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Friends With No Benefits: Why the Normal Rules of Dating Don't Always Apply to People With Childhood PTSD

 

Here's what they tell you: Work hard in school. Love yourself. Get enough sleep. Say no to drugs and tobacco. Don't consume sugary drinks. Use a condom. Don't let yourself be pressured into sex. Accept your body. Get a career before you have children. Eat five fruits and vegetables a day. Breathe!  Don't bully. Dream big.

Here's what they don't tell you: If you grew up poor, there is a much higher than average chance that you will have children outside of marriage, and this fact, more than any other, will push you toward the grubby end of income inequality -- the widening gap between the poor and everyone else in the United States.

You're not supposed to say this, but it's true.  I  know. I grew up poor, and began my life as a mother without a committed relationship.

Compared to a lot of women who grew up like I did, I had advantages. I was in my late thirties when I had kids. I had a masters degree and a decent job and made enough money to survive. The kids' father totally came through and cared for them half-time, and shared kid-related expenses. But my half of childcare was $1200 a month. Housing was $2600 a month. Healthcare was a whopping $2300 a month. Utilities, clothes, food, car, gas, insurance, toys, haircuts -- you can do the math.

Oh, and then the recession. There was no work for a year. Credit cards were my life raft. There were times I felt hopeless and desperate. This went on for a long time.

I love my kids a ridiculous amount. Being a mother is my core identity; I knew this when I was three years old. If I hadn't followed my bumpy path, I wouldn't have been blessed with theseparticular children, and therefore I wouldn't change a thing.

But I wish when I was younger someone had turned down the volume on all the "sex-is-empowerment, a-woman-needs-a-man-like-a-fish-needs-a-bicycle, marriage-is-just-a-piece-of-papercrap and gotten real with me about the gravelifestyle trap of single motherhood.

Being a single mom isn't just expensive, it turns out; it's still really stigmatizing. You get judged. I had no idea this was going to happen.

Married couples are not always comfortable with a single woman hanging around. And the stay-at-home and part-time working mothers who are friends with each other because they are involved at your kid's school will seldom think to invite you or your kid to playdates or parties.

It can fry your brain, raising kids without another adult in the house. I worked from home, and days would pass without contact with anyone older than a five-year-old. When I would finally get in the company of another adult, I'd blabber on and on, feeling suddenly alive and relieved of pent up thoughts, oblivious to nonverbal cues that my turn was over, it was time to let the other persontalk.

With no one to share the stories, or to tell you things are going to be all right, the fear can really get you. Loneliness and money and medical worries can quickly escalate into a desperate panic. You get isolated. It's easy to lose your temper. It's hard to look nice. It's hard not to turn out poor.

One night I was home alone watching the movie Hud, and during the scene where Paul Newman has to shoot the entire herd of cattle, I began to cry the hardest I've every cried in my life. First it was the movie, and then it was everything in the whole world. A lot of stuff kept going wrong in my life, mostly to do with men, and I was sick of it.

I had always expected I would get married and have kids, but the right guy had not come along. I'd had plenty of boyfriends, one after another, but nothing could really hold. I was attracted to the wrong people, and ended up hurt. I was too afraid of being alone, and lacked patience. I kept finding myself bonded with guys I didn't actually like, or who didn't like me. Some of this was normal youth stuff, but I wasn't young anymore.

I had no idea what I was doing wrong or what to do, but here, crying alone on a kid-stained Ikea sofa in front of the TV on a Saturday night, I became willing, without any reservation, to do absolutely anything necessary to change. Here's what happened.

  • I wrote my fears and resentments (I had a LOT of fears and resentments, and it was causing a lot of dysregulation. You can learn my technique for re-regulating by clicking on that link). I was determined to de-fog my perception, in order to face the reality of my situation and take action.
  • I ended all connections with men where one of us (and only one of us) was interested in the other. I'd long had a habit of keeping guys around who were interested, but whom I knew I'd never date. A friend of mine confronted me about it, and called such men my "lab rats". I also stopped being anyone else's lab rat. Making the phone calls to end these friendships was awkward and painful, but liberating. I became emotionally available.
  • I made an extra effort to dress nicely more of the time, to be on time, to be a better listener, and do what I could to be a better person.
  • I made a decision that I wanted to get married. I wasn't dating yet, but when I did, it would no longer be for the purpose of filling up my time. It was to see if the man was someone I wanted to marry.
  • So that I wouldn't waffle, I wrote down a list of characteristics that were non-negotiable for me -- no drug or alcohol problems. No entanglements with other women. No conflicts whatsoever about being a loving, committed, giving husband and stepfather to my kids.

