Liar


I wrote a post yesterday about getting back on the dating horse. But I’m not so sure I want to. Life is peaceful now. There is no daily drama. I’m not constantly irritated and frustrated. I’m content. In contrast, a little over a year ago, I wrote this:

It’s May 22, 2011. Mack and I have spent my birthday weekend at the beach. His asshole side made an appearance last night, and I did not indulge him. We were singing in the car on the way to getting my oozy chocolate birthday dessert. I thought we were having a good time with it, when suddenly he snapped at me. He said this is his profession and he doesn’t indulge mere amateurs by singing with them whilst driving in a car. He said at first it was fun, but then he found me obnoxious. By this time we were at the restaurant. He got out of the car in a huff, like he had been put upon and was totally justified in being a prick. I got out of the car after some deliberation, and told him I didn’t want to go into the restaurant. He said, “Fine!” We got in the car and as he exited the parking lot, he gunned the engine a little. I told him I’d drive, if he was going to drive like an idiot. Again, “Fine!” So we switched seats and I drove us home. When we got home, he got out of the car and went for a walk on the beach. I wanted to. But since he announced it first, I simply went to bed. He came back a short time later and slammed around in the kitchen, loudly and angrily, making sure he made his ire known. I dozed in and out, and eventually he came into the bedroom, demanding that I wake up. “Why, so you can yell at me some more?” He left me alone after that. Later he came back to bed, and said, “Great, I sleep this way in two beds now.” Realizing what he’d said, he added, “At least I used to.” So, either he still sleeps in bed with Corrine, or he threw it out there erroneously, trying to make a point in the midst of his anger.

He gave up sleeping and went out in the living room to work on my computer. And read about Galveston. He came to bed a couple of hours later. I slept in my clothes.

I arose before he did, and found a note in the kitchen that he’d fixed my laptop. And the coffee was ready, just flip the switch. But there was no apology. At least not an overt one. He got up shortly after I did. I was still in the midst of my first cup. I was out on the deck, typing on my laptop. He asked if my computer was working. I nodded my head that it was. Shortly thereafter I went inside to refill my coffee.

He said, “So what happens now?”

“I’m drinking coffee, enjoying the morning on the deck.” I paused. Refilled my cup. “Unless you want to yell at me some more and tell me how obnoxious I am.”

“Not really.”

I went back out on the deck with my refilled cup and began writing. I imagined him inside. Pouting.

Last night I didn’t like him at all. I knew we were done. I found him unattractive, and I didn’t want him to touch me. This morning, standing there in the middle of the room, he looked young. Vulnerable. Cute. Maybe it’s not over. Maybe you deal with someone being a complete asshole from time to time.

From time to time, I read back over things I wrote back then, and I wonder what in the hell I was thinking.

That kind of assholeishness isn’t normal in a relationship, is it? Is this the way people behave and it’s just swept under the rug and forgotten? I really do not know. Which is how I kept talking myself into staying.

I had no role models growing up for this sort of thing. My role models taught me that you’re honest, you don’t steal, you don’t lie, and you don’t cheat people. You get a good education and you work hard. I was taught the value of a dollar. I was taught that reading books is magical.

But I wasn’t taught that you treat your partner with kindness and respect. My father treated my mother horribly. He ridiculed her constantly. He told her she was fat. He made fun of her when she ate. He’d say things like, “Just keep eating, Joanna, just keep eating!” She never said a word. But I’d defend her. Some of the worst fights I ever had with my father began when I defended my mother. And those fights were always my fault–because I antagonized him.

I once pressed my mother to explain why she never fought back. She said it was much easier to simply ignore him. I asked her how she could possibly ignore the daily onslaughts, the horrible ridicule. She said she’d just learned to tune him out.

And I was tuning out Mack’s bad behavior. Only it didn’t work for me like it worked for my mother. And so I broke free of him. And once I was free, once I could let go of everything I’d bottled up for a year, I fell into a depression.

And now, here I am, feeling better, and wondering: Do I get involved in another relationship? How do I know he won’t be another Mack? How will I know if he’s a kind, respectful man, and not a man simply on his best behavior for a few months? If he treats me poorly, when do I run? At the first instance? The second? And how poorly does he have to treat me for it to not be normal? I need a role model. Or a book. Is there a book out there that gives examples of what’s acceptable and what isn’t in a relationship?

