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Case File:
DBH-1963 February,
1999 |
The Story: It all started in 1988, when I met him.
He was my first everything. My first held hand, my first kiss, my
first sex. For the next three years, we had a turbulent relationship. Probably
because we both expected different things from it. He was expecting
a purely sexual, non-emotional one. I was expecting a normal relationship. One
that started with two people learning about each other and growing into a loving, caring
relationship. I was the one to be disappointed. Although, my love grew for
him, he remained cold and distant. I tried very hard (in
retrospect, too hard) to appease him, but he was
uninterested in anything but sex. |
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The
relationship took place totally within my apartment or his.
We never dated, except for two "dutch-treat" outings to movies. We never
ate together, and when I did go over to his place, he
would offer me water while he would drink a soft drink. He
focused a lot of attention on his looks, sometimes preening and making
sure his hair was perfect. I was under strict instructions not to
touch his hair. He would never compliment me, but
conversely made comments about "How women had beautiful bodies..." then looking
at mine would say "well, most women". I was too innocent in the ways of
relationships, too much under his control to know that this wasn't right
at all. When
I did go out with my other friends, we would occasionally see him.
He would either ignore me entirely, or be rude and
stand-offish. After two years of this practice, I learned that if we were in a
public place and I saw him, all I would be allowed to do is a polite nod
and smile to acknowledge him, and then I would have to move on. I
learned that I also was not to be introduced to anyone else in his life
and was not to even suggest that it happen.
In the summer of 1990, a friend and
I decided to go to a Caribbean festival in one of our city's parks. While there, I
saw him standing with friends in the beer garden. As I had been
trained to do, I smiled and nodded and walked on. He waved and
smiled "hi". My friend and I went home almost immediately. A week
later, I phoned him to say "hi", but was very surprised when he
immediately hung up on me. I tried dialing again, but the phone was off the
hook.
I was getting dressed for an
engagement party at the Dean of Fine Arts of the area's largest University. It was
to be one of those elite-type parties where people would stand around a swimming pool
sucking back champagne and caviar. The dress I had put on was flattering to my
"far from perfect" body. The whole time while I was getting ready, I
was trying to figure out why he was so upset. I determined to find
out on my way to the party. I called up another friend who lived in his
apartment building, and she agreed to "buzz" me in through security. He
refused to open his apartment door saying that he
"didn't like to be ignored in public" (in reference to my smile and nod in the
park). He finally let me into his apartment after
I threatened to start screaming in the hallway. I told him that I
didn't understand, I thought that was what he wanted, a distant public
acknowledgment, and then I cited other instances where he ignored me. He
replied "well, that doesn't matter ... but I think I should tell you that I
had never broken up with [name removed to protect the innocent].
I've been sleeping with both of you for the last few months." I was
stunned. He then looked me up and down and sneered "I know why
you dressed like that, but don't expect to have sex with me!" I started to cry,
and explain to him I was on my way out to a party, but he
would have none of it, and asked me to leave. I went to the party, but was
pre-occupied with the events earlier in the evening, not enjoying the ambiance of the
tea-light candles floating on the pool, not enjoying the champagne or the caviar, not
enjoying the opportunity to rub elbows with the city's uppercrust.
The next week, I went to another
Caribbean festival with my friend. While in a display room, one of the women there
told us about a parade that was going to close the festival on the following weekend.
We took the flyers with us as we entered the auditorium where a show was going to
start. We sat on some bleachers along one wall. I could see directly across
from us, that he was working, selling rum punch to other patrons. I
refused to go and talk to him and instead enjoyed the conversation I was
having with my friend. The next thing we knew, he was walking
towards us with two "complementary" glasses of rum punch. I
introduced my friend to him. He was polite and quite
charming. I was so surprised. When we were leaving, I decided to go to him
to say goodbye and thank him for the punch. He
told me to stay right where I was. He wanted to introduce me to someone.
He pulled over one of his friends and introduced
us. I had finally met someone in his life. Finally, after
over two years.
On the day of the parade, my friend
decided not to go, so I went by myself. When I walked into the park where the parade
was to end, I saw him sitting alone on a park bench. There was no
one else around us. I went over to say "hi" and he (more
or less) grunted at me. I got the picture. I went and sat about 50 feet away
on the side of a stage, waiting for the parade to come. I looked over my shoulder to
see if he was still there, but he was gone. I
scanned the park and now saw him at least 500 feet away on a different
bench. Here we go again. I thought I should go to a nearby store to run an
errand instead of waiting alone in the park. I still had lots of time before
the parade was to arrive. On my way back from the store, I saw him
and some newly arrived friends standing along the road. I approached him,
and asked if he would mind if I watch the parade with him
and his friends. He said abruptly,
"sure" and turned away from me to watch the approaching parade.
