Finally, you realize what is wrong with your romantic partner: He or she is a sociopath.
Finally, the behavior that was so confusing makes sense. The person you loved, and who you thought loved you, has a personality disorder. Now you realize that anything your partner told you could have been a lie. Now you know why your partner could be so cruel, then tell you how much he or she loved you, practically in the same breath. Now you realize that there never was any love, that your entire relationship was exploitation, and nothing more.
Now what do you do? How do you move forward? How do you recover?
Many of your friends and family tell you, “Just put it behind you. Get over it. Move on.” You are particularly likely to hear this advice if you were “only” dating the person, not married.
The friends and family dispensing this pithy advice probably were never involved with a sociopath. They don’t understand the depth of the betrayal. When you split from a sociopath, it is not a normal breakup. The intensity of these relationships makes the end incredibly painful.
Relationship and addiction
The sociopath initiated this intensity in the beginning of the relationship by showering you with attention, wanting to be with you all the time, claiming that you were soul mates, and painting a glimmering picture of your future together. You, never having experienced such adoration, believed that he or she was head over heels in love with you. Even if you felt misgivings, you suppressed them and focused on the promise of happily ever after.
Then, sooner or later, the sociopath did something to make you feel fear or anxiety. Perhaps you caught your partner lying or cheating. Perhaps he or she suddenly became enraged—you weren’t sure why—and threatened to end your relationship.
Whatever it was, the bliss that you felt in the beginning was shattered, and you wanted it back. You asked what was wrong, tried to work things out, perhaps even apologized for something that you didn’t do. Eventually the sociopath relented, and you kissed and made up.
Then, the whole cycle started again: Intense attraction. An incident causing fear and anxiety. Relief. Around and around it went.
This process has a profound psychological effect—it actually makes you addicted to the relationship. That’s why it’s so hard to break up with a sociopath. You’re not breaking off a relationship—you’re breaking an addiction.
Choose yourself
Addictions don’t just go away. Anyone who has quit smoking, drinking, drugs or any other addiction knows that it’s hard work. You must choose yourself, your health and wellbeing, over the addiction. Then you must work on your recovery, day in and day out.
A relationship with a sociopath is the same. You cannot simply “put it behind you.” You cannot fully recover by locking your internal devastation into a closet, never to be opened, while attempting to go through the motions of living. If you try to do this, you simply end up with an emotional cancer within you, eating away at your life force.
The solution is to choose yourself. Make a commitment to yourself that you will recover, and then work it, day by day.
Steps of recovery
The first step is No Contact. Get the person out of your life. Stop seeing and talking to him or her. Block emails and text messages. Don’t visit his or her Facebook page.
This will be difficult in the beginning, because, remember, you are breaking an addiction. You’ll feel a compulsion to contact your former romantic partner. But if you do, it’s just like an alcoholic falling off the wagon. You’ll be back at square one, and you’ll have to start the recovery process all over again.
The secret to breaking the addiction, as they say in 12-step programs, is to take it one day at a time. So commit to yourself that you will not contact the sociopath today. Then you make the same commitment tomorrow, and then the next day.
The longer you stay away from the sociopath, the stronger you become.
Deeper healing
Getting the sociopath out of your life is only the first part of your recovery. The second, and most important, part, is healing whatever made you vulnerable to the sociopath in the first place.
We all have vulnerabilities—it’s part of being human. We have internal fears, doubts and injuries from our past. Or we have dreams and ambitions—these, too, in the practiced hands of a sociopath, can become vulnerabilities, when he or she promises to make them come true. But generally, the sociopaths target our weaknesses, because that’s the easiest and most effective way to hook us.
Usually the weaknesses boil down to a subconscious belief, deep within us, that we are not good enough.
We rationalize that our mother ignored us, or our father abused us, because we were not good enough. We assume that an earlier romantic involvement failed because we were not good enough. These ideas may have been deeply buried, but they still caused pain, and pain created vulnerability. Sociopaths can sense vulnerability like a shark senses blood in the water.
Releasing the pain
How do you recover from these deep wounds? You acknowledge that they exist. You look at them and allow yourself to feel the associated emotions—pain, disappointment, fear, anger, rage, numbness—and then you let the emotions go.
This is a process, and is best done in private, or with the help of a competent therapist. You’ll find that you have layers and layers of pain, and as you release one, another rises to take its place. You may find yourself crying, wailing or stomping to release anger. You work your way through the layers of emotions, acknowledging, feeling and releasing.
You can’t do this all at once—it’s too draining, and you still have to live your life. In fact, you should intersperse these sessions of releasing with times of treating yourself well, and feeling joy at whatever goodness you experience, no matter how small.
True recovery isn’t easy, fun or instant—it takes work and a commitment to yourself. But the rewards are so wonderful: Release from old traumas. Life lived with peace and lightness. The opportunity for true love and happiness.
It all begins with making a decision to recover.
Kim,
yeah, compassion is the trump card — the ace up our sleeves.
Because the spaths’, what they really want, more than anything, is to turn us into them. While we have compassion, we will not become them.
They want to trade places with us. My poor spath sis. She was always a narcissist, but her spath made her believe that evil is good and that if she could get her siblings and his siblings to commit suicide, there would be more inheritance for them. She wasn’t like that before.
She had $100 grand equity, no debt and her own business, when she met him. Now she has no money, no business and God only knows how much DEBT.
It mirrors what my spath did to me. Her spath and mine were broke, in debt and bad credit. They traded places with us. That’s all spaths want to do: Trade places with us.
Whether it is about money or compassion or envy, they want us to become them and they wish they could become us (but they can’t)
Well my sister, didn’t fare so well. She is still in love with her spath, (that my spath sent to marry her) she is underwater on 2 houses. He has a career with homeland security, she has nothing, (she is too stressed to work) half the debt is hers (including his student loan to get a law degree) and there is no equity in either house. The worst part is she became as evil as he is. She has tried to kill 2 of her siblings and managed to kill (by suicide) one of his. He made her evil and that was his REAL intent. He took her soul (the smidgen that my parents gave her).
My words might seem to make you hate the spaths, but that isn’t the intent. They are that way because (IMO) it was done to them first. Compassion and revulsion, like you would feel for a leper, are the appropriate emotions.
Ok hens….you clean the oven, I’m gonna flush the tidy-bowl man.
ahahahahahahahahahahaha
I am calling Orkin.
Dupey
😛
call roter rooter and flush all your problems down the drain. ker plunck ~!
hahahahaha
I did that when I dumped “IT”…
best thing I have ever done for myself.
at least I can go to sleep with myself at night now.
In peace and quiet. Know what I mean, jelly bean?
🙂
Dopester
yeppers, it’s nice not havin to sleep with one eye open, aint it dupster? If the cat has kitten’s in the oven that dont mean they are biscuits ~!
oh yes, nice not having to listen to the constant and incessant bitching and moaning and the ‘stage theatrics’. Trust me. We only THINK we might miss all that. Stopping and remembering seems to put everything right back in perspective; don’t it?
hahaha: that’s right: ‘if the cat has kittens in the oven that
don’t mean they are biscuits!’ Although a ppath may try to
convince you otherwise.
Is a fly without wings called a walk?
ya know dupey – my x would stay up at nite on the puter and I would position the door with a mirror just so, so I could see if he was on a sex site…now how sick is me?
yes sleepin with your wallet hidden – a gun close by and wonderin when he was ever gonna come to bed….now how sick was me?
Time flys like the wind. Fruit flies like banannas.