“When you understand that what you're telling is just a story. It isn't happening anymore. When you realize the story you're telling is just words, when you can just crumble up and throw your past in the trashcan, then we'll figure out who you're going to be.”
― Chuck Palahniuk
When my fiancé of 3 & a-half years left in January, I was a broken person.
Knowing his past behaviors during manic episodes, I thought I had mentally prepared myself for this. I didn't expect, extrapolate, or calculate that healing has its own timeline, & unfortunately these things take time.
Even so, I was determined to quickly reach a point of acceptance and growth. I was determined to no longer settle for my happiness. I was oblivious, or maybe in denial, to the fact that I needed to focus on myself. I needed more time to nurture the hurt parts of my soul...But I had always been an impatient person.
I was excited, albeit hesitant, to venture out into the dating scene. I signed up for a few dating sites to see if I could sort out someone truly special among the cornucopia of weeds, weirdos, and freaks. I had an overwhelming response to my ad. To this day, I am still scratching my head as to why one member chose a close-up picture of his one extremely red eye as his profile photo. No one particularly stuck out until I came across an image of a familiar face.
Jonathan B. McElroy aka JBMCLRY. I'd worked with Jonathan for several years at a previous job. He is probably a wallflower to most people, just another average, slightly overweight hipster with a beard. He seemed like your average Joe, but to me, I was attracted to the authority in his voice, his confidence & weird sense of humor. When I saw his picture on OKCupid I thought to myself, "There is no way he and his girlfriend broke up. They were SO happy." After fact-checking Facebook to assure myself, I wasn't preemptively getting involved in some complicated drama-I-didn't-need-in-my-life situation, I clicked the "like" button, probably blushed & most definitely giggled like a schoolgirl.
The heart I thought would never thump again was akin to Jim Henson's Muppet Animal on a drum set.
The anticipation just felt so good.
Many of Jonathan's first dates were nothing less than magical. My birthday was like the scene from "16 Candles". He held my hand as we walked through Moss Wright Park. He looked lovingly into my eyes as we discussed having children and how desperately he wanted to be a father. He revealed how much he feared never having the opportunity to start a family of his own. His eyes actually twinkled when he stared into my eyes. We walked around the Opryland Hotel Garden while he told me about his time as a marine and the passing of his father. It seemed as though I'd found someone with so many common interests and life goals who had suffered as much as I had and deserved so much more. It was so perfect in the beginning that only 3 weeks into it I remember joking with my roommate that he " was so perfect, there must be something terribly wrong with him". We laughed, but in hindsight, I know my intuition was trying to tell me something that the oxytocin flowing through my neural pathways refused to acknowledge.
As perfect as things seemed, there were huge signs I should've noticed. People were waving red flags telling me to avoid this disaster but I couldn't see the reality through the perfect, content, romance-filled life I'd been promised. Here's a few things that occurred after a month of dating that should've sent me running for the hills:
- He wanted to move in after 3 weeks of dating.
- He demanded exclusivity & that we rush into a marriage-type situation.
- He threw a tantrum when I told him I was going to a male friend's party.
- He was consistently late for any plans.
- Easter weekend we were supposed to meet at noon. At 1:30 I contacted him asking where he was. ( I now know he was on a date.) He threw a tantrum & refused to keep Easter plans. He later tried to make me feel bad for him because he "was alone on Easter".
- He would take everything out of context and take offense to every little thing.
- He would compare me positively to his ex.
- (April) He began getting upset for absolutely no logical reason and blaming me for his anger.
- He told me I didn't know how to treat a man and accused me of trying to control him.
- He began to compare me negatively to his ex and several other women.
- He demanded I paint my nails. He critiqued everything I wore. He told me to start parting my hair to the other side.
- He tripped me because I had to get up to use the restroom.
- He would have sex with me when I was asleep.
- (May) He pushed me & told me to get out of his apartment one evening after we had gone to sleep. While I was putting on my shirt he ripped it out of my hands & tore it to shreds. He pushed me against the wall and then kissed me and begged me not to leave him. His excuse was PTSD. He left several scratches and bruises on my arms.
- (May) He backed into my car purposefully and then reprimanded me for getting upset.
- He ripped my shirt and tried to force me to answer the door dressed inappropriately when the food delivery guy got there.
- He started calling me names during his tantrums. After the first time I was called a b*tch I politely explained to him that I would not accept that behavior. After the 5th time, I called him a b*tch back & he ignored me for 3 days because "it means something worse for men".
- (June) He threw his dog across the apartment because it peed on the floor.
- (June) He accused me of cheating on him & demanded I take pictures around the house to prove no one was home with me.
- (July 4th) He grabbed my arm, bruised me, and pushed me again. When I refused to apologize for my behavior, he punched himself in his side and threatened to call the police on me.
- He threw his dog into the counter this time breaking it's nail. It bled on the bed and the wall. D.B. refused to clean it up and expected me to sleep in/on/around it.
- (July) He informed me that he broke a wood-burned elephant I gave him into pieces to clean up dog shit with. When I started to cry he scolded me for getting upset.
- (July) A bug was stinging my arm and I flicked it off. He spit in my face because I "flicked it at him in anger".
- (July) We were playing a video game, and I leveled up & picked up better gear before him, so he acted insulted, threw a tantrum & kicked me out.
- (July 24th) He told me I was the only one who understood him. Then kicked me out because I had to get out of bed to use the bathroom. He had made me lie in the bed for almost 18 hours at this point.
- (July 28th) I found another woman walking his dog at his apartment. She had slept over. I confronted both & ended that terrible relationship once and for all.
God, I feel so terrible for his current wife. I keep tabs on him, so I can verify that he is far the hell away from me. I saw a post on Facebook in a rock identification group about how years ago, he tried to convince her that a black rock was blue. That was the beginning of your grooming, girl. One of his first micro mindfucks was him arguing that the sky 'was green' and how 'everyone knows it's green.'
Good god, what a manipulative piece of human garbage.
-Happy New Year! xoxo
-Cheriebobomb
“You read and write and sing and experience, thinking that one day these things will build the character you admire to live as. You love and lose and bleed best you can, to the extreme, hoping that one day the world will read you like the poem you want to be.”
― Charlotte Eriksson
I've experienced these type of men , was mnarried many years to this type of man. The good news is though, that I learned what is not healthy love, and after him I recognize the traits that are not love-but the result of a man with a mental disorder trying to make a woman believe she is the hysterical, out of control person- not that the treatment would cause anyone to become unhinged.Abuse always starts slowly, they test you to see how much you will put up with. The more you forgive them for unacceptable behavior, the worse their next move will be. It's good you realized it and got out while you still had the emotional strength to do so, so many do not and spend their lives being abused in one way or another.
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