Hope is perceived in our society as noble and inspirational: when all seems lost, the brave and noble hang on to hope and are incentivized by it, while those who give up hope are viewed as quitters, lacking in bravery, and “succumbing” to hopelessness.
Sometimes, however, hope is not your
saviour and your best friend. Sometimes hope is an anchor dragging you under
and your worst enemy. Benjamin Franklin once said “He that lives upon hope will
die fasting.” The man had a point.
We are socially conditioned to never let go
of hope, that when all else fails, hope can sustain us. But like all things,
there is a limit as to how much is healthy and sustaining and how much is not:
sometimes clinging to hope is really no more than clinging, desperate denial, a
stubborn, pain-fueled refusal to face an unhappy, unwanted reality. Hope is an
extension of expectation; it is what expectation devolves to when it has been
disappointed too often, too badly. When you no longer expect reciprocity from
someone but you are unwilling to accept that it will never happen, you hope.
When I was a very little girl, I suffered
from insomnia…I had trouble falling to sleep at night. Keyed up from a day of
hypervigilance, I went to bed tense and with a buzzing, hyperalert brain. Add
to the fact that my bedroom shared a paper-thin wall with the living room and I
could hear every sound in that room…including my mother’s negative
characterizations of me to her friends, replete with complete fabrications and
self-servingly incorrect assignment of my motives, sleep often eluded me. I
learned to silently tell myself stories, rather like soapies, that on following
nights I would pick up where I had drifted off to sleep the night before. These
stories were fantasies in which I was the hero, the rescuer, the nurturer, and
my reward for my good deeds would be the love and devotion of everyone around
me, including (and most especially) my mother.
As young as five or six years of age I had
absorbed my NM’s paradigm that I had to earn love through my deeds and actions.
Being young and unsophisticated, I had the expectation that if I was a “good
girl,” i.e., I lived up to the expectations of others, took care of them,
sacrificed for them, I would earn their love. Eventually I learned that you
cannot earn love any more than you can buy it, but some of us never abandon
this behavioural model, setting ourselves up for disappointment after
disappointment because we fail to take into account the nature…and social
paradigms…of the people from whom we expect reciprocity.
Hope and expectations are singularly self-oriented
phenomena. Both have to do with want—what you want: you want something and
either you expect it will occur or, if you have given up on expectation, you
hope it will. With either one, you may work to do your “part,” expecting or
hoping the other person will do his/hers…which will grant you your wish.
Unfortunately, we do not all go by the same playbook of life, and those of us
who grow up in dysfunctional households often have vastly different playbooks
from those who did not. Our expectations, based on what we believed it took to
get the positive attention of a narcissistic parent, may not elicit the desired
response from others.
I once worked with a very nice woman who
grew up with a pair of exacting scientists for parents; she married an
emotionally detached man-child and after their second child was diagnosed as
profoundly autistic, the husband abandoned wife and family for an old flame.
Devastated and feeling abandoned, my friend turned her attention to one of the
managers in our department and began knocking herself out to be the best admin
he had ever had. She brought him coffee, cleaned up his office, put his work
ahead of the others, put a plant on his desk and took care of it. For weeks she
bent over backwards to impress and serve this man…seeking attention and
approval from an authority figure, seeking some kind of validation from him to
reassure her of her value. Her expectation was one of reciprocity: she would be
the best secretary he had ever worked with and he would reciprocate with
thanks, praise and even the occasional token of his appreciation. When
Secretary’s Day came and went without a lunch invitation from him or even a
wilted carnation, she broke down in tears, confessing to me her anger and
disappointment at him for not keeping up his end.
The problem, of course, was that he was
completely unaware that he had an end to keep up. In his world, the way she had
been behaving was expected because it was her job and he owed her nothing, not
even thanks, for it…her reward—her thanks, if you will—came in the form of a
pay check every two weeks. She, of course, was operating from a completely
different playbook, the one in which you earn accolades by your devotion and
going-the-extra-distance. In her eyes, she had gone above and beyond and
therefore deserved praise and thanks for it; in his eyes, she was just
performing her job duties.
