If there is a single category of memories that still can make me squirm, it is the remembrance of what I did to make my sociopath love me. And what I did simply to keep him from hurting me. And what I did to try to understand the things I must have done wrong, because he didn’t love me. And all the ways I pretzel-twisted my brain to excuse him for his lies, deception, disrespect and greed.
The topic of this article is the next phase of healing from a sociopathic relationship: bargaining.
We are in the process of healing from the moment we sustain any emotional trauma. Relationships with sociopaths typically involve many traumatic events, both large and small. Some of these events are the “blows” of insults, coldness and various types of violence or violation of our trust. But these blows, however painful they may be, are less damaging than the events that threaten our identities by making us question our own values and ability to trust ourselves
Bargaining is one of the two ways we negotiate with pain. The first is denial, which was discussed in the last article, Part 3. Denial enables us to postpone facing trauma, until we’re ready, or until we’ve found support that can help us think it through. In denial, we make a temporary deal with ourselves not to think about it and to block our normal feelings. It’s an interior mechanism, a way to control our own reactions.
Shifting Denial to the Outside World
Bargaining is an advance on denial because, at least, we are beginning to negotiate with the outside world, rather than our own psyches. But like denial, bargaining is magical thinking. We’re still not dealing directly with the facts as though they were real. We are finding reasons to make them unreal, and looking for ways that we can influence the situation so that it becomes we want it to be.
“She’s just acting cold, because she’s had a bad time and needs to get over it. If I am more loving, she will warm up.”
“He is being so rude to the waitress, because he came from a background of uncaring people. If I show him how much better service he’ll get if he’s courteous, he’ll see that it’s true and become the gentle, caring person I know he really is inside.”
“She’s sleeping around because she’s insecure about her looks or afraid that I don’t really love her. If I try to be more supportive and more complementary, she’ll come to recognize that no one has ever loved her more.”
“He’s telling me that I don’t deserve to be loved, because he secretly feels he doesn’t deserve to be loved. If I convince him that he’s lovable, it will open his heart.”
“He never shows up when I need him, runs profiles on dating sites, and disappears for days or weeks. He says everything would be better if I trusted him, so I’ll try to trust him more.”
In each of these examples, we are faced with evidence that the person is, at minimum, behaving in ways that we don’t like. If we want to analyze it further, we could say that this person is behaving as though they don’t care how we feel. Or if we wanted to characterize the person by his or her behavior, we could say that he or she is acting like a selfish, out-of-control sleezeball. But we don’t have to do any analysis at all to simply check our own feelings and determine that we are not happy about it. Or that it causes us pain.
In the bargaining phase, we are ready to acknowledge our own pain and the material fact that is causing us pain. However, we are not yet ready to connect all the dots in the sense of recognizing that we have a serious and unmanageable problem on our hands.
The Three Elements of Bargaining
The components of traumatic bargaining are three very different things. One is acknowledgement of the trauma. This is an important new stage in our healing process. It’s the first time since the trauma occurred that we consciously accept that something happened to us. That “something” came from outside of us. It was not something we did to ourselves.
The second component is our vision of how things ought to be. This could be how things used to be — like when we had our perfect lover. But it might be a vision of how we want things to be in the future — like when we and our perfect lover settle down in a “happily ever after” relationship. There are all kinds of possible visions of reality that we are trying to get to, or get back to. Particularly in relationships with sociopaths, where there are so many different types of trauma — identity, emotional, physical, sexual, financial, etc.— we may be holding tight to any one of a variety of visions.
The final component is the bargaining itself, which is a kind of bridge between the unwanted reality and the desired vision. That bridge is made up of all the things we are willing to do to earn that reality.
Bargaining is a basic skill of life, an everyday event in which we negotiate with family, friends, employers, customers to find satisfactory shared outcomes. We even negotiate with inanimate objects, like regularly changing the oil to get longer service from our cars. These little trades in life are so common we hardly notice them. We make little deals all day long, as we pragmatically navigate around and through all the things we have to accommodate in our lives.
However, post-traumatic bargaining has a different flavor that puts it squarely in the realm of magical thinking. Instead of negotiating for some future outcome, we are trying to change a here-and-now fact. The fact is not what our sociopaths did, but what their actions say about them. We don’t want them to be what they appear to be.
In this bargaining, we are appealing to someone or something that we imagine has the power to change that fact. In attempting to solicit its cooperation, we are hoping or believing that we can convince that power source to care about us.
