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.
Vee,
what makes you think you are a sociopath? Which traits specifically?
Depends. Which Spotters’ Guide do you guys use? Suggest some traits or behaviours and I’ll tell you whether I have them. I’ve never killed anyone, if that helps.
ahhhh…
evading the question. That’s one.
🙂
sorry, I couldn’t help myself. I belong to the rope school of thought, myself.
Ok, in all seriousness, do you project blame on people WITHIN your circle of trust (friends, family). Do you slander them behind their backs? or do you tell them to their face that they are guilty of your own transgressions? (shifting blame).
Are you envious? Do you find that you want things just because other people have it?
Do you engage in sabotage? sabotage can be mechanical or it can be psychological. It just means that you secretly inhibit someone’s or something’s ability to function.
For example, do you pit your children against each other in trying to win your love? Do you undermine your loved one’s self confidence?
You see, a psychopath is not someone who is cruel to people they don’t know. It is someone who is cruel to those closest to them. My spath neighbor quoted, “keep your friends close and your enemies closer.” Spaths like to make friends with people they are going to screw over.
Skylar…LOL
Vee, best of luck to you on your Expedition.
Hehe, nice one 🙂 Yes, I’ll delay answering on occasion. Fell at the first hurdle, huh?
Envy, yes. Doesn’t everyone? I see something nice, I’d like to have it. It doesn’t ruin my life if it’s not possible though.
I don’t expect my children to ‘win my love’. I care for them unconditionally, because they’re mine and they’re interesting people in their own right. They have nothing to prove to me.
Sabotage, projection … hell, maybe. You’d have to ask them. If I’m attacked I’ll say or do whatever I must to defuse the situation. Slander, no. If I talk about somebody I’ll discuss their actual traits and behaviour as I observe them. If they don’t recognise themselves in what I say, they need to be more honest with themselves.
Vee,
You continue to evade the questions.
Around here we have the courage to look truthfully at ourselves and acknowledge the good and the bad, then we talk about it. You came here professing to be a sociopath and wanting to talk about it, so I gave you a chance to talk about it. You’ve taken each question and changed it before you answered it.
I’m sorry but this conversation is going nowhere so I won’t be participating anymore.
Gosh, that sets me straight …
What did I change? I answered your queries. Questions in the format ‘Do you do evil stuff?’ aren’t going to get interesting answers. I do stuff. Sometimes people are disadvantaged by that. Next!
Skylar, LMAO!!!!!! Expedition Fail.
Aw, now you’ve hurt my feelings 😛 Interesting Greek chorus effect there, by the way. A little creepy, but interesting.
I assume from the ‘expedition’ reference that you think I’m here for some nefarious evil sociopathic purpose? *sigh* That’s really not my style. I saw a question that hadn’t been addressed, and thought I’d feed my ego by being helpful. If I wanted to mess with your heads I’d have invented a victim persona.
This thread is getting sort-of off topic…
Anyway, at the risk (and likelihood) of being crucified, I am going to at least partially agree with and wholly applaud the author.
You see, I am struggling and trying to come to terms with the fact that I am likely a sociopath/psychopath. I say “likely” because the entire criteria of these “disorders” do not really describe me. Here’s where I differ:
I *do* have empathy with others and really do feel emotions for them. The thing is, I can “turn it off” when it is necessary and remove emotions from the equation. Eventually it does catch up to me and using this ability has caused me some serious anxiety/depression issues. I believe that using this mechanism or “gift” has allowed me to (literally) survive some situations where I may not have otherwise done so.
Before you give me a pass and say it is just PTSD (which I have been diagnosed with), I must tell you that in all the soul searching I have done over this matter I always come to the same conclusion: I am a sociopath. There is just too much of who I am and what I have done in my life to otherwise deny it.
Now let me say something else… I am sorry to all of you here who have been hurt and used by people like me. I do not know any of you from Adam, so I do not say that facetiously or to elicit any desired response. In truth, I will not likely return to this thread so whatever is said after this is of little consequence to me.
Except it is. I really do care how you feel. Just like I feel bad about how I have treated certain people in my life/past. Only with age and experience have I been able to gain some perspective about this, though. Now when I look back, I can see how things I did and said must have hurt my first wife (I was married at age 16 to almost 30, single/alone for 11ish years and now have been married for several years, again). Usually the things I did and said back then (during my first marriage) were to get my own way. It was how I moved the things that needed moving (behaving in a sociopathic way).
Today, I really care about how my current wife feels. I still find myself acting somewhat similar to what I did before at times, but I do my best to not lie to her; to not blame her for things that aren’t her fault; to genuinely apologize when and only when a genuine apology is due. The years have taught me that even though sociopathic behavior may feel natural, I do have some control over what I do/say and more importantly that it does affect others in ways I would not want to be made to feel; ways that I would not want my children to be made to feel.
So I struggle with my nature. I have recently been looking online to see if others like me want to change, too. All I really come up with is stuff like I have been seeing here; things that say, “there is no treatment for sociopathic/psychopathic behavior”; advice that tells people to run from people like me. Believe it or not, I can even understand and appreciate the latter. While I selfishly cannot agree with it (like most of you, I do not want to be alone, either), I do understand it.
Many years ago (20 years or so) I told a therapist I was seeing that I thought I was either anti-social (clinically) or a sociopath. She told me I wasn’t because I wasn’t in jail (nor had I been there at that point in my life); that I wouldn’t care about anyone or anything but myself if it were true (and I was a single father at that time). Like then, today I still believe the diagnosis fits me. But like the author of the letter above, I cannot believe that I am a monster who is useless and to be run from; shunned from society. When I read about the how people have been treated by other sociopaths, it makes me sad (today in particular, I have been especially affected as my mother-in-law who I love and respect greatly recently told me of her great disdain for me and my kind) because I really do believe that I can take the “way that I am” and use it for good. I believe I can learn from my mistakes and I am not doomed to repeat them. I am what I am, as Popeye would say. However, that doesn’t mean I cannot grow and mature, yet still be who I am.
Seriously, after sitting here reading about sociopaths all day I was feeling pretty bad about myself and even in tears a few times. Some for me, some for the people (friends, family and strangers alike) I have hurt. Until I read this guy’s letter I was feeling pretty bad about myself, overall. I appreciate his message; it gives me some hope.
Thanks for listening.