It is perhaps one of the most difficult things to do after having loved, The Lie. To love again without fear of the past repeating itself. To love without fear of making a mistake. Without fear of being hurt.
And yet, we yearn for love. For connection. For that special someone to spend away the hours, sharing in good times and bad. To whisper sweet nothings in the night, to hold and to be held, to laugh with, cry with and even have sex with.
But no, our tender hearts cry out, I can’t do it. I won’t. I’ll never love again. Too risky. Too intimate. Too much.
Or, before our broken hearts even have a chance to stop bleeding, we race out and find another, searching for that special someone to make us feel so special we forget all about the blood dripping from our wounds with every beat of our aching hearts.
We are relational beings.
When I was released from that relationship from hell, I knew I wasn’t healthy enough to date. I knew I was very broken and so I made a commitment with myself to not date for a minimum of a year. I knew that I had to give myself that time to get comfortable with myself again. To heal the tender spots. To soothe my wounded soul and strengthen my sorry ego.
And, underneath my practical approach to what I needed to do to heal was the absolute truth. I was absolutely terrified of getting close to a man. I was terrified I’d vomit all over his leather jacket because it happened to have the same smell as the one I’d given ”˜Him whose name I could not speak’ our first Christmas together. Or, I was terrified I’d break down crying in a restaurant just because my date happened to order the same meal ”˜He’ had ordered the night he’d proposed to me. Or what if, while sitting in a movie, my date reached across to take my hand and I wasn’t expecting it and I got all scared and accidentally slapped him in the face and made such a scene I got up and ran out of the theatre and we were sitting in the middle of the row and everybody had to get up and let me out and I’d feel like such a fool and when I got outside I kept running because, well, I was such a loser!
Seeing as my psyche was pretty caught up in some pretty serious fortune telling of the negative kind about weird and wacky things that would happen if I dated, it seemed wisest to not date — at least until such time as I could look at a man across a table and not want to hurl my plate at him just because he preferred his steak rare. Doesn’t he know? Eating steak rare is a red flag suggesting he was out for blood! A vampire of the sociopathic kind!
And so, the year became two, and then three. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to date. It was just, even after I’d gotten over my fear of pending dating disasters with every dinner invitation; every time I went out on a date I couldn’t figure out how much of the sordid tale I should tell. Do I warn him I’ve got some serious trust issues about men on the first date? Do I tell him I’m hyper-vigilant when it comes to his behaviour? What about the ”˜three times, you’re out’ rule? How much do I tell and when?
It seemed easier to not date than to try to figure out the ins and outs of dating etiquette after the sociopath is gone. And so, I created a story of my satisfaction with my single status, laughingly telling anyone who listened that I liked my life better without a man.
Reality is; we are relational beings. For the vast majority of us, the desire for intimacy, the yearning to be in relation with someone special, is part of our human condition.
Challenge is; looking at my track record up to and including ”˜Him whose name I do not speak’, I wasn’t sure how to be in relationship without my patterns leading to the ”˜new love’ becoming the ”˜ex’, regardless of what a true prince he was.
History does not repeat itself — unless I make it happen.
And then I met C.C.. I met him through business. Oh oh. I met the sociopath through business too. Strike one. He was a friend of a friend. So was ”˜Him whose name…’ Strike two.
What am I doing? My mind shrieked. Am I repeating history? Two similarities right off the bat. Not good.
C.C. even liked cars. Oh no. ”˜He’ liked cars too. Had lots of them. The difference with C.C. was, he liked cars but they weren’t his life. He drove an old antique Mercedes that he’d lovingly restored. And that was his only car. Okay. Only one car. It’s old. We’re okay.
The real difference though between ”˜Him…’ and C.C. was evident from the very first time I met him. C.C. didn’t flirt. He didn’t come on to me or even try to convince me to go out with him on our first encounter. And he never ignored my ”˜No’.
In fact, when we met he was just coming out of a marriage of twenty years and wasn’t looking to date. We’d have lunch or coffee and talk about life and living and I’d share what I’d learned in my growing through the pain of having loved, The Lie, and he’d share his love of his kids and his sorrow at having ”˜failed’ as a husband.
It wasn’t until after about a year of a casual friendship that he asked me on a date, or, as I insisted we call it, an ”˜undate’. “We’re not going out,” I told him. “We’re simply spending some time together to share in the company of someone we enjoy who happens to be of the opposite sex.” And pretty sexy to boot — I didn’t tell him!
