"We accept the love we think we deserve"...
Someone said this to me yesterday and it made me angry. I have a problem with this quote and struggle to get my head around it. As a 2 x DV survivor I absolutely DO NOT believe that I deserved the "love" that I received, if you can call it that. It was selfish, controlling, possessive and destructive. As a result I now also find it very hard to believe in unconditional love. Other than that of a parent for a child I believe that all love is conditional. Experience and age have made me cynical I think. I'd love to know some of your thoughts on this. Do any of you feel the same way?
Perhaps if you don't love and respect yourself you will accept someone who doesn't either. I too have a tendency to overlook red flags in relationships only to regret it later. The psychology behind that is we continue to make the same mistakes and bad choices over and and over again, because we are subconsciously trying to heal past wounds.
"We accept the love we think we deserve" is an example of blaming the victim.
The only truth in it is people tend to be attracted to what is familiar. "I married my mother," I have heard countless times.
We can learn and grow.
The victim is not the cause nor deserve all the blame but there is a degree of copability if a women continues to stay and tacitly and horribly give pathological approval of the perpetrator’s behavior of repeated violent patterns... at some point she must leave , must get away , must seek out a shelter or supportive family members or trustworthy friends. As I’ve said the very worse case scenario for abused woman can be death and ones owes their children relief. I know from personal observations
People always just have to have some "cool" vapid sound byte saying. They aren't worth much more than the paper they are printed on most of the time. Plus, if you felt you deserved what you got, you wouldn't have left.
Beware platitudes. They work...until they don't.
They might work for 99.9% of people...who have never had the specific experience you've had, and therefore fail to conceive of the very possibility of a scenario which invalidates the nugget o' wisdom in question.
I've had a few exceedingly uncommon and effectively inconceivable experiences in my life. I've seen many platitudes fall flat from the pressure of my uniquely informed perspective. I see them get torn to shreds on social media repeatedly by others who have undergone similar arcs.
"What doesn't kill you makes you stronger"? Yeah, say that to someone with PTSD and report back.
Platitudes for me are the candy of the mind: may taste good, and are good for a lark, but there's very little nutrition there, and too much reliance upon them will rot your brain.
TL;DR: Don't feel bad for not taking platitudes seriously. I don't, and I don't.
Love is an action word...another cliche but this is what I based my relationships on. It's like a bank account too...what you put in , you suppose get back. Be careful who you allow access....your bank account in irresponsible hands can leave you broke.
I agree. It sounds like simplistic Oprah Winfrey bollocks.
Sorry that it offended you but sadly that person was correct and only through therapy can an abused and battered woman come to term. I was a psychiatric RN and worked specifically with abused women and children. The issues are complex but simply 1)”I can change him”-nope,2) he’ll realize he needs me- nope,3) I have such low esteem I deserve him; giant rational, 4) “ I can’t leave him”,” or I’m trapped: excuses, 5) women who remain in such relationships have a significantly high chance of being killed by that monster... the same one who tells you he loves yet is incapable, he treats in a dehumanizing manner which makes violence against women easier. These “ men” are sociopaths or psychopaths and are impervious to therapy or marriage counseling. The only way is stay away, stay out, if your on a date and he evidenced the slightly aggressiveness..... follow your gut and remember other experiences
It’s clear to me that the crimes that were perpetrated against you weren’t expressions of love. Love is love. DV is DV. Separate the two conceptually, just like you might separate any two other things that bear no relationship ro each other.
Love is a complicated emotion because in its “romantic” or traditional sense it’s accompanied by the illusion that lovers are spiritually or emotionally a single entity. This is hard to do for anyone who has any common sense. For this reason, common sense should guide us to define love and to try to find it within the real of the possible, and not to pursue a mirage. To be loved and to love, we should be ready to welcome a person who supports us, who feels good next to us, who adds to us, and who is open to hearing us and to being there for us.
It’s clear to me that the crimes that were perpetrated against you weren’t expressions of love. Love is love. DV is DV. Separate the two conceptually, just like you might separate any two other things that bear no relationship ro each other.
