Voicelessness and Emotional Survival Message Board

Voicelessness and Emotional Survival => Voicelessness and Emotional Survival Message Board => Topic started by: polymath on August 20, 2009, 08:07:36 AM

Title: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: polymath on August 20, 2009, 08:07:36 AM
If anyone knows ANY man, just one, who fits my profile and got past it, please send them my way, and soon.

Ladies, I appreciate your encouragement I really do but I NEED some man whos been there done that to show me the way. This whole thing is beginning to come into focus for me. Men raised as boys without a male role model to take the attention of mom off them are in deep deep doo doo. Strong women have the sense to get out of the way a little. Lebron James was raised in a hellish, poverty stricken environment. His mother often didn't know where there next meal was coming from. But she had the sense, and strength, not to hunker down, take welfare and smother her kid. She let uncles and coaches and other people look after her son while she looked for work. She didn't smother him and look where he is today. Forget the fame and fortune, I see in his interviews with his kids around that he made it. He's strong emotionally and his kids love him genuinely, all without his father around.

The key is the strength of the mother. Mine happened to have none. I pulled the strings and that my friends, creates a monster. Most, if not all, men that came up like I did, are in prison or six feet under at 37 yrs old. I am trying so hard to just stay alive. I've become very reclusive, even around my own kids and wife, keeping my nose in a book or working on the car and motorcycles. I'm eat up with the fear of the world that my crazy mother (and grandmother) put into me.

She got that fear from a father who sexually abused her and a mother that preferred her brother. She was never seen and appreciated. Her mother and father surely had the same situation growing up to some degree. My father had polio, was the youngest of 3, and was babied by his well-meaning mother while his father worked all the time and who said, I'll make the money, you take care of the kids.

I'm the unfortunate product of these two people running into each other in adolescence and finding comfort in each others arms sexually but had absolutely no business having a child. My only sibling is a half brother on my dads side who I didn't grow up with, he lived with my father. He's now in prison for sexual abuse of a minor. I can only imagine the hell he grew up with, living with my fathers alcoholic temper tantrums.

I'm not a violent person toward others because I didn't grow up with it. I will walk away from a confrontation with a man because I learned in high school what I will do in a rage and have never hit a woman. I just didn't see that growing up so its not a part of me. But I'm all about me to the n'th degree and that has gotten old.

Folks, I know I'm no different than thousands of other boys who are now men and either incarcerated, tyrants in their own home, homeless walking the streets or dead. I just happen to have enough IQ and comprehension skills to realize where I am. Alot of these men are needing the same thing, they just gave up on trying.

Someone please tell me, no, specifically some man please show me, that this can be overcome. That after putting people on the moon, mapping genes, building skyscrapers, etc. that there is some therapy or something that can pull a man out of the downward spiral.

Hanging on waiting for a miracle,

RS

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 20, 2009, 10:16:03 AM
There was a man on here who fits some of your description--- Papillion.
You can check out his posts if you look under Members List. If you do ,let me know what you think.       Ami



PS With Papillion, I can see that great suffering produced great compassion and beauty when it got to the end.
 
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: BonesMS on August 20, 2009, 11:34:50 AM
If anyone knows ANY man, just one, who fits my profile and got past it, please send them my way, and soon.

Ladies, I appreciate your encouragement I really do but I NEED some man whos been there done that to show me the way. This whole thing is beginning to come into focus for me. Men raised as boys without a male role model to take the attention of mom off them are in deep deep doo doo. Strong women have the sense to get out of the way a little. Lebron James was raised in a hellish, poverty stricken environment. His mother often didn't know where there next meal was coming from. But she had the sense, and strength, not to hunker down, take welfare and smother her kid. She let uncles and coaches and other people look after her son while she looked for work. She didn't smother him and look where he is today. Forget the fame and fortune, I see in his interviews with his kids around that he made it. He's strong emotionally and his kids love him genuinely, all without his father around.

The key is the strength of the mother. Mine happened to have none. I pulled the strings and that my friends, creates a monster. Most, if not all, men that came up like I did, are in prison or six feet under at 37 yrs old. I am trying so hard to just stay alive. I've become very reclusive, even around my own kids and wife, keeping my nose in a book or working on the car and motorcycles. I'm eat up with the fear of the world that my crazy mother (and grandmother) put into me.

