to not name names, but mine has been dragged through the trash over on Nicole‘s blog in these posts, so here I go.  For me, the last straw has been her post My Dream, in which she calls me a hypocrite. But before that, I hung in there and defended her over on GOMI for months, and stayed loyal despite not agreeing to her militant hatred of fat and people as expressed in Buying the Model, where she calls normal women ‘lumpy’, the resulting comments, the comments on The big fat, fat fat article, I’d rather be dead than fat, her comments about Beyonce being fat on my own posts about beautiful women… and then the shit hit the fan.

After her attack of the lovely Missy in I’m Baaaaaack, I stepped out. I said

“Nicole, you know i care for you. But this is just going too far. You DO need to get some help. What did Missy do to you that was so ‘mean’? She CARED. And you threw it back in her face. YOU have been the ‘mean girl’ – to Missy. And posting her photo like this? NOT ON. This is so beneath you. Please get help. I’m out – Still care about you, but I cannot sit and watch you self destruct and lash out and hurt others any more.
Take care xxxx”

Her response has been to follow me around the internet attacking me on other blogs, on my own blog, and to post calling me a hypocrite.
People have asked, what did Missy do? Well this is what Missy did. Missy posted this comment in response to Nicole’s I’d rather be dead than fat post, where Nicole publicly posted a picture of Jessica‘s body idol – which Jess had not wanted public, and expressed her opinion that if Jess would be happy looking like that, then it was okay and she encouraged it.
um…..is this real life????

“when I drop below a certain point/weight (and corresponding aesthetic)….I feel just that, as though my body can stop working at any point.”

what if this is how Jess would feel physically if she reached her ideal? (which could actually continue to change — to perhaps even thinner or more muscular. EDs work that way.) what if pursiung that ideal caused her to feel like the walking dead? heart beating erratically, muscle failure and tremors, obsession, depression,…etc/

not saying this would or would not be the case…just “what if?”

anywhoo- my point is — what if this would also be for Jess “unhealthy” would you still support her pursuit — to the death?
rationalizing all the while that sometimes “the unhealthy is healthy,” as you put it?

do you think you might change your opinion of “she died happy” after she was dead?

Jess, one way to lose weight is to ditch some of your “friends.”
just saying.

i am very concerned. and disturbed. in so many ways.”

As you can see – not an attack. A very concerned (with good reason) comment. Concerned for Jess’s wellbeing over all things.

This and this were Nicole’s responses.  As you can see, not at all appropriate. And if you have time to read the hundreds of comments, the attacks just keep coming. Missy has bowed out – and is fine. She’s wise.

I am a very loyal person. I have lived with mental illnesses all around me. I’ve volunteered with the homeless, of whom a large percentage are in that position because they are mentally ill and have fallen ‘through the cracks’ so to speak. I’ve spent over 150 admissions mostly in a psychiatric ward for my eating disorder where I have had the opportunity to become extremely familiar with mental illnesses and those who live with them. I have good friends with all sorts of problems – and mental illnesses. My best friend in the whole wide world lives with Schizophrenia – and I’ve hung in there despite at times, being scared of losing my friend to a stranger who just happened to inhabit her body and could hit out at times verbally. I’ve seen friends become psychotic, either from starvation in anorexia, or other mental illnesses. I’ve watched friends suffering anorexia and bulimia become distraught and verbally abusive in hospital, even physically fight those trying to help them. I myself, have been abusive both verbally and physically in my own admissions – “I hate you! How could you do this to me? It’s MY body! Mine. Leave me alone! You can’t make me have this! You can’t do this, I won’t let you!” and so forth. Physically I have fought tooth and nail to keep them from nasogastrically feeding me. I am not proud of that, but I was sick. So I have stuck around for friends despite this behaviour (and scarier) in them, because I love them for them – not their behaviour. I separate that from them and support them hoping for their recovery.

This is what I expected to be able to do with Nicole. From the beginning, she was a lovely person to know. She was kind – sending me gifts  and inspiring me to have hope that I can beat the bulimia part of my eating disorder – by adopting a practice of buying my food daily, not keeping food to binge on in the house. I could see myself doing it, whereas before that, I couldn’t imagine it being possible.