Is there a book out there telling me what’s normal, and what’s not?

I spent some time this morning browsing old Mack emails. I really need to delete them, but I’m not ready, just yet. I still want the reminder of what an abusive asshole he is. Here’s a list of a few things that made him angry.

(more…)

One year ago today. Mack and I were making up after a breakup. On my office floor. He allowed himself to reunite with me, but only after I apologized and groveled after breaking up with him. Because he was wearing me out with all the arguments over imagined slights. Over his jealousy of a man I dated four years earlier. And because he lived with another woman. His “roommate.” (But no jealousy for me. My suspicions were going to kill our relationship.) So many lies. So many unbelievable lies that I pretended to believe. Why? To have a man around. It was the beginning of another “honeymoon” phase. And I wanted to believe his lies. I wanted the engagement ring I wore to mean something. I wanted the fantasy to be real.

I can’t afford to believe lies any more. There’s too much at stake.

William Wordsworth wrote:

Strange fits of passion have I known.

Wordsworth wrote of imagining the death of his lover. Rather than a fit of passion, to my thinking, it sounds as if he was suffering from drama he created with his thoughts.

I wrote a post about drama in relationships a year ago, deceptively titled: No More Drama. http://wp.me/p1jL9y-E. Reading it again today, I see how utterly inane that post was. Like most posts I wrote while I was with Mack, I was doing my very best to rationalize being in an irrational relationship. No More Drama was my attempt to explain why drama is a necessary component of a passionate relationship. One year later, I call bullshit on myself.

drama  (drah-muh)

a situation or sequence of events that is highly emotional, tragic, or turbulent

passion  (ˈpæʃən)

ardent love or affection

intense sexual love

(Definitions of both words come from dictionary.com.)

Mack was a drama king. He created conflict. Even the most minor things (me singing in the car, for example) got a huge, emotional response. Mack’s emotional responses usually resulted in him walking out. He walked out on me at my home many times. Once, he left our table in a restaurant to go to the men’s room, and as I waited and waited for him to return, the waiter eventually informed me Mack had gone. Apparently I’d chosen a restaurant that was too upscale for his insecurities, so he just walked the fuck out without telling me, leaving me sitting there. The next morning, he came to my house for make-up sex. And for good measure, he also cooked me breakfast.

In my relationship with Mack, peace seldom was experienced. Things either were really great or completely abysmal. Our relationship was up or down, and never steady. And always, I felt utterly drained.

My self-talk during that year often included: Don’t worry, tomorrow he’ll be fine. Tomorrow, we’ll be fine. He hasn’t left me for good. He still loves me. He’ll be back. Tomorrow, it will all be okay.

And tomorrow, it always was okay. Other than the makeup sex, Mack generally acted as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred. Looking back on things, I realize it wasn’t out of the ordinary for him. This was how Mack behaved in relationships. All relationships; not just romantic ones. He had email fights with the captain of his baseball team. He wrote scathing emails to the editor for the only paid writing job he had. (No wonder he couldn’t keep or land a job.) Someone he claimed as a friend often told him, “You always choose the sharpest knife in the drawer.” And he did.

Mack loved conflict. Mack loved inflicting pain. Mack loved drama. But look back at the definitions. Drama is not passion. Drama doesn’t fuel passion. In fact, it now is my belief that drama is the antithesis of passion. After months and months of drama with Mack, I began to look upon him with disgust. The make-up sex no longer erased the effects of whatever fight he’d initiated the night before. I didn’t like him any more. I saw him as mean, hurtful, and petty. I knew that if I could just get away from him long enough to clear my head, his manipulations no longer would hold sway over me. I could get away, and stay away.

With my head now clear, I’ve come to an important realization:

Drama kills passion.

Next time, I’m going to fall in love with a nice, steady, kind man. No more drama. And this time, I mean it.

