~ Mari's Rose ~
Dear Friends on our
Journey,
There is something
that I would like to share with those of you who are visiting the Recovery Group's Website.
It's a bit personal ... but I would like to
tell you how I found I found my recovery in cyberspace and why you will see
so many roses when you view our pages. Having listened to hundreds of compulsive
people tell their stores over these years, I have come to learn what it means
to them also. This is about a loop in cyberspace.
And about love . . .
And a rose . . .
I have lived a life in
which I came to mistrust people who were *supposed* to love me but actually
treated me with disrespect and even, at times, meanness. Normally, an outgoing
person who loved to hug and touch, I gradually became a person who died a
little inside. I mourned the death of my emotions and went on with my life.
I actually functioned at a pretty high level. At some point, though, I quit
feeling.
In the summer of 1994
I walked into these cyber-rooms strictly by accident. I found a recovery
loop. I attended the online meetings. I even bought the Big Book. And I listened
to what I considered then to be rhetoric. I kept coming back, day by day,
month by month and during that time I would listen to the "love yous", the
"I love yous", the "{{{{{{{{ }}}}}}}}}}", the "I cares", the "dear this"
or the "dear that" , the God talk, the "Let me love you until you can love
yourself." And, at first, I would almost gag.
Little by little I found
myself feeling. I would read a letter from someone hurting and I would hurt
too. I questioned this because how could I care for someone I had never seen
and I might never see? I made friendships. To this day, those friendships
remain. Some of them are no longer loop members. Many of them are. My love
for them has grown deeper and I would do just about anything to help them
when they hurt.
Someone wrote the other
day ~ someone new here with whom I had not even had a perfunctory correspondence
~ but she told of being alone in a hospital and I wrote her and was just
about ready to hop on a plane to be with her.
I can't explain cyberspace
recovery. I'm not sure what happens when a group of addicts get together
in cyberspace. But I do know that it is meant to be. I do know that because
of our common denominator, our compulsions, WHEN WE BEGIN TO LOVE SOMEONE
ON OUR RECOVERY LOOP, WE ARE LOVING OURSELVES.
As I began to love more
people here, I found myself loving me more. I'm not about to try to explain
to you precious people who are visiting this Web site how this happened because
actually I don't know. What I do know is that you should never question the
sincerity of a hug or an "I love you" on this Journey to Recovery loop. .
Our loopies are the most authentic people on the face of the earth and, while
they may disagree with you, fight with you, pester you, flame you, bore you
~ ~ ~ ~ when they say "I love you", they truly mean it!! Recovery has a way
of making one honest. And loopies just don't say "I love you" and not mean
it.
Count on it.
What I found here is the
most important gift of my life. I have told young girls who are drug addicts
I love them. I've told hurting mothers who were in tears because they had
abused their children that I loved them. I've told anorexics who were starving
themselves to death and 500 pounders who had given up hope that I love them.
I have even told grown married men I loved them and meant it. Lesbian women
and I meant it. Gay men and I meant it. People I didn't like very much but
I felt love for ~ and I meant it. But telling these people that I feel love
for them has brought me far more than it has given them. It has made me a
more loving person with my family. With people around me. It has enabled
me to look for ways to fill voids that I might never have searched for otherwise.
And it has opened places in my heart that have been closed for a long, long
time.
My rose means that. My
rose means "I love you". I used it when I simply could NOT say the words.
My signature was just my name. Because I couldn't say the word "love," I
just signed my name, Mari, and put a little cyber-rose above it. The rose
meant love. And it still means that.
And it will always mean
that.
Such a simple thing, this
rose.
@-}-}-}-
Such a difficult thing
for me before recovery to say "I love you."
Thanks to a little place
in cyberspace, I can now say it. I can now feel it. I can now give it.
Love.
But I still use my rose.
@-}-}-}-
I love you,
![]()
Mari
Mari@TheRecoveryGroup.org
The Recovery Group
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