A relationship with a sociopath is a traumatic experience. The definition of physical trauma is a serious injury or shock to the body, as with a car accident or major surgery. It requires healing.
On an emotional level, a trauma is wound or shock that causes lasting damage to the psychological development of a person. It also requires healing.
To some degree, we can depend on our natural ability to heal. But just as an untreated broken bone can mend crooked, our emotional systems may become “stuck” in an intermediate stage of healing. For example we may get stuck in anger, bitterness, or even earlier stages of healing, such as fear and confusion.
This article is about my personal ideas about the healing path for full recovery from the emotional trauma caused by a relationship with a sociopath. I am not a therapist, although I have training in some processes and theories of personal and organizational development. My ideas are also the result of years of research into personality disorders, creative and learning processes, family dynamics, childhood development, recovery from addictions and trauma, and neurological research.
After my five-year relationship with a man I now believe to be a sociopath, I was physically and emotionally broken down. I was also terrified about my condition for several reasons. In my mid-fifties, I was already seeing evidence of several age-related diseases. But more worrisome than the premature aging was my social incapacitation. I was unable to talk about myself without crying, unable to do the consultative work I lived on, desperately in need of comfort and reassurance, unable to trust my own instincts.
I had been in long-term relationships almost my entire life. My instinct was to find another one to help me rebuild myself. But I knew that there was no safe “relationship of equals” for me now. I was too messed up. No one would take on someone as physically debilitated and emotionally damaged as I was, without expecting to be paid for it. Likewise, I was afraid of my inclination to bond sexually. The only type of person I could imagine attracting was another predator who would “help” me while draining whatever was left of my material and financial resources.
My challenge
So, for the first time in my life, I made a decision to be alone. Knowing that the relationship with the sociopath had involved forces in my personality that were out of my control, I also decided that my best approach to this recovery was to figure out what was wrong with me and fix it. At the time, I did not understand my role in fostering this relationship, except that I couldn’t get out of it. But I knew that what happened to me with the sociopath wasn’t just about him. It was also about me.
I also made a decision to manage my own recovery. I made this decision for several reasons. One was that no one else really understood the mechanics of this relationship. My friends offered emotional support, but they were as confused as I was about his hold on me and why I could not extricate myself. Second, I found no meaningful assistance from therapists who seemed unable to grasp that this was a traumatic relationship. Third, everyone I knew wanted me to get over it and get on with my life, which was simply impossible to do.
So I was not only alone, but proceeding on a path that no one else supported. I’m not sure where I found the certainty that it was the right thing to do. But I was certain, and I held onto that certainty through the years it took. Today, when I’m essentially at the end of the process, except for the ongoing work on myself that has little to do with the sociopath anymore, I look back at it as the greatest gift I ever gave myself. It was the hardest thing I ever did. And in its own weird way, the most fun.
Here is where I started. I knew that I wanted to discover and neutralize the causes of my vulnerability. I knew that my vulnerabilities pre-dated the sociopath, although he had exploited them and made them worse. I felt like my battered state and particularly the sharp emotional pain gave me something to work with that was clear and concrete, and possibly the emergence from my subconscious of a lot buried garbage that had been affecting my entire life. Ultimately, I did engage a therapist to assist me in uncovering some childhood memories, and then went back to my own work alone.
My personal goal may have been more ambitious than others who come to this site. I not only wanted to heal myself from the damage of this relationship. I intended to accomplish a deep character transformation that would change the way I lived. Before I met him I was superficially successful, but I was also an over-committed workaholic with a history of relationship disasters. Except for a lot of unpublished poetry and half-written books, I had made no progress on lifelong desire to live as a creative writer. I wanted to come out of this as a strong, independent person who could visualize major goals and manage my resources to achieve them.
Because I had no model for what I was trying to do, I did things that felt very risky at the time. For example, I consciously allowed myself to become bitter, an emotion I never allowed myself to feel before, because I was afraid of getting stuck there. I’ll talk about some of these risks in future pieces — what I did and how it came out. I learned techniques that I hear other people talking about here on Lovefraud, things that really helped to process the pain and loss. Some of them I adapted from reading about other subjects. Some of them I just stumbled upon, and later learned about them from books, after I’d begun practicing them.