But Nicole has changed hugely. At first there were glimpses, little signs that things were not completely okay under that facade, but lately she has spun wildly out of control.  This behaviour – the last straw being her attack on Missy – has gone way beyond ‘sick’ and into just plain nasty – and I believe we are dealing with someone who is a Malignant Narcissist.  Wikipedia describes it as an

“”an extreme form of antisocial personality disorder that is manifest in a person who is pathologically grandiose, lacking in conscience and behavioral regulation, and with characteristic demonstrations of joyful cruelty andsadism“.[1]

I know now, that I can rest easy that stepping out was the best thing to do.  I could stay loyal to Nicole – and if she ever does get help for her problems and settle down and try to be a sincere person, I will gladly again support her. But we have to draw a line – and sticking with a cruel and sadistic person is like placing your own head on a chopping block after handing them the axe.

That said, I now wish to talk about what Nicole has said about me.

If what I am doing makes me a hypocrite, so be it. But I know, in my own heart, that I have been working my arse ON in my efforts for a better, more functional life. I might be far from any kind of ‘well’ in anyone’s language – but I’m getting there.

Several years ago, I was on my deathbed. I had been dying for the past decade. I was never out of hospital for long periods of time – I pretty much have spent more than a decade practically living in that place – fighting them, and fighting for my life. My weight dropped as low as 29 kilograms on my 170cm frame, constantly. Not just once, but many, many times. I would lose the weight pretty much as soon as they discharged me. They stopped taking me up further than 40 kilos to discharge me and I would be back in the low 30′s within a week and my bloods would be dangerously out  of whack. I was on 30+ medications to just keep my body alive daily, as well as constant medical admissions for IV’s to save my life. I had chronic severe neutropenia – meaning I had very few white blood cells and my immunity was dangerously suppressed, so I spent a lot of time in the infectious diseases ward too. A very simple infection – a cold, an infected cut finger – would have killed me, I had nothing to fight it.

I started out a restricter, but after some admissions, learnt to purge. I then slowly became bulimic as control was lost to the urges from a lifetime of starvation. So while I was losing this weight, I was bingeing and purging horrifically, so that my eating disorder (diagnosis is Anorexia type II) was extremely dangerous – all the worst aspects of both anorexia and bulimia combined. It was also a living hell.

Over the last couple of years, even nasogastric feeding did not help me. I could throw up ANYTHING and did so, even when restrained with two point restraints – you are strapped to your bed, on your back, by your wrists. What did stay down, no longer seemed to be used by my body. So I was kept alive with TPN – total parenatal nutrition. I got extremely sick every time I was refed with refeeding syndrome. It was touch and go. I have been told several times I would not make it through the night. I have been told I wouldn’t live to 24, to 28, to 30 – I’m now 34. I wasted to the point that I was not able to sit up myself, could not stand up without support, could not walk. I was a broken mess.

All this time, I was working in therapy – asking for more help, working with my case managers and doctors. I was honest with them, and tried to do what I could to help myself, but it wasn’t much. I felt utterly hopeless in the face of a beast that screamed (still does) 24/7 the most horrible things. I felt overwhelmed by self hatred and in the depths of major depression, which I was first diagnosed with at nine – and felt I needed to die, to stop my horrible-ness from infecting the world.

I reached a point just a couple of years ago, where I was able to ask for more help – despite my fear, I asked them to NOT stop at 40 kilos in this admission – but to take me all the way to 45 kilos – so instead of  just hitting BMI 14, I asked for another whole BMI mark. It’s scary because for me, going above 40 is a huge point of fear. I can’t stand being 40. I can’t stand being in hospital and was basically asking to stay there longer. And they refused. I had to beg and beg before they said they would help me – because they did not believe that I could do it, or that I would keep the weight on anyway.

And I did it, over two admissions and by myself – I ate that weight on. And I have kept it on. It’s two years this May since I have been in hospital and I’m still 45 – 46 kilos. For me – that is a miracle. My treatment team, and the doctors and nurses from the hospital when I bump into them – still gush over what a miracle it is.

I am far from fixed. I am still only BMI 15. I am still living a hell in my mind. So I have a long way to go. But I’m getting there. Over this two years I have been working in therapy – very hard. I have been doing physiotherapy to get my body strong enough to do all the things I could no longer do – this took a huge comittment from myself, since physio is quite painful for me and requires me to do daily exercises despite that pain. I have moved to get away from my family and two abusive, stalking exes – and was fortunate enough to have needed a transfer to a lower ground unit as my severe osteoporosis requires me to not have to constantly walk up and down stairs. I have tackled my chronic pain and been active despite it. I have come a long way, still have a long way to go on the physical and therapy fronts. But from someone who couldn’t even sit up or hold her  head up, to someone who in a few short weeks will be starting ballet barre and pilates classes – wow.

