Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following email from a reader called “Adelade.” Her previous posts are “When life ain’t fair” and “This is the time for me to learn who I am.”
Having grown up in a dysfunctional alcoholic environment, I spent just about 35 years involved in one “program” or another, and I was able to strongly identify with my “inner child” after one particularly grueling session with my counseling therapist. I could clearly see how my emotional development had been abruptly arrested during my childhood, and that I had developed into an adult whose every decision and action had been based upon the need for acceptance, validation, appreciation, and approval. Fear of “dysapproval,” “dyslike,” and abandonment were, among other things, the driving force throughout my lifetime.
Last week, when the discussions were flowing from new LoveFraud readers to the long-timers, I saw in myself a step-by-step process of healing that directly reflected that philosophy of nearly all 12-Step Programs, from addictions to co-dependency. I mean, isn’t that pretty much how we all were duped? We were addicted to trusting someone else with our very lives?
So, long before I made the discovery about the exspath, I had begun teaching myself how to speak and think “truthfully.” Speaking “truthfully” translates into plain, honest, no-sugar-coating speech. If I learned how to speak the truth without malice, perhaps I wouldn’t be such an easy target for sociopaths.
I digress. Back to the spur-of-the-moment 12 Steps of Recovery from LoveFraud:
Step #1: We admit that we had involved ourselves with a sociopath and that our lives had become a living hell.
What I believe that this meant was recognizing the glaring Truth: whomever the sociopath that we are involved with might be, we can no longer ignore the absolute fact that we have been used, abused, damaged, and discarded. It is a fact. It is a Truth. And, it cannot be denied if we have found our way to LoveFraud.com.
Step #2: Make the decision to sever our toxic relationship.
We have realized what we were associated with and we have made the choice to save ourselves, our finances, our sexuality, our system of beliefs, and our very souls. We have made the conscious, cognizant, and lifesaving decision to end the toxic association, for our own sakes.
Step #3: Admit to someone who “gets it” that we had been in a dire situation and need help.
Whether that “someone” is a counseling therapist, attorney, abuse hotline intake worker, or the “family” that we have on LoveFraud.com, we make the choice – the conscious decision – to reach out through our tears, our terror, our horror, our fears, and our despair and grasp the hands of Life. We need help – we need help – we need help because we do not have the tools and techniques to survive our experiences on our own.
Step #4: Recognize that we are a part of a Greater Universe.
When we are just beginning to survive our sociopath experiences, we tend to follow human nature and become quite self-absorbed. We believe that our experiences were the worst that could ever happen to anyone. Until, that is, we read stories like OxDrover’s, Witsend, Darwinsmom, Donna Andersen’s, and others. Yes, our pain is real, and the earth is still going to spin on her axis regardless of our agony. Whether we choose to place a “spiritual perspective” on this, or not, is strictly a personal choice.
Step #5: Agree to maintain NO CONTACT for the remainder of our lives.
Now, I realize that there are many of us who share custody with a sociopath and, for that reason, “No Contact” is a very difficult rule to self-impose. Well, for those of us who do NOT have children with a sociopath, stop trying to make sense. Stop trying to “talk” to them. Stop pretending that they’re speaking the truth. No river of tears, no impassioned pleas, no personal sacrifices, and no amount of money will ever “fix” what ails a sociopath. They will not care about your pain. They DO not care about your pain. And, they never HAVE cared about you. This Truth is a fact, and it is irrefutable.
Step #6: Make amends to all people that we had harmed, directly or indirectly, as a result of our sociopath entanglements, except when to do so would injure them, or others.
Yes, we were victimized. And, yes”¦.we never asked to be victimized. But, we must look beyond our own damages and recognize that our friends, family, and inner circle experienced collateral damage, as well. We’re not apologizing FOR the sociopath. We are apologizing that the sociopath exists. Do we use the word, “sociopath?” We’re not qualified, but we sure as hell can say that they “fit the profile OF a sociopath.”
Step #7: Recognize our own frailties, vulnerabilities, and boundary failures and made efforts to repair and forgive ourselves for our mistakes.
The topic of “forgiveness” is a volatile one. There seems to be no grey area – either you forgive and heal, or you don’t and you stagnate. I disagree with both views. Forgiveness of “Self” is a moral, ethical, and emotional imperative. We were targeted, lured, and hooked by an organism that feels no empathy or remorse for damages that they create. We are not at fault with the exception that we trusted such a thing. So, we must forgive ourselves, FIRST. All the rest will come as it does, or not.
Step #8: Engage in open, frank, and truthful discussions about our experiences, how we were affected, and how our issues affected others.
