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.
Hi, sorry just re-read my post and meant to say HE married within 6 months.
Blondie We have to mourn the loss and re-evaluate our priorities. We begin to acknowledge ourselves again. We have the gift of ourselves. When no one else is around we are keeping company with a human being with a soul, our own soul. Gradually we take ourselves to work, to the store, to school. We create ways to take our complete self to interact once again with others. We begin to heal. Blondie why don’t you go rent some movies, go to wal mart and buy a new candle. Just get up and do something. I was just like you, all i did was sit and analyze the crap out of things. We can’t go back wards, so put one foot in front of the other and go somewhere, anywhere even for just a few minutes.
Welcome ally,
YOu have come to a good place to learn more and receive validation in your search for healing. Read and learn, there is sooooo much good information here and such great people!
We’ve all been through essentially the same things so we do “get it” and understand. Welcome!
Hi OxDrover thank you for the welcome. This site and all your words of wisdom ahve helped so much, its a real relief to have people who understand. As much as my family and friends are lovley after 6 months i can almost here the sigh as i go down hill and they need to pick me up again. I have always been a pretty much stable person as far as emotions go and even though i have had my fair share of lifes ups and downs i have coped in a positive way but this relationship has me totally re-evaluating everything i ever believed in. I still get scared if i hear an unexpected noise or car pull up outside and can’t walk round town with my head held up just incase i see him. Is this normal? The emotional and verabl abuse he showered on me was severe but i can’t undertand how i let it happen and what made me try to make it better, why did i need his love so badly when all he did was try to destroy me? When i wouldn’t remortgage my house to pay for his dreams me found someone very quickly who would. One minute i feel sorry for the person he is and the pain he must be in as he lives life in chaos with periods of heavy drinking and acting ‘lost’ and other times i can’t cope with the overwhelming pain he had left me with and the confusion. Is this normal and how long will it last. I feel i keep getting lost in the fog and i’m really postive one minute and then totally lost the next. I have been looking at mindfulness and meditation as a way of just trying to focus on the present, has anyone else found this helpful?
i understand your pain ally. if i didt give my x the money he needed he would find someone else. when my x wanted a new car but i wouldt sign for it. he went out and found some other girl to get a car for him. its really evil how self centered they are. they do things only for them. its all a game to them. im sorry about your pain, but im glad your here with the rest of us. keep reading and posting. one day at a time.
Aloha,
Yeah, LivingLovingMe….I hadn’t written any comments at the time she did, but I did read them sometime in April or May, I think. I actually went back in the archives to see if she had offered an update to her heartbreaking situation. Nope. Nothing after her comment stating she felt like walking head on into traffic. Poor gal…..
Ok, LivingLovingMe—-if you’re out there, let us know how you are doing, doll. I’m sure that all the wonderful folks who responded with such encouraging, compassionate, concerned words would most assuredly love to hear from you.
And also, alwabh. Remember her, Aloha? You were right there, on the spot giving her frank support and advice because she was in an emergency crisis situation herself. Her husband had been diagnosed as BPD and he was beating her daily, that beautiful woman was suffering horribly at his cruel hands. The last thing she wrote is that she fled and was hiding out in a motel. That’s it.
If you are reading this site, alwabh, please stay in touch with LF, let us know that you’re still alive and breathing. Even if you’re back with your husband, still…..just let us know, ok?
All I can think of after reading today’s posts on this thread is oxy talking about Lying 101, and Faking apologies 203.. lol
The worst thing I think is that we know all along that they are a bit fake, a bit over the top, a little in denial, and that they like to aim wide of the mark in their discussions.
After a few months or years maybe we even know all about their tendency to cover bad behavior with a fight, or to get pissed and walk away when we are questioning them a little too closely.
Maybe in semi candid moments they have even said things like.. I don’t really know what love is.. or sometimes I just don’t really care about people at all.
But still it’s just so devastating when they choose to destroy the relationship, cancel our backstage ticket into their show, delete us, or worse, ruin us.
I need help. I am so fragile today, the past week. I feel like I am dieing. It has been 2 months and at first it was hard and then I went away and I was great. I healed. Now I am back and I am breaking down. I keep remembering him and the sadness and loneliness is hitting me. If I see him now I will take him back. God help me I will take him back. I got married and divorced in 21 days. I know that I am lucky that I found out so soon, that I got away before I paid a heavier price but I am so lonely.
I got my credit card bill today and he cost me 9 thousand in five months. I don’t know how I am going to pay it or how long. I am just falling apart. I need help please.
Dear dear natogin,
I am so sorry that all this has happened to you, I know it seems like you are dying, and at times we wonder how we will get through the next minute, much less the next day or week. We don’t feel strong, we feel weak, but you are so much stronger than you know or feel right now. You have just been through the wringer, been stomped on wrung out and left hanging.
Right now, don’t worry about the money, that is tomorrow’s worry, tonight, this night, just hang on, cry, scream, come here and read, come here and post, call a friend, do anyting you have to do to keep going, just for tonight. Call a shelter and talk to someone there, call a crisis line, but don’t give up. Hang on by your fingernails until daylight.
You are not alone, natogin, we DO understand how you feel, because the people at love fraud have all been through this same hell on earth, maybe not just exactly, but we have all been used and abused by people. We’ve all felt sad, alone, lonliness, and most if not all of us would or did take them back, sometimes several times. You are not alone, you are not dumb, you are not crazy, you are a strong woman, but right now you don’t feel like you are.
We are here, reading about this will help you, and you will get through this. ((((((BIG HUG))))))
Thank you OxDrover. I know what you are telling me I tell it to my self all the time, but lately it’s so hard. I thought that I healed not completely but allot more that I am finding out that I have. I can’t take it I have no patience I want to get over him fast and now. I am strong I know that I am. I sent him to jail twice, on two different cases. I can make his life a hell but I am not going that route. I know the legal system I work in it, I know how to make it work, but I don’t want to go there. Am I wrong in not going for his jugular?
How couldn’t I not see it? I help women like my self. That is the part that kills me the most. How could I be so blind?
Tell me I am not wrong in telling my self not to take him back. He will never change. He is evil. Tell me I am not wrong in believing that.