Before I became entangled with the sociopath, I was an avid consumer of self-help books and programs. Although I was successful in my career, I could not get the relationship thing to work. This, of course, was the vulnerability exploited by the sociopath I married, but I get ahead of myself.
In my quest for answers—Why was I alone? Why couldn’t I find love?—I once participated in a weekend seminar called “Understanding Yourself and Others.” After some initial skepticism, I found the program to be helpful. One of the things I remember from the weekend is a pithy little motto:
“The truth will set you free—but first it will piss you off.”
In reference to sociopaths, truer words were never spoken. When we finally learn the truth about these people, after months, years or decades of deception, we are hurt—but we are also enraged. Then, as we try to dig ourselves out of the hole, we learn more infuriating truths about the inability of other people in our lives, and of society’s institutions, to help us. Let’s take a look at what we learn.
Truths that make us angry
1. The sociopath never loved us. We were used. He or she wanted our money, or sex, or a place to live, or business connections, or a family to make him or her look normal, or whatever. All the promises of eternal love were bald-faced lies. We were supply, that’s all. They toyed with our hearts, and we are furious.
2. Other people just don’t understand. Those who have been lucky enough to avoid entanglements with sociopaths cannot fathom how we fell for it. They don’t comprehend the elaborate deception, the psychological manipulation and our inability to extract ourselves. We hear, “Just get over it already,” and are angry at the callousness of people who say they are concerned for us.
3. Credit card companies don’t care that we’ve been defrauded. The con artists talked us into paying their expenses or giving them money. Unless we can prove identity theft, the credit card companies don’t care how many lies he or she told. Even if a court finds the sociopath guilty of fraud, we’re stuck with the bills—which is patently unfair.
4. Legal authorities cannot cope with sub-criminal sociopaths. Unless the sociopath commits murder or robs a bank, chances are slim that law enforcement will take action. Fraud and domestic violence charges are difficult to prove, so they often don’t get investigated. But even if the police do take action, much of it is undone in the courts. Between manipulating the legal system and lying under oath, sociopaths rarely get the punishment they deserve. Sometimes they actually get away with murder, and we are fit to be tied.
5. Media images of sociopaths are wrong. On television and in the movies, sociopaths are equated with The Sopranos and psychopaths are portrayed as Hannibal Lecter. Some disordered people are, in fact, demented murderers and serial killers, but the vast majority of them are not. By promulgating myths and not reporting reality, the media do a tremendous disservice to everyone. As a trained journalist, this one really pisses me off.
Truths that set us free
6. Evil exists. Many of us got into our predicaments because we did not realize that human beings are capable of the evil that sociopaths perpetrate. Now we know, and knowledge is power. We know to be on the lookout for these predators, so that we do not fall into their traps again.
7. Our intuition knows better. Most of us felt something was wrong with the predator early in the game. We got the tickling in the brain, the twisting in the stomach, telling us to get out. But we let the sociopaths explain away our concerns. Now we know—when it comes to protecting ourselves from evil, our instincts are usually right.
8. We cannot save the sociopath. Sociopaths do not seek treatment. But suppose, due to a court order or fear of losing their gravy train, they do submit to medication or therapy. Suppose the treatment makes them 50 percent less abusive. That’s still 50 percent too much abuse for a healthy relationship. No matter how hard we try to save them, sociopaths are incapable of empathy or love. Adult sociopaths will not suddenly develop a conscience. So we can put down the burden of rescuing them, because it is not possible.
9. We must learn discrimination. An important meaning of the word “discriminate” is “to distinguish accurately.” Our mission in life is to learn when to say yes, and when to say no, so that our decisions support our wellbeing. We cannot abdicate this decision to others, even to people in authority. Some of them are sociopaths. Even if they aren’t, the people in charge do not always have our best interests at heart.
10. We are responsible for our own healing. We’ve been exploited, injured, used, and now we are struggling to overcome the pain. But where did the pain actually begin? There may have been some vulnerability or desire within us—something as normal as wanting to be loved. Somehow we felt we were lacking, and that gave the sociopath an opening. He or she ripped open our hearts, and whatever old wounds were hidden in them. Now we must look within, force ourselves to take stock of everything that’s there, and heal. Even when we have support, it is a lonely journey that we must undertake ourselves. But it is the journey that truly sets us free.
wow. you folks are wonderful. i feel so much better.
beverly, that makes so much sense that his closeness to me would render him unable to be with me sexually while he was ‘doing’ everyone else.
tood, mine told me he had physical problems as well, not to mention i was very much ‘on to him’ toward the end and wouldn’t shut up about it!
sigh. i hope i get through this. he actually called me yesterday and said he wanted to come over and talk. i said, ‘oh HELL no!, at which point he simply said, ‘then i’ll just go be with HER.’
what a guy!
Blindsided,
My heart goes out to you for everything you have been through. I know that some women can be very vicious. I used to work with a lady who, for her own reasons did not like me. That was just fine with me until after she got fired I found out from the other girls in the office that she had told them I should do everyone a favor and take a gun and shoot myself. Now I know her and I did not see eye to eye but I don’t believe I deserved something as horrible as that. I know this is something very small compared to what you have been through, I just wanted to say that your story is not impossible to believe, I think all of us here DO believe. We have seen/read/heard and lived through things that would have at one time seemed too unreal to be real. Not anymore, we know, we believe, we care. Take care
Some of them, drop you, mess it up – when the relationship is going well – its like – they want to drop you from the tallest height to get maximum thud.
