In the world of healing from an encounter of the P(sychopath) kind, it is easy to forget that there is a world without fear, without lies, without terror, without uncertainty, out there, just around the corner from the insanity of his abuse. It’s easy to forget that people don’t always manipulate, deceive, devalue and destroy you. And, it’s easy to forget — you never deserved their lies and manipulation in the first place.
It’s one of the things that makes healing from these encounters so difficult. We forget who we are as we fall into believing we are who they say… Whatever it is they tell us we are — from beautiful to ugly, impossible to live without, impossible to live with. The most incredibly intelligent woman they’ve ever met to the stupidest woman who ever walked the planet.
In their eyes we become less than we ever imagined possible because, in their eyes we do not exist. At least, not the ”˜we’ we’ve known ourselves to be. Because their eyes can’t see ”˜us’. All they can see is the ”˜target’ of who they needed us to be while they stalked and plotted their way into our lives.
When I was first released from that relationship, I couldn’t believe what had happened to me. And then I had to remind myself — believe it. It happened. “But how could he have done it?” my mind raced. “He said he loved me. Would never hurt me.”
Hah! Face it. He lied.
Facing reality of his lies is imperative to healing from these cretins evil passages through our lives. Believing they did what they did, said what they said, lied and deceived and cheated and coerced us into giving up on ourselves, is vital to our recovery.
And facing the truth about the sickness of their love, and our sickness while believing we were in love with them is critical to soothing our aching hearts and sorrow filled psyches.
So many times someone will say after they’ve told me all the things he’s done to abuse them, “But I still love him.”
And I always ask, “What’s in it for you to keep believing you love someone who treated you like that? Who betrayed you? Cheated on you? Lied to you with every breath? What’s in it for you to keep believing he is worthy of your love?”
Because after they’ve gone and devalued and discarded us one more time, we are the one’s who keep ourselves attached to their machinations with our picking at the scabs of the wounds they’ve inflicted at us, worrying the sore of their abuse with our repetition of their words running through our minds. We are the one’s who keep thinking about them, worrying about what they’re doing or saying after they’ve walked out the door one last time leaving us standing with the pieces of our hearts falling through our fingers into the puddle of our tears pooling on the floor.
It is not easy healing from a relationship with a sociopath. But, it’s a heck of a lot better than being in relationship with one.
When I was with the sociopath, I did not know up from down, left from right, in from out. Every day was fraught with some new terror, some weird and wacky story about why he couldn’t turn up, didn’t have the money to pay, didn’t have the guts to call, or simply didn’t do what he’d say he’d do in the first place. Every day was a roller coaster ride through his crazy-making words and antics, with me constantly searching for truth and order, fairness and kindness amidst the insanity that was his ”˜love forevermore’. In staying with him, I became more and more sick. More and more incapable of seeing that it wasn’t that I ”˜couldn’t leave’, it was that I kept telling myself, “I couldn’t leave.” because…. he loved me. Needed me. Wanted me. I loved him. Needed him. Wanted him. I kept telling myself I couldn’t walk away and trapped myself into believing I couldn’t because I loved him and he loved me.
He never knew what it meant to love. He never had it in him to love me. And, while I walked into that relationship with my arms and heart wide open to love, I stayed because my mind closed down and my heart broke up into a thousand tiny pieces with every moment I remained within his unholy arms.
When I was first released I wanted to believe he loved me, at least at some point in that tortorous ride — it couldn’t all be for nothing, could it? I wanted to believe it wasn’t all a lie or some sick game played out on the battlefield that became my life. In healing, I accept, He never loved me. He never could. It was always a sick game and I was the pawn who could never gain entry into his castle — because his castle never existed. And he was never the prince of my imaginings.
Poison doesn’t kill you because it loves you. Poison kills you because it’s toxic.
And he was toxic to my life. A poison I consumed with every breath I took whether I was in proximity to him or his voice was simply coming down the umbilical cord of the telephone through which he fed me my daily dose of lies.
In those first minutes and hours and days away from him, within the protective veil of No Contact, I came face to face with reality and accepted my truth. I never loved him. I wanted to think I did. I truly wanted to believe I did. But, in reality, I loved a mirage. A shimmering creation of his duplicituous creation. He was the chimera. Facilely capable of shifting shape to suit the weather, the time zone, the geographic formations around him.
I never loved him. I loved the thought of him. The idea. The dream.
In accepting the reality of my love of the idea of him versus the truth of who he was, I freed myself to awaken from the nightmare of his embrace. In my awakening, I opened myself up to all that is possible when I let go of living on cloud nine, squeezing my feet into too small high heeled shoes that inevitably trip me up. Feet firmly planted on the ground in my size nine hiking boots, and armed with my shield of No Contact, I strode fearlessly away from my need to hear his voice, to know what he was doing and saying and thinking. To make sense of his nonsense. To understand his machinations.