Unfortunately, his 6' frame blocked my 5'3" view of the
parade. I couldn't see anything, and he was in total "ignore
mode". Another of his friends arrived and ran across the
street breaking between the others. As he did this, he
stepped hard on my ankle. The guys decided to go get a beer and turned to
re-enter the park, leaving me by myself to watch the parade fade away.
I was despondent. I limped
back into the park. The guys were initially walking towards me with beers in their
hands, but turned to avoid me. They did walk by fairly closely, and I was
looking at him, but he refused to even look in my
direction. I stood alone, in the middle of the park, not knowing whether to be
angry, or to cry, or to scream, or to run. They were behind me. The stage was in
front of me. They had to walk by me to get a good look at the stage, and when they
did, again there was no acknowledgment. I had had it! I marched into the
crowd, and as he was "downing" the last of his
beer, I tugged on his sleeve. He looked down at me
and said "What?" I snipped sarcastically "I just wanted to thank you
for not ignoring me in public" and stormed off through the crowd towards my car.
He followed quickly behind me and grabbed my arm hard enough
to spin me around. "What did you expect me to do? Hug you?" I looked at him
in the eyes and slowly replied "Would that have been so bad" and left the park.
He did not talk to me again for another two months.
The relationship finally came to a
climax in 1991. I had been battling for 3 years, trying to get him to
know who I really was. That I was loving and caring, that I was funny and
intelligent, and that he was very important to me. I knew he
was uncomfortable with me, so I did my best to keep my distance. But it wasn't enough.
Unfortunately, at the time, I was very naive when it came to relationships, and
he was manipulative. I had the feeling that over the past three
years, that he had multiple sexual partners. This scared me has he
never used "protection" when we were together and the one time I had started
taking the pill he "freaked" out on me, not talking to me for
months. Of course, I stopped. It was the only way I thought he
would come back.
One evening, in early 1991, I
invited him, my bestfriend and a male friend of hers over to my
apartment for a night of Trivial Pursuit and pizza. It was a lot of fun, but I found
I was uncomfortable with my friend and him, as they had started flirting
with each other. My friend and her male companion left that evening, and he
and I finished the evening with his usual request of sexual favours.
On January 26, 1991, he
invited me to his apartment. After he seduced me
and we had sex, we were lying in his bed. He,
surprisingly, jumped out of the bed and ran into the living room. He
came back a few minutes later, commanding me to leave his apartment.
I was shocked. We had been lying in each others arms in silence. What
had I done? Why was he forcing me to leave? He
left the bedroom to allow me time to get dressed. I started to cry. I
had left my cardigan in the living room and went in to retrieve it. He
was standing facing the outside wall, stiff. I put my boots and coat on, picked up
my purse and reached for the door. He was behind me. He
reached forward and put his hand on the door, just above the doorknob,
holding it shut, saying "Please don't be mad". I told him
that I wasn't mad, I was shocked and scared. He let me go home.
I didn't know it at the time, but that was the last time we were to be
together intimately. The next night, I phoned him to find out what
I had done. He said "Nothing, I was just having a bad night.
Do you have a problem with that" and ended the conversation by hanging
up the phone.
A week later he
called me back, asking that I arrange another Trivial Pursuit game between him,
my bestfriend and myself. I said okay, but that was a mistake on my part. That
night they both left my apartment at the same time and when outside exchanged phone
numbers (at the minimum). I was totally unaware of what was going on. I was so
trusting and so naive.
He called me one
night in February, asking for a loan of money. He had to have a
large bill paid the next day and needed money as soon as possible. I took the money
from credit card and gave it to him. He told
me to write an IOU, and that he'd have the money paid back in a month.
I did write up the IOU, but he avoided me, and avoided signing the
document. I did not see him again until June of 1991 when I finally
forced the issue, and made him sign it. He
moved away within a month, with my money.
Since February, I had been leaning
on my bestfriend for emotional support, telling her everything. Wondering what I had
done wrong, wondering why he was avoiding me, wondering why he
was treating me this way. She seemed so uncomfortable talking about it. I told
her how much I loved him, how much I missed him, how it
hurt that he wouldn't acknowledge me. I told her how much I missed his
and my Sunday nights together (as that was his preferred night to have
sex). I told her how much I missed her, because now that my Sunday nights were free,
hers all of a sudden became busy. Until this time, she and I had spent every evening
(except Sunday) together. I was so naive, I had no idea what was going to happen
next, what I was going to find out.