Two years later, C.C. and I live in a home we bought together. We continue to deepen our intimacy and to strengthen our commitment to each other. We still have ups and downs. Moments when I think, “Someone to cuddle in bed just isn’t worth this!” But, reality is, my responsibility in our ups and downs are 100% my doing. And his accountability is 100% his doing. I am willing to work on my 100% and I am willing to let him be responsible for his.
And that’s the difference between then and now.
I’m not looking for C.C. to fix me, change me, improve me. And, I’m not looking to fix, change or improve him.
What I’m looking for is a relationship where I can be accountable for myself 100% of the time, and be confident that even when I’m acting out, even when I’m not hearing him or seeing him or behaving in a loving way, our love is not the issue. It’s my behaviour that’s at fault, or needs changing or evaluating and realigning. It’s not ”˜me’. It’s what I’m doing, or how I’m reacting to what’s happening that’s the issue.
True Confessions.
Recently, I came front and centre with my 100% accountability factor. It started with C.C. phoning late in the afternoon to cancel on plans we’d made for that evening. “My partner and I need to meet to go over a crisis situation. Sorry hon. Can’t be avoided. I’ll be home as soon as I’m done,” he said.
Now, ”˜Him whose name I do not speak’ did that kind of thing all the time. Plans made. Cancelled. Promises broken. Disappearances that lasted for days. Turmoil and mystery. Empty promise after empty promise.
My psyche went on full alert. The past was triggered and I boarded its runaway train.
Know that voice in your head that just won’t shut up? After hanging up the phone, ”˜that voice’ revved up into high gear.
“You know he’s lying,” the sibilant hiss of that voice raced through my mind, skirting in and out of the shadows. Beguiling. Seductive. Destructive. “He’s lying. He’s not meeting a business associate. He’s got a date with someone else. He’s conning you.”
Now, let’s be clear. I had no real reason to doubt him. C.C. has never not phoned when he’s promised to phone. Never not appeared, on time, when he’s promised to appear. Perhaps it was I was tired. I’d been out of sorts about all kinds of things in the previous week, including issues with my eldest daughter and her father, who was being who he’d always been, an emotionally distant man but not a sociopath.
Normally, in my post sociopath awareness, I can quieten ”˜that voice’ with a good dose of loving care. “You’re just scared, Louise. That was then. This is now. C.C. is not Him… C.C. has never done anything to cause you to doubt him.”
Alas, on this night, the furies were about and I unhooked their cage and released them.
I got in my car. Yup. I got in my car and drove to where I knew C.C.’ meeting was to be. ”˜If I just see his car there, then I’ll know he didn’t lie.’ I told myself. ”˜I need to do this to give me peace of mind.’ ”˜There’s nothing wrong with being suspicious. After all I’ve been through, why wouldn’t I be suspicious?’
And the justifications carried on, and on and on as I drove closer and closer to my date with the furies. Tears streamed from my eyes. I played a CD filled with songs of love betrayed just to fuel my pain and my feelings of self-loathing. I cried and I cried. I drove and I drove. With every block closer to my destination, the voice of reason receded further and further from my reality.
“You know this is wrong, Louise,” the voice of reason admonished.
”˜That voice’ snarled back. “Bug off. She has to do this. It’s your fault anyway. If you’d just kept her from falling in love with him I wouldn’t have to step in and protect her!’
I’d like to say I came to my senses before I got to my destination. But I didn’t. His car was there. He hadn’t lied. I turned around and headed home.
I have nothing to fear but myself.
I hated what I’d done that night. Hated that I had given in to fear and talked myself into behaving in a way that undermined my higher good.
It was a great lesson. In the end, I discovered the truth about what I was doing. It wasn’t that I couldn’t trust C.C.. It was that I didn’t trust myself enough to do the right thing. I was letting myself down by giving into my fears. I will wilfully behaving in a distrustful way. I was being untrustworthy and undermining our relationship.
Regardless of whether C.C. was or wasn’t where he’d said he’d be, I had let my fears control me. I had let myself react without giving care to what I was creating in my life. Harmony or discord? The choice was always mine. That night I chose discord.