I struggle with C-PTSD every single day, and I cannot use losing weight (and therefore my mind – turning the memories ‘down’ like a volume switch) to escape that any more. Every day I am flooded with flashbacks. I come from a history of severe child abuse – sexually, physically, emotionally, and neglect. I grew up hungry, dirty, and battered, and was bullied at school for being hungry, dirty and battered. It was a cruel upbringing. I then was raped and captive, then stalked, by a two men after I left home. So I have those memories all the time, and it’s not a matter of putting it all behind me – because it doesn’t work like that. I have moved forward, but anything can send me crashing out of reality and into the past – like living in a time machine. It’s extremely real – simple memories do not involve feeling, smelling, hearing what happened as though it’s really happening for the first time – but my flashbacks are that powerful. Using DBT skills (I am not eligible for DBT or CBT groups so I have been working on the skills from those by myself with the help of a case manager) I have learnt to distract myself and bring myself back into the present, to notice my thoughts and not be sucked into them – become an observer, etc, to lessen the severity, but it’s still a daily battle.

I still binge and purge, but nothing like the scale I used to do it on. I also manage to eat and keep down enough food to keep my own weight stable without the need for constant hospital visits. For years, I had a problem with shoplifting, a huge problem, and I have now not stolen for a long time. Probably close to six months – which I realise sounds not very long – but for me It’s such a relief. Morally, I hated myself, hated what I was doing. The urge to grab food and hoard food is still always there – but I don’t steal. This is my own doing too – I asked for help and support and now have someone with me twice a week to go shopping with.

I have help with physical tasks I cannot manage from my home and community care (HACC) people too, I see a psychiatrist once a week, a consultant psychiatrist once a month, a dietician when needed, a mental health case manager weekly, a HACC case manager monthly, Physio several times a week, a GP every couple of weeks, and other appointments as needed eg Endocrinologist and ECG, Echocardiograms, blood tests, scans, x rays etc. It tires me out – it doesn’t sound a lot to someone who works but for me, it’s exhausting. It also takes a lot of mental energy to constantly engage with people who are ‘shrinking’ me in a way.

I have also been working with an agency that helps people who have a mental illness and have been out of work to get a job. This has been a committment over months – appointments, interviews, paperwork. I’m very hopeful about being able to get a job. I would have to start small – cognition is terrible (I cannot read at the moment – even small amounts of reading on the computer are difficult and slow, heartbreaking as I’m a bookworm – and yet I still am trying, constantly in the library) concentration is bad, energy levels are low, pain is high. I also live with constant chronic pain and fatigue. I have bone pain from severe osteoporosis and I have peripheral neuropathy from malnutrition which believe me, is AGONY. Back on the subject – I would have to start small – maybe one shift a week or even fortnight – but it’s a start. Another step forward.

I could go on – I’m sorry for this super-long blog post. But I wanted to defend myself against Nicole’s accusations. In her own words-

“Fiona, Missy Miller, Karen Carpenter, etcetera might preach about birds and Lauren Hill.  But did that give them a clean esophagus?  Did that feed their bodies with nutrients?  Did that create health?  Fuck no.  They are bitches who want to pull you into the depths of their despair.  Don’t fall for it.

They thrive on the great sorrows of their disease.  SICKENING.  GROSS.  DECEPTIVE.

I manage my disease, successfully.

Don’t judge me.  Judge the hypocrites.”

OH for goodness sake, is she for real? This woman calls herself the “Ex-Bulimic” and blogs that she is fashionably raising awareness of eating disorders (and by the way, calls mental illnesses like depression ‘personal weaknesses’.)

Nicole has swapped bingeing and purging for alcoholism. She has NOT dealt with her issues at ALL – instead she hits out at those around her, spews hatred about fat and far from eats a healthy diet – choosing to sit with an empty plate at her family’s easter lunch and eat only corn and peas for thanksgiving. She restricts her diet not in calories, but in terms of nutrients. And she calls us hypocrites? Thank you so much! (not.)

The behaviours of eating disorders are NOT the illness itself. Whatever the underlying issues are, (different for each of us), they are the core of this illness. When someone with anorexia is refed and their weight restored, they are not cured. Likewise, you cannot no longer have a problem just because you stopped bingeing and purging overnight. You have to put in a lot of hard work to consider yourself better from these diseases, and swapping bulimia for alcohol abuse is NOT an improvement.

Lastly, in her latest post, she says that

Fiona, the Liberal, campaigns to earn the support of those who want to love.”

