I thought I’d depart from a more standard post and offer below some verbatim interactions I recently had with a client whom I’ve always suspected as having sociopathic tendencies.
I share these interactions (with comments) not for their excitement, because their subject matter is in fact extremely mundane; but rather for the sociopathic elements I believe they instructively contain.
My client, T, is a 35 year old male, with a “work history” of voyeuristic, sexually aggressive behavior towards females. My role with him is as a “consulting therapist” for a community agency. T is not psychotic, and has no reality testing impairment. He is a verbally quick, superficially engaging, extroverted individual.
My suspicions of his having sociopathic tendencies (whether or not he meets fuller criteria for sociopathy) derive from the kinds of interactions with (and experiences of) him that I share below.
I should also note that T has a fairly substantial job history that has been undermined by his predatory behaviors (especially at work) towards females. Presently, he has held down a part-time job for several months with an excellent company. However, he does not work with women at this job, which decreases his chances of acting-out.
Briefly setting the scene, I’ve been asked by agency staff to address their concerns that T may recently be non-medication compliant (I repeat, he does not have a psychotic history). T has assured multiple staff repeatedly that he’s been perfectly, uninterruptedly medication compliant.
I meet T today at the agency, where a staff party is unfolding on the first floor. We meet in the midst of this rather crowded, claustrophobic scene. Very quickly, almost immediately, he asks me if I’ll get him something to eat? Because I intend to get something to eat for myself, although I experience his request as rather presumptuous and aggressive, I agree.
However, as I’m making a plate for him with two small sandwiches, I am intercepted by a staff person who informs me that T is not to be eating the party food. She is already on to him, because she’s already explained this to him: It is a staff, not client, party. As other clients enter the agency they, too, will feel entitled to eat the food if he does.
This is a reasonable limit, and I understand it. As I note, prior to my arrival, she had already explained this to T. However, this didn’t deter T from asking me, instantly upon my arrival, to make him a plate. After all, by using me he could circumvent the limit.
“T” sees this staff person informing me of the situation, and when I return to him, I explain the situation. He is somewhat amused, and also a bit irritated by, this frustrating development.
A minute or so later, seeing that the plate I was making up for him remains untouched on the table, he suggests with remarkable audacity, “Why don’t you get the plate now? Nobody’s touched it. Nobody’s looking.”
I am used to this kind of reaction from him, nevertheless I venture, “Don’t you think that would be unethical, since we were just told again that you can’t eat the party food?”
He says, with absolute equanimity, “You can bring it upstairs”¦no one will know. You can have one sandwich and I can have the other.”
Striking here is, of course, the obvious manipulativeness, but also the utterly blithe, shameless presumptuousness.
I’ve written in a prior post of the “shameless audacity” of the sociopath; T has shameless audacity in his personality.
To clarify, T knows very well that his latest suggestion (that I lift his plate and bring it upstairs) flatly transgresses staff’s reasserted limit, the basis of which he fully understands (even if it inconveniences him).
And there is that disarmingly comfortable presumption of my complicity in his suggestion to circumvent a staff rule (no less knowing that I am among staff).
Now here, I make a confession: Because I am really hungry, I bring a plate of food upstairs with me, where he and I are to meet. And because I’m constitutionally unable to eat in front of someone who is also hungry while I eat, I offer T a sandwich from my plate, arguably totally enabling his latest manipulation.
Now what does he do, in response to my gesture?
He pulls out his wallet and says, “What do I owe you?”
Now this is gamesmanship. This is a highly insincere gesture. He has no intention to pay me anything, and he knows on some level how ludicrous this gesture is. More audacious is that he knows that I know how absurd and insincere his gesture is. Yet with no shame whatsoever he engages me in this absurd charade.
I say: T, are you playing games with me?
T (convincingly, still fingering his wallet): No, what do I owe you?
S: For what?
T: The food, man.
S: You’re playing games, T”¦knock it off.
T: Hey, I’m just asking.
S: I know you’re just asking, but it’s a game you’re playing.
No big deal. I’m not looking to be psychotherapeutic here, just confronting of his bullshit. He drops the subject abruptly, because he has as little interest in it as he did to pay me anything for the food.
It’s as if this shallow, false gesture of gratitude was, for him, a fleeting source of entertainment, or solution to his momentary boredom.
Now at this point I ask him about the meds.
S: So what’s up with the meds? I understand there’s some concern you’re not taking them.
