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.
Garfy,
Welcome to our “club” and sorry that you qualify for “membership” in this…but, the GOOD news is that there IS LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL.
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER and there is a lot of knowledge here at this site to help you heal and regain your power! Lots of support too.
Keep on reading and learning! and Again, welcome. God bless.
I’m writing here after a while…
I think that this site is my last hope that I could ever get over the pain the spath has left me with…
I haven’t talked to him since Augoust. I kept the no contact for almost 3 months…
For a while it seemed I was getting better, I wouldn’t cry every day anymore and I had started to take care of myself again…
Then, before a month, I got on his online profile again…
I don’t know why I did it. I guess I wanted to make it sure that I got over him and that he never loved me. I saw him flirting online with other women and I was glad that I didn’t felt any pain anymore…
For a while it was ok. I thought I was finally ready to move on and I continued with the No Contact.
Until a couple of weeks ago, when I suddenly felt the need to tell him how much he hurt me. I posted him a message and I got ignored… Once again.
It made me feel stupid and fall back to depression.
Now, I’m back to checking his online profile… It makes me feel pathetic and desperate. I feel worst than ever before. I’m crying many hours during the day, I have been drinking and I have suicidal thoughts…
I don’t know why I feel that way. For some time everything seemed getting better for me… Now the pain seems unbearable and it gets worst with each day…
All I can think is that he used me and now he is probably happy with his life. He even got friends with his exes (the ones that he told me that he hated). So, that makes me seem like the bad woman, the crazy one, and he is the best guy in the world.
I feel hopeless. I was closed to myself for so many years and when I finally decided to open my heart and show my true self to someone, to share my hopes and dreams with him and leave my lonely world behind, he turned out to be a spath…
Now he is happy laughing with his girlfriends when I feel more desperate and lost than ever before. Watching his happy pics makes me cry… It makes me wonder where is Justice here… Since everyone seems to like him, it makes me even wonder if I deserved to be treated that way…
Ms_Snowhite:
Can I tell you that I felt EXACTLY like you. I could have written your post that’s how much you sound like me. I hope that what I am going to say will help you. I thought I would NEVER feel better, but I do. It’s only after YEARS of hurt (not months, but years), that I began to accept it for what it was. There is nothing else you can really do…there is nothing else I could do either. What can we do?? I know this is probably not much comfort, but mine ignored me just like yours did…time and time again. I thought I was going to die. I was being ignored while he was out with his minions drinking and having a good time. Again, what can we do? I personally have a lot of anger because of it. I HATE what he did to me and STILL think he deserves to pay for it (even after 2 1/2 years). Even after all this time, I will feel better for awhile (just like you) and then I fall back into my same way of feeling and I never know why…anything can trigger it. I think I am resigned to knowing that I will forever feel a pang of hurt about what happened to me. The only thing you can do is get “through” it. We can’t get around it or under it. I know what I have said is probably not much comfort, but just know that there are other people out here who relate to you and are here for you. And stay no contact. I KNOW how hard it is….you feel like you are going to die, but as you can see (and what I found out), it just hurts even more to have contact. We think it is going to make us feel better (a fix), but in the end, it makes it worse. Huge HUGS to you.
Oh, and also…he is not happy. Believe me on that one.
Louise,
thank you…
I’m so sorry you had to get through that too… Sometimes it feels like I would die from the pain… I haven’t cried so much for whole of my life.
He ignored me again and again, so many times too, it made me feel so worthless and every time he used stupid excuses and lies… I guess it was a game to them, ignoring us.
I have so much anger for him too, I even got sick because of it and had to hospitalized for a while…
It makes me mad thinking of him having a good time after what he did to me, I’m so angry at him, at myself, at God… I so much hope that he pays for what he did to me but he seems o.k with that, and people (at least on Facebook) seem to like him a lot and that makes me mad…
It makes me feel like I am the only one who knows him for who he trully is, but like you said, what can I do?
I am there now… it feels like I’m going to die… My life has lost all it’s meaning and I’m not interested in anything anymore… It’s so sad how much damage can someone like that do to our souls… 🙁
Thank you so much, it makes me feel better… I hope it is that way and he is not happy. It’s so unfair of them to be happy after what they have done to us. Maybe he just pretends to be happy… I haven’t seen him for months, it’s all what I saw on his Facebook profile…
Ms_Snowhite:
People are not seeing him for what he is because he is still using them and they are all caught up in it…it’s fun! I was there! It was so much fun being in his circle, drinking and having a great time with him until he discarded me. That is what all his friends (especially the women) are experiencing right now. When they become discarded and ignored, they will see the light.
