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Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Court Transcripts & Letters from Prison

I have not said much lately about my "qualifier" (a kinder word for the perpetrator I was married to).  Earlier this year, he violated the conditions of his probation and now sits in prison.  As a former volunteer behind bars, I had inside information on the kind of treatment child offenders receive when incarcerated.  After I learned of his foray into the dark world of child pornography, we had many "discussions" where I painted the consequence of his continued pursuit in vivid language.   He called me "paranoid" then but is now living in some pretty horrendous conditions, as I predicted.

Anyone who has been in a relationship with an addict has experienced the blame, projection, minimization, exaggeration and denial that is common to addiction, and particularly so when dealing with a narcissist.  (One therapist that I worked with asserts that she has yet to meet an addict who is not also a narcissist).  You would think that when you are caught with your hand in the proverbial cookie jar, there would be little recourse except to acknowledge your guilt and accept your punishment.  That is not what I am experiencing and after speaking with many women who have had the same misfortune of marrying a pedophile, I find that my experience is not unique.

As I did after my ex's first trial, I purchased the court transcripts from his most recent trial and received them a few months ago.  It has been enlightening and sobering to read once again the case against him, particularly the ways he "storied" his probation violation.  One paragraph in the transcript stood out to me and the words continue to reverberate in my head and are validated by past and current experiences with my qualifier.  Quoting  a clinical psychologist who treated my ex for nearly four years, the prosecutor said, "This defendant has an inordinately difficult time accepting responsibility for his behavior.  He constantly blames his [ex]wife for his offense . . . feeling that if she had been more supportive of him, he wouldn't have had to look at child pornography."  His probation officer testified about his violation in great detail (no children were directly harmed, thank God) and the prosecutor illustrated how the defendant's story about the violation changed, depending on who he was talking to.  Court transcripts are incredibly valuable, particularly when dealing with an addict/narcissist who uses a lot of gaslighting.  They are the stake in the ground that becomes unmovable and grounding when communication becomes murky and confusing.

Letters from prison have been arriving--letters that are deeply disturbing and hurtful, far more desperate than previous ones.  The latest, addressed to one of my children, includes 20 pages of hate and blame towards me.  The specifics do not merit inclusion here but once again, those court transcripts are the anchor in the swirl of blame-shifting, denial and deception.  As my friend, "Eve" discovered, the man I thought I married does not exist and never did.  He was an illusion and I was simply a prop in his elaborate scheme to hide his secret nature.  Eve and I had a conversation recently about the difficulty in removing those rose-colored glasses and accepting the truth about our former partners, a conversation I vividly remembered when reading those letters!

My ex made it clear in his letters that he does not like the fact that this blog exists and consequently I have questioned my motives in continuing to write about my experience.  While he thinks that my writing is all about him, it is really about my recovery from betrayal and trauma; he is central to my wounding but irrelevant to my recovery.  I regularly hear from women just like me who somehow discover this space on the internet and find hope in the knowledge that they are not alone.  There is risk and vulnerability in writing of such personal experiences but there is also freedom in speaking the truth rather than continuing to hide.

So the lessons I have learned from reading and re-reading court transcripts and letters from prison can be summarized by the following:
  • Denial, minimization, blame-shifting, projecting and deception are common among addicts and until they are abandoned, recovery becomes virtually impossible;
  • Gaslighting (using tactics to try to change an individual's perception of reality) is very confusing; those who experience it need frequent reality checks with trusted individuals or court transcripts;
  • Manipulation, exaggeration and distortion of facts can be very convincing and require vigilance in holding to what we know to be objective truth;
  • Perpetrators are incredibly skilled at creating and maintaining a near-perfect illusionary life, gathering props (i.e. spouse, children, academic credentials, etc.) to support the facade that hides their true nature and behavior;
  • When a narcissist is through with you, either by your choice or his, what seemed like love becomes rabid hatred.  We can't be surprised by this.
How about you?  Has your experience been similar or different to what I have described?   As always, I would love to hear from you. 

2 comments:

  1. Hi I have been reading your blog for a while now and this will be my first comment. Although I am not married to a pedophile, my husband was addicted to porn and has had affairs with other women.He did not physically abuse me but has emotionally and financially abused me for many years. He did not want any kind of relationship with me. I was "unattractive" to him. But he did not want a divorce either.

    Perhaps he stayed on this marriage for financial benefits. He has not worked for the past 17 years and has depended on me. I am now in my mid fifties. Due to so much neglect I felt isolated and so lonely in this marriage. I did not tell anyone what I was going through as I felt so ashamed of myself. I feel like I have no worth or value as even my husband who vowed to love me rejected me.

    I wished I had left him earlier and given myself a chance to meet someone else. But I used to think all men were like my husband. He used to tell me that I could never be happy with anyone and I bought his lie.

    Anyway I cannot turn back the clock. I don't want to spend the rest of my life with a scheming man manipulative man who just made use of me for my income and other creature comforts. I want to ask God for a second chance even though I an so much older now but again I feel so ashamed to ask my heart's desire. Sometimes I think God wants me to put up with what goes on in my life and the loneliness as there other issues worse in life that people face, like poverty and illness and young children dying. I feel so hopeless and lost.

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  2. Dear Anonymous,

    Thank you for stopping by. I am so sorry for the pain you have endured and continue to experience. Porn addiction is so devastating to a woman and to a marriage. Have you considered S-Anon, a 12-step group for partners of those with a sex addiction? I found it to be incredibly beneficial for my recovery.

    Let me say that I was your age when my world fell apart. You are never too old to begin taking care of yourself and you are not alone. This addiction of his is not your fault, you cannot control or cure it. He has to want to do this for himself, which may or may not ever happen. There are so many women (and men) like you who are living with the shame of a spouse's sex addiction. But the shame is not yours!

    I think many times we have too low a view of marriage--staying for the sake of avoiding divorce is not a high view of marriage. Marriage is intended to be an earthly representation of the relationship between the members of the Trinity. That relationship is based on an other-centered, self-giving love in a circle of interdependence, respect and submission. There is no hierarchy or one-sidedness in the divine relationship, nor should there be in our relationships.

    Your husband has given you plenty of reasons to divorce him. Isn't it time for you to begin prioritizing yourself?

    Hugs,
    Brenda

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