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1990Domer
Guest
I wished Good Friday was a bit holier for me, but I received an unexpected phone call from my sister’s husband. Some here may remember the issues I had with my in-laws. Well, I also came from a toxic family and put severe boundaries on my sister and now on my mom, but only very recently when I realized she would not get help for her mental illness.
Out of the blue, my sister’s husband calls. I picked up the phone because I didn’t recognize the number and thought it may be a tax client. Bad choice. I should have ended the call ASAP but decided to hear him out. The common thread was that I was a bad Catholic and acting in an unChristian-like manner for not allowing my sister back into my life. I tried to politely end the conversation by saying that said husband had no history of my childhood, my sister’s drug problem, her abusive first husband (he died and she married this man shortly after), etc. My sister is one who can really gaslight a person. Her husband treats her like dirt (for the two or three times I met him). So, he told me the reason he’s agnostic stems from meeting people who call themselves Christian but don’t act like it. No reasonable communication took place.
While I am angry at myself for the conversations lasting as long as it did, it gave me additional evidence that the choice I made to avoid people who could gaslight me is a good decision, because my husband and son were the ones who suffered when I projected pent up anger at them. Honestly, I agree with my pastor that sometimes it’s best to avoid toxic people to keep them from sinning. So, I pray from afar that they will someday understand why I need(ed) to set boundaries.
Out of the blue, my sister’s husband calls. I picked up the phone because I didn’t recognize the number and thought it may be a tax client. Bad choice. I should have ended the call ASAP but decided to hear him out. The common thread was that I was a bad Catholic and acting in an unChristian-like manner for not allowing my sister back into my life. I tried to politely end the conversation by saying that said husband had no history of my childhood, my sister’s drug problem, her abusive first husband (he died and she married this man shortly after), etc. My sister is one who can really gaslight a person. Her husband treats her like dirt (for the two or three times I met him). So, he told me the reason he’s agnostic stems from meeting people who call themselves Christian but don’t act like it. No reasonable communication took place.
While I am angry at myself for the conversations lasting as long as it did, it gave me additional evidence that the choice I made to avoid people who could gaslight me is a good decision, because my husband and son were the ones who suffered when I projected pent up anger at them. Honestly, I agree with my pastor that sometimes it’s best to avoid toxic people to keep them from sinning. So, I pray from afar that they will someday understand why I need(ed) to set boundaries.