Even Mistakes Have Gifts in the End

Some people are lessonsI loved the quote by Sol Gordon that “In living your life, you will learn lessons. There are no mistakes, only lessons [and they] will be repeated until they are learned.” The reason I love the quote so much is that I have had some pretty hard lessons in life that I kept coming back until I finally learned what I was supposed to with regard to self-love, love from others, relationships, and domestic abuse. The domestic abuse was introduced into my life early in childhood, which can explain why I had lower levels of differentiation, lacked healthy self-esteem, and didn’t know how to find healthy relationships since I had never had one modeled for me. While I tried to avoid ever becoming a victim of abuse in my adult life, I simply hadn’t learned what I needed to in order to be successful at that. What I’m referring to covers many things from “how” to learn to really accept and love myself in a healthy manner, what healthy boundaries are, how to avoid or eliminate enmeshment in my relationships, and (most importantly) what the warning signs of domestic abuse are, as well as that I “can” do better and even deserve more than that. That I am truly worthy of love without abuse, and even that I am better off to be alone than with someone who doesn’t treat me right. When I lacked healthy levels of self-love, I felt like I needed person-change-lifesomeone else to love me “for me,” if that makes sense. It was very difficult for me to learn that I needed to love myself for myself before I tried to be in a relationship with anyone else. Some of my relationships I couldn’t even recognize that I was being abused because it wasn’t physical abuse. When it came to verbal and emotional abuse, I didn’t recognize it as such and, worse, I treated myself just as badly inside my own head. However, as the years went on, the abuse in my relationships seemed to escalate until it was full-blown life-threatening events that finally got my attention. This is what it took for me to learn the aforementioned lessons, though.

growUnfortunately, having been through such extreme abuse included having to deal with physical injuries and related medical issues, PTSD, financial destitution, and even homelessness for a period of time. These are not the easiest things to endure and some take a very long time to from which to recover.  Almost three years later, I am still dealing with the effects of the financial abuse my husband subjected me to and I will be for years to come even though I have left the relationship. While I no longer deal with physical and emotional abuse, the aftermath of the various ways I was abused continue to impact my daily life and add a lot of stress to my life. In addition to the financial problems and their fallout, I also still deal with health issues that the abuse resulted in, which is difficult when you have no medical insurance and are already dealing with financial devastation.

when-i-look-back-on-my-life-i-see-pain-mistakes-and-heart-ache-when-i-look-in-the-mirror-i-see-strength-learned-lessons-and-pride-in-myself-life-quote-2I have given so much in my past relationships to my own detriment, time and time again, and have been left with nothing to show for it and instead have been left cleaning up other people’s messes left behind in their path of destruction. However, I am not bitter and even feel blessed. When people ask me how I can be so happy after such great trauma, how I can approach the world with so much love and resiliency, and basically imply or even come right out and say that these experiences are all so terrible, I always correct them. It hasn’t been all bad. It is because of what I’ve gone through that I am the person I am today. It’s been my own great suffering that has gifted me with such great levels of empathy for others. It’s these hardships that have gifted me with the wisdom to help others in a way that I would otherwise be unable. It is my trauma that has revealed to me how strong I am and gifted me with a confidence that I can survive anything going forward in life… because I already have before. The extreme tragedies I’ve experienced are also what gifted me with an unusual amount of drive and passion to achieve certain goals- a drive unparalleled to anything I had ever seen or knew before. There are so many beautiful things that have come from my hard-knocks in life and, while I consider the catalysts to be a traumatic experiences in themselves, the end results- what I have created with the broken pieces of my life and self- are now amazing blessings and gifts. ugly wrapping paperThey simply came in ugly wrapping paper. I wouldn’t change it for the world, though, because I am happier and healthier now than I ever was before. So, you see, lessons do repeat themselves until you have learned them, but everything is a gift. There are no mistakes to regret, only ugly wrapping paper to see beyond. That is what my mistakes have taught me.

