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Author Topic: Were You Accused of Being an Abuser?  (Read 153 times)
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Proud2B
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« on: July 29, 2010, 02:40:50 PM »

It got me curious after reading other folks experience with their N.

Mine accused me of being abusive on more than one occasion.  And for a while I believed him, because I did act out.  Usually it was in response to something he'd done - like the Silent Treatment for a week running, or subtle passive/aggressive acts, or just plain meanness on his part.

NEVER did I START something.  Yep, I threw tomatoes, broke a plate, yelled (on more than one occasion, sad to say), and slugged him in the arm once.  I behaved badly, and did things I am very embarrassed about now.

But abuse?  No.  I did not abuse him.  But because I misbehaved, he created enough self-doubt in me with his accusations, that it kept me in line for a little while longer. 

The real acid test for me is that I did not 'abuse' anyone before that relationship, and have not 'abused' anyone since that relationship ended.  Hmmmm....imagine that. 

I'm just wondering if others experienced anything similar.

Oh, and I switched to FireFox, and the message box doesn't scroll anymore.  What a hassle that was with MSIE.  Thanks for the info CZ.

Proud2B
 
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redhairtemper
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« Reply #1 on: July 29, 2010, 03:26:23 PM »

Actually, if you check out the definition of Narcissistic Victims Syndrome outbursts like yours are a common symptom.  Some victims actually do get charged with domestic violence. 
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eyes_up
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« Reply #2 on: July 29, 2010, 04:04:30 PM »

Proud, Ya know, I had so much steam stacking up inside it would have been easy to become crazed and violent. I can recall once doing something that was NOT abusive but it was out right crazy. I found pix of women on my computer history and became accusatory. Well, as I look back I can see that I was in a trap. I was being pushed past my limits and well, I was losing it.

To an observer the story would look great ... That I was insecure (and so I was) and I was insane (and so I was) and I was trapping him by being suspicious (and so I was, extremely so at some point and with darn good reason). Can not really say I was 'trapping' but it could look like, through the voice of the narc, that I was being out right
 controlling. It didn't matter. It never went any where except right back into my face.

That is what I think happens with covert abuse.

It was not until I was in therapy about 6 months that therapist told me... abuse and covert abuse was active. At some point it slipped out and I told the narc he was abusive and it was after that the word abuse multiplied. I was then the abusive one.

Unfortunately for the narcissist, His accusation hardly mattered at that point. I had other things going on that he was not aware of (therapy) and new info being logged into my head. I was no longer isolated.


When looking up answers to abuse I ran into the term NPD and began reading which led me to WoN.

So the answer to your question is YES.

Learning about covert abuse pretty much changed the way I read behaviors. If I had known this even back when I lived at home with my mother I would have known better.
In that case I was also a perpetrator and my mother the victim. I have lived through a lot of that bull and finally I am free.

Thanks for asking,

eyes
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"If you are out to describe the truth, leave elegance to the tailor." ~ Albert Einstein
NewWings4MeNow
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« Reply #3 on: July 29, 2010, 06:32:21 PM »

Proud,

In my entire lifetime I've never known anger, hatred or rage the ways I've experienced it toward XNH through these years.  Never had this kind of relationship with any other person.  It has shocked and horrified me that I could feel this strongly.

In my entire lifetime I've also never had a relationship with any other person who violated almost every boundary that exists between people, or whose malevolent acts against me completely changed the course of, and took control over, my own life.  

In my entire lifetime I'd never felt imprisoned by any other person.

It takes all a person's courage, strength, will and resilience to forge a persona that does not react or spiral down into abusive behavior themselves, to fight back, to defend themselves, to try to re-exert control over their own life, to get out of feeling like they've been cornered.  If one survives it, growing and maturity, it's my view, have to comprise some part of the outcome.

I made a conscious choice a long, long time ago to not ever go there in my life.

XNH e-mailed me just once, years ago, using the "you're abusive" language -- shortly after I referred to his phone conversation to me where he threatened to hurt me.  His act was simply a revenge tactic.

Hasn't happened since.  

I now understand, more than ever, how stories like "The Burning Bed" and Battered Women's Syndrome could occur, and empathize with the level of extreme desperation so many women/abuse victims must feel who've been through so much worse than I've experienced, and over a much longer period of time than I have.

The moral question is:  What's ultimately justifiable?

NewWings4MeNow
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betterdays
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« Reply #4 on: July 29, 2010, 07:07:58 PM »

Ditto, ladies.  We sound like we are living the same life.  Wings asks what is ultimately justifiable, and I do not know, but I will never be like N, so I can't go the revenge route.  That said, here is my all time favorite one line joke, courtesy of Sid Caesar:   

      If I had shot him when I first thought of it , I'd be out by now         What a butt head!
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CZBZ
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« Reply #5 on: July 29, 2010, 07:23:37 PM »

LOL, Betterdays!!