It was several months before I told C.C. what I’d done. I knew that had I told him that night, while I was still feeling off-centered and out of control, he would not have been able to hear me speak of what had compelled me to act in such a foolish and distasteful way. He would only have heard the bare facts — I hadn’t trusted him enough to believe him.
Trust is a big issue for C.C.. We’ve discussed it many times. He needs to know he is trusted in order to trust.
My big issue is safety. I need to feel safe to know I am safe. My behaviour that night had nothing to do with C.C. and everything to do with what was going on in my head. I wasn’t safe within me.
Intimacy can do that to me. In having come through those years of abuse and healing, I know I am okay. But, as I get closer to another human being, along with the joy of knowing I am loved, I am loveable, I am enough, the fears of never being good enough, or of being made to look like a fool, also awaken.
It’s up to me to tame them with ample doses of self-love and liberal dollops of truth and honesty, accountability and authenticity.
When I did tell him about my ride with the furies raging in my head, I ensured I began the conversation with a statement of how much I love him. In the end, he heard me say, “What I did had everything to do with me and my issues around intimacy. It had nothing to do with you and your trustworthiness.” And in his hearing me from where I was at, intimacy deepened, love survived.
We’ve weathered that storm. Climbed different mountains, crossed other seas. And through it all, I am learning that loving another is a journey of discovery. It is a voyage of wonder where I get to let go of holding someone else accountable for how I’m feeling, how I’m acting and what I’m thinking.
To be in relationship with another requires that I first and always hold true to my relationship with my self. To act out is to act against my values, beliefs and principles. To act in love is to embrace all that is wondrous, miraculous and Divine in me.
I am responsible for me. It is my responsibility to act in my higher good, and to not let myself down on the side of doing the wrong thing. Love requires my attention. I deserve my loving care. And love deserves I turn up, pay attention, speak my truth and stay unattached to the outcome. And when I do, love blossoms and I am safe within me.
Sociopaths taught us life lessons. I was naive and i SHOULD have followed him but I didn’t. Why was it wrong to check to see if the car for C.C. was there? Aren’t we supposed to use our new radar to prevent another disaster? Why was it so destructive to you? If the car was there, can’t you just sooth yourself and be reassured? You can say that your intuition was from the past and not the present. Laugh a little and go home. Smile and give him a big I love you hug when he returned without explanation. If the car, off-chance was not there, and your intuitions were right then you might have prevented another disaster. I don’t think anyone can be too careful. I think confronting him on the phone before knowing the facts would be foolish and acting out. But without accusing and trusting your gut I think you were wise. Unless this man is a saint. Certainly not a sociopath in anyway but all humans can be unfaithful if the right opportunities comes their way. Why not be on guard for that?
Does anyone have trouble sexually. I used to be so responsive and full of desire with my sociopath spouse. Once I realized that I lived a lie, I can’t seem to let go or have desire anymore even in the arms of a sensitive, loving man. I feel disconnected from my body.Almost the dissociation that sexually abused women feel. I was quickly responsive to my husband. I feel so rejected. I know that I am attractive in my mind and I hear that I am beautiful. But in my heart, all I can feel is this betrayal. The orgasms were real but letting go and being connected (to one who has no bond/attachement) was a lie. I want it to feel like with my husband (he was so good, he was my husband, I didn’t have inhibitions because i was in a marriage and we conceived 3 children together). I think about how he withheld sex although it was so good. It was manipulation. It made him amused – I was going crazy. We went to sex therapiest. He had charm, convinced everyone he just didn’t have a sexual desire as often as mine -only every 2-3 months througha 15 year “marriage.” But he got his needs met outside the marriage, He used dancers in VIP rooms, porn, his nurse at his office. Now everyone in town knows., I picture the loving man who makes love to me as wondering what was wrong with me for my husband to reject me . I am less responsive bc of my trauma. So I think he must be wondering “oh, that’s why, she takes forever to climax.” I don’t want to tell him that it was so easy with my spouse and that its only hard with him because my mind and heart have been destroyed by a callous sociopath who sexually exploited me and other women. I keep thinking one day, now 2 1/2 yrs into the relationship that sex will feel normal again. Like it was before I met my husband with emotionally healthy boyfriends (3 ) or with my husband before I knew he was a sociopath. My S husband was also a narcissist and could care less about my pleasure. Now I have someone who cares so much that I feel like I get stage fright trying to climax because its so important to him for me to feel good. For him to be unselfish. The more unselfish he is – the harder it is for me to let go. IT was easier with the sexually magnetic, sociopathic stare husband who was intense and high risk – his seeking high excitement, high risk made him a very intense lover. And waiting for him to “allow” me to touch him gave me so much built up that I would almost explode with pleasure as soon as he touched me. Is this another reason he withheld the sex. It made me more like the high risk women that met his high risk personality? Is there any therapist on this site who also understand how damaged one can become after sex w/ a S?
