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.
kat…there is an ebook called:” women who love sociopaths” i havent read it but i believe it addresses just that issue on common characteristics among women who fall for the jerks……not sure if it can be generalized to men as well
henry, i can feel your smiling energy as oxy slapped you up side the head…and not a minute too soon…lol i was waiting for a piece of that rainbow cake you offerred….lots of icing pls
and blondie…right now they are just words..but soon your brain will say “HEY i cant be his everything ..i cant be his world, because HE doesnt even exist….you want that guy you THOUGHT he was….that was a play, a movie..when you take the stage away he is just a mannequin with clothes on………HE is NOT who you loved…you loved the fantasy, the dream of who wanted him to be………………the good news is , your pain will eventually heal and you have the capacity to love…….he never did and he never ill…dont worry about what he is doing or his life now………it is FAR emptier than yours ….you have the ability to FEEL love from family friends lovers……he NEVER has and NEVER will…………your sufferring is now….HIS is for eternity!!!!!!
Thanks Newworld..I love all your names, I think they say so much about us as a group. My mom gave me a gift card from Amazon, I think I will use it to read up on some of this stuff.
But Newworld, does it really heal? It has been (let me think) 14 years since I kicked my first husband out of my life, and still the feelings come back to haunt me. Sometimes I feel like the world is not big enough for him and I to share.
Henry, do you remember that song in the sixties.. “The Candyman”
That’s what I think of sometimes when you talk.. you are the best.
Oxy, thank you so much as usual. You are a soothsayer. I am lucky that when I confronted my mom about some of her past abusive behavior and reset my boundaries she (slowly) accepted it. She and I have repaired our relationship beyond anything I ever hoped for as a child. If she had been adamant in her abusive ways, I would have had to close myself off from her like you did. I still can’t find any excuse for the neglect she heaped on me as a child, but I have to say she has done her level best to make up for it in the last ten years.
Now the bad news.. guys I am as weak as I ever was right now. I am going on week 3 of zero contact with my cheater bf, and I am weak weak weak tonight. My heart just aches. I wonder how he can stand to ignore me day after day after day, knowing how I feel. He doesn’t have to come back (hell I wouldn’t take him) but it sure would be nice to know I don’t count for nothing to him.
I have had too much rejection lately I guess. Sorry I’m writing so much today, I’m hanging on to you folks for dear life. I cannot rest or relax today, my heart feels like someone is squeezing it really really hard.
gosh kat id love to say it will totally…i can say it will definitely lessen….im only one yr out so to early to tell……..i think our degree and speed of healing depends on what other burdens of emotional pain we still have buried from our earlier yrs…..i think that is what that e book talks about….you must fill us in……………it seems to me that so many of us here were taught or conditioned to put others wants and needs ahead of our own…we were great nurturers to all but ourselves and this may have been the blow needed to get our attention that we MUST care for ourselves and not consider it selfishness………the universe has sent us the next lesson in our journey….thank God we are now on the other end and not having to go through the fantasy again and find out it wasnt real
i have noticed all the interesting names too……….sure says alot about our suffering…………my new world view,shocking at 53 to have FINALLY learned this.is that not all people are good…….there truly are purely evil beings who walk among us
Kat, I don’t think healing is just about “time passing” but what we DO with that time, what we learn in that time.
There is an old saying about someone having “30 years experience” OR “one year experience 30 TIMES” they are NOT the same. Just doing the same thing like you did the first year, and not growing with it, whatever it is, driving a car, piloting a plane, or whatever, if you dont use that time to learn more and grow, you just are still a “beginner” forever.
I went through P-experience over and over, with my P-bio dad , with this person, that person, etc. and I didn’t LEARN the lessons I should have, so when this whole crisis hit last year, I had to learn from SCRATCH, from the start.
So you spent 14 years after you kicked him out, but you obviously didn’t get the lesson, cause you fell for another one. I did too. OVER AND OVER AND OVER. It is remedial classes in the SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS. Either you get the lesson or you GET TO REPEAT IT.
Hun, I’m 61 years old and I don’t want to keep having to go to these same painful classes the rest of what I have left in life. I am flat going to get it RIGHT this time.
I’m not only looking at how they are the SAME, but at HOW I DID THE SAME THING. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and thinking you are going to get a different outcome. I think Albert Einstein said that, but not sure.
Anyway, I am tired of the INSANITY. It is insane for me not to learn what I DID WRONG TO ALLOW THIS REPEAT ABUSE.
The old saying “crap on me once, shame on you, crap on me again, SHAME ON ME!” I am aware I may be fooled again, but you know what, they may fool me once, and do something or say something nasty to me ONE TIME, but they will not get the SECOND chance. It is NOT my responsibility to provide happiness for every person in the world. Or ANY person in the world. I will share my happiiness with anyone who wants to treat me well, but I can’t MAKE anyone else happy. Happiness is a side effect of being a complete and good human being. We can only provide it for ourselves as a by-product of our lives.
I saw a show tonight with Diane Sawyer who was interviewing a man Named Randy Pausch, who was dying with cancer. He was an absolute inspiration to his students and his friends, because he wasn’t “dying” he was ‘LIVING and loving even though he had cancer and knew his time was very limited.