Allowing Purpose and Eliminating Mayhem

You attract what you are, not what you want. That’s why when you have broken pieces inside and feel weak, you attract other people who are also broken in some way. You must take the time and put in the work that’s necessary to heal yourself inside so that going forward, you will not attract more abuse in your life. We cannot depend on anyone else to create our lives for us, be responsible for our happiness, or give our lives purpose. We must do these things for ourselves. Once you realize you are in control of all of these things (you always were, but just had some confusing messages in life that misguided you from truth and divinity), you will find yourself empowered. You will feel energized, blissful, grateful, strong, and feel like a CREATOR of your destiny, rather than a victim of chance or other people. And when you are living in synchronicity with your life purpose, things will come easily. Opportunities will present themselves to you- you will not have to work hard to make things happen or succeed in your life. Things naturally fall into place and happen with ease when you are living authentically in tune with your true calling in the world. It is from EGO and fear that we operate when we are trying to force what we “want” instead of trusting that things will unfold as they should. When we fail to “trust,” that is when chaos occurs in our lives. This is why you must let go and trust that God will take care of everything and bless you infinitely. He has a grand plan that you could never even imagine for yourself, so trust that it’s better than what you think you want. TRUST. And then let go. Shift into purpose, meaning, and joy. As Alan Cohen said, “The purpose of life is not to fight against evil and misfortune; it is to unveil magnificence.”

What’s the Gift in All of This?

We all have challenges…life is about ebb and flow. And it’s human nature to seek constant pleasure and try to always avoid pain. But it’s our refusal to just accept the ebb and flow, our refusal to accept when bad things happen that causes much of our suffering. Instead of thinking that everything bad or painful that happens to us is just “bad,” we should be asking “What gift is there in this for me?” We can always learn from our hardships if we choose to look at them as stepping stones instead of stumbling blocks. It’s all about perception…and we get to CHOOSE how to think about things…we PICK our own thoughts! So that’s the great news about all of this. We can choose to look at what we gain from adversity (wisdom, deeper levels of empathy, better personality or character traits, a new job or relationship that’s better than the one we had before, spiritual transformation, or changing the path we’ve been on to bring us to our DESTINY- what we were always MEANT TO DO and go where we were SUPPOSED TO BE!)…or we can “choose” to focus on the negative aspects and play the victim role, sitting on our pity pot feeling sorry for ourselves and letting it steal from our ability to be happy in the present and future. This isn’t what’s in our best interest, though. Sure- take a little time to grieve- you have to experience your feelings. After all, that’s part of being human. But then realize that it’s not how many times you falter, fail, get hurt, or otherwise that matters…it’s what you do when you GET BACK UP that counts! Life is 10% what hapens to us and 90% how we choose to look at it and react to it. In the movie “Maid in Manhatten,” the character Lionel says “What defines us is how well we rise after falling.” And that’s exactly my point. We must always remind ourselves that while it seems that the good times never last forever, neither can the bad because that’s how the ebb and flow of life works. It will always come to an end because the only constant in life is CHANGE. And as Oprah once said, “[…] when you hit rock bottom, that’s the best [opportunity] to spring forward.” Everything’s a gift, guys- don’t get thrown off if it just happens to come in ugly wrapping paper sometimes!!!

“Even when you think you have your life all mapped out, things happen that shape your destiny in ways you might never have imagined.” ~Deepak Chopra

