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Compassion - The Key to Joy 

Sometimes there are posts written by those in the recovery field that are excellent and worth repeating. Here is one such post by noted author and blogger, Steven Stosny.

 

Anger in Marriage: Failure of Compassion and the Rise of Contempt

 

Most marriages end in a whimper, not a bang. The final rupture is not caused by too much anger or abuse or infidelity. Rather, most marriages die a slow, agonizing death from too little compassion.

 

Compassion is sympathy for the hurt or distress of another. At heart it is a simple appreciation of the basic human frailty we all share, which is why the experience of compassion makes you feel more humane and less isolated.

 

Compassion is necessary for the formation of emotional bonds. Think of when you were dating someone you eventually came to love. Suppose you had to call that person and report that your parents had died. If your date responded with, "Well, that's tough, call me when you get over it," would you have fallen in love with that person? Chances are, you fell in love with someone who cared about how you felt, especially when you felt bad.

 

Most of what you fight about now is not money or sex or in-laws or raising the kids. Those are common problems that seem insurmountable only when you're hurt. What causes the hurt, i.e., what you really fight about, is the impression that your partner doesn't care how you feel. When someone you love is not compassionate, it feels like abuse.

 

As compassion decreases, resentment automatically rises, making common problems insoluble. If unfettered by the better angels of our nature, resentment inevitably turns into contempt.

 

Contempt is disdain for the hurt of others, due to their lower moral standing, character defects, mental instability, ignorance, or general unworthiness. Contempt is powered by a low but steady dose of adrenalin. So long as the adrenalin lasts, you feel more confident and self-righteous in blaming your bad feelings on some defect of your partner. But you also feel less humane. And when the adrenalin wears off, you feel depressed.

 

Both compassion and contempt are extremely contagious and highly influenced by projection. If you're around a compassionate person, you're likely to become more compassionate. If you're around a contemptuous person, you're likely to become more contemptuous, unless you make a determined effort to remain true to your deepest values. If you project onto others that they're compassionate, they are likely to become more considerate. If you project contemptuous characterizations, such as, "loser, abuser, selfish, lazy, narcissistic, irrational, devious, etc.," they are likely to become more so.

 

By the time couples come to our boot camps for chronic resentment, anger, or emotional abuse, they have developed entrenched habits of protecting their respective vulnerabilities by devaluing each other. They try to justify their contempt with "evidence" that the partner is selfish, lazy, narcissistic, crazy, abusive, etc. Mutual contempt makes them both feel chronically criticized and attacked, although neither really wants to attack the other. They feel like victims and rationalize their bad behavior as mere reactions to the awful behavior of the other. Their defenses so automatically justify their resentment and contempt that they cannot possibly see each other.  Neither can they see that their resentment and contempt have cut them off from their deeper values and made them into someone they are not.

 

Once defenses become habits, they run on automatic pilot and resist change through insight. They will likely recur in any future relationship that stirs guilt, shame, and anxiety, that is to say, any close relationship.

 

The only way out, whether the couple stays in the relationship or not, is to focus on compassion - not to manipulate change in the other - but to feel more humane and to reconnect with their deepest values.The problem is that most couples are afraid to embrace compassion once they've been hurt.

 

How we cope with our feelings is vital. We work hard during our recovery to embrace all our emotions and learn to give our partner the space to do the same. Our recovery emboldens us to be compassionate partners as we walk our chosen path.

by Lisa_Cannon  564 Posts 

Posted on 11/4/2009 8:51 PM
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Tags: abuse , anger , compassion , contempt ,
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Comments for "Compassion - The Key to Joy"  (25) (You must be logged in to answer)




Hi BlueBird -

Your passion is such a wonderful part of you.  It is a joy to see you so involved in your healing and so dedicated to your recovery. 

You will be an example of recovery for many.  Thank you for your insights and especially for all your thoughtful comments.

Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/9/2009 2:19 AM
0





Thanks Lisa. What you are saying makes a little more sense.
Compassion is not the right response in my case. Indifference is. 
Every marriage is different. I'm glad for you that compassion is what you can have for yours. I tried that. It blew up in my face. I am hoping to get this settled so I no longer have to think of him at all.
by bluebird   1158 Posts
Posted on 11/8/2009 9:30 AM
0





Hi Greener -

From your post on your blog I can see that you have come a long way in your walk.  Keep holding you head up high and be proud of all you have accomplished.
Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/8/2009 3:11 AM
0





Lisa,I loved the article.  I had to make a conscious decision to surrender to the process.  For so long I struggled with my anger knowing that I was braising in it.  When I flipped the switch I could see my STBX as another being who was caring just as much pain if not more than what I carried.  I can look back and know that yes, I was not kind in some instances but for the whole I can be proud of my behavior.  I also know that as I heal this wound will be less likely to open up in my next relationship whenever that will be down the road.  
GP
by greenerpastures   40 Posts
Posted on 11/8/2009 3:07 AM
0





(continued...)

Letting go doesn't mean letting things go.  Letting go means not trying to control other people or outcomes in situations.  It means letting the universe unfold naturally.  When we try to control anything we cannot, that thing ends up controlling us.  Letting go means...  Let go and let God.   It means we stop trying to do our Higher Power's job and let our Higher Power handle it.

Forgiveness doesn't mean that we believe that someone's cruel actions are acceptable.  Forgiveness means that we have let go of the anger, the need for revenge, the need to punish and allowed ourselves to get out of the way so that the cruel person can experience the natural consequences of their actions without our interference.  Consequences happen in their own time... not in ours...  so patience is a part of the process as well.

Forgiveness is a part of letting go.  When we forgive we decide we are no longer going to allow the cruel actions of the person who had hurt us to continue to control us.  It does NOT mean that we say their behavior is okay or that we tell them they are forgiven.  It is something we do within our own heart that we share with our Higher Power.  Forgiveness is internal, just like letting go and compassion.   It is not something we advertise, just a decision we make within our hearts and with the guidance of our Higher Power.

These recovery concepts may seem to go against everything that feel natural and normal.  In time the wisdom of the words of these recovery principles will become understandable. 

It's okay to not be ready to hear it now. Each of us becomes ready in our own time.  Have patience.  Someday you will be a shining example to everyone you meet of recovery. 
Have faith.

Best - 
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/8/2009 2:51 AM
0





Hi BlueBird -

No... you are not talking to a wall.  I am trying to see where you are coming from and understand your point of view.  

Letting things go, forgiving, compassion, have a place. They are not a part of what you do to someone who is continuing to make your life as difficult as they can. You stand up and say 'no, you aren't going to get away with this. You need to fix what you have broken. You need to pay me what you owe me.' You don't have compassion. That's if they turn around and make it right and admit that they messed up. If they continue to cause trouble, then you can't let them think it's ok.

Compassion is something you feel inside.  It is an emotion.  It is what it feels like to look at my son's Dad and feel for his loss of self esteem, for his constant need to pretend he did nothing to cause our relationship to fail, for all the pretense he has had to put up in front of family and friends when they wanted to know why we split.  For all the loss of respect he suffered from me, my son, my parents and my family.  That emotion that I feel whenever I think of these things has a name...  compassion.  I truly feel sympathy for him. 

Although at the time we split I was frightened, hurt, angry and had little self esteem left...  over the years as I worked on my recovery I came to realize that I was not the one who lost.  I was the one who gained.  I regained my self esteem.  I regained my safety.  I regained my sanity and my self worth.  Sure, it cost me many thousands of $$$, but I can always earn more $$$.  I can't put a price on my self esteem, my self worth or my sanity. 

So, yes, you discipline a horse (or a child for that matter) by accentuating the positive and eliminating the negative.  You reinforce the appropriate behavior. 

