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.
I was in a state of anxiety for four year over the sociopath cop.
Now I realize that a HEALTHY relationship means feeling comfortable, safe and secure.
That a normal person won’t give me reasons to feel anxious. Will instead be reliable and consistent. In his words and his actions.
Anxiety is a red flag to run — not to wait and be patient and be insecure, never knowing whether he really cares or not..
This is helpful – there are many things I have been avoiding out of anxiety when contemplating them. The ones I have tackled have taken far less time and been far less daunting than I had anticipated.
Thanks for the boot up the bottom!
This is so true.
I had anxiety to the max in the relationship and now I’m experiencing MORE of it.
Ox, I have a question about this. I wonder if I’m healthy enough to continue with school or if I should keep going with it. I did very well last term. It helped me get my ass out of the relationship and a will to stop drinking. I’ve done some very positive things for myself in school and it makes me feel good about myself. I really don’t want to give it up. I realize I’m dealing with depression, anxiety and probably PTSD as well, but this article is very interesting. If I don’t stay active in school, which goes towards exercising areas of my life for SELF IMPROVEMENT, I feel like I”ve lost the last thing I’ve worked hard for to rebuild my life.
Any thoughts on this? I would appreciate any input.
LL….It must be hard to concentrate on schoolwork, while have PTSD symptoms…I had them for two months…just sat on my laptop, smoking, numb…and my girls would giggle and I would tell them to STOP!! Loud noises, crowds…got to me. I explained what PTSD is to them, and why ….and they left me alone to work things out. It was summertime and I would force myself to ride across to the lake beach and spend time with them…but I wasn’t “right” for several months…processing, grieving…etc.
Now, if you are able to concentrate, and it distracts you to study…and NOT drink…then, by no means….stick with it. Do your work and then post here or talk to a friend…then back to work. I hope you can stick with it…
Dear LL,
That is for you and your therapist to decide, but I can give you this example out of my past.
I got a VERY UNWANTED divorce and a total financial screwing from a husband I loved very much (he was mentally ill as pre-teen kids on my hips and had been a stay at home mom most of the time my kids were little, I was financially devastated, and I started back to school. I did A work that first semester though I was in total shock, and cried myself to sleep every night, my stress was MAXED OUT, but I survived, and finished my degree, raised my kids, and actually had a good life, remarrying 7 years later. You know, the thing is that coping with school helps us to focus.
This time, after my husband was killed in a very dramatic accident that I witnessed, I went back to work 3 months later, worked for a few weeks, then quit because I knew I was not safe to practice the intense nursing job I was at. My short term memory was and still is quite poor, though much improved in the 6 yrs since I retired from active nursing. So if you are functioning and making adequate grades in college I would say that you are doing okay with that and I would continue to do it. I would not try to date anyone else, and I would keep changes and stress to a minimum, focus on taking good care of yourself, eat well, exercise and try to live a balanced life.
A balanced life, focusing on doing good things for yourself is a good therapy I think. (((hugs)))
Ox,
Thanks for the example. I agree with you in that with school it helps us to focus. It’s required. I hold myself accountable with school and still can function in that capacity right now. It feels right FOR ME at the moment.
If I were working, I think it would be another ball of wax entirely.
I have no DESIRE to date anyone else. It’s the furthest thing from my mind at the moment. I don’t think I would even know how. My emotions are not balanced at the moment. I think I’m getting the overreaction deal too. I constantly reacted to Spath and overly so. I can’t explain the dynamics, but I do understand it. I appreciate you pointing that out to me. I think therapy will help me work through that too. I found my copy of stalking of the soul. Reading that right now. I have a different perspective about the book now, than when I had read it before. Kind of interesting.
Thanks for sharing that Ox. I really don’t know how so many people here have survived the atrocities they’ve suffered, but it’s amazing and encouraging, as well as discouraging at times too.
LL
tobe,
You have NO idea how much your sharing helps. That is EXACTLY how it is for me right now. Exactly. I find that when I’m focused on my school work, it DOES help a lot. I have to be okay with where I’m at right now and that’s really hard. Did you find yourself overreacting to situations and people too? I TOTALLY understand about noises and crowds. That’s bothering me too right now. I don’t say anything to my kids, because they’re laughing and having a good time. I just try to breathe through it when it’s happening. I really need to stop beating myself up for where i’m at right now, although that’s hard to do. Everything feels like an accusation right now, or a blaming thing….I’m projecting my experience with POS onto others and that’s not right. I”m angry, tired and depressed. It does help to be confronted on it and/or to share about it because then I’m aware of it and can talk myself down. That’s really hard. I need the therapy, not just to deal with all of this and the PTSD symptoms but some ideas as how to counteract my over reacting to things. I just feel so raw right now.
Dear Lesson Learned
That’s a good book for you right now I think, and yes, sometimes we read/see/hear something at at that moment it doesn’t resonate with us, but later it will, or if we encounter it later again it will give us an AH HA moment. Just keep focused toward the “light” and you will get there too. (((hugs))))
Ox,
Some things are definitely resonating.
But admittedly, I’m more looking forward to the Betrayal Bond coming tomorrow 🙂
LL…..KNOWLEDGE IS POWER…
Being AWARE is lifechanging….Its the first step to healing.