This week we received the following email. I am sharing it with you because what she reports is very common on a number of levels that I will discuss.
I was married to a sociopath for 25 years. They were horrible years because most of that time I had no idea I was married to a sociopath. I was deeply in love when we met. He told me everything I wanted to hear. Knowing all my weaknesses and fears he fed them, made me totally emotionally dependent on him. He helped me get great jobs, pumped me up so I would keep making more money, while of course he lived off me. But at the same time kept telling me I was ugly, fat, sickly. He had affairs. All of this and I still kept hoping he would change and someday really love me. He even encouraged me to do some illegal stuff — which I did — just to make him happy.
Twenty five years and when I finally couldn’t take it any more I left (8 months ago) Thought that was the end of it — but I actually kept worrying about him. He didn’t have a job or enough food to eat.
Well, he had used my computer one day when he was visiting and his email site was left on. I got curious and started reading his emails. He had been seeing other women, started relationship while he was still with me, telling them the same things he had always told me — but what I found most hurtful was that he was talking to these women about me in derogatory ways. That I was a psycho, unattractive, that I didn’t inspire him to do anything, etc. In many ways, this should have been good. Had I not seen that with my own eyes I would have never believed that my husband of 25 years who told me every day that he loved me more than life itself was bad mouthing me to these other women. I feel such anger and hatred in me that I know is not healthy”¦but I don’t know how to let it go.
I cut off all communications with him, but I still check into his emails. It’s like watching a soap opera — I’m hooked on this and don’t know how to stop. Every day when I see a new email where he’s dragging my name through the mud, it just makes me feel like crap. Even though I know he’s heartless and I should just not care what he says — I do. This is the man I slept next to for 25 years. I’m 58 years old and I can’t even think of starting a new relationship with all this distrust and hatred in my heart. How in the world would I ever trust another man? The duplicity that men are capable is incredible and every man I meet gives me the creeps.
Is there any hope that I could ever get over this? I just don’t know how to move forward.
First of all 25 years is a long time to spend with another person, might as well be a lifetime. To come to grips with that, a person has to focus his/her attention on all the other things he/she did and accomplished during that time period. Usually the relationship was not the only part of life. Since the outcome was so bad the mind naturally wants to focus the attention on the bad and recovery means fighting this natural tendency.
Second, worrying about the sociopath is extremely common. Again overcoming this means focused attention. Attend to what this says about you. You are a person who cares and naturally worries about those you have loved. Just because you have a feeling does not mean you have to act on it.
The third issue, spying on the sociopath. I have seen that behavior a great deal so don’t feel you are unusual because you do this. I have also observed that the spying is often linked to anger, as is difficulty letting go.
Why would spying, anger and difficulty letting go be linked? I think this relates to a need for power and mastery over the situation. How many times have victims said, “I just didn’t want him/her to win”? I think recovery starts with admitting that we “lost” and the sociopath “won.” In the same breath though we have to question what the “prize” for winning was. If we don’t go on with our lives and recover, we give the sociopath a real prize!
The fourth issue is trusting again. That will come with recovery, but perhaps the trust for others will always be different. I will say that evil people tend to capture our attention. Some studies show that the good has to outweigh the bad 4 times in order for good to capture as much attention as bad. Evil men are much more visible in society, so make it a point to focus your attention on the loving empathetic men you know. This is difficult for many women who are attracted to power because they do not find less powerful men very attractive.
I would rephrase, “The duplicity that men are capable is incredible and every man I meet gives me the creeps.” To the duplicity of every man I focus my attention on… I am working on a book, both discussing love and empathy in men and telling the stories of men who have been victimized by sociopathic women. I am doing this to help both men and women realize that loving behavior is the norm for men. We just attend to evil/powerful men more, the loving man goes unnoticed. He is invisible to us.
That gets me to recovery and some tough advice. Recovery takes a great deal of work and self discipline. In order to have the mental discipline you will need to stop reading the emails and move on, you have to work on your physical health. If you are out of shape, smoking and/or using alcohol, you may have great difficulty recovering. The part of the brain that is responsible for will power and impulse control is easily affected by poor health andxiety and lack of sleep. Start with a total health program. That program will go a long way toward lifting anxiety and depression. Keep a healthy diet and exercise every day. I would really like us to have a virtual exercise club and I put up Fit and Smart for that purpose. On that web site you will find a free program to help structure your exercise routine.
Fill your free time with activities that build you up mentally and spiritually. Build yourself up mentally by reading and perhaps taking a class. Build yourself up spiritually by volunteering or participating in a spiritual community. If you do all these things, you will have the health and strength to focus your attention where it needs to be. The writing of M. Louise Gallagher may be an inspiration to you.
Holehearted,
I can relate to all that missing and hating and loving and wanting revenge…all that CRAZY thinking about things, but IMHO, you really need to stop contact with him! Dont call him in the middle of the night anymore for sure! NO CONTACT. By your contacting him, you are staying in his game…..and even giving him ammunition to use against you….and believe me, he will. Enjoy what youve done for yourself…and leave him behind to rot. Please, dont contact him anymore.
Holehearted-
Don’t feel too bad I just read in a clinical article ( I am addicted to reading on psychopaths) that professionals believe they can help them- there is a contingency who thinks they are redeemable–notably the author mentioned the fact the professionals admitted to wanting the challenge, the thrill (versus the boredom of working with “worried well) that fact hit me.
Psychopaths do enchant, they are challenges…puzzles….but empty like those presents put under decorator trees.
I am finally behind the curtain and can honestly say….I don’t want anymore of the show.
