This is the eighth article in this series about the recovery path, and it is about the second half of the path. This is after we have fully accessed our anger, and begun to grieve our losses and let go. This article may not necessarily be helpful to someone who is still reeling from betrayal and loss, or even someone who is still exploring righteous anger. However, it is part of this series because a growing number of people on LoveFraud are considering the influence of their histories on their relationships, as part of healing themselves and their lives. Please, take what is valuable to you, but if this one doesn’t make sense or, God forbid, makes you feel like you’re being blamed, it just means that you’re at another healing stage. Which is good. Every stage is necessary and good. Be where you are, love yourself and heal. That’s all that matters. — Kathy
In recovering from a trauma or extended trauma like a sociopathic relationship, we often discover that what we lost isn’t what we first thought it was. In fact, our very resistance to letting go — the thing that often keeps us stuck in anger or even bargaining or denial — isn’t exactly what we thought it was.
The traumatic recovery process, if we have the courage to see it through, turns out to be very different from the “he done me wrong” drama it first appeared to be. It’s not about unrequited love. It’s not about us not being good enough or smart enough. It’s really not about anything that is between us and our sociopathic opposite number.
It is really about us waking from a dream.
What is real?
An old friend talked to me recently about feeling so disoriented that she had difficulty finding her way out of her hometown airport. She was returning from her third trip to visit a man in another city. Based on phone conversations with him, she had become convinced that he loved her, wanted a future with her, and accepted her as she was. When she arrived, she discovered that what he wanted was “friends with benefits.” And by the way, would she please invest in his condo because he was having trouble making the payments?
As on the previous trips, he was cold, critical and exploitive, expecting her to pay for staying with him and pay for everything they did together. Knowing that he had less money than her, she did that willingly. She would have given the five-figure investment in the condo, except that her money was tied up in a trust. The one thing she could not do was casual sex, and she could not understand how or why he did not remember that this was a baseline truth with her. If she was in a sexual relationship, it had to be serious and committed. Of course, they had sex before his idea about “friends with benefits” became clear, leaving her feeling used and ashamed.
After the other trips, she had felt wounded and depressed. Half angry at him, half wondering what she had done wrong. This time was different. She finally understood that she had been deluded, and it didn’t matter if he had misled her or she had misled herself. She contacted me to ask me what to do about the feeling of disorientation. She didn’t know how she could have been so mistaken, and she didn’t know what was real anymore.
“I want my old self back,” she said. Then she thought a moment, and said. “No, I don’t. Not if it’s the old self that keeps doing this over and over.”
The broken part
My friend is not stupid, though she has a history of relationships with exploitive people. Listening to her talk about how ashamed she felt about the love letters she had written and her feeling that she was too stupid to live, I could almost see the broken cog in the machinery of her psyche.
With her, as with many of us, this broken part is not really about the exploitive people who take advantage of it. We feel like these relationships are “happening to” us. But what really happened is that a certain set of circumstances triggers something in us that I call a “state.” (Some psychologists call it a ”˜trance,” because it is a form of self-hypnosis. It may also be called a “fugue state,” after a type of music where a single melody line is repeated in many variations.)
A state is a reactive response with certain characteristics. One is a narrowing of focus. Everything else fades to lesser importance. Other, possibly unrelated experiences are interpreted through our intense involvement with this state and its triggers. The anger we have discussed in previous articles is a state. The disorientation of my friend and the distressed confusion of early-stage recovery are also states. Other characteristics of states may be reversion to childlike emotional behaviors — tantrums, outsized hunger for validation or security, confusing the feeling of relief with love.
Another characteristic of these states is often disassociation, or distancing ourselves from objective reality. “Inside” the state, we identify with it. It feels “right,” often passionately right, the truth about ourselves. A feedback loop can evolve. The state becomes magnified by our attention; so we pay more attention to it. If the state is painful, we may start looking for self-medication through alcohol, drugs, video games, shopping, work, etc. If the state provides pleasure, we may do more and more of what we think is creating the pleasure. As we pursue or avoid feelings, learning skills or living with the effects of our actions, the state’s structure evolves into more complexity.