T: I’m taking them.
S: You are?
T: Yeah.
S: So why’s the staff concerned about that?
T: I don’t know. I’m takin’ them.
S: Every day?
T: Yeah. Every day.
S: The bloodwork doesn’t show it. The meds don’t show up in the bloodwork.
T: I don’t know how to explain that.
And there isn’t the remotest sense of accountability, of his feeling the remotest discomfort or anxiety to be faced with this suspicious, if not incriminating, evidence. He has reassured staff that he’s been taking his meds, and now he reassures me. He doesn’t find this bloodwork issue embarrassing, or puzzling; it’s more just a nuisance to be told about it.
T: I take ’em every day I work.
S: You said you take them every day.
T: I do.
S: Every day you work?
T: Yeah. I take ’em every day I work.
S: You work every day?
T: Yeah.
S: Weekends?
T; No ”¦not on Saturday and Sunday.
S: So you don’t take them every day.
T: Yeah, but I take ’em every day I work.
There is real glibness, and slipperiness here; also the brazen attitude that this incoherent, logic/reasoning should satisfy me.
S: You said you took them everyday, and now you’re telling me you take them only during the week, meaning 5 days, not 7.
T: Yeah.
Bald-faced lying exposed; yet again, neither embarrassment, nor the sense of anything to account for. He has used confusing, diversionary language as a strategy for evading responsibility. But even when the strategy has failed (very obviously), even when he’s been patently exposed for his prevaricating, he acts like he hasn’t been exposed for anything.
The blitheness is so striking, so comfortable, that it makes you doubt yourself—i.e., perhaps I didn’t expose him for anything?
S: So how does your not taking the meds on the weekends constitute your taking them every day?
T: I said I take them every day I work.
S: You’re saying that now, T, but you didn’t say that initially, and you haven’t been telling staff that.
T: Whatever, I’ll take ’em.
He’s annoyed now, not embarrassed. This is inconvenient for him. He’s not ashamed, but irritated. His attitude is something like, “So what. Okay”¦you got me”¦congratulations”¦who cares?”
T: I take the meds to keep me on the up and up at work.
S: Up and up? What do you mean?
T: Yeah”¦to make sure I’m like”¦exercising good judgement.
S: You don’t need that good judgment on the weekends?
T: I’m fine on the weekends. I take ’em every day, like I said, to make sure I’m good to go at work.
S: Uh huh”¦but we’ve already established you don’t take them every day”¦you haven’t been taking them on the weekends.
T: Yeah, I get you. Whatever. Okay.
There is a continued manipulation of the facts, a continued effort to blur the distinction between “every day” (7 days/week) and “weekdays” (5 days/week). It remains striking that T conveys an absence of shame”¦not suppressed shame”¦but an absence of shame. There is a difference between someone who, when caught lying, responds with suppressed shame versus no shame. T has no shame.
S: So you’re telling me you’ll start taking them seven days a week”¦that’s something I and the staff can trust?
T (apathetically): Yeah.
S: Uh huh”¦okay”¦.and you’re okay if I report this to the staff? The truth about your medication situation? And your intentions going forward?
T: Whatever”¦yeah”¦why would I care?
About now, the conversation shifts, when T abruptly raises the question of why we have to keep meeting weekly? This is a question he raises repeatedly—and, I think, manipulatively, passive-aggressively, and maybe somewhat impulsively—every week or other week, despite our having addressed it many times.
T: So”¦what do you think? You think we need to keep meeting?
This signals also his desire to drop the medication issue, as it bored and inconvenienced him.
S: You ask me this pretty much every week, and I pretty much tell you the same thing.
T: Yeah, but what do you think? I’m doing pretty well, right? No problems with women lately”¦I’m holding down my job. Why do we have to keep meeting?
S: We meet, T, every week, because it’s the expectation of the program that we do. You know this very clearly. The program expects its clients to meet every week with a therapist”¦even if just for a check-in.
T: Yeah, but what’s the point? I’m doing fine. Maybe we can cut it back to once every other week?
He is manipulating”¦cajoling. He wants what he wants.
S: It’s funny, but you’d think that you come out to see me, instead of my coming to see you. I drive 30 minutes to come here, to see you”¦sometimes for just a few minutes”¦you walk two blocks, I drive 30 minutes”¦who’s making the sacrifice? What’s the skin off your back?
