This column is dedicated to my sister, who is my best friend and wise counsel in so much of this learning
In Part 2, I wrote about painful shock, our instantaneous reactions to stabilize us until we have time to heal, and the everyday process that we use to resolve trauma.
In a relationship with a sociopath, something goes wrong with this process. We don’t handle “bad things that happen to us” in an expeditious way. It may be that we do not have skills for fast processing of emotional trauma, because we are burdened by residue of previous trauma. But beyond that, the typical sociopathic technique of recruiting us through seductive love-bombing, followed by withdrawal of positive attention, can disable our normal responses.
Instead of clearly recognizing that we are victims of abuse, we become confused about our own involvement. Because we responded positively to the seduction, we are from the beginning volunteers or collaborators in what happened to us. When our “perfect lovers” inexplicably turn cold, critical and demanding, we are left dealing with emotional attachments to our precious memories. This chaotic emotional landscape sets the stage for further emotional abuse and predation.
Adapting to the Unthinkable
Denial is the topic of this piece. In denial, we assume that we have power over certain aspects of our relationship with a sociopath. It is a form of magical thinking. It also plays an important role in recovery.
My friends: Kathy, what do you mean he’s moving back in with you again? It took you months to stop crying over him last time.
Me: No, it’s really okay. We had a good talk. He’s just needs my support. It was my fault for not trusting him. He really cares about me. He was so tender and open. Can’t you hear how happy I am?
Is it any wonder people think we’re crazy? But until we “learn through” this situation, we may feel as crazy as they think we are.
In the Kubler-Ross model of grief processing after receiving a terminal diagnosis, denial is a rejection of reality. “This isn’t happening to me.” It is the same difficulty we face in the loss of a loved one, absorbing the information that a life resource has disappeared. First response to trauma often includes a massive rush of endorphins (the “feel good” brain chemical) that anesthetizes pain and helps prevent us from dying or breaking down. This is why the first response of survivors is often inexplicably confident and relaxed about the future.
But denial is also a psychological state that can endure forever. In denial, we avoid the cause-and-effect reality of our pain. If our sociopath relationship causes us pain, we look for its causes anywhere but in the sociopath’s bad intention toward us. When we look at our situation with the sociopath, we see the benefits and good potential, rather than the disasters that we’re living through.
Swept Off Our Feet
The purpose of denial is not to reduce the pain, but to avoid acknowledging the cause of it. In our relationships with sociopaths, we have at least two significant reasons for denial. One is that, like a drug pusher, the sociopath has successfully pushed past our normal self-protective boundaries and conditioned us to emotional merger in an environment of “perfect love.” We have lost independence of thought and feeling, and acquired a new need to keep us stable — the “perfect love.” We are now junkies.
The difference between this emotional merger and a healthy love relationship is that the development was dominated by the sociopath. It was conducted in a way that rewarded us for fast emotional response and penalized us for trying to slow it down for rational consideration.
As a result, we do not have a well-understood set of reasons for our involvement, except that this person was so accurate in pushing our buttons. Without those reasons, it is harder for us to go back and compare our current reality with any logical choices that we made. We begin these relationships in disorientation that seems to be “perfect” because it reflects our dreams or emotional needs, but does not reflect our well-boundaried, thoughtful, self-caring identities.
The second and even more compelling reason to avoid acknowledging the cause of our pain is the knowledge of our own collusion.We said yes to this.(It is not until later in the healing process that we understand what we were up against, and forgive ourselves.) If we are causing ourselves this pain, our identities are seriously compromised.We don’t know who we are anymore. https://frpiluleenligne.com
If we can’t extricate ourselves from the relationship, the threat to our internal integrity is magnified.
So denial “protects” us from the knowledge that our drug of choice is a destructive force on our lives, and that we are causing our own pain. (One of those facts is true.)
The Impact of Shutting Down
Denial is an act of will. A deliberate not knowing. However, denial does not always occur at the conscious level, especially if we have backgrounds of unhealed childhood abuse. Likewise, major adult trauma — like rape or combat experiences — can overwhelm our everyday trauma-processing skills, making us more likely to “get stuck” at early-stage processing.
