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.)
Henry,
I was warned about my S by his sister and his mother. I don’t think either of them know about sociopaths-but they had his number. I think we don’t listen to the warnings bc the S’s convince us to feel sorry for them, after all, they’ve been abandoned by their families/friends, poooooooooooor s’s.
My S is turning 40 on June 28. I had already began planning in my head what I would do for his big day. I’m trying to prepare myself now bc I know that day is going to be full of ghosts and yet more unrealized dreams. It is annoying to be good at remembering dates sometimes…
JustAboutHealed,
I love that you think of your S as brain damaged. My little sister is who first told me she thought my S was an S. She would tell me “something is WRONG with him.”
She tried to get me to see by comparing him to someone with a visible mental disorder, like autism or some other type of severe retardation. She said, “Imagine if S came in diapers. You wouldn’t be attracted to someone in diapers, it’s the same thing.”
I didn’t get what she meant at first, but basically she was saying that just bc he wasn’t visibly mentally ill ie: in diapers, he was still ill but I just couldn’t tell by looking at him, and just as I wouldn’t be attracted to a mentally retarded person, I shouldn’t be attracted to him.
So now, it always makes me laugh to imagine the S in diapers.
Erin and EWS, Thanks again for support and good advice. I did get away this weekend. Spent time with friends and family out of state. Only thoughts of the sp were a lucid dream this early morning where I was in the home that I lived in before he came into my life and he was there in my bedroom and I was beating the living Chit right out of him. I swear I’m not violent. Have never been in a fight since early childhood with anyone that was physical but hitting him and biting him felt so GOOD! Better than a sex dream. Pure pleasure. Maybe it was a future dream as in I will beat him Tuesday in court. I just know it felt good to inflict some pain. Fun fact? My cousin is dating the new girlfriends ex husband and he seems to be a super sweet guy according to my family. I have not met him. But her exhusband is telling my family having no knowledge of my connection in this that my ex is very weird and creeps him out. Maybe the mask is slipping. Maybe it will fall completely off in court. I hope so. I hope he lies about his past. My lawyer will go for perjury and dismissal at the first lie about his criminal and psychiatric past as she has sent for certified copies from the county where he did time. He will be blindsided when I go there. He will not expect it. He will think that I’m scared, and he will have forgotten that I know all his dirty little secrets as he is in the new con where nobody knows the truth about him. And that is why he can’t have me around. I know it all, and he can’t fool me anymore.
henry:
If your S’s birthday is 6/10, maybe we were dating the same guy.
One of the things that threw me on this party I threw was exactly the same thing that hit you — how he would talk about
these friends and colleagues like they were kin. All no-shows and not even RSVPs. Clue 1. Hell, of the kin of his I invited 1 out of 3 showed. Clue 2.
I remember one of his few friends who showed, an retired attorney who lives around the corner from me, who both posted S’s bail and gave him a place to live when S was released, saying to me “I never understood how S’s family, to a man, turned their backs on him when he got sent to prison.” Let me tell you, I understand. I always liked his family and they liked me. Of course, I now see that they all knew what he was and that I was his current victim. I think they were just grateful that I came along to take the heat off of them for awhile. And boy does that make me feel like a fool – the fact that they were all in on the game.
I asked one of my brother’s today what he thought would happen to S. He said his employer will go after him and this is going to be an A felony for the scale of his theft. Oh, yes, and S no doubt completely hates you, even after all you did, because he couldn’t get that 10 grand out of you. So you may as well keep sicing his judgment creditors on him and let them take a piece of him.
To this
Joy,
Sounds like that was a very empowering dream! Let’s hope it is a premonition! Good luck on Tuesday!
Matt & Henry,
You guys are making me think, my S, too talks about all these great friends. I never tried to throw him a party–but I wonder now who would have come? Also, I know that my S has not told his mother or sister that we are no longer together. He knows they love me and likes to tell them whatever they want to hear, or whatever makes him look good.
When I first moved here and met some of his new friends, I was surprised at how much they knew about me—like he was bragging about me to them. He conveniently left out the part about him cheating on me and treating me like dog sh!t most of the time. So I guess I am one of these “phantom” friends of an S, bc I sure wouldn’t show up to his party LOl.
Done:
Thinking back, I took every opportunity I could to introduce S to friends of mine. I felt it was important for him to get to know my friends since he was part of my life. Also, I thought it would be good for him to move in my circle of friends who are mostly professionals and also very nice, so he wouldn’t be tempted to wander back to his old crowd (such as it were).
S’s reaction? All you ever talk about is business. Hardly true. What he spoke about would be a recent court ruling, a recent newspaper article, basically we didn’t gossp about others.
AS for me meeting S’s friends — they were few and far between. And trouble came to me because his friends would contact me instead of him with an invite for the two of us or if they couldn’t reach him. Talk about a territorial reaction.
Matt:
I can relate to a lot of what you are going through.
I am not working at the present time, either. Currently, I am taking care of my niece, at the whim of my brother and sister-in-law.
When I am not doing that, I am taking care of my 90-year old grandmother who is in congestive heart failure.
She is currently living in the apartments that are connected to the nursing home. I am doing everything I can to keep her out of the nursing home, because that is her biggest fear, and it would kill her to be put there.
My sister-in-law is jockeying for position to con my elderly relatives out of their money, and she’s working on my brother to do the dirty work.
I should definitely be looking for work, since I am receiving zero compensation for babysitting my niece and caring for my grandmother.
But, there are too many other demands on my time right now. It is as if my life is not my own. It has been a thankless, draining, endeavor. But, I know I am doing what is right, and it’s what my late father would want me to do. So, I guess that is my satisfaction for now.
All I can do is HOPE that somehow, everything will turn out for the best. And I believe it will.
At the end of the day, I will have NO Regrets. That gives me peace.
Anyway, Matt, just know that you are not alone in the way you are feeling right now. I feel the same way, at times.
Matt It was 6-15-66…yep I can remember how his ‘friends’ would look at me with that surprised look…one of his friends even commented how I was the best catch he had ever seen him with….pisses me off that they didnt say RUN LIKE HELL – but I prolly wouldnt have anywho..when I do something I do it good….
Matt,
I know just what you are talking about. Many of the people my S introduced me to as “one of his best friends” ended up being friends of mine. Most of them didn’t have such a high opinion of S, and none of them would have introduced me to him as one of their best friends. Should have seen all those waving (some talking) red flags.
Henry,
Maybe the friends and family don’t tell us to RUN LIKE HELL bc they are still holding out hope that the S is a decent person, and maybe we will be the one to “save” the S.