Speaking about what happened to us, how it happened, and how it affected our friends, family, coworkers, and the rest of our inner circles is a part of the healing process. We speak truthfully and openly, but we keep in mind that “other people” often “don’t get it” because they have not experienced it themselves, or they are in denial. And, we are not responsible for anyone else’s issues but our own. We speak using facts – my counselor provided me with a sanity-saving mantra: feelings are not facts.
Step #9: Make every human effort to educate ourselves and others about the healing processes of sociopath entanglements.
By “educating ourselves,” I mean that we memorize and ingrain the Red Flags, and the Yellow Flags of sociopath behavior. The mechanics, studies, and statistics are utterly meaningless with regard to the healing process. And, the steps of our healing processes are not bound by a specific timeline. We must experience our healing and speak of our positive steps even as we re-examine how we were duped.
Step # 10: Allow ourselves to experience the grieving process in a healthy, productive way.
There are stages of grieving, whether it’s grieving the loss of a loved one, kicking a substance addiction, or losing the illusion that a sociopath has fabricated. We must be willing to identify and experience those stages with courage and acceptance. It’s OKAY to be angry! It’s OKAY to be sad! It’s OKAY to feel despair! But, we have to grab ourselves by our shorthairs and drag ourselves forward – nothing within the human condition prepares us for the carnages of sociopath entanglements. It is OUR time, now – our time to heal, to realize our own potential, to realize our own value, and to take our place as advocates for ourselves.
Step #11: Remain accountable for our own actions and decisions.
We can look to our sociopath experiences and say, “This is what happened to me and why I lost everything that I ever had.” What we cannot truthfully say is, “Because I was victimized by a sociopath, I am going to make stupid choices, bad decisions, and harm other people in my anger.” We may not excuse bad behavior on bad behavior. If we are wrong, or we’ve harmed another person (deliberately, or unintentionally), we stand accountable. It is not a mortal sin to be human. It IS “sinful” to refuse to acknowledge our own humanity.
Step #12: Continue to maintain our boundaries, NO CONTACT, and support and encouragement for ourselves, and for others.
We do not alter our boundaries on a person-by-person-basis. Our boundary failures are what allowed the sociopath into our domain, in the first place, and we may be wiser, but we will likely be hyper-vulnerable – more so than the “average” person. NO CONTACT is non-negotiable, even in situations of shared custody. We do not speak to the sociopath unless it involves the immediate safety/security/well-being of the shared child. All others are non-entities – they do not exist – they are not among the living – they are, in essence, deceased. We encourage ourselves AND others regardless of what our own issues might be. Through support and encouragement of others who are unfortunate members of the Sociopath Survivor Club, we are healed as we assist others in their healing processes.
So, that’s what it is, I guess. For whatever reason, I ran down the list of 12 Steps to the best of my recollection and attempted to put a LoveFraud.com spin on them. In writing these out with their explanations, I’ve taken another centimeter forward on my healing path.
I thank Donna Andersen, OxDrover, Mel Carnegie, and each and every one of you on this site for helping me along. We’re all going to push through our experiences at our own speed. And, may you each find the most sincere blessings of comfort on your own healing paths.
Darwinsmom and Kim Frederick, thank you for your takes on the symbolism. Both interpretations make sense, especially when the shawl fell over my head, I remember thinking to myself that the tassels were absolutely beautiful workmanship, but that having my head covered was absolutely hindering me in every way and I shook it back.
I am trying to protect myself, I think. And, the shawl was warm and of good craftsmanship.
And, the exspath was also briefly in the dream as the person that I had loved and trusted – but, I reminded myself that this person was only an illusion and that I had to stay as far away from that illusion as possible. “His” cat was also in the dream – she was in need of something, and I remember telling myself that she wasn’t my responsibility, anymore. I was sad to leave her with him, but I had my own things that needed my attention.
I know that this thread isn’t about dream interpretation, but I wanted to throw the symbolisms out there while they were fresh in my head.
Thanks so much and brightest blessings
Thank you so much for your helping…
I have no contact with the sociopath for almost 2 weeks, I know it’s too early but for the first time I feel that I’m starting to recover. I have finally accepted the fact that he had never had any feelings about me which was the most difficult part and I don’t miss him or want to be with him anymore. I don’t cry every night or want to die like I used to either… but it still hurts so much… I can’t stop feeling ashamed about the fact that I had trusted him and told him all those things about myself. He knows everything about me, all my weaknesses… I feel so ashamed that I trusted someone like that… I feel like my soul was left naked…
I can’t stop thinking that now he is lying to other women and they believe him too… It seems like I am the only one who knows the ugly truth and everyone else seems to like his fake persona and admire him.
