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.
I was reading an article today that had a quote, attributed to the Talmud and it is simple, direct, and profound: “We do not see things as they are; we see them as we are.”
SOUTHERN
WOW! AWSOME! EXCELENT! Worthy! Inspired! LOYAL! DEVOTED! LOVE! Faith,hope and Love and the Greatest of these is LOVE! THANK YOU JJ
Hi sstiles54:
I know how you feel. I so want to feel normal again. The way I used to feel 2 1/2 years ago before I met the sociopath. For the 1st 6 mos when the relationship was new I fell madly in love. Over the next year, he slowly changed me…or should I say I allowed him to change me. When all was said and done, I definitely was not me anymore. My soul was empty, I couldn’t sleep. I would wake up 1, 2, 3 am sometimes vomiting…no joke. This man who promised to love me for the rest of my life had used me for a place to live and took all my money and almost got away with my car and 1/2 my home. .all the while he had another woman right in town…in the shadows…just waiting in the wings. Everyone knew about her…his son, the school, people where we shopped. I felt like the village idiot. He and the OW had planned everything. He was going to leave me for her this past June, as soon as his son finished the school year. So there he was, taking her out in the car I paid for, his son covering for him, sometimes leaving his son with me to babysit while he went out on dates telling me he was going out with his guy friend. He quit his job in Feb leaving me to pay all the expenses up to the very end. It sickens me to know the OW was in on the plan and didn’t give a flying sh.. about me either. Unbelieveable. Now I sit here thinking how happy they are together …gloating that their plot worked like a charm. I keep asking what I did to deserve such treatment. I keep trying to let it go but it still stings. All the abuse turned me into someone unrecognizeable. I am slowly recovering. It’s been 7 months. It took me 5 entire months to get him to sign off the deed papers to my condo back into my name. I even had to blackmail him to do so. I feel so stupid. It was a big red flag when he asked me to put his name on the deed. That was an extreme request. But I did it because we were engaged and wanted him to feel like the place was both ours ..I wanted to share my life with him so I thought it was fine. Little did I know the underlying plan.
I’m very cautious going out on dates now. I still don’t feel right but I am pushing myself out the door…it beats sitting home feeling sorry for myself. I’m watching to make sure the guys I date are paying for meals, etc. I’m telling you…one red flag and I’m outta there!
Indi:
Didn’t you cry?
sstiles54 – I don’t think you want to be the old you. Yes I was lost and all I wanted was to find the old me again – where did I go? Well it is the old me that got shit on all the time. I am working on the new me – learning from my mistakes – changing pattern’s – defining boundaries….Let’s not look for the old us – we were to comfortable and vulnerable back then. A new us !!!! Hang in there sstiles and give yer poochie’s a kiss for me and I think you need to have a talk with your daughter!!!~~!!
Elizabeth Conley: Good NEWS for You. Tonight on Larry King Live …. his guests were Joel and Victoria Osteen. Both said that NEW attendances to the churches are at an all time high.
They said that during crisis times, people question and want to find relief …. they also spoke about horrific situations in life … it either makes you stronger or … you can make yourself bitter.
Peace.
Trust again? The thing is I have never completely trusted anyone to begin with. That was probably my saving grace and why the relationship with the P only lasted a few months. This is not the first time a man has hurt me, and believe it or not, it’s not the worst. Every time I get hurt, it scars me a little bit, even though I seem to move on with my life. I honestly don’t know if I will ever find a man patient enough to teach me that it’s okay to trust. Heck I can’t even LIKE men right now, never mind trust one! I feel so envious of happily married women with wonderful husbands who love and adore them. I feel like there is something wrong with me that I can’t find that, too. It’s like I’m a defective model or something. I mean, I know my stepfather abused me, and my bio father abandoned me. But somewhere in my psyche, can’t I even IMAGINE what it would be like to be loved by a man? Apparently I can’t. At least I’ve learned what is not love. Lust is not love. Got that loud and clear this time around. But when you take that away (as my looks are fading anyway) I don’t even remember what is left. I don’t even know what trust means, because I’ve never had anyone in my life I could really trust.
StarG: That’s because you are looking at yourself from your human eye…. it’s when you learn to see yourself with your spiritual eye is when you will see the beauty of the world.
You’ve got your health? Correct?
You’ve got your mind and your creativity? Correct?
Those are two great, great gifts to have! The rest we can build on your shattered self esteem. The shattered self esteem is the human part … that we’ve been talking about is superficial and has a time limit to it’s expiration date (0-100 and something years old). It’s your spiritual part of your soul that will make you come alive.
Peace.
Yes, Wini, it is my spirit that has kept me alive and even vibrant through all of this. I have my intelligence, creativity, and DAMN, my sense of humor just won’t die. These are my greatest qualities, and I know they will help me overcome. But sometimes I wonder what it would be like to experience that sense of close biological human family that others experience. That’s something I will never have.
StarG: What you are seeing in the last 40-50 years is the collapse of believers in our Holy Father. Therefore, I personally don’t know that there are many married couples that are truly happy and believe what the Bible teaches. I know a few, but not many … most couples cheat on each other … then pretend for their children’s sake (whatever that means, I think it’s an excuse they use because their marriages are convenient for them) … but … to truly love each other and care about each other … I DON’T THINK SO.
I think there are more people like us … except they like to keep their heads in the sand … and not rock their world by walking out of their lousy marriages.
Hey, and I’m not a pessimist … I’m just calling it like I see it. I’d love to tell the wives that think they have such great husbands how their husbands have hit on me over and over again through the years … then, I wouldn’t be friends with them anymore, would I? They’d kick me to the curb than allow their bubbles to burst. I have told really close friends … and eventually they divorced … but it was when they were ready.
Peace.