Please, God, if you’ll only”¦
That beginning of a supplicant prayer ends with “and I promise I’ll”¦” Please, God, if you’ll only help me pass this test, I promise I’ll do my geography homework forever. Or we may not bring God into it. We may wear our lucky underwear to the game, so we’ll sink more basketballs. Or if I sign over my paycheck or dress like a floozy or rush to get you another beer when you toss the empty over your shoulder, maybe you’ll love me.
Doing a rain dance may not appear to equate with trying to have a happy relationship with a sociopath, but it has similarities. One of those similarities is that we are depending on formal rules that we imagine are something like infallible. So, if we are very, very, very good, and follow the rules punctiliously, then the result will be that the sociopath loves us or that the sociopath will be zapped with some cosmic healing ray that makes it possible for him to love at all.
While bargaining is a developmental advance over denial, it has one big similarity with denial. That is, we still feel like we have some power, even if we now recognize that most of the power resides elsewhere. In terms of our volunteering or collaboration, we’ve stepped up to the “can-do” plate, and we’re trying to fix the situation. Maybe this will work. Maybe that will. We’re operating on hope or faith in our own magic.
Our approach to this is childlike, in the sense that we are defining that outside power as something there to fulfill our desires. As all of us have learned one way or another, trying to elicit “love” from a sociopath is like trying to get attention from the devil. We may get the attention, but it is very, very expensive.
In fact, our very belief in these rules — whether they are the rules of courtesy or Christian behavior or how we imagine lovers are supposed to act — is something that sociopaths use against us. They make us feel guilty for not trusting them. Or concerned about how pitiful they are. Or crushed because we are doing all the right things, and still not succeeding in being loved.
The Craziest Phase
The bargaining phase is characterized by hope and frustration. It is also the first real learning phase of recovery. We have acknowledged that there is something wrong, and we are experimenting with solutions to fix it.
Until we’ve learned enough to realize that we can’t avoid the unpleasant facts, we are in what might be characterized as the “craziest” part of our recovery. We’re throwing good energy after bad. We’re doing the same things that worked for us in other relationships, over and over, without getting results. We don’t understand the rules of the game. We don’t know what else to do except be better and nicer and more giving, and our judgment about what we can afford to lose goes haywire.
Our pain and disbelief about the nature of this relationship are only one kind of bargaining trigger. We are probably in the bargaining stage with other traumas, like the loss of our money or possessions or jobs or professional credibility or our children’s safety or our privacy or our hope of simple break-up. We can become absolutely frantic with bargaining. We may feel like we’ve got so many plates in the air we can’t even remember our names.
This can be particularly true in after-effects of a sociopathic relationship, which can seem more traumatic than the relationship itself. As we detox from the hypnotic effect of the sociopath’s influence, we may finally emerge from denial about our losses. We may attempt to negotiate recovery of things we lost. We may appeal to other sources of power, like the police or the legal system, only to discover that no one believes us because the sociopath has done such a good job of characterizing us as unstable or untrustworthy. Or because no one knows anything about sociopaths, and assumes that we’re exaggerating.
In dealing with sociopaths, one of the most difficult things is to determine which situations we can control and what is out of our control. Our own histories as competent and effective people make it hard for us to give up trying to find a solution. Before we give up, we are likely to lower our expectations of fairness, understanding and support, not only from the sociopath, but from the legal system as well as our previous social support systems, like friends and family. As sad as this may seem, it is all part of the great information-gathering exercise that bargaining is.
The First Clarity
Just as denial gave us the gift of time, bargaining has its own gifts. One is a great deal of new factual knowledge about the world we live in. Many of us say that we wished we never learned what we learned in these experiences. But like them or not, these are realities about the people and circumstances we may face in our lives. Knowing them will eventually make us smarter, stronger and more confident in taking care of ourselves.
We also learn the lengths to which we’ll go, if there is something we want badly enough. Some of that is good news and other parts make us uncomfortable. But like the facts about the world, this will be useful information when we are farther in our recovery process.
The most important gift of knowledge comes from our successes and failures in bargaining with the sociopath. We learn that we “succeed” when we’re willing to give up anything we have and everything we are. We learn that we “lose” when we attempt to hold onto our own identities and independent resources.
Eventually, those of us who are going to be survivors come to recognize a very important fact. It’s a fact that was in front of us from the minute we realized that we were not happy with what was going on or that we were in pain. That fact is that the sociopath causing our pain.
There are a few additional facts that we may figure out at this point (depending on which trauma we are working on). One is that the sociopath doesn’t want to be fixed. Another is that the sociopath doesn’t care about our pain.
