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.
Henry:
I don’t know if you have read this in one of my previous posts, but I had NC with “my” S last fall for almost three months. I was doing pretty good I thought. I had reframed the relationship, was empowered, but not recovered. I met another man who I had endless phone conversations with. He was a one woman man (not a 3-5 at one time like “my” S) so this was very appealing to me. We lunched together a few times a week and he always paid. We went out on weekends and I slept with him three times. Then… he wanted to buy a used truck but was $300. short of paying for it in full. I loaned him the money and he was to pay me in 2 to 3 weeks. I have yet to see the money. I stopped seeing him as “my” S started to call and would rather be with an S I loved than an S I was just getting to know. Then… New guy continued to call, ‘my” S pretended to be jealous, what a mess!
We must go through the 8 steps, sometimes again and again as Ox stated, before we recover. I may make the mistake again, think I’m strong enough, find out I’m not. But as long as I am aware, I do get stronger with each step even if on the continuum I am moving backwards.
Bev I got you post earlier this morning- thank you- Oxy that quote is something I re-read almost daily, I just wanted to share it– I am better today thanks to my good friends here.. 107 here today and no rain insight it is getting so dry, I have water all day to keep things alive…
Dear Lib, I know you posted to Henry, but may I comment too? I dont know if you read my post about synchronicity. Often things crop up together, because the cosmos is trying to show us something. If we recognise this synchronicity it is a divine form of help that opens our eyes to what is being played out. Thank goodness you had the foresight not to go beyond the three hundred dollars.
People say that we learn from experience. The problem is, that some experiences come in different disguises. Only by recognising the common threads in things do we wise up.
wonder why God made these human like creatures
Lib Did you get my post in responce too your comment ( I must go the the snake pits with a big smile and a sword?) Yeah a big smile a sword and a can or RAID!
NWV, I read a book, can’t remember the name of it, that posited that when Adam and Eve were in the garden, without the knowledge of good and evil that they were not fully “human” and that everything in the world being wonderful, all their needs being met, etc. but they had no appreciation of just how good things were.
Satan, by tempting Eve who in her naivite fell for his “promises” that she would be wise and all knowing, just like God if she ate the “fruit of the knowledge of good and evil” gave “humanity” the option of becoming fully human with a knowledge of good and evil and the ability to make choices based on that knowledge.
Chimpanzes are not fully human because they really don’t have a “knowledge of good and evil” even though they have a society of sorts, based on reciprosity through fear of revenge. Wolves have a “society ” of sorts, based on mutual affection and status, but they are not “human” and have no knowledge of good and evil.
Without a knowledge of good and evil, we would be like the animals. It is the ONE thing that sets humanity apart from the animals. It makes us aware of our souls and our choices and our spirituality, that we are more than flesh and bone.
Even the most primitive culture of humans has a knowledge of good and evil, though it may be “different” from one culture to another. There is a commonality of agreement within a culture of what is good and what is bad. There are those within any culuture who will violate the “rules” but all pretty much agree in a culture or society WHAT those rules are.
While I acknowledge that there is a genetic component for psychopathic mind set, I also think that there is an environmental one as well. WE all have choices. The P has a choice to act well or to act badly. It isn’t a case of a person born without the intellect or power to control their behavior, they CHOOSE not to control it. Now WHEN that choice is made at first and when it is “set in concrete” I don’t propose to know, but I do believe that they have choices, just like th eperson who inherits the genes for alcoholism has a CHOICE not to drink or to drink. The P has the choice to be evil or to act well. He may not be able to preceive love and empathy as well as “others” but he has a CHOICE like the rest of us, just as the alocholic does. I apparently don’t have the genetic component to make me really “addictable” to alcohol, but I still have a CHOICE to drink or not to drink, or if so how much. It may be easier for me to chose NOT to drink to excess than a person with an alcoholics’ genetic make up, and it may be more difficult for a person with a psychopathic genetic trait to “be nice” but we ALL HAVE CHOICES.
The point is that they become so egotistical that they would not even want to make the “right” choice and see no benefit in doing so, any more than some alcoholics NEVER see an benefit in stopping drinking so don’t even try, no matter what the consequences are. Go to your local “wino shelter” and you will see the results of hundreds of thousands of men who still consume the booze and don’t even want to quit even though it has by OUR STANDARDS “ruined their lives”—go to a prison and see the Ps there, who hae “ruined their lives” by OUR STANDARDS but not by their own and don’t even want to change.
