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.)
Dear Soulslapped,
As I read your comment I got emocional because I went throught all the stages and you are in the first one and I know how it hurts. I used to feel very guilty, so much that I had this feeling for quite a long time, but now after a year I’m much better but what I can tell you, first of all, you are lucky to find this website and blog so early, cause I just found out my ex was one of them after about 9 months, and during these 9 months I was still suffering. The articles and this blog made me see the whole situation with different eyes, and what happened doesn’t affect me like it did before, cause I have a different perspective toward this kind of situation. As oxdrover once said “knowledge is power”…now I don’t feel guilty anymore, I don’t suffer anymore. I know he doesn’t love or have feelings about the woman he cheated on me, it was only interest and a simply lack of values and lack of empathy. At the time I thought I couldn’t live without him. It takes some time to heal, but believe me, it will. It’s easy to say, and for a long time I wondered what lesson I could learn about what happened. Probably there is one, everything happens for a reason, but it’s no use looking for an answer. We want to find answers but they don’t appear. Cause it’s all nonsense. Yes, they are not normal people and the breaking up is completely different from a normal relationship. Have faith in god and believe in yourself, you are much better than you think you are. They leave us with a low self-steem but after some time you will regain it. Trust me. You may think it’s impossible as I thought in the begging. I thought I could never overcome this problem. I admit I still think of him more than I wanted to, but he doesn’t affect me. After some time I started taking some pills for depression. Actually I never thought I could take these kinds of pills. But since you don’t get dependent, I accepted to use. They helped me a lot, in the sense that, after I started taking them, I had no more negative feelings when a bad memory came to my mind. And it helped me have the calmness and the strenght to move on. They are not miraculous, but they keep you away from harming your health. I hope this helps you, it’s a little bit of my experience.
SG said:
“wow, you sure have a long memory”, trying to put the attention back on me.
N said the same thing to me.
I keep a diary, a haphazard day planner, and am a natural born detective; meaning I don’t have to go out of my way or be “evil”, as N put it, to notice or remember things.
Most of my partners have been fine with this side of me, except the liars.
N hated that I write everything down. He’d long forgotten what he’d said the week before, or that he’d blacked out some other night. He minimized his damage.
Over time with N, I realize now, I had changed my journal content from general “life stuff” topics to documenting our crazy life. If I hadn’t written it all down, I may have believed him when he said I was “psycho”.
I even offered to let him read my journals once and he said, “No. It will only be one sided” (this, from the man who while drunk, had gotten into my journals from two years before we dated, and spent a night yelling at me about guys I’d dated then!).
I thought that was funny because I’m in the habit of writing down events of the day (I had to with him). I do get into some observations and venting, but the events are not a matter of interpretation.
Now I realize the potential for danger there was in him reading my journals about events while with him…Holy Doodle! I can only imagine the further havoc he could’ve created. Luckily they’re online and not in my computer, or he’d have found those too.
He just resorted to “Whatever”, or “Why don’t you let it go?”, in the end, because he knew that if I didn’t remember something, I could always go look it up.
This was one of our circular interactions. I had wanted to plant a strip of the yard but was told “No” because all sorts of other things were going to happen there – someday:
“He’s been talking for months, about how he’s going to put a lap pool on the lower level of the yard, below the retaining walls and bamboo. I said “Cool, now that the boat and trailer won’t be there, we can level out the drive and put the trampoline down there too.”
“NO” He insisted.
“Why not?”
“Because I can’t see her from the house, that’s why!”
“Well” I said, “Then I guess the pool can’t go there either.”
“Why not?!” he asked angrily.
“Because you can’t see the pool from the house either – so, if it’s okay to have the pool there, why can’t the trampoline go down there too?” [the thing took up nearly half of the patio]
“NO”
“Okay, then why can’t I plant a garden there if we can’t put the pool and trampoline down there?”
“I don’t want to talk about it anymore – end of discussion!”
Nothing ever did happen in that part of the yard.
…forgot to mention, he knew that gardening was one of my “sanity keepers”; something I loved to do, and that it gave me an immense feeling of satisfaction. He made it hell to even put a plant in the ground and would argue and harass me about nearly every one. Nuts!
