Thursday, January 3, 2019

Is She the World's Worst Girlfriend?


In this week’s unfortunate Ask Polly column a letter writer explains that she is being stalked and abused by an ex-boyfriend. Polly tells her to get over her feelings of shame. As always, Polly is grievously wrong. In an age where we have been told to become more attuned to the abuse that men visit on women, we have a case where a man is abusing a woman… and where Polly tells the woman to think about her flaws.

You see, the letter writer left her boyfriend for another man. As bad as it all was with the first boyfriend, things have been far, far better with the new boyfriend. She says that she suffers from mental illness, but we do not know which one or how it is being treated. She mentions IBS, irritable bowel syndrome, so perhaps that is what she is calling a mental illness.

Here is the first half of her letter:

I was in a relationship for four years. I am 31, he is 36. I was unhappy, he was unhappy, but we were scared of being alone I guess. I don’t even know what went wrong, really. We had some beautiful memories. We were very close. We went through really hard times together. But at times he made me feel weak and unlovable because of my mental illnesses. He believed if I couldn’t be happy with him, then I’d never be happy with anyone. We had explosive fights. I stopped working completely because my confidence was so low, and then I let myself depend on him financially. My friends and family hated him. I didn’t think I could do any better. I was so depressed.

But then something happened. My crush from college (for over the last ten years, nonstop) asked me to leave everything to be with him before we even shared our first kiss. He just knew. I just knew. No doubt about it. I left my then-boyfriend the next day. I lost my financial security, my home, my dogs, all of my belongings. It was hard but I knew it was the right thing to do. The new guy wasn’t scared of the pressure. He was ready for it. And thankfully it worked out perfectly. We fell madly in love, and now we live together. He’s the love of my life. I even have a job! I’m not doing great financially but I’m supporting myself for the first time. I never knew such happiness was possible, not for someone like me anyway — someone as weird and difficult and emotional and sensitive as I am. I’m healthy. I got my ambition back. I’m in love. Life is so much easier now. I don’t bear many traces of mental illness anymore. Even my IBS has gone! Just like magic. My friends and family love my boyfriend.

Now, her ex-boyfriend has set out to try to destroy her. He cannot stand the fact that she made him look bad and he believes that destroying her happiness would allow him to save face. The person feeling shame is the ex-boyfriend. The letter writer has nothing to feel ashamed about—after all, she did not cheat on him.

She continues:

But obviously the ex is angry. So angry! It was a year ago and he won’t give me my things back (and I really need them — why is he hanging on to all of my things still?!), spreads nasty rumors about me, divulges very personal things about me, gets mad at our mutual friends for still hanging out with me. I tried to meet up in person but he ignores my emails or answers with cutting one-liners. The last thing he told me in person was “I was only with you because of your looks and now that you’re 30, you’re useless!” Great. I always knew he hated women.

I feel like a boring urban legend, the “Long-Term Girlfriend Who Left the Guy Who Paid for Everything for a Younger Hotter Cooler More Successful Guy,” one that he feels the need to tell everyone. I get it. I’d be bitter, too, if I were in his shoes.

Apparently, she is incapable of ignoring him. I don’t want to be overly obvious here, but if he is holding on to her possessions, she needs to see a lawyer. She should not be dealing with him in person or through friends. She should have him charged with theft, for stealing her possessions. The correct approach to the problem is for her to expose him for the degenerate that he is. Since she has not thought of this solution-- Polly doesn't either-- she feels empathy for him.

As you know, and as I have often warned you, empathy is a trap. It is bad news. Now, we have a woman who is deeply empathetic and who feels her ex-boyfriend’s pain. She is allowing it to destroy her current relationship. Polly thinks that they both need therapy, so you know that therapy is the problem not the solution. As I said, she needs to talk to a lawyer and to have him served. Perhaps an order of protection would be useful. I am recommending public exposure of the bad news boyfriend.

