Obsessive Hate

I’ve made a lot of flippant jokes about my husband’s ex-wife, Psycho, being obsessed with me and stalking me. In all honesty, though, it’s more disturbing than amusing.

This summer, my husband and I will be celebrating 20 years together. TWENTY YEARS. Two decades. And her bad-mouthing, snooping, driving by, and online stalking have never slowed down.

The easy explanation is that she’s crazy, jealous, has no life. All those things are true, but there is obviously more than that going on. Obsessing and stalking for twenty years takes more than just a few loose screws.

I find her pathological obsession puzzling. If I like someone, I seek them out. If I don’t like someone, I don’t pay attention to them. Simple. Claiming to hate me, yet rabidly seeking me out, doesn’t add up.

Dr. Karla McLaren, a psychotherapist, wrote, “… we attach ourselves to our hate targets with an intensely obsessive passion.” It becomes a distorted form of infatuation, or as psychiatrist Willard Gaylin calls it, a “quasi-delusional mental disease”.

Dr. Gaylin emphasized that the obsessive hater externalizes internal frustrations, conflicts, and shortcomings onto a scapegoat, and that the choice of victim is guided by the unconscious needs of the hater, not by actions of the victim.

Ah. That makes sense.

By all accounts, Psycho did not intend to follow through on their divorce all those years ago. It was a narcissistic stunt to demand sympathy and money from her father, to feed her parasitic ego by expecting my husband to beg her to come back to him, and to bask in commiseration and attention from that town of inbred tongue-waggers. Instead, my husband realized that he missed the kids like hell, but not Psycho. Then…he met me.

If Psycho is honest with herself, that is ground zero for all of her feelings about me. I didn’t even know her, or my husband, until long after they separated. Her game playing, selfishness, stupidity, and untreated mental defects destroyed her marriage, but it’s so much easier to point at me and say, “I hate her.” For 20 years.

Dr. Gaylin writes about pathological haters shifting blame to others for their unhappiness, deprivations, and misery. It’s easier than accepting responsibility for their own actions. I don’t believe that Psycho is even aware that she has done this, has trapped herself in this delusion, for decades.

Hateful fixation, like Psycho’s with me, shares serotonin and dopamine profiles similar to obsessive-compulsive disorder. She has obsessed over me for so long that it is a compulsion now, intrusive, embedded in her neural circuitry.

I already knew it was a disturbance solely in her head, and I am just the one she conveniently blames for her failures as a person, as a wife, as a mother. These psychiatrists’ research and writings only affirmed what I already understood.

A co-worker of mine is now going through a contentious divorce. We talked for hours the other day. I thought about what I wish I knew nearly 20 years ago, and I told her that the best advice I could give, besides document everything, is to learn to tune out the bad-mouthing, the accusations, the insults, the provocations. I told her to let her ex drown in bitterness, anger, and a toxic stew of hateful emotions, but for herself and her child, choose better.

My husband and I made a conscious decision to focus on us and the kids, our future together, our happiness. Psycho made a decision to focus on her jealousy and her spite. Her venomous thoughts and behaviors fed on each other, until they blotted out all reason or potential for growth.

It’s sad. But avoidable. And all her own fault. Hell, we even tried to warn her, but she was swiftly past the point of logic, if she was ever there at all.

Twenty more years from now, Psycho will still be obsessed with me. She can’t help it. It’s become part of who she is. She has entwined her very being and identity with her fascination with me. The alternative is honestly evaluating her life and how she spawned its downward spiral, but she lacks the strength, honor, and integrity to ever do that.

So she will continue to stalk me online, to interrogate others about me, to drive by our house and anywhere else she can find me, to think about me more than she wants to admit. It’s not healthy, it’s not sane, and it’s sad and pathetic, but it simply is what it is.

She is beyond help, and has been for years. And, cold as it sounds, I don’t care. She has done this to herself, day by day, choice by choice.

Just as I decided nearly 20 years ago, I am going to focus on me, my marriage, my family, my happiness. I am proud and grateful that my choices have led to a life filled with love. Can I really blame Psycho for coveting what we have?

Reflect

The more I have been thinking and reflecting lately, the more I realize just how true this is.

When my heart reflects back the countless voids in someone else’s life, that person has an important choice: belligerence and hostility, or self-inspection and improvement. It’s obvious — and disappointingly sad — which choice has been made.

Rising Above It

Ever hear those tired old phrases about being the bigger person and rising above the drama?  Yeah, I use them, too.  They have fit into my life over many, many years, thanks to cast mates pushed onto this crazy stage called life, to co-star with me, like it or not.

I don’t know if it’s age, or just being happier in my life, or simple maturity (nah, probably not that one), but I feel like I have risen above so far that I can look down and shake my head sadly at the drama and pettiness that has been so omnipresent, it’s like the sky or the grass, just part of the scenery.

I accept my part in poking the bear with a stick at times, just to chuckle when it predictably roars, but since I did not bring this mess to the scene, I can’t remove it.  That’s up to others who lug it around like an old friend, clutching it, unwilling to part with it.  The best I can do is refuse to pick it up and carry around pieces of it for them anymore.