I wonder, will they ever know the truth about him? It seems so unfair that he had caused me all that pain and now everything seems to work great for him. The last time we talked he told me that everything goes fantastic in his life. Is that possible? He has no job and still lives with his parents, can he really believe that his life is that great? :/
I’m sorry if I’m asking too many questions, I feel confused.
Ms_Snowhite says:
It’s all a lie. The spaths biggest con he’s running is on his self. His whole life is an illusion. Things seem well because the spath has the ability to transform events in his own mind. And act as if that is true. His whole existence is to maintain the illusion that he is the greatest. So he’s living with his parents. To him he doesn’t have to pay rent or the bills. He doesn’t see that for most people that moving back into their parents house would be a major disaster and they are only doing it for lack of another option. He’s never wrong and everything happens as he wants. At least in his own mind.
The other part most people do not look passed the surface. Act confident. They’ll treat you as if you are. Go around smiling. People will smile with you. But it doesn’t mean that you really are happy. Normal people feel then act. Spaths act to feel. Acting as if and being able to generate the emotion is two different things.
Your applying your rules about life to him and not seeing him for what he is, a lie. See he’s happy then his life must be good. “The last time we talked he told me that everything goes fantastic in his life.” A lie. He has no job, lives with his parents. Not the end of the world but very depressing. A normal guy would have said I’m fine but I’ve had to move back home. Looking for a job so I can get out of this. Well it sucks but we do what we got to do sometimes. How are you…………
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2012/07/30/after-the-sociopath-make-a-decision-to-recover/comment-page-2/#comment-167196
“It seems so unfair that he had caused me all that pain and now everything seems to work great for him.”
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2012/07/30/after-the-sociopath-make-a-decision-to-recover/comment-page-3/#comment-167560
My 2 Cents
Spoon, thank you, I have read the articles and they are very helpful. You are right, his life is an illusion, he never had realistic goals or a permanent job. He thinks it’s o.k being that way, he is perfect and everyone owns him.
I can’t believe that I fall for someone like that…
I have blocked his Facebook page so I won’t visit his profile anymore. Just like the first article said one step at a day.
Thank you,
Blessings.
Dear all, I have booked yet more counselling on Truthspeak’s advice. The anti depressants were anaesthetising it for 6 months… all of what you all say rings so absolutely true. Whatever their particular sociopathic shafting to us was, what disturbs us most profoundly is that the whole thing was a total lie, a fake, an illusion….I thought I was living the most beautiful, intense, true connection with another human being that I had ever experienced. To deconstruct that and dismantle it now, knowing that they felt absolutely nothing, meant not one word of what they said, is beyond any vestige of our previously normal comprehension of humanity. We have so much to learn from this. I believe we are all beautiful women…but now in our generation thankfully more informed, more supported and thereby empowered. Just imagine women in past generations who went through this ( and they clearly did according to statistics and research) but never understood what happened…imagine that pain and bewilderment in isolation….no insight, no community of people who knew exactly. Think how all this information has helped you come to terms or at least make some sense of it. When I found Martha Stot’s book, ‘The sociopath next door’ every page healed me, validated my trauma, gave me explanation…that I would never get from him. It nearly unhinged me….emotional carnage as Truthspeak said. That loss of will to live…the searing, suffocating pain in my chest, endless nights of no sleep, tears that never stopped…..no other relationship could ever have prepared us for this. I think I may have turned a little corner thanks to this site…I spent 7 months conducting a rather frenzied smear campaign against him….thankfully his previous treatment of his much beleaguered ex-wife gave me a little head start. Yet I know now I have shocked some people and given them every reason to avoid me as a serious lunatic. I also simply could not stop sending him hate mail…it was an absolute imperative…pointless, futile, demeaning…my head knew this. Somehow I thought if I’d had such connection with him for a year, surely he would ‘get’ my pain. He even did send a long, pompous, self-pitying apology and claims to be in therapy for his behaviour…but I can’t buy any of it. I sent him weekly e-mails addressed to a fictitious character from me, another fictitious character. It must stop now…it was a bitter, terrible, devastating experience…but it must have happened for a reason. To make us even better people… Today the sun is shining here..a rare treat for us. Happy weekend to all.
Ms_Snowhite
Hi,
The other part is he didn’t do it to you because of you. He did what he did because of who he is. And yes “he is lying to other women…” Because that is what he does.
Glad the articles helped. And No Contact is the only way to deal with these kinds of people.
