Editor’s note: A reader who identified himself as a sociopath recently posted this comment on the Lovefraud Blog, and sent it to me in an email. I am posting this piece because it provides a good description of how sociopaths view themselves, and explains why they are quite comfortable taking advantage of the rest of us. Be sure to read the question I asked him, and his response, at the end.
We are uniquely gifted
“Sociopath” is a misleading word: it implies a disorder, something wrong and unnatural with the person, and this couldn’t be further from the truth. We, the people you refer to as sociopaths, have nothing wrong with us. We are instead, the uniquely gifted. Our gifts have been mischaracterized and maligned and it’s time someone set the record straight.
What the experts call superficial charm, I call having a natural ability to win friends and influence people. What experts call manipulative and conning, I call an affinity for persuasion based upon an innate ability to pinpoint others personality strengths and weaknesses. What the experts decry as a lack of compassion, I call pragmatism and clarity. What experts call a “problem with authority”, I call embracing personal power and celebrating the independent spirit. What experts call “delusions of grandeur”, I call self confidence and optimism. What experts call “shallow emotional affect,” I call freedom from the tyranny of irrational emotions. And finally, while the experts say that guiltlessness is a disorder (because it is the lack of guilt that separates the sociopath, psychopath and Machiavellian from the general population), I say it is the enhanced ability to do the things that build civilizations and keep societies going, the very things that the guilt afflicted shy away from. It is no coincidence that our lack of guilt so often comes with abnormally high intelligence and charisma.
We are born to lead and many of our traits support this conclusion. We are born knowing this and the rest of you know it when you see us. It is these very traits that make us necessary for the survival and success of the human species, especially since the dawn of civilization. It’s why you elect us, follow us, and often give your very lives by our command. Though we are found disproportionally in prisons we are found with even greater frequency in your governments, your corporations, your military. Who else but someone devoid of conscience could order thousands of soldiers to die, regardless of how noble the cause? Who can fire hundreds of workers to save a company from bankruptcy and then sleep peacefully that night? Who can so elegantly tell the lies that must be told, to protect the very people to whom the lies are told? It takes one of us to make those calls, the calls that the rest of humanity cannot make.
And yet a distressing number of us become the very thing you fear us all to be; criminals and abusers. This creates a cycle of ignorance, as all the “sociopaths” identified by the news are killers or wife-beaters, and so we identify this collection of gifts as evil, as pathological, and thus those of us in our proper roles feel the need to disguise ourselves for fear of being labeled evil. A similar cycle of ignorance has kept homosexuals oppressed for decades; homosexuality has been associated with child molesters and perverts, drug use and disease, and it was called “evil” for this.
We are not evil; you simply do not recognize the “good” ones as the same phenomena. Google “sociopath” and all you find are ways to recover from contact with a sociopath, information advising you to run from relationships with sociopaths, and misinformation that will claim that “sociopaths cannot feel love” or that we “cannot think of others as human beings” or that we are “parasitic”.
It is very distressing to discover, for a child who has always known that he was different, that he is a monster… that he is doomed to live a loveless life and become a criminal, that he will never be able to hold a job or raise a family. Indeed, one must wonder how often do one of us accepts the mischaracterization of our abilities and instincts as things to be repressed and rejected due to ignorance? How often do the young among our frequently demonized minority discover what he is, buys into the paranoid misinformation and simply does what he is expected to do, withholding from society the very qualities it needs and secretly wants to maintain itself and imprisoning himself in a state of confusion and needless pain as a result?
What is the so called sociopath? A sociopath is one of your potential leaders, labeled by the fearful and unreasoning masses as something sick and evil. “Sociopath” is a negative label which only serves to further alienate people who simply need to be allowed to embrace their gifts. Getting rid of this misleading term should be the first step towards fully understanding who we are and the role we play in this world. We are not the embodiment of a pathology. On the contrary; we are instead the uniquely gifted.
Editor’s note: I sent the author this question: “How do you justify lying and deception?” His reply:
Justify? Did you forget the “no guilt, no remorse” part already? We have no need to justify the lying, as we don’t see anything inherently wrong with it. Deception is merely a means to an end. Nor is it necessarily malevolent. We simply act in our own self-interest. We know what we want and the easiest way to get it. It’s a gift.