He wrote a book called “The Last Lecture” and I intend to get a copy of his book. Excerpts from his last lecture showed that he WAS STILL HAPPY. Each of us is dying jut like him, ONE DAY AT A TIME…and unlike him we don’t know if our last day is next week or 4 decades away, but we should also be happy. Happy each day that we live. I want his point of view! The only way I can get it is to develop it, to streach myself, my spirit, my strength, my soul to the utter limits of the best that I can do and the best that I can be. I won’t let the damned Ps drag me down. I can’t fix them. I can’t make them love me, but by golly I can LOVE MYSELF. BE MYSELF and CELEBRATE myself. Celebrate the moment!
Kat, I’m sorry you’ve struggled so much today. Great job with the NC even though it’s painful. I’ve come to understand that even in moments of weakness we are proving our strength to ourselves. You deserve so much more than to be treated in a way that makes you ever question whether you count to someone! Heck yeah you count. You count to those of us who can appreciate you and treat you with the respect you deserve.
A good question is does he really count for anything to you? Sometimes when it hurts I try to think of the opposite of what I’m feeling. Rather than wonder if I ever meant anything to him I think of what he means to me right now. With the truth in front of me. In that perspective I am able to be the one in control and not the victim. I can still experience the pain but the story changes.
Besides, I would rather be on the minds of those who love me and treat me with respect than those cheaters and liars who only think of what they can get from us…not give to us. I guess I don’t want to count to them anymore. If I did my ex S would be back looking to abuse me further.
Hang on Kat. Take care of that precious heart of yours. Feed it with chocolate or with watching your favorite movie or something that soothes it. Just know you are better than your ex because you have a heart in the first place. Please be kind to yourself and nurture yourself. Take care of you first.
Oxy,
I am still waiting to hear back from a contact of mine about EMDR. I asked for a referral. Thank you for sharing how helpful it was for you. Thanks for last night and helping me through such a tough time. You are such a blessing :). You’re truly an angel here on earth!
JaneSmith,
“So is that why many of us have internalized our emotional pain & suffering over the years and the result is self loathing, feelings of worthlessness, uselessness, feeling unlovable?”
Yes, yes, yes :). For those who may not be familiar with the terms. The S/N/Ps have disorders that are “ego-syntonic” which refers to behavior or mental acts, like thoughts, feelings, and desires, which are seen as acceptable to the aims of the ego and the psychological needs of the individual. Thus they fail to see their behavior as a problem and simply consider it as part of their identity. Therefore justifying abusive behavior.
Ego-Dystonic refers to behavior or mental acts, like thoughts, feelings, and desires, which are repugnant or at odds with the aims of the ego and the related psychological needs of the individual. The individual realizes that the behavior is at odds with their concept of self. Thus we experience guilt and feel bad for the very suggestion that we hurt others. S/N/Ps seem to prey on that fact and project blame.
You’re very welcome, Takingmeback, glad to help and I hope the Rapid Eye movement therapy helps you as much as it did me. I think it was a godsend.
taking me back…..the emdr truly works wonders….i thought it was a gimmick, but it was explained to be by a neuro/brain scientist that it very simply changes the pathways already laid down in the brain …..for example a song or a place or a thought will continually trigger sadness and despair and a whole set of emotions……but continually visualizing those thoughts intentionally whil either following a row of repeating lights (or in my case differents sounds of music and nature) can desensitize us to those thoughts by creating NEW neuronal pathways that do not follow the same previous path ……..when using the lights or the music,,,they are designed to continually stimulate BOTH sides of the brain while thinking the emotional triggers….by stimulating BOTH sides of the brain, the new pathways are created that do not allow only the emotional side of the brain to react as the prior pathway has been laid down….almost like making a new memory……….i dont know if i explained that very well…i tried to make it understandable……but i tell you this….no one is more skeptical than me and after one
session on a terribly disturbing event, i am amazed at how the same triggers just dont get the same crippling emotional response from me…….i am a believer good luck
Dear Newworldview,
Thank you for explaining to me how it works, I didn’t know HOW or WHY only that it DID work, and AMAZINGLY FAST, which is what was so truly amazing about it. The odd thing too was that though I was focusing on the trauma of the plane crash and fire in which my husband died, it seemed as it if also helped me with other traumatic memories. I too am skeptical about a lot of things, but this one sure proved to be a BIG success and I highly recommend it to others for the traumatic things we have all experienced.
thx guys.
Did I learn my lesson? I thought I did. I have read, struggled and studied for years, worked hard at getting all abusers out of my life.
I think my big mistake this time was letting him into my heart before I checked him out thoroughly. Last summer when he first started showing me he can’t be faithful, I was already too hooked to completely shut him off. I was lonely, and I wanted to believe.
I think I’ve learned a whole lot, but I may never be the hard, self-reliant person you have to be these days to completely protect yourself from victimizers.
NWV thank you.. I have decided to feed my soul with healthy behaviors and hope to lose some weight. I’m really thankful I didn’t move in with him or worse, marry him as he begged me to. I’m glad I still have my apt. and that I moved ahead with my life and finished college. It could have been worse, but I just wonder if I will ever meet someone who can make me forget.