Though not all of us may think about our recovery as deep transformation work, I think all of us recognize that our beliefs, our life strategies and our emotional capacities have been profoundly challenged. We are people who are characteristically strong and caring. Personal characteristics that seemed “good” to us brought us loss and pain. After the relationship, our challenge is to make sense of ourselves and our world again, when what we learned goes against everything we believed in.
What I write here is not a model for going through this recovery alone. I say I did this alone, but I recruited a therapist when I needed help. I encourage anyone who is recovering from one of these relationships to find a therapist who understands the trauma of abusive relationships, and that recommendation is doubled if, like me, you have other PSTD issues.
The healing path
Given all that, this article is the first of a series about the process of healing fully. I believe that Lovefraud readers who are far down their own recovery paths will recognize the stages. Those who are just recently out of their relationships may not be able to relate to the later stages. But from my experience, my observations of other people’s recovery, and from reading the personal writings on Lovefraud, I think that all of our recovery experiences have similarities.
Since my own intention in healing was to figure out what was wrong with me and fix it, this recovery path is about self-healing, rather than doing anything to or about the sociopath. However there is a stage when we do want that. We want to understand who we were dealing with. We may want recognition of our victimization, revenge or just fair resolution. There is nothing wrong with feeling that way. It is a stage of recovery, and an important one.
My ideas owe a lot to the Kubler-Ross grief model, as well as to recovery processes related to childhood trauma, codependency and addiction. I also owe a great deal to the writing of Stephen M. Johnson, whose Humanizing the Narcissistic Affect and Characterological Transformation: the Hard Work Miracle provided invaluable insights and encouragement.
Here is the path as I see it.
1. Painful shock
2. Negotiation with pain
3. Recognition with the sociopath
4. Anger
5. Measurement of damage
6. Surrender to reality of damage
7. Review of identity after damage
8. Rebuilding life strategies
9. Practice
The words here are very dry, and I apologize for that. The experience, as we all know, is more emotional than intellectual, though it taxes our thinking heavily.
From what I’ve experienced and seen, some of these stages may occur simultaneously. We may feel like we’re in all of them, but working particularly in one stage more than the others. In my case, I often found that I was “going around and around the same mountain,” returning to a previous stage but at a higher level than before.
There is no specific mention of depression in this list. This is because I regard it as a kind of brown-out of our emotional system, when we are simply too overwhelmed by facts and feelings that conflict with our beliefs and identities. Depression can happen at any time in this path, but feelings of depression are most likely to occur in Stage 6. Terrible as depression may feel, I believe it is evidence of a deep learning process, where our conscious minds are resisting new awareness that is developing at a deeper level.
This path is a model of adult learning. It would be equally valid in facing and surmounting any major life change. If you are familiar with the Kubler-Ross grief model which was developed to describe the challenges involved with bereavement, this model will look familiar. It is essentially an extension of Kubler-Ross into a post-traumatic learning model. The trauma may be the loss of a loved one, a divorce, a job loss or change, or any of the major stressors of life.
This is all about learning and evolving. If the path is traveled to its end, we emerge changed but improved and empowered. We have given up something to gain something more. The fact that this change is triggered by trauma may cause us to think that it’s a bad thing for a while, but ultimately we come to realize that we have not only recovered from a painful blow, we have truly become more than we were before.
What drives us to heal
The future articles in this series will explore the stages, their value to us and how we “graduate” from one to the next.
Our struggle to get over this experience involves facing our pain, which is the flip side of our intuitive knowledge of we need and want in our lives. Those needs draw us through the recovery process, like beacons on a far shore guide a ship on a stormy sea. To the extent that we can bring these needs up into conscious awareness, we can move through the path more directly, because it programs our thinking to recognize what helps and what does not.
Here are a few ideas about where we think we’re going. I hope they will stimulate some discussion here, and that you will add your own objectives to the list.
1. To relieve the pain
2. To release our unhealthy attachment to the sociopath
3. To recover our ability to love and trust
4. To recover confidence that we can take care of ourselves
5. To recover joy and creativity in our lives
6. To gain perspective about what happened
7. To recover the capacity to imagine our own futures
Finally, I want to say again how grateful I am to be writing here on Lovefraud. As you all know, it is not easy to find anyone who understands our experience or what it takes to get over it.
I have been working on a book about this recovery path for several years. The ideas I’m presenting here have been developed in solitude, and “tested” to a certain extent in coaching other victims of sociopathic relationships who entered my life while I was working on my own recovery. But I’ve never had the opportunity before to share them with a group of people who really know and understand what I am talking about.
