Wednesday, February 20, 2013

My Abuse “Refresher” Course – A Personal Story



 
Having been married to an abusive man for seven years, I still have post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) from time to time. However, I haven’t had a PTSD episode for over a year now and, was beginning to feel very healthy and proud of myself. Then it hit me last week when I experienced a traumatic relapse. The Bible is right again—pride really does come before a fall.

It has been five years since my abusive ex-husband did any major attacking of me or my children. It has been five and a-half years since I married my wonderfully strong, encouraging and protective husband Pete. He is a rare gem indeed. Because of his fearless strength, I have not had to speak to or write to my ex-husband in nearly six years. My husband runs interference with my ex-husband and fends off any and every possible attack, manipulative word, and seemingly meaningless communication.

I believe that my post-divorce insulated protection has put my emotional and psychological healing on fast-forward. For many abuse victims suffering from PTSD, the healing process is slow, but I have been blessed with progressively fewer and fewer PTSD episodes, nightmares, and panic attacks as the years go on. But my protected life has had some negatives....

I was recently asked to help care for an ailing elderly couple in their home as an elder care assistant. I was warned before I began the job that the wife had narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). “No problem,” I assured my new boss. “My ex-husband had NPD. I’m well-acquainted with this disorder and, after seven years of living with my NPD ex-husband plus two more years of abusive attacks, I know how to deal with it.” I had long seen a connection between demonic possession and NPD. With my ex-husband, as terrible as the abuse was, my faith in God was strengthened as I dug deeply into the Bible, prayed fervently, and spoke the words of Scripture aloud into every abusive situation. If anyone could handle NPD, it was I. Besides, I thought, how bad could an NPD female be? First of all, NPD is rare. Could this woman really have it? Furthermore, most individuals with NPD are males. I believed I could “suck up” to this old woman, win her over, and avoid any potential violence intended toward me. I should not have been so overly confident.

As the weeks went on, this crafty, manipulative woman gradually yet progressively attacked me verbally in subtle ways—minor assaults with very little noticeable significance aside from a few pinpricks to my formerly damaged psyche. I would hear her rude words and quickly dismiss them. In fact, I was able to laugh them off and have a sense of humor about the episodes.

Last week I had a crash “refresher” course in abuse. “NPD Girl” verbally put down her poor, dear husband right in front of him and I reacted without premeditated thought. I reprimanded the woman and covered her husband’s ears. Defensive and angry, she verbally attacked me. I managed to escape the room with her husband before her abuse could continue. Thinking I was safe, I was unprepared for a second, even harsher barrage of harassment from NPD Girl approximately an hour later, when she told me to never again try to protect her husband from her. Instead of wisely backing down, I engaged in a confrontational conversation with her, once again defending her husband and explaining to her that her words were mean and abusive.

In a way that was astonishingly reminiscent of my ex-husband, this woman let loose with a vitriolic sludge of verbal assault against me. She also physically hit me on my arm—and for a seemingly frail old woman, she hit hard.

I had often wondered at my ex-husband’s psychological attacks against me. There were times when something otherworldly flashed in my abuser’s eyes, his face contorted into something inhuman, and his voice took on unrecognizable tones and pitches. Demonic? I wasn’t sure—until now. There was something remarkably familiar in NPD Girl’s eyes and voice. There was that same look of sheer hatred in her eyes and the sound of murder in her voice. What shocked me more than anything was this woman’s choice of words. They were identical to my ex-husband’s words. How could that be? How could she possibly know the exact words my ex-husband had used to abuse me, cut me to the core of my soul, claw and shred my heart into tiny bloody bits, and make me want to curl up and die on the spot? This woman’s words were too familiar to be anything but demonic. Only a demon could know so precisely how to strike me to inflict the greatest damage, right?

I was floored. Instead of standing up to the woman and speaking words of Scripture, I came under a heavy, oppressive weight of utter submission to whatever was speaking to me through NPD Girl. I knew I was under demonic attack, yet I felt utterly powerless, helpless, and oddly calm and relaxed. It was as though I was in a trance. She (or rather the demon in her) said I was worthless, that others wished I were dead, that I had no right to be alive, that I’m stupid, and many other terrible things. I felt instantly abandoned by God. The worst thing was that I fully believed every terrible thing I heard, accepting every evil word as real and true. Seven and a-half long years of counseling and speaking the Bible aloud to my spirit to reprogram my mind to believe truth rather than lies… It had all disappeared in a matter of minutes. I hadn’t felt suicidal in years—not since I was married to my ex-husband, while enduring his daily torment. Now I was suddenly entertaining suicidal thoughts.

Thankfully, I called my mom. She is a spiritually strong woman who has continually spoken truth to me. She prayed with me, spoke against whatever demonic attack I had come under, and urged me not to go back to work in that house. She assured me that my lack of faith in God would return quickly. She was right. I mustered up the courage to call my boss and tell her that I was so badly injured by this old and abusive woman that I could only return to work if the abuser was removed or in some way restrained. I needed complete assurance that I would be completely protected from further harm—physical, psychological or otherwise.

By God’s mercy and grace, I have not been asked to return to work in that home. I washed my mind in the spoken Word of God, I conquered the lies with truth, and my faith in God has returned. I need another job, but I’m praying about it as I seek out and diligently inquire into various positions. Something will work out. I trust that the Lord is leading me, just as He led me into the throes of spiritual battle to refresh my memory, reminding me of what it is like to be abused. I was fortunate this time to be provided with an easy way of escape. I am reminded of how perilously difficult it is for abuse victims to get out of their prisons. My heart is once again softened toward women trapped in the demonic chains of violence. It’s hard to reverse brainwashing. It’s hard to believe truth when you can’t distinguish truth from lies. I pray for victims to see their way of escape and have the courage to take steps toward truth and freedom...and never again return to lies from the pit of hell. It can be a long, arduous journey.

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