So where do these states come from? Especially the painful ones. Anyone who has been reading this series of articles knows already. They are residue of unprocessed trauma. One of the simplest ways to grasp this is to ask, “When was the first time I ever felt this way?” We may not immediately remember the first time, but most of us can track the state backwards through events in our history.
My relationship with a sociopath was not the first time I’d felt completely subsumed by a romantic attachment. (It was just, unfortunately, the first time I’d done it with someone who felt no ethical responsibility toward me.) I realized, fairly early, that what was happening with him wasn’t “different,” but only a worst-case scenario of something I’d been doing my entire life.
Leaving Las Vegas
Few of us on LoveFraud would consider ourselves gambling addicts. But if we think about what gambling addicts really want, we might see a bit of ourselves in it. When a gambler is winning, the emotional payoff isn’t the money. It is the sense of basking in a kind of sunshine of divine acceptance, where s/he is magically doing everything right and being loved for it. The love may be expressed in financial winnings, but the thrill is that big, loving, supportive “yes” from the cosmos.
From the book “Leaving the Enchanted Forest: The Path from Relationship Addiction to Intimacy” by Stephanie Covington and Liana Beckett, here is a brief description of the progression of an addictive relationship:
1. Experiencing the euphoric high of a new relationship, which enables us to focus on another person, rather than dealing with our true emotional state
2. Seeking the positive mood swing, looking forward to it, being willing to make sacrifices to get it, suffering occasional feelings of dejection or jealousy or panic, but the pain is still manageable
3. Dependence, where focus on the lover crosses the line from choice to need, and life becomes narrow, unbalanced, unhealthy with obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors
4. Maintaining contact just to avoid being in a state of chronic depression and emotional pain, because there is no more euphoria and the inner balance is in shambles
Is this a state? It actually sounds like a series of states with a common thread. If we return to the gambler, we can see a similar fundamental story. A pursuit of magical redemption in which we get the prize if Lady Luck smiles on us, or fall back into a kind of emotional hell if she doesn’t.
But is that a fair analogy? Games of luck depend on the random distribution of a shuffled card deck, the end of a wheel’s momentum, the way dice fall. The gambler is essentially passive, beyond risking the stakes. In our relationships, we do so much more, don’t we? We don’t just show up and hope. We go out of our way to be charming, agreeable, enthusiastic, compliant, understanding, tolerant and supportive, while we kiss, cook, make love, arrange our schedules, dress to please, help out with their finances, children, careers, leave behind huge chunks of our lives as they were before. We’re actively building, investing, sacrificing, trying.
Still, the gambling analogy holds, because of one thing. The success of it all is out of our control. All we can do is our best, and hope that we earn a happy ending. In sociopathic relationships, we learn several very tough lessons. But primary among them is this: if our happiness depends on something outside of ourselves, we are living a gambler’s life.
The crumbling foundation
A recent show on HDTV was about the crumbling foundation under a house. Contractors mortared cinderblock up against the old walls and dug trenches around the outside of the foundation to divert the water that had weakened the concrete. In all, they managed to preserve the rooms of the house above by shoring up the old foundation.
What we face in getting over a sociopathic relationship something like the same problem, although our solution may be quite different. Our “states” are like rooms built on the foundation of old coping responses we adopted when we faced an overwhelming event when we were younger. When I was very small, I learned that no one would protect me from my father’s unreasonable verbal and physical abuse, and in fact, I was responsible for keeping him happy. At three years old or so, I developed an immediate coping response that involved alterations in patterns of feeling, thought and behavior, designed to manipulate circumstances and myself in order to survive. All of it was founded on an awareness of impending danger. But it also included a memory of the time before the danger, a dream of a better time, when I was loved, safe and could thrive as who I was.
