Supporting a Friend Who Isn't There for Themselves
Posted: Tue Feb 16, 2016 8:49 am
Hey all! Heads up for a VERY long post as I explain what's going on in my life right now. I just need to vent a bit first, there may not be any direct questions, but I would really appreciate any feedback about how to cope with this situation, since it is on-going and will be for quite some time.
So I have been friends with, let's call her T, for a good 5 or so years now. In that time, I have come to know that her relationships (all, not just romantic) are very rocky. She maintains friendships with people she tells me she doesn't actually like, and she says she only stays in contact with them because she feels guilty/like she owes them something. She has friends who do things that she feels very uncomfortable with and that push past her boundaries, and she says that she will cut them out of her life, but then it doesn't happen. Her romantic relationship has also been incredibly rocky the whole time I've known her. She has been with her partner since high school, he was her first relationship, and she has always felt that he is the only one who could ever love her. Her self-esteem is incredibly low, and so she views herself as completely valueless. Obviously, I think this has played a BIG part in her relationships being not-so-great; because she thinks so shittily of herself, she doesn't feel like she deserves better when other people treat her like shit.
She began venting to me a lot about things her partner would say or do, and trust me... there was a lot to vent about. On several occasions, he convinced her to agree to an open relationship when she didn't want that. He's one of those "bluntly honest" people who thinks that because it's "the truth" it doesn't matter if you're an asshole about it, and that if it's "the truth" then you should say it, no matter how hurtful it is. He's pretty much up and up told her that she's stupid -- he's asked her if she thinks maybe the chemo she underwent affected her intelligence. He's been just generally incredibly rude to her, like when she tried on a dress he told her it "gave her a muffin top under her armpits" and other cruelly "honest" things. He treats everyone as if they're stupid, and I have always disliked him because, well, he's always been kind of an asshole.
It got to the point where, every time we hung out, at some point she would bring up some shitty thing he said, kind of searching for me to validate her feelings that it was shitty. And of course, it WOULD be shitty, so I would say "wow that is a shitty thing to say to a person" and "I really don't like the way he said that to you". So she'd feel validated about feeling upset by it (because, considering her low self-esteem, she would always feel like maybe it wasn't actually a big deal). BUT then she would end up using me as almost a sounding board so she could then work out a "reason" why it totally WASN'T that shitty and oh he's SO GREAT in other ways. She was VERY firmly committed to this cycle (and then they got married!) so I didn't even mention that it was looking an awful lot like an abusive cycle, because she already would do the "reasoning" thing if I so much as said that wasn't a nice thing to say to a person.
Going through this same routine every single time I saw her started to really wear on me, so about a year and a half ago I sort of faded out of her life. I really loved her, and enjoyed her company, but hearing about her partner every single time, and having to go through the same routine of "oh he said this shitty thing to me but wait now that you agreed that it was shitty well IT WASN'T SO SHITTY AFTER ALL" was just too much for me. I was also struggling a lot with my own depression, so my emotional well had just run totally dry and I needed time to dig myself out of the pit I was in.
For a while I've kind of suspected that she might have BPD, because it just feels that she is SO emotionally dependent and needs a lot of reassurance, and has such low self-esteem that she kind of needs to constantly rely on her external relationships to define her and to provide that reassurance and sense of identity instead of getting it from within herself. She's also said things like I'm the only person who hasn't let her down (hello, pressure?!?) and that she's so glad to have me in her life because I'm the only friend who's really supportive of her. Even when she's not talking about her partner, she'll often just make small statements about her worthlessness or ugliness or whatever. So our friendship has always felt pretty emotionally draining for me.
In the spring I started therapy, and in september I started medication, and I have been feeling a lot more stable and confident in my ability to cope with my depression, although I'm only at the beginning of my journey so my footing doesn't feel totally secure and I'm still having to figure out things like dosage and self-care routines. Because of feeling a little more capable, I decided to start becoming close to T again in the summer -- I felt more able to deal with her emotional dependency. Once again, she would talk to me about how her relationship was feeling rocky, and her partner was spending an awful lot of time with another girl and she was feeling insecure about it. She said to me "I just have no idea where I would go if we split up." And I said that well, I know my boyfriend's parents are looking to rent out the other rooms in the house we're living in, so that's always a last resort. I wanted her to know that I was there for her and that there were OPTIONS, that she didn't HAVE to stay with her partner.
