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.
We will teach these spathy butts that they don’t matter by teaching ourselves that we do matter. 🙂
A few days ago I was enjoying a cappuccino in my favourite cafe and when I went to pay, a stranger (known to staff as Sergio) had already paid for mine!
Well u either “got it” or u ain’t! 🙂
Ms_snowhite,
The reason I mentioned my Journal in my last post was because, in writing all those horrible things, I saw them in black and white. Not through the rose colored glasses I used to have on. I realized that the person I thought I loved did not exist. It was a fantasy life. The spath was not the person I had envisioned or thought I loved. He was evil and never loved me, just used me. This made me MAD. It was only when the anger started that the pain started to go away. How dare he treat me like this. I too went through the recriminations of not being “good” enough for him. I was the best thing that ever happened to him and he discarded me like an old pair of shoes. Mine also has a new girlfriend. At first it hurt, but then I started feeling sorry for her because she has no idea of who or what she is involved with. Someday she will know, and if she ever finds this site I will welcome her, because she is also a victim.
You are a bright beautiful person. I don’t know you personally but this is what I see in your writings. You did not deserve to be treated this way. It was nothing you did or didn’t do. It had nothing to do with the way you looked. It was all about him. He is a predator that goes through life hurting people. You can not change a person’s inner core, no matter how pretty or how good you are to them. You must get this into your head. It was him!!!!!
I know that right now it feels hopeless, but it is not. That is why I pray to St. Jude the patron saint of hopeless causes. Please hang in there. I promise it will get better. It will take a while and a lot of soul searching. You are worthy of God’s love that’s all that matters. Your spath was NOT worthy of your love. Just try and think he is not worth of one more minute of your time and energy and soon it will be true.
Keep your chin up and your heart protected.
http://www.csj.org/studyindex/studymindctr/study_mindctr_singer.htm
Dr. Margaret T. Singer’s 6 Conditions for Thought Reform
Keep the person unaware of what is going on and how she or he is being changed a step at a time. Potential new members are led, step by step, through a behavioral-change program without being aware of the final agenda or full content of the group. The goal may be to make them deployable agents for the leadership, to get them to buy more courses, or get them to make a deeper commitment, depending on the leader’s aim and desires.
Control the person’s social and/or physical environment; especially control the person’s time. Through various methods, newer members are kept busy and led to think about the group and its content during as much of their waking time as possible.
Systematically create a sense of powerlessness in the person. This is accomplished by getting members away from the normal social support group for a period of time and into an environment where the majority of people are already group members. The members serve as models of the attitudes and behaviors of the group and speak an in-group language.
Manipulate a system of rewards, punishments and experiences in such a way as to inhibit behavior that reflects the person’s former social identity. Manipulation of experiences can be accomplished through various methods of trance induction, including leaders using such techniques as paced speaking patterns, guided imagery, chanting, long prayer sessions or lectures, and lengthy meditation sessions.
Manipulate a system of rewards, punishments, and experiences in order to promote learning the group’s ideology or belief system and group-approved behaviors. Good behavior, demonstrating an understanding and acceptance of the group’s beliefs, and compliance are rewarded while questioning, expressing doubts or criticizing are met with disapproval, redress and possible rejection. If one expresses a question, he or she is made to feel that there is something inherently wrong with them to be questioning.
Put forth a closed system of logic and an authoritarian structure that permits no feedback and refuses to be modified except by leadership approval or executive order. The group has a top-down, pyramid structure. The leaders must have verbal ways of never losing. (Singer, 1995).
More at the link
Stormy,
it is exactly the same here. I try to remind myself that the person that I loved did not exist. He was only a mirror of my hopes and dreams.
Talking about evil. I didn’t believed in Evil before I met with the spath. When I first met him I thought that he was the most amazing man. He had an angelic face, he was caring, honest and true. The most important I was the woman of his dreams, he wanted to get married and have a family together…
Then, one day the illusion had started to fade, the words didn’t fit with his actions and I felt confused most of the time…
I will never forget the first time that I saw his angelic face turning into a devils mask. I was shocked. That was not the man that I loved. The expression on that face, the only way that I could describe it: Pure Evil. It was like it came out straight from a scene of a horror movie.
I feel the same that you felt back then Stormy, I feel mad at him. I was the best thing that had happened in his life too. I know that most of men would give anything to have a beautiful, intelligent woman who would love and take care of them… but not the spath… The spath was hanging around with cheap women, making it sure that I would find out and break my heart. That’s how I lost my self confidence.
I so much want to accept the fact that it was him and not me. I was always there trying to understand him, being patient and caring, giving him all of my love. I know I did everything that I could and yet it was not enough.
At first, when I left him I felt strong but as the days pass I feel more helpless and lost. I can’t have my innocence back. Before the spath I used to believe in good in people, now I have to be suspicious with every man that I meet in the future.
