It is almost Christmas again. For many people, this is a
time of good cheer, love and togetherness. For others, not so much.
I am not talking about the
homeless or the non-Christian or those incarcerated or locked away in mental
institutions. I am not talking about the poor, those who can barely afford to
eat, let alone waste money on a tree and gifts that are not strict necessities.
I am not even talking about the Scrooges and Grinches among us. I am talking
about the unloved.
Unloved people fit into every
niche and category of human being you can name. They are atheists and devout
followers of a faith, they are Christian and non-Christian. They are rich and
they are bone-chillingly poor. They live in palatial mansions and in cardboard
boxes. They wear castoffs from dumpsters and they wear designer labels. They
surround us, they are our co-workers and our neighbours, the strangers in the
street, the acquaintance at the park, the cop on the corner, your hairdresser,
your barber, your dental hygienist, your vet. They surround you on any given
day, like strangers in a crowded elevator. And they are completely invisible to
us.
Some of them react to their status
with churlishness. “Happy Holidays!” you say, extending a greeting intended to
include those who do not identify as Christian and their celebrations as well. “Don’t
‘Happy Holidays’ me,” they snarl back. “It’s ‘Merry Christmas’!” They don’t
hold doors for those whose arms are too laden with packages to do it easily
themselves, they don’t step aside so a child can see Santa at the mall, they
don’t smile and return the love of the season because, feeling unloved, they
have none to share.
Some react to their status with
manipulation. They earned their status with it and they keep themselves in
denial with it. Having driven love away with their manipulations and petty
cruelties, they have cast a web of fear and obligation and guilt out to snare
the unwary. They will draw you in to a nest of festivities planned to create an
atmosphere they can pretend is love. Giving none, they receive none back, just
the pandering of those who continue trying to squeeze love from a heart of
stone and the obligatory appearance of those who fear repercussion for their failure
to attend the command performance.
Others react to their status with
fear and longing. Most of the year they keep it together but during the times
perceived as “family togetherness” periods, they feel their isolation most
acutely. Even the crumbs they receive, from last minute invitations to
thoughtless gifts, from negative attention to being talked over and ignored,
they believe that the little they receive is better than the nothing they would
surely get if they were to demand the respect that was due them. They fear they
are not loved and they will do anything they can in order to avoid confirming
that fear.
The unloved are legion. They are
the children who got socks and underwear under the tree when the siblings got
coveted toys. They are the children who reaped lavish heaps of costly gifts but
who are merely props in the dramatic script of the adults in their lives,
fawned over for photo opportunities, badgered to bring home brag-worthy grades,
valued only for what they can do, not simply for their existence.
They are the wives and husbands
who endure abusive spouses rather than be alone, the mothers and fathers who
vow to give their children better than they received but who simply go to the
opposite extreme, giving their children what they need to give them, not what
the children individually need. They are the people who don’t recognize love
when it walks into their lives and sits down next to them because they don’t
really know what it looks like. Their definitions of love were gleaned from
their experiences of abuse and being ignored, of being engulfed and
overwhelmed, of being prized for their performance but never for the simple
fact of their existence.
The unloved suffer. Often in
silence, occasionally dropping hints in the hope that someone will hear the
echo of emptiness inside them. Afraid that others will feel threatened by their
emptiness, they seldom speak of it and instead, silently hope for the miracle
that is someone who can hear them. Their pain is smothered, expressed in a sigh
or a wan smile, released only to run in the privacy of darkness. Sometimes it
escapes, alarming witnesses, generating distance at a time that closeness is
most needed. The pain lies buried, often forgotten, existing as an undercurrent
of fear that permeates all aspects of life. Some allow the fear to control
them, others rebel against it, but it shades life with its grey pallor.
The unloved are unloved by
themselves. They have accepted their unacceptability. They live in the guilt of
being flawed. They unlove themselves as much or more than others do. They are,
in truth, their own worst enemies because as long as they do not love
themselves, they validate those others who do not love them. And at no time of
the year is this lack of love felt more than now, during the season in which we
are reminded by heartless corporations and soulless sellers that this is the
season of love, to give to show your love, view your gifts as an indicator of
how much you are loved.
But when you don’t love yourself,
nobody else can love you. You cannot feel the love of another if you cannot
feel your own. You cannot rejoice in it, embrace it, revel in it when you
cannot see it or feel it or touch it. No matter how much love another has for you,
you cannot relate to it if you do not have self-love. If you do not value
yourself, you do not respect the value others have for you. Love begins at
home, within you, with you loving yourself and believing that you are worthy of
being loved. It all starts with you.
So in this holiday season,
remember that those who taught you that you are not worth loving, who viewed
you as burdensome chattel rather than beloved child, those who gave you
manipulation and control instead of love and understanding—they have earned
their aloneness. Not only have they earned it, they have spent all of the years
right up to this moment telling you that when it comes to love and respect for
you, they are a dry well, an empty cup, a drained basin. They never had it for
you, they don’t have it now, and the future cannot be any different. Hope will
bring you back, again and again, but there will be nothing where there was
never anything in the first place.
You didn’t cause this. It is not
something you did when you were five months or five years or fifteen. It is
them: they decided, from the moment you were a reality to them, the role you
would play in their lives—not the role they would play in yours. Your role was
created and cast with no consideration for you and your personality,
sensitivities, wants, likes, fears, or desires. You were a lump of clay to be
moulded to fit the role they created and forced to conform through any means
acceptable to them. Depending on their own peculiarities, those means could
have ranged from emotional privation, manipulating, shaming, guilt,
gaslighting, untruths, and even physical attack. Their objective had nothing to
do with helping you to develop into the best you that you could be, it was
entirely about moulding you to be who and what they wanted to fit the role they
created for you.
