Hi Gabben,
Back to being envied. I view envy as very childish, narcissistic and it shouts to me of some element of of arrested/perverse development. I suppose I've been subjected to attempts to subject me to envy, even recently, but I simply refuse to play... once I recognise it of course. I'm quite boundaried now (didn't used to be) and as a result envy can't really annihilate or debilitate me unless I allow it. I treat it as an emotional tantrum almost. I have zero tolerance for anything that says I'm not entitled to my own rightful entitlements, or wishes me loss.
The envier may attempt to attack my dignity or reputation - oh well, so what. I have no control over another. But I'm becoming more confident that no-one can annihilate me when/if I know who I am, what I'm about and what I stand for.
For me being envied oddly came from people I was close to - for some reason. It didn't happen often, but when it did it really hurt. I couldn't understand it at all - w-h-a-t-s-o-e-v-e-r!! Acquaintances never seemed to wish me ill-fortune. Some of my friends also never seemed to wish me ill-fortune, but it was a recurring theme in my life that required addressing. I knew that I certainly had experienced serious envy from people, and it was always and only from ones I loved or was very close to. That alone was very destructive, upsetting and confusing for me, and I think for them too. And I was doubly distressed because I don't do envy, didn't feel I deserved it, and I felt horribly victimized. These were different people at different times who I'd so often and easily put myself out for.
So, fortunately I addressed it. My friends would reassure me that it wasn't anything I was doing and that it was the other person's problem. That didn't help. Initially I believed them, it was so easy to.
Gabben - please keep in mind I'm only talking about my own unique journey and experience and what worked for me with envy.
Then at some point I read this and it's never left me since - this goes everywhere with me -
'You don't attract what you want, you attract what you are'. That rocked my world. I felt it's underlying truth although I was repulsed to think that I was envious, when I thought I wasn't. It was all so totally scary, but I decided to spend some time on it anyway, if only to see where it led.
Then I read that the envied and the envier are like equal opposites. Like how the vicitims/supporters of N's are their equal opposites. I read and learned that by the envied playing out their vicitim part in the relationship they can actually attract or draw out envy from certain other people. That made sense to me only in one way - I certainly felt opposite to the envier. Then there was also a quote I've never forgotten that said "Tell a starving man about the great meal you had last night and he'll grow to hate you."
From there I looked at my boundaries, decided that even though I still didn't understand what it was about me attracting envy, whether my poor boundaries, my unconscious behaviours or attitudes that was attracting this, I decided I would accept that it was me.
I decided based on a scant theory to accept that I was somehow mutually responsible for the situation. That one little thought revolutionised
my little world - forever.
Because if I was somehow mutually responsible for the situation, then suddenly I embraced that I had
power in the relationship and
I could change it. Does that make sense? That one tiny thought alone was one of the biggest personal breakthroughs I'd ever had. I carry the principle with me and apply it daily as some might blood presure tablets. My life is so much less problemsome as a result.
It was in accepting that I was somehow just as responsible as the other party for any emotional mess that I found myself in, that I was then free to exercise my power and freedom and do something about it. It was in realising this power to change things, that my freedom from being envied came. I realised I had been exercising my power already in those relationships anyway - but not for my own benefit. I was exercising my power to be a vcitim. So I worked out what it was that I was unhappy about in the relationship, then I decided what I could do about it, with an almost 'damn the consequences, freedom or bust' attitude

- yes, true. I found I had the power to bring about positive change for me, and no doubt it was better for the other party as well.
This is obviously a case of one man's medicine is another man's poison. What's right for me may only be right for me. But that's how I dealt and deal with being envied or most other emotional baggage situations that come along. I don't know if any of this is of value in your situation but you're welcome to pick through it.
Thanks for the topic,
Papillon
edit in - me and typo's go back a long way