I suggest you read more about psychos….there isn’t anything there…save man breasts : )
They are shells–they suck us dry because they are so empty. The good we see is our own projections.
Interesting how each sociopath has an element of criminal behavior. My ex did the same and was involved in some fraud. I begged her to stop and that I fear it would get us into trouble. She would reply that we needed the assistance and told her just to get a job and no we don’t need that type of help. Another time, concerning her employment claim, I told her that this time I wanted no part of it! For some reason the moral and legal ramification of their actions and what hardship it may cause their friends or family has little impact on them.
A little history in my case is that its been two years now with NC (no contact) and just a few days ago I knew it was time to forgive my sociopath and by doing so forgive myself. So I imaged a small white dove on my finger and watch it fly away, telling myself that I forgave her and myself. I cried and tremble like a child and let the weight lift off my shoulders. I gave this to God, asking that she would someday find the help she needs. I know that by forgiving her, I can let go (closure) and then move on with my life that I want back so badly. Now, each time I start to feel those hateful (emotional memory) emotions, I tell myself that forgiveness is forgiveness and just tell those feeling to go away! I know now that I will allow another person in my life and trust her, but also remembering to look out for those “Red Flags” and not miss them this time around.
Evolving from victim to survivor is never easy, but each of us must become a survivor in order to move on with our personal lives. Allowing them to take what little they left us, our humanity, our trust in others, our empathy for people and our hearts. If we let them to this, then indeed they (sociopath) have won and we lose everything!
Ladies:
Thank you very much. I changed my cell phone number. I’m reading Creating Calm in Difficult Times: Strength in the Storm by Easwaran, and Dr. Wayne W. Dyer: There’s a Spiritual Solution to Every Problem.
I’m trying my best to erase him from my memory. I’m tired of thinking about him. Too painful.
Jules
Not sure is NC hurts the sociopath, but its like a bright ray of sunshine of reality. Each day we go thru and confirm our covenant of no contact with ourselves. This same “reality” becomes their reality. So in this bright ray of truth, they do shrivel and become weaker in our mental and emotional state of being.
Does it hurt them? Well, reality hurts all of us. We age, we lose love one thru death and our children go on to complete autonomy and independents. With that in mind this ray of truth and reality will hurt them someday I believe. We all can deny reality, but in the end, reality is what reality Is! “So that what we sow, so shall we reap”.
Book,
dont be too hard on yourself for thinking about him. It’s a normal process each of us has had to go thru in order to get to some place of ‘peace’ within ourselves. There’s a thread called ‘On Rumination’. This sheds some light on the obsessive thinking we all have experienced after trauma with a sociopath. Look it up and read it. I wish I could erase him from my memory as well. But if I had not have had the experience, I wouldnt have learned so much about sociopaths. I’m glad I know now, even though I learned the ‘hard way’. We can’t change the past that’s for sure. It did infact happen. I let a sociopath into my life. Because I let him convince me he ‘loved me’ while he was USING me (see post: the opposite of love is…..USE.) I don’t beat myself up about this too much now though, because he was good! Really good at his game. But not good enough, because in the end, he didnt get what he wanted: to move in with me, and use me even more. I have to accept that he did an incredibly horrible and selfish thing: directly expose me to his disease of HIV- allowing me to make a potentially fatal mistake, without a care at all. Short of actually murdering someone or raping someone or a defenseless child, I can’t really think of anything more morally wrong. But it DID happen. And he walked away. Without a care in the world about my feelings. Only his. I guess one measue of my recovery in this is that fact that I dont constantly plan his demise and wish bad things on him. I’m too good a person to hate another. I hate what he did to me, and probably has done and will do to others. I pray to God to give him a soul, a conscience……and for God to keep him away from me and my life as much as possible. I figure if I keep my end of the bargain up with NO CONTACT, no planning his demise, then God will protect me from him. But I certainly have warned others, my friends, people who knew we were together. I’ve told them all what he did to me. I’ve made it harder for him to get away with doing that again.
liane,peggy,rperk,james; thank you all for your input i am learning from what each and every one of you say here. if any one else has anything to add i d love to hear also. its so enriching to read what you you all say on this site .liane i think you are right its the loss of power and them not knowing we are there for them to use at leisure and not knowing exactly what i am doing, i actually think they are nosey too. thnk you all so much. anyone else feel free to coment on my question. thanks again.
Jules,
I don’t think they hurt with NC. And the point of NC is to protect you from their manipulation. It’s not meant to hurt them. It’s meant to close the door on them and give them nothing to manipulate.. and it gives you the space to clear the fog from your mind.
Also, I think when we truly go NC, they move on to someone else. It’s no fun anymore when we won’t play with them.
Aloha,
I agree. I don’t think it “hurts” them because they don’t have the ability to feel that sense of loss since they never loved in the first place. I think the feeling they feel would be frustration more than anything else. Especially if they didn’t have someone else lined up at the time. Inconvenienced maybe, if their victim did a lot for them (paid for things, gave them rides, cleaned and cooked).
Probably the same as when your computer crashes, you are frustrated that it won’t respond so you can use it for whatever you need it for. Then going out to get a new computer is a real hassle, and sometimes you had the settings just the way you liked them so you would rather try to fix it than buy a new one. Or maybe you could use a bunch of computers on the side to get your work done, that’s not something to feel guilty about. Sorry I got carried away with that metaphor lol, but to them real humans are just things to be possessed, no emotional bonds involved.
I may hold a funeral. That isn’t a bad idea. But I get a little freaked at the idea of him returning from the dead. He seemed like a vampire that couldn’t be killed. Or a roach. They are hard to kill too.. and where there is one there are a thousand …that’s why I don’t date on line. LOL