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.
Wait? I did something right? Now if I ever change my mind and go asking this guy out, I don’t want any crap for it. 🙂
I had bought a bunch of salsa dresses at the Goodwill and ARC last week that are really sexy. The one I have planned for next Sunday will make J’s eyes water.
*returns hugs to One Joy*
We all live in a thought-created reality—not a circumstance-created reality. But we create the thought.
Feelings: Where Do They Really Come From? ”“ Dicken Bettinger
“As soon as we disconnect thought from feeling we begin to connect our feelings to something in the outside world.”
“It is humbling to realize that all of us, with no exception, get lost in those moments when we misunderstand where our feelings are coming from and act as if the world [What someone says to us. Those that poo-poo us, belittle us. What the spath says…etc.] has created what we are feeling.”
More at the link
http://www.3pgc.org/blog/feelings-where-do-they-really-come-from-dicken-bettinger/
Enjoy
spoon
spoon:
Thanks…good stuff.
Hi, Louise your welcome.
This is the base of where the problems are. Sydney Banks came up with the 3 principles of Thought, Consciousness, and Mind.
Those that speak of the great sex with the spath think it had to do with him. He was this – he was that. It was exciting etc. But it wasn’t him. It was happening in the mind. Great Sex is always there. But because a person erroneously places it outside of them then they are at the whims of the outside world. And it goes with all this stuff. Happiness has to do with what is going on within not which way the world is churning.
This gets us to the understanding that events have no meaning to us until we assign a meaning to it. Once we do that we have our experience. “Event plus Meaning equal Experience” We can’t change the event. But we can change the meaning which changes our experience. A person who was abused as a child can have some problems later on in life. The child believed that if he could be good enough etc then they would treat him better. The child sees it as he is the problem. But the truth is it was those that were doing the abusing they where the problem the child did nothing wrong. He was doing what he was suppose to being a kid. By getting this person to see it was them then his experience of the events change.
It works the same for a belief. If one believes that they are unlovable. Then no matter how much love someone shows this person they won’t get it. They may get a taste of love but will never experience it or feel loved. Why because in their mind they are unlovable and that will always over shadow or poison the love someone shows them. So what they will experience is the feelings of being unlovable. Most with this belief tend to go from one sex partner to another. They are trying to compensate for this belief of being unlovable. The only thing that will change this is to look within and deal with the false belief that they are unlovable.
More can be read here on the 3 principles of Thought, Consciousness, and Mind. http://www.3pgc.org/blog/
THE POWER OF TRANSCENDING HISTORY
http://eight.pairlist.net/pipermail/neurons/2012/000631.html
Change your representations.
Change your words and languaged descriptions.
Change your evaluations.
Change your conclusions.
Change your meanings.
My 2 Cents
spoon
Good information, Spoon.
You know on the day 9/11 happened in NY, NOTHING happened in Arkansas where I live, but we ASCRIBED MEANING to the 9/11 events and we were TRAUMATIZED, yet nothing had happened to US.
So our ascribing meeting to the events of 9/11 GAVE THEM MEANING to us.
I think that is a very good analogy about the psychopath.
Somewhere in the world there is a man who does not love me.
He has never heard of me and doesn’t know I exist and he does not love me. BIG DEAL.
The psychopath does NOT love me. I fall apart. WHY?
That really doesn’t do anything for me unless I ascribe a meaning to this lack of love on their part.
I think my give a sheet factor just broke….I’m FREE!!!!
Spoon:
This is all great info. It really is just common sense I think. It takes a lot of conscious thinking to pull it off though. I could do this if I constantly was telling myself these things. I do try and I will try harder.
Oxy…what you said makes total sense. But the reason of course we fall apart when the ppath doesn’t love us is because we KNOW the ppath or spath. We have had contact with them whether it be a lover, spouse, sibling, parent or child. We don’t KNOW that man out there who doesn’t love us that we never met. So these concepts make so much sense, but they are much harder to put into practice I think, but I sure am going to try! 🙂
Louise;
Clinically, quite true. For example, I despise my x-spath’s online persona as revealed thru various dating and porn sites.
