I've never connected the dots before between my health issues and my upbringing, but there must be something to it.
I'm now a year and a half into my 'recovery' from a lifelong OCD habit of hair twirling and pulling. I NEVER thought I'd be able to stop, but with therapy, meditation, and time, it's actually happening. Woohoo! :)
Thankfully, I have a mild case of psoriasis, which is pretty much treatable. This has also improved quite a bit in the past year or two. I remember the doctor asking me if there was any way I could remove stressors from my life, and at the time, I thought, "Huh????" But it IS possible, and it DOES help.
I've always been anxious and hyper aware of the emotional states of the people around me. This can be a good thing, but can also be a chronic source of anxiety/depression. Does anyone else out there feel this way?
My brother has had a slight stutter all his life.
Thinking about all of these phenomena makes me think, once again, that I'm NOT crazy, but my upbringing certainly was.
My SIL's MIL, interrogating my son at dinner, called clear across the table: "Are there any *coloured* children at your school?" He said to me later on: "God knows what she'd have said if she knew I slept next to one…"
Lovely lad from the Ivory Coast whose first day at the school I will never forget - half-sobbing, he said to his mother "… mais ces tiroirs sont tous petits..!" If the inadequate storage for his Lacoste tennis shirts was all he had to worry about it wasn't too bad a start.
My great aunt, my very favourite one, raised an interesting linguistic point, though. When she was a gel, where she came from (then, Calcutta) one would NEVER have used the word "b-l-a-c-k" about people - this would have been considered extremely rude. Now, being the switched-on and amiable person she was, she kept up with these things and was always careful to use whatever term people themselves preferred. But once she got to 97 and was living in residential care in Sussex, things had come almost full-circle on her and the 'correct' description was one she could not bring herself to utter. I am sorry to say that the compromise she settled on was "blackie" - full marks for trying, but 0/10 for social ease. Only it makes me think: what is our generation going to do if, God help us, the n-word should ever become normal again? We'll never be able to say it.
The most comforting thing I can share about this debate is the expression on the face of a black fellow student in a sociology class where we were discussing offensive and acceptable racial terms. 28 years old, he had been freely using the word "y*d" to describe members of his own beloved soccer club since he had been able to talk: it was only at this point in his life that he found out what it actually, or at least originally, meant. Aghast doesn't even begin to describe it, bless him.
My husband says she was always that way, but it's gotten worse in the past five years or so. My suspicion is that in addition to being an mega narcissist, she's also bipolar, either that, or she suffered permanent frontal lobe damage from being thrown through car windshields not once, not twice, but three times. In her way of thinking, seatbelts trap you inside the car, which may catch on fire if there's an accident. Not wearing a seatbelt allows you to be "thrown free," as she puts it. Being thrown free sounds lovely, and sort of exhilarating, except for the part about crashing through the windshield.
But anyway, that's MIL: stubborn, illogical, grandiose and triangulating like it's her full-time job. A full-time job that she loves.
As an example of her refusal to recognize when she's wrong, about ten years ago, she told me that one of her friends had stage two cancer of some kind. "Stage three is death," she intoned melodramatically.
When I politely pointed out that she was incorrect, and that there are people living with stage four cancer (not feeling super-great, but living) she ignored me. Later, I heard her repeating the "stage three is death" thing to someone else.
Fortunately, her friend's condition improved, and she's still around today, but you'd think MIL would be interested in learning that something she believed to be true was, in fact, incorrect, and then changing her narrative to suit the facts. But no, because that would mean she was wrong about something and she can never be wrong.
For someone who proudly describes herself as "an academic and an intellectual," she is very close-minded. Even before dementia started making inroads on her brain, she was very resistant to learning new things. Conversely, she has a horror of seeming "stupid," so she either ignores her mistakes or stubbornly insists that she's right.
For instance, the device that her boyfriend uses to improve his respiration while recovering from pneumonia is called a nebulizer. She calls it a breathalyzer, which is unintentionally funny because her boyfriend is n alcoholic of the falling-down-drunk variety. When I tried to explain the difference between the two, and what the nebulizer is supposed to be doing for drunken boyfriend's lungs, she cut me off with, "I don't care about all those tubes and things in the human body."
And then she pouted. For someone who's walked around in a body for coming up on eighty-one years, her ignorance of what goes on inside it is astonishing. She insists that eating Mexican food causes miscarriages, because she once had a miscarriage after having eaten some tacos or arroz con pollo or something. When I suggested that maybe her miscarriage was caused by something else, because if eating Mexican food makes women miscarry, eventually there would be no more Mexicans, she just gave me a snotty look.
My refusal to pretend that she's not always right about everything (I always tell her gently when she's wrong about something I think might be important, but most of the time I just let it slide) is part of the reason she calls me "The B*tch." She always insists that she didn't really say that, and I must have imagined it. I kind of like the title.
NOT THE 'THROWN CLEAR' (thrown clear into a lamp post, but what the heck…) HYPOTHESIS!!! Oh GOD if I had a cent for every time I've heard that old chestnut!
Ugh, just take her out for a few nice long drives why don't you..? x
The last serious ding-dong (unless you count the mild difference of opinion after which she didn't speak to me for five blessed, peaceful years) we had was about defences to libel. To her credit, she qualified as a barrister when she was around fifty, but it astonished me that, given her recent studies, she didn't know that truth (in UK law, this is) is an absolute defence in a libel action. "Not if it's malicious," she kept parroting. Now, I happened to know this point for complicated reasons I won't go into; and a few days later I recounted the story to an older friend. Who pointed out that when MIL was my age, malice would override a 'truth' defence. In other words, the law had changed, but not MIL. She liked the old one, and she was sticking to it. Hang the law.