Love is amazing. Love is precious. It isn’t just thrown around like words can be. I’m all for love – but I don’t campaign for it. If I campain for anything – it is acceptance and understanding - both qualities that Nicole has done a lot to harm when it comes to both those people with eating disorders, and people with mental illnesses in general. She accused my  post about Stigma of being contradictory because I counsel against trying to cure someone with a mental illness through prayer – but am all for having and keeping hold of HOPE. Hope and prayer are not the same thing. I am Christian – but I do not expect anyone else to be, or try and push that on others. Hope, for me, is the belief that you can get through something, the belief that things can get better, the belief in basic goodness – aside from the hope that being Christian brings me. And when we lose hope – we are lost indeed. Perhaps this is why Nicole herself is so lost and hurting so much that she needs to basically attack everyone who isn’t ‘for’ her, belittle anyone else’s efforts at happiness or hopefulness, and why she’s so unable to have a basic concept of how it’s possible to be happy without needing to be skinny and fashionable and beautiful. That’s sad, because true happiness isn’t about the outside – it is within. Just like true progress when battling any sort of mental illness is, too. Perhaps that is why she pretends to be so happy and gaily upbeat and content. She doesn’t fool me. She doesn’t fool most people.

Okay – I have run out of gas here! Thank you if you read this far – it is a long and wordy post about unfortunate and uncomfortable things.

I don’t know how exactly to end this rant! Just that it’s been a relief to get it out, and that it’s time we all moved on. Hopefully Nicole will put it all behind her, get help, and move on herself.

You Can’t Change People – You Can Only Get Away From Them.

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I learnt at a really young age that I can’t rely on anyone else in this world. In a way this brought me some peace. My mother used to just abandon me in places for hours. Usually it would be after some class like ballet. She would drop me off and go, I would take my class, then wait through the next class, then the next, then the next – this would be hours. Then it would be late at night. Classes were over. Everyone had gone home. The hall was closed up and dark. The teacher wanted to just go home herself and was waiting because she wasn’t going to drive off and leave a kid sitting alone in the dark. And then mum would deign to rock up, after another hour or so, all smiles and not even acting like there was a problem with this.

Different variations of this happened over the years, again and again, through all the different places I needed to go. I learnt to accept it.

I used to stare at the road, watching the cars, and when it was dark, watching the headlights that approached, willing the next car to be my mum’s, willing it to turn into the parking lot. And it never would be. Every time my hopes were raised and it wasn’t her, I was dashed again. Already feeling dread and fear, I spent these hours fretting that my mother had been in some accident or she had just completely forgotten about me and wouldn’t come at all.

Over time I started to say to myself “I can’t make my mum arrive. I can’t make the next car be her. I can’t hurry her up. She’s late, and she’s going to be later, and I can’t change that. All I can do, is accept it, and sit here, and wait. Worrying isn’t going to make it any different”.

Looking back I think that’s a big thing for a kid to realise. We are talking, 7 to 13 years old here.

I also learnt that I can’t change people’s nature. I can only do what I can to protect myself. But that wasn’t such a good thing to learn and it didn’t help me much. My brother used to go off in the most violent vile rages most days. Throw a tantrum because he couldnt’ get his own way like a spoilt brat – except he was a freaking huge spoilt brat a lot bigger than me. So my mum and my older sister would lock themselves in mum’s room because it locked. I didn’t even have my own room, I shared a doorless space with him. So yes, I copped it. And they knew that. But they wouldn’t protect me or let me in with them. So there was a lot you tried to do to mollify the beast. He wants his chores done for him? Do them. He wants you to move your butt or give him the yummiest bit at dinner? Hell yeah. And I will never forgive him his cruelty to my first cat, Hotchy.

My sister, was awful in her own way. So much older, and more like mum’s confidante – she was granted huge power over us, and she used it cruelly. She let pets die, and she killed pets. I now know it was SHE who drowned ducklings, beheaded ducks, beat our dog, etc. At the time I thought it was my brother since he was so violent and he was cruel to my cat since she was mine I guess. My sister was into witchcraft which she later made more ‘acceptable’ by going into natural therapies. But she’s still into the dark stuff, as evidenced by a nasty blood soaked voodoo doll she left for me one Christmas only a few years ago at my last flat.

When I was in my teens, she started stealing from mum. I don’t even know exactly what was stolen, it sounds like it was old books, and old family things. And of course, my sister’s junk cosmetic jewellry was also stolen. My sister ‘found’ these things in apparently, pawn stores in the city, in an area I was yet to even explore myself for the first time. Ironically close to where I now have been living.

