My Name is Cristina D. Johnson
"What's wrong?" Michelle (my therapist) asked as she opened the door. My eyes were brimming with tears. Bill sat in the waiting room with me, watching me intently. Rose to give me a hug.
"I'll be okay," I lied.
As I walked into Michelle's office, the crying started. "I can see you're upset," she said as she handed me a box of tissues.
"We just found out Bill is leaving for Illinois this weekend," I choked out.
She sat quietly for a moment. "Let's just take a minute and breathe," she said. I huffed out a few labored breaths. It felt like someone was squeezing my chest with a vise.
"What else?" she asked, intuitively knowing there was more.
"I had to talk to Gary yesterday. That didn't help."
She nodded.
"And I was going to go see Carolyn but I backed out - I just can't do it. I'm not ready," I said.
She nodded again and I was still sobbing, although I'd calmed slightly.
"So let's just take a minute and get you grounded," she said calmly. "You have a lot going on and we have a whole session to talk about it."
I nodded and we just sat there in silence for a couple of minutes.
Bill has been here for about a month, although I've known him over twelve years. We've worked together, lived together, dated, then lived together again, and then parted ways as friends. We both understood - to our core - what unconditional love is and we both agreed that our friendship was more valuable than trying to be in a relationship.
And so it's been for years. He's been a constant friend, not just to me but to my son as well.
For the past month, he has been my constant companion. He's seen me through multiple meltdowns, slobbering, snotty, trembling break-downs over my break up. He's listened to me sob over my pain, held my hands when I was shaking and wiped my tears away with his thumbs. He's stood by as I vomited and gagged and was there with a wet washcloth when it was over, each time telling me, "Don't apologize. You don't have anything to apologize for."
He came initially to see how I was doing and, in his own words, he'd never seen me as bad as I was. The things I was going through with the break-up, the agony of my therapy and the flashbacks...everything and he swore he would do whatever he could to get me out of that house, away from the horrible triggers and abuse I was experiencing and somewhere safe, where I could be independent.
He kept his word. He has helped me in every way possible. He has been my friend. My only friend. My true friend. He has made me laugh, eaten dinner with Trevor and I, and sat silently with me, intuitively knowing me so well, that he knew I needed simply to think. He's read every blog (and always has), and every book or article I've shown him. He's given me more support than anyone ever has, in my entire life.
"What is it you're afraid of?" Michelle asked me, regarding Bill leaving.
"Being alone," I answered. "Not belonging here. I don't belong here. I am scared to go to the grocery store. I'm scared to go anywhere," I cried. "He's my only friend."
Which led to the conversation about Carolyn and Gary.
"Why do they have so much power over you?" she asked.
"I don't know. I wish I knew. I gave them that power by letting them in. By getting close to them," I answered.
She nodded. "So how can you take that power back?" she asked.
"I don't know. I can't even stand the thought of either of them. I can't stand the thought of the things they did. I can't stand that he's doing the things he's doing. It literally makes me sick in my stomach."
And the truth is, I don't know. I don't know how.... I don't know.
"Bill has been a helpful distraction for you," she said. "His leaving is going to allow you to experience the grieving process."
"I've grieved and Bill has been there through it. I've gotten angry, I've wept..."
"Yes, but now you're going to be doing it alone and maybe that's what you're supposed to do," she said. Then she paused and she said, "I'm just going to throw this out there....it could be way, way off..."
"Maybe the years you spent with Gary were meant to bring you here, to this place. This place where you are feeling emotions that you've never felt before."
I'd actually thought about that - more than once - and I told her so.
"You say you're disconnected but I see you feeling feelings. Maybe, when Bill is gone, you'll experience the feelings of grief and pain and all that comes with grieving."
It was a tearful session. I feel sick - extremely nauseated. All of my "friends" are partying on his boat, oblivious to the PTSD and DID symptoms I've had to endure because of the things he did to me.
Bill is my only friend.
And he is leaving.
And I am afraid.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you find this helpful, please comment - and share! Education is key