It is cleansing for people to discuss their experiences with psychopathy. Some stories are unbelievable, mimicking the material that should only appear in movies. Others pack a less dramatic punch, but are, perhaps, even more devastating. That’s the nature of most brushes with psychopathy. When the stories are ours, however, it is not until we start to learn about the disorder, that we are able to begin making sense of the non-sense and heal. Without a working knowledge, success is rare. Our desire to identify and overcome is often how we end up here. Since I began sharing what I know, many have begun telling me of their struggles. Often, they have few words for the relief this brings. I am retelling one of those stories. The person who shared it hopes that her story will help others, by either facilitating prevention or lending validation.
One day, a women with whom I am acquainted, but do not know well, approached me at a function. She was from out of town, but through friends and family, had heard about the cause I hold dear, and the passion that I have for psychopathy education. When a mutual friend mentioned that I had begun contributing to a blog, she decided to check it out. Something within told her she should investigate. Unexpectedly, she learned something that had the potential to change her life.
She came up to me and quietly said, “You know, I have read everything you have written. I have read many of the other things that others have written. I think I know someone who is a psychopath and I think he kind of negatively impacted my life. I’m serious.” She went on to say that her story was slightly different than most she read about, but was, nonetheless, just as difficult. We sat and talked in our own little world for hours.
As the afternoon drew to a close and we had to part ways, she told me I could write her story. I asked if she was sure about that and she nodded in the affirmative, telling me that others had to know what she lived with for all those years. She went on to say that had she understood sooner, things may have been very different for her. She admitted that she did not think anything like this existed in seemingly “normal” people and added that she still might not have ever known. Luckily, the information she stumbled upon will hopefully help.
Innocence
Most of us have probably been there. Young and in love. Perhaps we had a crush on the boy who sat across from us in Algebra or someone famous and unattainable. Regardless, the teenage years can be filled with new feelings, some of which we know what to do with, and others with which we do not. Jane fell head over heels for a local boy from town. He was good looking and always had something nice to say. They dated for a time. She loved him dearly, but always felt like something was “off.” After a few abusive incidents, at the age of 17, she chose to end the relationship. As high school drew to a close, so did they.
Life goes on
As kids do, they went their separate ways. Each met and married other people, but Jane says that her feelings for him really never died. She couldn’t quite put her finger on why she felt unable to release him. She now acknowledges that she experienced the “psychopathic addiction.” This is the same phenomenon that causes the victims of psychopaths to sometimes “stalk” the psychopath. It is difficult to go cold turkey from any addiction. The psychopathic bond, or betrayal bond, can be one of the hardest to break.
She did not stalk him, but rather, she tried to forget about him. Jane met the man who would eventually become her husband. She was committed to him, never wavering, but she could not help feeling this deep, emptiness that told her heart was elsewhere. As the years passed, she and her husband had two children, a boy and a girl. They did everything young couples were supposed to do. They worked, bought a home, vacationed, and had many close friends with which they shared many good times.
However, Jane lived in a close knit community. She encountered her first love from time to time. They had many mutual friends and were cordial with one another. In fact, her first love ended up marrying one of her close friends. She and herhusband were both in the wedding. Jane recalls choking back the tears that day, since she was filled with bits and pieces of sadness and envy. As relationships with psychopaths tend to go, that marriage did not last. In fact, between the ages of 20 and 60, three more of his marriages failed. Hers remained in tact…for a time.
“Lifespan psychology”
But over the years, Jane and her husband grew apart. She said that they came to hate each other, but that no one had really done anything wrong, worthy of such loathing. There had not been any cheating or abuse on either of their parts. She explained that she felt as though a part of her was unavailable to give what a wife needed to, but did not know why. They watched their children grow and went about their daily activities, but clearly, both felt something was missing that could not be recovered.
As fate sometimes goes, Jane’s path crossed with her first love’s. She wondered if the stars and planets had finally aligned. Energetic and positive, she always saw the glass as half full. Both were single and decided to rekindle what once was. She thought that maybe maturity had changed him. He had been single for a time, and in recent years had held the same job. In fact, he became quite successful. After all, she felt that he really was a good guy. Most importantly, she had not been able to shake him from her thoughts for over forty years. It had to be right.
It was not. The relationship was fun, filled with excursions and tastes of the good life. Jane was showered with the attention that she remembered. It was the type of attention that her psychologically normal husband was never able to match, but that she measured his love by. Her husband had loved her, but he loved her normally. With her first love, she was in the process of being “lovebombed,” just as she had been as a young girl. Everything seemed perfect, at least until his mask cracked again. And crack it did, leaving her stranded, far from home.
