Several Lovefraud readers have written to me recently—annoyed, angry, horrified. These readers had finally realized what they were dealing with—a sociopath. They extricated themselves from the relationships and had no further contact with the disordered individuals. And what happened? Another sociopath came into their lives.
The readers asked: What is going on? Why can’t they leave me alone? Am I a sociopath magnet?
The answer is, not necessarily. Following are some observations to add perspective to the situation.
Millions of sociopaths
These disordered individuals are everywhere. As long as we’re living on this planet, we face the possibility of running into them.
Experts estimate that 1 percent to 4 percent of the population meet the criteria for psychopathy or antisocial personality disorder. But if you add in the narcissists and those with borderline personality disorder, as many as 12 percent of the population are social predators. In the United States, that’s 37 million people. With so many of them out there, we shouldn’t be surprised to come across them.
Faster recognition
The bad news is that these readers found themselves dealing with another sociopath. The good news is that they figured it out much more quickly this time around.
I think these readers should interpret their most recent experience as signs of growth. Yes, another sociopath came into their lives, but they spotted the predator! They know the warning signs and listened to their instincts! This is progress! This is good!
More healing
The fact that another sociopath appeared could also indicate that these readers still have more healing to do. Sociopaths sense vulnerabilities, like sharks sense blood in the water. Perhaps the readers need to look for more injuries within themselves that need to be addressed.
Remember, sociopaths come into our lives by exploiting vulnerabilities. Afterwards, we need to recover from the nasty encounter with the sociopath. But we also need to heal the earlier, deeper injury that enabled the sociopath to target us in the first place. Perhaps we were neglected as a child or abused in an earlier relationship. Or perhaps we had negative beliefs about ourselves—that we were unwanted or unlovable. By addressing and healing our vulnerabilities, we protect ourselves from further pain.
How to stay safe
The bottom line is that millions of sociopaths live among us, so chances are good that at some point, we’ll come across them. So here are the three steps to protecting ourselves:
- Know that sociopaths exist.
- Know the warning signs of sociopathic behavior.
- Listen to our instincts.
Our intuition is designed to protect us from predators. It will almost always tell us, early in the involvement, that something is wrong with an individual. The trick is to pay attention and take action.
All of these readers did that. So yes, it is annoying to find another predator. But at least they got rid of them quickly, before too much damage was done. These Lovefraud readers should be proud of themselves.
As for a “aaaaaah haaaa”, moment…..some months ago, was listening to the spath, as he bragged about the days he played football. As he was blowing hard, he said this: “Hahaha, in playing with your opponent, you look for their…WEAKNESSES, and then USE IT AGAINST THEM” Little did he realize when he said that….WHAT I ASSIMILATED….is NOT WHAT HE SAID, but the meaning behind what he verbalized. For me, that was a WOW! A huge……ahaaaaaaa! Now, anything HE SAYS, CAN…and WILL be used to MY advantage! WHOOOO HOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!
So profound, Radar_On…
Pedopile. LOLOlolol. Love that. So many fantastic word variations within this blog. Someone must create a spath/survivor dictionary/thesaurus or something of the like.
Oxy – Peggy – Radar et al – thank you so much for the thoughtful comments and elaboration. Yes, this is a key lesson for us all to learn.
I also fell for that trap. I thought I was so carefull, but the second time around nearly killed me. Not the first. I was even single for 7 yrs. so I wouldn’t fall into another trap and I believed I had done the work. Oh boy did I fool my self. I was so carefull, had all my friends and family approve of him and I thought all is well. Unfortunately, I had a bucket full of bullshit. When my world collapsed, it felt as someone had pulled the vail away from my eyes. I could see clearly. Not only did I attract spath boyfriends, but 99% of every single friend I had were spaths or had traits of it, they were highly selfish. Just as my family.
Yes I agree, in our childhood lies the answer. My mother trained me well to be targeted. I believe that our childhood and past isn’t only a place were we store our pain, therein lies the key to our healing.
magnets targets..do we really know us…???? I believe being damanged young and though adulthood…us as victims and surivors dont know the true us…. we ourself damanged to spaths..abusiers..ect… I believe being alone and learning ourselfs…the right theropy..we can learn to be living spath.abusive free..dont we deserve that.. I relized myself..i have no clue who I Am.. just my name..thats it…remember we were stripped of who we are.. for there gratification..i figure love and know ourselfs truly know ourselfs…and when the next spath.or abusier..or psyco ect..comes peeling in our lives the flags WILL FLY..
It is amazing to me how the topics on Love Fraud are so relevant to exactly what I need right now! I read on another site (wish I had bookmarked it) a very interesting remark. The Dr. who wrote the article said, (paraphrasing)
“The most harm in the relationship comes from the waiting: that things will change, things will get better. They never do. In fact, they get worse.”
Well, that hit me like a ton of bricks! I realized that I wasted so much time waiting for things to get better. To continue to suck up more of his abuse, both verbal and emotional, financial & legal…and then beating myself up for wasting that precious time. I was SO angry with myself. A woman said to me the other day, “Don’t beat yourself up.” “Why not?! Why shouldn’t I for being so stupid?” I replied. She said, “Because it doesn’t change anything.”
She is right. Forgiving myself and taking care of myself are my two priorities, neither of which I am very good at. I should be fantastic at it, since that’s all I did for the spath; forgive him over and over and take care of him. His needs, his wants, his goals, plans and dreams. Geez, aren’t I at least as good as he is? Surely, I must be. How can I see that I have some value and worth in this world? I think that’s what it’s going to take for me. Fingers crossed it happens sooner than later.
I know I’m a spath magnet. That’s why I’ve been thinking about it for a while and trying to figure out why.
I’m beginning to think it’s because spaths are an addiction. Once you are an addict, you can go into recovery but you’ll always be an addict and you have to be extra careful not to fall off the wagon.
So what exactly are we addicted to? DRAMA.
Spaths are the source of all DRAMA. And we don’t realize that this is what attracts our attention to them. They watch our faces. My spath used to describe people’s faces during moments of surprise or fear. He’d say, “You should have seen his face.” Facial expressions are what he eats for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
I think that drama addicts reveal our addiction by our facial expressions, among other reactions. They test us with their charisma, their stories and their larger than life persona. They read our faces. They know when they’ve caught a “live one”.
That’s why gray rock works. GIVE THEM NO EMOTION. Keep boundaries on your emotions. Do this as a matter of course. Don’t let your expressions give you away.
No, I’m not as successful at this as I would like to be. On the contrary, unless I’m on alert because I KNOW I’m in the company of a spath, I let my emotional expressions flow. This is my problem, I think.
The article was timely. I need to work on that: being a gray rock ALL THE TIME and keeping emotional boundaries for close friends.
I’m terrible at it. It’s my next goal. I’ll let you all know how that works for me.
…
http://blog.melanietoniaevans.com/how-the-phenomenon-of-narcissistic-abuse-occurs-and-how-you-can-overcome-it-p1/
Maybe this can shed some light;)