Research has suggested that some sociopaths may experience something like “sociopathic burnout,” characterized by a reduction in their antisocial behavioral output as they move through middle and older age. (This is a type of decline in production to be glad for.)
What this does not mean is that sociopaths “outgrow” their sociopathic orientation, anymore than a career thief outgrows his thief’s mentality.
“Sociopathic burn-out,” let me stress, is not to be mistaken for something as chimerical (and unrealistic) as the sociopath’s “personal growth.” One might be tempted to regard the aging sociopath’s “mellowing” as a signal of his perhaps, finally, “growing up;” of his acquiring perhaps, finally, a more mature grasp of his priorities; of his having learned, perhaps at long last, finally to appreciate and value his blessings (including you).
Don’t be deceived. The aging sociopath’s “mellowing” will have nothing to do with a maturation, genuine repentance or self-discovery process. In the end, it will be about “burnout,” and nothing more.
And “burnout” really isn’t so complicated. We all burn-out. All of us, as we age, lose energy, requiring, over time, that we grow more selective in the allocation of our decreasing energy reserves.
Accordingly, we might find ourselves, gradually, apportioning less of our energy to activities and behaviors that failed to tax us in our younger, indefatigable days.
And let’s not kid ourselves: The life of the exploiter is energy-draining. It may take a sociopath to chronically exploit others unconscionably, but it also takes a considerable toll of energy.
And so the sociopath, whose energy is as finite as yours, tires. As he moves past his prime, he finds that his shenanigans now come with a cost, a price, just as, at 40, or 50, you find that recovering from a bender isn’t as easy, as painless, as when you were 20, or 25.
Like the veteran Hollywood stunt man, the aging sociopath finds he can no longer pull off stunt after stunt without confronting an emerging reality: the satisfaction he gets from his outrageous stunts no longer necessarily (after all these years) supercedes the cost to himself, which grows bit by bit as he “ages” not out of his shallowness and lovelessness, but his energy.
The sociopath, in other words, hasn’t been humanized by age, merely depleted by age of the energy levels necessary to sustain his flagrant, sociopathic machinations.
And so, sadly, the aging sociopath will not, finally, come to love or genuinely respect you; he will not “evolve” a true, belated appreciation of everything you promised him that he foully besmirched in his previous immaturity.
Rather, increasingly fatigued and/or dependent, he will only value, as always and now perhaps more than ever, the convenience (if he’s lucky) that your companionship affords him in his now “mellower,” but really just more tired, incarnation.
(My use of “he” in this post and others is merely a convenience, and not meant to suggest that males have a patent on sociopathy. This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW. Thanks to TC for inspiring it.)
ErinB:
I just stuck your post on the fridge and put one in my wallet and one under my pillow so as I might believe it. I pray that you are right and that I live to hear all about it.
P.S. i.e. I stuck the first post up about “them not getting out unscathed”. I have never seen one psychopath in my life suffer consequences. Not even the murderer – even after i gave him up four times. And that was twenty years ago.
I know your psychopath wouldn’t have wanted another child if he thought you could easily have one. It was all about making himself look good to everyone- like he was sacrificing, and a saint and all the rest of their deceitful narcissistic crap.
I only just learned a few weeks ago that i can’t make a shark go after them.
part of the problem with them is that, like my P son who is a murderer, and in PRISON FOR IT, doesn’t SEE being in prison has anything to do with HIM. He actually sees himself as a SUCCESS in this world—he did kill her after all—and being in prison is not connected to THAT, plus, he is soooo smart that he has learned everything there is to know, so he is a BIG success in life. Just temporarily inconvenienced in where he has to live.
Even “punishment” and bad things and consequences they don[‘t ASSOCIATE with what they have done to bring it on.
OxDrover,
That is the most frustrating part for me-that they don’t recognize their punishment as having anything to do with them. Mine would never take any personal responsibility for anything, it used to make me so crazy I just wanted to SHAKE him.
Erin & Tilly,
As far as karma/revenge, I know my S is not happy. I doubt there are that many happy S’s. Sometimes I forget that bc he makes it seem like he must be happy, but I know he is really leading a miserable hollow life. That said, it doesn’t prevent me from anxiously awaiting his demise.
Henry,
I tried to save mine too. Many, many times. You know how they tell you never to jump in to help someone who is drowning, bc they will cause you to drown? I jumped in. From now on I’ll throw someone a floaty, but if they can’t save themselves I’m not going to drown with them.
JustAboutHealed,
My sister is wise beyond her years. She also told me years ago that I shouldn’t love a guy for his [unrealized] potential. From now on, I am going to use the “brain damaged diaper wearing vampire” image as well. And I read that article a few weeks back, it has done WONDERS. I’m sure it takes at least 1/2 the credit for only crying a couple times since NC.
Done – As time goes by that need for revenge will avaporate. They are messed up people and we cant help them. I am somewhere around a year and half no contact and I am just glad it is over. I blame myself for setting in the sun too long and getting fried. This is all about us now. As for my X he is history……I was reading a website about sociopaths and this writer, a man was saying sociopaths wear excessive amounts of cologne, does this ring true with any of you? To this day if I smell a guy with Stetson cologne on I want to puke on him….
Henry, Every year my ex sp’s coworkers give him cologne/deodorant stick packages for Christmas. This is their polite way of saying “You Stink!” He refuses to wear it. Not a cultural thing or a religious thing. It is an I don’t care that I offend you with my stink. Nor does he cover his mouth when he sneezes or ever say excuse me, pardon me, or I’m sorry. Social graces and common courtesy totally absent from this man. Of course for court he will clean up like a choir boy, when he is courting he will clean up to draw you in, but beyond the bait, once he has the hook set never a ounce of good smell put on!
Henry:
Mine used to DROWN himself in cologne — always worn with a clashing deoderant. In contrast, I shoot a mist of cologne in the air and walk through it.
As for revenge, well, I had the nicest phone call today with the attorney who is representing someone S screwed out of 10 grand plus. I asked if he had received the info I had sent him on where S worked and lived and he thanked me and told me he had already served the writ of wage garnishment on the sheriff’s office. He then asked me if I was a friend of his client’s and all I said was “No. I’m just someone who is interested in seeing justice done and some balance returned to the universe.” He offered to represent me if I wanted to sue S.
One creditor down and 15 to go.
Henry,
Awesome about the credit-revenge! And YES my S used to drown himself in cologne too! It drove me crazy, bc I’m sensitive to it most colognes give me a headache. He would get the bottle out, and I’d try to stop him after one or two sprays but he would just ignore me and keep spraying. One time, my sister, me and the S went to a mall, he found the cologne counter and must have put on 50 different fragrances. My sister threatened to make him ride on the roof on the way home.
On the topic of colognes, I hate how smells have such a strong link to memories. Today I took the stairs at work and someone with my S’s favorite cologne must have been in the stairwell before me, the entire way down was like this awful flashback. YUK! I wonder if there is a correlation between cologne and S’s what their logic is behind it?
Oh whoops–congrats to Matt on the creditor thing. I misread.