Thank you for giving me hope, I haven’t heard about St Jude, I pray in God and Angels, from now on I will pray in St Jude too.
I hope to be where you are now Stormy, I know that I have a long way to walk though… I’m going to start counselling this week too, I hope it will help ’cause I feel completely lost.
Ms_Snowhite,
Our stories are very similar but, I left my spath, moved 400 miles away and told him I didn’t love him anymore. I was fine for a while but when I didn’t hear from him anymore I went into a panic state. I could not understand this feeling because I left him. That is when I fould LF and began to understand the addiction he had caused in me. If I could talk to him I was fine. The minute he cut me off I felt like I was going insane. That’s when I sought counseling.
It was here on LF that I began to understand the web he cast over me. The manipulation. the love bombing and the following trauma it caused me. I was addicted to him. My counselor did not understand at first what I was talking about. But she did give me several points to help me get through it.
In your last post it sounds like this is exactly what you are going through. Felt fine at first and then INSANITY! It sounds to me that you are addicted exactly like I was (am). It takes a lot of work to get over any addiction but it can be overcome.
Give your counselor a few visits. After my first session I felt that she didn’t “get it” at all. But on my second session she started pulling things together. A lot of my problem went back to the abandonment, self image as a child, and a few other things. She had me work on each one individually until I had a clearer picture of how it affected me and my relationship to my spath. My next, and hopefully last appointment is next week.
Keep it one day at a time!
http://shrink4men.wordpress.com/2010/03/12/abusive-women-cults-brainwashing-and-deprogramming-part-i/
Michael Langone, PhD has compiled a list of cult victim traits that are similar to the traits of abuse victims. The similar traits are:
Dependency. An intense desire for a sense of belonging, approval, acceptance and a fear of being alone.
Unassertiveness. Non-confrontational, people-pleasers who are reluctant to question authority.
Gullibility. A willingness to believe what another person says without critically thinking it through or challenging it.
Naive Idealism. The belief that everyone is good, has some redeeming quality or can change for the better.
Desire for Spiritual Meaning. The belief that life has a “higher purpose” or that everything happens for a reason. Sometimes people are just abusive jerks and there’s no deeper meaning attached to it, but good targets keep searching for it despite all evidence to the contrary.
Stormy, it is true, the same thing was happening to me. Every time I talked with the spath (even if it was only through mails lately) and he said that he loved me it felt good, but that was only temporary… Then, when I was alone, I thought about all the bad things that he did to me and I always regretted it for talking to him.
I had left many times before but I always got back trying to make him understand that what he did hurt me. Now I know that he is not like us, he has no feelings, so every time I tried to talk to him he thought that I was attacking him and he always had to win the conversation by lying and manipulating but never by telling the truth. The worst thing is that he doesn’t seem to understand why I left. It seems like I suddenly got crazy and I decided to leave… Not his fault! Of course 🙂
I am addicted to him, yes, and I have the same symptoms that I had when I quit smoking. Anxiety, fast heart beating, insomnia… I live the insanity away from him, but I know that if I stayed things would get only worst and I could only lose my identity. So, I have to stay away from him at any cost.
I miss the sexual chemistry that we had. I never had that connection with anyone else and I doubt I would have it with anyone in the future, but I know that he used it as a way to control me and the thought of it – that he was just playing a role, makes me sick.
That’s my “fear” too, that the counselor won’t understand that I was involved with a sociopath, but I will try to explain to her and I hope that it will help!
Brightest blessings to you Stormy, and I hope with all of my heart that soon the stormy days would be behind you and seem only like a bad distant dream…
Ms_Snowhite,
Have you read the signs of a sociopath? That article brought me to LF. It was on yahoo, and the only reason I read it was because my girlfriend (who is a nurse) told me years ago that my spath actually was a sociopath. Here is a link:
http://shine.yahoo.com/love-sex/is-your-new-sweetheart-a-sociopath-2441892.html
Guess you will have to cut and paste because it does not show up as a link.
When I read this and my spath hit all of the symptoms I was shocked, then I realized it was true. The sex part is because of there excess testosterone. Mine had it at first but now that I look back at it he was not that good. It was quantity instead of quality.
When you go to your counselor, of course let then know that you are recovering from a breakup with your boyfriend but don’t tell them he is a sociopath. That is a medical diagnosis and it gets their hackles up because you are a lay person. It is best to say that your boyfriend shows all the symptoms of being a sociopath and you want their opinion and help in severing the relationship.
I sure hope it goes well. And as I said before, make sure you give it a couple of visits for the counselor to “get it”. If after then they don’t understand I would look for another one.
You are in my prayers.
Ms_Snowhite
In one of your posts you mentioned that English was not your native language. Where are you located at?