T: I hear ya”¦I’m just saying I don’t see the point of meeting. You’ve said yourself I’m doing well.
S: You are doing well. You’re holding down this job, which everyone applauds you for”¦.you’re basically doing real well. Then again, the reason we started meeting in the spring was about your failing to own some of your behaviors”¦like the female issue. We were meeting about your failure to take responsibility for your actions. And now, with this medication situation, it’s still more of that”¦your lying, or only telling half-truths”¦this is the latest thing”¦your not being honest and responsible about your meds.
T: Look, I don’t care if we keep meeting”¦I’ve got no problem with you. I just don’t think I need it. It’s a waste of time.
No interest whatsoever in the larger points I made. He blithely dismisses them, and then superficially, emptily affirms his willingness to cooperate. But he will ask again, soon, maybe next week, about our cutting our meetings.
As I warned, these are mundane interactions. But mundane interactions can be full of interesting, diagnostically suggestive clues. In these instances, T deploys, rather characteristically, some verbal gymnastics and attitudes that, I think, lend strength to (rather than weaken) my hypothesis that he is sociopathically inclined.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Rune,
“If you ask me, “How are you?” I might havie had a horrible day, full of intrusive thoughts and self-blame. I may not want any focus on me at all, so I’ll say, “I’ve been up to my eyeballs; how are you?” There’s a “nothing” answer for you. It means, I don’t care to reveal myself and I just threw up a smokescreen.”
Yepindoodles, that sort of dodge is legit. Essentially, you’re good humoredly letting the person know that your emotional state is “out of bounds” for now. That’s how most healthy people handle these questions.
My friends are abnormally candid. (Like most geeks, I’m blunt myself. Only the candid can put up with the candid for long!) I asked one of them how she was doing yesterday. She said “OK. Just OK.” I know she’s got a tough balancing act in life, and I really admire her. She didn’t want to go into it. She wanted me to focus on the positive and productive. I feel honored by her trust, and I respected her enough to trust that if she needed help, she’d tell me so. I kept our conversation brief and businesslike, and told her I looked forward to getting together later. If I had dug for details, she would have avoided my call the next time around rather than resort to blowing me off with an artful dodge. Either way is fine, artful dodge or cool candor. They’re much the same when the object is simply defining your boundaries.
Some acquaintances say “OK, Just OK.” when they actually want me to become concerned and drag the details of their tale of tragedy and woe out of them. I find that taking these people’s claim at face value and ignoring the pity play is a good tactic. It causes them to become more honest to get their needs met or go searching for a fellow drama club member to act out with. Either way, I’m not blundering into unwholesome drama due to my dumb-bunny rescuing habits.
Steve:
That conversation you posted just brought back in a big way the whole essence of my x-S… disrespecting and disregarding any rules or conditions that “inconvienced” him and being a manipulator by nature… Wow…. a blast from the past!!!!
Don’t know how real this letter is from a “s”, but the psychologist took it seriously anyway.
http://counsellingresource.com/ask-the-psychologist/2008/12/31/am-i-sociopathic/
It is a person describing herself and asking if she is a sociopath. I wonder if they do have this much self awareness. The person I was involved with seemed to have quite a bit of self-awareness on some jerk factors, and on others, I think he was ALMOST totally convinced by his own lies. Certainly WOULDN’T see responsibility or accept it. Oh heck, it depended on which way the wind was blowing! He hated for me to quote from his old emails, he said there was no way he could predict how he would feel tomorrow or the next day. YUP, because self-interest has a way of changing with what is going on. He did seem sincere about depression at times and feelings of emptiness. Otherwise he said “Feelings! I have no training in feelings!” and seemed really lost about what others actually feel. But could say I love you, to get sex, in a heart beat.
I did observe some of the crazy behavior/conversation patterns in the short time I knew my S. But I didn’t know him long enough to know if he had any awareness about them. I did find out a few months after our break-up that his wife had once divorced him for pathological lying, but remarried him. The person who told me this conjectured that she remarried him because she may be involved in his army scam. Again, I’m very very grateful I got out when I did. My breaking point was 2-1/2 months. I could not have done it without the help of a few very wise counselors and this site.
Ox-D: Happy New Year! Today is a good day for you to congratulate yourself for your ability to gather strength and share it, even through the holidays and with all of us.
