By Ox Drover
After reading Steve Becker’s article yesterday, I commented that most of the articles here on Lovefraud that could be entitled “1001 Things I Did Wrong in Dealing with a Psychopath” were the ones that applied most to my own dealings with them.
That was meant as a joke, but after I left that comment for Steve, I got to thinking about how right-on it was, joke or not, because I have done so much wrong in dealing with these people. I got my self deeper and deeper into trouble, doing the wrong things in interacting with them. Not that I was intentionally doing something mean or “wrong” per se, but I didn’t make choices that led to positive outcomes in dealing with the psychopaths in my life.
One of the reasons I did 1001 things wrong was that I didn’t know what I was dealing with. I thought I was dealing with people who had good intentions toward me, just as I had good intentions toward them. Boy, was that a wrong thing to assume. But because I assumed this error in fact about their intentions, I tried to “be reasonable” with them. That sure didn’t work. They broke their word to me time and time again. It took me a long time “to get it through my thick skull,” as MaryJo Buttafuoco said in her book, and then, when I did get it through my thick head that “Person A” couldn’t be trusted, I didn’t “generalize” that knowledge to other people who also broke their words to me over and over and over again.
Learning to generalize
Even animals can learn to generalize. A friend and I trained steer, getting them used to “something that rattled.” It didn’t matter what rattled; we would use plastic milk jugs with rocks in them, and tie those jugs to their tails so that every time they took a step, this “rattling monster” attached to them would make noise and follow them. For a little while they were scared and ran from it, but eventually they got the idea that the “rattling monster” wasn’t going to be outrun by them (it always kept up), and it wasn’t actually going to hurt them. Eventually they decided anything that rattled and made noise was harmless.
With one set of young steers my friend trained though, if you got them used to a white jug with rocks in it, and they weren’t afraid of it any more, if you used a yellow jug, they would go back to SQUARE ONE PANIC AGAIN, with each tiny change in the “monster.” They didn’t “generalize” very well and were always hyper-alert and on guard. He eventually got them so they were “dynamite proof,” so he could take them out in public without being afraid they would panic at the first sound they weren’t used to, or the first loud retort from a fire cracker, but he and I both thought for a long time they might not ever generalize enough to be safe from panicking and running away out in public.
Abusive behavior
I think in a way I also didn’t “generalize” the abusive behaviors of the various psychopaths I encountered. When a boss would be dishonest and verbally abusive to me, I was upset and “panicked” at the unexpected behavior, trying to figure out how to not get hurt, but when a relative would do this same kind of behavior I, again, panicked and didn’t realize that the “rattle” was just the same kind of “monster” that I had encountered with the other psychopath. Of course I didn’t realize then that the psychopathic “monsters” had a name or that their lack of empathy and their damage was definitely destructive, unlike a milk jug with a few rocks in it.
I not only tried to be “reasonable” with the psychopaths, but I also tried to placate them, to make them see, by being extra nice to them and not “bowing up and fighting back,” that I wasn’t trying to hurt them. I wanted to be “friends” and get along.
Of course, when a prey animal tries to get along with a predator animal we know what happens, don’t we? The prey animal gets the worst end of the deal. Yep, I did get the worst end of the deal trying to “make nice” with the psychopaths, but again, I didn’t learn that a psychopath is a psychopath is a psychopath is a predator! Rather than generalize this hurtful behavior to a class of people, I saw each one as an individual person with “reasons” and “excuses” and the “potential to change” and “see the light” when there was no chance that they were going to have any empathy, much less sympathy, for the pain they caused me or anyone else. They didn’t give a hoot how badly they hurt me as long as they got what they wanted.
Wanted to get along
I also didn’t really see what it was that they actually wanted. I didn’t want to cause anyone any pain, I wanted to love people and get along with them and share good things and help folks out. This is what I thought that everyone wanted. What they actually did want, however, was to control me, humiliate me, and to get me to provide them with their own twisted idea of a relationship—all take on their part and all give on mine.