If you are still feeling unloved,
it is because you are. It is because you bought into their bullshit and have
not yet let it go. You are unlovable because you did not fulfil the roll to
their expectations—and you have accepted and embraced that.
But the truth is, they are wrong.
Their proper role was not to create a role for you and force you into it, their
role was to discover you, and then your talents, and help you develop them, and
to guide you, gently and lovingly, into the society in which you live. Their
role was to focus on you and your needs and to adapt their lives to care for
you and support you and assist you in becoming the best you that you can be.
Instead, they sacrificed you on the altar of their own glorification. They were
more important than you. You were a tool, a means to an end, a way to gain
whatever they sought in the form of narcissistic supply. It is not your fault—it
never was. They had a choice of who to put first and they chose themselves
every single time.
This is the season of love, the
perfect time to start loving yourself. The ideal time to stop measuring
yourself against the yardstick of their perceptions and self-serving
evaluations and to start creating your own. This is the time to stop
self-sabotaging yourself because feeling guilty is more familiar than feeling
self-pride. It is the perfect time to look to pleasing yourself rather than
others. It is the ideal moment for you to learn and to practice the use of the
most powerful word in the English language: NO.
When they disparage you, tell them
no by walking away. Even if you are sitting on the floor surrounded by boxes
and wrapping paper, even if you are sitting at the table with a half-eaten
plate of turkey, even if you are standing in the kitchen with your hands full
of hot food—now is the time to refuse to accept disparagement, belittling,
scorn, and derision. This is not the time for words that can be twisted and
turned back on you, this is the time to take their unloving behaviour and,
rather than accepting and amplifying it, reject it. Reject it in the most
powerful way you can: walk away.
On Christmas Day, 1990, my
mother-in-law leaned across the dinner table in the middle of the meal, and
told her son that, because he was refusing to sign legal papers without having
an attorney read them first, he was stupid. And she repeated the word, shaking
her dinner knife in his face, “Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!” He was dyslexic and had
trouble reading, so this accusation cut deep. The hurt on his face was plain. I
knew nothing of narcissists in those days, but I knew I was not obligated to
tolerate her behaviour, her hurting my husband, who had grown up to be a fine
man in spite of her. I got up from the table and went to the coat closet, took
out our jackets and my handbag, got the car keys, and walked out the door. It
took her eleven months to realize we weren’t going to call her and make nice.
She never called him names again—she knew we would not accept it any longer.
The most powerful message you can
give a person is with your actions, not your words. When people treat you badly
and you accept it, you laugh it off, you choose to ignore it, you are giving
them permission to continue. When you say something to them, you not only give
them an opportunity to ridicule you or put you down, you give them an
opportunity to tell you why you deserve to be treated badly.
But when your actions speak for
you, they cannot ignore you or try to talk you around. I had a tenant who was
abusive to me every time she called me on the phone. When I started hanging up
on her, however, whenever she was rude, it didn’t take her long to realize that
she had to civil to me if she wanted me to hear her. Your actions are your most
power message: do not permit them to abuse you and, one way or another, they
will stop.
Sometimes the way they stop is the
way my mother did it: she disappeared me (and my children) from her life. We
did not hear from her at all—no cards, no calls, no gifts. We ceased to exist
until the day came that we were useful to her. When you determine to stop the
unloving from abusing you, this could be your outcome. My daughter has done the
same. I am no longer useful to her, so she no longer has anything to say to me.
Thinking about such an outcome can
be very painful. Nobody likes rejection. But if you put it into perspective, it
is the kindest thing they can do for you, albeit unwittingly so. It saves you
years—even decades of repeated little rejections, back stabs, insults, and
abuses. It gives you the truth in one huge bombshell: they don’t care about you,
writ large. The truth, in all its ugly glory, finally in your hands.
So, what do you do with it? You
first recognize that they are the ones who are flawed, not you. They cannot
appreciate anything beyond their own narrowly defined, selfish and self-centred
perceptions. They will take anyone who fits their mould: my daughter found
herself a surrogate mother who would behave the way she wanted me to behave,
who put no limits or restrictions on her, who wouldn’t make her go to school,
who supplied her with drugs and alcohol and did not act like a parent. Your Ns
may do the same: find a substitute for you who will play the role. My mother
substituted my daughter for me—my daughter played the role where I insisted on
being myself.
You find out who you really are and
you embrace it. You find your real self, your real tastes, your real likes,
dislikes, values and beliefs. Some of them may mirror your Ns and that is OK,
some of them will be diametrically opposed—and that is OK, too.
You embrace your real self, the
one who doesn’t share their ethics or tastes, the one who is different from
what they have tried to shape you to be. You love what you learn about yourself
even if it goes contrary to what you have been taught to believe—create your
own beliefs, beliefs that feel right
to you. Listen to information contrary to what you have been taught, think
about it critically, accept what feels right to you and discard the rest. Let
yourself become the real you and love that new person for no other reason than
it is you, the real you, the you that you were always meant to be.
When you love yourself, you feel
whole. Even if you are not truly whole yet, when you love yourself, you feel
that way.
When you love yourself you open
the door to others to love you. Not exploit or manipulate or control you—to love
you. New people come into your life and love comes with them. Sometimes
romantic love, sometimes platonic love, but it is all love.
The way for you to no longer be
one of the unloved starts with loving yourself, wholly, completely, and
unconditionally. It opens the door to a whole new world.
Thank you. I learned the power of 'no' a little late, but I am using it more now -- I am finally being honest and realistic instead of glossing over stuff....so much wasted time and effort....
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Wonderful post Violet.
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