Enjoy the weekend.
Thank you Spoon, but I think that I had ruined everything today… I had sent a message to one of his new victims warning her about him. I didn’t told her that he is a sociopath but I let her know that he is a liar and has stolen my money in the past. Although I said the truth and I thought I was doing the right thing at that time, I feel horrible right now, like if I did something I shouldn’t do, like if I did something bad to him… It makes me feel very anxious too. I had NC with him for 12 days and now I feel that I ruin everything by doing that… I should focus on my self and not the other women.
Enjoy your weekend too!
MoMac, good for you, dear one. After my marriage collapsed, I was in sessions every week. The only reason that I didn’t engage in my own smear campaign was, to be brutally honest, that I had been on this site for a couple of years beforehand. Was it an immediate impulse? Oh, HELL YES, it was! I fought this impulse on a moment-by-moment basis, and the first thing that I did was to disconnect myself with “mutual” friends and his coworkers.
Having said that, I still couldn’t stop telling people that I believed were my “friends” about precisely what I had discovered, and what he had actually done. Then, I began to observe what I was saying in connection with other people’s responses. Today, I do my level best to keep my mouth shut about my feelings, my experiences, and all of the rest.
Particularly with FaceBook pages and other sites where I can easily be identified, I don’t post a single thing (not one thing) about my current situation, or my divorce action.
It’s a farking temptation, to be sure, because I want validation. But, I have to learn how to validate myself, by myself. I find validation on this site and in counseling, but I have to continue learning that other people just “don’t get it” and never will, unless (and, until) they experience the same situation, themselves.
As for antidepressants, I took them for 2 years with the first exspath. I thought that I was crazy because he caused me to feel that I was, and often told me that I was. The medications did only one thing: kept me on an even emotional keel. The medications did not alter the dynamics of the marriage, nor did they make the abuser stop perpetrating his abuses. I don’t believe (IMHO) that antidepressants should be prescribed without a tandem course of counseling therapy, in just about every situation.
Good for you, MoMac. You obviously have the desire and strength to heal yourself, and you will. You’ve taken the first leap by going No Contact. The rest isn’t going to be pleasant, but no healing process is. There is no New Age light and love approach to healing from socipathic entanglements. It’s harsh, painful, and demanding. But, you will do this in very good order.
Brightest blessings to you!
Ms_Snowhite, you didn’t do anything bad to him, at all. You only harmed yourself, temporarily.
It is not my intention to come off harsh or mean, but there are questions that you might want to ask yourself:
* What did I expect to accomplish by contacting this woman?
* What do I truly have control over?
* Do I want to continue giving the spath the power to destroy me, even by proxy?
* If another woman had tried to “warn” me about the spath, would I have listened?
* Do I realize that my attempts to “warn” other potential victims gives validity to the spath’s claims that I’m some crazy, bitter, psycho-b*tch?
We go No Contact for “a reason.” That “reason” is to sever all emotional, physical, spiritual, sexual, and financial ties with a toxic and malicious entity that is encased in a human form. Any contact – third party or otherwise – is contact. Viewing profiles, talking to “mutual” friends, or text messaging new girlfriends/boyfriends is still contact.
I made a choice against every impulse that I felt, and I have not spoken to the exspath in many, many months. I have no desire to. I have no desire to “warn” his playmates. I still have a desire to tell everyone in this grotty little town about what he is and what he did – you bet I do – and, I fight that impulse EVERY day.
Ms_Snowhite, you’ll either make the choice to walk away and break all contacts, or you won’t. It’s your choice, and nobody else can make that choice for you. But, I’ll guarantee you this: if you make the choice to go No Contact on every level, you’ll never “feel” as if you’ve done something awful, again, with regard to the spath. I also guarantee that, one year from now, if you choose to maintain No Contact, you will be a completely different person and he will no longer be a toxic obsession for you.
My brightest blessings to you
Ms Snowwhite. The woman I rescued has thanked me repeatedly for doing so….But he had actually already hurt her a year previously….and she’d been married to a SP before that. So she was immediately able to walk away with her head held high, recognising him at once for what he is. Unfortunately most women will just think you are crazy, bitter, obsessed…as much as we want to save ANY other sister from the same horrific ordeal, our first mission is to recover ourselves. I think it’s probably not advisable to contact her. She may come to you in the future for some answers. he will continue to destroy lives as he always has done. But that can’t be your problem. You have yourself to fix, a life of truth and real love to live. His sick game is no longer your concern cos you’re OUT! Don’t beat your self up about it…I think you and I are at about the same stage of this…maybe I’m a little further on. Big hug