It’s good that you haven’t seen him in months. I haven’t seen mine for 16 months now. A long time that is going to turn into infinity. My city is big enough that I will never have to see him unless it was accidental and God forbid if that ever happens. Hang in there!
But it is so unfair that those people do believe him! They would probably never know the truth about him or it will take them a lot of time to find it out…
What hurts the most is seeing other people to like him, it makes me doubt about myself. How can everyone else like him, it makes me wonder that maybe I was the only one who he treated that wayor maybe I did something to deserve being treated that way…
I guess it’s my low self confidence talking…
That’s what I thought too… That he showers them with love and compliments until they trust him and then he would get bored and start ignoring them, just like he did with me…
That’s the only hope that I have, that those people would sooner or later see the truth and some other woman who would not be so “nice” like me, gives him a lesson soon.
16months, that’s great! Have you checked his online profile all those months?
I know I will not see him again, I have moved so he can’t find me anymore, I just want to stop watching his profile and erase him from my memory, to stop the pain.
Ms_Snowhite:
He only has a skeleton profile…you know, with no profile picture, no friends, no photos. As a predator, I know he only has this so he can look at everyone else on Facebook (since the only way you can look around is to have a profile yourself). So there is nothing for me to see…thank God. I understand…it is like an addiction and very hard to break. My thoughts are with you.
Luise, “mine” has many online profiles. I had learned about it too late. I was trusting him too much to check him out…
In his main profile he has his real name and pics so he would seem like a trusworthy person to women, that he has nothing to hide about himself, but he always has his friends list private, even from his friends… I know he adds hundreds of women there and he doesn’t want anyone else, especially women, to see it. He is an online predator but he has good looks and he looks innocent, he also knows by instinct what to tell to every woman and women fall for it.
Thanks again Luise, before I get here, tonight, I was in a very bad condition… I was ready to end it all, but by reading this it gives me strength to continue living…
I will stop watching his profile tonight, I had deleted all my online profiles but I used my mothers Facebook to see his profile again… I’m stoping this tonight and I’m starting all over again…
Blessings and hugs. I hope the nightmare ends soon..
Ms_Snowhite:
Thank God!!! I am so glad that what I said had some impact and kept you from suicide…OMG!!!! Yes, have strength!!! I know how tough it is, but dig deep, really deep and you can find the resolve you need to get through this. We both will look back one day and wonder what the hell was wrong with us for letting a stupid man make us feel this way!! I promise!!!! HUGS.
By the way, you said something that stuck out to me when you said he knows what to tell every woman and women fall for it. Men must think we are so stupid! I KNOW they do!!! That’s why I stopped the madness. I KNOW the truth of how men think. If anyone out there thinks that they don’t divide women into two groups, you are greatly mistaken, greatly mistaken. Ask any man. They will tell you.
I am so glad you feel better!!! 🙂
Luise, it has a huge impact on me and thank you so much…
That’s why I said that this site was my last hope… I have been losing all my hope lately and I was ready to give up.
I see no justice and that hurts me so much, I feel like maybe I deserved all that happened to me when I see him being fine after what he did to me…
We didn’t deserved to be treated that way…
I agree, but we are not stupid, not at all… We seemed stupid to them just because we decided to follow our hearts and not our mind, but that doesn’t make us stupid, only human.
We trusted them. It was an honor to them that we took the decision to give them our love and trust but they took it as a weakness… That is what makes them stupid, not us.
When I think of him I can’t believe how much stupid someone could be… It makes me mad.
I can’t trust any man anymore, after the spath, they all seem the same to me…
The pain of being used, lied, ignored and humiliated again and again is unbearable and I have to live with it every day… That’s why I wanted to give an end…
I will continue to live, even if my heart is broken and I feel like I’m not living, and maybe someday I will see that person suffering the same way like I do now…
That will not make me happy but at least it will give me some relief that there is justice in this world for people who cause so much pain to others…
I trully feel much better now… 🙂 It is night here and I’m finally going to sleep without crying after weeks…
Hugs and love