Well, fast forward to a month ago. Her husband tells her that he's realised that he DOES want children after all -- he used to totally shit all over the idea of anyone who wanted children, like he was SO superior to them. And I was always so heartbroken by the fact that I could tell that T DID want children, she had ALWAYS wanted children, but because her partner didn't, she convinced herself that she didn't either. She had started saying how stupid and gross children were, etc etc. Her identity and desires were always molded into whatever her partner wanted. To the point where she had been looking into getting tubal ligation. So then he went and turned entirely around on that and said he did want kids after all. But then he told her that he didn't want to have kids with HER. He said that, because of her multiple chronic illnesses, she is like a child because he always has to look after her, and thus she wouldn't be fit to be a mother.
She told me this in the middle of a shopping mall and I started yelling about how horrible and ableist that is to say, haha. People stared. I don't mind, because holy SHIT I have never wanted to punch someone so hard. Anyway, he also told her that they just don't have enough in common (like good job champ, you had 9 years to figure that out and maybe you should have done so BEFORE marrying her??) and so he wants a divorce. So she asked me if she could move in with my partner and I. Honestly, I hadn't been expecting that to actually happen at all, because whenever her partner was horrible, the cycle of abuse would just continue and they never did split up, she would convince herself that everything was totally fine, and life would continue as usual. I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm so relieved for her that she has been freed of her partner, and I am heartbroken for her that he did it in such a horrible way and wasted so much of her time. I was just surprised that what I thought was more a symbolic gesture actually was becoming a reality.
So anyhoo, my partner asked his parents if they were still looking for more tenants, how much it would cost, etc. And everything worked out so that T COULD move in with us, as soon as she needed to. I'm glad I've been able to provide a space for her so she can properly be away from her husband, and I'm glad to be a steady supportive rock in her life at a time when she is really lacking that. However, I was very worried about thus being her 24/7 sole emotional support. I knew that she would be in an incredibly emotionally unstable place after such a devastating breakup, especially because I know how low her self-esteem is and how she relied on her relationship as a defining part of her identity. Then, about five days before she was due to move in with us, she attempted suicide and texted me from the psychiatric inpatient care in the hospital. So clearly, emotional unstable was a good estimation on my part.
She's been living with us now for a few weeks, and is a pretty great roommate and we've been hanging out and it hasn't been too bad at all. She sees a therapist and has switched dosage and type of antidepressants, and she said she hasn't been feeling suicidal anymore. We're working out a suicidal-feelings-plan anyway, I'm going to print off a list of good suicide hotlines and things that she can call if those feelings come back. I'm not sure what else exactly to include in the plan, so if anyone has more suggestions for that I would love to hear them.
I'm trying to work on finding a balance between hanging out with her and hanging out with alex and spending time by myself. When she's in the house I'm always inclined to hang out with her instead of spend time by myself, because she's awesome and we have fun together. But the other week I found myself just completely drained and unable to function, so I realized that I'd just been overextending myself and needed to take a break from everyone. I'm trying to include more me-time, and more dedicated self-care time now and it's working out better. If anyone has input around good ways to keep that balance, I would also appreciate that, too! I'm going to print off a little schedule of our work days so that T can see when we'll be in (this will help her a lot because she has memory issues due to her illness, and I think it'll also help when she's feeling lonely or suicidal, because she'll be able to look at it and know that someone will be home really soon) and I'll also add some dedicated me-time so that I can commit more to self-care time. I'll also have some dedicated-her time so that she can feel like there is some real time that she can rely on having some support. I've just been kind of unconsciously procrastinating on printing it off, because of a silly little worry that she'll be offended if I officially request some me-time (even though she's actually been totally great about offering me my own space, I've just constantly ignored my own needs and hung out with her instead lol).
However, her emotional dependency and yo-yo-ing have continued, as is to be expected, and she keeps going back and forth about whether her partner was terrible to her or whether he was actually lovely. I've had several conversations with her to help her talk through how she was feeling about it, and giving my own experience with my own breakup and figuring out when things have been not-so-healthy, if not outright abusive. She's also talked with another friend of hers (who she says she doesn't actually like?!? I don't know anymore) who is in her 30s and has a lot more experience and wisdom around relationships, and she said pretty much exactly the same stuff I'd been saying. So T would agree with us and say that it all makes a lot of sense, and then the next day she would be like "well you only know about the BAD stuff" or "it really wasn't that bad, he was really lovely most of the time" or "for most of the years, he was really great, it's just been the past couple of years". I have heard that all many times before, even coming from myself, so I absolutely understand what she's going through.