Then I made a list of desirable characteristics:

  • I wanted someone with a good job, age within five years of my age, without debt, with loving family of origin, who likes camping (because I love camping) and plays guitar (because I love to sing).
  • I decided casual sex was not for me. Avoiding this solved two things: Never again would I have an accidental pregnancy, and never again would I find myself emotionally bonded with (or ripped apart by) someone who was not committed to me. This is easier said than done, but was the single most powerful change.
  • I decided I was willing to be alone the rest of my life, if necessary. I made peace with that, so I didn't have to be fearful or clingy.
  • I relinquished efforts to "make" a relationship happen. I decided to let the relationship come to me.

Within a month or two, a funny thing happened. I started to get asked out by perfectly nice men. I went on some dates. The dates were OK. There were one or two second dates, and nothing happened. I got some practice at getting to know people. My life got nicer, more stable. I slept well. The kids were thriving. Work was going well.

Somewhere in there,  I met the man I ended up marrying. I felt very strongly about him right away, but it went slowly. It took over a year before we were earnestly dating. It took three years to get engaged and five years to get married. If I had known, magically, how to date like this when I was younger, it would have saved a lot of heartache. It would have liberated so much creative and constructive energy in every part of my life and (yes, I would have liked this) I could have had more kids.

Better late than never, though, right? And since you ask, yes -- my husband very closely fits the qualities on the list I made (though there was a spell where he didn't like camping anymore, but we fixed that by using real (not inflatable) mattresses.

OK so I know, I KNOW that some people think what I did to change is regressive, misogynistic, sex-negative. Maybe you don't need such a rigorous structure for dating. Maybe you don't have the wreckage of a crappy childhood that makes all close relationships fraught and slippery. Or maybe you have more tolerance for ambiguity, solitude and partings than I do. If so, you are lucky, and I sincerely envy you and wish you happiness.

For me though, the comfort and safety of being a two-parent family -- even on the bad days -- is a scaffold, a well, a launching pad, a haven. Life my husband and two kids has grown sweeter and a little more grand each year since we came together as a family. And though I know better than most people how hard it can be to get this right (or do marriage and kids in the proper order) I highly recommend to anyone with Childhood PTSD who longs for family to start by aiming high. Don't sell yourself short on this one!  Hold out for a good partner. Bea good partner. And know that you are worthevery bit of work and patience (including being alone sometimes) that this happy future requires. It's never too late to make a new beginning.

 

***

In December, my new course on dating and relationships (for people with Childhood PTSD) will be open for registration! If you want to be the first to get the announcement, you can add your name to this e-mail list. Heads up -- I may reach out to folks on this list to for input about topics you want to be sure I cover!

You can learn about my first online course, Healing Childhood PTSD, right here.

Anna Runkle is a mother and video producer in Berkeley, California. She is the author of the blog Crappy Childhood Fairy, where you can find more stories, downloadable tools and ideas for self-healing when you're affected by Childhood PTSD.

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Comments (7)

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Thanks, Anna, that resonated so deeply within me. 

It can fry your brain, raising kids without another adult in the house.

I too ended up a single mom when my son was 2 when his father died which was a relief because he turned out to be emotionally abusive.

Oh, I shudder to even think of those years, the struggle, the loneliness and being ostracized by my Catholic family for having a kid without marriage. Coming from an abusive home really undermined my self-esteem and I ended up in a relationship that turned out to be as bad as what I tried to escape.

I thank God every day for having survived and my son turning out okay.  Well, I really wish I had some guidance and was not sold that 'sex-is-empowerment' crap. 

Anna... this is a wonderful article! I had my own relationship challenges and it wasn't until I was in my late 40s that I met the man I married. I can relate to a lot of what you wrote, although I don't have children. I'm also a psychotherapist and know your post will resonate will many of my clients. I will share this. And thank you for sharing your story!

Really nice post. And if anyone tells you the steps you took to change were "regressive, misogynistic and sex-negative," - tell them to go live their own lives. I am a feminist, a lesbian and I live with complex, chronic PTSD. Your account is spot-on and what I see you having done was step firmly into adulthood and get clear about your goals. How any of that is any of those negative adjectives, I can't imagine.  You chose the life (and the sex) you wanted. That is being pro-woman, pro-self and pro-gressive. Power to you.

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