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,
Absolutely! I would forget everything and put things in such a perspective that I’d have hope that could move mountains that things would be different this time. Then we’d talk or I’d see him and it was all right back again. I believe that what they do to us is so harmful that denial sets in rather quickly to protect ourselves. Our minds have a way of trying to establish that equilibrium so we can keep going on. But what we end up doing is walking right back into the fire over and over as if we have a death wish. That’s part of what was crazy making for me. I had to struggle to stay in reality and recognize who I was dealing with.
I was lucky my N/S moved on and had another target he was working on. He wanted to keep me around too but I wouldn’t let go of asking why he did the things he did. It drove him crazy that I wouldn’t let it go. That saved me in the end. His excuses were too irrational and the therapist in me wouldn’t let go of the questioning as his behavior did not match his words. It made it worse in the end as he got homicidal towards me but it is truly what saved me. He ended up admitting that he isn’t capable of love or forgiveness or change. He said he knew what was wrong with him but didn’t want to do anything about it. He said he was probably the one that made me sick thinking I was crazy. He admitted to only giving gifts to make himself look good and to fit in. He also said he could only feel normal at times around others who truly didn’t know him and he had no attachment to. He would always be miserable and always disappoint people. I believe he has been told what he is. I also believe he’s back into denial again and getting enough NS to keep him filled. But I caught him at a low point and got some answers I never expected. He had told me he was depressed for so long I still had a hard time seeing what he was telling me. But it all clicked in when I had distance from him and I saw sooo much more. No Contact is a must to healing and taking yourself back!
If you continue to let him know you’re not interested he may finally figure out he can’t use you. You NEED to be consistent in not responding to him. You are feeding him each time you do. Ignoring him may make him try harder but I hope it will eventually wear him out and he’ll move on to other easier sources of supply.
Be strong and don’t forget what he’s done and the fact that he’ll continue doing it if you let him!
YOU DESERVE SO MUCH MORE!!!
takingmeback, i feel like your story and my story and the same. thank you for the support im going to need it badly.
i also need to know how to deal with him, when we have items together that he is payin me montly on. do i just take the items back and pay for them myself so there is no connection? i just dont know how to deal with these type of guys with business stuff.
Dear Blondie,
Let me add my 2 cents worth here to this, every time you listen to him, read a text or e mail, it rips your scabs off your wounds.
Do not answer the phone, don’t listen to voice mail, don’t read e mails, don’t answer the door. don’t talk to anyone who will telll him how you are. If he follows you on the street, call the cops, if he knocks at your door, don’t even yell through the door go away, just call the cops.
For a while you will still doubt, you will still second guess, but you will get over that phase and start to not want to hear from him.
He may keep it up a day, a week, a month or a year, or show up 10 years from now and knock on your door. They are like that and yoiu can’t always predict when they will turn back up, but the NO CONTACT give syou time to heal, to listen to yourself instead of him. HE IS THE LIE. EVERYTHING HE SAYS IS A LIE. HE CANNOT LOVE YOU, HE WANTS TO CONTROL YOU.
With NO contact, YOU ARE IN CONTROL, THE ONLY CONTROL YOU CAN GAVE OVER HIM–GET OUT OF MY LIFE.
You have nothing to feel guilty about, this is not a polite cocktail party it is ABUSE and you do not have to “be nice” or “be polite” or “not make a scene”—-he does not deserve polite. He has lied to and abused you. CUT HIM OFF.
Hang in there babe, and before you contact him, come here and post, we will support what you already know is the right thing to do—listen to your gut woman! It will protect you, and right now your heart is confused. (((Big Hugs))))
Takingmeback…wow…this is EXACTLY what my S was like.
Blondie, its weird, but after 3 years with him and 10 days of no contact, its getting easier and things he said, things he did are popping into my head in retrospect. Being away from them makes you see how really sick they are. But I think if he did call me I’d start to get weak again thinking that maybe THIS time it will be different. It won’t and I have to believe that intellectually, not emotionally. My hope in people and changed lives dictates and HAS dictated that I always gave him another chance. Chance after chance after chance, but it always ended up with the bomb dropping when I least expected it. Nothing is going to change if it hasnt by this time.
He too would say, “I want to be friends with you. I cant stand not being in your orbit”. CHEESY!!! now that I think of it and look back on it. Friends??? I said to him. I dont want a “friend” who lies to me and manipulates and hurts me. He will never be a “friend” because he never was. He was always a “frenemy”: an enemy disguised as a friend.
Indiechick, I heard that word, “Frenemy” for the first time the other day and I htought it was SO appropriate for the Ps—enemy disguised as a friend. What could describe them better!!
Thanks OxDrover so much!
indiechick
its been a month and we have not talked for like a week, but i have’nt seen him but twice. my life has already changed a little bit, ive been doing what ive been wanting to do. i havent had to worry about him. my life feels somewhat less stressful. ive been spending more time with my mom and family and ive missed them, if feels nice to be around them more, and i dont want to go back to that life with him, bc it was always about him, ive never really spent the time with them, bc he always wanted me to be with him. I to always gave him chance after chance, and then boom i would find some email or a text message or find out some lie about where he was or what he was doing and who is was with.
he just texted me that he is crying bc im doin this to him and im dating someone else. haha i just laugh bc its so far from the truth and he just wants a reaction. the sad truth is when i told him to get out of my life for all these things he did to me he didt cry to me or in front of me. they always make it about them, never what they did to do.
