A Lovefraud reader posted the following comment awhile back:
I just have one question for everyone here. Does anyone trust people after these sick people did what they did to us? Unfortunately for me, I have run across a few of these sickos but NONE like my ex. Whoever I meet now I’m thinking to myself, who is this person really? Do they have a secret life like the Scott Petersons and Ted Bundys of this world? I don’t let my children out of my sight and I’m already training my kids and they all know the signs of a sociopath especially my girls. I feel like I’m in a prison sometimes in my mind as I try so hard but just can’t trust anyone.
Yes, it is possible to trust again. Remember, sociopaths account for 1% to 4% of the population, depending on how the personality disorder is defined. Let’s bump the number of disordered people up to 10% to account for those who have sociopathic traits, but maybe not the full disorder.
That still means that 90% of the population are not sociopaths, and may be deserving of our trust.
So how can we feel trust again? How do we determine whom to trust? I think there are four components to being able to feel trust, and deciding who deserves to be trusted.
1. Educate ourselves
One of the statements I’ve heard over and over again, through emails and phone calls from victims, is this: “I didn’t know such evil existed.” Well, now we know.
We’ve all learned, mostly the hard way, about sociopaths. Now that we know they exist, we need to educate ourselves about the warning signs, the patterns of behavior that may indicate someone is disordered. Lies, irresponsibility, vague answers to questions, no long-term friends, new in town, magnetic charm, lavish flattery, statements that don’t add up, flashes of violence—if we start seeing the signs, we need to put up our guard.
2. Believe our own instincts
Just about everyone who was victimized by a sociopath had early warning signs—a gut feeling that something wasn’t right, an instinctive revulsion, questions about what was seen or heard. Unfortunately, we ignored the signals.
We didn’t believe the signals for three reasons:
- We didn’t have the empirical knowledge that evil exists (see above), so we didn’t know how interpret them.
- We viewed ourselves as open-minded individuals, and believed that everyone deserves the benefit of the doubt.
- We allowed the sociopath to explain away our questions and doubts.
Never again. We should never doubt our instincts. In fact, we should train ourselves to pay attention to our instincts. Our intuition is absolutely the best tool we have for steering clear of sociopaths.
3. Make people earn our trust
I had a blind spot. I am a forthright, trustworthy person. I would never think of lying to someone. Unfortunately, I thought everyone else was like me. Big mistake. My younger brother’s life philosophy is probably more useful. His rule of thumb: “Everyone is an a**hole until proven otherwise.”
The point is that we should not give our trust away indiscriminately. People must earn our trust by consistent, reliable and truthful behavior.
Important caveat: Sociopaths often appear to be trustworthy, dependable and honest in the beginning, while they’re trying to hook us. So if the good behavior slips, and bad behavior starts to appear, we must recognize the change as a big red flag.
4. Process our pain
I think the biggest roadblock to being able to trust again is our own pain. After an encounter with a sociopath, we’ve been deceived, betrayed, injured, emotionally crushed. We are angry and bitter, and rightfully so. But if we want to move on, we can’t keep carrying the pain around.
To get rid of the pain, we must allow ourselves to feel it.
I recommend that, either privately or with the guidance of a good therapist, we let the tears and curses flow. Expressing the pain physically, without hurting yourself or others, also helps. My favorite technique was pounding pillows with my fists. You may want to stomp your feet, twist towels or chop wood.
For more on this, read Releasing the pain inflicted by a sociopath.
Trust and love
It is important to be able to trust again. Doubting and disbelieving everyone we meet is a dismal way to live. If we cannot recover our trust in humanity, the sociopath who plagued us will have truly won.
The difference is that after the sociopath, we must practice informed trust. We know the red flags of a sociopath, and in evaluating a person, we don’t see them. Our intuition is giving us the green light. The person has proven, and continues to prove, to be trustworthy. These are the intellectual aspects of trust.
