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.
blondie,
I found the only cure is to stay the hell away from him. change your phone # have the doorman block him from the building, filter his e-mails any and everything imaginable. This course of action has been my savior. I got away from mine for 2 months now and i went thru hard times of why doesn’t he try to contact me to me laughing my ass off at the e-mail that did get thru my filter.
if you can take some time off go some place relaxing do it, I left the country for a month. I had to resign from work but they were nice enough to hold my possition for me.
hell i did what i instruct my client to do when they come to see me. you see i work the district attorney in NY, I help women who find them selves in the position I found my self in, i was unable to see my self entering and living in the hell that i help other women exit. that is the hardest for me to accept, my stupidity, but that is irrelevant just stay the hell away from him. if he does not leave you allot inform him that you will apply for a protection order under the grounds of harassment and aggravated stalking. hell he will only need the cops to visit him once in order to have him piss in his pants.
it will pass just give it time. start dating just for fun, just so you will get the hell out of the house. just make sure he does not have any contact with you. it’s hard and it will drive you nuts but it’s the only way.
good luck
Henry-
Ditto. What you said is what runs through my mind too often for my taste. Then every once in awhile I hear that song “I can see clearly now the rain is gone, I can see all obstacles in my way” and everytime I bawl my eyes out cuz that is how it REALLY is, you step back, and you can see clearly what the obstacle is…sociopath, psychopath…lies, deceit, ect. and you smile after the tears are spent (which is healthy by the way) and you are just grateful that you got out.
It’s amazing how, even though I haven’t seen or heard from him in years, I still hear the most outlandish stories from people about how I “ruined” my first husband’s life, by “keeping him from” all sorts of great opportunities.
Oxy.. I know, crazy right? It just makes you want to scratch your head and say.. Where the hell did he get that from? My daughter was unfortunately brought up in the craziness, before I got away, and she went and married one of the craziest N’s you’d ever want to see. Now he unceasingly stalks her through the internet, leaving mean, unfounded and often ridiculous posts about her all over the place.
I really think you should fight these accusations of being at his house, he is making you look bad in that state, and you know the police, often for them the one who screams first gets the attention. I have had some success leaving warnings with police depts. about his behavior in advance.
Henry,
I think the Gift of Fear said that for every 1 contact with a stalker it buys you 16 days. I believe it. By having no contact, it puts the glass over the flame, so to speak. It says “I am not taking this abuse anymore.” Good job on the three months no contact. I hope someday I am that far along!
May I give a shout out to fellow LF members that I greatly miss?
okthanks…
Lilygirl—thinking bout you and your lovely son.
Free—where are you my fellow veggie sister? I miss reading your beautiful words.
LilOrphan—I know we never had a chance to chat, but I still remember the comments you posted and was wondering how you are doing.
StillSorting—you were here briefly, but I got the impression that you belong here, with us, reading and sharing. You have oodles of experiences, personal history to offer LF.
SassySarah—please check in with us so we know you’re hanging in there, seeking help for your beautiful self.
Oops….forget Wini…how could I forget such a bright light as her?
Get your beautiful, spiritual, loving/lovable self back in here, woman!…:)
What about LivingLovingMe?
I think that was the name. I spoke to you. I hope you are alright.
Perky We can see clearly now and all obstacles are gone. But now that he is gone I sometime’s ask myself does he have any clue what he lost? Do they even recognize the chance they threw away? I know the answer to that, I just don’t want to accept the reality. Tears are healthy, I recommend it! I have not had to do that in a long while now. I am still going to check out the Butterfly Pavilion. Thanks Perky for your responce to my post. Hope you don’t mind if I call you Perky!!!! Bird thanks and I like how you phrase no contact by putting a glass over the flame and snuffing it out. The final discard is our’s, they have no limit’s and will continue being evil to us until we say no more enuff is enuff!!!!!
Oy Henry, that was the exact thought going through my head as I logged in .. does he have any idea what he threw away. The last time I talked to him he threatened to have me arrested.. I know this guy was in love with me.. he really was.. he decided to throw away the only real love he ever found.. for the chance to schmooze some other woman into paying his bills.
He’s so transparent.. the only reason he wants to make sure I don’t call is he doesn’t want me to upset his new gravy train.. I know I don’t mean anything to him anymore.. but I just wish I could somehow understand why.. and how.. he could do it. Will I ever get completely over this a-h?
it sickens me to know that i spent 2 years loving someone who never ever loved me ever. there was never ever any feelings there. all he did was use me god its gross! im so freaking angry today. my ex and i have a mutual friend that we know. i work with him and thats how i met my ex. anyways i heard that my ex sociopath is mad at our mutual friend for hooking us up. what is that about??????? it makes me so flipping mad. its all about him. i was nothing to him. all he focuses on is that why his friend got us together, i think its a little to late for that. we spend two years together. i so bad want to call him or email him and tell off so bad……but i wont.