Do you remember Mr. Miyagi? “Wax on, wax off.” Mr. Miyagi was teaching the Karate Kid something very important about accessing energy that is physical, emotional, spiritual, and unlimited. Someone told me years ago that any work can be a spiritual practice if you do it in a mindful way: applying paint to the outside balustrade, mucking out stalls, brushing the dog. Tai chi exercises and yoga postures are energy-gathering practices, done in mindfulness. So is mopping the floor, or rocking a child and singing a lullaby.
In your work with the animals, on the land, I believe you’ve been accessing the strength to get you through, or you wouldn’t be here with us. I believe that if you accept that that energy is unlimited, it will flow through you in greater abundance, and help you “stand your ground” and get through whatever challenges come up.
As we try to heal from these “sociopathic interactions,” we need to claim any practices and any mindsets that allow us to move out of the chaos and into grace. I believe, Ox-D, that whether you’ve acknowledged it or now, you’ve been doing just that! Thank you for the example.
Star,
As far as your X’s wife’s “involvement”—wittingly or unwittingly–(i.e. is she another “victim” and/or another “dupe”?)
My take on it is that she is BOTH. She would HAVE TO KNOW that he is cheating on her again, and we don’t need a crystal ball to know it is AGAIN, right. LOL
She would also have to know that he is NOT “disabled” like he claims.
She obviously got a gut full once and divorced him, but then he hooked her back into the web. So I have a feeling that she is BOTH victim and dupe. He is using her for the scam (as a “witness” to how pitifully he is “disabled” etc)
My take is that though she knows he is lying, she is so deep in the web, so beaten down, she is “going along” with the scam. Ultimately, I think she is like Patty Hearst in the bank with the gun robbing it. I will pray for that woman and maybe the jerk going to Leavenworth will free her enough she can heal. There but for the grace of God go I, or you, or xxxx.
Justabouthealed, there is nothing that I know of that says a P can’t ALSO have depression. Many of them according to some statistics Dr. Leedom published are also BI-POLAR.
If a person is NOT a psychopath and is bi-polar the alternating depression and the mania can wreck their lives! I have several goods friend who are bi-polar and that make every effort to control their problem with medication and therapy, but from time to time, early on before they got good control of it, had major life problems because of it.
I have also, as a mental health professional, worked with many people who were bi-polar and without exception, they have all done some pretty “crazy” things just from swings of hormones vs medication.
So if you put the gradiosity, of the P, the fearlessness of the P, and the “I can flap my wings and fly to the moon” mania phase of bi-polar in a pot, turn up the fire, and stir well, you can cook up some violent “Brew.”
When the Psychopathic-bi-polar scheme comes crashing to the ground (as they will) the P goes into “deep dark depression, excessive miz-er-eeeeee.”
Dear Rune,
We posted over each other at the same time! Sincronicity. Thanks for the Happy HOlidays wish!
Oh, yes, Rune, I do know about the energy flow and it is here, on this farm that I can really “tap into it”—I know it is not limited to HERE, but this is a place I can do it more easily. I have done some of my deepest thinking while mucking out a barn stall or planting seeds.
I felt it in the African bush, and I find out years later that that is a common thing for people who first come to Africa, somehow like it is a “homecoming” from some ancestoral memory.
I felt it in the Grand Tetons, in the deserts of the Southwest. It isn’t the Place, IT IS WITHIN US. The problem for me,, I think, was I gave it all away, I didn’t use it for ME, for my own well being. I foolishly gave away too much (in enabling etc) and deprived myself of even the amount of energy left to survive when the Ps made a grab for what little was left.
I’ve used a quiet solitude to replenish it in the past, and could usually keep up with the “in vs out” flow, but with all the “ordinary” things of life sucking energy, to have a P-attack at the same time overwhelmed my ability to replenish my stores. I foolishly thought that my Ps cared about me (don’t we all! LOL) and begged them to give me TIME to replenish, and instead, it cued them that now was the time to ATTACK in FULL FORCE because she’s wounded.
It was about as smart (on my part) as an antelope begging a mountain lion to let him get his breath so he could keep on running! LOL Yea, like the LION cares for the welfare of the antelope! Wow, I laughed so hard at mh own analogy I almost choked!~
I can look back at the long long letters I wrote to my P-son telling him I just didn’t have the energy to keep running to town to Xerox this or that for him, or whatever his demand of the minute was, and I kept explaining to him as I tearfully wrote and begged him to quit demanding this and that, and all I got back was a letter guilting me about what a hard life HE HAD. And, a comment of “get up mom, you’re just not trying!”