In this knowledge, we face the reality that nothing we can do will make the sociopath behave like a feeling human being. No matter how many opportunities we have to please the sociopath, or earn love, or prove our worth, or gain trust, we cannot change the wiring of the sociopathic emotional system. And worse, our attempts to “bargain” for love or any form of caring tend to cause us more losses. Whatever we give, whatever we do, whatever pleas we make for compassion or understanding, it is like throwing ourselves against a Teflon wall.
Helping Ourselves
These insights open the doorway into the next big phase, anger, which will be the topic of the next article. In the meantime, it’s a good thing to remember that we may be experiencing various phases at the same time, especially since we are likely to be processing many different types of events. All of the phases have their reason and their importance in healing.
As the “craziest” of the phases, our bargaining phase is the time that we are most likely to be making other people crazy too — whether we’re still inside the relationship or we’ve stopped it but are still trying to fix it some part of it. Our family, our friends, anyone who cares about us may become frustrated with us or even cut us off. When everyone outside this relationship can clearly see that something is wrong — either with us or with our lovers — they become understandably impatient with us, if we are acting like we in the middle of a great work in progress, rather than in the middle of a train wreck.
If the bargaining phase can be characterized as addictive behavior on our side, because we’re totally focused on getting love or validation to “fix” our pain, it’s unlikely that we’re going to be open to intervention. Likewise, finding the power in ourselves to intervene is not likely.
But if we could, or if there is a part of us that is watching aghast at what’s going on, it would be a good time to start keeping a ledger of losses. Even if it’s only a mental record, but writing it down would be better. Start keeping a list of the betrayals, the financial losses, the insults, the lies, the sabotage, the demands to compromise our values, all the things that make us less than we formerly were.
Keeping this list may be the hardest thing we ever do when we’re inside the relationship, because it is exactly the kind of thing a sociopath would view as disloyalty or distrust. To the extent that our feelings are co-opted, we may feel guilty about doing it. But if we can do it — and it’s equally valuable to do after the relationship is over — we reestablish connection with our own identities and feelings, instead of seeing the world though the lens of the sociopath’s intentions.
Keeping the “black list” or the “sad list” or the “list of disappointments” will help us move through the bargaining stage faster. It will help us find our anger, which is where we start to regain our power over our lives and our hearts.
Namaste. The courageous healing spirit in me salutes the courageous healing spirit in you.
Kathy
oops my post truncated…i’ll try again.
i was that before the sociopath. all of that and more. and i will never be again…i am a faded memory of myself. i cannot say anything good came of my total destruction via the experience with the sociopath..it only took. many yrs out (4) i’ve regained nothing and only lost more-domino effect but the biggest loss (and i lost everything, career, all my money, my social circle, my home, my career, my pet, my health…) has been the identity that was erased. i cannot say anything positive came from the experience, whatsoever. domino effect continued the spiral of losses. the experience shattered my world view and identity beyond repair-i liken it to a stange sorta of perma-amnesia-i am a blank. i lost the ability to attach to anything and in a way, i have become much like what he is minus the hatred, envy, aggression and violence-but detached permanently. no way to create meaning from the experience of living. and i once lived life fully. thankfully, this is not the way it goes for most of us but sometimes, i think, the losses can end up too radically shifting the world view, for a world view and an identity to be restored.
Kathy,
YOU ARE SO RIGHT!!!
Several years before my husband died, I was so “busy” with “friends” and “things” that I never had enough time to spend with the people I really loved and to do the things I REALLY wanted to do. I “simplified” my life in several ways, one was to “cut down on” the amount of time I spent with some people when I would rather have (a) been with someone else (b) doing something else—and that HELPED. Of course, I still spent too much time trying to make others happy….but I also (looking back) realized that we and every person on earth have the same amount of WEALTH. We hve 24 hours each day, and we have 365 days a year. WE can INVEST THAT TIME in making more money, spending it unhappy, angry, miserable, depressed, with people we don’t like, etc. etc. or we can INVEST THAT TIME in things that make us feel good.
Even BILL GATES has no more “real wealth” than each of us. He only has the same 24 hours a day. He may have more money, but money is NOT REAL WEALTH. He cannot be one whit happier than we can be, money will not buy that. Money will not buy him real friends. Money will not buy him health or love.
TIME is the only real wealth any of us have, and spending our prescious time on UNNECESSARY ANGER, bitterness, etc. over the psychopaths is a WASTE of our time. Our WEALTH. I realize tht we will have some of those feelings during the grief process and that they are natural and normal, but if we nurture them and never let them go, then we are squandering our wealth.