Some time back I posited: Do men cause clinical depression?  http://wp.me/p1jL9y-4q After giving it a lot of thought, I’ve come to believe the answer is, yes. When I say I believe my relationship with Mack caused my depression, I don’t mean I was sad about the relationship being over. I wasn’t. I wanted it to be over. I wanted him out of my life. Completely. Out. But being involved with an abusive asshole for a year, and the energy it took to perform the mental gymnastics necessary to not acknowledge the abuse and throw him out, the amount of energy it took to deny reality, wore me down. Wore me out. The tentacles wrapped around my legs, slithered up my waist and around my neck, and slowly pulled me deeper and deeper into the black depths of nothingness. I wasn’t hunkering down in my home all weekend because I was too sad to face the world. I just didn’t give a shit. I couldn’t be bothered. The thought of being around people seemed like so much work. Why go to all that trouble? And while I cried, I had no idea what I was crying about. I wasn’t crying about him. I was just crying. I was crying because I felt overwhelmed. Overwhelmed by the weight of it all. The weight of all what? The weight of choosing such an unhealthy partner, yet again. The weight of my fucked up, dysfunctional childhood, haunting me, still. The childhood that presses me, over and over again, to choose men who are abusive. Each one, a different flavor.

First, there was Joe. Joe was physically abusive. I was in my twenties, and he was fifteen years older. And my boss. Yes, I was in a bit of a pickle, getting out of that one. Eventually, I ended it. Or tried to. He stalked me in all the classic ways. Repeated phone calls, gifts (flowers, jewelry, a bag of panties on my doorstep), parking outside my apartment and watching my place, watching for a sign of me. Parking behind my car in the morning so I couldn’t leave for work without engaging with him. Going to my parents’ home and telling them how much he loved me, could they talk some sense into me? Attempting to break into my apartment at night. Terrified, I called 911. Looking back, I see how close I was to becoming a domestic violence statistic. (Approximately 1,500 women are killed each year by husbands or boyfriends. About 2 million men per year beat their partners, according to the F.B.I.) Oddly, he never threatened my job to keep me in line. Later I would find out they knew he had been abusing me. A co-worker had called human resources. So he couldn’t touch me at work. Eventually, after he was asked to leave, he found a job in a city 250 miles away. The stalking stopped. Mostly. He still sent letters for quite some time. And over the holidays a few years back (and twenty years later), he called my mother, said he was in town and would like to see me. She told him I’d moved to another city and didn’t give him my number.

Then there was Daryl, whom I met on eHarmony. Yes, eHarmony. He looked terrific on paper, which allowed him to slip through their 258-question screening application. Turns out this tall, handsome, blonde, charming, West Point/Berkeley graduate was a sex addict, pedophile, and diagnosed narcissist. (I find it disconcerting that eHarmony thought we matched on 29 levels of compatibility.) And he was sexually abusive. I won’t talk about those eleven months, here. They’re too dark; still too painful. Even five years later. I will say that several years after it ended he called to tell me the police had broken down the door of his condo with a warrant. They were looking for child porn. He was proud they found nothing. My guess is, it’s on his computer at his office. He called to tell me he thought it might have been me who tipped off the police. It wasn’t. But still I worry about his young niece whom he babysat from time to time. I should have reported him. She’d be around eight, now.

And, of course, my latest flavor of abusive partner was Mack. In comparison to Joe and Daryl, Mack didn’t seem so bad. Annie (my therapist) said, when I told myself, “This isn’t that bad,” that should have been a flaming red flag. Looking back on things, the cycle of abuse was the same. The only thing different was that the abuse was psychological and emotional, rather than physical or sexual. (If you’d like to read more about that, have a look at this post: http://wp.me/p1jL9y-6m.) I think now I’ve experienced every type of abuser there is. And the good news: I made it out alive, and I’ve never had a repeat of any discrete type of abuser.

Yes, abusive childhoods fuck you up. But when I compare myself to my siblings, I feel lucky. All three, a sister and two brothers, are alcoholics. My brothers have been in and out of rehab more times than I can count. My eldest brother is like a cat, cheating death time and time again. Most people would make the most of the second, third, and fourth chances. I guess when you’re dodging so much pain, and you’ve never gotten help with it, second chances don’t seem like such a gift. My other brother, 2.5 years older than me, currently is detoxing in the hospital. He recently was diagnosed with mouth cancer (caused in part, no doubt, by all the smoking and drinking), and was supposed to be getting radiation. Instead, he drank himself into oblivion, fell at home, and hit his head. His son, who doesn’t live with him, but who happened to stop by, found him nearly unconscious on the sofa, blood all over the floor, vodka bottles strewn about. He got four pints of blood. The doctor said if his son hadn’t found him when he did, he would have died. As the doctors were working to stabilize him from the blood loss, the alcohol withdrawals began. He’s in restraints and there’s a nurse in his room at all times. If he won’t go to rehab when he’s ready to leave the hospital, it seems they might force the issue. After all, he is a danger to himself. Even if he does another stint in rehab, unless he at long last looks under that big black rock, there’s bound to be a repeat. And last, if you’d like to read about the abusive man my sister married, go here: http://wp.me/p1jL9y-3p. If I was married to that prick, and didn’t have the backbone to leave him, I’d blot myself out with alcohol, too.