Denial is not just a stage in healing. It is also a radical coping response to certain circumstances. If we cannot escape a situation, if we are dependent for survival on the perpetrators of trauma, if we can’t exercise our defensive flight-or-fight impulses without increasing our risk, shutting down our awareness of cause and effect is a way of managing our responses to the situation. Like that first endorphin rush after a painful shock, shutting down is a means of survival.
In later life, if we have never adequately processed and healed from these situations, this type of shutting down may still be our best and final response to any traumatic event. Because it may be embedded in blocked memory, the whole mechanism may occur below the realm of consciousness.
If we are using denial as a self-protective technique, we may have an unusual pain tolerance, a lack of awareness of risk, and a constant “hum” of anxiety interfering with emotional or logical activity. Our knowledge of cause and effect of pain is not destroyed, only blocked. Our protective “alert” system keeps generating emotional noise, trying to draw our attention to the situation. Even after it is long past. Because we have not yet finished learning from it, so we can move on with our identities intact. The fact that this painful trauma is still “live” means that we are reactive to anything that looks like a reoccurrence, causing post-traumatic stress responses.
Magical thinking is the idea that we can alter reality by our thoughts. In many cases, we do influence events by envisioning our preferred outcomes, and acting on opportunities to create the future we want. But when magical thinking becomes the attempt to obliterate feelings that originate in our survival responses, we move into the realm of the impossible and self-destructive. We are attempting to magically change the present, not create the future. Rejecting our feelings splits our psyches into parts of ourselves that we accept and parts that we do not. Fear and rejection of ourselves makes us more likely to view the world in terms of fear and rejection.
For all the problems it creates, denial provides us the gift of time. It enables us to postpone trauma processing until the environment is safer or more supportive, or until we can endure facing the cause-and-effect issues. But until we are ready to move forward, everything we might learn and all our related self-protective emotions are stuffed back into a “La-la-la, I’m not thinking about this now” area of our heads.
The more we stuff, the more emotional static builds up in the background. If the sociopath is depending on our insecurity, instability, or high pain tolerance, denial makes it that much easier for the sociopath to exploit us, because we are not acting self-protectively in response to pain.
How to Care for Ourselves
Denial is probably the most toxic phase of the healing process, because we are not only reeling from painful shock, but also blocking our knowledge and feelings about it. However much we are obsessed by relationship with the sociopath, a much larger and more demanding relationship drama is occurring in our own psyches. We are at war with ourselves.
As others have noted here on Lovefraud, getting over a sociopathic relationship isn’t necessarily a linear process. We may be experiencing multiple stages of healing — including anger and forgiveness — alongside early-stage processing like denial. One reason for this is that the experience of a sociopathic relationship is so multi-layered. We experience trauma related to our beliefs about the world and changes in our material circumstances, as well as our relationships with ourselves.
The fastest way to recover our capacity to deal with other traumas is to fix our relationship with ourselves. Self-hatred drains our energy, hope and creative capacity. Part of this despair is instilled in us by the sociopath’s criticisms and now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t “love,” which are part of their program to separate us from our self-trust and make us more dependent on them. But a more important source of our self-hatred is denial itself. Denial creates an environment of fear and rejection of ourselves.
The Healing Facts
In healing, we do eventually come terms with what we did to ourselves. We get there because we face two simple facts.
One is that we were vulnerable. Our vulnerability came out of the way we were taught, our previous experiences that may have left us with unhealed emotional damage, and the quality of our dreams. All of these things are part of being human. All of these things can be reconsidered and improved to makes us stronger, more able and confident in taking care of ourselves, and more creative and joyful in our lives. These improvements occur during our recovery process.
The other fact is that we were dealing with something we didn’t understand. The sociopathic strategy for predation begins with deliberately disabling other people’s self-protective responses. They do it in order to exploit other people’s social feelings, personal resources and dignity, all to fill incurable deficiencies in their characters and lives. They mask themselves as attractive people we would like to know. Until they show their predatory intentions, we are dealing with an actor playing a role. The fact that we didn’t understand is also human.