She got that fear from a father who sexually abused her and a mother that preferred her brother. She was never seen and appreciated. Her mother and father surely had the same situation growing up to some degree. My father had polio, was the youngest of 3, and was babied by his well-meaning mother while his father worked all the time and who said, I'll make the money, you take care of the kids.

I'm the unfortunate product of these two people running into each other in adolescence and finding comfort in each others arms sexually but had absolutely no business having a child. My only sibling is a half brother on my dads side who I didn't grow up with, he lived with my father. He's now in prison for sexual abuse of a minor. I can only imagine the hell he grew up with, living with my fathers alcoholic temper tantrums.

I'm not a violent person toward others because I didn't grow up with it. I will walk away from a confrontation with a man because I learned in high school what I will do in a rage and have never hit a woman. I just didn't see that growing up so its not a part of me. But I'm all about me to the n'th degree and that has gotten old.

Folks, I know I'm no different than thousands of other boys who are now men and either incarcerated, tyrants in their own home, homeless walking the streets or dead. I just happen to have enough IQ and comprehension skills to realize where I am. Alot of these men are needing the same thing, they just gave up on trying.

Someone please tell me, no, specifically some man please show me, that this can be overcome. That after putting people on the moon, mapping genes, building skyscrapers, etc. that there is some therapy or something that can pull a man out of the downward spiral.

Hanging on waiting for a miracle,

RS



Hi, RS.

I'm hoping this suggestion might help....Dr. G is also a Survivor of an N.  Have you been able to read his essays?  He also monitors the board.  Just a thought or two....

Bones
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 07:11:53 AM
Dear CB
 I think that if RS needs to find a man who lived what he did  and survived and  thrived that is his vision for the next step in his healing.(I don't like the use of the word victim .It sounds pejorative to me but you probabaly didn't mean it that way)
 That is his goal as a legitimate way out---a vision. He has a vision of healing. That is important when one has been close to suicidal. One's vision is a very,very important step out
 I know you are not trying to undermine his vision. I am not saying that but I think that his goals and vision for healing are THE most important thing--not yours or mine---his.
 He has expressed them and it is very important for people to respect that in his( and anyone's healing).
 One's own  gut knows the way for oneself.
        Ami

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: CB123 on August 21, 2009, 07:21:05 AM
Thanks for your perspective, Ami.

I hope my comments are helpful to Poly and if I was unclear, maybe I can clarify them for him.  Sorry you were triggered by the victim word.  The wounds we have sustained sometimes leave tender places.

Hope you are doing well...havent talked to you in a while.

CB
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: polymath on August 21, 2009, 07:29:51 AM
Yeah, my whole idea behind finding a guy who's been through my situation is really just to get an example to follow to give me hope. It's no interesting how these things play out. My neighbor (Scott) was raised by his father after his drunk mother left and he is a very patient 'manly' guy with other men and great with kids but follows his girlfriend around like  whipped puppy. It's like he got the guy stuff put in him and now is destined to follow women around looking for mom's approval he never got.

Anyway, thanks for the book reference and as to the 'victim' thing, no offense taken.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Portia on August 21, 2009, 07:30:24 AM
CB, Wild At Heart looks interesting. I might buy it for myself, being a little male-brained as i think I may be. Thanks.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 07:32:05 AM
Thank you for your graciousness, CB. My reality has been stolen from me for my whole life beginning with my NM, of course ,so I may be sensitive to something which was nothing of the kind.               Ami
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 07:33:30 AM
It is really nice that we can all dialogue in a respectful ,supportive manner!               Ami
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 07:39:07 AM
Dear RS,
 When you talk about the guy being whipped by the girlfriend, I think this is a common fear  I have always had male friends and most of them struggle with the push/pull of wanting to be close to a woman but fearing anniilahation(sp?) at the same time where they will be so caught up with the woman that they will dissolve.       Ami
 
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: polymath on August 21, 2009, 08:22:14 AM
Yeah, its such a fine high-wire act and I'm not sure if we can learn it if we weren't given it.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 08:42:18 AM
I think that all people(I assume even the healthiest) struggle with intimacy. There is the push to connect and the pull NOT to be swallowed up.
 I was listening to a physicist talk about complicated  formulas in physics. The moderator asked him,"What would you MOST like to know about the universe? He said,"How to have a lasting long term relationship."
  For me, my mental health comes before any relationship cuz it won't work otherwise.
  I really ,really want to love myself and walk in peace and honor with myself.
 This has to be the first step, I think.         Ami
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: polymath on August 21, 2009, 08:53:47 AM
I think that men who are self-aware, as you are Poly, are probably the most successful at navigating this rough water.  Just because you are being tossed about a bit in the squall, doesnt mean you wont reach shore.