Yes, Mack didn’t seem so bad. But, of course, he was. Oh the clarity that comes with emerging from depression. Sometimes the dark pit seems better than shining a light on reality.

Personal experience has taught me time and again that chemistry is not necessarily a good thing when it comes to choosing a romantic partner. When I feel that inexplicable pull to be with someone I otherwise wouldn’t imagine dating in a post-nuclear world, that’s a pretty good sign bad chemistry is at work.

Mack and I had been communicating on-line for months. He’d been following me (and multiple other women) around on a fitness website. Eventually we began sending private messages, and a few months later we made plans to meet in person. Well, actually, he made plans for us to meet, and I complied. And so it began. I was eager to meet him. I’d actually fallen for him simply trading emails. The man he created through those emails was very enticing. He fancied himself a musician, and a writer. Most of it turned out to be but a figment of his imagination, but the personal mystique he created with the words he wrote to me had done its job–he’d drawn me in.

Mack had me meet him at a shitty dive bar on the seedier side of town. I could do dive bars, or so I told myself. When I walked in, he jumped up from the booth where he’d been sitting, watching the door and drinking a beer. (One of many, no doubt.) As he came toward me like an eager puppy, my heart fell. Physically he was not my type at all. He was wearing 80s-style jeans and a gray “wife-beater.” (A  foreshadowing, of sorts.) Although his appearance was course and unrefined, my misgivings were overshadowed by his physicality, his sexuality, his confidence. I speculated that there had to be a reason for his confidence. There had to be a reason he thought he fit with a successful, professional, urbane woman. (Later I would discover there wasn’t one, other than an absurd sense of entitlement that is common to many abusers.) I had to figure out why I was drawn to this guy. Why I felt such chemistry with a man I would never have seen myself with. I told myself that I should give a different sort of man a chance. I talked myself into it, against my better judgment. (I ignored my gut. Always a bad idea.)

Being with Mack felt familiar from the start. It was all so easy. I felt comfortable with him, as if I had always known him. I felt he knew me. All of me. Even the parts of me I imagined were damaged. The connection was on a much deeper level than it should have been at this early stage (another clue that something was wrong). Mack said being with me was like coming home. I said, I felt it, too.

Coming home. Home for me was not a safe place. Home for me was an abusive alcoholic father and a manipulative mother who adored playing the martyr. Home was painful. Home left me bruised and battered, emotionally and physically. Yet being with Mack felt like coming home; a place I’d avoided since early adulthood. Mack once expressed pride in the fact that he blended so well with my family. As if that were a selling point. Later I would ponder this comment, and begin to see why I was drawn to and repulsed by Mack, seemingly simultaneously.

When things were at their worst with Mack, after many months of manipulation and emotional abuse, I told myself this is the kind of relationship I was doomed to have. Because I was damaged in my childhood, this is the only kind of man I could pair with. I told myself we both were fucked up in the same ways, and so we fit. And this was my life. It was either this, or being alone. Now that I’ve been away from Mack for several months, I see that I’d been severely mindfucked. Mack would tell me that no other man would love me like he does. No other man would appreciate my body the way he does. (Like many women, I have body image issues, of which Mack was acutely aware, and which he used to manipulate me into thinking I should stay with him because I’d never find another man accepting of my body like he was.) No one else could put up with my “quirks.” After all, I’d always lived alone and so I didn’t know how to live with a man. But he was okay with that. He would work with me. He’d save me from my pathetic life of solitude, to which I was doomed if I left him. When he proposed to me, he said, “Now you don’t have to be alone any more.” This was it. My last chance. He’d even written a song about it, featuring these lyrics: This is our last chance for love. Message received. I’d better keep hold of Mack. Because no other man would put up with me, and my body, and my quirks.

Yes, I’d been mindfucked. And hard. It was a virtual pounding. (Which is ironic seeing he suffered from a severe case of erectile dysfunction.)

