I have a different view. I don't give anything worth as much as a sous for how one looks. It's the inner strength that counts.
One can look weak and be strong. I've known since I first fell for W2b that I was more into her than she was into me. I tried to hide it during our early days. It was liberating to accept and show that I was hooked, because I maintained boundaries even though I was hooked. That was so beneficial on and after d-day, for sure - since I could separate what I wanted from what I would do.
It showed up in my work life, when I was asked to put my technical knowledge at the service of proposals I did not support.
It shows up in the stories of people who heal from being betrayed - both by those who decide to R if certain conditions are met and by those who D saying, 'I've gone this far, but I won't go any farther.'
I hate dogma, but I'm dogmatic on this:
Be honest.
Honesty with oneself leads to strength.
Give not one cell, not one atom to looking strong.
******
the past only hurts you if you allow it to.
This seems to advise suppressing pain, and I think that's one of the worst possible responses to pain.
One can't heal pain without acknowledging it. If something from the past is hurting in the present, anything that aims to suppress that knowledge will be a disservice to oneself. To heal from being betrayed, I believe one needs to let the pain flow through and out of one's body.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 3:13 PM, Friday, June 14th]
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.