However, my mind only remembers the mask. This mask is so good, if not for one sentence on one online dating profile, I probably would have recontacted him prior to my heart surgery.
Thankfully, that one sentence was humiliating enough for me to drop my cognitive dissonance. Yet still, sometimes, parts o me wonder…
BBE:
Yes, this stuff can totally work, but it takes a lot of effort to constantly be telling ourselves these things. We all can do it, but it’s not easy.
Qxy.. That’s about it in a nutshell. The meaning of why it was/is important for the spath to have loved you.
Louise
“But the reason of course we fall apart when the ppath doesn’t love us is because we KNOW the ppath or spath”
I would say it is the meaning that one has placed on the situation. This being that you are in-love [strong emotional feelings] with him and have placed great importance on the relationship. And when we build up someone and the situation in our minds and they do not live up to this it can be hard to take in. We have expectations and have built dreams. And this is popped. But the feelings/trigger is still there even though the evidence now says the feelings are wrong. So we have a cognitive dissonance. As long as the feeling/trigger exists plus the pain of our build up popping. It just goes around and around. Until the feeling/trigger is burned out or reconciliation of the relationship happens. Then add he had to have love me cause why would I do all that if he didn’t? Because if he didn’t then what does that mean? I have these feelings but how can I have these feelings if it wasn’t real?
The problem is the feelings of in-love is being placed on the other person as if they made us fall for them when what really happens is we choose to fall in love. We tend to disconnect it from the true source our own thoughts and place this on the other person. Falling in love happens not when the other person is there but when we are alone. We go in to a self induced trance and create a loop. When you see this person the loop is triggered. We feel energized, light headed etc. And if things go well this loop gets reinforce over and over again. If not then the loop crashes and it’s over.
When the loop crashes then it becomes one of investment, time, value, what the relationship means etc… The answer to these is we go or we stay.
Yes, implementation can be easier said then done. Plus the task of trying to use will power when there are multitude of things that need our attention. Hold on to one thing and then another trigger takes your attention away and it can get frustrating.
The understanding that we create our feelings. It is a new way of seeing it for many. When someone gets mad at us they are responding not so much to the event as much as they are acting upon an old mental pattern that matches what they think this event means. Which just means they are reliving something that happened in the past. Like when we meet someone and we don’t like from the get go. We might not know why. But on a unconscious level their behavior, looks etc has trigger a memory of a person that hurt us or we came to distrust. We hook this memory to them and they’ll most likely will always be disliked by us. Or the memory of the spath can re-trigger the old feelings. Or seeing a car similar to his etc This is stuff we have learned to do.
Some of our feelings/triggers can persist. We tend to go – We feel therefore we are. When it should be – We are therefore we feel. Feelings as been said on this Blog many times are not facts. But if they are in us – they will effect us.
That is where one of the techniques to deal with these feelings comes in handy.
The one I’ve posted many times works like a charm. Or EFT, EMDR
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2012/08/30/what-did-the-sociopath-give-me-and-why-is-it-so-hard-to-let-it-go/comment-page-1/#comment-168977
Reality is Plastic
spoon
Expectations versus what we have.
I bought a lotto ticket, I did NOT EXPECT TO WIN so when I did not win the 500 million dollar lotto I was NOT CRUSHED.
However, If I EXPECTED to win, and did not then I would be crushed. So the difference in how I FEEL about it is what I expected.
We keep HOPING that the psychopath will change….we keep EXPECTING them to change and when they do not WE are crushed.
So, what do WE have control over here? Our EXPECTATIONS of course, and that is ALL we have control over.
I used to have a sign that said “I feel so much better since I gave up hope”—and it is TRUE as long as I had HOPE, “malignant” hope I call it, I was continually CRUSHED when it was never materialized. When I QUIT HOPING, I gained peace, and accepted REALITY as it iIS, not what I wanted it to be.
Wat