Last Friday Robin Hoffman interviewed me again on her radio show, The Feminine Soul. We discussed recovering from a relationship with a sociopath. She asked two very important questions, “How do we avoid picking another sociopath in the future?” and “How can we ever trust our instincts again?”
Coincidentally, yesterday I received this letter from a reader:
I got involved recently with a man who seemed to be the opposite of my previous psychopath. All the traits I like, strong, dominant, etc but seemed to have a good heart, and importantly a good history. I checked him out, he had a long service in the police force and a voluntary youth organization, was widely respected and successful.
Recognizing my vulnerability, I kept my eyes and ears open, and my heart guarded.
After 3 weeks I started to spot inconsistencies, tested a bit, and noticed the feeling of cognitive dissonance and didn’t ignore it.
After 6 weeks I ended the relationship, even though part of me was screaming inside “no, don’t do it”. Only afterwards did I discover that not only was he cheating on a wife who had cancer, but he was also cheating on a long term girlfriend, who genuinely loved him and is devastated. He was playing with fire by putting us both on the same webpage and we got chatting without having any idea of the relationships involved and it all came out. I’ve given her a link to saferelationships.com and can only hope she learns from the experience.
I SO proud of myself. I got out before getting involved, so it didn’t hurt. The experience was positive in that I made a different choice, for me. My stop light is starting to work and I’m learning I can trust my instincts again.
There are three parts of ourselves that are “taken” by the sociopath. The first part is the conscious mind. The sociopath fools the conscious mind by lies. It can be very difficult to detect these lies because skilled sociopaths use willing and unknowing accomplices to back up their lies. (This is why it is important for family members to distance themselves from the sociopath and his/her relationships.)
Sociopaths know to pick on trusting people. In general trusting people are loyal and trustworthy. These are good qualities so when your conscious mind is taken, you can be left with a lot of self-doubts. The strategy of carefully checking out people’s claims is a good one but it often takes time to uncover a sociopath’s lies.
Our unconscious minds also get “taken” in the sociopath’s con. Sociopaths are dominant and seductive. These traits may be arousing and attractive. I think that this may be in born. We may be attracted to these traits instinctively just like certain body parts are arousing for some.
Even though the attraction to the dominance and seductiveness of sociopaths may be instinctual, I don’t think we are stuck with it. I was able to train myself to be different and I want to share with you how I did it.
I am somewhat ashamed to say it took me too long to understand that I was drawn to sociopaths because of their dominance behavior. Once I understood this, I set out to find a way to feel differently about them. I wanted to like them less. I had always observed that there were some mental health professionals who were instinctively repulsed by sociopaths and I wanted to know what was different about them.
In studying the literature on dominance behavior and personality I discovered that dominance and empathy are opposed to each other. When dominance motives are in play empathy is turned off. The hormones of dominance also turn off empathy. The opposite is also true empathy and affection also suppress dominance motives.
Armed with this knowledge I set out to study men I knew who had long track records of loving empathetic behavior. I spent hours talking with them about their views of love, life and life’s purpose. I did this until the lesson had sunk in emotionally not just intellectually. A fully human person, male or female is loving and devoted. He or she is able to control dominance motives and express them only when appropriate.
Since this emotional lesson sunk in, I have found myself actually repulsed by dominant people. I no longer admire them or find them entertaining. Instead, I emotionally experience them as they are, shallow and lacking in important qualities.
Sociopaths also “take us” on another level. They manipulate us into forming bonds with them. These bonds are unconscious and chemical- whether the sociopath is a family member or lover. Breaking a bond with a sociopath is very painful. We do not have to be enslaved by our human bonds, we can acknowledge them and realize that at times these bonds have to be broken even though doing so is painful and difficult.
To sum it up then your new wiser mindset may have many aspects to it. Wisdom is a practice as well as a state of mind.
Indigoblue and Beverly: Conscious choice of what? How they were conditioned? LOL. Think about it, if you were lucky enough to receive love as a child, then love is what you know, if you weren’t lucky enough to receive love as a child, you fight to find that love (aka our own Oxy is testament to this) … or else, you give up (the weak way out) and join the ranks of those that do NOT love… then it’s your journey in life, free will … to search for what it is that your spirit truly needs … the sidetracking off reality is what we are blogging about.
Peace.
Wini, I am so with you. Love and Peace to You Wini. The road of Divine Love is not an easy Road.
Hi Beverly, I knew whe’d be on at the same time soon.
Good to chat with you, I’m glad you are bringing the conversation back to the reality of how we are to heal … that healing is through LOVE… whether we give it out to the world or we receive it.
Peace.
Just think Beverly, if life didn’t have all these twists and turns to it … we’d be a pretty bored bunch of humans down here (LOL). It’s sitting back to allow yourself to see the big picture, not just having it clouded all the time, by the likes of our EXs (the spiritually stunted children of the universe)… they too, have their journeys to be on …
Peace and love to you too Beverly.
Much Respect, Love and Peace to you Dearest Wini.
Bev: You are right about them being drawn to us “energetically needing to progress”. I knew this because I wasn’t choosing these folks to come into my life, they were flocking to me. I was, as usual, just minding my own business … it was these folks that were picking my brain … curious in how I ticked, then always telling me I was naive. Couldn’t believe someone could live the way I do (LOL).
I know my lesson was forgiveness. True forgiveness, not just saying it, living it.
Peace.
Yes Wini, when the advice says, ‘be in the world – but not of the world’ – what I think that means, is that when we take the higher view, we realise that everything that happens to us, is just mirroring us, its a fantastic dynamic cosmic mirror that shows us where we are at. Then we dont get so drawn into it (being ‘in the world’- we take a step outwards) and that leads us to our divinity.
An hour and a half ago Beverly talked about turbulence and chaos in their relationships. That is what the s has tried to introduce into my life since my daughter married a s. There is so much drama!!! Do you think they focus on one relationship at a time with the drama and then we could be “off the hook” for a while until it comes back to us? Or is it just constant drama with everyone all the time? Is the drama just to get the attention off themselves? or is it just the only way they know to deal with people and circumstances?
Wini, I think forgiveness is a lifelong experience of learning and I feel that you have that template. Weaving that template into the ‘group’ of souls who have suffered the same as you is a healing experience for you and everyone else in the group.
Onajourney. Yes the chaos is their bid to get you to focus on them and less on you – it is a diversion. They also like the ‘hit’ of getting you to focus the energy onto them, so they dont feel so abandoned.