There is an old “Cherokee” story about a grandfather who told his grandson that inside each of us there are two wolves fighting. The Bad wolf which is anger, bitterness and bad feelings, and the good wolf of happiness, peace and goodness. The boy asked? Which one wins, grandfather? The old man answered, THE ONE YOU FEED.
We must stop FEEDING the negative emotions and start to FEED our positive emotions, and take back our power. We CAN choose which “wolf” to feed.
Henry, dear, I do NOT WANT TO GO BACK TO BEING THE PERSON I WAS BEFORE!!! I am liking the “New and Improved mule-skinnin’, jack-ass riding, skillet weilding, boundary setting crone that I am becoming!” TOWANDA!!!!
stunned, my heart goes out to you. I sounds like the load of grief you’re carrying is taking a lot of your internal resources.
I don’t know if this is helpful, but I’m going to put it out. That long list of things you lost are like a mountain of ashes. That mountain may be in front of you. or behind you, or over at the side. Or you may feel like it’s dumped on top of you and you’re in the middle of it.
But wherever it is, there is something that is not that mountain of ashes. Something that is you that knows about the mountain of ashes, and may be grieving over it, but it is not that mountain. Though you may not feel like it right now, everything in that mountain was something you could survive losing. It was not essential to who you are. Who you are is the woman that sees that mountain, grieves her losses, but is also aware the mountain isn’t everything. It isn’t everything about her, and it isn’t everything about the world.
Grief is sad. Sad is the deepest part of grief, after you go through the other layers of shock and anger. Sad is what you feel when you realize you have to say goodbye to something. If you have a lot of things to grieve, a lot of changes you have to adapt to, it can seem like there’s nothing in your life but saying goodbye to things.
But these are emotional rituals we have to go through. They are how we deal with change. They are also how we uncover the new reality. Of ourselves. Of our world.
Right now, it may seem like you and your world are nothing but things leaving and you saying goodbye. That state may seem to extend all the way out to the horizon and you can’t imagine anything else. But it’s a state, and you are moving through its time in your life.
There’s an old Zen saying: “My barn burned down and now I can see the moon.” This is not about turning away from our losses. We have to deal with them emotionally. But this is about the nature of change. Reality shifts. Our eyes capture it before our thoughts do. Our thoughts capture it before our emotions do. And then our emotions catch up and the world is different for us.
You didn’t lose everything. You lost things that you thought were you. Now you’re learning that they were not you. You are the one who is complaining about how hard it is to deal with change. You are right. But we get better at it as we do more of it. After this, it will take a big change to rattle you. This is your Ph.D. thesis in change. And you’re panting and tired and sore with managing this big change (because all of these things are really one thing in the end, a stripping away of what is transient so you can discover what is permanent and real about you).
You wouldn’t be here if you weren’t healing. I’m telling you this to comfort you. That permanent, real part of you is bringing to you back here for company, for courage, for ideas to help you move through this time. If you try to imagine what is left of you when that mountain blows away in a stiff wind, you might have a sense of a new beginning with a blank slate, of being a person you’re not sure you know, because all the little things that identified you are blown away.
I felt like that a few years ago. Naked, skeletal, like a grown-up infant having to relearn who I am and what it’s like here. And when you write about the blankness, you remind me of that time. That’s what I felt like, a blank slate on which I would have to grow up again with a whole new sense of everything.
But this time, it was different from when I really was a baby. This time I was doing it for myself, making my own choices of who I will be and the way I wanted to be in the world. It’s wasn’t something that would happen it a day or a week. But it happened, one step at a time, feeling my way along to see what felt right, laying new skins of identity over that core. Getting to know her, my real permanent self, as I did.
I am so sorry that you are dealing with so much trauma. I wish I could just whisk you to the other side of this process. But I can’t. Only you know how much time you have to spend with saying goodbye to these things. If there is one suggestion I can make to help the process along, it would be to find your nearest hospice organization, and ask them about grief support groups in your area.
In a way, that’s what we are here at LF, but you might find more confirmation that a real, indomitable you still exists if you see it reflected in other people’s eyes.
To the extent that I can confirm it, I saw it in your writing. I see it in your anger, your list-keeping, your demand to be acknowledged, your search for answers and comfort. Believe me, you are still very much alive. You are moving exactly as you should be through your healing.
It will get better. I promise.Someday you will be amazed and delighted with the new person you’ve made of yourself and the new world you see.
Namaste.
