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.
Mine too – I thought he was so calm and mature and serene. Nothing I said seemed to bother him. I thought it was a buddha-like unconditional acceptance. HA! Truth is he just didn’t care…..at all. Though he did log some of the stuff away to be used later against me.
I’m going to have to turn texting off on my phone. He won’t go away. Why the hell doesn’t he run out of steam? I’m not feeding the vampire.
Henry, that is called
RECTRO-CRANIAL INVERSION (head up your a$$) LOL ROTFLMAO
From now on we will call it “RCI” And besides, when you are in that position, it makes it hard for me to BOINK you! LOL
And yes, it is a darned painful position. My neck has a permanent crick in it I spent so much time in that position.
Oxy – the rose colored glasses – my mother said basically the same thing to me. She said she worried about me because I wasn’t “judgemental enough.” That I saw only the good in everybody. And though that was an exaggeration – she was on to a basic core characteristic of mine that served me well for a while (when I needed it to surive) and then was the gateway for the sociopath. I don’t want to lose the loving, kind, trusting, parts of me. I like them. But I do want to lose the naivete, and the people pleasing qualities that made me such a beautiful victim – served up on a platter for psychopath breakfast.
hey it is soooo cold here today!!! I think I miss companionship and comradere in general – but I got you folks so I am not alone…
I was in just my shorts this afternoon Hnery
RCIsyndrome
this is when a woman will not go get her man beer and Cigaretts:)~ LOVE JJ
Healing Heart: That’s the way humans are suppose to act … you are living life correctly … it’s the others … well, enough said!
I’m shutting up now.
Peace.
Well Indi, I turned off my heat yesterday and today … maybe tomorrow or the next … I’ll have to turn it back on. So … nah, nah, nah, nah, naaaaaaaaaaaaah.
Anyway, I figure if it gets really chilly up here … we can all fly down there to see you buddy tuddy! LOL … then you’ll have to go out and get your beer (smile).
Well, I’ll probably be here a lot more now that I’ve finally been driven off my reptiles sites. The ex’s hooks are just too deep into the online reptile community. He is friends with too many people I used to know and trust, and I keep feeling stabbed in the back over and over again. Plus who knows which of these women he’s flirting with and dating or trying to date. Ugh. This is extremely hurtful to me how it all came down. I’m sure once I’m off the main site for a few months, he will return, ensuring that I will never be able to go back anyway. He is now a major player in the reptile world. He amassed a collection of collector snakes in a very short time, and now people worship him for it. He has them all fooled. MEANWHILE, the army is thick into their investigation. They came up today with typed papers for me to sign. They also visited 3 of my friends with the typed papers. Tomorrow they will be visiting another girl the ex knows in CO Springs.
He will probably just get kicked out without pension after all he’s done. Then he’s free to go out and defraud someone else. It really makes me sick.
I can’t even begin to wrap my mind around the hurt and betrayal I feel from the reptile community.
Stargazer:
Just saw your posting. Am feeling like you are at the moment. My brother called me today and told me the S had sent him photos he had taken in Mykonos. My brother emailed him back with a simple “thank you.” The S then responded “Is it politically correct for an ex to contact his ex-partner’s friends, colleagues and family?”
I immediately realized what is going on — I sent XMAS cards to one friend of S’s who I became friendly with and whom I see at church, and to a couple he’s friendly with who had invited me to an event the weekend before last. Every nerve in my body is telling me that he’s gearing up to hit me again. And the smear campaign continues.
Some way to live, huh?