However, she then says things like "wow I wish you could make my life decisions for me haha" and asks for my advice about how to get over her partner -- I told her it's important to stay out of contact for a few months, to give herself some space, and surround herself with people who love her and respect her. She's asked me for my advice around this multiple times, and then always goes and sees him as soon as I'm not around. And then when I come home after work in the evening she says "I'm such an idiot. I went and saw him today." And there are various "reasons" -- oh he wasn't coping well today, oh I needed to get something from the house, etc etc. I finally said (yet again) that look -- I know it's totally the opposite to what you WANT to do right now, but what will help you the most with getting through this is to not see him for a good long while, and to minimize contact entirely to only absolutely necessary things (because of most of her stuff still being at their shared apartment, it's pretty difficult to totally cut off contact). You're not an idiot, but you ARE making decisions right now that are just not in your best interest. In the long run you are actually just prolonging the pain of the breakup and making it harder for yourself to move on. The fact that you two are keeping in such close contact and still relying on each other heavily for emotional support is just not fair on either of you, and just not a healthy way of dealing with the breakup.
The next day she went to see him to ask him if they could get back together.
Like, just???? Why even ask for my advice if you're going to do the exact opposite. It's just like when she would vent to me about something terrible he said and then as soon as I validated her feelings, she decided that it wasn't actually terrible after all.
WHHYYYYY. Where do I draw the line around this? How do I help her to stop flip-flopping so much. (I know the answer to that is that I CAN'T).
I also try to make sure I'm not constantly like, dictating what she should do, or giving her advice or anything. The day she told me she went back to him and asked if they could get back together, I didn't say "didn't I TELL you not to do that" or anything -- I just gave her a big hug and told her I loved her and watched some doctor who with her. But how do I not constantly have it on my MIND? I am always thinking about the fact that I hope her therapist knows about this particular aspect or that one and asking her this question or that question, and I'm always hoping that her partner won't agree to get back together with her and she has to go through all that shit all over again, and I'm always trying to think of some way I could somehow magic her into believing in herself more. How do I stop myself not only from always being there for her, but from always having her on my mind??
So I have been friends with, let's call her T, for a good 5 or so years now. In that time, I have come to know that her relationships (all, not just romantic) are very rocky. She maintains friendships with people she tells me she doesn't actually like, and she says she only stays in contact with them because she feels guilty/like she owes them something. She has friends who do things that she feels very uncomfortable with and that push past her boundaries, and she says that she will cut them out of her life, but then it doesn't happen. Her romantic relationship has also been incredibly rocky the whole time I've known her. She has been with her partner since high school, he was her first relationship, and she has always felt that he is the only one who could ever love her. Her self-esteem is incredibly low, and so she views herself as completely valueless. Obviously, I think this has played a BIG part in her relationships being not-so-great; because she thinks so shittily of herself, she doesn't feel like she deserves better when other people treat her like shit.
She began venting to me a lot about things her partner would say or do, and trust me... there was a lot to vent about. On several occasions, he convinced her to agree to an open relationship when she didn't want that. He's one of those "bluntly honest" people who thinks that because it's "the truth" it doesn't matter if you're an asshole about it, and that if it's "the truth" then you should say it, no matter how hurtful it is. He's pretty much up and up told her that she's stupid -- he's asked her if she thinks maybe the chemo she underwent affected her intelligence. He's been just generally incredibly rude to her, like when she tried on a dress he told her it "gave her a muffin top under her armpits" and other cruelly "honest" things. He treats everyone as if they're stupid, and I have always disliked him because, well, he's always been kind of an asshole.
It got to the point where, every time we hung out, at some point she would bring up some shitty thing he said, kind of searching for me to validate her feelings that it was shitty. And of course, it WOULD be shitty, so I would say "wow that is a shitty thing to say to a person" and "I really don't like the way he said that to you". So she'd feel validated about feeling upset by it (because, considering her low self-esteem, she would always feel like maybe it wasn't actually a big deal). BUT then she would end up using me as almost a sounding board so she could then work out a "reason" why it totally WASN'T that shitty and oh he's SO GREAT in other ways. She was VERY firmly committed to this cycle (and then they got married!) so I didn't even mention that it was looking an awful lot like an abusive cycle, because she already would do the "reasoning" thing if I so much as said that wasn't a nice thing to say to a person.
