Meet the Wrights - A Love Hard University Story

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Barry and Leatrice met as teenagers in 1984.  According to Barry, she made quite the impression on him.  Their paths wouldn't cross again for another 30 years. They lived in different parts of the country, had different life experiences, married different people and even had different philosophies about life and how to live it. He's a TRADITIONALIST and she has traditional traits. He's quiet and she's never been quiet a day in her life. He's a sports and chicken wings kinda guy and she's an arts, culture and sushi kinda girl. He's very Virgo and she's extremely Pisces. Instead of allowing their differences to define them they embraced the common ground they found in their friendship, respect for one another, shared values and the profound love between them. 3 years in and he hangs at her museum exhibition openings and she doesn't use a fork and knife to eat her chicken wings anymore. As a matter of fact they found an amazing wing spot and she might be a chicken wings kinda girl after all.  LOL.  

Finding love at this juncture in their lives has been a blessing.  They threw convention and tradition out the window and are totally making up their own rules as they go along based on how they want to live and love in the next chapter of their lives.  They know from experience that it won't always be easy, but have an expectation that it will always be worth it. They continue to be excited about embarking on this amazing journey together and are eternally grateful to their community of family and friends who stand witness to their love and hold them down as a couple.  Love Wins! 

All About Love

Back in the day music used to uplift and encourage. No group was better at raising the consciousness of people and making us feel good about ourselves than Earth, Wind and Fire.  Keep Your Head to the Sky is a veritable masterpiece. But this post is about All About Love. All About Love is a tune that I have known all of my life but didn't understand it until I was going through something and actually listened to the song with a different ear. I knew it was a love song but realized it was a love song for oneself as opposed to the object of one's affection. All About Love encourages us to deal with ourselves and not try to obtain external love without first loving ourselves.  Revisit it below or visit it for the first time and let us know what you think. - LEW

All About Love Lyrics
Earth, Wind and Fire (1975)

We know it's been time talking to you, 
So we figure we lay it on you
Let you know how we feel about, love
Paint a pretty smile, each day
Lovin, is a blessing, 
Never let it fade away
It's all about love

Build yourself a true romance, 
There's beauty that surround you
You deserve, just one more chance

My dear, my dear

Let the light snine, all through
Your mind feel your little, heart a glow
Take the time, make up your mind
It's all about love

Talking to yourself is fine makes
You feel, much better, 
Know just where to draw the line

My dear, my dear

Bound to fall in love one day
Surely and you need it, 
Pretty smile will always say
It's all about love

We want to take this moment
To run down a couple of things
About things we see everyday

Now, I want you to stop
Whatever you're doing
You're doing
Just stop
You know, they say there' s beauty
In the eyes which I say is not the fact
'Cause you are as beautiful
As your thoughts, right on

You know, for instance, we study
All kinds of sciences, astrogy, 
Mysticism, religion, so forth we did
And like coming from her place, 
All these things help
Because if you're inside your inner self
Have mercy!

Now...there's an outer self
We got to deal with
The one that likes to go to parties, 
One that likes to dress up and be cool
And look pretty, 
All ego-trips have all this

Hear you all, I'm trying to tell you, 
You gotta love you
And learn all the beautiful things around you, 
Trees and birds...and if
There ain't no beauty, 
You got to make some beauty
Have mercy! 
Listen to me, Yeah!

How Do I Heal from Narcissistic Abuse?

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Reposted from:
Psychology Today
Posted July 28, 2018
Written By Elinor Greenberg, Ph.D.

I am often asked some version of the following question by people who are newly out of an abusive relationship with a Narcissist. They say:

My ex treated me miserably. By the time they kicked me to the curb, I was a total mess.  I had lost my self-esteem and most of my self-confidence.  It took me weeks to stop crying.  I am in therapy and finally able to function again. Clearly, I know that I am better off without this relationship, but I still fantasize about my ex every day and wish that we could be together. Why can’t I just forget this person and move on?  

One of the ways to understand what is going on here is to realize that our minds and our hearts sometimes travel on separate tracks. The key to healing is having them communicate with each other.

Your heart saysI love this person.

Your mind says: It is over. They abused you. You need to get far away and never go back.

This back and forth dialogue can go on for a long time without being resolved. These are two entirely different views of the same situation. One view is focused on how good it felt when things were going well and the other is focused on the reality of how everything actually turned out.  You do not have to passively wait until something happens to breaks this stalemate.  There are things that you can do to speed up your healing and end this emotionally destructive push/pull.

Note: I am using the terms “Narcissist” and “Narcissistic” in this article as shorthand for the much longer phrase: a person who has made a Narcissistic adaptation to a childhood situation and who now manifests a pattern of responses that is generally called a Narcissistic Personality Disorder.  