That is a quick illustration of the foundation under a “room” in my psyche. I developed through my childhood and adult life with that “state” ready to be triggered by any circumstances that seemed to “fit.” Through the years, I furnished this room with more experiences that supported its reality, learned more survival skills for a world of impending danger, and once or twice, learned that I could relax and be myself in certain circumstances, thinking I was making big progress in my life.
But the twilight-zone reality of this room, which began with the original decision about how to handle an overwhelming childhood event, is what allowed the sociopath to take residence in my life. A coping strategy that was designed to help me survive danger as a child turned into a vulnerability to tremendous danger as an adult.
My friend who kept going back to a man who is incapable of loving her and uses her for money isn’t trying to hurt herself. In fact, she is trying to help herself out of other circumstances in her life. Because of her family background, she has a life strategy of being very, very good and helpful, because love must be earned and the alternative is punishment. Her dream is that, if she earns love, she will be able to recover the lost state of being accepted for herself and the right to her own identity. In this “state,” she is vulnerable to interpreting small kindnesses or seductive behaviors as “love” and acceptance. Especially if the other person meets certain other criteria, like bearing psychological resemblance to her pathologically selfish father.
All of us have gone through these perfect-storm situations when the right stimuli and our old coping strategies come together to throw us into a “state” that seems exciting and redemptive. But for my friend, on her final encounter with this man, something new emerged from this relationship — a realization that she was deluded. She was understandably disoriented because this realization potentially affected not just this relationship, but the structure of her entire life. When she said “I don’t know what to believe anymore” or “maybe I’m just too stupid to live,” she is talking about cracks in the foundation. Not just in the way she understood the world, but even in her ideas about her own identity.
How much can we lose?
In dealing with the residue of a sociopathic relationship, we feel separated from parts of our identity. We talk about not being able to trust again or love again. We talk about the loss of ourselves as lovable or attractive people, as trustworthy to ourselves or others, as believers in the goodness of the world or in a benevolent deity. We have feelings — like bitterness, anger, vengefulness — that we fear or dislike in ourselves. It seems like our rules of social engagement, romance or personality integrity have become broken or unreal.
It is no wonder that many of us need time before we jump back into the world again. With so many basic realities up in the air, a larger question emerges. If the world is so different, if we are so different that what we imagined, then what is real? Or more importantly, is real about us?
As profoundly disorienting as this may be, it is also part of the grieving and letting go stage of trauma processing. Because as we start to allow ourselves to face irretrievable losses — like the loss of the person we loved and the loss of the dream that person represented — we often discover that those losses are just the superficial veneer over deeper losses we have not yet grieved and let go.
In my case, grieving the loss of this man also brought me to the realization that he, and all the other lovers of my life, were band-aids I used cover a very old wound. That was the too-early loss of supportive protection when I was a child. I saw how much of my life was constructed around my coping with impending danger, and especially in my search for safety and restoration of a sense that I belonged and was welcome in the world.
In healing, I had to revisit that child who still existed in me, who was still holding up the foundation of that now-dysfunctional room that welcomed my sociopathic lover as a savior. I had to grieve with her about the childhood she lost while I reassured her that I was taking care of her now. That she could drop that weight finally, stop holding together all those coping strategies like a little Atlas with the world on her shoulders.
If you had asked me five years ago who I am, I would have given you a list of all the characteristics I developed in that room. Hardworking, responsible, trustworthy, generous, tolerant, kind, polite, presentable — all “virtues” that were really highly developed skills to earn the acceptance and approval I needed to feel safe. If you had thought to ask me who I was underneath all of that, and I was feeling particularly honest, I would have told you I was scared and tired and alone. Chronically and unfixably, except for the temporary respites I got from diving into another relationship, winning some praise for my work, or buying or eating something that made me feel better.
Today, if you asked me the same question, I would just smile. The question doesn’t compute. I am my “states,” and yes, they still exist. I still have knee-jerk responses to the stimuli that remind me of my old “world of impending danger.” But increasingly, I recognize them as responses to trauma. I observe myself slipping in and out of these states, being tempted to behaviors that are band-aids for pain.