I understand now that strong chemistry, or a strong sexual attraction (particularly with someone we can hardly imagine ourselves pairing with), is that primitive need to recreate our unhealthy and dysfunctional childhoods. Strong chemistry often means only that their teeth fit our wounds.

Mack’s teeth fit my wounds. Our chemistry was the worst kind of chemistry. Perhaps next time, I will date an entirely different kind of man: a nice, seemingly boring guy. The kind of guy who in the past, I’ve given short shrift. Yes, nice guys are looking mighty attractive these days. I’ve even begun to feel physically attracted to them. Odd the unintended aftereffects of dating an abusive asshole. Perhaps it wasn’t all for naught, after all.  

I’ve fallen in love with my iPad. The ability to purchase a book and have it be available instantly is terrific. Now when I get on a tear on a particular topic, the electronic world is my oyster. I’ve been gobbling up everything I can get my hands on these past few weeks about abusive relationships. Last night, I came across Dragon Slippers: This is What an Abusive Relationship Looks Like by Rosalind Penfold (not her real name). Here’s a link to her website:  http://www.dragonslippers.com/home.html

Ros, a successful, strong-willed, independent woman, found herself entangled in an abusive relationship. It seems odd to many that this could happen to a woman who could take care of herself. Who wasn’t financially enslaved. But it does happen. It happens all the time. Ros drew a series of pictures describing her relationship with her abusive partner as it unfolded. A graphic novel about abuse. It was poignant, and unnerving. Several of the frames could have been depicting Mack and me. Most unsettling.

Ros’s partner would act as if his explosions had never happened; or when he acknowledged they had, he blamed her for making him angry. Mack would act horribly (most often when he’d been drinking, which was most of the time), and the next morning, pretend it never happened. He’d be loving, adoring, kind. I’d wonder if I had imagined how awfully he’d behaved the night before. Since he didn’t think it was any big deal, maybe it wasn’t any big deal. I’d feel grateful he no longer was angry with me. I’d feel grateful things were “back to normal.” Often, in the midst of his worst tirades, when he would go off in a rage over some imagined slight, I would tell myself to just hang on; it would all be okay the next day. He didn’t really hate me. It didn’t really spell the end of our relationship.

I got through it by telling myself, “This too shall pass.” He’ll be back to normal, tomorrow. He’ll be nice, tomorrow.

 

All the reading I’ve done on abuse of late, and in particular on emotional abuse, has me wondering whether Mack has a history of physically abusing the women in his life. Apparently, it usually starts slowly, and bit by bit, things escalate. Generally, they save the physical abuse until after you’re married, or until you’ve been together for several years. Would Mack have become physically abusive if I had stayed with him? I’m glad I didn’t stick around to find out.

That seems to be the silver lining in all this. I didn’t stick around. I didn’t let him move in again. I didn’t marry him. I ended the relationship. Granted, I let it go on for far too long, but finally I listened to my gut.

I got hit with some shrapnel, but I dodged the bomb.

When we think of abusive relationships, the first thing that comes to mind is physical abuse. When you’re in a physically abusive relationship, you know it. You don’t have to ask yourself, “Is he abusing me? Is this abuse?” Then there’s the verbally abusive relationship. This type of abuse brings to mind comments, generally made with raised voice, such as: “You stupid fucking fat bitch.” “You lying whore.” Or something along those lines. I think we all can agree that these types of comments are abusive.

But there are other types of abuse that are more insidious, but just as damaging. What if he “just” gets angry all the time?

What if he’s hostile, treating every interaction as if it were a call to battle? If there’s conflict, he’s not interested in resolving it. His sole focus is to win. By whatever means possible. With this guy, a good offense is the best defense.

For example, you’ve asked him to sell a pair of your (very gently used) Prada shoes on eBay. The auction is not going well and the bids are very low ($12) two days before the close of bidding. You tell him to shut it down if the bids haven’t reached $75 by the end of the day. He ignores your request. He says you should defer to him. He knows best and is certain there will be a flurry of activity at the end of the bidding period. Turns out he was wrong, there wasn’t a flurry of activity, and he had to get a friend to bid on the shoes so that they went for $35 instead of $15. When you express your displeasure about his refusal to shut down the auction, he tells you he’s upset with you for not having faith in him. And as a result, you need a time out. A time out, he says. So he won’t be seeing you that evening as you had planned.

What the fuck?

