Month: May 2021

Help! My Relationship Has Been Storyboarded After a Breakup!!!

breakups

At one time I felt that Jonathan, aka Darth Vader, was the “Man of My Dreams” – my “last lover” (and exactly how many “lovers” do I wish to accumulate? Not too many is the hope…). Weird how one can believe in fairytale romance, even in one’s Golden Years, or maybe it’s just me.

Alas, we crashed the day he rushed into our bedroom, in a highly agitated state, to ask, “Have you been thinking of moving out?” We had not been getting along well, though I did not know it was that bad. But within two days I had packed all my essentials and moved out. Easy breezy, pandemic be damned. And not particularly onerous, as breakup stories go.

So, what happened? Months were spent agonizing over this question. Darth is a gifted teacher and writer, but talking about relationships was not his forte. What went wrong was left to my imagination, other than him telling me he needed “space,” and criticizing a couple of my quirkier, but certainly not revolting, personal habits.

But still, in the dead of night I would obsess about whether I was inherently unworthy. Girlfriends and family were my therapists/detectives in getting through all the unpleasantness of loss, rejection, and uncertainty.

Narratives Don’t Always Match!

The last time Darth and I spoke, he offered his brand new narrative. Introducing a heretofore unknown theme into the story of us, he advised me that I had always been smitten with him, while his feelings had been more lukewarm.

We lived together not out of love, but because he was helping me out during a rough patch. I did not know any of this! The narrative stung, which may have been the intended effect, who knows. He actively revolted against any suggestion that his scenario was less than spot on.

But think about it. Having a palatable, realistic narrative for life’s setbacks goes a long way towards putting an end to late night obsessing. Darth has this great narrative he struts around with, but what about me?

Why does he get to characterize me as a loser? Can I right this wrong? Why do I care what he says about me to people I will never meet or never see again? Or worse yet, has he just stopped talking about me?

Lauren Howe, a doctoral candidate in psychology at Stanford, wrote a piece in The Atlantic addressing the power of narrative when rejection occurs (“Why Some People Take Breakups Harder Than Others”).

In it, she said: “The stories we tell ourselves about rejection…can shape how and how well we cope with it.” People who believed they were rejected because of an immutable personal flaw suffered more greatly than people who either accepted rejection as a part of life, or understood that two wonderfully great people are not necessarily great together.

People who believed they were rejected because of a fixable personal flaw also did well, the flaw could be fixed, life goes on.

Personal Psychology Affects Memory

In The New Yorker magazine, Elizabeth Loftus, a controversial but respected psychologist specializing in memory, says:

“Our representation of the past takes on a living, shifting reality. It is not fixed and immutable, not a place way back there that is preserved in stone, but a living thing that changes shape, expands, shrinks, and expands again, an amoeba-like creature” (“Past Imperfect”).

In a Ted Talk, Loftus said:

“Part of memory may tell us who we want to be. There is scientific evidence that we distort our own memories in a positive or prestige enhancing direction without anyone else intervening.”

“Distortions can occur in the minds of people who are otherwise trying to be honest.”

“Maybe memories are who we prefer to be.”

Are there gender differences in how people process breakups, thus shaping their narratives? Women normally get the benefit of talking with friends about their breakups. We help one another create narratives that help make things more palatable.

My sister rewrote my Darth narrative to say that I had actually sent him away (by so readily and easily moving out), conveniently bypassing the couple of times that I tried to win him back. But on good days, I completely and highly endorse her version of events.

When I am with friends, we often pass the time analyzing and discussing the male psyche. We exhume, poke, and prod at their inner lives, sometimes with great authority, sometimes with wishful thinking, Tarot Cards, and pseudoscience. Typically, these sessions are fun but equally important, also healing.

According to a study conducted at Binghamton University and University College London, “women tend to be more negatively affected by breakups, reporting higher levels of both physical and emotional pain.”

Nonetheless, “women tend to recover more fully and come out emotionally stronger.” Does the processing we do with our female friends help create more sensibly robust narratives? Are men’s narratives stilted if they occurred strictly within the confines of the mind?

Could this explain why Darth’s narrative felt so off? He had no one but me to tell him he was wrong and why would he choose to listen to me?

According to the Binghamton study, “men […] never fully recover – they simply move on.” These researchers boiled the differences down to biology:

“Put simply, women have evolved to invest far more in a relationship than men. A brief encounter could lead to nine months of pregnancy followed by many years of lactation for an ancestral woman, while the man may have left the scene literally minutes after the encounter, with literally no further biological investment.”

