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.
I washed my car for the first time since coming back home and for the first time, I DIDN’T wash my neighbor’s car too-or sweep her steps like I used to. I used to spend so much time doing things for her, but I finally realized that she wouldn’t do the same thing for me.
It is a step for me in the right direction. I still have feelings but I know that doing what I was doing before was NOT right for me. I cannot change her personality or save her from the life that she has-even though I think it’s pathetic, lonely, and sad. She wants to be the way that she is and I’m NEVER going to change what she is. I have a quote on the wallpaper of my phone now that says “it’s not about being who everyone else wants you to be, it’s about being yourself and finding someone who loves every bit of it”. She is never going to love me and even if she did, she is too told for me to teach her how to love women-if if she really wanted me too. I realize just how much work that would be. I am at the point in my life where I don’t think it should be that hard.
Oh my goodness one believer… our stories are almost identical as far as spath upbringing, only thing is spath mom now tried time compensate for time she lost back when she was whoring around and he unhappy put off on grandparents. Dad is a loser drug addict and cheat. He watched both parents cheat and whore around growing up so I guess he’s never experienced what real love looks like. I think it gets better with time. Some days I could care less about him and some days I want to avenge. Just depends. I keep feeling a new partner will take my focus off of it. I haven’t dated since the break up. Just hurts knowing he is conning new victims still has the dumb ex for his fixes and is going along with life while I sit here broken from his treatment.
This describes to me what LoveFraud is all about:
“We shall be friends to those
heartbroken and in sorrow.
We shall share their sorrow.”
~ Rumi ♥
i saw the rumi quote, before the poster’s name, and I thought, ‘this must be Ana.’ 😉
One Joy,
Love you! 🙂 Hope all is well with you. I’ve been working a lot and not posting but reading, for sure.
Hi ana – that’s the nicest thing i have heard today!
not so good here. lots of physical pain, and depression.
not posting much either, not reading much. i want to be out in the world, but my feet are so bad…always in pain and so not enjoying much. owrked to support a business colleagues event today – many hours and it just bummed me out. havng that ‘everyone hates me, going to the garden to eat worms feeling.’ that is depression for me. so, not so good.
and how about you dear ana?
One Joy!
So sorry you are not feeling well. Is there something you can do for your feet? I soak mine in a basic “massage” tub and it does help some. I must massage my own feet just to make them functional.
One Joy,
I feel like when everyone hates me, I must be doing something right! LOL I’d be more concered about yourself, than whatever they feel about you. Take care of YOU.
Ana and Onejoy – It’s good to see ya’ll on a saturday nite..1steprs I get in those funky moods also, and my old bones scream at me ‘ YOUR OLD YOUR OLD ~!’ I am sorry your down and feeling not so good..get some rest and maybe tomorrow will be a better day for you ..
ana – i don’t know how people feel about me – what i do know is that attitude is depression. i need to exercise and can’t. i am going to find a new osteopath the=is week if i can. my whole body had ached for weeks and weeks caused by the problems in my feet. i am walking oddly and so everything is out of whack (and the fall when i hurt my leg didn’t help.) the way our of depression for me is exercise – i need the dopamine, i need to exercise.
hens – this isn’t about old, can’t wit to get *there*, but i hear you. there are no good days right now. i wake in pain and i go to sleep in pain. the mood doesnt’ shift, except to get worse during the day. my liver is and kidneys are struggling, and i am losing the energy for the ‘the fight’. i don’t want to burden them so am not taking pain killers. I have some strong stuff – if i could afford a day out of it, i would take my morphine. my energy to take care of myself is ebbing. I have to figure this out.