Thanks, GS. You know, I can fully understand the double whammy of your husband's feelings about any of your accomplishments. It is bad enough that FOO gave such negative feedback about your worth. But there was still the hope that growing up and marrying would change all that. There was still the question in your mind--I can't really be that bad, can I? Then the most important person of all comes along, your husband, and it turns out, yes, I am that bad. Even my husband, the one who knows me best and understands me best and values me most, even he has come to the conclusion that I'm no good. Then out goes that little spark of hope that maybe the messages of childhood were wrong. Nope, it turns out those first messages were right after all. That's how I tend to think anyway. Always looking for someone who will say, Wow, your parents were just stupid not to see how great you are. We don't know yet, that we can tell ourselves that. We want that other person, the spouse who chose us, to be the one to validate us. When that person doesn't, well, what a betrayal. Yes, those early messages keep playing over and over again.
It is fortunate that I got to see what my father was really like inside. As hard as it is to watch someone die over the years, months and weeks, if I hadn't participated in that I might never have had any kind of explanation or closure about that relationship. In fact, my sister never got that. She has lived out of state for years and couldn't be there too much. But I think her path was meant to be different than mine. If she had been here that whole time, it would have added to the stress of it and taken away from the gifts. So, while I wouldn't want to have to do it again, it was good that it happened the way it did. It was a way that is part of my path to freedom.
Pennyplant