In September, she and I drove to the
beach. We sat there as I drew hearts in the sand with his and my
initials intertwined. I cried and lamented over the loss of his
attention, still wondering where I had gone wrong. She sat in silence watching the
water. As we drove away from the beach, we passed his cottage, where we could see him
hosting a party. I sighed "I wish he would invite me to his
parties, he never wanted me to meet any of his
friends". My friend replied "I bet if I went to the door, he'd
let me in" To which I said "I'm sure he would. He'd
let anyone in but me". As we drove home she asked what I would do if she were to meet
up with him one day at a bar and they had a drink together. I told
her that if she were any other friend of mine, that I would have no problem with it, but
because it was her, someone who flirted voraciously, I said that I couldn't trust her with
him. She was shocked that I thought like that. I dropped her
off at her home. When I arrived home, she phoned me "I have something I have to
tell you ... He and I have been seeing each other ..." ...
And that was it ... for the next 8
hours we were on the phone as she told the story of how they secretly met at his
place and hers, how they went for drives, and ate pizza and talked for hours. She
wouldn't give me details as to what, specifically, they would talk about. But what I
did find out was that everything that I had wanted in a relationship with him,
he gave to her. Attention, appreciation, affection,
compliments, conversation, and more. He even bought her dinner, and
offered her soft drinks instead of the water I always got. She had been my
replacement in every way. Only she had the relationship with him,
that I had worked so hard to achieve.
My heart was more than broken.
It was totally destroyed. He had ripped it out of my
chest, beat it to a bloody pulp and with a smile, and fed it to my bestfriend as they
partied over my grave. A piece of my soul was gone, and I would never get that back.
The only two people (apart from family) on this planet that I truly loved had
worked together to kill me. I wasn't to suffer a mortal death, but a spiritual and
emotional death. The man who was my soulmate treated me like an
insignificant amoeba on the hind leg of an insignificant flea on the back of a leprous
dead rat.
It took me a long time to start to
get back on my legs. My life was new, but lonely. He faded
into his new life, shutting the door on me. My
"bestfriend" had started to date a new man, so I hardly saw her anymore.
I pushed all the negativity of 1991 deep inside of me, burying it. I
put on a public happy face, even though I was dying inside. I bought a house, and
settled in with my two cats.
In 1993, my father had a stroke and
was hospitalized. My mother, who was in the early stages of Alzheimer's, was staying
at my house. One evening, we went for a drive for some ice cream. We drove
through a nearby park, and as we were leaving, I caught a glimpse of him
and his new girlfriend walking down a back lane. I became
incensed! Here he was, going on with his life as
if 1991 didn't happen. He still hadn't paid back the money he
owed. I instantly decided that I was going to be strong, and I exercised the IOU.
With the help of a lawyer friend, and another brave friend who delivered the
subpoena, I took him to court to get the money back. I won.
But I have only seen $60 of the over $600 he owes me.
You see, he never kept a job long enough since 1991 for me to garnishee his
wages. And I still felt controlled by him, terrified that he
would "go ballistic" on me if I even mentioned the subject. I have never
brought up the subject of the money since then.
When my father died in 1995, I sat
down with my telephone book and phoned all of my friends to let them know. I came to
his name. He was in a new apartment, and had
given me his address and phone number as a show of good faith that he
would pay me back the money. I thought "What the heck, what can I
lose". I phoned him, to let him know about my
Dad. When he answered and realized it was me, the first thing out
of his mouth was "look, I know why you're calling, you want your
money back, and you will get it back when I can give it to you!". I replied
"Actually, I was calling to let you know that my Dad passed away last night, but
thanks for caring".
We haven't had much
contact since then. He called me once or twice, and tried to call him
when my precious cat died, but the phone disconnected as it was answered (read: he
hung up). He eventually bought a computer, and got internet access.
He visited my web page and left a very nice message. I
replied to it, but there was no response back. C'est la vie.
In the summer of 1998, he
sent me an e-mail asking if I would get rid of the legal action against him
over the money, because he needed the money to go to school to upgrade
himself. He promised that as soon as he got his
student loan, that he would pay me back in full. I thought, well,
if I do, and he doesn't come through with his promise,
then I'm out the money and he gets his way. If I don't, then he
won't be able to upgrade his skills, and that could affect his
future. I came up with an equitable solution. He would give
something valuable to a third party. I would clear up the legal stuff. He
would get his loan. He would pay me back. The third
party would return the valuable item to him. Very reasonable. Very
equitable. When I approached him with the suggestion, he
said thanks, but no thanks. I was surprised that he didn't go for
it as this would have been a way for him to finally be rid of me
permanently.