I respect every stage of the recovery path — the attitudes and voices of those stages, their perspectives and the value they provide to us. So if you find me more philosophic, idealistic or intellectual than you feel right now, believe me that I have been through every bit of it. If you had met at different places on the path, you would have found a stunned, weepy, embittered, distraught, outraged or depressed person. I was in the angry phase for a very long time. I had reason to feel that way, and it was the right way for me to be at the time.
I believe the stages are a developmental process that builds, one stage to the next, to make us whole. I also believe that this healing process is natural to us, and what I’m doing here is describing something that has been described by many people before me, but not necessarily in this context.
Your thoughts and feedback are very important to me.
Namaste. The healing wisdom in me salutes the healing wisdom in you.
Kathy
Wow. That’s really terrific…I particularly like the last paragraph. I’m struggling a bit today with sadness. I really do hope that I will have “understanding” about this relationship and the emotional wreckage so that some day I can see it as a gift. It’s hard right now. I’m alone in my office (though I had a highly social weekend with family and friends) and wishing I had a partner to go home to, and envious that the ex S has someone madly in love with him right now. I’m jealous of them both and remember the high of that tremendous “masked man” period. Though the poor woman, boy is she in for it.
My point in posting the above excerpt is that there can come a time when we realize our suffering has been our healing in a strange sort of way, for it has been the basis for re-centering and reforming a self that would have been less without it.
For those still in great pain, I understand fully how hard it is to even imagine such a thing especially when feeling you have been kicked in the chest by a horse, or blindsided, and trampled beyond any shred of hope.
Healing Heart,
You are still in the early stages. Deep sadness is normal as is deep sensation of hurt, IMO. You don’t need therapy because you feel it.
I keep talking about my friend the grief counselor, but I don’t know how else to identify her. The death of her daughter happened over 30 years ago and she still has her days and her moments of going through the entire cycle of “why”, and feeling sad as she marks her daughter’s birthday and other life events.
The call about the accident came at 2 a.m. She and her husband still unplug the phones at night even after all this time because they cannot stand the memory a ringing phone in the middle of the night holds for them. So, some sensitivities that are deep and personal never really heal. They remain tender and easily inflamed. It’s all just not quite as intense in terms of day to day coping.
May you have a gentle and peaceful evening.
Oh, EyeoftheStorm, that was really helpful, thank you. I feel disappointed sometimes when I realize that I am just in the beginning phases of healing because I feel like I have been in pain for the past 12 months, and feel like I am due for home happiness, dammit. But I get the message from you, and every one else, that I NEED to go through this grief.
It just feels very heavy at times. And unfair. But I like that people keep posting that they come back together “better” for it. Sometimes that feels so tangible to me, while at other it feels very far off, and perhaps like wishful thinking – or a place that I, personally will never arrive.
Thank you for sharing your friend’s story. Losing a child – my God. I can’t imagine a worse loss. And how do you ever make sense of that?
“Gentle and Peaceful” is perfect. That is what I should be aiming for – that it what I need right now.
HH: I understand that pain of loneliness. But I also know that the loneliest place I’ve ever been was when I was “with” someone who I knew was not really present. I now know that I married a sociopath when I was 18, and stayed married for 6 years. I didn’t have a name for his control, jealousy, lack of love, lies, etc., etc. But I know that late in the marriage I got to a point where I couldn’t sleep without having one foot hanging out of the bed and touching the floor. (One foot on the floor, one foot out the door?) I would have unbidden thoughts of getting a room somewhere, anywhere, where I could just be alone — knowing that I would be less lonely in that room than in my marriage.
With the help of the LF team, you know this man was not really present for you, and you even have a psychological framework for what he is. I know it’s a challenge to teach your heart and your body this truth, but it can be done.
Celebrate your freedom and the fact that you’ve cleared him out to make space for your own self and for your better future. And cast a moment of pity for the new target that he’s defrauding emotionally right now.
Healing Heart,
I was going to post this tomorrow , but I will post it now for you especially. It is another excerpt from Merle Shain’s book “When Lovers Are Friends”. It’s about trust……..