(continued...)
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/8/2009 2:35 AM
0





I actually am talking to a brick wall here, am I not? What I am saying runs counter to fundamental beliefs. I had a hard time with this as well when the therapist first presented it to me.
Let me put it this way. I'm training a young horse. He bites. When he does, it's just because he's young and that's the way he relates to other horses. He's not even being evil. He thinks of me as being part of his herd.
Do I turn around and say, 'oh, that's ok sweetie, I understand, I forgive you, I love you'? No way! What would that do? It would confirm for him that his actions were ok.
No. I shake the lead on his halter or bridle. He doesn't like it and it makes him pay attention immediately. I say 'bad horsey'. He understands.
You know what? He doesn't bite nearly as much now as he did a few weeks ago. When he's good, of course, I shower him with love and attention. I reward the good behaviour, I discipline the bad. 
Letting things go, forgiving, compassion, have a place. They are not a part of what you do to someone who is continuing to make your life as difficult as they can. You stand up and say 'no, you aren't going to get away with this. You need to fix what you have broken. You need to pay me what you owe me.' You don't have compassion. That's if they turn around and make it right and admit that they messed up. If they continue to cause trouble, then you can't let them think it's ok.
Also, I don't show any anger at all in court. I haven't had any communication with him since a few days after he left nor have I seen him at all. He sends the lawyer to court. I did too, until my fully paid lawyer failed to show up last time. Those of you on here know he makes me angry. He knows nothing. We will be going to court next week for the 6th time. He's in contempt.
by bluebird   1158 Posts
Posted on 11/7/2009 10:52 AM
0





I disagree.
Compassion is NOT always the right response. 
I forgive myself for staying married to him. I accept that he is a monster and won't change. I live my life without reference to him, except when I have to deal with ongoing legal issues. I occassionally express anger when he causes another problem.
I have no compassion for those who have no goodness inside of them, like Hitler, Stalin, Saddam Hussein. Not even God forgives people who don't think they need it. Am I better than God?
by bluebird   1158 Posts
Posted on 11/7/2009 10:29 AM
0





HI BlueBird and JMNY -

It is understandable to be angry and feel that you cannot find compassion at this time.  When you feel raw it may be too soon to even think about feeling anything except anger. 

In time, when you have healed and are feeling more indifference toward your former husband you may be able to think about compassion. 

Each of us learns our lessons in our own time and in our own way.  Dactyl said something vital...    remember that he who makes you angry controls you...  there are few truer words ever said. 

When my son's father and I were in the process of separating we were sitting and talking about splitting property one night and he said, "I used to do all these little things to control you and none of them work anymore."  At the time I had been in counseling doing recovery work for about six months.  My counselor had told me that my anger was part of his control.  I didn't believe her... until that night.  I was stunned by his statement.  It was like an electric shock.  All of a sudden I realized that my counselor was right.  He was controlling me.  And all the while I thought I was doing all the controlling.  How duped I had been!!

Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/7/2009 1:41 AM
0





Lisa- great post!  Thanks for that.  For those who are going through horrible anger issues, remember that he who makes you angry controls you.  I so totally understand being angry, but once I realized that when I was angry with my ex, he was controlling me.  I know it's hard to let go of the anger, but you have to!
by Dactyl   2606 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 9:03 PM
0





It is good advice and does make alot of sense.  But the process is a long and winding road isn't it?  I have been seperated for just four months and only in the past two weeks have found myself being ugly to my husband and feeling vindictive.  But the worst that I do is an occasional snippy email for which I will feel guilty about for days after.  I don't know where to find compassion though when your husband cheats on you, cus really, while I was taking care of four children and the house and the bills and everything else, he was out dating!  Hopefully I'll get to the compassion someday but I think I had more of it during the marriage...
by jmeredithny   39 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 8:27 PM
0





I, personally, have no forgiveness or compassion for Hitler. Yes, he had a difficult childhood. Too bad. He MURDERED SIX MILLION PEOPLE!!!
There are some people in life that do not deserve either forgiveness or compassion. There are horrible people in the world. Compassion makes them stronger and more intent on evil. It is the wrong response.
Forgiveness and compassion are NOT always the right thing to do. Sometimes simply accepting that the other person is an irredemably evil person and staying away is the best you can do.
by bluebird   1158 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 7:47 PM
0





Hi VLady -

I really got a chuckle out of your post.  I thought many times of smacking my son's Dad in the back of the head with a 2X4!! 

Too funny!
Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/6/2009 6:32 PM
0





Hi OddGirlOut -

Beautiful post.  

Forgiveness is an essential part of  recovery.  We forgive those who hurt us not for them, but for us.  The one who experiences healing isn't the one who hurt us, but ourselves.  