The letter writer continues, explaining that she is incapable of dealing with the situation. She is incapable because she seems merely to have her emotions:

But I hate being hated. He’s full of hatred. He hated all the ex-girlfriends who dumped him. He stalked them obsessively on Instagram, every single day, and wasn’t embarrassed about it (even girlfriends from five years ago). He probably does the same to me. He hates random people he’s never met but who threaten his confidence in some way. He’s an angry, bitter person with a huge ego. It frightens me to be at the receiving end of his hatred. But I’m sorry. I feel guilty. I wish my current happiness didn’t result from leaving him and thus breaking his heart. It makes my happiness and my relationship feel illegitimate.

And, of course, he keeps doing it because it works. She does not like being hated. Who would? She thinks that she has broken his heart… which is idiotic. She is allowing him to destroy her current relationship… because she sees it all through the prism of therapy.

He makes me angry because his reactions taint our happy memories. Because he’s robbing me of four years of my life. Because he makes me doubt that I deserve happiness. Because I couldn’t get closure as he never wanted to talk things out calmly. Because I’m scared to bump into him and I avoid going to the places I love the most. Because he never admitted that the fact I left him for someone else hurt him. Instead he said I’ve hurt him by making him unhappy for four years, as if I was the one keeping him captive. He makes me angry because he’s said such hurtful things and I can’t get them out of my head. He’s keeping me stuck. Maybe I’m the one keeping myself stuck. I know he loved me so much. I know he thought we would end up together. But I had to leave!

She has gotten to the point of believing that his hate is a sign of how deeply he loved her. It isn’t. It’s a sign of his own shame and his own inability to believe that he just got dumped for a better man:

And yet I have to admit, his hate is so visceral, it’s validation that he did love me and maybe still does. It’s when I leave the men I am in long-term relationships with that I realize how much they do love me. It happened the last four times. I wish I weren’t like this. I wish that I could completely take in my current boyfriend’s love for me without wondering how destroyed he’d be if I left. That’s probably why I compete with my boyfriend’s exes. I can be the love of someone’s life, but am I really anything until I have broken their heart into little pieces and made them cry for months on end? I know this doesn’t make much sense with everything I wrote above.

I know my ex knows how much I hate being disliked. So it’s his last power over me. Keeping my things, turning people against me, tainting my reputation, not forgiving me. How do I let it go? How do I forgive myself even if he doesn’t? How do I give myself closure? Should I tell him all these things and acknowledge his pain even if he’ll probably never reply? Also, I don’t want him to think I’m obsessed with him!

She signs it: Worst Ex-Girlfriend Ever

Again, she needs a lawyer. If he is tainting her reputation, she might have grounds for a lawsuit. Perhaps the threat will bring him to his senses.

I am sure you want to know what Polly thinks… though, obviously, she does not know how to think. As a casualty of the therapy culture she proposes that WEGE is feeling pain because she feels responsible for hurting her ex.  And because WEGE knows that there is something wrong with her:

You’re living inside his twisted perception of you, and he’s living inside your rejection. You wouldn’t be obsessed with this if you didn’t suspect that there was something wrong with you. Your shame and your unexamined compulsions are teaming up to haunt you, but you’re only seeing them through the prism of your ex’s ego-driven fixation. And by the way, his fixation isn’t proof of his love. It’s proof of his damage. His ongoing rage boils down to “How dare that unstable, useless, over-the-hill woman get the best of me!”

And now you’re honoring his narcissistic rage by calling it love, and you’re refusing to honor your very sane act of self-preservation in leaving him by calling yourself selfish. The only thing that was impulsive about your exit was that you leaped straight into the arms of someone you didn’t know that well, and you left your dogs behind. (Sorry, I’m still worried about those dogs. How do you walk out on your dogs like that?!!)

But the way you’re translating these natural feelings — anger, confusion, guilt — into self-recrimination suggests that you don’t understand what you’ve been through, who you were then, or who you are now. 

If the man is holding on to her dogs, we sympathize with Polly's interjection: how did she leave without her dogs? But, we recognize that she needs a lawyer or the police to recover her pets. Isn't there a law against dognapping?

