I subscribe to a service through which reporters who are looking for information for their stories can find sources. Not long ago, a reporter posted the following query:
A reporter at a national publication is writing about the hell of heartbreak and is looking for people to interview who have experienced a romantic breakup or divorce and who have creative/unusual advice on how to get through the day-to-day emotional turmoil of it. If you’ve been through a breakup (as an adult), how did you deal with the emotional pain, especially in the very beginning? How did you distract yourself from your heartache? How did you keep yourself from calling or texting your former beloved? What advice would you give to someone else in the middle of a heartbreak?
Most of us are here on Lovefraud because we experienced the most devastating, heartrending breakups of all—those involving sociopaths.
Ours were not run-of-the-mill relationships where the ending was, “he’s just not into you.” Ours were not situations in which two people “just grew apart.” Ours were false relationships from the very beginning, in which we were targeted, exploited and betrayed.
Advice? Yes, I have advice.
First of all, if you were involved with a sociopath, NORMAL ADVICE DOESN’T WORK. Even though self-help gurus have sold millions of books, and even if your friends have been through many, many relationships, unless they, too, have been targeted by sociopaths, THEY DON’T KNOW WHAT THEY’RE TALKING ABOUT.
So, the first bit of advice is DON’T LISTEN TO PEOPLE WHO DON’T GET IT.
Back to positive advice. What is the one thing you need to understand if you’ve been involved with a sociopath? IT’S NOT YOU!
Oh, the sociopath certainly told you that you were the problem, told you that you had problems, and even blamed you for his or her atrocious behavior. But that was all part of the manipulation. Sociopaths intentionally make you doubt yourself. Sometimes it’s to make you malleable so they can take advantage of you, sometimes it’s just for their own entertainment. If you’re feeling nuts, you are having a rational reaction to an insane situation, and your ex is the one causing the insanity.
Next you need to know that the relationship NEVER WOULD HAVE WORKED. Although sociopaths lavishly proclaim their love, they’re lying. Sociopaths are incapable of love. But they have learned that if they mouth the words “I love you,” they can get what they want. And what they want is to exploit you.
If you’ve been involved with someone like this, there is nothing you could have done differently. Nothing would have made the situation better. The sociopath cannot be satisfied, and cannot change.
So how should you view your experience? DON’T TAKE IT PERSONALLY. Yes, really. The fact that you were mistreated had nothing to do with you or your behavior. It had everything to do with the fact that you were involved with a cruel, heartless sociopath.
If your ex didn’t do it to you, he or she would have done it to someone else. Why? Because that’s what they do.
Finally, YOU CAN RECOVER, BUT IT WILL TAKE TIME. This is not a normal breakup. It wasn’t only your heart that was broken. It was also your view of the world.
Give yourself time and permission to heal. Surround yourself with people who truly care about you, and embark on a program of NO CONTACT with the sociopath. Even though you pine for the individual, understand that you fell in love with a mirage, and what you’re feeling is residual addiction to the relationship.
Do not call. Do not text. Do not send email. The stronger your commitment to NO CONTACT, the faster you will mend.
Take positive steps. Find joy and happiness anywhere you can, and let them seep into the empty hole that was your heart. Eventually, your heart will fill up and you can try again—with much more wisdom than you had before.
Also Sky – you might be right that some of them enjoy the wife or husband finding out. But mine at least saw it as a HUGE inconvenience, and would have far preferred it to have never come out. At least, I’m all but certain that this was the case…
Constantine AND Skylar:
Wow, thank you both for some humor and insight on this early morning! You both are great when it comes to making me REALLY see what it’s all about…this world of dealing with these spath creatures.
Skylar: Very important point about the spath enjoying the drama if the spouse finds out…hmmmm.
Constantine: I love it! Just send the books AND the letter! Too funny and true…so much for me to think about. Also, thanks for pointing out that June Carter wrote “Ring of Fire”…I didn’t know that. And yes, how dare they give us hope to believe in finding a soul mate. Sigh. Very rare occurrence I think.
Thanks again to both of you for jumpstarting my day 🙂
Constantine,
it’s 2AM and I woke up. Now I can’t sleep.