Women seek quality mates, men just kind of float around? Oh, how I hate it when life is boiled down to biology. And if there really is credence to this line of thought, do we continue to be affected by biology in our Golden Years?

Is There a Right Way to Heal?

The internet is awash with books, stories, and articles about how one must “heal” after a breakup in order to move forward in a positive fashion. With all due respect to the counseling field, psychotherapists are probably paying for their vacation homes from earnings counseling abandoned clients.

Some would argue that healing and self-examination is unnecessary. The BBC reported the findings of a City University of NY study of the psychological well-being of people who had recently broken up. Claudia Brumbaugh, a psychologist who studies adult attachment says that people who quickly start new relationships “feel more confident, desirable, and loveable.”

“There were no cases where people who were single were better off.” Apparently, people who quickly rebounded into a new relationship experienced that “their relatively uninterrupted relationship status allows their lifestyle to flow smoothly as they transition from one partner to another.”

Now this is great storyboarding! Person A thought I was not good enough, but here is a wonderful Person B who thinks I am amazing! The article goes on to suggest that people, who report personal growth following a breakup, may actually be kidding themselves. Telling oneself that life is better is a way of soothing the ego.

But of course there are caveats. “Quick rebounders also tend to be people who had issues with insecurity in their previous relationships.”

Now I am confused. It’s supposedly okay if I rebound quickly, but only if I am not insecure? Who is not insecure, on some level? How do I know if my level of insecurity is high enough to fall into this new category? And if I am improving my self-esteem, how do I know if it’s really improved, or am I just selling myself a bill of goods?

What Does Nature Tell Us?

Even scientists find the breaking up process worthy of study. In 2012, Scientific American briefly reported on the study “Love Hurts: Brain Chemistry Explains the Pangs of Separation,” which discusses the deep depression that male prairie voles slip into when they lose a mate.

Interestingly, Prairie voles “…display social traits we think of as deeply human.” These rodents are rare amongst mammals because they form bonds that outlast the mating process. Curiously, these prairie voles also like whiskey (an unintended side dish to the study).

It’s not clear if there is a correlation between whiskey and monogamy, but I have my theories. I can pretty much chart the course of a new friendship based on the amount of drinks I have on the first date.

But all is not hearts and flowers with voles. “As with human romances, pair bonding doesn’t preclude what researchers call opportunistic infidelity.” And, some males don’t pair bond at all. These footloose individuals are known as “wanderers.” One wonders about the stories that voles tell themselves when losing a mate: “She must have been eaten by a predator or sweet talked by a wanderer.”

Abandonment is part of the breakup lexicon. In her book, The Journey from Abandonment to Healing, Susan Anderson says: “Emotional experience is more painful when it echoes an episode from the past; that’s especially true when it comes to rejection and loss. The relationship that ended today may be the fulfillment of your worst nightmares from childhood.”

Many of us with these histories display tendencies towards “self-attack and recrimination.” One ends up scrutinizing the relationship beyond what can be considered healthy, looking for all the little things one must have done to lose one’s lover. The self-examination runs the gamut between the heartbreaking to the mundane.

For people with difficult pasts, rewriting the narrative in a positive light is particularly challenging and probably cannot occur constructively in a vacuum. Some people have an unusually difficult time disbelieving the sad, negative, critical stories they tell themselves.

Grab Hold of Your Narrative

My favorite part of the book is the section on “rewriting the Closure,” which advises you to decide how things ended, on your own terms. After all, you were a 100% participant in this relationship. Just because someone else ended it doesn’t mean that you don’t have your own experience.

Because I was so mad at Darth for his insistence on his narrative, I wrote him a long letter detailing all sorts of crimes and misdemeanors, the kinds of things you might think about a person but never say. I ever so strongly wanted to seriously wound his pride and make him doubt himself.

I wrote, rewrote, then wrote again, but never sent the letter. Why would I intentionally want to hurt someone I once cared about, just because he hurt me? At the end of the day, I decided I want to feel squeaky clean, emotionally speaking, and not feel encrusted with hate and thoughts of revenge.

The day-to-day nuances, as well as the random thoughts that run through the mind of a partner can never be fully captured or understood. And even though we all need narratives, more than likely there is never one perfectly clean narrative.

Forgiving someone who needed to have a particular relationship narrative in order to continue functioning, like Darth, feels important. Its only when that narrative is used to hurt or destroy another that storyboarding becomes unforgiveable.

Moving Forward

And, a word to the wise. Pay close attention to the story that your new love tells you of prior breakups. Was their wife an evil shrew who did this, that, and the other, he being a not so willing victim? Life is so rarely that clean.

In fact, at this stage of the game, anyone that I date would hopefully have laid their last relationship to bed and does not use dating and intimacy with me as a way of processing his last loss.