Well, there are things GOOD that the sociopaths do…in Hitler’s Germany THE TRAINS RAN ON TIME….well, for a while, anyway.
In the book,”the 48 Laws of Power,” the author writes it almost as a “play book” for psychopaths in how to get what your goal is. Some of the advice, frankly, is pretty good advice, but when you read very far you get the idea that the author is a psychopath, like the one above.
Oh, BTW sister sister, it was NOT ONLY the Love bombing that was a reason to dump that jerk…it was ALL THE OTHER SIGNS and RED FLAGS, like his rudeness, his gas lighting, and his CRIMINAL HISTORY of 22 years in prison. Him just wanting to paint your living room was only a SMALL portion of the things I saw in him that were DANGEROUS red flags. It was, however, the BAIT he was holding out to you. But there is always a HOOK inside the bait.
Well put, Survivor3!!
Its a gift which will earn three squares and free housing (ie prison) and a lonely, loveless death. Not something I’d envy.
Sociopatholgy is unloveable. If you betray the people who trust you repeatedly, it has a cost. And the world is not big enough for that behavior to go on and on for anyone in it.
The more visible you are, the faster you will be identified and either removed from society or ignored.
Will we feel any remorse for this? Can we?
Only to the extent that we would pity a calf born with its legs turned backward that needed to be put down. Or any other animal with deformity which defined that it would not survive.
Sociopaths don’t survive well.
They all run down and out of options eventually.
The shame is that we have no better ways to set them aside earlier in life because it will always come to a bad end and leave in its wake victims who are materially and emotionally harmed.
But, these lives will run their courses.
I am reminded of the line from the Rock Opera Tommy from the song We;re not gonna take it-
“We’ll forget you better still”
“do they feel ANY kind of connection to a spouse or their own children since they are incapable of the true meaning of LOVE”?
donna dixon,
I have contemplated this question. I think, at best, the connection which the SP or N has to their spouse or children is w/in the realm of toxic bonding. They view themselves as the King/Queen, so any good they may do for their spouse or children is done as a superior being administering to their minions, their subjects. Also, any positivity they bestow on their spouse or children may be motivated by their need to ‘look good’ to others. Outsiders may view our parents & spouses as wonderful & giving, but we know the truth & the SP or N never wants that mask to slip or illusion to be broken.
Edit: to SPs or Ns, other people are ‘things’, so they ‘love’ us just as they love their favorite chair, car or other things.
Good points clair
Thanks Ox Drover! 🙂
Clair ~ Your thoughts do make a great deal of sense ~ Since they aren’t capable of deep emotions what else can it be BUT a front for building their image? THANKS!
Thanks donna dixon! 🙂
“a front for building their image”
You raise a very good point: Perhaps everything an SP does in relationship to another person is to reinforce the SP’s mask. Probably the worst thing we can do to an SP is to unmask them, which in turn, will cause them to unleash their narcissistic rage.
Clair,
I just got chills! When the mask fell I did experience that narcissistic rage and it was SCARY! Although never physically abused by him once you realize your entire relationship was a mask there is no telling what they are capable of.
While first reading this post I thought, “Why is Donna giving this self-glorifying person a platform to pound his chest?” But after reading through it and observing the self-delusions this person buys into regarding “winning friends and influencing people” and genuine lack of responsibility for despicable conduct, I was glad she did post it. While this person may be enjoying some sort of material sucess and “career progression” from the general tone of the post (if it’s even real!), the claim that not all sociopaths are parasitic is bogus in my eyes. This one might not be leeching off of someone for a place to stay, money, etc, but likely bleeding others of emotional resources.
They truly seem to be beyond help of any kind, because, as this particular individual has admitted, they see their traits as a gift, that they are some how tragically unique. “They know the music, but not the words…” How many of us got that impression reading this person’s words?
What a sad existance, obsessed with ladder climbing and power at all costs. I thank God that I am at the opposite end of the spectrum, highly sensative as opposed to sociopathic. I used to consider my sensativity a liability, but it’s actually turned out to be more of a gift than I could have ever imagined.