My answer is "YES". I was accused of being emotionally abusive which is so darn funny I forgot to laugh. By the time the narcissist starts accusing you though, you might be uncertain of yourself and actually wonder if you are abusive. Since a paranoid narcissist sees bombs planted in bunny rabbits or threats behind every corner grocery store, it's not too hard to understand why they see YOU as a threat. They see things that don't exist and no one can convince them that they are wrong.

As far as reacting to the narcissist? Well...................let me admit that I have never in my entire and whole frustrating life, told anyone to F**K OFF" but one day, that's exactly what I told my husband. I have never done that again, either. And my life is not exactly a 'bed of roses' without frustration and anxiety but THAT MAN---O MY HECK! That man would make Lassie bite off his kneecaps.


Hugs,
CZ
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“The moment a woman comes home to herself, the moment she knows that she has become a person of influence, an artist of her life, a sculptor of her universe, a person with rights and responsibilities who is respected and recognized, the resurrection of the world begins.” ~Joan Chittister
BlueSky
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« Reply #6 on: July 29, 2010, 09:34:42 PM »

I wrote a reply and lost it.  Sigh.  But, yes, my exN did accuse me of abuse - the way I found out about it was that exN's wife wrote about it on her blog.  He never accused me of that to my face.  I guess they had some conversations about why he hid things from her... eventually they decided that he did that because I abused him during the marriage - that when he didn't tell me about something, I was abusive when I found out.  When I read that, I thought 'isn't that convenient, when he screws up with her, he blames me, and she buys it'.

I was thinking about what I wrote earlier and what occurred to me is how strange it was to be accused of being abusive during the marriage when what I recall is being very careful to never upset exN!!  Later in the marriage, he would cry or act very hurt and upset when confronted about things he did without my knowledge or about lying.  When I would bring things up, I would review whatever it was to make sure it was worth upsetting him about and I would try to be gentle.  I do not recall ever yelling or breaking things or threatening him.  If whatever he did was related to something financial he had done behind my back, I would try to calmly tell him about the consequences of his actions and ask him nicely to please let me in on the decision-making the next time.   I can see now why an N might think that 'abusive' as they would know they were being questioned on their 'right' to do what they wanted.

I did get mad at him and yelled at him a few times post-divorce - once told him to 'F*** off' - which was highly unusual for me.  There were some emails I got pretty angry in.  I feel badly about it.  There are some things I did during the marriage I feel bad about - its mainly that after he started isolating himself from me and our son, I let him do it.  I stopped trying to reach out to him and began concentrating on my son and myself.  My psychologist told me that the things I did do were in reaction to what he was doing - and he was doing some unhealthy and very hurtful things.

Still, I do review my past actions and wonder from time to time....usually, I am able to shake off the feeling that maybe I was.
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Litha
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Illusions are so silly!


« Reply #7 on: July 30, 2010, 07:04:10 AM »

...Well, as I look back I can see that I was in a trap. I was being pushed past my limits and well, I was losing it.

To an observer the story would look great ... That I was insecure (and so I was) and I was insane (and so I was) and I was trapping him by being suspicious (and so I was, extremely so at some point and with darn good reason). Can not really say I was 'trapping' but it could look like, through the voice of the narc, that I was being out right
 controlling. It didn't matter. It never went any where except right back into my face.

eyes, you've summed up my experience nicely with your post. What I finally realized was this:

The healthy response to narcissistic abuse is not fighting back, it is ending the relationship.

Fighting back feeds their need for n-supply, and so encourages them to repeat whatever behavior triggered you to fight. Pretty soon you are being abusive, and they can prove it in divorce court or custody hearings. They win.
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tango3
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« Reply #8 on: July 30, 2010, 07:58:29 AM »

Oh yes I was accused of being abusive.  I think in one of his pathetic answers on the divorce papers he claimed we fought all the time.  Well for the last five years of our marriage he was hardly home, so there was nothing to fight about and by that time I was plain worn out from fighting him.  Our fights were always about something he did and me reacting to it, but the later years - I just gave up and he did whatever the hell he wanted.
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RB22
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« Reply #9 on: July 30, 2010, 01:30:44 PM »

I was accused of abusing him, his wife, PAS.  He even had his attorney send me an article about PAS... in that article was a website.  I went there and did HUGE amounts of research... I wasn't alienating him from his Children... his lack of initiative, and his wife were!

When he sent the 'YOU ARE the abuser in this relationship'   I was just far enough out of his control that I started to have fits of hysterical laughter.  EVERYTHING he said I did... HE DID.  And I had the Emails from him to prove it. 

Prior to that, I remember him accusing me of being manic, clinically depressed, (that ended shortly AFTER he left, wonder why) a Narc and Sybil.... I asked CZBZ if I was a narc... she told me if I was asking... I wasn't.  I chose to believe her... she's never lied to me. 

She likes oreos.... so she got my vote.

Hugs,

RB
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NewWings4MeNow
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« Reply #10 on: July 30, 2010, 01:59:29 PM »

Getting to the point of writing single letters as e-mail replies, or one-word or monosyllable word answers, has been incredibly freeing.  

