I currently have two friends dealing with abusive relationships. One of the two just got out, and though struggling, she's waking up each morning to do the work to get to the other side. The other is in deep and won't admit to what is right in front of her face. I've expended way too much energy on this, as she has made it clear she's staying and doesn't want help, yet I can't look away.
My best friend told me "You are allowed to walk away from this. You do not have to be her savior. You are allowed to save yourself first." I agreed, and thanked her for the reminder, but added that when I talk openly about what happened to me, when I share my truth, and the few times I help someone get out, it heals me just a little more. It's all a delicate balance that I need to observe and stay aware of when I'm helping another or when I'm hurting myself.
I'm well versed in what abuse looks like both from my personal experience as well as hearing the stories of others, helping get protection orders, calling the police and pleading with friends to leave before they are killed. Abuse is tricky as it's not simply a matter of being punched in the face and walking away forever. Abuse cycles are well known yet you excuse it away when you are in it as you don't want to believe this could happen to you.
I'm getting flashes of the stories I've heard and what I've seen in my lifetime. Watching my mother's body fly across the porch as her abuser beat her, hearing a friend tell of having her hand broken by a shovel and while hiding in her bedroom being told, "I'll kill you and dance on your grave. I'll fuck your mother up the ass.", seeing my coworker come in with more makeup daily to hide the bruises. In every one of these situations this wasn't the first time, as they all had domestic violence records a mile long.
To myself: you did the best you could. When you ultimately hit rock bottom you scratched and clawed your way out. You've done amazing inner work and should be proud, as so many give up and never try. You did it.