What if he blames you for things for which you are not responsible? For example, he gets lost on the way to the gym (where he’s been several times), and lights into you claiming it’s your fault because you don’t know how to draw a map. Never mind that it wasn’t your responsibility to get him to the gym or draw him a map in the first place. (Do you know about the Google, asshole?) He insists that it is. And you’ve failed utterly (even though in reality, it was a perfectly accurate map). You’re inept at map-drawing (and the message here is, you’re a typical dumb woman), and as a result, it’s your fault he couldn’t find the gym. And he’s angry with you. Very, very angry.

What if he yells at you for singing in the car because he’s had enough? No matter that he’d been singing along with you until the moment he decides he’s had enough and explodes. He’s had enough and by god you’re going to shut the fuck up immediately. He says that singing is his domain (seeing as he’s a musician and all), and listening to your caterwauling gets on his last fucking nerve. He has belittled your singing and squashed your joy. He’s back in control. You’re upset about his irrational outburst, and you now are wondering whether you should ever sing out loud again. Things are so tense, so unpleasant, that you don’t want to go where you were headed: out for your birthday dessert. And you tell him as much. He then becomes angrier because you’re angry with him for his bad behavior. When you get home, he stomps around as if you’ve done him wrong. You go to bed early, just to avoid being around him. The next day, he acts as if nothing is wrong; everything that happened the night before has been forgotten. He’s acted like a complete and utter asshole on your birthday weekend, but makes no apology. And there is to be no discussion. “Just drop it,” he says. “Do you want to ruin the rest of the weekend?”

What if he denies your reality? He tells you that you’re being petty or sensitive for getting angry when you’ve caught him in a lie. (And he lies a lot.) What if he refuses to tell you where he’s going, or where he’s been, insisting it’s none of your business where he is every minute of the day?

The trouble with this type of abuse (and make no mistake, it is abuse) is that we question our reality. We know something feels wrong, but we aren’t sure the behavior qualifies as abusive. We think we somehow are responsible for their anger. This is especially true if, like me, you’ve grown up in a home filled with abuse. Your threshold for acceptable behavior is much lower than for people who didn’t grow up in toxic environments. We think if we had just drawn the map a little better, if we hadn’t carried on singing for so long, if we didn’t have such a terrible singing voice, if we’d just tempered our happiness a little (being really happy is obnoxious, you know), or if we’d not called him on his lies, things between you might be better. After all, did the lie really matter? Did it really matter that he said he was going home to work, when instead he went to a movie with his “ex”-girlfriend? And the shoes. You hadn’t worn them in a while. They were just sitting in the closet. So weren’t you better off with $35 than with a pair of Prada sitting in the closet collecting dust? (Personally, I’d rather they collected dust than selling a $800 pair of shoes for $35.)

The trouble with this kind of guy is that he’s an abusive asshole. But we think if we just do everything a little better, he won’t be.

Snap out of it. It’s not you, it’s him. He’s an asshole. He’s abusive. He’s mean and nasty and manipulative. You can’t fix him by being better, or nicer, or more forgiving. The only thing you can do with a guy like this is leave him. Leave. And don’t look back. No matter what he says, no matter how he tries to manipulate you into staying and putting up with his abuse, don’t do it. Leave him to his sad, pathetic, miserable life.

 

 

 

 

And then work on getting your head on straight by blogging about it.

My intuition is spectacular. When a man is a creep, my gut knows it immediately. The trouble is, I second-guess myself. I don’t trust my gut. I’m not sure why I do this, seeing as my gut has proven time and again that it is smarter than my “rational” brain. Over and over, even though my gut knows better, I talk myself into doing something that I know is not in my best interests. Or I let someone else talk me into doing something that isn’t in my best interests.

Having faith in ourselves, sticking to our guns, is important if we want to make it through life without getting squashed time and again by our bad decisions. So why do we dismiss our intuition? In some situations, we just get lazy and don’t tune in. This one is easy to overcome. All you have to do is pause for a moment, and check in with yourself–check in with your gut. Most of us do this as a matter of course. The trouble comes up later, when there’s interference, or static, that’s drowning out what our guts are trying to tell us. You might be involved with someone who is emotionally manipulative. If this someone knows where your soft spots are, he’ll use them to ensure the outcome he desires. The outcome an emotionally manipulative person desires rarely is in our best interests.