He did what he did because he could. It’s what he does. It’s who he is.
There’s no rhyme nor reason that can ever justify what he did to me or continues to do to others. Away from him, there’s no sense in spending my precious breath trying to make sense of his nonsense or trying to figure out if there is some way I can make him hear me, see me, look at me. There’s no closure worth being in contact with him. No point in having the last word. There’s never a last word with a sociopath. They’ll always think that one word is the opening to more.
He is the lie and I am free.
He will always be the lie and I will always be free — as long as I stay true to who I am, my values, beliefs, principles and ideals. As long as I stand up for what is right and loving in my life and turn up for me in all my beauty, warts and all and love myself for all I’m worth.
Today, these boots are made for walking. Away from abuse. Away from deceit. Away from anything or anyone who believes they have the right to tell me who I am, what I can do and where I can go.
In walking away from the belief that I loved him, I walk into the truth that I deserve love and joy and all that is good in this world. In walking away from him I leap fearlessly into creating my best life yet, of living this moment without fear that I will fall into the arms of someone who believes they have the right to take my life and make it theirs.
Nobody has that right. And I’m not giving up my right to live my life in joy and love and wonder, creating my best life yet for all I’m worth.
And I’m worth a lot.
So are you.
I survived an encounter of the sociopathic kind. I am no longer a victim of his abuse. I am a victor on the path of success, creating beauty and love in my life today because, I deserve it!
So do you!
skylar,
You are dealing with a 48-50 ish (??) year old man and I am dealing with a 16 year old kid……
So if you believe that your X CHOSE to choose to hate at about the age of 12 and lets say that my son would have been close to that same age making the choice……
Why do I see such a set-in-stone mindset already at the ripe old age of 16? Whatever it is choice or not it has posessed him. Or so it seems.
This is not a debate about the choice. It is about what YOU can do to CHANGE it? Letting him know whats wrong with him can’t possible be the key to him changing? Is it? If it IS a matter of choice then maybe he doesn’t WANT to change.
Somehow your X has managed to use his pity ploy with you again. Your seeing the pitiful little boy in him instead of the grown man who tried to poison you, or hurt you at every opportunity.
I see that “little boy” in my imagination every day over here. It wasn’t that long ago that he was a sweet little boy. BUT in his place now I see a STRANGER. A very disturbing one.
Skylar I know your not a mom, but if you trust nothing else I have to say, TRUST me that I love my son and it is the hardest thing that I have ever done…..To even come to the place and admit that something is very wrong with him. He is very sick and how does a mother even admit that there is nothing she can do to help her own flesh and blood? ONLY when she has seen something SO VERY TROUBLING…..SO FEARFUL, that she takes a step BACK instead of taking the step in. Going IN is what a mothers natural instinct is to do.
So why is my instinct (that is in DIRECT conflict with my heart) telling me to step back?
Yesterday you exposed a pretty sick individual here. But you couldn’t HELP him…all you could do was expose him.
How will exposing your X help him? AND how would you be safe?
I LIKE you. I care about your being safe.
Dear Skylar,
QUOTE: “I want him to know what is wrong with him. ”
Skylar you might as well try to get a rattle snake to know what is “wrong about biting people” you would have AS MUCH CHANCE convincing the snake you didn’t want to be bitten and that it iwasn’t necessary to bite.
THEY DO NOT THINK THERE IS ANYTHING WRONG WITH THEM, AND THEY ARE NOT INTERESTED IN LEARNING.
In order to TEACH you must have a willing student. They are not willing. FRUSTRATING I KNOW…but the fact none the less.
ps Sky,
Take this for what it is worth, and I may be wrong, but it seems to me that you are still holding on to some “hope” that you can “fix” them, or that they can be fixed, or convnced of their problems and CHANGE their choices—-that is NOT going to happen. EVER. Waiting for that to happen or trying to fix it is like “raising the dead” no matter how fervently you pray or how hard you try, dead is dead and psychopath is psychopath. All the emotional CPR and “life support” for them is just wasted energy.
Ox and Wit,
It will be like training a cobra to dance. I know that. That’s why I haven’t done it.
I’ve spent the last 4 months reading and thinking. 24/7, it never stops. That is why I can’t function because my brain is using 90% of it’s resources on this issue. I scour the internet and books for little clues. I’m putting the puzzle together. That hardwiring that everyone talks about is not hardwired for evil. It’s hardwired for intense emotion. Much more intense than any of us feel. Maybe that’s why men are more often psychopaths, the testosterone feeds strong emotion. That emotion is too painful for the childlike mind to deal with. The choice to hate is a self-protective mechanism.
I was that way when I was a child. I made that choice too. I wanted to hate too. I was emotionally abused and I was very very angry. I’m glad that I didn’t kill anyone.
It went away when I grew up. I guess I’m not the kind of person that really sticks to anything, I’m pretty flexible. Remembering this stuff has helped me put myself in his shoes.