“It is very difficult to accept the fact that there are no guarantees in life, no guarantees that life will progress as it should or that the people you care about will love you back, or even that they will treat you right. But trust in life does not mean trusting that life will always be good or that it will be free of grief and pain. It means that somewhere inside yourself you can find the strength to go forth and meet what comes and, even if you meet betrayal and disappointment along the way, go forth again the very next day.” Merle Shain
Did you see the Kathy Bates video above? Remember there is always TOWANDA!
Thank you EyeoftheStorm, and Rune. I get frustrated when I have bad days after feeling okay for a stretch. Thank you for the support. And those Merle Shain quotes are great – I should get the book. Definitely.
The loneliness is frustrating. But its a good point that I felt more lonely in a horribly pain-stricken way, when I was in a relationship with a man who was rejecting me. I was sick with hurt and loneliness. It was much worse than now, when I think about it. And I don’t want that man back. My experience with LF has solidfied that he is a sociopath, he will never change, and the best course of action for me is NC. He is a monster.
I just feel frustrated when I think that right now he is with another woman, and the two of them are happy right now. Hugging, kissing, giggling, making love, feeling on top of the world, texting, emailing, loving……And I’m miserable. I do pity her, though. And I feel frightened for the world that he, and all other sociopaths, just keep doing what they do. The ball of destruction moves onward. It’s so unfair to the rest of us. Maybe not though, maybe this is a gift for all victims. Though I get the sense many of us don’t come out alive (literally and figuratively) We, at LF are the strong ones, the survivors.
At times I think that I should find a new boyfriend – but I know that is not what is right for me. That is exactly the kind of quick fix that got me into this situation to begin with.
LF has been incredibly helpful to me. The supportive and loving and understanding community is a lifesaver.
I’d rather be alone than wish I were!
HH: They are NOT happy. She thinks she is, which is only the setup for her future pain. And he isn’t, because he isn’t really capable of “happy” unless it’s the thrill he feels when he’s manipulating someone else.
This may sound harsh, but I’m handing you the understanding I came to that let me NOT imagine and obsess in the way you are now. I know — if this had been a normal relationship (and part of you still wishes it was) it would be justifiable for you to feel those twinges and hold jealousy. But remember, this wasn’t EVER a normal relationship. God help you, at least you’re on this side of the shock and pain. She thinks she’s in a blissful honeymoon place, but he’s really tying her to the railroad tracks with his charm so he can run over her with that giant freight train of truth, sometime in the future.
Celebrate your understanding and your freedom.
Kathy:
Thank you for the article! I look forward to reading more about healing.
Healing is possible. It takes time, support, and effort. Unfortunately, as an adolescent I met a different sort of psychopath (the criminal kind) who almost destroyed my life. There were times I would scream at my mother that I wanted to be dead because the emotional pain was too much. I coped by engaging in many harmful activities. But I took back my soul. Many people helped me during this process. And I was able to develop my intuition about men who might be physically dangerous. I pay attention to those signals.
Now I’m recognizing the incredible intuition I have can be used to see with greater clarity the red flags in relationships with those psychopaths who steal the mind. Michael was my first long-term relationship after a 20+ year marriage.
I don’t like what has happened. It is shocking. The only other cruelty I have ever experienced resulted in a lengthy prison sentence for that man. He’s now serving life without parole. But he was a stranger to me.
Michael was a man who used me for 21 months so he could move to the city in which I live. Once he was in his house he discarded me (as I’ve written about on other blogs). The fact that he didn’t exist except in my mind shattered my world. I will never be the same person. I don’t want to be the same person. I want to learn more about myself and strengthen my boundaries. I never want to tolerate disrespect again from a man. I want to act at the first sign instead of excusing it, being blind to it, believing lies that don’t make sense and then reacting to cruelty.
I don’t expect relationships to last forever. But next time I’m going to follow this proverb: “Above all else guard your heart for it is the wellspring of life.”
Michael may never understand in this lifetime how he devastated me. But part of healing is acceptance of what has happened and letting go of my anger which seems too much like hatred to me. I am at a place where I can do this because of the work I have done from the previous traumatic experience.
Everybody is in a different place because our life experiences are different. But we do share the fact that someone in our life–who said he loved us–has caused pain on a scale that is off the charts.
Namaste.
I know I’ll see Michael again. I’ll ask for Divine guidance in what to say.
All I know is I’m tired of images of him running through my mind. I’m changing the images to what I want in life. I don’t want him. I’m going to put my imagination to work and the Universe will provide other opportunities that are good, kind, generous, loving.