Best - 
Lisa 
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/6/2009 6:27 PM
0





Hi BlueBird -

It is true that every situation, every person and every relationship is unique. 

It is also true that we each come through recovery in our own time.  Every person here is on their own path, experiencing their own emotions in their own unique way.  Recovery is not a one way trip.  We take three steps forward and two back all along the path. 

We can move back and forth between grieving stages during that time as well...  from denial to anger to bargaining and back and forth as much as well need to process all our emotions.

The overall goal is the most important.  That we do eventually get to the end...  acceptance and gratefulness.  Acceptance of all that has happened to us... has become a part of us...  and has made us who we are today...  and gratefulness for all that our Higher Power has brought into our lives...   for all the times that we were carried along our path by our support system because we could no longer walk alone.

Compassion comes to us all in our own time...  when we are healed and able to stand straight, with our head held high, proud of who we are and what we have accomplished on our path.

When we are ready we will be able to learn the lesson of gratefulness, forgiveness, compassion and most of all acceptance.

If I can get to that place, so can you. 
Don't give up. 
Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/6/2009 6:18 PM
0





Simply beautiful Lisa. I tried to thank you for the response on the Anger blog I wrote so I thank you now :-)

I guess I am still in the raw stage because all I can think of is bopping him over the head with a club for wasting my time and love on him....

Timeless if you can do it so can I.....

Give me time....

Best
by vlady   2119 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 12:43 PM
0





It's a lovely thought that we can put 'most' marriages into a category. The truth is that while all of us here are experiencing divorce, EVERY ONE IS DIFFERENT.
This is what makes it hard to give advice. This is also what makes this forum so helpful. Whereas all are different, with this many people, something in one person's situation strikes a chord in another's. There are enough similarities in this large a sample size that we can help each other in some ways, but not in others.
Iam, I am so sorry. Killing your dog was truly evil. My stbx is similar. He didn't kill my little dog, but he did let her suffer when he watched her. She nearly died of dehydration when I took a trip for 4 days and he didn't give her any water or food. Luckily I had left a lot, but she was without water for at least 2 days. I did show kindness to him by doing joint taxes. He has now found a way to make me responsible for $20,000 of his taxes, after I saved him more than that on his. What an ass.
Compassion, like every other emotion, can be the wrong thing to have in certain situations. You can't show compassion to some people. It makes them worse, not better, and allows them to hurt you further. It is not a matter of perspective, as iam's and my situation shows. These are actual externally verifiable facts.
This generalization about relationships does not recognize the uniqueness of human relationships.
by bluebird   1158 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 12:02 PM
0





I have a response for Iam. A couple weeks ago i was having trouble with my anger towards my ex. It kept creeping into my head, so i went looking for help. I found an article about forgivness.

Believe me i was skeptical when i first saw it. But the auther went on to say that forgiving those who have hurt us so deeply is not looking them in the eye and saying "I forgive you for what you put me through," and being magically healed. It's coming to the realization that you can't change that person or what they did. That when someone slaps you in the face, to turn the other cheek...not as an offering to be struck again, but for you to face in a new direction.

I chewed on that for a while. It helped.
by OddGirlOut   134 Posts
Posted on 11/6/2009 11:05 AM
1





Hi Timless -

I loved your post.  I hope everyone reads it.  It is a testament to the value of recovery work.

Bully for you!!  I am proud of you and your efforts.  Spread the message.

Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/5/2009 11:38 PM
0





HI Confused-

You feel all the victimization that Steven talks about in his blog.  I totally understand how hard it is to feel any compassion right now.  That is why you would benefit so much from counseling.  It will give you an outlet, which you need, and a way to get through the feelings you are experiencing in a healthy way.  Sometimes we are so bound up in our own stuff that we can't see the path out.  A counselor should be able to lead you out of the stuck place you are in giving you the clear head you need to process what is happening.  As you change you may see changes in your relationship that you didn't expect.  Try it. You can only gain from the experience.
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/5/2009 11:37 PM
0





Thank you Lisa for the great post.   