Have you been looking for the “Man of Your Dreams”? What’s been your success thus far? Have you ever experienced a relationship storyboarding? How did that feel like? Have you been on the delivery side of things? Would you seek revenge after a breakup? Please share with the community!

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Outtasight or Out of Sight? How to Wear an Invisibility Cloak

outtasight invisible boomer women

Remember the 60s? The 1960s that is, when “outtasight” referenced something cool and hip? In the 60s that “something” could have been a Baby Boomer teen girl. Well now, those 40 million Baby Boomer women are well into their seventh decade and hip and cool are rarely words used to characterize these sexagenarians.

The Cloak of Invisibility

At 67, I most assuredly fall into this age demographic and a recent travel experience convinced me Baby Boomer teen girls (now women) have gone from being outtasight to just plain “out of sight.”

A weekend trip to New York City with four other similarly aged moms caused me to ponder the societal status of Lady Boomers. On one hand, Baby Boomer women are nearly 40 million strong and enjoy much focus from the media, marketers, and merchants.

On the other hand, Baby Boomer women tend to be invisible. I realize I’m not the first to say this, but being in hip, cool NYC brought this fact into full relief for me.

Now, let me be quick to point out I was the oldest among our group that consisted of a retired lawyer, television anchor, pharmacist, and practicing lawyer. However, for the sake of this story, I’m lumping our 58- to 66-year-old selves into this same age cohort.

The Butt of the Joke

The first clue I had about our invisibility status was at a standup comedy club, Caroline’s, On Broadway. Our table virtually abutted the stage, and thus became a convenient part of the show, and the butt of many jokes.

According to the young male comics, the five of us shared the same hairstyle – “Just like Hillary’s!” (as in Hillary Clinton). First, I would love to have Hillary’s hair or at least her stylist at my disposal. Not one of the five of us believed our hairstyles resembled each other’s. 

The (not funny to us) comedians pointed out the obvious that we were well beyond child-bearing years (quite true, and thank goodness, but a stinging indictment nevertheless).

There were other clues pointing to our Casper the Ghost status, i.e., cab drivers ignoring our hails and ticket takers our stubs. Now, I realize we were visiting a fast-paced urban city but more than once a fast-paced professional crashed into one of us, reacting with irritated surprise that we were even occupying sidewalk real estate in front of him.

And Still There Is a Positive Side

But… there were and are advantages. Our age and various infirmities enabled us to jump the queue in the 45-minute line to enter the 9/11 museum, a big help escaping the icy wind and rain. We always had a seat on the subway.

Melissa Swann’s 31-year tenure as an anchor on the CBS affiliate in Louisville, Kentucky, enabled us to get a tour of the control room and set of the CBS Morning News show, meeting co-anchor, Gayle King and her guest star, former Superwoman, Linda Evans. (Now that was affirming as the now 77-year-old former superhero looks great and has an irreverent sense of humor.)

Since we are of a certain age, we have connections, which enabled us to get backstage access to a Broadway play owing to a daughter’s relationship with the female lead. But, by far, my favorite line of the weekend regarding the freedom afforded us by our invisibility was uttered by one of my travel companions:

“We could smoke a bong on Fifth Avenue and the police would assume someone else was blowing smoke in our faces.”

Not that we tested this theory, but we rolled on the floor of our suite (yet another advantage of our age – disposable income) howling at the veracity of this statement.

I guess while our sex appeal may have waned, the camaraderie and shared understanding of our age plight with others similarly situated is, let’s say it together, priceless!

When was the last time you felt invisible? What was the experience like? Do you think there are advantages to being over 60? Which ones do you make use of the most? Please share below!

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Lady Gaga Debuted Dark Hair & An ’80s Pop Star Vibe While Celebrating Born This Way Day

Fresh off filming the House of Gucci movie, Lady Gaga hit up West Hollywood, CA to celebrate the 10th anniversary of one of her biggest albums. Local officials announced to Gaga and fans that May 23 is now Born This Way Day. It honors the anniversary of the album and also Gaga’s support for the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community as a whole.

“You’ve been the motherfucking key to my heart for a long time,” Gaga told the crowd. “I’ll honor this and I’ll cherish this, and I promise that I’ll always be here for this day … to celebrate with you. To feel joy with you, to cry with you, to laugh with you. Because you know what we are? We’re poets and we’re just talking to each other.”

Gaga went all out for the big day, debuting new brunette hair done up in a high pony adorned with a metallic scrunchie. She also rocked thick, black cat-eye makeup and deep red lips, giving the whole thing an amazing ’80s rockstar vibe.