To think, now, that I actually fell for that crap is amazing! LOL ROTFLMAO
Son C and I sat up last night well after midnight just talking about the past few years, and what led to where we were and what led to where we are NOW. How far we have come, and how much we trust each other now, love each other. We talked about our spiritual relationship with God, that is so much deeper, so much more internal, and so much more personal now.
I have also realized now that my sons are no longer “my boys” but are my FRIENDS. We have made that leap of trust. They are men, not children, and they are men I am so proud of to have as my friends. Though I can close my eyes and visualize them as “children” I know those “children” are gone, and replaced with the MEN that are now my friends. Men who are good, kind, caring, empathetic, compassionate, giving, but in no way “anyone’s fool.” They too are wiser and stronger than before the attacks.
Son C has come here and read a great deal. Though he has never posted on this site, but he has gained a great deal of wisdom and insight from reading here.
Both D and I still see some signs of PTSD in him, and C has very willingly agreed with this and we will get him an appointment with the Rapid Eye Movement therapy psychologist as soon as the holiday is over. We talked about the TERROR he felt as he was trying to hold the door closed as the Trojan Horse (a big man) was trying to push through with the gun (and C’s wife was desperately trying to get the phone out of C’s hand as he was calling 911). The resulting hypervigilence from that experience is still there, though I can tell that since he is home, even that has diminished somewhat.
I can’t help but feel upbeat for the new year. The guys and I have all three renewed our energy, our strength and our reserve, and we are a formidable “tribe” with the determination to make 2009 a GOOD year!
Woohoo! I hope you are enjoying your day, Oxy. I, too, am feeling pretty upbeat for the new year, barring something really stupid I did today, which I may talk about at some point, but not today.
While I’m enjoying my real life friends at my party today, you guys will all be with me in spirit.
Hi Steve Becker,
One thing I need to point out about this very good example of the everyday mundane conversation with a sociopath ,is that the play on our emotions is what we forget when we recall the bizarre twist of emotions. You are a trained listener and it seems that in the conversation you called him on the nonsense and his attempts to manipulate or show a lack of ethics or regard for rules.
Sometimes when I think back to the nonsense it’s difficult to remember the detail that twisted US, as good people to simply want to respond to the manipulation in order to help. THIS is the key. It’s about being a better listener and putting less responsibility on ourselves to attempt to please. I know that I have learned to better protect myself. It’s easier to remember the big lies and harder to recall the little manipulations along the way that DID get us so entangled in the nonsense and drama of everyday, which is simply unnecessary. It’s hard to remember the entire conversation. But I remember several. Sometimes it would get to a point where the subtle accusations and lies would cause such anxiety,, that I remember lashing out, not even understanding why I was so annoyed with the conversation, realizing later that it was all nonsense. Does that make sense?
it’s that kind of stuff that in trying to explain to others, why you feel the way you do and why things happened as they did, that people don’t understand. Steve thanks for this post. It helps to realize in advance what has happened in MANY conversations with them. It helps to understand the manipulation when we continue wondering how the hell this all happened.
I had a conversation with a friend the other day (not a sociopath, but he was a bit manipulative and this is a fairly new relationship). He asked me if I wanted to go away the holiday weekend in January. He mentioned three different places to go and I told him I would agree to any of them. He then said….”well let me see how comfortable I am as it gets closer.” I said “comfortable with me? What do you mean by comfortable?” He said “well money is kind of tight right now until abut August.” I was truly annoyed. A year ago, I may have said something like…… well I’ll book the hotel etc….and we can worry about it later, and probably would have been stuck with the whole bill. I just basically looked at him and said “Then you shouldn’t even be bringing these things up if it’s not affordable.”
I keep going back to the saying “the road to hell is paved with good intentions.” I focus more now on the end result and how it may benefit me. I feel sometimes like it’s a selfish thing to do but I’m over it. At 48 I am done doing for everyone else, and appreciating the fact that he wants to spend time away with me. If he wants to spend time with me he should do it within his means. I’m tired of taking care of everyone.
K-F: I think you need to own your part of this exchange. How are you not taking responsibility for your . . .
Oh, wait! Now I’m sounding like a “good therapist” doing EXACTLY the wrong thing for the person caught in a S-P relationship!!! It’s so easy for the uninitiated to blame us, the victims.