Soulslapped68:
Welcome. To badly paraphrase someone when I first came found Lovefraud: “This isn’t a club (surviving a S) that anyone would want to join, but if one has to join a club, all-in-all this is a pretty good club.”
The red flags. I ignored more red flags than you’d find at a Harvard football game (Go Crimson). When I finally realized it was drive off the S or die, I was a mess.
I’ve gained a lot of insight from this site, and you’ll discover the same thing I did — there are variations on a theme, but they all more-or-less employ the same playbook. I wrote a blog on this in December. A lot of readers told me that I captured the progressions of a S. Maybe it will help you understand.
I am still grappling with, and I suspect you are/will to, is trying to make sense of their nonsense. All my friends tell me that they will never understand how I offered him the life he could only dream of, and still set out to destroy me. I’m slowly coming to the realization that there never will be a satisfactory answer to what drove my S to do the things he did. It is incredibly painful to realize that I was played from day 1 and was nothing more than a source of supply to S.
In the case of my S, he has already served one prison term. I suspect, based on the downward spiral he is on, that he will soon be a guest of the criminal justice system again. I am glad that I won’t personally be around to witness that chapter of his life.
That said, each day that goes by, he takes up a little less space in my head. And it is very nice, each day, to wake up and not feel like I’m walking on eggshells and waiting for more crazy-making behavior to rain down around me.
You called yours a vampire. I prefer to call mine a parasite — for one simple reason — he bled me emotionally, financially, any way he could.
By viewing him as nothing but an insect, it makes it so much easier to remove emotionally remove myself from the situation and do what I have to do vis-a-vis the S. Right now I am pursuing him for money he owes (that’s a future article). By turning off the guilt and other emotions, I have gotten to the point that I can say it’s nothing personal, just business.
Stay with the site. You’ll get past the white-knuckle phase. There are those on this site who are way down the recovery road, others who are at various roadmarkers, and others getting on the entrance ramp. But, unlike our relationships with our sociopaths, our recovery IS a trip with a desination.
Okay. Just read the original post.
Can I just say that your conversation resembles so many conversations my husband has with the Bad Woman? At the time, you don’t think much of being manipulated, then afterwards, you think– that’s all they did was try to manipulate me!
Classic
Matt:
Soulslapped68:
” By viewing him as nothing but an insect, it makes it so much easier to remove emotionally remove myself from the situation and do what I have to do vis-a-vis the S. Right now I am pursuing him for money he owes (that’s a future article). By turning off the guilt and other emotions, I have gotten to the point that I can say it’s nothing personal, just business.”
This is exactally the point I was making before when someone told me that if people actually did this it would bring the world to chaos. The sooner you can accept that the person has no feelings with which to hurt the sooner you can sink to their level and regard them as not a human. The same thing they do to you. Its just buissness. Beat a sociopath by being a better sociopath yourself, you guys have all the resourses here at your disposal, start using them. The sociopath lives off the fact that you will abide by the rules and not take his point of view.
Things are bad here and I dont feel too good, still hardly any sleep, still the emails which I save, but now he has smashed my friends car, her husband wont allow her to go to the police cos he thinks it will never end, she has emails from all week warninghjer to stay out of the way. I feel cornered and like I fighting a losing battle, I also feel flat, like a zombie. Neither asleep nor awake ansd always the churning in my gut.
Boring potted plant in this blog…
Muldoon, I haven’t read all your posts and I’m sure someone will have better advice than me. But yesterday I went to my MD and she was so sympathetic, took a whole hour with me which blew me away and put me on some anti-anxiety medicine and depression medicine. She said it will help put my brain chemicals back in balance and help me concentrate and think more clearly, etc. I was so scared to go talk to her but as soon as I listed just some of the things I had been through, she was adamant that this was necessary for my mental and physical health (constant stress is so hard on the body).
I feel rough as sin. Cant explain it other than flat, i see no one other than the children and have barely been out of tthe door since Christmas,
Muldoon: Read Oxy’s blog on “Washed out and wrung out.” You sound like you’re being deeply affected by the stress, and I’m glad you’re online and communicating. That means you’re reaching out, and that is a very, very good thing.
What have you done for yourself today?