Free will, I think we all have it.
Henry, that quote is a perfect description of an encounter with the Cluster B Personality Disorder. Do you know that although Clusters A, B and C are mentioned in the official Diagnostic Manual that they have no codes? This means that these individuals are usually listed as having a Personality Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (NOS). Yet we’re talking about a very dangerous personalitiy disorder indeed! It’s quite specific! It’s frustrating. As frustrating to those whom I work with who don’t get the devastation these folks create in their personal lives. I can only hope that the next diagnostic manual gets it right. I almost feel there should be a duty to warn others when this cluster shows up. The potential for harm is so immense. But at this time it would be seen as unethical. I think it’s time we started being more specific in the field and call a spade a spade. Even if it’s just to warn about the potential for harm and to educate others.
I know confidentiality was created to protect our clients. But what about the innocents out there who don’t know what they’re dealing with in these folks? How are mental health professionals not accountable to warn them? Yet we can’t unless there is a clear statement that someone intends to harm another. Usually this is meant as physical harm. What about the psychological and emotional harm they do? It is so frustrating. OK, I’m done ranting.
Here’s what I grabbed from that quote (where did it come from BTW?)
“Imagine what it must be like to consider one’s own company to be either nothing at all or something vile. It must be terrifying. From this point of wiew, it is understandable that this human must try to do everything and anything possible not to look in the mirror.”
I used to say before discovering that my father is an N that he could not face himself in the mirror. He would be horrifed but what he sees. Recently he had a disagreement with my sister who told him what a horrid father he has been. She reminded him of some of the most abusive things he has done to her. He told me that if what she said is true then he must not be the father he believes himself to be. BINGO! It took everything in me not respond. To respond would be to open myself up to his vitriole (thanks ex S for introducing me to that word).
The ex S also validated that portion of the quote himself. He told me that he hated himself so incredibly much how was he expected to love or have empathy for another if he didn’t feel that way about himself. This was during a period of losing NS. I had told him that I was done. He revealed a lot in that temper tantrum and others. My only saving grace in all this was that I would not let him control me for long. I would push back and question. He revealed himself by his very words in the end. I think the realization of not only who but what I had been dealing with brought on the trauma. To have fallen in love with the most unloving creature out there.
Unlike what the quote says, I do not agree that it is understandable that due to their own terrifying feelings they do anything not to look in the mirror. It explains why they do that but I do not think it’s understandable. We are all on here facing ourselves each day and showing our vulnerabilities so that we can learn and grow. We are facing some things about ourselves that perhaps we don’t like but see to it that we change. Why don’t they? What makes their disorder so permanent? What role does genetics play in the choices we make in life? I’ve been questioning a lot lately. I understand the hows but I don’t get the whys.
Taking me back – I got the quote from “Psychopath@groups.msn.com” lot’s of good info there…….. also this line hit’s home with the (Ps) “Evil is something you recognise immediately when you see it; it works through charm”
yes oxy…it has always been thus……it sure seems like there are many, many more of them nowadays….still i wonder why…..may this is part of the answer:
> God does not give us overcoming life: He gives us life as we
> overcome. The strain is the strength. If there is no strain, there is
> no strength. Are you asking God to give you life and liberty and joy?
> He cannot, unless you will accept the strain. Immediately you face
> the strain, you will get the strength. Overcome your own timidity and
> take the step, and God will give you to eat of the tree of life and
> you will get nourishment. If you spend yourself out physically, you
> become exhausted; but spend yourself spiritually, and you get more
> strength. God never gives strength for to-morrow, or for the next
> hour, but only for the strain of the minute. The temptation is to
> face difficulties from a common-sense standpoint. The saint is
> hilarious when he is crushed with difficulties because the thing is so ludicrously impossible except to God….
henry, ah yes charm. Wikipedia lists charisma as a synonym of charm. It’s interesting to read what it says about charisma and how it can be used to harm others. How true.
I no longer look for my Prince Charming. The list of traits I want in a mate does not include that word! I want someone GENUINE!!! Good quote. I have added it to my list 🙂