And this is the curse of hope: our hopes
and expectations are too often not based on reality or even generally-held
beliefs and experiences. They are based on the missing bits in our own psyches,
the damaged or empty parts of our hearts, the holes in our souls. We hope for
those things we believe will make us whole, will satisfy that sense of want within
us. Even if we are not consciously aware of the chasm within, our hopes and
expectations are tailor-made to fit it. Few of us, however, realize that even
if we are able to bring those hopes and expectations to fruition, they will
never fill the abyss that makes us yearn. Those hopes fool us into thinking
they are the great cure for our despair when, in fact, they give us only a
temporary, illusory respite, and then we are back to hoping and wanting and
yearning even more.
If you don’t believe me, think about this.
You are here, reading this, because you have a painful relationship with a
narcissist…most likely your mother. You feel unloved, maybe even unwanted by
her. What if, tomorrow morning, you got a phone call from that narcissist in
which she said she loved you, she had always loved you, she was sorry for how
she had treated you, and she wanted to make amends. Wish granted, hope
fulfilled…now, how do you think you will feel?
The expectation you carry with you today is
that if your narcissist were to do that, you would feel filled with that love,
soothed by it, your pain and doubt and anxiety melting away. So why are you
feeling sceptical, cynical, maybe even angry or anxious? Why are you expecting
her next breath to reveal a falling out between her and your GC brother or
sister? Or for her to pause, then laugh shrilly, and announce she was kidding,
of course? Why are you wondering what she is up to, what the catch is, when the
other shoe is going to drop? Having our fondest hope come true is not always
what we think it will be, and sometimes we end up even more unhappy as a
result.
In June of 2011, Psychology Today published an article by Mary C. Lamia, Ph.D.,
entitled "The Power of Hope, and Recognizing When It's Hopeless." Dr.
Lamia says “In relationships, there are times when abandoning hope is
psychologically healthier than holding onto it…In ending a relationship,
relinquishing hope means coming to terms with your failure. In a rescuing
relationship, hope may have led you to assume that you could help your partner
achieve his expressed goal: be it financial success, sobriety, security, or
happiness. Yet despite your efforts, you could not control whether or not he
would be inclined to pursue your perception of a desirable path. Perhaps your
hope was that your partner would become the one you wanted or wished him to be,
and he would then need, love, and appreciate you. Relinquishing hope is hard to
do, because it means that you have failed to get what you expected from your relationship.
The feelings associated with giving up hope in a relationship are often the
very same emotions you sought to avoid in the first place, including
helplessness, despair, depression, or yearning… Yet giving up hope can also be
very constructive and positive, depending on your attitude.
“Giving up hope is sometimes prudent… Continuing
to pursue a particular direction where you invariably encounter roadblocks,
whether in a relationship, career, or business venture, can obscure other
avenues that may lead to achieving an objective. In our culture there is a
particular glamour attributed to those who persist, and win, in spite of
limited hope for success. At the same time, having the strength to recognize
when hope should be relinquished, and the courage to acknowledge your
helplessness, can point you in an unsullied direction that is accompanied by
new hope.”
Notice that Dr. Lamia specifically refers
to us having an expectation—a hope—that the other person does not necessarily
buy into. Like my co-worker, when the other party does not reciprocate, is not
“inclined to pursue your perception of a desirable path,” you are faced with a
choice: continue or quit. And while she likens giving up hope to a perception
of our having failed, I think this is less true for the children of
narcissistic parents: for us, giving up hope is to finally acknowledge that we
will never be loved in a way that is meaningful to us by the very people from
whom we are truly entitled to receive that love, our parent(s). This is the pain
we seek to avoid, the helplessness, despair, depression, the yearning for our
birthright, parental love. To give up hope here means that we must not only
embrace that pain, we must give up the whole idea of ever having that
expectation, that entitlement fulfilled. It means we have been cheated and we
can do nothing about it except accept it and walk away empty handed. And so,
unwilling to do that, we cling to the feeblest hope…
And yet, keeping a futile hope alive just
makes us stuck: we cannot move forward when we are stuck in a holding pattern,
waiting for our narcissist to wake up and see what wonderful, worthwhile,
loving people we are and how deserving we are of love and appreciation. Frozen
in time and space, arrested emotionally, trapped by futile hope, we hold
ourselves back and determinedly allow opportunities to pass us by while we
continue to hurt ourselves with our drive to find that magic key, that special
phrase, that perfect gift or deed that will open the door to the narcissistic
parent’s love and fan our feeble flame of hope into a joyful reality. Hiding
from the pain of helplessness, despair, depression and yearning, we simply mire
ourselves more deeply in them.