By doing the work of exorcising our pain, we clear away the roadblocks to feeling trust emotionally. It’s crucial to be able to feel trust, because that’s what paves the way for love.
star:
‘a combination of lust and fantasy’ … well said.
that’s exactly it.
Sstiles, I think this is the reason mine couldn’t sleep at night. He claimed it was from his head injury (which doesn’t exist). More likely from trying to keep all his lies straight. I have been the main witness to testify that he is faking medical symptoms to defraud the army (I never saw any symptoms). It is my word against his. He is actually claiming we were just “friends” and that I am making all the stories about him up. Amazing. This guy can lie convincingly at the drop of a hat. I’ve heard psychopaths can pass lie detectors tests because they actually believe their own lies.
Stargazer,
If it wasn’t so hurtful to think about, it would almost be a hoot! Mine had laser brain surgery over a weekend to fix an aneurysm (that didn’t exist)& didn’t even have a scar or a band aid, heart attacks (his sister is a nurse that checked his records-nothing to indicate any heart attack tests or treatments), panic attacks & PTSD from serving in ‘Nam(he never left the states-he was a recruiter), the list goes on…
They truly do believe the crap they make up, they have no actual reality. That’s scary enough, what’s scarier is that so many others believe them.
OMG, sstiles, was yours 6’3′ with a shaved head? Could be the same person? Or at least went to the same sociopath school! Mine got his alleged head injury because an IUD went off in the vicinity of where he was in Iraq. He claims he fell and hit his head and spent 6 months in the hospital (this was a lie). The army has been testing him for probably over a year and cannot find any injury. When he was around me, he acted fine. But down there on the army base, he walks with a cane, cannot drive, and slurs his speech. He also claims he cannot perform sexually because he has no feeling from the waist down. I laughed so hard when I heard that one. The extent of the deception is incredible. I had no idea this was going on. I only found out when I turned him in to the army for adultery. And here I thought I was dating a hero.
Stargazer, I about had a heart attack when I started to read your post–mine was 6’3″, but he had a full head of hair & mustache. He was very vain about his hair, since his 2 brothers went bald, & they were younger than him. I thought I was dating someone “larger than life”-his term to describe himself. ..a so called martial arts expert, body guard with his own company, world traveler, special service op in the Marines (doing secret missions to rescue downed pilots), a legend in his own mind. His own family can’t believe the bull sh-y stories he told me. They have all disowned him, & have chosen to remain close to me. The only one in his own family that has anything to do with him, is is psycho brother. I think they must swap fantasy life stories.
You know it wouldn’t surprise me if some of us dated the same psychos. Hair can be shaved and shaved heads can be grown out. Identities can be changed, and stories can be fabricated. Mine shaved his head because he is in the military. Apparently, this is one of the few truths he told.
Thank you guys for your undertanding and TRUTHFUL feedback. Yep, I know…anything that intense to start off is really a major clue. But for me…one of my closest freinds introduced us. I knew all about his history and was assured by my freind …”he is really the only one out of all people I know and have ever met that I would ever suggest would be for you”.
So, with this reference foundation I easily fell into the immense intensity of it all and it all felt just so right and normal and finally like…ahhhh…made it home. I wouldn’t have let this occur…BELIEVE ME please if my freind wasn’t such a reference. I’d have probably run run run right after hello actually as I knew it seemed so oddly to good to be true. NOT blaming my freind here as he is quite shocked from all of this as well but I do know that this ‘quick attachment’ should have been a warning sign. I hear you Oxy…I really was conscious of this but boy did he ever present like a direct image from my soul, impossible to look away with the reference I had. He was all the soc tried to mirroe x’s a million.
Indigo, thank you…ya..I know it’s not me…still not convinced he’s a soc but only 2 options and he’s playing the ‘ill’ option quite well.
Stillsorting…thank you. Yes I do agree with you and I don’t think this one was intentionally seeking to destroy…perhaps have a ‘holiday’ from his own darkness but not intentionally trying to cover my light. I will BE FLABBERGASTED if I find he’s done this to others though or has moved on or something. Time will tell. We’ll see how long this ‘illness’ consumes him.