Carla:
I am not a therapist….somone in that area can answer you but from another victim standpoint….oh yes…..I am so burned I have not even dated another man. I almost throw up at the thought of it……and yes, it is sexual abuse these P’s dole out on us. Most of us are suffering from post traumatic stress and this is just another one of the areas….these P’s use sex as just another power play. They don’t like emotions involved so they many times frequent professional sex workers.
It’s been 4 years for me. I am dating again. Dating, as in, meeting a man face to face to see if there is any mutual interest. So far, there hasn’t been.
I’m doing the online dating thing. I’ve emailed and/or met a few guys who seem normal, but it is amazing how many awful guys are out there! I can eliminate a lot of them before even meeting them. (looking for an assistant, long laundry list of demands, incredible hostility and bitterness toward women, etc.)
I do worry that my ability to trust has been damaged. I worry that when I meet someone new, I will be too much on alert for any misstep he makes. I work hard to find a balance between protecting myself from a P and accepting that all of us have moments of selfishness or rudeness and that we can do and say things that could be misinterpreted. It’s just that the real Ps have ONLY selfishness and rudeness, and the things they say that sound obnoxious really ARE obnoxious.
I’m also fortunate that I have terrific friends, men and women, who I can hold up as a standard of comparison for potential dates.
Nottakingitanymore,
My P was wonderful when we first met – or so it seemed. But only in hindsight can I say that there were many, many clues. My friend noticed the first one: he could not say anything nice about anyone else. Everyone was inferior to him.
Really, if you step back and look at them, they are just seething with envy. We get distracted by their facade but many friends, acquaintances and even people I hardly knew came up to me and told me that this man was wrong for me. I just thought I knew him so much better than they did.
The last few years, when he realized I was running out of money and patience with him, he started to reveal his real self. All this was under the guise of him “changing”, but it was actually him “revealing” his disgusting nature. The only thing he did not reveal were all the evil things he was doing to me. Slandering me to my neighbors and the police, poisoning me, sabatoing my car and everything in my life.
“It’s my behaviour that’s at fault, or needs changing or evaluating and realigning. It’s not ’me’. It’s what I’m doing, or how I’m reacting to what’s happening that’s the issue.”
Even though I’m not seeing anyone now, this still is important for me to remember.
PoiSoN had so poisoned my thinking that I always thought that I was defective somehow, that it was “me”, that nobody else would want me and he was doing me some sort of favor by being with me — what was that quote from Bronte?
Its not so hard to change a reaction/behavior as to think that your whole being is somehow wrong. I just remembered a thing a friend used to say all of the time, “You can change your attitude quicker than you can change your socks”.
I know that the way I’ve been conditioned to react, suspect, doubt, question, fear, mistrust, etc. will take a lot longer but some things that I do can be changed quickly; for instance, I chose to read this blog instead of old emails tonight (well, at least for the moment lol).
In the first PoiSon relationship I was in, toward the end, I drove to where he was supposed to be (and he wasn’t), I checked his cell (yep, messages from his girlfriends), I checked his pockets (baggies from cocaine), I found other women’s underwear that he insisted were mine, and all of those crazy, mistrustful behaviors. I always thought that I felt badly because it was true that he was lying, cheating, hurting, trying to make me think that I was going crazy.
It wasn’t until I read this article that I realized that when I want to “check” on my ex, that its MY BEHAVIOR that is making me feel badly about myself today. I can stop doing this to myself. I have a choice now. I don’t have to continue to do these things. I am the one disappointing me now. I am the one behaving in a mistrustful way — AND WE ARE NOT TOGETHER ANYMORE.
“It was that I didn’t trust myself enough to do the right thing. I was letting myself down by giving into my fears. I will (sic) wilfully behaving in a distrustful way.”
I need to think on this tonight.