Even prior to witnessing his failing facade, Jane felt inexplicably uncomfortable. Things were strange. Minor words or incidents left her uncomfortable or even slightly afraid of him. She minimized her feelings and told herself she was being ridiculous, but somehow, her gut knew better.
Unable to make sense of things, but longing for answers, she tried talking to him, but met with the silent treatment. He was done and he made that clear. It seemed that when the relationship began to turn “real,” he chose to run. She felt alone and longed for the man she “knew” and had so many good times with. In reality, however, that person never existed.
New Beginnings
By happenstance, Jane came to realize that her first love was probably a psychopath. Shortly thereafter, she considered the possibility that her brush with psychopathy may have ruined her marriage. She feels that she never recovered from the stronghold of the psychopathic bond and somehow had created her idea of a normal relationship based on her dysfunctional one. Nothing normal could ever measure up. “I had no idea what I was dealing with,” she told me. “It wasn’t until I started reading, when I looked at the traits and behaviors, I realized that I had been trapped by a psychopath since childhood.”
Upon coming to terms with this, she began counseling. Her counselor agrees that her first love is a indeed a troubled soul. Although she asked me several times if I thought it really could be. She still questions herself and her experiences and fights the urges to seek understanding from him. I explained that it is, quite possibly, one of the toughest pills to swallow and to look to those who understand and care for answers and strength. No one wants this to be. But, sometimes, it just is.
So much work comes with recovery. One must soul search, come to terms with the things that we cannot change, and work to manage those we can. I have every confidence that Jane will fully recover and appropriately take on the demons she must face. None of us here thought this would be part of our futures or have consumed so much of our pasts. We can, however, control what comes next, at least to some degree. Thank you, Jane, for your bravery. Thank you for wanting to share your story. Once touched by psychopathy, our lives may never look as they would have otherwise. Sometimes, that’s not a bad thing. It can be especially rewarding if it allows us to come to terms with events that touched us profoundly and allow us to move forward happily.
Jane is a pseudonym. Some minor facts were altered to protect identity.
Linda, thank you SO much for this article. Jane’s experiences speak a great deal as to just how deeply a person can be affected by spath entanglements.
For whatever reason, I’d had brushes with spaths throughout my life, and I’m firmly convinced that I attracted these types because of my own flawed core-issues. I didn’t “know” about these issues because only trained professionals and those seeking answers AFTER the carnages discuss them.
It does come down to accepting what is and changing only those things that we have the power to change – ourselves.
Again, thank you Linda, and thanks to Jane for her courage in calling a spade what it is.
Brightest blessings
I think volumes could be written about high school blasts from the past reappearing in our later years. They sure do love to use Facebook!
The relationship ended badly way back then, we moved on with our lives (maybe not in entirely healthy ways). 5-10-25 or more years later that guy comes back and we dare to hope he grew up, won’t cheat, won’t lie, won’t deceive, won’t use and abuse. It seems to rarely ever work out.
I know some of these people are psychopaths and I know some of them are *just* deeply damaged people. I think they’re universally looking for an ego stroke, that sweet and loving girl who bent over freaking backwards for them. They seem to have amnesia regarding the bad things that happened. So they come around again, take what they want just like before, and seem surprised if we are hurt or finally say “enough, already”.
Yes, this has happened to me. Nothing made me feel more empowered than telling that high school “sweetheart” to go away forever.
I feel like this now. I feel like I won’t ever, ever be able to love a “normal” man because they are too “boring.” It wasn’t because of a high school sweetheart, but because of this recent spath. I feel that same pull…the door was never closed…there is always something “there.” I pray all the time I am not alone the rest of my life because of that bastard. What the hell do they do to us?
Louise,
I think I could only break the bond (and the cycle of misery) with the last, and most dangerous man, by hitting rock bottom. I went to therapy, got honest with myself and talked about the things that had happened to me that led to such a horrendous relationship. I reminded myself every day that I could not continue loving and wanting a person who was never real.
I chose me over him. I’m more important.
Linda,
what a sad story. It almost has a mythical quality in the sense that Jane’s early encounter with the spath contaminated her marriage in some “magical” way.
Louise, when spaths put us on roller coaster ride, they juxtaposition the highs with the lows. Later when we remember the highs, they seemed so much higher because of this. Just like white seems brighter against a black background, the spaths’s lovebombing is remembered as brighter against the times when they devalued or ignored us.
Dawn, I love what you said, “I could not continue loving and wanting a person who was never real.” That’s the crux of it.
Great article, linda, and goes to show that it doesn’t take a long term marriage for a psychopath to have a negative impact on us. Just that brush with him when Jane was a kid and didn’t know what she was dealing with, “tainted” the rest of her life and her relationships.