I can truthfully say that compassion and respect made all the difference in my divorce and the health and wellbeing of both myself and my ex and shielded my 7year old daughter for the suffering and pain most children of divorce are forced to endure.      She thrives as a well adjusted and happy young girl because her dad and I did the hard work and dealt with our anger (mostly mine due to his infidelity).

My therepist showed me the way early in the process (with me initially kicking and screaming) and I immediately saw a difference in myself and my ex and felt so greatful that the burden of anger and resentment was lifted so quickly.  

I believe I was not only able to move forward in my emotional health by acting with compassion but I was also able to move into my new relationship without the excess baggage and pain from the collapse of my 10 year marriage.    I'm a happier more satified person all the way around.

Your post hit the nail on the head with:

They try to justify their contempt with "evidence" that the partner is selfish, lazy, narcissistic, crazy, abusive, etc. Mutual contempt makes them both feel chronically criticized and attacked, although neither really wants to attack the other. They feel like victims and rationalize their bad behavior as mere reactions to the awful behavior of the other.

Thanks again for the post.   Its a nice reminder that there is another way that is so much healthier and more satisfying.   
by timless   781 Posts
Posted on 11/5/2009 9:21 AM
1





Lisa,

I feel the following from your post describes my situation:

What causes the hurt, i.e., what you really fight about, is the impression that your partner doesn't care how you feel. When someone you love is not compassionate, it feels like abuse.

This is exactly how I feel right now.  After all I've been through, I would expect somebody that loves me would show compassion and consideration.  That they would want to help me through it.  I love my wife - I have no doubts.  But I can't stand being treated this way after all I've tried to do for the past year to fix this.  After everything, I feel like she expects me to "get over this" - instead of helping me get through it.  It is a very hard thing to know that when you are at your worst, you can turn to the person that is supposed to be closest to you.  She shows little affection.  I feel like she "escapes" by spending time talking to friends who are far away, and don't know the situation.  If I try to bring something up, I get accused of "checking up on her" or "not wanting her to have any friends".  It goes from hurtful to very frustrating.  I try to be fair and I'm willing to take responsibility... I am sure that before all of this happened I didn't show her enough or the right compassion either.... But nothing to me excuses what she did... and what is so painful now - how she is choosing to handle it / or not handle it... I basically feel like she wants to sweep it under the rug and "pretend" nothing happened.  When you have scars from it, that doesn't work so well.

Thanks!
by ConfusedNFrustrated   2 Posts
Posted on 11/5/2009 8:25 AM
0





Hi Iam -

You are clearly in a great deal of pain.  I am moved by your passion.  I tried to read up on your story but found nothing.  No blogs, no history.  I guess you deleted them.

I posted the blog here for understanding.  Now may not be the time for you to absorb the lessons of compassion.  It may be too soon.  Every one of us is in a different stage of the process.  One day the lessons of compassion will have meaning to you...  even for such a cruel person who would kill a defenseless animal just to hurt you.

You may be unable to feel compassion for your stbx now because you are still so raw.  One day when you have healed...  you will know because you will only feel indifference for him...  you will be able to feel compassion.  Compassion for the broken person that he became...  compassion for the pain and hurt he has clearly experienced in his life (remember... hurt people, hurt people...)...
compassion for all the joy and love he will miss because he is so dysfunctional...

Compassion is all about you knowing that you have healed your heart and can allow yourself to feel empathy for the pain of others.

Have faith.  You will get there.  I got there...  If I can do it, so can you.

Best -
Lisa
by Lisa Cannon   
Posted on 11/4/2009 10:18 PM
14





Lisa,

It's a good post, but it's not reality.  Reality is that whenever I have shown compassion for my ex, I get the knife stuck in my ribcage.  I cannot deal with the ex at all.  How can I have compassion for someone who has lost his humanness?  Is there a way for me to be compassionate to him when the ex is well and truly a rat's ass?  I am not projecting these behaviors or personality traits on him--the man killed my dog just to spite me. 

How do we, people who are headed toward or going through a divorce, retain our humanness and compassion when the ex has sold their soul?
by Iam   474 Posts
Posted on 11/4/2009 9:32 PM
0





Good post, Lisa. 
by stCheshirecat   301 Posts
Posted on 11/4/2009 9:18 PM
0







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