Thanks all of you. LF is really pulling me through, holding me up, showing me what I can do to heal this time.
I am a woman worthy of love too; just like all of you. I need to find that love for myself again, that trust in myself, that “Hey, you’re alright and fun and bright and I like you”.
I’m not the type who “needs” to always be in a relationship but I do need to regain a healthy relationship with me. I’ve been destroying myself over having fallen for the lie again.
The last couple of days I’m having a hard time with the feelings of worthlessness, humiliation, degredation, shame, loss of dignity and self-respect, etc. related to the sexual aspects of my last relationship. [Just needed to say that].
Twice Betrayed,
Interesting you say they can be “professional sex workers” His mother always was a martyr and said things like “I had to prostitute because the father didn’t pay support.” I used to think that was odd. She made her self sound worse trying to make him look badly. My ex S grew up with those messages. I think that is what attracted him to slutty women and why he chose me to be the presentable, well educated, economically sound, good mother- but oh, no – don’t touch her like the “whores. I was the Madonna. He was a very generous and able to be as a podiatrist. I got the cars, jewelry, vacations. I was invisible as an attractive/sexy woman. SO back to blog,
How does one in recovery from the S shift gears when someone who is not a S (yes, I feel like everyone is these days) looks at you as a woman and with healthy sexuality?? I feel like a little girl who was being taken care of by someone in a almost parent child way? I feel ugly even though I am complimented all the time.I think they are saying it to make me feel better. How could I be so desirable when my ex s husband made me beg for sex unless he wanted me to have another baby? Do you know of any of us in recovery who have used post traumatic stress coping for sexual abuse to help heal the sex with the sociopath. SO that another mutally sharing relationship is possible? I think my inability to “let go” is because I am hypervigilant and I don’t feel secure. I anticipate being cheated on again before it even happens. I truly trusted my ex S of 15 yrs and felt secure. I waited a year with my relationship to be physically intimate and I felt like a woman at first but as things settled in a couple years – I felt that worthlessness that Cherre descibes. I think its coming from me – I must be accountable for my conditioned reactions. Many questions. I hope you can all help shed some light…
Carla:
“Interesting you say they can be “professional sex workers”
Actually I said they can ‘frequent sex workers’. Meaning they sometimes use/go to them for sex.
However, I would stick my neck out and say P’s can be ‘sex workers also’.
Heck, they leave us so blown out from all the games/stress it takes us a long time to get over it.
From my understanding mine suffered from the Madonna/whore syndrome. Wife=madonna-good woman/homemaker/mother/pure/saintly/mother figure. Whore is for the fun sex.
Twice Betrayed,
What are your thoughts on the SP that starts out with a very sexual relationship, but when it becomes very emotional only on the part of the victim…he seems to withhold sex, or at least feign reasons not to be interested. Not that an SP ever really becomes emotional anyway, but he didn’t pretend to be “in love”. Of course the “supply” didn’t have quite enough money or other benefits to suit him for a “committed” relationship. So I’m wondering if perhaps it was just easier for him to avoid the emotional response of the victim…or was it simply to toy with her?
On a different note, I just thought of something that gave me the willies, after reading a post a bit above. There were about 4 occasions (all weekends as I lived an hour from my S) within a couple months time that I woke up vomiting at his house. I had the all too familiar migraine that went along with it, but this was only happening at his house as my headaches were pretty much under control and rarely happened at home. My gosh, can anyone think of something that he could have been giving me to make me sick like that?? I can’t remember if those days followed evenings when he would have so nicely fixed me a bedtime snack, but I always had water by the bed that I drank during the night with meds.
I feel like I’m being paranoid, but it just seems odd, and I know ANYTHING is possible with a psychopath…
gosh hummingbird, you probably read my post about my illness and then how he emptied the refrigerator when I left.
I had my urine and my hair tested for drugs – all negative. But it could be anything. I read about a midwest radio talkshow host who killed his wife slowly over 2 years by dosing her juice with anti-freeze in small amounts. Her kidneys failed and he didn’t call the ambulance til it was too late. But at least he went to jail.
It might’ve been a coincidence that you were sick or even your body’s stress from being with him. I guess it doesn’t really matter except as a lesson to ALL OF US. Like you said, “ANYTHING is possible with a P.” STAY AWAY FROM THEM IF POSSIBLE.