Like so many other things, there can be too
much hope. Do you have a realistic goal for yourself? A goal to find or create
happiness for yourself is realistic; a goal to find that happiness through
eliciting a specific behaviour from another person is not. You cannot
manipulate yourself into being loved, nor can you obtain it by doing, over and
over again, the things that did not convey it to you in the first place. You
simply cannot dredge from the depths of another human being that which is not
there. And the longer you wait for that person to find that which is not there
in order to salve your soul, the longer you will remain stuck.
We do live in a culture that glamorizes those
who cling to hope and ultimately succeed. But that is the stuff of fairy tales,
romance, glamour. In real life, the odds are stacked against you: when an
expectation degrades to mere hope, the odds of your prevailing diminish. And
the longer you hold onto a hope despite no signs of that hope coming to
fruition, the more your odds of prevailing diminish. In other words, the longer
you hope with no reward, the less likely you will get what you want. And if
that hope is keeping you stuck in some way, it is working against you, actually
preventing you from achieving what you want.
A good example is the “other woman” who
engages in a long-term affair with a married man whom she expects will leave
his wife for her. Years pass and there is always some reason he can’t go: a
child is sick, the wife’s parent died and he can’t leave while she is so
fragile, he must wait until the child graduates high school, college…always an
excuse, always she accepts the excuse and lives on the hope that someday the
time will be right and they will be together. Meanwhile, she turns a blind eye
to other men, other opportunities for love and marriage and a family, until she
is set aside in favour of a younger mistress and she walks away middle-aged,
alone, with nothing to show for her years of devotion but a broken heart and a
biological clock that has nearly run out. Hope did this woman no favours but
kept her confined in a relationship with a selfish man who thought only of
himself.
Hope, too much hope, hoping too long,
hoping for the impossible or even just the improbable, can do this to you.
Clinging to hope when the prudent move would be to let it go and move in
another direction, works against you. There is no shame in giving up hope when
it is futile, there is no shame in embracing reality and recognizing and
accepting that hope is futile. The shame is in sacrificing your life and your
emotional well-being to futile hope, like the hope that a narcissistic parent
will “wake up” and find the love for you hidden in her heart. Reality check: if
she didn’t love and adore you when you were an adorable, cooing infant, a
chubby-cheeked toddler, an admiring young daughter, what makes you think she
will find some loving emotion for you now, at this late date, when your life no
longer revolves around her and you are no longer the uncritical, loving,
adoring child you once were—and for whom she could find no love?
Harsh? Yes. Reality is not always pretty,
nor does it spare our feelings. Reality is a harsh taskmistress, giving us the
unvarnished truth without regard to our emotions. And the reality of this is
simply that if she did not love you then, what makes you think she will love
you now? If she didn’t love you when you were innocent and open and emotionally
untarnished, what makes you think she will love the adult, distrustful, wounded
person her indifference created? If she didn’t find you good enough to love
when you adored her uncritically, how does your present state of mind and
emotions improve on that and elicit love from her?
Reality is, you cannot squeeze blood from a
stone…and you cannot squeeze love from the stony heart of a narcissist. Reality
is, the fault is not with you and it never was: the fact that your narcissist
could not love you when you were a tiny little child proves that, for what can
a baby do to disengage the heart of a
loving mother? Hoping for her to change…and expecting that change to fill the
hole in your soul, is futile, it keeps you stuck, it prevents you from
progressing. And, whether you want to admit it or not, you are stuck because
you have chosen to put your life, your wholeness, on hold while you wait for
her to do what you want.