I hear you there, however my basic foundational problem would be hyper-self awareness. My second-guessing and anxiety over the smallest of decisions (which shirt, what to pick up first) stems, in my belief, from not being allowed to make decisions plus spoiling. I want it all, both things I look at and now, very addictive. I never did hard drugs because deep down I knew what they could do, but boy could I metabolize alcohol.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 09:01:45 AM
I think James,in his posts, talks about some of the things you brought up. He was talking about sexual abuse in some of them but also about trying to navigate life with  similar issues , it seemed .
    Ami
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Portia on August 21, 2009, 10:21:54 AM
Polymath, thanks for this thread.

I've influenced something in my life directly today because of things I've read here. It doesn't involve me, but an adventure time has been arranged for this weekend, and that's hugely important to people i care about, right now. The timing is amazing. Talk about a 'result'! Thank you.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: HeartofPilgrimage on August 21, 2009, 10:43:48 AM
Yes, thanks, polymath, for this thread. I am not a narcissist, but was raised by a NMother, and now am having to see that my son is struggling with many of the same issues that adult children of narcissists deal with ... I think because my parents were so in my head when he was little that I smothered and hyper-parented ... but also, maybe there are other things going on that have nothing to do with me. It's not, after all, all about me. My other kids seem healthier, maybe at least in part because I began to grow up as I had them and raised them. It's the oldest that is struggling. I still want to fix all of his problems. He has pulled away from our family completely. I have had to allow him to do that. I don't know how to do that. I don't know how to show him I will always be there for him without overdoing it. Your post helped shake me back to the reality that I poured a lot of good things into my son, and that he will find his way, and that me trying too hard will probably slow down the process of him finding his own way. I believe in prayer, and I think that praying hard for him is probably the best and only thing I can do for him right now, and it is the way I can pour good things into him without shortcircuiting the process of him finding his own way. Thanks, Polymath, for an important reminder that helped my heart to know that the way that I have chosen --- backing off --- is the right decision.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: mudpuppy on August 21, 2009, 11:18:45 AM
Quote
Yeah, my whole idea behind finding a guy who's been through my situation is really just to get an example to follow to give me hope.

The best hope comes from doing something yourself not seeing someone else do it, no?
Hanging around healthy people, regardless of how they got there, seems to me the best way to learn or relearn healthy habits.
And that I suspect involves your own personal will. Nobody can pull you there no matter how well meaning either of you are. You have to put one foot in front of the other (and occasionally fall over) to break out of the mindset that's holding you back; seems an incremental process from what I've seen.
The only non-incremental, shazamm type healings of people I've seen were God things, but that's another, sometimes contentious, subject.

mud
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: polymath on August 21, 2009, 11:50:33 AM
yeah mud, thats what I'm most afraid of, that there's no therapy/meds combo that can get me jump started.

This is so deep. God I know this sounds like the world's biggest pity party, its just that I can't seem to find a man who is still around at my age to simply say, "hey, I came up spoiled and hovered and unconditionally loved by my mom who left my alcoholic father but never reconnected with another man out of fear, just came home after work, lived like a hermit and leaned on me to be her little man."

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Portia on August 21, 2009, 12:50:59 PM
Mud, I like this: The best hope comes from doing something yourself

and Polymath you said :  there's no therapy/meds combo that can get me jump started

made me think. Is therapy like putting some magic pill into you? Does it add to you/ is a separate thing, to you?

Or does therapy take away from you (take away all the accumulated rubbish) - and doesn't it necessarily hurt like hell?

I reckon therapy is more like an assault course for the brain.

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 01:48:30 PM
Quote
Yeah, my whole idea behind finding a guy who's been through my situation is really just to get an example to follow to give me hope.

