I will tell anyone younger than 50 this important piece of advice. I wish someone had not just told me, but made me understand. A lot of the choices we make in our life when we are younger seem to have no bad repercussions, and as a result, we start thinking we're invincible. I'm watching my nephew scarf down all these hamburgers and fried chicken dinners. I honestly can't remember the last time I saw him eat a vegetable or anything green. Unless you count French Fries. But here's the thing. As you're driving down the road of life, sooner or later you have to do something to maintain the vehicle, or a the very least prepare for emergencies, or there's a very good chance you make not make it to your destination. But if you're a science buff, remember the Newton's law: For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Put another way, for every action, there is a consequence. You may not see it at first and you may not feel it for years to come, but over time, that bill will come due. Put something aside now while you're healthy young and well, to pay that bill later.
And now, the Reverend has left the pulpit.
Not the sort of post it seems appropriate to like as it is so sad. I am glad you made it through but having had a fairly good relationship with my parents I do feel sad you missed out on something that can be special but pleased you found yourself, not everyone achieves that.
All this has happened a long time ago, but like you said, it's not something we can just forget about and move on. There is no moving on from loosing your entire family when they are still alive. Even when my mother passed away, there was still no way back. I used to blame her for many things, but over time I forgave her, since all she did was moved by a mental pathology that was beyond her. Besides, hating my parents with such passion was only making ME suffer, so I had to stop and forgive. There was no peace without that.
Forgiving my mother was the hardest thing I have ever done, and yet, I had to stay away for the sake of keeping my mental sanity, not to mention my marriage. My wife almost left me because of her. Bipolar disorder can probably destroy the entire planet if given the chance, but it always starts with the family. When my father decided not to treat her for the syndrome, that sealed my decision to leave home and move to the other side of the planet. From this point on, it still took me a couple of decades until I had gathered enough strength and wisdom to learn how to forgive. It doesn't fix anything, but it certainly lifts a terrible weight from the heart. After everything has been destroyed, forgiveness was my way out. And it was not about telling my mother that I forgave her (bipolars are incapable of recognizing guilt), but instead to convince myself that I did. That was the toughest part.
I have been very privileged to experience happiness as well as heartache and I feel desperately sad for those that only seem to experience the latter. Happily you appear not to be one of them.
It has become a matter of living one day at a time. Bipolar disorder is a syndrome, so it aggravates over time. I still have good memories of my family from my childhood, before things got out of hand. My wife finds it hard to believe that things were not always like this, because she only met me after things started to escalate. She has only seen the dark side, and never understood how I could forgive. So even though my mother has passed away many years ago, in a way she is still living through those who could never forgive her. It's hard to separate the person from the disease if you have never seen them before it takes over.
People find it easier to hate than to forgive, especially when those afflicted by this mental disorder are incapable of feeling remorse or guilt for things they did, and those feelings are what define us as human beings. I suppose when people loose the ability to feel compassion, they are no longer human. That's what this disorder do to them, so to many who have seen them in action, they are seen as monsters. What keeps a family together no longer applies to them because they are incapable of loving. It's not that they don't want to love, but instead that they are no longer capable of understanding the concept. Over time I have developed the ability to become emotionally numb, so her attacks had less effect on me. A self-protection mechanism took over.
When I have exiled myself from my family, I had decades to reflect over what makes us human. I have worked at an IT company where the manager had symptoms similar to my mother, frequently verbally assaulting the employees to feed his ego - something I was very familiar with. Later I have noticed that the industry was actually seeking for people like him, because psychopaths are detached from human emotions, which turns them into the ideal managers who have to make difficult decisions without worrying about who is going to be hurt by them.
There is a good chance most of our world leaders are actual psychopaths, because that works in their favor. They are not quite human by definition, which seems to fit well with their position and the decisions they need to make. It appears that 1 in every 10 of us are psychopaths, completely devoid of human emotions, making them perfect candidates for leading positions. Being unaffected by things like compassion or regret, they are quite efficient, capable of making quicker decisions, and still sleep quite well at night. That means the 90% of us who are still human are quite possibly being governed by psychopaths incapable of human emotions. I guess that explains a lot of what's in the history books.
I know it is said time heals but I have never believed that myself, the pain may diminish but it is always there.
Some claim it's the pain that makes us human. Some people lack the ability to feel anything, and do terrible things while attempting to feel something. I think that Dexter TV show was about this. He was the classic psychopath, incapable of feeling happiness, love, remorse or guilt. He tried feel empathy, but it was pointless to him. It was not his fault - it's a mental disorder, and looks like 1 in every 10 of us have it. They appear to make very efficient managers and leaders, though you won't want to work under them. LOL
Hehe I know how that can be. That single psycho manager has ruined my life back in 2004, and I still haven't recovered from it. I don't know if I ever will, but life goes on.
He often told me no job is worth being miserable for.
In a past life I worked as a social worker in the mental health system. Bipolar is really difficult to deal with. So sorry Ken. My mom was borderline. She lived for causing trouble between people. Imagine your mom is your frienenemy.
He was quite capable of deeply loving someone and being hurt easily.
Unless that job is tied up to your permission to remain in the country?
It does leave a mark on us though, if we are mistreated badly or watch someone we love dearly suffer, it still hurts us emotionally.
The scars form and we learn to cope but memories still hurt.
It is a sad fact that those close to us and have the potential to love so much as the same potential to hurt. I was lucky to have a good family but it was nothing more than that, no one deserves the hurt or the illness discussed here but it happens.