I didn't expect her to follow through, because I had come to believe that her reservations were all just a smoke screen for inchoate fears that she couldn't articulate ... all because up till now she had not articulated them in a way I could understand. But I was wrong, and glad to be so. She sent me a letter and then asked me not to contact her again.
I'll post the letter here. My therapist suggested that I write a reply (with no intention of ever sending it!) just to capture where my head is at today; then in a few months I can check to see whether I am in the same place. Usually when I post something really long that I've written elsewhere, I look back on it later and wonder what I could possibly have been thinking to inflict it all on you. But in the spirit of yesterday's post -- in the spirit of getting content out there -- I will post it. Not all in a lump: I'll break it into pieces and scatter it over a couple of days. No, I don't think this gets me off the hook of writing something every single day. It just breaks up the monotony of my whiny self-justifications. Or I hope it will.
Anyway, here is her letter:
__________
For Hosea 03-25-2014
A couple of things I have noticed:
1. You seem to compartmentalize different parts of your life and keep them very separate. When one person strays from one part of your life into another, it seems to make you feel extremely anxious, even if you have planned the crossover and want it to happen. In general, you seem to put a lot of effort into planning, orchestrating and managing your life and events in it in order for things to go as smoothly as possible and to not have anything unexpected happen.
2. A specific event that seems important… the morning we were going to drive from my place to visit your Aunt and Uncle. [I talk about this trip briefly here. -H.] I was somewhat scattered and having trouble getting it together with my last packing to get out the door and go. This little bit of chaotic behavior on my part triggered a full blown reactive response from you that lasted all day. Yes, my behavior was irritating and even maddening, but your reaction seemed way out of proportion to the stimulus and seemed to be about more than just me. In addition, you expressed that you had made a decision to just go with the flow and accommodate whatever I ended up doing, but in fact you seemed angry and reactive all day long. The next day, you didn’t seem to remember much about what had happened and that suggests to me that you may have dissociated.
These two things seem to me to be related to living so many years with a person whose behavior was chaotic, unpredictable, often threatening and sometimes actually violent. Anyone would develop similar coping behaviors in the same circumstances, but they make me feel cautious.
3. This is something we have not talked about. I see a pattern in your Mom’s relationship with your Dad and Wife’s relationship with you that worries me. Your mother is very, very passive in her relationship with your Dad, and remains super-calm and non-reactive in response to him. While Wife is not passive – she acts out- over the years she became helpless. I really don’t want to step into this pattern of women who do not function to their full capacity.
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