Just like the hyper-alert steers, I didn’t feel comfortable, and was always jumpy, expecting something to hit me, but I wasn’t sure where it would come from, so each time a psychopath lied to me, stole from me, took advantage of me, I was totally surprised again and again.
Eventually that young pair of steers got to where they were not surprised by anything in the way of a loud noise and they calmed down and became a reliable pair of working steers (oxen). But it was only because they learned to move from the individual to the general concepts of what would or would not hurt them. They learned that a little yappy dog running at their feet was not a danger, but that a large aggressive dog was something that they should kick at or hook at with their horns. They learned that the sound of a fire cracker or a car back firing, or a cannon shooting at a historical reenactment, wasn’t going to hurt them and they didn’t need to pay it any attention. They learned to distinguish between harmless noises like people yelling or laughing and their drover saying “get up” and meaning it!
I’m not sure why these particular steers were so difficult to train. Perhaps it was because the breed was the wilder Spanish cattle from Mexico whose ancestors that had not jumped every time there was a noise in the brush had been taken out of the gene pool by the wolves, coyotes and mountain lions, so only the “jumpy” ones were left.
Changed my response
I’m also not sure why I didn’t generalize from the abusive behavior I endured over and over, or change the failed attempts to get it to stop by doing repeatedly something that had not worked. Someone once said, “insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” I sure did enough of that for two lifetimes. Now I have changed the way I respond to abusive behavior. I am learning to distinguish the difference between “harmless rattles” and “real threats” from predators.
I have made some general “rules” to guide me in my differentiation of what is “harmless” and what is “threatening.” First off, it depends on how close to me the threat is. A rattle snake at 10 yards from me is no threat at all. I know he could hurt me if he was closer, but I will not let him get close enough to strike me, so I don’t have to fear him. If that same rattle snake is 3 feet from me, I take a different view of the potential for harm from the same snake, and react in a different way than I do to the one who is 30 feet away.
If a person who is not “close to me” lies to me, it probably isn’t going to be much of a danger to me, unless it is a big business deal. I don’t fear that lie from someone I don’t really have any connection with, I just notice (like with the rattle snake at a distance) that the person is dishonest, I don’t want him to get closer to me.
If a person who is “close to me” lies, that has a much bigger potential for harm to me, both emotionally and otherwise. Therefore I will move away from that dishonest person, put some distance between me and them so that if they do strike, they won’t be close enough to hit me or do any significant damage.
Threat or benign
Once I have determined that a person, animal, or object is a potential threat rather than a benign creature, I will keep a wary eye on it. I won’t make excuses for the potential damage, and once it has tried to hurt me, it won’t have another chance. I no longer trust anything or anyone without assessing the potential damage that could be done.
Cynical? No, I don’t think so, just cautious. I don’t venture into the world like there are no dangers out there, no evil people. I do know now that there are some evil creatures in the world, some potential threats to my life, sanity and health. But I no longer walk in terror, because I have realized what the evil creatures are. I am no longer terrified of the “rattling milk jugs,” but I give a wide berth to the “poison snakes.”
I’ve finally personally learned from the “1001e things I did wrong in dealing with psychopaths.”
mich0101,
the children, depending on gender and age, have some awareness of who the father is. The unfortunate thing is that they are affected by it and it does shape their personalities, sometimes they become spaths too.
If you can have your kids avoid his kids, it would be better for them. The influence should be cut off as much as possible.
Also, it’s very likely that he was taking medicine for ED but he didn’t let you know. Sex for them is about gaining control over us. My exspath actually referred to sex as “maintenance”. I had no idea why he said that, but now I do. Sex was all about maintaining control. It’s a chore they have to do to keep the wifey in line.
I thought he was joking but he wasn’t, I was just a chore to him. sick, sick, sick.
Hi Mich0101,
After careful consideration, one of the last things I did was ask my spath for $ to pay for STD screening. I am uninsured and wanted him to know I felt he had responsibility to do so. He did…mad as hell, like I care! NOT.
It was probably one of the first self-protective things I did since meeting him. I still struggled with letting go- proof that I was so attached, that evn though I knew he had been with others…it did not register yet…that the whole “love OF MY LIFE” was a ruse.( more like victim of the year LOL) Mental registration took 6 months post leaving him, and finding-reading LF.
