Lovefraud received the following e-mail from a reader; we’ll call her Lisa. In one short paragraph, Lisa conveyed the betrayal, rage, pain and hopelessness that we’ve all felt:
If a stranger broke into my house and stole all my valuables and then burned the rest. If I was left homeless and broke. I would be angry. I would be damaged. But I would recover. The person who did this slept in my bed and held me tight and told me he loved me every day. He told me that we were moving overseas and that everything should go. Stop paying the mortgage. Sell your furniture for cheap. Burn the rest. I did it. He disappeared with my jewelry and cash. I feel that I cannot recover. I am devastated. I am bitter. I am obsessed with my hatred and can’t smile or laugh. I need a psychiatrist. I dream of stabbing him. I am a loving and forgiving person that can’t find grace. I try to forgive and recognize my own fault. I fail. I need help with this.
Had an unknown criminal ransacked Lisa’s home, she would be justifiably outraged, and perhaps afraid for her safety. But the man who plotted and schemed to crush her was a man that she trusted, a lover who talked about their exciting future together in a faraway land.
It was cruelty beyond belief. It was the shattering of trust.
A few months back I wrote about a book called Legal Abuse Syndrome. The author, Karin Huffer, writes, “the most profound loss is loss of trust.”
That is what makes these experiences so painful. We trusted someone with our hopes, our dreams, our love. That person probably spoke eloquently about trust to us, in words full of shining promise. And it was all a lie.
Now we don’t know whom we can trust. And we’re pretty sure that we cannot trust ourselves.
So how do we recover?
8 steps for recovery
Huffer provides an outline for recovery in her book. Although the steps are geared to helping people recover from the outrages of the legal system, which has a tendency to make our bad situations even worse, I think the steps are useful for anyone recovering from the betrayal of a sociopath.
1. Debriefing. That means telling someone what happened, and that person listening without judgment. This is what we try to do at Lovefraud. We all listen to your stories, and we know what you’re talking about, because we’ve all been there.
2. Grieving. Grief is usually associated with the death of a loved one. But as Huffer points out, it is legitimate to grieve the loss of possessions, or our lifestyle, or our place in the community. Sometimes well-meaning friends or relatives say, “Oh, it’s only money.” This isn’t true. As Huffer writes, “Possessions are the outward manifestations of our inner identity.” We didn’t just lose things. We lost part of ourselves.
3. Obsession. Lisa is obsessed with her hatred of the guy who violated her. Her feelings are certainly justified. The problem with obsession, however, is that it wears you out, and interferes with your ability to regain control in your life. Huffer suggests coping with obsession by compartmentalizing it—only allowing yourself to dwell in it for specific periods of time. “Schedule your way out of it,” she says.
4. Blaming. This means putting blame where it belongs: on the perpetrator. We often feel guilty for allowing the situation to occur in our lives. But we have nothing to be guilty about. We were normal, caring, loving individuals who were deceived. The guilt, anger and rage needs to directed towards the person who deceived us.
5. Deshaming. Before our encounter with the predator, we had certain beliefs, such as “there’s good in everyone,” or “if someone asks me to marry him, he must really love me.” Unfortunately, the dreadful experience has taught us that some beliefs are false and need to be changed. When we do this, we also change our attitude, from “I was a fool” to “I’ve been wronged.”
6. Reframing. The first five steps of the process must be accomplished, Huffer writes, before a person can move on to reframing. At this stage, you can look at your experience, define it differently, and then articulate the wisdom you’ve gained.
7. Empowerment. At this point, you feel focused energy. You take ownership of your problems, determine how you are going to cope with them, and go into action.
8. Recovery. With recovery, you are able to move forward in your life. Sometimes recovery involves forgiveness, but Huffer says it is not necessary. It if far too early for Lisa, who wrote the e-mail quoted above, to attempt forgiveness.
The long journey
There is no expected timetable for moving through the recovery process. We all have different personal histories and face different circumstances. We’ve all had different levels of violation.
Anyone who has been targeted for destruction by a sociopath must understand that it was a profound assault, and it will take time to recover. You may slide back and forth among the stages. So be gentle on yourself, because the journey may be long. If you keep going, in the end you will find peace, built upon new depths of wisdom and understanding.
takingmeback: What you wrote about Satan’s ego and wanting to replace God is the crux of all of this. It’s their egos and taking a life onto it’s own. These folks are chained to believing their own egos instead of God’s word.
I’m glad you wrote the book and that as a health professional, do feel that he is on to something. Hey, this guy put the words on paper when he hit rock bottom. Anyone hitting rock bottom from the pain others cause us … is alright in my book. I do believe that because he prayed to God to help him with his fight of depression and being suicidal over his pain body … God assisted him with writing the book. Tolle says he did not write the book, it was written centuries ago … he just put the words on paper for all to read. That to me, is God’s word using Tolle as a messenger for all of us down on Earth to listen to the man.
Peace.
takingmeback: Correction “I’m glad you read the book”, not wrote the book.
Mea culpa
takingmeback: I’ve known about anti-social personalities since I was a kid in grade school. First one I met was my friend next door stealing my grandmother’s gift of a change purse to me. Nice, hand stitched … beautiful in my eyes. My grandmother knew I really liked it and gave it to me. I showed it to my friend next door and it vanished. Then days later I see her playing with it at her house. I grabbed it from her, she went into a fit. Her mom came in and reprimanded me for smacking her. Her mom then backed up her lies and said “that she gave her the purse, that it just looked like mine”. My first meeting with a psychopath. And her mom is such a sweet woman. I hope it was just saving face in front of me and she spanked that kid on her bottom after I left. But, it was frustrating to have a child friend and an adult lie to me like that. My mom always kept this neighbor woman at a distance. Years later, the neighbor used to put my mom down. Now I understand in detail … but it was confusing as a child. It’s amazing how these creatures spin all the good people around. They are afraid to do battle with each other tho. I noticed that. They walk big circles around each other.