Jane…thank you. Ya…duped regardless of explanation. You are wise and very wise words to Doll. That’s the one thing I can truly say that the damn S gave me is 100% confidence in my trust in myself and when we are all through and over it…nothing will dent this. As much as I’m shocked and hurt by ‘ill’ boy…I still feel confident and strong…these streets I have walked before so I know the way now.
Stargazer…yes, thanks. I know…the beginning intensity is not real…just a drug really and I had a pipe ready to go. Was just so so hard to discredit this soul who seemed to know me for centuries without any prior knowledge. Really felt ‘Real’. We both just seemed so eaqual in our love…like the mirror just got us higher and higher because there was really no end in that reflection. Until the ‘snap’. lol.
I mean really…a ‘snap’ is the only other possible half accepted excuse other than being a soc. I think he is just cowardly and the stress of a major move triggered undealt with past trauma and now he is stuck. My problem is that even though he is stuck there how the hell can you not have any feeling any longer? From 100 degrees to mi nus 20 in one day. He did half heartedly admit to Dissociative Identity Disorder which would explain this I guess but he still can e-mail me like he knows who I am but as thougb I am just some freind he’s had for a long time…definately no lover! BIZARRE!
Regardless of all this craziness I have relearned to trust myself thanks to the ‘definate soc’ and know I will overcome this disappointment regardless of the cause of it. For that…I am SO SO TRULY thankful for and that is one thing I was never able to say about the soc before this experience. I have been trained and evolved. We are all evolving and we are family.
Thank you everyone for being here…this place is always our home our TRUTH.
p.s. star and stiles…you guys crack me up…don’t know how many times I wanted to e-mail someone who blogged CONVINCED we were or had been with the same guy. They are all the same man! Just differnet masks!
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Wiserandhealing: Well, I’m confused. You said this great guy moved all across the country to be with you! Am I correct? If so, how would a friend know him well enough to make the perfect connection for you and him? Unless, of course, that friend of yours was from the same state as your EX?
Or, maybe I read your post wrong.
Peace.
Hi Wini,
No the ‘great guy’ was due here this coming Saturday. He is in another Province. Up until last Friday I have gotten the same consistant loving guy…actually text messaging me each morning with the exact hours it will be until his plane arrives.
My freind grew up in the same town as him but has lived out here in the West for several years and unfortunately moved to Alberta last year. My freind came to visit earlier this fall and that is how he introduced us.
Wiser,
Hi sweetie! How are you doing? I surely know how you feel. Oh, yes I do! But I’m not you and you’re the one hurting right now.
You know, I was involved with a guy like this a couple of years ago. He even told me in the beginning that he didn’t have the energy, the desire for a relationship. This was before we even started hanging out together. I was still in my fixer phase and arrogantly thought I could “love him to mental/emotional health”. That I would enchant and seduce him to fall for me..snort…what an ego I had, huh?!
Anyway, I stubbornly refused to just let us be ships passing in the night and told him I wanted to be with him. A couple of months later he deliberately picked a fight with me and I called it quits (this the day after he confessed to falling for me). He wanted me to be “bad guy” and break up so he could ease his conscience without any guilt attached. (hindsight is 20/20).
Well, I called him every foul name I could think of (alone, to myself, of course) and I could still bad mouth him on LF, but what’s the point? He just wasn’t for me and I realize that now.
My experience with him is a cautionary tale for me. If a guy says he’s not interested in a relationship, I will believe him and not pursue him in an effort to appease my stupid ego.
I got burned but I’m relieved it happened after a short period of time and not months, or even years later.
These troublesome involvements with “dangerous men” only reinforce our own personal strength, personal power, our grit and determination to protect ourselves from future harms. I truly believe that, and you stated above that there’s no way in hell that ANY man can undermine and destroy the healing and recovery you’ve sought to help yourself.
You go Girl!!
🙂