  • Exercise 1--Challenge your False Beliefs
    Here is a 4 part exercise that can speed up the process of healing:

Part 1—Write down all your beliefs about your relationship with your Narcissistic ex that interfere with you moving on and looking for someone new to love.

Here is my client Laura’s list:

  1. It was my fault he behaved so badly to me.
  2. I could have done something that would have made the situation work.
  3. He is treating his next love better than me because the new person is better than me.
  4. I will never find anyone again that will make me feel as good and as special.

The above list is “heart based.”  The emotional side of Laura longs for what she once had with her ex when things were at its lovely peak.  This side of Laura does not want to face the pain of acknowledging her current reality-- that she will never have everlasting love and a perfect future with this man. The idea that absolutely nothing can be salvaged from this relationship except wisdom is too painful for Laura to face head on.  Instead, she is trying to persuade her more logical self that there still might be a way to make this relationship work if she got to do it-over again.  

“Hang on,” her heart says, “You might still be able to get your ex back and this time you can make it work.”  Unfortunately, this is also the heart of someone who is taking more than their share of the blame for the failure of the relationship.

Part 2—Who in your childhood encouraged you to take all the blame?

Most of my clients who tend to take more than their share of the blame for their breakups had a parent who blamed them inappropriately. It can help to realize that part of what is keeping you from seeing the current breakup situation realistically is that it is a repeat of a recurring childhood situation. Ask yourself: Who in my childhood always blamed me when something went wrong?

Example—My client Laura was raised by a Narcissistic mother who continually blamed her for virtually everything. If the milk in the refrigerator went sour, she was told: You must have left it out.  When her mother got angry and yelled at Laura on the street, she heard: It’s your fault that I lost my temper! If you hadn’t been so disrespectful, I wouldn’t have had to yell at you in public.

Part 3—What do you get out of protecting your abusive ex and blaming yourself instead?

We not only blame ourselves out of habit and because of our history, but also because it serves some hidden psychological purpose.  In order to move on, It helps to recognize what you are getting out of protecting your ex and putting all the blame on yourself.

This was a hard question for Laura to answer. She finally said:

If it was my fault, I can make it better. I loved the way he made me feel in the beginning. He kept telling me how special I was and that I was so beautiful! That is hard for me to let go of. No other man ever made me feel so confident.  If I accept that he is a Narcissist and nothing I do can solve his problems, I have to give up on ever getting him back the way it was before. I realize that whenever I think about him, I only picture him the way he was in the beginning, not when he was abusing me.

Part 4—Write down a true statement next to each belief in Part 1.  Make sure it is what your mind tells you is true (even though your heart does not want to believe it).

Here is Laura’s new list:

  1. It is not my fault that he was abusive.  He has a history of being abusive to women.
  2. There was nothing I could have done that would have changed the outcome.’
  3. He only treats women well in the beginning of the relationship when he wants to seal the deal.
  4. He will eventually abuse the new woman too.
  5. There are lots of men who will find me attractive and special in a normal way that does not change into its opposite.

Whenever you find yourself missing your ex or blaming yourself, reread Part 4 over again.

Punchline: It can be very hard to heal from Narcissistic abuse because we tend to only focus on the good parts. We tell ourselves that we could have done something differently and we imagine that our ex will be giving someone new the perfect, everlasting love that we crave. It takes repeated cold doses of reality to counteract our fantasy that we lost something fantastic and irreplaceable.

This article is a based on a Quora.com post called: It's been months since I went "complete" no contact to heal from narcissistic abuse, months since I started therapy, months of researching narcissism, and I still think about this person every day. When does this nightmare end?
(June 17, 2018).

 

Love Hard University Photo Shoot

Jalen Ellzy, Apollo and Isis Gunn and Alayah Shelton pose in their Love Hard University T-Shirts on the steps of the Historic Hammonds House Museum in Atlanta's West End Neighborhood as photographer, Michael Moss captures the moment.

Jalen Ellzy, Apollo and Isis Gunn and Alayah Shelton pose in their Love Hard University T-Shirts on the steps of the Historic Hammonds House Museum in Atlanta's West End Neighborhood as photographer, Michael Moss captures the moment.

We are super excited about getting the photos from the Love Hard University photo shoot this past Saturday. Thanks to Michael Moss from Skylane Productions for taking some amazing pics. We can't wait to share them. LEW

W. Imara Canady Community Leader

W. Imara Canady
Community Leader

Janelle Ellzy Foodie and Restaurant Consultant

Janelle Ellzy
Foodie and Restaurant Consultant

Make-Up Artist  Vonda K. Morris

Make-Up Artist
Vonda K. Morris

Bronwyn T. Gunn Luxury Retail Director

Bronwyn T. Gunn
Luxury Retail Director

Museum Operations Director Donna Watts-Nunn

Museum Operations Director
Donna Watts-Nunn