While it’s true that a spath doesn’t usually like their mask ripped off, they are fully capable of enjoying the ensuing drama, even still. Most of them will just go out and get new supply, if things go south. But they’ll drag it out, for the drama and whatever monetary gain there might be.
My exspath was able to reel me back at least twice, that I can remember. I never left because I caught him cheating, I left because he was intolerable. I wish so much that there had been more resources back then.
The third time, he was ready to give me up. He said, “I’m not going to stalk you this time. I’m not that way anymore.” Read that : You’re out of money and I need someone that I can fool.” But he still stalked me and my spath parents. They just can’t stand the idea of being abandoned. It’s painful to them. They want to be the ones doing the discarding.
Do you know what happened to your spath’s marriage? Did it end? Did the husband realize he was with a spath?
Hi Louise,
which time zone are you in? Are you like me, in the twilight zone?
🙂
Sky,
I honestly have no idea what happened to their marriage. The last I talked to anyone was when I chatted with the husband on the phone that time five years ago. He called me after I sent the letter to thank me. He was a good dude with a real gentle spirit, but it was quite sad to hear him “in person” (he was still in shock, I think, and I felt guilty as hell – even though I had nothing to feel guilty about!). And the way she was STILL lying to him about everything was close to insufferable! But from what I gathered, she was well into “clean-up overdrive mode” by that time, and going through all the requisite motions of crying to the people who needed to be cried to, etc. etc. (Interestingly, she was apparently her usual stony-faced, guiltless self with him.)
He did say that his sister told him he should never take her back. – I bet I’d like her! Haha, I wonder if the sister stuck to her guns and gave that bitch the cold shoulder at least?! I certainly hope so!
As I think I’ve mentioned, I found out later that she was screwing two other guys – in addition to me and the husband. I suspected it before, but I didn’t have any absolute proof. But two years later I got the definitive evidence. (By an unbelievable coincidence – I wasn’t even looking for it.) However, I never contacted him again after that. I figured at that point it was REALLY no longer my responsibility. But it still bothers me a little that he doesn’t know about the “three way” being a “five way”!
Anyhow, I think there’s a very fine line here, Sky. Your points are well-taken, but I still maintain from her behavior that she was at least seriously “put-out” by all of it. Of course, she made it back into the old “blame-everyone-but-herself manipulation game” pretty fast (in a week or two, as I surmised from that conversation with the husband); but, again, I’m certain that it made her life more unpleasant than it would have been if I’d simply done nothing.
Oh, and I never called her a “sociopath” to him. (I referred to HER that way in that last letter I wrote to HER.) But now that you mention it, Sky, I wish I did! – if only to get the “wheels turning” in his mind. Hmmmm – that is a good question: I wonder if it ever occurred to him on his own?
Your own S sounds like he did many similar things, like putting on that show in front of your parents’ house. In any case, no one should ever be fooled into thinking that they can’t cry when self-interest demands it!
Have a great day, Sky.
Louise,
And you have a great day too! If I remember correctly, you said that you work in an office somewhere? So I think I’ll use that as my mental image of you: a “forty something,” hopeless romantic woman toiling away in a cubicle!
A few times on this site I wished outloud for a letter I could send to a victim of a sociopath. A letter to facilitate “waking up”. I now realize this is IT. BINGO. I am going to buy a handful of books, and ship them to his new wife. m going to include the Sociopath Next Door, get a marker, cross out the title and fix it so it says the Sociopath At Home.
Superkid
this morning is a bit hard again – i have been doing some reading about my blood type, and we have elevated levels of cortisol, and cortisol is naturally elevated in the morning. this explains why i have more pain in the mornings.
work – i feel so far under the work load i don’t even want to get out of bed. depression and pain and fear makes for a reluctant one joy. but i have to interview 3 people today and and meet with a volunteer (who is so bright it’s amazing) who is working with m e on another project.
I can’t get out from under this pain and sluggishness to get a perspective on what’s going on at work.
this is my usual morning thing now, and it helps to write a few words…i feel less alone in it.
skylar:
No, I am in the Eastern time zone. I was up at 4:45AM. UGGGHH. That’s ONLY because I had to work today.
Superkid:
The “Sociopath at Home”…I love that! 🙂