Love is a complicated emotion because in its “romantic” or traditional sense it’s accompanied by the illusion that lovers are spiritually or emotionally a single entity. This is hard to do for anyone who has any common sense. For this reason, common sense should guide us to define love and to try to find it within the real of the possible, and not to pursue a mirage. To be loved and to love, we should be ready to welcome a person who supports us, who feels good next to us, who adds to us, and who is open to hearing us and to being there for us.
'Deserve' is definitely the wrong word but I read that statement and think about how my bad patterns of behavior and fucked up thinking have helped me make really bad choices.
Yes deserve is the process to hell
Perhaps but you must stop the self flagellating.. it’s time to accept yourself and forgive you’re self.
I feel that I have found the unconditional love that was denied me by seriously mentally unwell parents - i left home at 15 years old looking for that love and I found it in many different places and in many different ways - Now 70, and loved indeed. I think the biggest part of the process is believing that it is real and not some sort of ploy or trap.
I think you are possibly the embodiment of what the quote is trying to say. You believed you deserved better and therefore moved on. Many who suffer with DV stay because their self esteem is so low they don't believe they deserve any better.
That said, we need to help those in such situations realize they DO NOT have to accept it and they do deserve better.
You can’t imagine how hard that is as yours is intellect but what holds back a woman is deep askewed feelings which knowing may not make change
@Millerski25 No doubt. It is an uphill battle and one that, for many, is often never won.
That bit of "wisdom" is for those with choices and is shallow and mean spirited for those who deserve better but are stuck out of circumstance. Sometimes there are no choices, and when you stand up to the treatment you are receiving, it can backfire and get worse.
While this bit of shallow advice is well meaning, it can be felt as an uncaring insult. It angers me when I see it, too, for the depressing quality of it. Sounds like a statement that people parrot after seeing it in a meme. Doesn't matter the "spirit" in which it was intended. The statement can hurt. Love can be more complicated than that.
Yes it can but you may reach the true danger zone if one stays in such an explosive environment
Take care of yourself. I worked in the DV movement for 15 years. It is not easy and there is a lot of victim blaming.
The way I see the quote, it looks like more of that 'you can't love anyone if you don't love yourself' bullshit. If you have low self-worth, you won't think you deserve proper love from other people and thus will attract and accept abuse. Oysh. ?. More victim blaming.
By you using b.s. you in think inadvertently make an ad homan attack or perhaps rather judgemental
@Keymaiden you didn’t really deserve it but you relegated to accept this person. You inadvertently have some copability not for his Neanderthal mind and behavior but for fear of following through because leaving and the law is all we have. Again these are not men but cowards that live with self loathing, emotional bankrupt and beraft of feelings
@Millerski25 ... what?
I too do not agree in the concept of unconditional love. All love is conditional. Even the love of a parent to a child. If that child grows up to be abusive to a parent, hatred can develop. A person loves another on condition that they will be treated in a manner that continues to encourage love. Love is earned. Just as hatred is. Also, I think the quote means that a person decides to accept their own good or bad treatment. A person who is abused and has the courage and realization that they can leave, makes the decision regarding what they "deserve". We control our lives. Period.
Or, you know, if that parent abuses their child.
I agree with you regarding the concept of "unconditional love". Furthermore, I don't necessarily think love being conditional is always a bad thing.
@memorylikeasieve yes, of course the other way around happens unfortunately.
What is 2 x dv?
Two relationships with domestic violence.
@BlueWave it truly pains me not only as I was a professional in this field but many years ago I had on several occasions heard/ observe my ex-bro-in- law verbally abuse my sister. It was demeaning, discordant, authoritarian. I confronted, not my sister but what had accused. She some what acknowledged it in all her humiliation but beg me not to intervene as a might knocked him on his ass... but deep inside it might make it worse. In retrospect he was clearly mentally and emotionally abusive and I had to restrain myself. When ever he asked me for anything I said I was sorry but NO. My sister eventually divorced him and was a better woman for it