In getting outside these states, I stopped limiting my identity to characteristics based on arranging my life around impending danger. I freed myself to grow into a larger identity. It includes characteristics — like selfishness, undependability and anger — that were forbidden before. I am more fluid and accepting of myself and other people. But most important, I find that my center has shifted. It’s hard to describe who I am now, but it includes this “observer,” as well as more awareness of the world around me, and more openness to feelings of joy, awe, gratitude and compassion.
I let go of a lot of things. It wasn’t always easy. There was backlash from well-intentioned “rules” and critical voices designed to keep me safe in a world of impending danger. I had to feel my way along to discover what rules were reasonable and which were obsolete artifacts of coping with a scary daddy.
This process of letting go of parts of myself will, I believe, never end. But, to my surprise, it becomes increasingly enjoyable. I once grieved over the discovery that I was not always trustworthy and that, despite all the effort I put into it, I could not make everyone like me. Now, when some inner voice tells me “I have to” do something, my inner observer frequently pops up and decides whether that “state” is useful or whether we have better options. More and more, everything about me is optional, because every moment is new with new challenges and new opportunities that have nothing to do with my history or with some frightened little identity that is really just baggage from that history.
As far as impending danger goes, that’s another issue that we’ll discuss in a future article. Fear, the natural fear of the dangers of a random universe, is something we still have not addressed in this journey of recovery. Grieving and letting go paves the way for that next stage.
Namaste. The joyous awakening spirit in me salutes the joyous awakening spirit in you.
Kathy
P.S. I owe a debt of gratitude to the writing of Stephen Wolinsky, Ph.D., for many of the ideas in this article. You can find his books on Amazon.
‘In dealing with the residue of a sociopathic relationship, we feel separated from parts of our identity. ‘
this is a really good article, and much of what has been posted in the last few days seems to be spoken to in it.
x one step
Seperated?
Holy Smokes batman! I can’t find mine anywhere! hope its not with all the socks lost in the dryer or worse yet -the last place I lost my car keys!
Started working on betrayal bond and it came as a question: Who am I now? If I don’t know who he was, and I lost myself in that episode, what gets written on that slate that the grown up erased?
In sociopathic relationships, we learn several very tough lessons. But primary among them is this: if our happiness depends on something outside of ourselves, we are living a gambler’s life.
‘Who am I now? If I don’t know who he was, and I lost myself in that episode, what gets written on that slate that the grown up erased?’
salient question silver. off axis, wobble, reverb – let us find out.
This article has me feeling so very, very sad………..
Gm to all,
I apologize for the profane language I used in a post yesterday. It is a remnant of my spath relationship…I rarely cussed before my spath-ship. One of the many removals of my values that occured during my adopting of his patterns.
I spent some time this early morn, reading a blog listed here, “psychopathyawareness”. I read through the entire thread on main page. Very mind-heart opening. It was like reading the story of how he hooked me, verbatim. I felt very connected to the description of how “I FELT” during various stages of my entanglement. It left me crying. I feel the pain and sadness of having opened my life and body…my very soul..to a creature whose main purpose was too cause me harm and pain. The crying felt good., releasing. It is so helpful to read how the drama played out, as if from a script. Makes me realize, I am not crazy, this really did happen to me. I am only responsible for my vulnerabilities, not his evil actions, intent,betrayal and the truth that he is psychologically disturbed.
I keep coming back to something that first crossed my mind 1-2 months after I left him. He was still playing cat/mouse with me…I was still seeing him. I had a vivid realization that at some point in every relationship I have had, I have ended up crying like I once did in childhood, on floor, broken in spirit, emotions,body and mind. This relationship brought me to that place again, most painfully.( ironically, he used to like to place me before him on ground..very submissive posturing…his way of dominating me) No doubt that this experience simply opened up a wound I once thought I had processed and grieved in depth…but like many other things in my life, it has been dealt with in layers. Maybe some pain is just to deep, too much to be processed at one time.