RPerk Thanks for sharing that message. I am like you, I have become a recluse a hermit. Except for going to work and visiting with my son, I pretty much keep a low profile. I avoid my neigbors because I am embarrased by some of the thing’s he did out here. Driving like a mad man when he was in a rage. Screaming at the top of his lung’s. I threatened to call the police and my son and he would say go ahead I will tell them what f–up person you are. I am so was humiliated and embarrassed at being conned> I feel like such a fool sometimes. When we first got together I wanted everyone to meet him. I told them what a good guy he was. (excuse me while I puke) Anyway I am gettin it back, I made a big mistake, but who doesn’t? If you are concerned about what other people think, the truth is most people are busy thinkin about themselve’s. So we got get out there and get busy living. Sometimes we have to be willing to let go of the life we had planned and start living the life that is waiting on us. I just wish I could get him out of my head. He just torment’s me all the time and I havent seen or talked to him in months. He is out of my heart but I keep going over all the lie’s all the deciet.. Maybe it will stop someday but anyway
Dear Henry,
In my community where my family has lived since 1833, it is ALL about what “the neighbors think” in my family, and you know, I say SCREW WHAT THE NEIGHBORS THINK! Their lives may not be any more “dramatic” than my last year or so has been, but you know, they are NOT focused on me and my life, and if they are, they are leaving some other poor soul alone.
They don’t support me, and you know, I am the one that got out of bed in the middle of saturday night movie to get the fish hook out of their kid’s ear, or the bug out of theirs, or sew up some guy’s hand when he caught it in the milk gate.
I am NOT going to live my life for the neighbors and my dear you better not either! As I used to say to my kids when they would squabble in the car–DON’T MAKE ME STOP THIS CAR! So Henry, my dear dear friend, don’t make me have to come through this screen after you! LOL You get out there and quit giving a flip about what the neighbors think, YOU ARE NOT THE ONE WHO ACTED BADLY. You know, I have felt shame all my life for OTHER’S bad behavior and I think it is time I quit, what about you? It hasn’t done us a bit of good to feel shame for their behavior cause THEY sure DON’T!!!
And, Henry, dear Henry, it will stop someday andyou will get it out of your head. I would drive down the road for what seemed like the longest time “talking” to him out loud in the car alone. Aloha said she did the same thing too. I guess we finally just get it all SAID even if we aren’t really talking to them. We might as well be talking to the air as to them because the air gets it just as well as they do!
I’m not exactly Ms. Social Butterfly either, but I do keep up with my friends and even went out for a while tonight to visit some friends for a couple of hours. I’m actually staying off the road as much as I can with gasoline as high as it is. People out in the country because we drive bigger vehicles and because we travel further use more gas than the townies do, just to get our shopping and errands done.
It’s nice to talk to these folks too because they DO get it about the Ps. This woman had a daughter murdered by her P husband 10 years ago, and she is raising the granddaughter of another one that is in prison, and her own first husband was a P, and the father of the little girl she is raising is one, and her life story makes mine look like a “normal family”—but she and her husband are both super neat people and she has over come a lot of trauma in her life. To be taking on an at-risk 3 year old when you are 60 is a big task, but that is the most beautiful and loving little girl I have ever met and she adores me too.
Henry, dear, no one felt more humiliated and embarassed than I did about this whole thing, and about being on the “wrong side” of the professional clip board, but I got over that and realized that the ONLY person on this earth I have to answer to is ME. The only one off this earth I have to answer to is God. What the rest of the however many billion people on earth think about me doesn’t matter. If you get right down to it, how many people really CARE what goes on in any one person’s life? Really, not very many that you know, and none of those you never met. So kick that guilt and humiliation in the butt pronto, and don’t make me have to come through this screen! LOL (((Big Hugs))))
Dear Blondie,
You asked, “How long will it be till he hurts me emotionally again!!!?”
My guess is… not long.
But answer the question for yourself. How long do you think it will take for him to hurt you again?
When he does hurt you again, will you have enough strength left to pick yourself up and go on?
How much inner strength do you have left?
How tired and beaten up do you feel?
If you took the energy you have left right now and you cut it in half, would it be enough to pick yourself up and go forward when he hurts you the next time?
If you still have a glimmer of hope for something better for yourself.. what if that glimmer of hope was cut in half? and in half again? and again? and again?
How long will it take before you will not have enough of you left to fight for yourself… and by fighting, I mean the fight that we have internally to recover and take back our joy, the spring in our step, our laughter, our peace, our life?
Blondie, the fact that you are saying you need help today tells me that there is a part of you that still has enough energy to put up a fight for yourself.
Good luck Blondie.
Aloha….. :o)