Yes, messing up the Christmas holidays seems to be one of their favourites. Cancelling or disappearing, or the like to cause a nasty dent in your relationship.
Dear Blindsided,
I’m glad you are feeling a bit better, and validated, here today. It is a long process, but though your X is diagnosed bi-polar, which is a treatable disease, you might as well accept that she is also behaving as a psychopath, and there is NO CURE FOR THAT. They EMBRACE EVIL, they ENJOY other people’s pain. Otherwise, she would not be there trying to cause you pain.
I’m sorry that you can’t move away so that you don’t have to see her, but with your situation, the only closure you will have is when the time comes that even seeing her doens’t make your blood boil. THAT YOU CAN ACHEIVE. I won’t tell you that it will be easy or quick, but you can do it.
Acheiving this level of closure is sort of like Jesus asked people before he healed them “DO YOU BELIEVE?” Only those that said “yes lord, I believe’ were healed. One man who was asking healing for his daughter said “Yes, I believe, Lord, help me with my UNbelief”
I know it will be difficult for you to always believe, but slowly you can believe that you can heal, even from this EVIL that has come into your life and blindsided you.
I suggest that the LEARNING ABOUT THEM (Psychopaths) is something that you spend every available minute doing. READ READ READ and learn. There is enough information and articles (essays?) here on this site to keep you reading for 100s of hours. Knowledge=Power and you have to take back the power from this woman to hurt you. To take back from this woman the pain she has stabbed you with.
It is all a massive grief process after losing “everything” we held dear. Losing all our illusions of “safety” and “security” and “happiness”—just GONE! We feel powerless, but we are NOT POWERLESS, we just have to take back our power, and to believe we can take our power back.
The absolutely satanic meanness in these people is “unbelieveable.” When I went to a new therapist, I spent two hours telling him “all my family is out to kill me” and my story was almost (not quite) as bizarre as yours and he very kindly and nicely asked me to BRING IN A WITNESS and DOCUMENTS to verify I wasn’t a “Paranoid delusional” I laughed at it, rather than got upset, because I can sure see how anyone hearing my story our yours would think WE WERE NUTS.
Fortunately, here, you will be believed, you will be supported, but finding others outside this safe haven to believe or support you may be difficult. There seems to almost be a NEED to talk about it, TO BE BELIEVED among victims and former victims. Our world seems to be toppsy turvie and “reality” is not “stable.” We seem to NEED someone to validate that we aren’t “crazy.” Even if they have driven us to the brink of emotional instability we are still NOT CRAZY.
We can be healed, they can’t.
I wish you well, Blindsided, don’t give up, it will take time, but you can HEAL, you can get better, the pain WILL STOP, and you will come out better than ever before.
Right now, though, you have been mentioning that “dating” is crazy during this time. I would suggest that for the time being that you don’t date, CONCENTRATE ON YOURSELF frist, dating and relationships take ENERGY and as badly as you have been burned, ENERGY is in short supply. Concentrate what you have, ALL YOUR RESOURCES onto YOU, healing you, and when that is accomplished you will have the energy to put into a new and HEALTHY relationship.
Many times when we go back into another relationship while we are still reeling from the previous one, it is a worse disaster than the one we were reeling from because we don’t have the energy and judgment and emotional stability to have a healthy relationship until we are farther along the road to healing. ((((hugs)))))
“Some of them, drop you, mess it up – when the relationship is going well – its like – they want to drop you from the tallest height to get maximum thud.”
Totally. Is there a school for sociopaths that they all went to, or something? Most healthy relationships you can see the end coming from a mile a way. The train is coming and you hear it, feel it, and see it. It gives you time to jump off the track unscathed. With the sociopath, the end comes like a silent train that wacks you out of nowhere. Leaving you to ask…”What just happened?”
Tood,
I just said something similar to my therapist. (trying to explain to someone about something like changing seats) I was talking to her about ( if things would go further) needing a restraining order to keep my ex off of my property. I said to her, “What do I say? He was in my driveway laughing and smiling.” I’d look like the crazy one.
Just curious. Has anyone else had the experience that their p/s actually would SAY “i’m the devil, you just can’t see it because you’re so in love with me” … or … “i’m a mean, cruel m…f…, and so what.” geez, hindsight sure is 20/20. when he would say these things i would laugh. i was FASCINATED by his ability to be so damn cool and above it all. it sounded so absurd, but little did i realize, it was true. where was i when this was all happening to me. it’s like i was so starry-eyed about his looks and what i thought was a spiritual love, that there he was WARNING me (for SIX YEARS!) and i never even heard him. what the …..?
lostingrief,
Absolutely. “I’m a cold m-f’er.” “I can walk away from anyone or anything.” I didn’t hear it, at least not in the coldly literal way he meant.
And towards the end, when he was projecting all his own defects onto me: “You are cold.” “You are aloof.” “You are crazy.” “You don’t care for anyone.” “You are selfish.”
Now for my own question: Has anyone else reached a “core personality” for want of a better term, with them? That is, have you spoken to a “thing” with a voice different than the P/S’s normal voice? If you have, you’ll know what I’m talking about. (shiver)
yes Tood he sent chills down my spine more times than I care to remember Mostly his personality was endearing and child like but when he did something wrong and I confronted him it was a complete different voice. One night he didnt come home at all and at 7 am when he came in he said ( I don’t give a fu-k what you think, I will just leave it’s that simple ) but after he slept for awhile the little pitiful opologetic boy resurfaced. Oh what a fool I was……was….