We ordinarily don’t get clear information about their intentions until we are hooked, addicted and dependent. At that point, our ability to recognize and act on the information is compromised. This doesn’t make us stupid. It makes us victims. It is pointless and it only perpetuates the trauma to hate the parts of ourselves that are innocent, hopeful, trusting and open to love. We didn’t do this to ourselves.
Getting out of denial is a cause for tears. But they are healthy tears for the right reasons. If we have been blocked in denial for a while, we may have a lot of them to shed. They are part of comforting ourselves, acknowledging our feelings and validating our right to feel them. When we’ve comforted ourselves enough, the tears will stop and we will move on to another part of healing. It does not go on forever.
We have reason to feel sad for ourselves. Something bad happened to us. We didn’t see it coming. We didn’t know what it was. We didn’t know how to protect ourselves. We didn’t know how to get out of it when it got painful. Every bit of it, including our saying yes to it and the emotional addiction that kept us attached, was not our choice. We never would have chosen it, if we understood what was really going on. Grasping the truth that a bad thing that happened to us, rather blaming it on ourselves, is a major part of healing.
To get out of denial, we may have to find the courage to ignore other people’s opinions or embedded ideas about who we “should” be. If we think we “should have been” stronger or smarter, we’re still in denial about our human vulnerability. With other people, we may have to reject with dignity any idea that this is a minor event, that we don’t have the right to take our time healing, and that we were not victimized.
Taking care of ourselves in this way speeds our recovery of self-trust. In our lives, we own the knowledge that this was a major trauma in our lives, and that it is our responsibility to ourselves to fully heal, no matter what it takes, or how long.
Recovering Our Resources
Facing the facts, getting out of self-hate, putting the blame where it belongs frees us to begin the positive work of restructuring our lives. Part of that work is thinking about what the encounter with the sociopath has to teach us. We have learned something about the world. We have also learned something about ourselves. Together, those two types of learning lead us to recreate ourselves in a number of ways.
This creation occurs in an environment of choice, not the desperation that led to denial. We use our new knowledge to develop new habits of self-care and new ideas about what we want out of our lives. All of this is good for us.
Getting out of denial and out of self-hatred also enables us to approach the world a little differently. We don’t feel the need to apologize for who we are. We need to put together a new life. We become more pragmatic, more able to work through our options, more comfortable with temporary failures, because we’re figuring out what works, not struggling to keep the lid on our feelings or to deny part of our history.
Every time we face an uncomfortable fact, we become better at undoing denial. Denial is a temporary tool for managing trauma, but it makes us vulnerable to the sociopath and other avoidable disasters. Becoming more open to truth, even when it is uncomfortable, is our first line of defense of our lives and our real identities.
To recap: A bad thing happened to us. We did not see it coming or understand it when it was happening. We did not cause it. We are survivors, and we’re learning from the experience. In healing, we not only get over our pain, but become better at living than we were before.
Namaste. The courageous, truth-seeking spirit in me salutes the courageous, truth-seeking spirit in you.
Kathy
Is opn,
I worry too, about not having that feeling again, because I really haven’t had it much before. Once. My college love (married now dangit!) But I would rather be alone forever than endure the misery that accompanies the pang.
DEar All,
YOu are going through the normal “wishy-washy” part and the anxiety and fear in MAKING A CHANGE. The book “The Betrayal Bond” (you can order it on Amazon, even with shipping it is like $10 so get it if you can) will explain the backwards illogical way we BOND to our abusers.
The hold out a carrot then when we reach for it they slap us, then they hold it out again, and that time when we reach for it they give it to us, but only a tiny bite, One day they are sweet and say “I love you…but…then say something nasty”
The ups and downs of this and the fear and anxiety play tricks on our brains with the chemicals this constant stress puts on us and we literally BOND to them. That is why it is so difficult to break away.YOU ARE BRAIN WASHED. hE HAS CONVINCED YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS that he is your life line and without hi you are nothing.