Well, she’s not going to do it. If she
hasn’t done it by now, she never will. You have put yourself in a holding
pattern and as you wait, peace of mind and wholeness of heart pass you by. As
you sit by and hope, you are waiting for someone else to take action. On some
level you are not only believing that person will, some day, come through, you
are also giving control of your life to that person and, in doing so,
abdicating your own responsibility to yourself. You offer yourself up like a
sacrificial lamb, vulnerable and powerless, when you continue to hope long past
the time to read reality and take control of your emotional life. You can only
stop being at the mercy of the merciless when you wake up and embrace that
harsh but liberating reality: narcissists have love only for themselves…there
is no room in their hearts for anyone else, not even the GC, who is merely
manipulated in ways different from the ways you experienced.
So what do you do? You have to fill that
hole, that gaping chasm of want and emptiness that yawns just inside your
ribcage. If you cannot have hope that your narcissist will fill it, if you must
give up the hope that someone else will come along and fill it for you, what do
you do? You fill it yourself.
And that is much easier said than done…I
know this from my own painful experience. And you can’t fill it in a day, or a
week or even a month. It is not a once-off deal, like filling a bucket of water
from the hose, it is an on-going, daily, even hourly, change in how you think,
what you think, the messages you give yourself, your sense of responsibility
for yourself. It is a change in how you live, how you believe, it is becoming
your own best friend and hero. It is you waking up to the reality of your NM
and accepting that which you do not want to believe: she does not love you, not
because you are somehow at fault or defective, but because she is defective and
cannot love anyone but herself. It is stepping away from the childish notion
that wishing will make it so and embracing the adult’s perception of reality as
it is…ugly and unsatisfying, but real.
There are times when hope does you no
favours, when it is time to realize that what you are clinging to is a false
hope, and in doing so, you are harming yourself more effectively than anything
she can ever do to you. There are time to just step away and close the door and
turn your back. And that time is when you open your own eyes and allow yourself
to finally see that if she was unable to love and care for you when you
believed the sun rose and set in her, she doesn’t have it in her to love
someone who is less perfect, less adoring than your infant self. She has been
telling you for all of your years, in countless ways…it is time for you to step
away from your denial and listen to her…really listen. And put those false,
misleading hopes that just keep you stringing along, to rest.
“He who has never
hoped can never despair.”
George
Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950), Caesar and Cleopatra
(1901) act 4
Letting go of hope is tough but that is exactly what NC forces us to do. When the huge weight of their expectations for me and mine for them was lifted, I felt like I was finally free. Hope was a tool they used to keep me ensnared. It was a ball and chain that slowed my escape.
ReplyDeleteI agree, that a parent's inability to love their own child speaks to their dysfunction and is not a reflection on our loveability.
This post is coming at a perfect time for me. I had been LC with my NM for several years and she recently declared that our relationship was over (I am sure she sensed my pulling back). I was shocked at my own reaction, it upset me so much. As I read this I realized that it was because that was the end of hope, even though I logically knew we did not have a relationship, my heart hoped. It has been three months now and I am getting stronger all the time. Dealing with the collateral damage of losing contact with some of my other family members because of her.
ReplyDeleteYour posts and others have been so helpful, not just to learn more about NM's in general but the peace of mind of knowing I am not alone in this journey.
Thanks
Zu
To go NC, you have to give up the dream of having a loving family or a loving parent. One thing I thought as I went NC 5 months ago was, "I give up!" and that was a good giving up!
ReplyDeleteI believe there is too much follow your dreams nonsense in American society especially where people are deny reality and this denial of reality has led to some of our problems.
Thanks so much for this spot-on article- I agree, part of what makes growing away from a narcissistic mother and into the realization of yourself so difficult is the societal perception that we should keep up hope always. I was told to keep hoping by friends, "family" and therapists and it only prolonged the pain. Now I know that often we ourselves know best what we experienced, and few outside others can understand the importance of getting out; the truth is, NC isn't brave, right or wrong- it's just necessary if you want to grow and thrive. Best to all going through this. If it's any consolation, the dream of a loving family also has a lot of mythology around it in this society- loving families do exist, but no one received perfect love, and everyone has to grow up and accept various degrees of compromise with regard to expectations and love... xoxo
ReplyDelete