Anyway, I do stay my distance from everyone I know is like this. When I see anyone with the slightest neurosis of this … I start backing away. Nicely, not letting them know that I know. You never tell an a — hole that they are an a — hole, why? Because they are an a – – hole.
My EX. All the deep conversations we had about these people. He played me like a fiddle. Unbelievable.
So I’m not the softy that you think I am. I’m not being delusional. I am speaking from a spiritual level though – and think this information needs to be looked in to. That’s all. When you hit rock bottom, you don’t heal to the place you were before, you go higher. I’m dealing with a double whammy in the last 10 years … Psychos destroying my career and my EX destroying my finances. So my pain is two fold, without even knowing the second until November of 2006. So I’m healing from about 70 psychos working on me daily for the last 10 years. And guess what? I’M STILL STANDING… la-di-da-la-di-da. I guess what it is – if you believe in God you’re deep with substance of God’s. If you don’t believe in God you’re superficial, no substance, all fluff, NO THING. Not that I’m doing a Glad Bag commercial here … but it’s something else to ponder. Oh, yeah, they can recite and memorize to make them look like deep thinkers aka Silence of the Lambs … doctor … work for those “A”‘s in college and get the 4.0 average … cheat and lie and con their way up the ladder, keep that fascade going … but there is no substance to them at all. NOTHING … NO THING.
Peace everyone … this blog is addictive in it’s own right.
Recovery takes a long long time… partly, IOHO — from the mind control aspects these Ps do to their victims.
Not all our site members tell their stories, which is fine, but the ones who really do NOT make it for long refuse to tell their stories and REFUSE to read anyone else’s story? Why?? Because they cling doggedly to the notice that HE was different, that THEIR story was unique and that no one will understand. Every time even one of these people breaks down and tells us what happened — its the same exact common patterns… SAME. Of course they leave once our group when they realize that it wasn’t unique… and reassure themselves that it was.
Telling brings VALIDATION of what happened and VALIDATION is absolutely key when you are surrounded by people who don’t ‘get it’ — or tell you to get over it — or that he can’t have been THAT bad… etc etc etc. Do whatever it takes to be VALIDATED…
And never blame yourself — even once.
Dear Beverly,
your story about your ex who couldn’t keep a girlfriend reminded me of my ex. I remember his sister telling me how once he was in love (in puberty) and that girl never knew about it. he used to give her all kinds of presents but was never able to tell her how he feels. even when we met, he used to tell me how he was broken hearted, but was still able to have two girlfriends at the same time and was still married!!!!
when he speaks about his great loves it is always mysterious and i know nothing about them. he was always left to suffer and no one understood him.
i think now there will be next victim who will listen to his stories about me leaving him to suffer. jesus, even now after all that he has done to me I feel sorry for him.
why, why do we keep forgetting about bad things and give those people a second, sometimes more than two times, chance?
I believe the more we feel sorry for the ex’s, the more it gives them the power they are seeking. I felt sorry for him many times, the times when he would do the “woe is me” thing, I would give him my shoulder to cry on, bail him out, give him the comfort he was seeking or money for his damn cell phone so it wouldn’t get shut off and when he received it, he was out the door with a smile on his face texting his other women even before he hit his car. What a fool I was. He also had that innocent, baby boy personna which I fell for. He is no dummy, he knew it and used it to his advantage to get what he wanted and he got it. From my understanding, it still works.
I believe there is right and there is wrong and everyone makes choices, good or bad. Even the P’s know that but they choose to do things willingly, knowingly, and happily to get what they want no matter the cost to someone else. They know they are using people to their advantage but they put that little screen over their faces and pretend they don’t see the hurt they have caused. They know it, they just don’t care, it would not benefit them to acknowledge the hurt they are causing. People do change, I believe that, but not the P’s, they don’t have to, they don’t want to because it is of no benefit to them.
Henry…yes there was a full moon last night, brighter than usual coming in my window, please pull up your britches so I can take my shades off.
as i break away from this relationship and continue on my journey to healing and no contact. i look back and i see that not once in two years did this man have true feelings in his heart for me. he never loved me EVER, that was just a word he used. he never once felt anything for me. he just played a game for two years. all that time spent was to get something, whatever it was. it makes me sick how FAKE it was.
i get why no contact is so good., its the only way out from this craziness, its the only way end this game, or they will just keep on playing it. i never want to have contact again in my life.
im afraid that i wont see red flags in people. i feel like im still going to go about trusting people, and what they say and i cant do that. i just wish i knew what i know now two years ago!
Rperk6069, we struggle to get the right perspective to the bottom of it and that is good. The Ps when they are in full flight, acting out, they are unaware of what they do, their consciousness is not the same as ours, they are in the grip of their demons. When they know they are using people, it is their faulted ego which acts this out. I want to struggle with this one
Blondie. we are all on a learning curve. Give thanks that you know it now.
Beverly-I just know that when J got caught and he knew he was hurting me, I could see it in his eyes that he knew I was hurt, he would seem so sincere and apologize and cry and beg for forgiveness, that he would never see the other woman again, that he was sorry for putting me through the pain of getting him out of jail, on and on. He seemed so sincere, I believe he was sincere in that moment. But then, I could also see the fog go over his eyes the moment he got what he wanted and he would leave. He may not have set out to hurt me all those times, but I know that he knew when he did and after he got what he wanted, he just didn’t care.
I am still trying to make sense out of something that is senseless. I need to stop trying. I know I would never do anything to benefit myself that would in any way hurt another person. No matter what. This is all so frustrating at times.