For Women Who Fear Fear
February 18, 2009
From Christian author John Shore:
(This post is fourth in the series 7 Reasons Women Stay in Bad Relationships.) To read the other posts in this series, go here, and read the posts starting with the bottom one up. Today’s post is a follow-up to last time’s The Fear Factor: Reason #2 Women Stay in Bad Relationships.)
Last time we identified four fears that often keep women in bad
relationships:
- “Things could always get worse”;
- “I’ve never been
alone”;
- “Will I ever find another man?”; and
- finally, “I’ll have no
money.”
So let’s take those one by one, and see if we can’t strip them
of their power.
“Things could always get worse for me if I leave this bad relationship I’m in.”
No, they really couldn’t. Being in a bad relationship is
the worse. Being every single day in a million little ways discouraged,
dismissed, belittled, ignored, angered, disappointed, condescended to
and/or emotionally or physically abused is as bad as it gets.
If that describes your life, then congratulations! You’ve bottomed out!
From where you’re at, you can only
go up. Allowing yourself to be consistently maligned by someone who is
supposed to love and support you is hell, pure and simple. There is no
place worse than hell. Get out.
“I’ve never been alone.”
But that’s a bad thing. You will love living alone.
There are deep, true, ever-resonating rewards to living alone that simply cannot be had any other way.
Your car. Your house. Your fridge, filled with your food, prepared the way you like it. Your bed, your furniture, your TV shows, your pet, your plants, your chair where you sit every morning and enjoy your cup of coffee. Your life.
It’s absolutely glorious. You’ll love it.
“Will I ever find another man?”
Right now, do you
really care? Is that really your #1 concern these days? Don’t let it
be.
For now, just get out of the bad relationship you’re in, make a new
life for yourself, and let “finding” a man take care of itself.
You’ll
meet someone; there’s a world of good men out there also looking for
mates. You can relax about that.
Besides, the best way to “find” a man
is to quit looking for one. (On this topic you might also want to read
my Looking for Mr. Right? You’re Missing the Point, and God Doesn’t Care if You’re Married or Not).
“But I’ll have no money.”
The first thing about
this fear is to make sure you’re being realistic about it.
It’s too
easy to see money as an emotional issue instead of what it is, which is
something in the world that’s real, tangible, and of absolute, objective value. So get real about it.
Will you actually starve out there? If you divorce your husband, won’t that leave you with enough money to at least get started? Will you really be out
of money—or will you just have less of it than you’re used to?
If it’s
the former, then that’s a real thing that needs to be addressed. If
it’s the latter, then realize that you’re putting money, of all things, ahead of your own spirit, heart, and self.
Also, ask yourself where you’ll be in ten years. If you stay in the
bad relationship you’re in, how will your life be better ten years from
now? Because if you leave—even if you leave with just the clothes on
your back—in ten years your life will be quantum leaps
better.
In ten years you’ll have a whole new life. You can always get
money. But you can’t get back one day of your life. If you’re worried
about the effect money will have on you leaving, think instead of what
it’s costing you to stay.
Also, plan. If you know you’re going to leave your man, and you know doing so is going to take money you don’t have, then get
money. Tell your husband you want to work part or full-time—and then
squirrel away as much of your paycheck as you can. Yes, it’s deceitful.
But nothing less than your life is at stake.
If the cost of saving your
own life is lying to a man who’s been treating you poorly every day and
has proved himself someone you have to lie to in order to
secure your own well-being, then lie to him till your smile muscles
ache. God will forgive you.
But get money, and take as much time as you
need (or can) to get as much as you can. (And to that end, do well
at that job you get. Get raises. Get promotions. Create as full a world
as you can for yourself to step into, come the time.)
Talk about your
plans with your trusted family member; see if they can help. Confide in
your true friends; they may have good advice and/or Actual Resources
for you. Avail yourself of the fact that people love to help
people who are trying to improve their lives—and especially people they
care about. Generally, go animal.
This is about survival. So look into
every area of your life that might prove a resource to you, make it a resource, and start collecting, on the side, what you need in order to make it on your own in the world.
Finally, if you’re in a situation where your husband won’t
let you work, then you’re in a special and dire category of concern.
You need to call the domestic violence shelter in your area, and get
them involved. They know exactly what to do in cases like yours; please
trust that you’ll be absolutely amazed at the sheer experience they
have helping people just like you safely extricate themselves from
situations just like yours.
Once you call a domestic violence agency—or
any “We Help People” non-profit type of agency in your area—you’ll
immediately be plugged into the whole network of organizations in your
area that are functionally connected with whatever agency you
contacted. It’s awesome, because then you’ll be into state
money and resources.
Those people will have you in a nice place safely
hidden from your husband as soon as you can pack your bags and catch
the cab they’ll send out to get you. And they want to help
you—to rescue you, to give you a place to live, to teach you whatever
life skills you want or need to learn—because that’s how they
get paid. Their funding depends upon helping individuals like you. So
never worry that you can in any way be an inconvenience to an
organization like that. Just the opposite is true.
They need you to call them. You’re part of their purpose.
One of the main ways bad men keep their women where and how they
want them to remain is by isolating them from the rest of the world. If
you’re a woman whose husband/man has done that to you, understand that
the idea you may have in your head that you are alone in the world is
pure, 100% illusion.
No one is alone in this world. There are
a ton of good people out here eager for the chance to help you. Pick up
the phone; get a job; make your plans; collect your finances—do
whatever you have to do. But please: Join us. You make all of us
stronger when you decide to be.
One last thing: It’s okay to be afraid. Don’t think that being
afraid means you’re weak, or stupid, or anything like that. It just
means you’re human. Everyone is afraid of all kinds of things in life;
a lot of things in life are scary. So forgive yourself for
being afraid, if you are. It’s normal. Don’t let your fears paralyze
you; don’t let them define you. But give them their place. Acknowledge
them—and then, one by one, start dismantling them.
Pleeeeeease pass this post along to anyone you think it might help.