THAT IS NOT TRUE. He is an abuser. He does NOT love you, it is all an ACT and he will never change, he will never care about you or treat you well….it will always be like this. Getting away from him is scary to even think about and you may tell yourself, “Oh, it’s not all that bad, maybe if I just would ______________(fill in the blank) he would be nice to me. AIN’T GONNA HAPPEN DARLING!
gETTING AWAY FROM HIM WILL FREE YOU. It will be scary, I know. Been there done that and felt like no one else would ever want me, boo hoo, I’m so lonely, alone..I’m old, ugly, etc etc but that’s the way they have made us feel.
But do come here and post your feelings, it is okay to do so, and helps get them out of your heart and make you know you have people here wo do care and who DO understand, and most of us have been right there with hyou when we split from our abusers. ((((hugs))))
Kathy Hawk, so beautifully expressed! Your words did sing to my soul. So true about the healing process and denial. This site has been so wonderful to me. It has validated every feeling and emotion that I have experienced this past year. I just want to say THANK YOU! THANK-YOU THANK-YOU!
Allpainnnogain; My heart goes out to you. Yes, you are right, you should be in a loving relationship with someone who truly loves you.
That someone would be YOU. Just like Kathy said, you really do have to focus on yourself and start taking extreme care. You have to take baby steps just like Henry said and make those positive changes. Your life is not about him. He is not the answer. You have the power inside you to recover and discover. Take it as a great opportunity. You get to decide- not him. Go Girl!
Eliza, the feelings will come again and you will be much more experienced and prepared. You will have done the work to self healing that Kathy talked about and you will recognize “True, real feelings” and you won’t except false love from a shell of a human being again. Take extreme care of yourself.
Thank you all for your words of wisdom, your words of strength, and your kindness in allowing me to vent. Sometimes I tell myself it’s better to stay and have him than to miss him and know he’s being that sweet, sexy, loving guy he was in the first few years.
I know that wasn’t really who he was. I’m smart enough to know the truth, but as time has gone by, I’VE become the shell of a person. I’ve become dependant on his love and approval… the addict. I’m so disgusted that I ever let this happen to me.
I wrote this to him but never gave it to him. It may sound silly, but I was exhausted and it was 3:30am.
Thank you—
Thank you for teaching me so many great lessons.
Thank you for teaching me that what goes around really does come around” except to people like you.
Thank you for showing me that loving someone with all your heart and soul can’t fix or heal a defective person with no soul.
Thank you for reminding me that a man is only as good as his word.
Thank you for helping to make me feel so ugly and unworthy.
Thank you for reminding me that I can’t trust anyone with my heart because they’ll eventually break it into pieces.
Thank you for showing me that me that marriage is only a piece of paper”. Nothing more, nothing less.
Thank you for helping me to realize that having faith isn’t always going to make it so.
Thank you for taking so much from me under false pretenses and cheating me out of so many years.
Thank you for allowing me to love you with all my heart soul”. At least I know that I’m capable of loving someone that much.
Thank you for opening my eyes and making me realize that true evil really does exist.
Thank you for making me feel so beautiful and so loved once upon a time.
Thank you for taking it all away and making me realize you never really meant it.
Thank you for showing me that life is worthless without honesty, faith, trust, and love.
Thank you for making me realize how important it is to have integrity.
Thank you, because now all the sad songs make me think of you and how we use to be.
Thank you, because when I see people that are in love, I feel envious and so very lonely.
Thank you for making me realize how much I use to have and appreciating it so much more even though it’s gone.
Thank you for showing me that there really is no light at the end of the tunnel, no clouds with silver linings, no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, and no happy endings.
Thank you for the tears I cry when I lay down to sleep at night.
Thank you for the nightmares that wake me in the middle of the night.
Thank you for the ache in my soul that brings me to my knees in utter despair.
Thank you for making me question why life has to be so painful and hard.
Thank you for blowing so much smoke up my ass. I really appreciate it.
Thank you for stringing me along instead of being kind enough to tell the truth and setting me free.
