Untangled 18: Eat Crow

It was indeed late-stage prostate cancer, according to him. He began telling me about PSA numbers and the possibility of having surgery. I felt like I was in a tunnel—my freedom was no longer within reach. When would this be over?! What was my obligation anyway? My life was no longer my own. I needed to detach myself from this whole thing. I felt stuck. How do you break up with someone who’s dying? I didn’t have it in me. I thought he would die long before I got to the end of my rope. I no longer knew what I wanted. A part of me felt like I should stay with him because I had so much skin in the game; another part felt like I should cut my losses. It was like driving north, hoping to run into Florida. This simply could not end well.

I was angry because he stopped drinking the juices I would prepare. Weekly, I purchased fresh vegetables and carrots in bulk. I washed, chopped, and juiced everything for him, and many times the juice would go bad just sitting in the fridge. I would find bags of candy in the car console, Bacardi and Coke in the back of my kitchen cabinets, and he would eat takeout and fried food every day. When I would bring up the fact that he was killing himself, he would tell me I was acting like a b****. That was the worst thing. His mouth was so foul, and on more than one occasion, he would actually say that to me—the person whose house he was living in, whose car he was driving, and who was paying for dinners, dates, and trips. He would excuse this by saying he didn’t actually call me the word, so I was overreacting.

I was trying to make his life better while he was making mine a living hell. So I sat tight-lipped as he ate and drank himself into an early grave. I started ignoring his wolf cries and just treated him like something I would soon be free of. I had to force selfies and pictures out of him whenever we went out. I needed to show people that things were okay. In the beginning, he was so nice to me that I told the world. I wanted to share the makings of this great romance. You know how we do—folk love a good backstory, and I wanted to deliver that. So, I had to keep up the façade in case he reverted back to the man I thought he was in the beginning. I had no taste for crow, so I would have to make him into the man I thought he was.

I also thought the cancer was making him mean. I’d heard it could do that, so I never really attributed his behavior entirely to him. He would say himself that the pain made him act differently.

He had long since stopped holding my hand, kissing, or touching me, but we would still travel together. That was kind of a relief because that was one area I felt better about. I didn’t learn until later that narcissists don’t touch you—they use intimacy as a weapon. They want you to feel unloved and lower your self-esteem. The joke was on him: I didn’t want those things from someone I was supporting financially. I no longer saw him as my man but as my son.

Whenever he began to sense my indifference or saw me pulling away, he would bring me flowers and revert back to his early acting days. That would give me hope that he was capable of being that person. The flowers were a Band-Aid, meant to replace sincere apologies, changed behavior, and meaningful conversations. We no longer talked to each other; we talked at each other.


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2 responses to “Untangled 18: Eat Crow”

  1. pleasantlydazzling7be3e08b72 Avatar
    pleasantlydazzling7be3e08b72

    My sister is a lot like you, as far as letting people take advantage of her. I don’t believe you are that way since you have got rid of the waste. A story to show how I act compared to her. I used to dj. My daughter had graduated from college, & two of her friends, one from Florida, the other from Texas, came for a visit in Ohio. I was djing one of the nights they were all here. A man that I know somewhat, married, not interested if he was single, was at the club. He asked me if he could borrow $20. I said, he had to pay me back because I was not made of money. He was supposed to come out the next night. He did come out, but it was to see my daughter & her friends. I asked if he had the $20. He said he didn’t but would come out the next night. He didn’t. I called left a message on his phone. I said, you have four children, you should be taking care of them not hanging out at a club & I expected him to pay me. He came out that week & gave me the money. Come to find out, he’d borrowed from my sister also. He stuffed a 20 in her hand, thinking I wouldn’t notice. He hasn’t been back since. No lose. Now, to compare my sister. He’d come out to her house often, drinking up her liquor. He even brought his parents & they drank everything in the house. He would go into her frig & help himself. She had other “friends” who used her, borrowing money, never paying it back. She had a big party once, & I told her friends to bring their own booze. That was the end of that. She said I was making her friends disappear. I told her, they aren’t your friends. I know that hurt, but her heart is too big. I don’t have a big heart. I’ll hound. I’ll say an easy no. You are stronger now, I believe, but have a big heart that some have used & abused. Shame on them. But, you have learned to be discerning about motive. Sorry so long.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Unfortunately users know who they can use. My user knew that I had sympathy for the sick. He knew what to do and say to garner that sympathy. I’m not the same person and that’s good in some ways. I’ve learned that people will lie, they will drain you dry and they will take whatever isn’t nailed down. It was a lesson, I’m glad I had it and survived.

      Thank you for sharing your experience with a user. People will see themselves in that as well 🙂

      Liked by 1 person