Going through this same routine every single time I saw her started to really wear on me, so about a year and a half ago I sort of faded out of her life. I really loved her, and enjoyed her company, but hearing about her partner every single time, and having to go through the same routine of "oh he said this shitty thing to me but wait now that you agreed that it was shitty well IT WASN'T SO SHITTY AFTER ALL" was just too much for me. I was also struggling a lot with my own depression, so my emotional well had just run totally dry and I needed time to dig myself out of the pit I was in.
For a while I've kind of suspected that she might have BPD, because it just feels that she is SO emotionally dependent and needs a lot of reassurance, and has such low self-esteem that she kind of needs to constantly rely on her external relationships to define her and to provide that reassurance and sense of identity instead of getting it from within herself. She's also said things like I'm the only person who hasn't let her down (hello, pressure?!?) and that she's so glad to have me in her life because I'm the only friend who's really supportive of her. Even when she's not talking about her partner, she'll often just make small statements about her worthlessness or ugliness or whatever. So our friendship has always felt pretty emotionally draining for me.
In the spring I started therapy, and in september I started medication, and I have been feeling a lot more stable and confident in my ability to cope with my depression, although I'm only at the beginning of my journey so my footing doesn't feel totally secure and I'm still having to figure out things like dosage and self-care routines. Because of feeling a little more capable, I decided to start becoming close to T again in the summer -- I felt more able to deal with her emotional dependency. Once again, she would talk to me about how her relationship was feeling rocky, and her partner was spending an awful lot of time with another girl and she was feeling insecure about it. She said to me "I just have no idea where I would go if we split up." And I said that well, I know my boyfriend's parents are looking to rent out the other rooms in the house we're living in, so that's always a last resort. I wanted her to know that I was there for her and that there were OPTIONS, that she didn't HAVE to stay with her partner.
Well, fast forward to a month ago. Her husband tells her that he's realised that he DOES want children after all -- he used to totally shit all over the idea of anyone who wanted children, like he was SO superior to them. And I was always so heartbroken by the fact that I could tell that T DID want children, she had ALWAYS wanted children, but because her partner didn't, she convinced herself that she didn't either. She had started saying how stupid and gross children were, etc etc. Her identity and desires were always molded into whatever her partner wanted. To the point where she had been looking into getting tubal ligation. So then he went and turned entirely around on that and said he did want kids after all. But then he told her that he didn't want to have kids with HER. He said that, because of her multiple chronic illnesses, she is like a child because he always has to look after her, and thus she wouldn't be fit to be a mother.
She told me this in the middle of a shopping mall and I started yelling about how horrible and ableist that is to say, haha. People stared. I don't mind, because holy SHIT I have never wanted to punch someone so hard. Anyway, he also told her that they just don't have enough in common (like good job champ, you had 9 years to figure that out and maybe you should have done so BEFORE marrying her??) and so he wants a divorce. So she asked me if she could move in with my partner and I. Honestly, I hadn't been expecting that to actually happen at all, because whenever her partner was horrible, the cycle of abuse would just continue and they never did split up, she would convince herself that everything was totally fine, and life would continue as usual. I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm so relieved for her that she has been freed of her partner, and I am heartbroken for her that he did it in such a horrible way and wasted so much of her time. I was just surprised that what I thought was more a symbolic gesture actually was becoming a reality.
So anyhoo, my partner asked his parents if they were still looking for more tenants, how much it would cost, etc. And everything worked out so that T COULD move in with us, as soon as she needed to. I'm glad I've been able to provide a space for her so she can properly be away from her husband, and I'm glad to be a steady supportive rock in her life at a time when she is really lacking that. However, I was very worried about thus being her 24/7 sole emotional support. I knew that she would be in an incredibly emotionally unstable place after such a devastating breakup, especially because I know how low her self-esteem is and how she relied on her relationship as a defining part of her identity. Then, about five days before she was due to move in with us, she attempted suicide and texted me from the psychiatric inpatient care in the hospital. So clearly, emotional unstable was a good estimation on my part.