The best hope comes from doing something yourself not seeing someone else do it, no?
Hanging around healthy people, regardless of how they got there, seems to me the best way to learn or relearn healthy habits.
And that I suspect involves your own personal will. Nobody can pull you there no matter how well meaning either of you are. You have to put one foot in front of the other (and occasionally fall over) to break out of the mindset that's holding you back; seems an incremental process from what I've seen.
The only non-incremental, shazamm type healings of people I've seen were God things, but that's another, sometimes contentious, subject.

mud


Dear Mud
 I completely disagree with this post. When a person is struggling with life and death issues----"Snap out of it" or "Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootstraps" just engenders more guilt and self loathing. The person  already is burderned by too much guilt and self hatred.That is how they got there in the first place.
  I have never seen it work for a hurting person ,myself included.Hope IS something that works.
 That is my  opinion. I don't care to debate it but just wanted to express it.         Am

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: HeartofPilgrimage on August 21, 2009, 03:43:01 PM
I think there are more women than men on this forum mainly because women like to talk more than men (as a group, yes I know this doesn't hold water for individuals). This imbalance does not mean that there are not men out there that have survived. Again, I'm a girl not a guy. But just because we are more visible on a forum like this does not mean that we have survived in greater numbers or even with better quality of life. THERE IS ALWAYS HOPE. THERE IS ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS HOPE. The only reason we even say that there is little or no hope for narcisssists is that a key part of their problem is not being able to recognize they have a problem.

Remember the famous story of when Winston Churchill was invited to give a commencement address after WWII (I think it was at West Point, but not sure)? His ENTIRE SPEECH consisted of the following: Gentlemen, NEVAH, NEVAH, NEVAH give up. And then he sat down.

You're alive, so there's hope. You're thinking, so there's hope. You're feeling, so there's hope.
And, regarding the disagreement among board members about whether the "bootstrap mentality" is helpful or not --- it really all depends upon the place you're in. If you find it helpful, take it and run with it! If you don't, it's OK, find something you do find helpful. But there is always hope.  You WILL find something that helps.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: mudpuppy on August 21, 2009, 08:46:29 PM
Quote
When a person is struggling with life and death issues----"Snap out of it" or "Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootstraps" just engenders more guilt and self loathing.
I didn't suggest polymath snap out of it or pull himself up by his own bootstraps.
I suggested that rather than look for someone who has suffered through similar circumstances he simply associate with healthy people no matter how they are or became healthy; in addition to his therapy of course, if he feels it is helping.
By such a process he might incrementally be able to internalize more healthy thoughts and habits, because ultimately mental health seems to me an internal process.
None of what I suggested places blame on polymath for his predicament. But neither do I think limiting who his support group should be to some guy his age who he can read about or talk to online and who has suffered similarly and prevailed is going to be likely to occur or productive.
It's like the old saw about normal families all being normal in the same way, but every dysfunctional one being different. Healthy people are basically pretty similar and it doesn't matter how they got there.
To the extent a healthy thought process can be learned simply being around them is what counts.

mud
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Ami on August 21, 2009, 09:53:35 PM
Quote
When a person is struggling with life and death issues----"Snap out of it" or "Pull Yourself Up By Your Bootstraps" just engenders more guilt and self loathing.
I didn't suggest polymath snap out of it or pull himself up by his own bootstraps.
I suggested that rather than look for someone who has suffered through similar circumstances he simply associate with healthy people no matter how they are or became healthy; in addition to his therapy of course, if he feels it is helping.
By such a process he might incrementally be able to internalize more healthy thoughts and habits, because ultimately mental health seems to me an internal process.
None of what I suggested places blame on polymath for his predicament. But neither do I think limiting who his support group should be to some guy his age who he can read about or talk to online and who has suffered similarly and prevailed is going to be likely to occur or productive.
It's like the old saw about normal families all being normal in the same way, but every dysfunctional one being different. Healthy people are basically pretty similar and it doesn't matter how they got there.
To the extent a healthy thought process can be learned simply being around them is what counts.

mud


I think a person has an intuitive wisdom about what THEY need. We can agree to disagree.              Ami
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: Hopalong on August 21, 2009, 10:07:06 PM
Hi Poly,

Lots of bossy advice here, please take anything useful and toss the rest...

totally understand why you're eager to find someone who fits the exact profile. But imo, this is is magical thinking. You could find someone who fit the checklist but who couldn't or wouldn't or didn't know how to articulate why he's okay. You would be shattered, because you've set yourself up to believe the checklist is the answer.