Thank you for making me realize that no matter how much you love someone, sometimes there’s nothing you can do to make them love you back.
Thank you for bringing out the ugly side of me. I didn’t know it was there until you came along.
Thank you for making me chase that ever-elusive carrot you dangle in front of me.
Thank you, because I’ve learned so much from you. So much more than I ever wanted to know.
Thank you, thanks for everything” and thanks for nothing.
AllPain: You ask “Why do I feel this way?” I believe that “feelings” can be a habit. Because we have the habit of “loving” him, when he does unspeakable things, we “feel rejected” but we want to “feel love.” And we keep thinking that we’re dealing with a normal human man who has normal responses, and if he isn’t reponding to us “normally” it must somehow be our fault.
Sweetie, HE’S NUTS! You’re not. And you crying, and begging for his love won’t change the fact that HE’S NUTS! He may not look nuts all the time, but that’s just how he manages to slide through society as if he were normal.
Way up on this blog, I think LIG said something about being “angry, sad, crying, angry . . . and then in a flash, laughing out loud.” In a flash, she understood that she was trying to relate to a crazy man. A man whose brain and behavior are just not like a normal person. This kind of crazy is like Scott Peterson, or Ted Bundy, or Eric Harris of the Columbine shootings: They all were “so nice” as other people described them — that’s the “mask” they wore for society. And their crazy, disordered personalities drive US crazy while we’re trying to make sense of their crazy behavior.
I think Tood said, “Once you’ve been free of their mindwarping reality for awhile, you’ll see a whole new world opening up to you. But you can’t really get better until you get them out of your life completely.”
Your feelings right now are normal feelings for being in your situation. It can’t change while you are still around him. He is a “crazymaker” and as long as you stay, you won’t be able to think clearly and practice new habits like loving yourself, recognizing happy moments when they show up, enjoying peace in your life.
AllPain: Practice writing powerful, positive things about yourself. Avoid writing negative things — that’s you helping him to do his damage, and remember, HE’S NUTS!!!
You said one important thing in your unsent letter: “Thank you for allowing me to love you with all my heart soul”. At least I know that I’m capable of loving someone that much.” That might be the most powerful lesson you can take away. Don’t waste another minute giving your love to this bottomless pit. A stone has more beauty and integrity than this facsimile of a man. But forgive yourself for being taken in by him: they can fool anyone. Really, anyone.
But now that you know . . . get out, get away, get free. You need to be part of our black & yellow tutu brigade, dancing in the fields!
OxDrover, Henry and Eliza:
Thanks so much for the words and advice.
The last few days have been particularly hard for me. At work the games continue. When HR asks you to “re-audit” your vacation time for 2008, you know damned well they’re moving in for the kill. I’m so tired of fighting the bastards, but am scared to death of losing my job.
Then I met with my accountant yesterday about the last step in my money fight with S. I’ve manuvered S right where I want him and my accountant prepared the nail for me to hammer into that pious, pedantic, pompous little prick’s coffin.
I came home and actually fell into my old rut of worrying about S and how he was going to handle this. How nuts is that?
OxDrover, you’re right. I have to work at forgiving myself. I think at this moment what I’m struggling with is that I look back at a lifetime of my being involved with exploitive people and I feel such unbridled contempt for myself.
I know that I”m the one who got involved with them because I wasn’t aware of what I was involved with. But, I’m still so angry at myself. I’m so mad at myself because I ended up in this place where I feel so used and abused and I AM RESPONSIBLE FOR THAT.
Thanks for the hugs. Definitely need them today.
Henry:
that “Begging for forgiveness for acting like a fool.” That one’s in my top 10. I look back at repeated episodes of my apologizing and grovelling to keep S around.
I literally feel the bile rise up past my throat and I gag. The contempt I feel for myself — that I was so pathetic and desperate to keep S in my life.
I know we all make the best decisions we can with the information we have at the time. And with S’s we got really defective intel. But I find it so hard to believe that my decision-making processes were so bad. I think that’s part of what has me so rattled and makes me question my own-decisionmaking on a going forward basis.