Tell Me What You Are Thinking

 

TELL-ME-WHAT-YOU-ARE-THINKING

You may remember Sophie who was one of my ex-girlfriends. She was a happy-go-lucky kind of person and loved dashing from person to person wishing them well. She was like a machine spewing out good wishes, pleasantries and compliments.

“You look really well,you have lost weight.”

“That skirt really suits you.”

“I heard you recently got married, you must be really happy. That’s really wonderful.”

“Hey great news on that new job. I am really pleased for you.”

“You look so content, I am really happy for you.”

She was really, really good natured. Oh and she used really a lot. There was not a bad bone in Sophie’s body and she always saw the good side of everything. I was by turns fascinated by how she managed it and also hugely attracted by her capacity to find victory from the jaws of defeat.

“He’s grumpy because he is tired, he works very hard you know.”

“I guess he didn’t have time to speak to me today, he has really huge responsibilities. He really has.”

“I don’t mind that he forgot my birthday, I am just really pleased to be with him, that’s a good enough present for me.”

“I haven’t heard from him so I guess he is out with his friends. It is really good to spend time with other people now and again, it keeps things really fresh.”

She just skipped along merrily handing out kindness and warmth as if that was all she was programmed to do. I reached this conclusion because behind the permanent smile, the twinkling eyes and elated expression she wore there really was not a lot else. She had no interest in politics, current affairs, sport, history, literature and so on. She would listen patiently if I railed against the latest proposals concerning immigration nodding and smiling and when I asked her what she thought she would say,

“Oh all of that is for people really clever. It’s not for me.”

She was never dismissive in the sense of pouring scorn on it just because she was not interested or she did not understand. No, she just had no interest because she felt it was beyond her, not something she had to be concerned about. She was concerned with just one thing ; skipping around like some modern day fairy sprinkling goodness everywhere. I do think she lacked much in the way of her own opinions and thoughts because she usually deflected any attempt to get her to critique something with a self-effacing comment like the one above. She never seemed to be caught in a moment of contemplation. She never seemed to pause for thought. She would just ask what I thought. She did this repeatedly. She was always concerned to know what I was thinking about.

“What’s on your mind?”

“Penny for your thoughts?”

“What are you thinking?”

“Where is your mind today?”

“What’s going on upstairs?”

Repeatedly throughout the day, as  we sat watching television, after we had made love, during dinner, going for a walk, when I was shaving and so on. Always wanting to know what I was thinking. So I told her. From the mundane (“This shaving gel is not as good as the last lot I bought”) through to the loving (“I was just thinking how wonderful it is being with you”) to the scathing (“I was just wondering why on earth I am with such an empty-headed woman as you”). That was all she wanted to know. What was I thinking? On and on she would go, asking and asking and no matter what I said, be it compliment or nasty comment or ephemera she would smile and give a satisfied nod.

All of this made her very attractive to someone like me at the outset as she was a real high volume fuel generator but once that wore thin, it was rather difficult to denigrate her so she would react the way that I wanted. She put me in mind of that toy the Weeble. The catchphrase surrounding the Weeble was “Weebles wobble but they don’t fall down.”Sophie was like that. I would be horrible to her and she maintained a smile (although I thought or at least hoped she was dying inside) and made an excuse and found a rationale for my unpleasantness. Insults just seemed to bounce off her. Smashing plates and ornaments caused her to stand and watch with a slightly perplexed look on her face before she tidied the pieces away. She did not cry or show fear. I would sit and flirt with other women online and comment to Sophie about how attractive they were. She would look over and agree with my comments and go on to compliment how white their teeth were or how she liked their hairstyle. If I wandered in during the middle of the morning she would just ask how my night had gone. I am sure she could smell other women on me but she did not seem to react. It was as if she was wrapped in this coating of pleasantness that was impervious to any nastiness thrown at her. She would either respond with a soothing comment, make an excuse for what I had said or done or just not react and get on with her day. I used to wonder if she had me worked out and this was her way of negating me. How had she done this? Who had put her on to this strategy?