I’ve joked about being a “chronic planner.” When I was younger, I planned on being a wife and mother and everything else was negotiable, but that was the ultimate plan. Then after I left my first marriage due to extreme physical violence and other forms of domestic abuse, I made a new plan to finish school first because I thought that would provide me “safety”…that it would make me safe from future abuse through providing myself financial independence. For 3 years I worked so hard on this goal that there was no room for anything else in my life. My friends didn’t know how I was doing it without burning out, but to me my whole “life” was riding on my success or failure at finishing school and being financially independent, and I never wanted to be anyone’s victim ever again. I made a lot of sacrifices during those 3 years, but I told myself that it was a short-term sacrifice for a long-term goal and that it would all pay off in the end. I lived in unfavorable conditions, saving every last penny I could so that I could get my own place. I worked 18 hours a day, 7 days a week between classes, homework, and for awhile even volunteered doing recreational therapies with dementia patients. I gave up any kind of social life because I felt I couldn’t afford for this plan to fail. To me that meant that I had to maintain a 4.0 gpa so that I would open as many doors as possible to scholarships and transfer schools. I had no balance in my life and poured 100% of my energy into this one single plan. Then, in the spring of 2010 a man who seemed charming and intelligent started aggressively pursuing me. Being cautious and putting school first, I waited several months before deciding to accept his advances to even go on a date with him. We dated for about a year. He seemed to be the man of my dreams and he wanted to get married and have the family I had always dreamed about. I thought that God had sent him, and I adjusted my plans to finish school first to include this man in my life. I didn’t want my past experiences to make me jaded and punish this man for someone else’s wrongdoings, so despite the sickness in my stomach, I agreed to loan him my money. A little at a time, he ended up “borrowing” every last dime I had to my name and then racked up thousands of dollars in debt on my credit cards. But I felt like I would be a bad wife, and even “jinxing” our future relationship, if I didn’t fight my misgivings about allowing him access to my finances…so I did. At this point, he’d given me no reason not to trust him. Don’t get me wrong, a couple of problems had arisen during our engagement, but he had assured me that they were nothing to worry about because we worked through them in a way that seemed normal and healthy at the time…or so he had led me to believe. But on our wedding night, the truth began to unfold and within a matter of 5 short weeks, I had become his victim unwittingly. From emotional abuse, to the constant, endless lies, his casual and twisted sex addiction and pornography addiction, multiple affairs, financial abuse through fraud, theft, and allowing me no access to our money to pay off debt he’d incurred in my name…I found some very dark things and began to “see behind the curtain.” It turned out that this man, the man I had grown to love and trust, who’d gone to church with me regularly and prayed with me literally every single night, was absolutely not the man that he presents to the world. And seeing behind his mask was terrifying to put it lightly. It was by far much scarier than the physical abuse of my first marriage. I hadn’t yet realized that my husband was a clinical narcissist and sociopath, so I confronted him with the phone records, emails, proof of accounts to sex hook up sites online, and receipts that proved his infidelities and lies and he acted like it wasn’t sitting in my hand right in front of him. He coolly, without any emotion, denied the truth that I had hard evidence of his abuse and lies right in my hand in front of him- he lied to me about it again without batting an eye. It was at that very moment that I realized that he had not just made a mistake and lied once or twice, but that this man was a pathological liar and it frightened me that he was able to do it with such ease. A chill went down my spine as I made this realization. I had married someone I didn’t truly know who they were…this person before me lacked any moral compass, character, honesty, or empathy….all the things that make a person human. There was no conscience or remorse, which I didn’t understand at that time because I had yet to learn about how a person with narcissistic personality disorder thinks or operates. If I had known, I would have understood how dangerous it was for me to let him know that I had found out all his dark secrets and knew who he really was. Lucky for me, this helped him to “decide” that he was “never” in love with me. After I told him that I couldn’t respect someone who was so dishonest and that I no longer thought he had just been making mistakes when he lied to me, but that he had a character defect, he immediately informed me that he not only “never loved” me, but that literally “everything” he had “ever told” me “was a lie” and he “was only playing a role.” From that point on, he became more and more abusive in far less insidious ways. His gloves had come off. I was lucky in many ways, but I sure didn’t feel lucky. In fact, at the time I questioned if God was punishing me for something…I tried going to confession in hopes that the abuse would stop. I couldn’t understand why this was happening to me. I had believed that if I was a good wife, not only through my actions toward him, but spiritually and on every level, that God would bless our marriage…and I begged him to save it. But even the church, when I turned to them for help, advised me to leave him, saying “this is just another form of abuse” and “we cannot support it.” They urged me to file for divorce and said they would support me through that (they even ended up