According to the National Institutes of Mental Health, “anxiety is a normal reaction to stress. It helps one deal with a tense situation in the office, study harder for an exam, keep focused on an important speech. In general, it helps one cope. But when anxiety becomes an excessive, irrational dread of everyday situations, it has become a disabling disorder.” Put another way anxiety is supposed to help us. The parts of the brain that produce feelings of anxiety are similar to the parts of the brain that process pain, another negative emotion. Anxiety and its cousin pain help us by signaling danger and causing us to avoid. Their job is to inhibit behavior. The part of the brain that processes pain and anxiety is called the Behavioral Inhibition System or BIS.
I have observed that anxiety is the single biggest obstacle to recovery from a pathological relationship with a sociopath (psychopath). The aftermath of these relationships leaves a person with terrible anxiety, dread and when anxiety/dread is overwhelming, avoidance sets in. Avoidance coping leads people to withdraw from life and responsibilities and the result is only more anxiety. A vicious cycle sets in where anxiety leads to avoidance, avoidance behaviors get us in trouble, that trouble leads to more anxiety, that anxiety leads to even more avoidance”¦and so on.
Why is a pathological relationship different from all others? Why is the anxiety experienced afterward so profound? I think the roots of the anxiety have to do with 6 things:
1. During the relationship, mind games, undermine a person’s confidence.
2. During the relationship the victim is intentionally isolated from potential sources of support.
3. During the relationship the sociopath/psychopath does things that harm the victim’s relationships with significant people in his/her life.
4. The break-up of any relationship causes anxiety, conflict laden relationships more so.
5. In the aftermath many victims face financial problems.
6. In the aftermath many victims face legal problems.
O.K. , I admit the anxiety is caused by a total destruction of the framework of a person’s life!
I think that our psychological defenses can operate so well that many people underestimate the degree to which anxiety influences their behavior and the level of avoidance coping they engage in. The best indicator of anxiety, in my opinion is this avoidance coping.
Just what is avoidance coping? Avoidance coping means that a person denies or minimizes the seriousness of a situation. He/she uses a self—protective strategy and actively suppresses stressful thoughts. Most importantly, behaviorally speaking avoidance coping means an avoidance of tasks that might in anyway remind us of the stressor and avoidance of doing many of the tasks of life. Since avoidance coping requires so much mental energy, there is not enough left for getting work done. Instead, people tend to get satisfaction through other activities like eating or watching TV.
I got to thinking about avoidance coping this week because I tutor a 15 year old in math and he described his own behavior which is a good example of avoidance coping and its consequences. I hadn’t seen this student for about a year. I worked with him for several years and the last time I saw him he was in 8th grade and was doing very well in that he could solve simple algebra problems. Now in 9th grade, he is failing math so his mother called me. When I tested him, he had regressed. He could not do any of the tasks he could do easily only a year ago.
I asked him what happened. He said, “The things I know I do. When I don’t get something, I don’t want to do it. I get home and feel like I would rather ride my bike, so I do. Then I don’t do my homework.”
The point I want to make to you, is that I worked with him for only an hour and he got a 93 on the next test! Due to this victory, he feels a great deal less like avoiding. So I ask you, are there things you are avoiding that you could actually succeed at if you just stop avoiding? Wouldn’t an A grade at some task that you are avoiding boost your confidence and serve you better than that nagging feeling you are not doing the stuff you are supposed to do.
My student’s mother has some negative words for her son’s motivation. She says he is lazy etc. She just does not understand the degree to which anxiety is producing his dysfunctional behavior. He doesn’t outwardly appear anxious, though inwardly he is. Just that little contact with me reduced his anxiety enough to help him face that which he had been avoiding. Just like my student, even when we don’t appear anxious, our avoidance behaviors often lead to further damage to our already damaged relationships.
If you are avoiding too much, I encourage you to stop avoiding. Confront those tasks that are causing you dread, fear and anxiety. In the end you will feel a lot better. You might get an A grade if you try and not trying always leads to failure-an F. Next week more on anxiety and coping.