One weekend she was staying with me at my house and I returned earlier than she expected. She had not heard me come in (it is often said that I manage to move around with a strange ability to be very quiet, popping up without warning) and I could hear her talking in the bedroom. I crept closer and through the slightly ajar door I realised she was talking to herself.

“Must not think, do not think Sophie. Just keep doing. Smile and shine, shine and smile. Keep going forward. Don’t think about it. We know what happens when you think about it. Bad things happen but we don’t do bad things do we? No. Only good things. I don’t do the thinking, he does. I need to know what he is thinking and then I can make him happy, it is only fair, he deserves it doesn’t he? Don’t think Sophie, must not do that, come on, you can do this, you always do. Do it don’t daydream.”

I stole away and then realised what I needed to do to break her.

After that, whenever she asked me what was I thinking about, I would respond by saying “Nothing.” She would look puzzled and ask again. I would repeat my answer. She then would look slightly anxious. I would turn to her and ask

“What are youthinking about”

She would try and deflect my question by asking me again or changing the subject but now I knew how to get to her. I would never tell her what I was thinking and instead pursue her to tell me what was going on inside that sugary head of hers. It worked. She became upset, angry, frustrated and anxious so I kept it going and going and going. I have no idea why it troubled her so much. Her eyes filled with panic when I kept saying nothing and then she seemed to shrink, her light dimming as I asked her about what she was really thinking. She could not cope with it. I did not work out what it was about thinking that caused her so much consternation and I did not care, all that mattered to me was being able to provoke her into giving me that emotional reaction. It seemed that too much thinking on her part was a dangerous thing indeed. The important thing was that I had worked out how to provoke the provision of negative fuel. Makes you think doesn’t it?

6 thoughts on “Tell Me What You Are Thinking

  1. MommyPino says:

    My problem is I overthink! I need to have a little bit of Sophie in me.

    1. Getting There says:

      I overthink also, Mommypino. I am told often that I need to stop.
      With Sophie, I think she thought a lot more than comes out here. Personally I am impressed with her ability to hide so much from HG. It took a lot of internal control to hide part of her weakness from him. It took him finding it by accident. If he hadn’t heard that, would he have discovered it or would she have been able to maintain her control of herself?

      1. MommyPino says:

        Hello Getting There, I agree that Sophie had an amazing internal control. I think that she also had an amazing ability to see the good in everything and that gave her the strength to withstand HG’s devaluation. It seems evident with her habit of seeing the good things in people and giving them positive compliments. So whenever HG treated her badly, she had the ability or habit of looking at the positive (or making up the positive) side of her bad experience. But it was probably starting to bother her already and she was trying to refuse to see it or think about it. So when HG was bugging her about what she thinks it was making her feel vulnerable. Her protective wall was being demolished.

        1. Getting There says:

          I agree, Mommypino, that he got through her protective wall. I think her positive thinking was very much who she is as well as her coping mechanism, as much her defense mechanism as narcissism is for HG.
          The term “daydream” caught me. For me that has a special meaning as I usually imagine in my daydreams saying things that I instinctively do not in situations. I don’t know if that is what she meant.

          I feel bad about all the feelings she must have had inside going at the same time once HG found his way to challenge her control of herself: the struggle to maintain control, the fear, the anger that has been hidden for so long, and possibly others. That one comment was the one that she should have kept in her head to truly have protected herself. I hope her defense mechanism of seeing the positive helped her recover.

  2. truthseeker6157 says:

    ‘I hope you like rabbit.’

  3. Renarde says:

    It certainly does. Sophie’s story does intrigue me. I think that might be why she foxed you for a bit as you say. You were constantly awaiting the counter move which never came. You had already made the moves in your head, through quite a few iterations and she was still wobbling!

    Puts me in mind of when I was with a group of ladies in circle. No idea how it came up but ‘thought’ did. Two popped out ‘Oh we never think, we just say whatever comes into our heads!’

    I was very perplexed by this. How had they managed to last for so long or had they just kept continually slinking under the radar?

    I do think Sophie is sweet though. Means wisdom, doesnt it? Even though it’s a pseudonym. You do like your jokes!

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