She's been living with us now for a few weeks, and is a pretty great roommate and we've been hanging out and it hasn't been too bad at all. She sees a therapist and has switched dosage and type of antidepressants, and she said she hasn't been feeling suicidal anymore. We're working out a suicidal-feelings-plan anyway, I'm going to print off a list of good suicide hotlines and things that she can call if those feelings come back. I'm not sure what else exactly to include in the plan, so if anyone has more suggestions for that I would love to hear them.
I'm trying to work on finding a balance between hanging out with her and hanging out with alex and spending time by myself. When she's in the house I'm always inclined to hang out with her instead of spend time by myself, because she's awesome and we have fun together. But the other week I found myself just completely drained and unable to function, so I realized that I'd just been overextending myself and needed to take a break from everyone. I'm trying to include more me-time, and more dedicated self-care time now and it's working out better. If anyone has input around good ways to keep that balance, I would also appreciate that, too! I'm going to print off a little schedule of our work days so that T can see when we'll be in (this will help her a lot because she has memory issues due to her illness, and I think it'll also help when she's feeling lonely or suicidal, because she'll be able to look at it and know that someone will be home really soon) and I'll also add some dedicated me-time so that I can commit more to self-care time. I'll also have some dedicated-her time so that she can feel like there is some real time that she can rely on having some support. I've just been kind of unconsciously procrastinating on printing it off, because of a silly little worry that she'll be offended if I officially request some me-time (even though she's actually been totally great about offering me my own space, I've just constantly ignored my own needs and hung out with her instead lol).
However, her emotional dependency and yo-yo-ing have continued, as is to be expected, and she keeps going back and forth about whether her partner was terrible to her or whether he was actually lovely. I've had several conversations with her to help her talk through how she was feeling about it, and giving my own experience with my own breakup and figuring out when things have been not-so-healthy, if not outright abusive. She's also talked with another friend of hers (who she says she doesn't actually like?!? I don't know anymore) who is in her 30s and has a lot more experience and wisdom around relationships, and she said pretty much exactly the same stuff I'd been saying. So T would agree with us and say that it all makes a lot of sense, and then the next day she would be like "well you only know about the BAD stuff" or "it really wasn't that bad, he was really lovely most of the time" or "for most of the years, he was really great, it's just been the past couple of years". I have heard that all many times before, even coming from myself, so I absolutely understand what she's going through.
However, she then says things like "wow I wish you could make my life decisions for me haha" and asks for my advice about how to get over her partner -- I told her it's important to stay out of contact for a few months, to give herself some space, and surround herself with people who love her and respect her. She's asked me for my advice around this multiple times, and then always goes and sees him as soon as I'm not around. And then when I come home after work in the evening she says "I'm such an idiot. I went and saw him today." And there are various "reasons" -- oh he wasn't coping well today, oh I needed to get something from the house, etc etc. I finally said (yet again) that look -- I know it's totally the opposite to what you WANT to do right now, but what will help you the most with getting through this is to not see him for a good long while, and to minimize contact entirely to only absolutely necessary things (because of most of her stuff still being at their shared apartment, it's pretty difficult to totally cut off contact). You're not an idiot, but you ARE making decisions right now that are just not in your best interest. In the long run you are actually just prolonging the pain of the breakup and making it harder for yourself to move on. The fact that you two are keeping in such close contact and still relying on each other heavily for emotional support is just not fair on either of you, and just not a healthy way of dealing with the breakup.
The next day she went to see him to ask him if they could get back together.
Like, just???? Why even ask for my advice if you're going to do the exact opposite. It's just like when she would vent to me about something terrible he said and then as soon as I validated her feelings, she decided that it wasn't actually terrible after all.
WHHYYYYY. Where do I draw the line around this? How do I help her to stop flip-flopping so much. (I know the answer to that is that I CAN'T).
I also try to make sure I'm not constantly like, dictating what she should do, or giving her advice or anything. The day she told me she went back to him and asked if they could get back together, I didn't say "didn't I TELL you not to do that" or anything -- I just gave her a big hug and told her I loved her and watched some doctor who with her. But how do I not constantly have it on my MIND? I am always thinking about the fact that I hope her therapist knows about this particular aspect or that one and asking her this question or that question, and I'm always hoping that her partner won't agree to get back together with her and she has to go through all that shit all over again, and I'm always trying to think of some way I could somehow magic her into believing in herself more. How do I stop myself not only from always being there for her, but from always having her on my mind??