I've been holding on for a long time.
Longer than maybe I should have. Longer than maybe that most other folks would. Longer than anyone else thought I could, or should.
Walking along the edge of a cliff, feeling the pull.
Longer than maybe I should have. Longer than maybe that most other folks would. Longer than anyone else thought I could, or should.
Walking along the edge of a cliff, feeling the pull.
For a while I was balanced, poised, steady. Things got a little...rocky...a little...rough...but I kept walking, kept going. "Surely the path will smooth out eventually...won't it?" became something of a mantra for me. I am tenacious (stubborn would be a more accurate description - tenacity seems to be more of a virtue, and I don't really feel virtuous), steadfast, determined to find my way along. I don't like to give up!
Somewhere along the way, I skidded on some scree. I teetered, reached for something to hold onto, found nothing but empty air. Flailed. Stumbled. Slid.
And over I went. Toppled into the sea of sky.
Somehow, before I joined entirely the wheeling denizens of the air with my own graceless, downward flight, I caught hold of an edge. Only just, scrabbling for better purchase, stone gnawing at my flesh, tearing, tattering. I sought better purchase, tried to pull myself up. I was too weak. My weight, the weight I carried, was too much. Arms trembling, fingers slipping, I tried to call out for help, but I had no voice. Perhaps I was too scared, but I like to think I was just too damned tired. I am certain that some part of me didn't care to hold on any longer. Why should I? The damage being done was too much, and holding on hurt.
Eventually, the inevitable - I fell.
It was bad, at first. Everything seized up and the air rushed past, the rock face blurred, creatures of the sky cast curious glances at my plummeting form.
Fall long enough, far enough, and you relax. Did you know that? You sort of accept what's happening, and one can only maintain that adrenaline rush for so long before the fearful becomes the norm. It wasn't fun, and I kept looking for a rope, a root, something to grab and stop my fall, but there was nothing.
It was bad, at first. Everything seized up and the air rushed past, the rock face blurred, creatures of the sky cast curious glances at my plummeting form.
Fall long enough, far enough, and you relax. Did you know that? You sort of accept what's happening, and one can only maintain that adrenaline rush for so long before the fearful becomes the norm. It wasn't fun, and I kept looking for a rope, a root, something to grab and stop my fall, but there was nothing.
I'm still falling. It's a terribly long way down, after all...
...but I think my wings are coming along nicely.
~~~~~
Someone and I are no more. We...I...have reached the point where there's no reconciling our differences. Although I didn't want to, I found myself feeling compelled to call the police a few nights ago, pushed by his drinking, his anger, his verbal and psychological abuse of me, of the kids. I'd asked him to move out some time ago, to give us some space and time to breathe, collect ourselves, patch up the worst of the damage and see if we could rebuild.
He didn't.
And then things broke down entirely, and I was dialing the phone with a stomach full of dread, a heart full of hurt, a head echoing with hateful, blaming, goading words and the sound of fists pounding on the glass shower door while I tried to wash my hair. Enough. Was. Enough.
I will not be the supply for a narcissist any more.
He will not remove himself from this house, despite having been asked and asked, so I will be forced to begin legal proceedings. I don't like this. I feel that I must, though, because what happens to me makes no difference to me, but my kids? Are another story entirely.
I did the thing I dreaded, never quite believing what I was doing even in the moment.
Here's hoping I finish building my wings before I go splat.
~~~~~
Someone and I are no more. We...I...have reached the point where there's no reconciling our differences. Although I didn't want to, I found myself feeling compelled to call the police a few nights ago, pushed by his drinking, his anger, his verbal and psychological abuse of me, of the kids. I'd asked him to move out some time ago, to give us some space and time to breathe, collect ourselves, patch up the worst of the damage and see if we could rebuild.
He didn't.
And then things broke down entirely, and I was dialing the phone with a stomach full of dread, a heart full of hurt, a head echoing with hateful, blaming, goading words and the sound of fists pounding on the glass shower door while I tried to wash my hair. Enough. Was. Enough.
I will not be the supply for a narcissist any more.
He will not remove himself from this house, despite having been asked and asked, so I will be forced to begin legal proceedings. I don't like this. I feel that I must, though, because what happens to me makes no difference to me, but my kids? Are another story entirely.
I did the thing I dreaded, never quite believing what I was doing even in the moment.
Here's hoping I finish building my wings before I go splat.