This is one COMPLEX AMAZING universe. Life is big, amazing, huge, marvellous, extraordinary, staggering! It's not routine that you have children! It's not ordinary that you have trees moving in the wind and hands that can hold a paintbrush or hammer!

That little Son-of-N checklist can't possibly be the only answer!

I believe you are setting yourself up in an obsessive way: the checklist, all the specific criteria. You can waste your hopes fixating on the checklist, and miss actual healers passing within feet (or posts) of you.

What I believe will work for you is to draw bits of healing and wisdom from a VARIETY of people and groups and resources. Male, female, spiritual, group, one-on-one, professional, pharmaceutical, familial, animal, altruistic. You need ALL of this, not ONE person.

A full-tilt love and support assault for yourself from every possible direction and source. Because you deserve to heal and to live.

And more importantly, because your children deserve a living father. Not a perfect one.

(I will say too that suicide, of a parent, is the most profoundly cruel thing a human can do to a child, imo. And though you don't discuss your kids, I am having trouble believing you want to tear their hearts out of their chests.)

I do ask, have you been thoroughly evaluated for the possibility of OCD?

I have always been drawn to the obsessive stubborn focus...(a lot of artists and writers have this trait) but I also know it can be a diversion, a distraction, from actually integrating the splintering parts of yourself.

It's not the checklist. It's just love, and hope, hope, hope.

You are absolutely determined and whether you find the profile man or not, you ARE finding something.

Keep talking. Get out to see PEOPLE, in addition to your therapist, can you find PEOPLE plural, in positive groups...say, volunteering? Several hours a week.

That is healing as well, it breaks the cycle of thought that you're struggling with.

Is there a soup kitchen or Habitat for Humanity? They'd love to see you. It won't be about you. And it will help you.

I'll swear that.

Hops
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: lupine on August 21, 2009, 10:51:13 PM
I think Mud is right.  Find the "healthy" people and follow their example as far as it can take you.  That being said, I hear the fear of letting go of all of your experience prior to going forward.  The bottom line is that whatever you do next, tension is how you should be; relaxation is who you are.  If how you are is where you want to go, relax and try it out.  Maybe for only a little while at a time (five minutes at a time?) but you'll get there.  You're still very young....you can tell your children later about your journey and they will learn.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: debkor on August 22, 2009, 06:10:44 AM
Hey Poly,

I have not much advice but want to tell you that Yes there are others who survived and thrived.  As a matter of fact he just left my house hours ago.

He was not the same but not unlike your story.  He was 41 years old and now 42 and thriving. Everything you want to do and hope for I am telling you he is doing.

I have to agree with hops because...that is exactly how he did it.

Hops said::

You are absolutely determined and whether you find the profile man or not, you ARE finding something.

Keep talking. Get out to see PEOPLE, in addition to your therapist, can you find PEOPLE plural, in positive groups...say, volunteering? Several hours a week.

That is healing as well, it breaks the cycle of thought that you're struggling with.

Is there a soup kitchen or Habitat for Humanity? They'd love to see you. It won't be about you. And it will help you.

I'll swear that.

Hops

Ditto!!

His was a shelter.

Love Deb

Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: mudpuppy on August 22, 2009, 11:58:12 AM
Quote
Remember the famous story of when Winston Churchill was invited to give a commencement address after WWII (I think it was at West Point, but not sure)? His ENTIRE SPEECH consisted of the following: Gentlemen, NEVAH, NEVAH, NEVAH give up. And then he sat down.

Actually heart of Pilgrimage it's even better than that.

Winston Churchill, October 1941, at close to the lowest point of the war, at Harrow his alma mater;

"This is the lesson, never give in, never give in, never, never, never--in nothing great or small, large or petty--never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy."

I know because I have a copy of it taped to my office door so I can never miss it when I leave. Inspired by the antics of my dear, dear brother.

mud
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: HeartofPilgrimage on August 22, 2009, 05:14:08 PM
Hey, thanks for finishing out my half-remembered quote, yes it's even better when you know the full story. And very apt for me too.
Title: Re: Are there ANY men out there like me who survived and thrived?
Post by: lighter on August 22, 2009, 07:32:14 PM

Winston Churchill, October 1941, at close to the lowest point of the war, at Harrow his alma mater;

"This is the lesson, never give in, never give in, never, never, never--in nothing great or small, large or petty--never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy."

Hear hear, Mud.