The hard part is being empathic and objective at the same time. And also letting go of my ego. I’m still trying to be clear so that when I approach him I can control the situation. There will be no overnight revelation. it will be tiny chinks in the armor until it’s gone and it will take years.
it will be like trying to handle a snake.
Because right now, his reaction to love is to strike at it with venom. Yet that is what he craves, he craves love. So I have to approach him with the promise of love but not demonstrate any love? While I do that I need to break through his thinking process to his rational mind.
Right now, he is vulnerable because my leaving him was a severe narcissitic injury.
I haven’t committed to doing it. It’s very scary. But if I don’t do it, I’m worried that worse things will happen.
I can kind of identify, Skylar. I still go back and forth, wondering if the X is really a P or if he’s just a low bottom crack addict. I also wrestle with the fact that there were things about him I liked. There are things, I miss.
I think of some of the things I said to him, and want to cry.
But I know that all of that has to be packed away, somewhere where it doesn’t get in the way of my moving on………………
I did everything I could. I left no rock un-turned, and somehow, that has to be enough.
I didn’t want to leave him. I was absolutey furious that I could’t fix him. God knows I wanted to. But, alas……………..
thanks for caring Wit,
They are committed to being hateful because they are afraid of emotional pain. You are afraid of him.
I can control my fear because I do not live with him. That helps a bit. Once I contact him I’m not sure I’ll be able to control the fear.
Interestingly, he seems afraid to see me. He wants to manipulate me by email or phone but not in person.
I still have more thinking to do.
I don’t think I’ll ever be able to BE with him again. No matter what happens. I can’t imagine ever giving him another chance to destroy my heart. I want better for me than that. This isn’t about that.
Kim, you said you were with him for 7 years?
Yes Sky, seven grueling years…..
skylar,
Like you I spend entirely to much time thinking about this. Understanding what makes them tick. Like you I still live with the toxins. (you with your parents, me with my son)
I don’t try to understand this because I think I can change it. I try and understand it so I can SURVIVE it. And because the disordered individual is my son. And because it is my nature to understand it before I fully accept it. It lives with me this disorder on a daily basis in the form of my son.
It can be “likened” to a chess game. He makes a move and I have to make a move. Do I ignore it, or respond to it? In some ways the chess game is what all parents “play” with a tenager. (picking your battles for one example) HOWEVER at the same token it is NOT at all the same. Because of the disorder. The stakes are much higher and there is alot more involved.
I don’t want to ADD to the disorder by making the wrong choices. I do feel RESPONSIBLE for that on a daily basis. The nurture, nature. It is what it is, but I don’t want to do the WRONG thing here at the nurturing end…….I want to do the right thing.
It is hard to SHOW that “softness” ( that love) that should exist 100% of the time between any parent and child when the child is so full of hate. But there are times when I choose softness even when it is very difficult. I choose to show love by example. And there are times this seems impossible to SHOW love. It doesn’t mean I don’t love him, but it is hard to embrace that Dr Jekle, Mr Hide personality. Either way I don’t think he FEELS the love. He feels entitelment. He feels supierior. Always that is his take. Not just with me but with everyone he interacts with.
The thing about this in a teenager…..He didn’t wear the mask and lure me in and the mask comes off at some point, like with a love relationship. He doesn’t “wear” the mask at all with me. I see him exploring with this mask for his own agenda with others. Its kind of like I am involved with this this “backwards”. I have seen the mask off before I seen it on? If that makes any sense.
The Dr. Jekle, Mr Hide personality isn’t for my benifit…..In other words he doesn’t sweet talk me or put on this “persona” for me. I SEE the real deal. It is for the benifit of others the “good guy”.
But when you say that your Xp’s reaction to love is to strike, yet he craves love. I AGREE with that. However I think the PROBLEM is he can’t feel LOVE. He craves what he can’t have. NOT that he HAS never BEEN GIVEN LOVE but he can’t FEEL it. THAT is the core of this disorder. Not being ABLE to feel LOVE. Nor EMPATHY. They are not only not capable of giving love or empathy they don’t feel it when it is given to THEM.
My son broke his leg when he was a freshman. In 2 places. I wasn’t home and was 2 hours away from home. A parent of the kid he was with called me and said he needed to go to the emergency room as she could tell it was broken and all messed up. My son claims that it couldn’t have been broken because he didn’t feel any pain. Once X rayed and set into a cast he did everything possible to break the doctors orders (go figure?) I don’t know if his not feeling pain with a broken bone has anything to do with this disorder or not. But it is certainly something that had me wondering about it, now.
For sure this disorder has alot of complicating factors. But being vulnerable? I just don’t think they feel vulnerability. I think they mirror that. Knowing that normal people feel vulnerable.
Witsend did you get your computer fixed so you can hear sound?