M
mommamaree
Guest
For years and years, she told me that the only thing that kept her from going through with it was that I told her I would never forgive her if she did it (successfully or not). She said that it was only my relationship with her that kept her alive. It was only recently I recognized this for the BS that it is and started calling her on it.“Only emotional extrication”…well, yes, easier than if you had to get a restraining order, but not by an order of magnitude, or anything. You still have an elephantine portion to swallow.
If someone threatens suicide, they need to be directed towards mental health treatment, rather than having the thinking pattern enabled through reward. Even if she were truly suicidal–being a narcissicist does not prevent you ever having true thoughts of suicide, after all–you’re still doing exactly the right thing by refusing to reward her threats of suicide. What she does with your response is out of your hands.
Analyzing my own actions over the last decade, I am coming to realize that I began this work of extrication a long time ago, even while I still held out hope that maybe she might change one day, not due to my own efforts, but due to God answering my prayers. Now I realize that God can only heal us if we want Him to and she does not want to change. She has just changed tactics, and broadened her targets to include my eldest daughter, whose very existence is threatening to her, because my eldest daughter is the same age as my niece, whom my mother adopted. Thus far, my daughter has been too young to consciously experience being the target, but I have noticed in the past year evidence that she perceives it now, but doesn’t know how to articulate it. That TERRIFIES me and I plan to have a conversation with my husband this weekend once he is back in town. I may be unwilling to protect myself, but I will do what needs to be done to protect my children.