Our mission at STYLECASTER is to bring style to the people, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale.

Instagram PhotoSource: Instagram

It’s likely Gaga is wearing her own Haus Laboratories line, including the best-selling Liquid Eye-Lie-Ner In Jet Black Punk ($20 at Amazon). We’re guessing she’s wearing lipstick like Le Monster Matte Lip Crayon In 14 – Wine Mouth ($12.60 at Amazon)—a new color that’s on sale!

This day was obviously really important to Lady Gaga. She spoke from the heart on Instagram about being inspired by Carl Bean, “a gay black religious activist who preached, sung and wrote about being ‘Born This Way.’”

“Thank you for decades of relentless love, bravery, and a reason to sing,” she wrote. “So we can all feel joy, because we deserve joy. Because we deserve the right to inspire tolerance, acceptance, and freedom for all.”

STYLECASTER | Ashley Benson Interview

Read More

Lady Gaga Debuted Dark Hair & An ’80s Pop Star Vibe While Celebrating Born This Way Day

Fresh off filming the House of Gucci movie, Lady Gaga hit up West Hollywood, CA to celebrate the 10th anniversary of one of her biggest albums. Local officials announced to Gaga and fans that May 23 is now Born This Way Day. It honors the anniversary of the album and also Gaga’s support for the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community as a whole.

“You’ve been the motherfucking key to my heart for a long time,” Gaga told the crowd. “I’ll honor this and I’ll cherish this, and I promise that I’ll always be here for this day … to celebrate with you. To feel joy with you, to cry with you, to laugh with you. Because you know what we are? We’re poets and we’re just talking to each other.”

Gaga went all out for the big day, debuting new brunette hair done up in a high pony adorned with a metallic scrunchie. She also rocked thick, black cat-eye makeup and deep red lips, giving the whole thing an amazing ’80s rockstar vibe.

Our mission at STYLECASTER is to bring style to the people, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale.

Instagram PhotoSource: Instagram

It’s likely Gaga is wearing her own Haus Laboratories line, including the best-selling Liquid Eye-Lie-Ner In Jet Black Punk ($20 at Amazon). We’re guessing she’s wearing lipstick like Le Monster Matte Lip Crayon In 14 – Wine Mouth ($12.60 at Amazon)—a new color that’s on sale!

This day was obviously really important to Lady Gaga. She spoke from the heart on Instagram about being inspired by Carl Bean, “a gay black religious activist who preached, sung and wrote about being ‘Born This Way.’”

“Thank you for decades of relentless love, bravery, and a reason to sing,” she wrote. “So we can all feel joy, because we deserve joy. Because we deserve the right to inspire tolerance, acceptance, and freedom for all.”

STYLECASTER | Ashley Benson Interview

Read More

Lady Gaga Debuted Dark Hair & An ’80s Pop Star Vibe While Celebrating Born This Way Day

Fresh off filming the House of Gucci movie, Lady Gaga hit up West Hollywood, CA to celebrate the 10th anniversary of one of her biggest albums. Local officials announced to Gaga and fans that May 23 is now Born This Way Day. It honors the anniversary of the album and also Gaga’s support for the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ community as a whole.

“You’ve been the motherfucking key to my heart for a long time,” Gaga told the crowd. “I’ll honor this and I’ll cherish this, and I promise that I’ll always be here for this day … to celebrate with you. To feel joy with you, to cry with you, to laugh with you. Because you know what we are? We’re poets and we’re just talking to each other.”

Gaga went all out for the big day, debuting new brunette hair done up in a high pony adorned with a metallic scrunchie. She also rocked thick, black cat-eye makeup and deep red lips, giving the whole thing an amazing ’80s rockstar vibe.

Our mission at STYLECASTER is to bring style to the people, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale.

Instagram PhotoSource: Instagram

It’s likely Gaga is wearing her own Haus Laboratories line, including the best-selling Liquid Eye-Lie-Ner In Jet Black Punk ($20 at Amazon). We’re guessing she’s wearing lipstick like Le Monster Matte Lip Crayon In 14 – Wine Mouth ($12.60 at Amazon)—a new color that’s on sale!

This day was obviously really important to Lady Gaga. She spoke from the heart on Instagram about being inspired by Carl Bean, “a gay black religious activist who preached, sung and wrote about being ‘Born This Way.’”

“Thank you for decades of relentless love, bravery, and a reason to sing,” she wrote. “So we can all feel joy, because we deserve joy. Because we deserve the right to inspire tolerance, acceptance, and freedom for all.”

STYLECASTER | Ashley Benson Interview

Read More