Wish you well…and hopefully clean. Peace
Blue
Skylar, there is so much truth to what you say. His oldest wants nothing to do with him but his youngest daughter is 13 and is just like him. She appears to have no conscious. She has stolen large amounts of money from him and thought nothingn of it when she got caught. My daughter wants nothing to do with him or his kids and my son is to young to know. And you are right, he must have been taking some kind of meds to be so sexually active. I have not seen him in 2 months and up until last Monday, he texted me daily. His chats were more and more sexually charged then I had ever seen. He tried so hard to get me back with sex. I am so glad I never caved in.
Blue, thanks, and I do have an apt for tomorrow. I am scared but praying that all is well in that aspect. Hard enough to heal from this without having a potential health issue from it. I am not going to ask him to pay, I dont ever want to talk to him again. I also will be going back to therapy next week. This is a nightmare.
My goodness everything on this site is sooooo familiar – my life right in front of me….odd and true!
Hi Melanie,
Welcome and so sorry we all have to meet like this :(.
Only two months after it ended, and I can see how true this is! Thank you for putting it into words. The best thing I ever did was reject his offers (repeatedly) of “friendship,” and going full no contact. It broke me out of his control, and ended his game. I got out lucky- he’s blackmailed others before, and then tried to continue milking them.
Progprof2011 – Welcome to Lovefraud. Yes – all those mistakes that we make are because we expect them to behave like normal human beings – and they’re not.
Tomorrow I have an appointment with a social worker…I am a senior citizen and have been used. Now I have a touch of nausea and anxiety about meeting
the social worker in person…we had a ten min phone talk because I am too scared to file for divorce because I was threatened that I would have the guilt
of causing his suicide….I have never been physically hit by him but the
verbal and emotional abuse are stressful.even today he pulled a crazy mental
control tactic on me when I got the Billie Holiday movie to watch…told me
he likes Betty Smith better and gave me that how dumb are you look…but i
never knew a Betty Smith blues singer,,,,finally I said Bessie Smith and
how she knew Ma Rainey….I really know music and he even told me a man
who plays by ear in the key of c was better on the piano than me??
Even asked me if I would sell my piano?
How did I get into this mess at my age? my sister was not speaking to me
and he even said the last woman he was with also was isolated from her
sister….that is the vulture signal to get prey.
when he first met me I was always given compliments and praised so that
was the hook to capture the next victim.
True facts I have really learned here…I never buy wine for him and when
he gives me cash to buy his wine it is always a little less than the full price.He gets marijuana from some deal I do not know…the social worker
said the brain is affected from mj…no way to ever be friends with him.
I wasted energy and friends to be with him.
Oldcoco – I am so sorry for your experience. Welcome to Lovefraud. About him threatening to commit suicide – it is a typical sociopathic control tactic. It means one of two things – either he is bluffing and just wants to make you feel guilty, so you can ignore him. Or, he is serious and has a mental issue that you can’t fix, so call 911. Usually, they’re bluffing.
Hi, I’m new here. I am a 48 year old woman who got out from her abusive adopted mother only 3 years ago. Where are some articles that will help me understand psychopath mothers? Also, I think my brother is one, but I want to read up and make sure he’s not. I am in therapy, but 44 years of being screwed up is not gonna be solved in 3 years, I know. Help?!
Welcome Tricorvus, very glad you found your way here to LF . There is an extensive section on Female Sociopaths ( pretty much the same meaning as psychopath), what I found helpful when I first came here 6 months ago was to read articles but not comments, as I initially just needed to become familiar with what sociopathy means, what a psychopath is and so on. So I’d say spend a few days just working through the Female Sociopaths articles and post anything you like on your experiences in any comments thread you like, and someone will see it pop up in Recent Comments.
Tricorvus – Welcome to Lovefraud. We have many articles that may help you. Along with the “Female Sociopaths” section that Tea Light suggested, you may want to read the “Sociopaths and families” articles. Many are about sociopathic spouses, but some are also about parents.