For example, your gut might tell you that your boyfriend is cheating on you. You have no evidence of this. You just have a gut feeling. He, of course, will do everything he can to throw you off your game. He’ll tell you your lack of trust is the problem. He’ll tell you he is not your ex-husband or boyfriend from ten years ago who cheated on you. He’ll tell you you’re just sensitive from past experience. He’ll tell you your suspicious mind is going to be the death of your relationship. He’ll become upset and angry you’re questioning him in the first place. All of this is designed to throw you off the scent. You end up apologizing to him, and vow to be more trusting.

And then it happens. Months later, you find out you were right. Those hours he disappeared off the radar screen, he wasn’t napping or at the gym. He was with another woman. And he’d been cheating on you for months.

Or perhaps you’re on a first date, and you have an icky feeling deep in your gut about the guy. You can’t put your finger on it, but feel there’s something about him that’s not quite right. But the static of his smile, of the way you feel when he kisses you, overpowers your gut. He tells you this is the best date he’s had in a very long time. You’re overdue for a boyfriend, and so you ignore that little nagging voice in the back of your head that says, “Run! Run like hell and don’t look back!” Because if you look back, he’ll only sweet talk you, and drown out your inner voice, sucking you back in again.

If you’re with someone who doesn’t feel quite right, step back. Tell him you need to take a break to reassess things. If he’s a good guy, he’ll let you have time to reflect, and he won’t bombard you during that period with email, or phone calls, or gifts, all designed to drown out that inner voice.

We know when someone isn’t right for us. We know when our man is cheating on us. We know when he’s a liar. We know when he’s using us. We know.

Trust your gut.

Austin is in an “exceptional” drought. That’s as bad as it gets, so far as drought categories go. The twelve months from October 2010 through September 2011 have been the driest for that twelve-month period in Texas since 1895. That’s the exact period of my involvement with Mack.

The effects of a drought are slow and insidious. In the beginning, you welcome the sunshine and warmth. After months of no water, things start to dry up. But it happens slowly; the effects are virtually imperceptible. You don’t notice the drooping trees, the brown lawns, the creek beds that diminish to a trickle and then become bone dry. The wildfires start popping up then, and you begin to take notice. And you realize, this shit has gotten really bad. Being with Mack was like that.

In the beginning of the twelve months, like sunshine, I was warmed by his charm. I ignored the fact that he was slowly and steadily draining my energy, my optimism, my vitality. Being involved with a liar will do that to you. You spend a lot of energy rationalizing and stuffing your anger. You spend a lot of energy pretending everything is terrific. You spend a lot of energy making excuses for him. You spend a lot of energy on self-loathing. After all, only a woman with no self-respect would put up with this shit. And then you spend energy trying to dig out from the self-loathing. The trouble is, there is no way to stop the self-loathing caused by being involved with a liar and a user other than to end the relationship. Yes, you will spend lots of time telling yourself how wonderful he is to you, how he is so great in bed, how he takes the trash out and makes you breakfast on Sunday, how he loves you in spite of your faults. But just below the surface, the truth is lurking.

The truth is, he lives with another woman. He has no job. Sure he cooks you breakfast, but it’s always your groceries. And he goes home on Sunday night and cooks her dinner with her groceries. He lied to you by not telling you (until he was forced to) that he lives with another woman. You know he hasn’t had a real job, an income, in years. You know he’s made his way through life by relying on women to support him. Despite all his free time, he does nothing to contribute to society. Does he do charity work? No. Is he handy around the house? No. Does he do housework for you? Not unless you pay him to do it. You realize his promises to be your partner are bullshit. You realize the man does not want to contribute; he wants to sleep ten hours a day, eat your food, drink your alcohol, and sit in front of your television watching sports. Oh, and he has to have time to go to the gym; a gym membership you’d be paying for.

So yeah, the wildfires start springing up and you realize, this shit is really bad. But unlike the weather, I can do something about it. I did something about it. It’s been a month since I’ve seen Mack. Three weeks since the official break-up.

And this morning it rained in Austin. And rained, and rained, and rained. I imagined the rain washing away the detritus that has accumulated over the past year. I imagined it nourishing the seeds of self-respect I’ve planted over the past few weeks. I imagined it washing away the grief of losing Mack, or the illusion of Mack; the grief of losing a man who isn’t who he pretended to be and who I hoped he was.

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