I n February of 1999, I had just
arrived at my office when the phone rang. It was him, and he
was in my reception area. He had just been hired by my company and was
training in the head office. We met for 5 minutes. He said
that he just wanted to let me know he was there so that
I wouldn't have a heart attack if I saw him in the hallways. That
night I sent him an email to thank him for the effort.
There was no response.
The only problem is that because I
had buried all my emotions from the trauma of 1991, and because of him
now being in "my territory", all of the emotions and memories from that terrible
time came back to flood me. I called my friend who was with him
1991, and found out that the two of them had been talking for a while over the net.
This brought back even more negative memories. I felt like I was being betrayed
again, even though she was happily married, and he was in a
"committed" relationship. My friend is working hard to help me
through this. She has spent hours and hours on the phone talking to me, trying to
make both of us understand what happened in 1991, explaining how (with 20/20 hindsight)
that it was all a big mistake. We even spent 9 hours one night driving around the
city talking it through. She approached him asking if I could talk
to him so that I could get closure and finally, after 8 years, get on
with my life. But he refused, thinking that I would affect the
relationship he was currently in. I was devastated again. He
still had control. 11 years after I met him, 8 years after it was
over, and he was still in control. And he is
thinking that I am some sort of evil person who was going to reap vengeance on him.
Where the heck was that coming from? I didn't want to hurt his
new female friend, and my friend was working so hard to help me, that I didn't want to
hurt her. I decided the only way I could get closure is to create this page
"Emotional Baggage Depot" and make a full DIS-closure (sorry for the pun). I'm hoping that
by making this page, I will be able to help other people get over the nastiness in their
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What Was Learned:
- There is nothing more painful than unrequited
love.
- In thinking back over all of the events, I
could not find anything explicitly that I had done wrong. It just goes to prove that
sometimes bad things happens to good people.
- I learned that some people never change.
Years can go by, but they are still the same.
- I learned that I have to be strong, that I can
make decisions for myself and don't need or want anyone controlling my every thought and
action.
- That I have a large support group of friends
and family who were able to pick up the pieces of my life, dust me off and help me make
the first steps to recovery.
- That my family and friends are very protective
... (one even sabotaged his car, but I didn't find that out for years).
- That someone who repeatedly ends your
relationship via a telephone call is cowardly, but someone who faces you with bad news,
and is willing to stay and duck flying glasses is very brave.
- That when he said that a
woman was "just a friend", that they weren't ever "JUST friends" at
all. (The word Fidelity was never ever part of his vocabulary).
- Never loan money to anyone who hasn't proven
themselves to be forthright and responsible.
- That even though friends can do bad things to
you, if they are truly your friends, they will work hard to help you through the hard
times.
- That I have to tell as many people as possible
about this story, so that he, or people like him, will
not get the power to do this to another person, ever. PLEASE TELL OTHERS ABOUT THIS PAGE
SO THAT THEY CAN LEARN FROM MY MISTAKES.
- People like him aren't
capable of the emotion of love, unless they see their own reflection in a mirror.
- Always have protected sex. It's too
dangerous, even if you think you're in a committed relationship. You never know who
your partner is with.
- If a man isn't willing to spend a dollar on a
soft drink for you, then it's time to go home and curl up with a good book.
- Vengeance isn't necessary, God takes care of
his own. He'll make sure that things will even out.
- I thought God didn't love me, but it's
amazing how poetic justice works. I must have a great guardian angel (Thanks,
Clarence... You've certainly earned your wings).
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Final Say: *phew* ... That took a lot of effort. It's
now out. No hiding it. No apologies. It could have ended differently if both parties
worked at it. But it didn't because only one person wanted it to work. I wish him
well with his future. And hope that he wishes me
well, but I doubt if he would. In fact, I doubt that he
even thinks about me, or what he did at all. At least, I don't feel
he would think about what he did with any remorse at
all. It's too bad that he didn't get to know me better. He
never got to know my sense of humour. He never knew how much someone
could love him. He lost out on what could have
been a fantastic romantic love. He is my soulmate, and we have both
lost because he was lazy. But I will go on, and in the next life,
maybe he will finally see the light and make the effort, and our eternity
together will be happy.
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The Serenity Prayer
God, grant me
The Serenity to accept the things I
cannot change,
Courage to change the things I can,
and
Wisdom to know the difference.
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Background Music: On My Own, From Les
Miserables
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