S1 and Kim
This encourages me!!! I’m so glad you’re considering therapy.
I’m EXTREMELY anxious. I was diagnosed with GAD quite some time back. My anxiety is kicked with all kinds of triggers. It drives me NUTS….um……..yea, anyway, I’m hoping that therapy will help with that. I know about breathing, meditating, but through this situation, it’s not helping right now. S1, I’m going through what looks to be menopause right now. Have a period, miss aperiod,FUN FUN FUN!!!
Ox, yea an absolute mess. That’s me right now.
S1, my insurance completely SUCKS!! This makes locating a therapist that much more difficult. I’m hoping that the one I called yesterday calls me back too. I know he is well versed in trauma care, as my son saw him. He’s very good, however, there is also a female therapist in the same place who also specializes in trauma care. We shall see.
HUGS!
Thanks Oxy,
I will probably go forward but not get my hopes up too much.
My mother is the furthest thing from parasitical you can imagine, but she has done and still does some thing that are not healthy. She seems to sow negativity and fear.
For example, all of us kids were pretty good students and would bring home mostly A’s on our report cards, but my mother wouldn’t complement us, she would ask us, “and how many A’s did your friend so-and-so get?” WTF?
To this day, she will point out people on TV who are movie stars or pop-stars and speak of their success, but in such a way as to make me feel like she is pointing out my own failures
LL,
I made an appointment for next Wednesday.. let’s hope I don’t chicken out and cancel.
soimnotthecrazee1!
S1!!
Good for you Chica!!! I”m still waiting for Mr. Therapist to call me back. It can take time with him as he has a very busy schedule.
As soon as he does though, I’m outta here!
I’ll try to assist you in not chickening out S1. That’s a big step and I’m proud of you!
Hopefully it all works out for the best for you!
LL
Well, went on a book run to the “used book store” (I’m a book-a-holic”) and taking me there is like taking a drunk to a liquor store–some friend my GF is right! LOL Already can see I am going to have to ship back some boxes of checked stuff on the train! LOL
Did get my son a Kinky Friedman book though!
Just responding to an old post… swallow said I am sure if did a survey of people targeted and ensnared by a psychopath you would find that many of them have previously suffered some kind of emotional trauma and abuse when young.
This is false. Anyone can be ensnared by a sociopath… See the book “Women Who Love Psychopaths” by Sandra Brown, MA ( she did the survey you were speaking of and it is inconsistent with your inference about the victims of sociopaths )
This also lends a very dangerous assumption… people think “well I’m psychologically healthy and grew up in a wonderful family so I’m not an easy target for a sociopath.” WRONG. So wrong on so many levels. Not only do these kinds of assumptions make it easier for professionals to start psychologizing the victim ( And just because someone is a professional doesn’t mean you should take them for their word. I can provide many examples of this. ) …
Psychologizing the victim is abuse in itself. I’m going to say that outright, because there has been a lot of re-traumatizing on the net for victims of S/N/P’s… saying that somethings wrong with THEM which CAUSED them to be targeted. NO! That’s like saying it’s a rape victims fault for getting raped for wearing something suggestive… it’s absolutely the perpetrator’s fault for taking advantage of someone- whether they came from a difficult childhood or not… the only thing that makes you a target is High empathy. Sure, other factors may contribute to making it easier, making you more vulnerable, but it is not in any way the CAUSE… or even remotely the reason.
Nancies,
I agree with you. There is nothing that can be pinned as the CAUSE. We have been victims/surviviors of a sick person. We are not to blame for this. We just need to heal from it. There maybe some issues that surface during healing that we need to address but that does not mean that these issues are the CAUSE of us being a victim.
Soimnotthecrazee1!
LL,
Thanks!!! The thought of going there just makes me want to go crawl underneath the bed!!!!
SC1
Thank you for that, nancies. I did nothing to attract my ex spath. He was ‘interested’ in me, but I was not attracted to him at all. It wasn’t until a traumatic break up with an old high school sweetheart that he got to me. he knew when to strike.
Hi, notcrazee!
Hey Jazzz!!! Hugzzzz woman!! How ya doing?