Things went well for a few months and then she started feeling sick a lot. She went to see a physician and found out she had hepatitis C. She talked to Terry about it, he said he would get checked. He told her about two weeks later he didn’t have it.
One Saturday there was a knock on the door and a detective walked in and asked if he could search the place. Her first question was what for? He said cocaine. After she agreed they found a bag of rock in the trunk of her car.
She was horrified and asked if they were going to arrest her. The detective said not if she would work with them, they wanted Terry, but most of all they wanted a man by the name of Salazar and his crew. She wondered who the hell Salazar was. They gave her a description of Salazar and included that he had 666 tattooed on his right arm. She couldn’t see any other way out, so she agreed.
That was when she started attending Alanon and realized there was a lot of women and a few men who were just like her. For the first time in years she actually felt better.
Two weeks later Terry was murdered in the hallway just as he was trying to enter the apartment. She hid behind some boxes in the closet and heard them break in and ransack the house. Possibly, the only thing that saved her was the police sirens getting close. Afterwards, she went to ER and asked for Valium to calm her down, she was starting to feel that ridiculous depression rear its head. In ER she relayed her story to an understanding nurse who she said go to The Sanctuary and follow their directions. For once in her life she did what she was told.
After the whole thing got sorted out in San Francisco, Meg found out Terry had known he had hepatitis C for at least a few years, he also was a cocaine addict, and a small time dealer.
Meg was at The Sanctuary only a few days when she was sure she had some ideas for improvements around there, she attempted to give some of the residents some pointers on how to improve themselves. One of the female residents said, I am surprised that someone hasn’t killed you and I have a little advice for you too, on Wednesday night there is an Alanon group held here be there.
At The Sanctuary
In those early weeks I tried to complain about my parents, but found no audience, those who listened at all said it sounded like my parents were pretty damn decent, so what the hell was I complaining about? They said my criticism of others was very detailed, however, when it came to my own behavior I tended to be vague and general.
I chain smoked and really wanted to cut down or quit and couldn’t seem to do that.
Meg’s admission to The Sanctuary was more ambiguous than most. She had a very hard time for about the first month and she and others were beginning to wonder if she could even adapt to the new way of life.
She stayed only because she couldn’t think of any place else to go to that she could tolerate. She had a hard edge to her, was very depressed and was extremely critical of the place the staff and other residents. She often commented she felt like they were trying to destroy who she was and sometimes said it felt like they were trying to kill her, although ,she admitted no one ever physically harmed her. There was absolutely no one at The Sanctuary who would take any crap from her. She had never, ever encountered that before, in the past she could always surround herself with those who would at least passively agree with her.
Things finally changed when a series of grief workshops were offered at The Sanctuary.
In the past, when I attended Alanon I had felt better and had a realization of how unrealistic my attitudes and behavior were, but it didn’t quite stick. I knew what I needed to do to feel better, however, for short periods of time, but it faded and I would be back to the old bitterness and feeling like a victim. About the same time I read some books by Anne Wilson-Schaef that helped give me a new way of looking at the world of business, politics and relationships.
When I filled out a chart with losses at the grief workshop I had over fifty examples and the next day I found even more. This terrified me and yet none of the losses were horrific, however, it was the sum total and the feeling that none of them had ever healed, which impressed me. The feelings of losses from twenty years ago were as fresh as if they happened yesterday. It was after sticking with this workshop, I finally felt free. I started realizing I had had wonderful parents and a great family, but the emotional barriers between me and them were just too great. If my parents had a failing it may have been they were too stoic about their own losses, they had done what they had been taught and tried their best. They also excelled at keeping me from facing reality; I was able to create my own little world without contradiction.
Some weeks after the workshop, Meg called her parents, her now ex-husband, and her children to express her regret of her past crappy behavior. They all seemed wary, but actually responded quite warmly to her new found attitude. She was invited to visit each of them; she declined with a request for a rain check.
Meg’s Insight into Her History
Meg said looking back she was a spoiled child with very few, if any boundaries.
I was privileged with money and social standing. I remember feeling superior to my family and the domestic help at a very early age.