Effectively, there is nothing wrong with WEGE. There might be something wrong with Polly, for being incapable of thinking her way out of therapy culture dogmas, but WEGE cannot deal with the problem by herself. She needs professional, legal help.

Obviously, Polly recommends that WEGE introspect… which will only make it worse:

By viewing your ex as loving you like crazy (as opposed to just being enraged by the fact he couldn’t control you) you’re also going to see yourself as someone cruel who trampled on that love. You’re going to worry that you’re capable of doing that all over again, even to someone as great as your current boyfriend.

In order to nurture a long-term relationship, you have to have faith in yourself. When you doubt yourself or question your motives or choose to use someone else’s rage as a prism for your shame, you erode your faith in yourself and damage your ability to live in the present and be honest with your current partner.

So, we have a victim of stalking and abuse. Polly’s answer, in the age of #MeToo is for the victim to examine her own flaws.

In order to stop fixating on your ex and his gossip, you (somewhat ironically!) have to LOOK DIRECTLY AT your disordered perceptions and your damage and your true, real flaws.

Beyond appalling, don’t you think?

10 comments:

  1. "She mentions IBS, irritable bowel syndrome, so perhaps that is what she is calling a mental illness."

    Probably because she has her head up her . . .

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  2. Stuart, this lady is not the worst or the first girlfriend to be confused by events and emotions, but I agree with Polly that the ex is the least of her problems. The relationship has been over for a year and she’s still looking for someone to give her pity. Where is the METOO? How is this lady a victim of anyone but herself?
    This will probably be the longest post I’ve ever written so bear with me because I sincerely disagree with your perception of Polly’s “appalling" advice. Let's look again at what the lady wrote:

    "I stopped working completely because my confidence was so low, and then I let myself depend on him financially.”
    SHE stopped working - nothing about how THEY discussed it and decided to be a one income household.
    She “let herself” depend on him financially - again, nothing on what his position or feeling were about her work stoppage.

    "My crush from college (for over the last ten years, nonstop) asked me to leave everything to be with him before we even shared our first kiss. He just knew. I just knew. No doubt about it. I left my then-boyfriend the next day. I lost my financial security, my home, my dogs, all of my belongings.”
    She’s been carrying a torch (10 years non-stop?) for some guy she’s never even kissed and then leaves the next day to be with him, abandoning her dogs and property to the whims of her ex. She’s done without them for a year, so I sincerely doubt she really needs them. The new man supposedly knew the score, he was taking in an unemployed woman, so why she’s claiming to have lost her financial security escapes me.

    I don’t know why the lady is trying to meet up with the guy in person after a year, or why she bothered to send him emailS, unless it is because she gives some value to herself from whether or not the ex hurts from her absence??

    "He hated all the ex-girlfriends who dumped him. He stalked them obsessively on Instagram, every single day, and wasn’t embarrassed about it (even girlfriends from five years ago). He probably does the same to me.”
    The lady asserts that the ex is a stalker by claiming to have watched him stalk the previous ex, “every single day” and that’s not why she dumped him?? That would have been my neon EXIT sign!

    "It’s when I leave the men I am in long-term relationships with that I realize how much they do love me. It happened the last four times. “
    They’re angry with her, so that proves they love her?? I hear Joni Mitchell singing … don’t know what you’ve got til it’s gone. Same mistake four times, and seems to be on a path to do it again…. It’s hard to run away from problems when you’re the one causing them…

    "I wish that I could completely take in my current boyfriend’s love for me without wondering how destroyed he’d be if I left.”
    HUH??? Alrighty then….. I wish you could too!
    "That’s probably why I compete with my boyfriend’s exes.”
    That’s not healthy! They’re exes! She's competing with ghosts?

    " I can be the love of someone’s life, but am I really anything until I have broken their heart into little pieces and made them cry for months on end?” Polly’s right, this lady has problems that have a higher priority than anything associated with her most recent ex. Imagine this lady is in a car, on the road, driving, and only looking at the rear view mirror…. she’s likely to hurt herself and others.