Kathy
Stunned: Sorry for ALL your losses. I too am in the same situation as you. My Ex conned me out of all my money plus stole money from my bank account using my ATM card. Had my retirement home foreclosed, ruined my credit history, bilked up my credit cards. Lied to me from start to finish. He actually helped obliterated my human existence (as I knew it) off the face of the earth (along with my bosses … which gave me a double whammy of this evil). But, and there is always a but … you, as well as everyone on LF need to look at life from your spiritual intellect instead of the old way of viewing life from the human intellect. We are so much more than what you can imagine on the human realm of life. Our spiritual self gets better and stronger after working through the trauma of these evils. We can never turn back and look at life on the superficial level of human existence again. Our spirits are now freed from the bondage of superficiality of life to allow us to be the best that we can be on the the higher level of spiritualism.
Peace.
Dear Stunned,
I agree with EVERY word that Kathy said, and I too am so sorry that anyone has ever gone through such losses. I am going to make a recommendation to you though.
Dr. Viktor Frankl, a man who spent many years in the Nazi prison camps wrote an account of the emotional trauma that he experienced in those camps when he had lost everything except his life. EVERYTHING. Thename of the book is “Man’s Search for Meaning”—
At the time I was in the depths of despair for my own loses which, like yours were almost TOTAL and overwhelming, I read his book and it gave me the HOPE that no other book had ever given me. Dr. Frankl’s moving and loving assessment of man’s search for meaning came out of his OWN experiences at the hands of the ULTIMATE PSYCHOPATHS, the Nazis. He also observed how some of the other inmates behaved and thought and how some small thing might make the difference in one actually laying down and dying instead of fighting and surviving.
I think that YOU ARE A SUVIVOR, and other wise you would not be here at LF.
Kathy is so right in her appraisal above, and what Wini said is also true. We are not just biologically animals, we are SPIRITUAL beings, and whatever your beliefs are, that SPIRIT inside of you is still there. It may be wounded, but it is NOT DEAD, and it can connect and it can come out stronger and better than ever before. YOU are NOT the money you lost, YOU are NOT the job you lost, YOU are NOT the house you lost. THINGS do not define who we ARE, only what we have.
BILL GATES is NOT any “richer” than you are though he has more money. He is NOT any richer than I am though he has more money.
Remember the story of the Phoenix, the bird that arose from its own ashes, a GOLDEN BIRD? While I was sitting in the pile of ashes, or feeling the flames from the fire I didn’t feel like I would EVER get out and up again, but what the fire of the psychopaths burned away (and yes it was painful fire) wasn’t me, and I am emerging from those ashes. And yes, there are days, I still find a spot or two of those ashes on my heart, but I keep working on cleaning them away (and that’s an ongoing process but it gets easier and easier as you go on.)
Take heart, Stunned, and though now is a dark time for you, there IS A LIGHT AT THE END OF THAT DARK TUNNEL and we will KEEP THE LIGHT BURNING FOR YOU, stunned. Stay here, and read and learn and take heart. You are NOT ALONE and you are not down for the count….there IS MEANING TO LIFE AFTER THE PSYCHOPATH. See if you can find Dr. Frankl’s book “Man’s Search for Meaning” It was what turned me around from the darkness and washed the ashes from my eyes. I figure if he could do it after what he went through and still find meaning, I could too. (((((hugs)))))) and prayers for your peace and healing. Oxy
Stunned: I would like to have a cup of coffee with you. We could talk. I don’t know where you are, or how you get online, but I very much relate to you and your story. I think we have a lot in common. I have thought a lot about you since I first saw you post.
Stunned I have also have had you on my mind after reading your post. I am so happy others are reaching out to you. I cannot imagine losing as much as you have, especially your pet. I liken the experience with a S to a tornado, your left in all the destruction and ruin, but you are left with your life, please join so many of us in rebuilding our lives
Dear Stunned, each experience is unique and I have never had an experience like this, but I have been to that empty desolate place where there seems like there is nothing left. What I have at my side are the books by Eckhart Tolle and I am trying to turn this nightmare into my deepest learning realisation, although its really hard, its like fighting a monster that is relentless.
There isnt a set format, of how we get over this, or how resilient we are, it all depends on so many other factors, what age we are, what other experiences we have had, how we view the world, what our personal circumstances are etc etc. For me, its the searching for the context of it all, how it fits into my life and the internal battles and experience I have. I never suffered financial losses, but I have suffered loss in so many other ways, my health is still far from good and he has rocked my world in a bad way. If only I had known that penalty. Ho hum, I bet we all say that.
Hello Beverly!!! I think of you alot and wanted to let you know I am doing great…..you were and are a great inspiration to me…I will never forget how similar our X’s were, and how we related to one another…..been one year no contact now.. I am so glad I have moved past that horrible place stunned is in now…..good to see you Bev!!!!