When I went to high school I remember feeling anger frequently and sometimes even rage. The only thing that gave me any relief was risky behavior with boys and activity with intense drama. Even exercise had to be extremely demanding or it felt like wasted time. Taking a bath had to be hurried or I was uncomfortable. I had no patience with most people, with one exception, and that was the losers. Even with the losers I was very selective, if they wanted to cooperate in improving their life I dropped them like a hot rock. I specialized in those that were losers and resisted with every cell in their body any positive change. I often said something is missing. I realize now I had tried to make them even more dependent than they already were.
Although, I have an excellent formal education that less than 1% of the population has, when it comes to relationships and social skills I had nearly none. I had no idea where I stopped and other people started, and often immersed myself deeply in other people’s business without their request or consent. I really pissed a lot of people off and had no idea why. I thought I worked myself half to death helping other people and then ended up being punished for my efforts. My favorite sign became "No good deed will go unpunished."
I now believe part of it was due to a certain type of neglect from the grown-ups around me. I’ll give some examples; first at about age 13 my dog was killed by being run over by a car. I was devastated. Everyone rallied around me and told me not to feel bad, they would get me a new puppy and so they did. I now realize I never really liked the damn dog who replaced Eddy. At age 16 I lost a boy friend I really liked, he just left me cold, with no warning.
Everyone sympathized with me and helped me avoid thinking about the boy friend. They told me don’t worry, there will be lots of other boys, and friends fixed me up with new dates. My parents took me on an expensive trip. I don’t know if I was ever was told no and when I disrespected my parents I was never even verbally challenged.
After that one boy friend at age 16 I don’t remember ever having a relationship with a man that really mattered much to me. Unless the relationship was chaotic, it seemed painfully dull to me.
Somewhere about the time I started college I became obsessed with the plight of the poor, minorities, and you name a cause, and I was ready to support it. Any group that looked like a victim to me. The government, business, and my own parents didn’t give any where near enough to these causes. I was an authority on what should be done with other people’s money and time. I, however, was never that generous with my own money and I’ll be damned if I was ever going to work in a soup kitchen, but "they" should.
I won’t go on because you have enough information about me to finish the pathetic picture out. I do want to mention I am not blaming my parents because they did everthing in their power to help me and had some limitations themselves. I also don’t mean to imply I am wallowing in guilt and remorse because I am not. I possibly could have done better and I regret some things, but I refuse to blame myself for what I didn’t know and social skills I wasn’t taught.
I do want to talk about how change happened. I believe when I left my job and ended up in a psych ward it was the start of change for me. I made some really dumb decisions after, but at least I started looking for change in my own way. At first, I sought out therapists who would support all my old self-defeating behavior and believe me they are not hard to find.
When I went to that psychiatrist in the City (she meant San Francisco) I started to doubt my own judgment and he annoyed, and infuriated me. When I discussed all the chaos in my present relationships, he said that is my defense system and the more internal turmoil you have the more external drama you need to avoid any responsibility. He added, you think anyone who doesn’t have all that drama going on leads a boring life; and I suspect many of those around may believe your constant turmoil becomes pathetic and boring. I could have slapped him, but I just said, you asshole.
Eventually, Alanon made sense to me and I started to see where it could be helpful. The problem was I could understand it and it helped me feel better for a few days and then the old behavior came back. So, I was on somewhat of an up and down emotional ride.
When I came to The Sanctuary, I thought these people are jerks, almost anything I would say they contradicted me. That is not easy for someone who was rarely ever contradicted before. They wouldn’t listen to any of my sad stories and they wouldn’t even participate in a good fight. I stayed and forced myself to keep on keeping on, and I did feel better physically. I saw the psychologist and he was helpful, but often annoying.
Gradually, I worked through the list of losses with their help and soon an enormous weight was lifted. Other residents would say, you don’t seemed pissed off much now, and I thought, damn, they are right. It didn’t resolve everything in my life, but it definitely turned things around for me.
I started to realize these people are really my friends and they did everything in their power to help me, even though, I treated them miserably. After some weeks I called people I knew; family and people from my old job, and they would comment that I didn’t sound like the same person. Of course, at first they were all wary. I like it here and am not ready to think about going anywhere else, except for short visits. If there was any key to change for me, it was that the people at The Sanctuary would not support my delusions.