paying for the filing fees and got me an attorney), but as far as they were concerned our marriage had never taken place because my husband had never taken his vows seriously, never acted married, and he was refusing to stop his abusive behavior the one time we had met with someone for counseling- in fact, my husband had become aggressive with the priest. My plan for a happy and safe life wasn’t just falling apart, it was being ripped apart and there was nothing I could do to stop it. He kept promising to pay back the money he’d “borrowed” since I had absolutely no income as a full-time student and he had a six-figure income, but he eventually told me he didn’t plan on actually returning any of my money to me “because [I] knew this could happen when I married him.” I certainly did not know that he would destroy everything I had worked so hard for or that he would betray me and abuse me so callously or I never would have married him in the first place. I believed him every time he promised to do just the opposite of that before we got married- to love, honor, and cherish me forever…and I didn’t think divorce would be so casually accepted as an option to him since he had professed to be such a devout Catholic and proclaimed to be so against divorce, among other things (he also fed me the same kind of bull about adultery, pornography, etc). I believed he was being honest because I was being honest with him, but he saw that as me being “naive” and, therefore, “deserving of the outcome.” It was my fault for not knowing that people could be so evil without feeling bad about it at all. In fact, he even went as far as to tell me that “This happens all the time. One person falls in love with someone who just doesn’t love them back.” I couldn’t believe how twisted this was since he had so aggressively pursued me and convinced me to fall in love with him because he “was so in love with me” …or so he had said. He acted like none of that ever happened and I was some stranger off the street that just had a crush on him. He took no responsibility for his actions at all and repeatedly blamed me for his treating me so abusively…it was always my fault for not knowing better. The abuse continued to escalate each day until my family and church intervened and basically forced me to leave for my own safety. I didn’t want to go because I was still so disillusioned and, while I didn’t know it yet, I was incapable of protecting myself from him. The abuse only escalated after I left, and it’s left me with PTSD and a myriad of health problems. Now, here is the important part: “Even when you think you have your life all mapped out, things happen that shape your destiny in ways you might never have imagined.” This is something I read that Deepak Chopra said and it really hit home with me. You remember when I was talking about how I thought God would bless me? He was…you see, my grandmother used to always say that everything is a gift from God- sometimes we just don’t like the wrapping paper. And that’s what was happening to me. God had a much greater plan for my life than I had “mapped” out for myself, and he could see the big picture down the road a ways…things I couldn’t yet see. Some of those things have yet to be, but some have been revealed to me already, and of the things that have become visible to me I am so grateful. This devastating and tragic event has shaped me into an even better person with even greater empathy for others. Knowing so much pain has allowed me to grow as a person- the person I am “destined” to be. Seeing such evil in another person has led to a religious transformation for me from mind to heart if you can understand what I mean, and for which I am so thankful. And last, but not least, this experience changed the career path I heading down. I have always wanted to go into counseling, but I felt it was not the logical or responsible thing financially for me to do. When I first returned to school, I was almost 30 and felt that it was important to spend as little time possible in school and graduate with a degree that would allow me to make as much money as possible so that I could reach that initial plan of financial independence and “safety,” so I had been working on my nursing degree. But my calling has always been to help others in a different way, and this event made it only impossible to deny that I must go into counseling and help other women who go through similar things. I want to open a non-profit organization one day to do fundraising for individuals who fall prey to the kind of abuse I did…to offer counseling and legal services…and spiritual healing through weekend retreats where these women can forget about their PTSD and maybe have a moment of joy in the middle of their pain. I will offer yoga and meditation classes, transitional housing, and a work program after initial healing work to empower other women. In the last year, in what very little spare time I have, I have offered support, resoures, education, daily inspiration, and preliminary safety planning to women (and a few men, too) in over 30 countries. It’s been very rewarding and healing for me. I have plans to change the world on a global level with regard to all kinds of abuse, from domestic violence like I’ve experienced, to human and sex trafficking, and even animal abuse. It took me going through this much pain to become motivated enough to risk everything to go after this path, because it’s a longer road with a much riskier financial outcome at the end… but make no mistake- it’s my destiny. And it took this happening to me to shape me into a person that knows what this feels like so that I can be there for others who survive abuse, to be able to show them we can all be triumphant over such abuse, and to INSPIRE me enough to find the COURAGE to start a place where we can all come together to do just that. So you see, I thought I had my life all planned out…but I could have never reached my destination without the proper inspiration that came from the unplanned events!