Gave XNH nothing, zippo, to chew on, use/spit back or make into a larger issue.  Initially he ranted over me not replying and those rants escalated to abusive e-mails, but not I don't even read them.  Am sure that if I did there would be a lot to laugh about (as there has been), but lately those reads are too risky and diverting of my focus.

RB, your comment about N's statements that what you were doing was what he was doing was very much, eventually, my experience with XNH.    It stunned me one day when, early in separation, he e-mailed that he 'wasn't a "cheater and chiseler"' -- as those were words I'd never heard him use ... so I knew he already thought that about himself.  He wrote that kind of thing several times, essentially telling me about who he was.

eyes talks about being trapped.  Since I found out the D tactics were all part of a concerted campaign XNH planned with his friend, looking back I can see very clearly how his moves through the years were designed to ensnare/corner me -- and his first among them was to return to the house so that he could incite a fight and claim I'd been violent (when he was the one who had been physical).  I'd have none of it.  

XNH hasn't called me psychoanalytical names; he's been a whole helluva lot more insulting than that at a more dehumanizing level.

NewWings4MeNow
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betterdays
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« Reply #11 on: July 30, 2010, 03:50:45 PM »

N calls me "scary", and "The Witch".  That's what he called his mother his whole life, until I turned 40.  Then it became me who was scary.  It is interesting to note that D's friends always call me "Mom", and tell her how lucky she is to have me.  I have been described by these kids as "laid-back", and "there for us".
I have been criticized as being accomodating, too nice, and not aggressive enough in a previous job, by a male N supervisor.  Althpugh I do stand up for myself and I think I have good boundaries, I have to say my all time favorite parental role model was and is, Fred Rogers.  I am one scary lady....
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Crystalstream
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« Reply #12 on: July 30, 2010, 03:55:42 PM »

We were at a convention.  he left me alone all week, running, golfing, meetings.  At the end of the week he walked up to me smiling and said " How are you?"  I said 'I am lonely.  I have waited for you all week.  I feel sad."  he said "thats funny.  I thought the same thing about you.  At which point I stood up and said "listen you blanking drug addict, dont forget where I am and who I have been with all week. You are full of (fill in the blank).  I see that for what it is and you cant get one over on me today.
I am so full of rage today.  I know it is good rage, because I will ride it out of the Land of N.
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Crystalstream
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« Reply #13 on: July 30, 2010, 03:58:00 PM »

names he called me and things he said:
Jabba the Hut
Morbidly Obese
Whats a nice coat like that doing on someone like you?
The way you think and the way you see things is wrong.
Sure, I got mad.  And I am the one who was abusive.
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CZBZ
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« Reply #14 on: July 30, 2010, 06:56:42 PM »


"The healthy response to narcissistic abuse is not fighting back, it is ending the relationship. " ~Litha

Absolutely! Perfect...that's the best way to save your integrity and your sanity, ha! Narcissists, as most of you know, just LOVE getting people ot react. They gain two things from our reactions:

1) a sense of control over us

2) we hate ourselves for acting out-of-character

If you picture yourself as a puppet-on-a-string and the narcissist as a happy-sadist, you can see why the narcissistic relationship is a destructive relationship. You might also understand 'why' your marriage/relationship suddenly ended when you started focusing on yourself and taking good care of yourself. Once your boundaries get better and you are less likely to REACT to the narcissist's pokes and jabs and insults, they tire of us. They move on to another puppet who just might dance on the end of the narcissist's strings forever.

It's a little off-topic but this concept explains why the narcissist ends up with a new partner who is 'very' reactionary and acts out FOR the narcisssist. As some of you also experienced, SHE does things to YOU that are so terrible you don't know why your husband doesn't stop her. Why? Well, he's pulling her strings and lucky for him, she does the things he wants her to do. That way, Mr. Puppetmaster can sit in the shadows and watch the Punch-and-Judy show and never get his hands dirty.


Hugs,
CZ

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“The moment a woman comes home to herself, the moment she knows that she has become a person of influence, an artist of her life, a sculptor of her universe, a person with rights and responsibilities who is respected and recognized, the resurrection of the world begins.” ~Joan Chittister
BlueSky
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Posts: 141


« Reply #15 on: July 30, 2010, 07:54:17 PM »

It is nice to know I am not alone in having experienced the reactionary new spouse/SO of an exN!  ExN's wife did things that appalled me and my family.  It is amazing they accused me of being abusive considering some of the things they both said & did.  I used to get really angry and didn't care much if they knew until I realized that they loved that as they could use that against me.

I was quite surprised, given my exN's huge penchant for keeping things secret, that he apparently was OK with her writing about so many things in their life online.  If I had done that years ago, exN would have been very upset.  Took me awhile to see that he was getting something out of her blogging the way she does.  Without a doubt he is pulling her strings - and I sometimes wonder how long it will take until she figures out she's being used.  I do think he used her to get back at me.   
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