    The ex is not a dognapper, she abandoned the dogs (and her property) to the mercy of the ex, surely she knew he would treat the dogs humanely or she would have given them more consideration. It’s notable to me that nothing derogatory was mentioned about the current health and well being of the animals..

    Judy in OKC

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  3. Heavens... you also miss the point. The woman has been stalked and harassed and abused and maligned by the man. It's not about her ability to get him out of her mind. It's about his continuing harassment... which you and Polly happily ignore. Keep in mind, this man is a nasty piece of work... She must have suspected it... so she might have needed to get out as quickly as possible... because she might have feared for her life. If she did, she might have been right. I am astonished that you and Polly have no sense whatever of the life and the mind of a woman who is being stalked and abused. As I said, the man is very bad news. She needs a lawyer, not a round of self-flagellation.

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  4. Show me one sentence that even implies his continuing harassment, or that she's fearful of violence of any kind and I'll reconsider my opinion.

    "He probably does the same to me.” Assumed stalking. He responds to her emails with mean one liners - or he doesn't respond at all. Where's the continuing harassment and abuse? Is it him not giving her enough attention? If someone tells something I'd rather they didn't, are they maligning me or just doling out information I'd rather stay private?

    If the lady has any text or email from the ex acknowledging custody of her property, she doesn't even need a lawyer, she can make arraingemnts for a police officer to be there while she loads the stuff up.

    There are a lot of "mights" in your response that are not supported by the lady's writing.
    I don't recommend self flagellation for anyone, just move on and start making better decisions. Admitting I made a bad choice and resolving to make better ones in the future is not beating myself up, I actually call it forgiveness.

    Keep in mind that we don't have the whole story, he might just be a nasty piece of work, but that's a pretty far leap to get to "she feared for her life".

    She's not the worst or the first.
    Judy in OKC

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  5. Somehow I think you were not paying attention. Here are some quotes:


    But at times he made me feel weak and unlovable because of my mental illnesses. He believed if I couldn’t be happy with him, then I’d never be happy with anyone. We had explosive fights.

    But obviously the ex is angry. So angry! It was a year ago and he won’t give me my things back (and I really need them — why is he hanging on to all of my things still?!), spreads nasty rumors about me, divulges very personal things about me, gets mad at our mutual friends for still hanging out with me.

    But I hate being hated. He’s full of hatred. He hated all the ex-girlfriends who dumped him. He stalked them obsessively on Instagram, every single day, and wasn’t embarrassed about it (even girlfriends from five years ago). He probably does the same to me. He hates random people he’s never met but who threaten his confidence in some way. He’s an angry, bitter person with a huge ego. It frightens me to be at the receiving end of his hatred.

    Try respecting her.

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  6. As for the question of abandoning her dogs, the information does not appear in her letter... so I suspect that Polly contacted her. You can imagine that she is a horrible human being for abandoning her dogs, or else, that she was terrified of her ex and wanted to get out as soon as possible. Being as I feel for her plight, I suspect that the latter is closer to the truth.

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  7. I have at least average reading comprehension, and I pay a fair amount of attention to things before I spout off that much. :)

    2nd paragraph: But then something happened. My crush from college (for over the last ten years, nonstop) asked me to leave everything to be with him before we even shared our first kiss. He just knew. I just knew. No doubt about it. I left my then-boyfriend the next day. I lost my financial security, my home, my dogs, all of my belongings. It was hard but I knew it was the right thing to do. The new guy wasn’t scared of the pressure.

    I wish them all the best I really do, I respect her and prayed for her (&me&you) twice, but the truth is, there are consequences and life's harder when you keep repeating your mistakes expecting a different outcome. Make a new plan Jan!

    Peace out Stuart!
    Judy in OKC

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  8. Interesting to me how pranksters can make up a forlorn story and most people buy into it. The clue to the prank letter, which pranksters love to insert is IBS. I BS. Get it? Her letter was my laugh of the day.

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  9. You get points for cleverness, except that there is such a thing as IBS... it is a medical diagnosis. You can have it without being a bullshitter.

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