Any idiot should have been able to see it wasn’t me. But my sister said it was. She was on some amazing mission to hunt down all the things I had stolen and sold all over the city when I was 16 years old, and bring them home to mum. It didn’t seem to matter that 1. I had never even set foot in a pawn store, 2. you have to be 18+ with 100 points of ID to sell anything at a pawn store and 3. they don’t put that stuff out to sell anyway – I’m not sure what they do with it, but it does not go back out to be sold. Especially when according to her it wasn’t sold to them, it was loaned in – so 4. how the hell did she know which of the many pawn stores in that area (it’s full of them, and what a coincidence, she worked and studied in that area at the time) to go to, exactly what was there, and have the TICKET to get it?

DUH.

IT HURTS SO MUCH that mum never, ever believed me. She never stood up for me. She never wanted to see what was the truth. I begged her and begged her to LISTEN. I made excuses for her for years – she couldn’t see past my sister’s manipulation, she didn’t know the truth, etc. She was dumb. NOW I know she was fully aware – and she just enjoyed me being the family scapegoat. Cold, callous, narcissistic, unloving. And I still craved a mum. A ‘MUMMY’. Someone who would cuddle me and protect me and be excited by my triumphs and comfort me when I fell. She never existed, but for years I kept searching for her in my mother – kept going back and trying to create a real relationship with her when that ‘Mummy’ never even existed and never would – because she doesn’t have the capacity to actually LOVE or emphasise.

It hurt so much when my brother was violent all those years. As you would do – I would try to defend myself. If he was yanking my hair out, I would hit out to try to get free. If he was punching me, I would put my hands up to try to field off the blows. Etc etc. And hell, at times I got so ANGRY at what he was putting me through that YES I did more than fight back in defence, I hit out at him, out of anger. Wanting to hurt him as much as he hurt me. And my mother never, ever defended me. She criticised me for fighting like cats and dogs with him. She called me nasty. And if my fingernails ever broke his skin, she cut them short. Which added to the humility and anger and pain I felt – just to raise your hands to an oaf who his bashing out at you, if you are like me, a teenage girl whose friends were cultivating long nails and lovely clothes and starting to shave and pluck and really care about how they looked, you will have the beginnings of longer nails. I never had more than the beginnings because as soon as they were no longer short, bam, they’d break his skin and I’d get them hacked off by force again.

Not to mention the added humiliation and pain and fear from the bullying. The relentless bullying. For being dirty, for having clothes that were torn, stained, too big, too small, wearing the ‘emergency’ school uniform because mum wouldn’t even buy me a school uniform that was size 16 (I was barely an 8). Wearing shoes that were so painful – from the 1980′s – my sister’s old school shoes, held together by nails that I had bashed into the inside of them the night before to try to keep them together enough to walk in. It worked, but as I walked they worked their way up inside the shoe – I was literally walking on nails and it was excruciating. Or having shoes falling apart so badly the art teacher held you back and suggested she help you tape them up with the art tape and helped you paint it black to try to make it less noticeable. Having your schoolbag literally spilling everything out, not having the required books and stationary, staying back because you couldn’t go on excursions.

Were we poor? Yes. And no. My mother and my sister were not poor. They had so many clothes that they could not fit them in their huge wardrobes and they hung in our shower and in every other possible space. And they went on many more clothes shopping sprees – two girly friends together having a lovely day out buying new clothes. We existed on single parent pension, maintenance from my dad, extra money because all three of us were ‘disabled’ or ‘sick’ and God knows what else since I witnessed my mother taking advantage of people quite a number of times. I do know now one of the reasons I initially struggled to get help when i first left home was because she told them I was still living with her and continued to collect disability payments for me, and maintenance for me from my father right up til I was 18.

So we could afford all the things we went without. My mother just couldn’t be bothered to make sure we had them, out of greed.

It hurts to know you are so unloved and unwanted. It hurts to know that you never were loved by your own mother. It hurts to have no family – real loving family.

I am now building my own family. They love me and they care. They are honest. They don’t beat around with bullshit in which you are constantly kept guessing. They don’t care more about themselves than anyone else in the world. They are honest – with themselves as well as everyone else. And they are good people.

I’ve learnt from this that there are many good people in this world – I just have to look for them, and that I cannot change people myself. Only they can do that.

I’m sorry for the rant.. i really felt a need to write this today. Thank you for listening.

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