I have so often said “first we must learn about THEM, and then we must learn about OURSELVES in order to heal.”
Not knowing about what HE was (maybe not even a full fledged P, just high in the traits is enough me thinks) and not knowing what was going on with her attachment (addiction?) to him, or with herself didn’t allow her to heal from the first encounter.
I’m glad she is even at this late stage iin her life healing and growing and coming to understand them and most important, herself.
Some good points to ponder in her story. Thanks, Linda
skylar:
Regarding the highs and lows…exactly! Even the OW said it. I remember her saying that the highs were so high and the lows were so low and that is what made the highs seem even higher. Just absolutely unbelievable!!! Isn’t it absolutely amazing that the spath did the same thing to all of his women?? Apparently they ALL do the same thing from what I read on this blog. I am still in disbelief. I think I am getting past the hurt and into disbelief. They invoke the exact same feelings in all women with their tactics. It’s craziness. How could I have known though? That’s what I think bothers me now. All the subtle things he was telling me…how could I know he was saying the same things to every woman?? For example, here is a tactic he used that I didn’t figure out until years later. He would tell women what he liked and didn’t like in a woman and then sit back and watch the women transform for him. He must have really been getting off watching all these women become thinner and thinner (because he would tell us he didn’t like fat) and start dressing to the nines (because he told us he liked a “sense of dress”). Unbelievable! I fell for it and didn’t even know what I was falling for! It was subconscious…it was a cruel mind game and it was sooooo subtle there is NO WAY any woman would know he was playing. Cruel and sick.
By the way, the young guy from work who had cancer died last night. 🙁
Louise,
🙁 Was he a friend?
Regarding the spaths manipulating us to change for them: it’s all about shame. They want us to feel that we aren’t good enough, so we have to look better, try harder, compare ourselves to others.
Shame and envy are their stock-in-trade. Even the highs and lows are all about shaming us by putting us on a pedestal and then knocking us down to size. My spath, near the end said to me, “My friends think you are arrogant.” WTF? This was completely out of the blue with no context to anything going on. On top of that, his friends don’t actually know me.
I was so confused that I had to go look up the word “arrogant”. The defintion says, it means thinking you are better than you actually are. He wanted me to have no self-esteem at all.
Though spaths may use different methods to get us there, they are all the same in their agendas: Shame and envy.
The reason for this is because envy is what they feel all the time. And as Girard says: “Envy involuntarily testifies to the lack of being that puts the envious to shame”
skylar:
He was a co-worker. I wasn’t his friend, but of course worked with him for years. It just feels weird. I originally said he was only in his 30s, but I think that is wrong. I think he is in his 40s, but early 40s. I will know when the obituary hits the newspaper. I want to go to the visitation, but am afraid because spath will most likely be there. Isn’t that horrible that I feel like I can’t even go to a visitation for a former co-worker because of him?? I guess I could go either really early or really late so I don’t run into him. I hate this.
Thank you once again for your explanation regarding what they do to make us feel unworthy. That’s exactly what he was doing…playing the other woman and me against each other…her jealous of me, me jealous of her. It is EXACTLY what he wanted and neither one of us was aware so what happened? She was jealous of me (before I was even aware of what was going on…I had NO clue she was even seeing him) and then I became jealous of her once I started seeing him and figured out what was going on. He loved it! He probably had to go to the restroom at work just to get off he loved it so much! Sorry…that was graphic, but probably actually happened since he loved to do himself so much. Yep, he is so shameful he has to slime everyone else to make himself not hurt so bad. That’s why he’s an alcoholic, too.
Arrogant…ha! That’s a good one. You are not arrogant. You just aren’t a pathetic human being like him and he couldn’t stand it. UGGHHH.
Louise,
I’m sorry about your co-worker’s passing. Even though you weren’t “friends”, he was someone that had become part of your life for awhile. Now, I think, you want some closure by going to the visitation.
I know it’s easier said than done, but I think that you should not let the spath interfere with that closure. As it is, he has attempted to never give you closure with regard to your relationshit with him. I’m sure he’d love to know that he “got ya” again.
As I said, I can talk the talk more easily than I can walk the walk. The times that I ran into my spathy neighbor women, I felt like crap, I was triggered and upset. But still, I think that the more we expose ourselves to these difficult situations, the less they will affect us. It’s like getting over a fear of spiders. There is only one way to do it. (Though I haven’t done it!!!)
If you choose to go to the visitation, plan to reward yourself with a delicious massage or some other indulgence afterwards. That way you can manage the emotional turbulence better.
Yes, I know he was projecting his own arrogance. Later, when he was pulling his final con on me, he told me “You have no EMPATHY!” LOL! 😆