I know others in our lives are far from finished with this game.  I know the badmouthing, hatefulness, and sniping will continue unabated.  I am at a point where I find myself almost feeling sorry for them.  They do it to themselves, yet it’s almost like they’re trapped in an oppressive cage of their own making, without the will or the knowledge to release themselves, to live any other way.

Life is really too short to waste it on thoughts, people, and activities that don’t bring anything of any true value to you.  I wish others in the kids’ lives would open their eyes to that.   God, how many more years have to be trashed with childish bullshit that, ultimately, doesn’t even matter?

I wish I could offer to help.  I know it will be met with hostility and hissing and spitting, with foaming at the mouth and much gnashing of teeth.  But it is very obvious that out of all the actors still assembled on this stage, I am much happier than they are, especially since I shifted to focusing on my life, my home, bettering myself, and turned my back on games and drama and all that silliness.

I think some people get so mired in their own negativity, they can’t squirm their way out on their own anymore.  They have been that way so long, they no longer know any better, or realize that anything else exists.  Everyone is as obsessed with this nonsense as they are, right?

Well, actually, no.  I am perfectly content living my own life, picking on my husband, working on our home and our life together, playing in the dirt on occasion, finding another stray animal to spoil, losing myself in a book, watching my husband and the kids get silly and loud, shaking my head but secretly just feeling happy that they are happy.

That’s what is important to me.  I regret any time I have wasted letting anything else steal that spotlight.  I hope it’s not too late for everyone else on this stage.  It doesn’t need to be.

That is their choice to make.  I have already made mine.

Rise above the Storm

10,000 Little Moments

Well, 2018, where did you go?  I can’t believe we are mere hours away from 2019.  This year flew by disturbingly fast!

I signed up for a special New Year’s Eve Spinning class today, and I am glad I did.  I not only got in a great, sweaty workout, I got a lot out of things the instructors said.  There were two instructors, which I’ve never seen before, but it was fun.

One of the instructors read a quote (I wish I remember who said it, or where she got it from), and the gist of it was, change is rarely made in a single, dramatic moment.  Change comes about in 10,000 little moments.  Every time we make a choice, no matter how small it seems at the time, to work toward a better, healthier us, we are creating one of those 10,000 little moments that adds up to positive change in our lives.

I like thinking about it that way.  And it’s true.  I am ending this year much slimmer, much healthier, than I started it, but it didn’t happen with one decision or one moment.  It happened each time I made a food choice based on how many calories I had consumed that day.  It happened each time I sipped unsweet tea instead of soda.   It happened each time I laced up my sneakers and chose to work out instead of flop on the couch.

Yesterday I met up with another running group, and I ran 11 miles.  I expected to be so sore I could barely walk later, but I was pleasantly surprised.  After stretching, my legs really weren’t all that sore.  Guess my legs have gotten stronger.

My foot complained a bit, but I iced it, massaged it, and wore my fancy-schmancy compression socks for a while after my shower.  I barely feel any tenderness at all in it today.  I’m thrilled about that! Maybe, just maybe, I can get back to my distance running now.

Well, time to enjoy the last few hours of 2018 and ring in the new one.  Happy New Year, everyone!  Here’s to creating 10,000 (or more) little moments in 2019 that lead us to our goals.

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Failure Is an Option

It’s not often that I’m wrong.  Just ask my husband.  Well, on second thought, don’t ask him.  What does he know?  (Ahem).  Just take my word for it, okay?

It’s even more rare that I’m glad I’m wrong, but this is one of those times.  Remember how I felt like I hadn’t lost anything last week, and even felt like I may have gained?  Must have all been in my head.  I was nervous about weigh-in on Saturday, but the scale had mercy on me after a long week and told me I had lost 1.6 pounds.

I’ll take it!

I’ve now lost 21.4 pounds since my highest weight ever, and 13.2 pounds since starting over.  No one has noticed yet, but I can feel my clothes getting looser.  Just a little.  Just enough to encourage me to keep going, because I’m making real progress and don’t want to stop.

I still have a long way to go to my goal weight, but if I’ve come this far, what would stop me from going the rest of the way?  Pretty much the only thing that can possibly get in my way is myself, and I’m tired of holding myself back.

I don’t want to get overconfident, though.  I hate the quote “Failure is not an option”, because it’s always an option, whether you want it to be or not.  I just don’t want it to the most probable option anymore.  I want to keep in mind that it’s always possible for me to stumble and fall back into bad habits and slip backwards, and I need to prevent that from happening.  I can’t pretend failure is not an option, or I will set myself up to fall.

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I’m learning how important planning is to weight loss success.  This upcoming week will be busy too, events in the evening, meaning I can’t work out after work.  I sat down with my planner earlier today, looked over my schedule, and wrote in my workouts.  At least two of them need to be morning workouts this upcoming week (groan, moan, hiss). It is what it is.  If I want to keep moving forward, I will get up extra early for those workouts.

Every action, every decision, either moves me toward or away from my goal.  So I need to choose accordingly.  It’s as simple (and as hard) as that!

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