But ref the psoriasis - you're going to ruin her games if you won't play, you know. I really do understand how maddening this is, but try the rule I gave my daughter about ten years ago: "nod and smile, dear, nod and smile." It is one form of revenge… :)
MIL stories are maddening but strangely irresistible, like prodding an absessed tooth. You know no good will come of it, but you can't stop yourself.
I won't mention the time she tried to take my son, who was then three, to a nude beach. Or the time she got me unininvited to a family wedding by lying and saying my husband and I were getting divorced (we weren't) and I had gone crazy because of all the drugs I was allegedly taking (my drug use is limited to caffeine) and had vowed to "cause a scene" at the wedding.
There are lots more thrilling tales, but suffice it to say she's an unstoppable, malignant force who's probably going to outlive us all.
Yes, nod and smile, until my head explodes.
Was she feeling peckish when she missed a meal, and was she chuffed when you got an A on a test? Did she carry boiled sweets in her purse, and take the lift in department stores?
Did she wear wellies when it rained? And did she say alu-mimi-yum instead of al-loo-min-um? Was that striped quadruped a zeb-bra and not a zee-bra?
She sounds dotty, and kind of fun.
Sodone, it's all material. And, you know, sometimes, I think - well, more fantasise - "if you can't beat 'em…"
But isn't that the thing - HOW do you go about becoming one of these breathtaking, outrageous monsters? How do you lose all sense of self-awareness like that? WHAT makes them think it's all right? I just don't know where to start, sigh…
Oh boy. Mini-Narc SIL will be in the country in a couple of weeks: two for the price of one when the whole of ex's family heads off to the seaside together. Which would be hugely entertaining for me - flying fur all over the shop - but is potentially very bad news for Lovely SIL/Scapegoat who hugs every shred of blame to herself. I'll look up some guidelines for her.
I used to feel this undescribable affinity with certain movies and didn't know why until I stumbled upon BPD/NPD/the Cluster B personality disorders and my mom was actually diagnosed. Movies like Carrie, Mommie Dearest.
My entire childhood was rife with stomach aches, nervous bowel, rashes, shyness, insecurity, and general worry. Every day was uncertain and scary. If mom had a good day, you knew it wouldn't last. If mom had a bad day, be invisible. I didn't realize I had grown up being so hyper vigilant about other people until recently, but it's true. Other people's anxiety, stress, and feelings are just right there in my face when the people owning these feelings might not even be aware of them! It's a real burden to put on a young person to be responsible for everyone in 50 miles' satisfaction with you.
It didn't help that I was reared in a very conservative southern baptist church where it was always hellfire and damnation preaching. We're all worms. We're all guilty of something somewhere even if you don't know it. We deserve to burn in h*ll. It was all about guilt, self-hate, and destruction. No wonder my mom loved it so.
I supposedly had all kinds of food allergies that I mysteriously lost the minute I moved out of the house and moved into a dorm. It's a miracle! I always wondered if she wasn't making me sick on purpose somehow. The stress, non-stop guilt, and uncertainty day to day definitely made me sick.
The way I was reared ended up in some sudden onset fear of flying in my late 20s. I had never been taught to self-soothe. I learned that my fear of flying had absolutely not one thing to do with flying at all. I learned some anxiety control techniques that worked like magic and was able to go to Germany & back with lots of connecting flights. And turbulence. I didn't freak out, throw up, or pee my pants. Amazing. I still use those techniques to this day. Anxiety is anxiety is anxiety.
I wish I could go back in time and tell myself as a little girl a few things. One being mom's nonstop caustic rages were not my fault. That I'd get away one day. That it will all be so different once I do get away. Just hang on. And see the school counselor. There was no need to carry around all that sense of responsibility and worry all that time.
There were two Catholic girls in our class who had to go to their own church on Sundays, and I always envied them proper Confession rather than the job-lot we C of E hoi polloi had to make do with. I reckoned it was a great way to get things off your chest, rather than just carrying the guilt around. Why a ten year old was feeling that burdened with guilt I really can't explain: not a narcissistic mother in my case, just an infectiously dread-filled one.
Sandwich, I can't watch Mommie Dearest. The Anniversary, now… Bette Davis in fine fettle, great fun. Fun? What am I saying! What was that you were saying about gallows humour??
Even tho' I've never met any of you, it's sad to say, but I feel much closer to the CG's on this site, b/c no matter what I'm going thru, I've always gotten thru tough times when I can talk to other people who are going thru the same thing. And I wonder why my "inner circle" is so small?! Fine with me! Hugs to you all!
PS - If you have the energy, rent or order the movie (I'm a little behind-the-times), Osage County w/Meryl Streep & Julia Robts. It hit SO close to home that I wanted to go into my Mom's room and wrestle her to the floor for no SPECIFIC reason, but I didn't! I'm so proud of myself!
When I got up at 11 a.m. this morning, Mom asked, "What's wrong?"
I answered (scratching at my invisible hives), "I didn't sleep well."
"WHY?" she asks.
Gee, I have NO idea.
It is two years since she was able to get safely to bed by herself.
Is your "friend" saving the laundry up for you? What, does she think you might get bored in her house or something?! I suppose all you can say is "Gee. Thanks. You think of everything."
I agree about having PTSD for life.
Glad, I think Archie Bunker - our equivalent is Alf Garnett - lives on a tiny bit in most of us, on one subject or another! It's part of the human condition to have some ingrained negative feelings we're decently ashamed of, which is why we're so relieved to laugh at them. It's just that when dementia gets going we get less good at locking them up…:/