The pain of loss of innocence, of violation from the very people in our lives who are supposed to love us unconditionally and protect us from evil…layered so deep in the mind and spirit. No wonder that it takes most victims of childhood abuse decades to uncover ..process it all. I am still sad, still crying some, still angry at him ( not self anymore..I gave love, I refuse to be angry at self for my only trangsgression…being vulnerable. Not being in the “know” of what a spath is, I was not responsible for evil perpetrated against me in childhood, I was not responsible for spath’s evil either.)
I am responsible for learning how to heal. I have always known that and dealing with the little girl still inside me. I am getting counseling from someone now who understands abuse. She can help me uncover my old wounds…deeply face -heal them this time.
Best part of today is…I do not feel longing for him. I felt so much longing for him at first, never thought I would stop.
6 +months of having left him, 4 + months of no face contact, 2+ months NC at all. It can only get better.
Peace to all,
Blue
G’mornin to you Blue! Best wishes and big hugs to you! Hang in there, Dear heart! 🙂
Thanks to Kathleen Hawk for all the wonderful articles that are helping me understand and process this trauma.
Gm to you Radar_On, hugs to you as well. Though I know that I have some undesirable traits, my hope is coming back from the deep knowing in me…that the genuine love I feel for most of humanity and YOU too, all LF’ers ( HUGS ), is not a flaw…. and it separates me from spath, because my caring for and about others is real and deeply felt! I FEEL…yeah to all of us, that we do. It may mean my pain right now is deeply felt too, but someday, it will turn to joy again.
Joy, self esteem and self love that I will guard with my life …next time a souless human crosses my path. I will become a zero tolerance woman…zero tolerance for violation and disrespect.
Blue
Thoughts that are surfacing in my mind…there was no amount of love I could have given to spath-man that would have woken him up, given him a conscience, make him reciprocate the love I felt for him.
There was no amount of love I could have given my Father… that would have made him a good Dad, who could love his daughter, treat me with respect, honor and caring. Just never was anyway for either of these men to be “Woken” by my love for them.
Sometimes, we are born into a hurricane. No choice in that. And then, through life, walk back into storms, because they are so familiar. Trying to reclaim the pieces of ourselves we lost in the initial storm of birth….childhood. I went to re-claim a little girl who was still crying on the floor…35 years ago. Re-claim the pieces of me splintered…left spiraling in a hurricane in my psyche.
Taking my pieces back…starts today. Still hurting…being gentle with self….thx soooo much to LF’ers for the thought that I be gentle to self…a foreign concept to me.
Blue
Bluemosaic, there are some superb articles from years ago that are priceless in their wisdom and no-nonsense messages.
You’re spot-on: nothing under the sun would have made any difference in the spath or his treatment of you. Personally, that was a difficult fact for me to accept. No amount of love, encouragement, support, or money would have altered the exspath’s choices.
Recovery comes in fits and spurts and there is no scheduled timeline. Some days “feel” better, and other days “feel” stagnant. It’s all okay because grieving and healing take time – they just do, and we can’t rush them no matter how much we read, absorb, and process. We still have to go through those grueling phases, and we have no control over how those phases transition.
One-day-at-a-time, Bluemosaic. You’re going to be just fine, in due time.
Brightest blessings
Thx Truthspeak, for your wisdom..and affirming to me that the pace and order I process this lesson at….is my own, different for us all. Part of my plan for coming months is to channel the physical nature of my anger…as well soothing the anger. This will include, but not be limited to, Boxing( I enjoy it), yoga, meditation….participating in a long distance cycling event with freinds (something I would have done pre-spath, but now will have even deeper meaning for me), and I have a group that I plan on volunteering with that helps train young athletes for races who have been victimized sexually, in order to help them re-build there self esteem,( something I also had planned on doing pre-spath, but my kids were too young at the time for me to give time to others.) That volunteering will now be an effort to help some other young girl walk into her adult life with more self-esteem than I did…maybe she will be more solid in her boundaries..stand a better chance than I did. Atleast, she will have more tools…hopefully a better sense of her spirit and value.
Blessings to you as well,
Blue