Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail from a reader:
I have a question for you. I’ve been divorced for 3 years now from my ex-husband who had a porn addiction. I’ve tried the Internet dating sites on and off since, and have had nothing but bad experiences. What do you suggest I do/ how do I go about finding someone? I am really lonely and would like to have a man in my life. However, I’m so afraid of attracting the wrong kind still. If you have any suggestions, I’d be happy to hear them.
If you’ve had a run-in with a sociopath, before attempting to date again, you must first heal yourself. If you’re feeling lonely and afraid, it is an indication that you are not yet healed.
I believe that circumstances and situations come into our lives as a result of our internal states. The energy and emotions that we have within us are like giant magnets, bringing us more of the same. Perhaps you’ve heard this concept described as “The Law of Attraction.” I think it’s a real phenomenon, because I’ve seen it operate in my own life, whether I liked the results or not.
Negative emotion
When sociopaths come into our lives, they bring emotional betrayal, physical assault, financial ruin, psychological manipulation, family devastation—far more trauma than any of us ever bargained for. As a result, we are crushed, afraid, angry, frightened. Often our lives are on the verge of collapse.
We are overwhelmed by negative emotion and energy, which is totally understandable. So what happens? We get more of the same.
It happened in my life, and I’ve seen it in countless Lovefraud stories. The sociopath cheats on us, and we’re in a car crash. The sociopath takes all our money, and then we lose our jobs. The sociopath ruins our marriage, and then we get cancer or some other major illness.
So what are we to do?
Feel the pain
I believe that we must get the negative emotion and energy out of our systems. And the way to do this is to allow ourselves to feel the pain.
Usually, this means crying. Of course, we’ve all probably spent hours and hours crying, and we’re tired of it. We just want to stop. But the pain caused by the sociopath goes very deep, especially if we’ve had the predator in our lives for many years—years that we stuffed our emotions, afraid to let ourselves feel what we were really feeling. It may take a long time to release the pent-up tears.
Then there’s the anger. Anger is a physical sensation—just because we know why we’re angry doesn’t make it go away. Anger needs to be released appropriately. (It does no good to confront the sociopath, and may make matters worse.) My method of choice for releasing anger is visualizing the sociopath’s face on a pillow, and then pounding the crap out of it. The idea is to do something physical—stomping the floor, twisting towels—until we feel an emotional release.
But what often happens as we work on releasing the pain caused by the sociopath is that we find more pain beneath it. This may be disappointment in previous love relationships, anger at mistreatment during our childhoods, betrayal bonds with other people who abused us.
These are the negative emotions that attracted the sociopath in the first place.
In my case, I was lonely, even desperate, when the sociopath showed up on my doorstep. During all of my 20s and 30s, I couldn’t get a relationship with a man to work. I now know that it was due to my internal state, as described above. But when I turned 40, feeling that biological clock ticking, wanting to make a connection—well, I was primed to be plucked. Attracted by my negative internal energy, the sociopath swooped in.
With the devastation wrought by the sociopath, my pain moved to the focus of my awareness. I processed it. It was all I could do.
This is not pretty, so it is best done alone (unless you’ve got a really good therapist who can be with you through it). And it will take repeated sessions. You’ll release some, and more will bubble to the surface. Just keep releasing, until you drain the well of pain.
Healthy and peaceful
Then an amazing thing happens—when you purge the negative energy, it is replaced by peace, hope and self-love.
I am here to tell you that it works. Changing my internal state, moving from desperate to peaceful, made all the difference in the world. Not long after I began feeling better, I met the man who became my husband—in a bar.
Some people say you can’t meet anyone worthwhile in a bar, but location is not the issue. The issue is your internal state. If you’re feeling positive, healthy and peaceful, an appropriate person will just show up.
My husband and I have been together for eight years. We are happy. Our relationship is comfortable and easy. There are no games, only love. And our love is not a lie—it’s the real thing.
Blue….
I think you need a little Kate Hepburn or Julie Andrews in you about now…..
🙂
Meg Ryan, and Julia Roberts.
Blueskies, have you ever seen the movie “My Best Friend’s Wedding” with Julia Roberts? Same theme. I think you might enjoy watching that movie right about now. I mean, he was rejecting JULIA ROBERTS for a new love. That’s gotta put some perspective on it. 🙂
I think it’s perfectly normal to grieve over the possibilities with your best male friend. I have gone through this with every one of my exes that I stayed friends with when they found a new flame, even if I was the one who broke up with them! I think you’ll find that if you let yourself grieve and maybe share some of your sadness with him, it will pass and you will be able to be happy for him. Part of the grieving is that he may not be as available to you as a friend as he once was. But that’s not the end of the world. You now get to spend some time alone or make a space for some other new exciting person to come into your life.
As far as you having all this stuff wrong with you, that is EXACTLY what I just went through after a weekend fling with a much younger man. The reality is that you can’t really know the reason why he didn’t want to commit to you. Maybe he was hurt by your relationship with the P. Maybe he just put you in the “just friends” category a long time ago. Maybe he thought you were out of his league. Do you really know? Obviously, if you were as messed up as you think you are, why would he be such a good friend?
I have a new motto: We are not as screwed up as we think we are. (That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it!)
Gemini,
Your post made me so sad. Your daughter has obviously gone down a path of destruction, and probably won’t come back without some miracle. This made me think of my opposite situation, how I’ve been estranged from my mother for years. She wants to be kind toward me, but she has never made amends for all the abusive and neglectful things she did to me while I was growing up. She does not want to hear how these things have affected me as an adult. She thinks she can just start acting like a normal mom now that I’m 49 and don’t need that any more, buying me underwear, and just normal chit chat like mothers/daughters do. I cannot live a lie and bury things under the rug without talking about them.
Like you with your daughter, I still love the “good mother” that I never had–the mother that I wish she was. The real person is very narcissistic and doesn’t care about my feelings. It’s very sad, and I feel it will take me some time in therapy to sort out my feelings about her, because she is at least trying to be nice, which is UNLIKE your daughter. The situation with your daughter sounds very clear cut. I relate to the pain of having to cut off a close family member. I don’t know if you ever get past it. I dream about my mom all the time. I wish life were more fair sometimes.
Hugs to you.
Love that, Stargazer, I think I’m stickin’ to it too. LOL. I saw your post first thing this AM and wanted to respond, but after coffee, lost track of it. I’m glad you’ve found someone to help you work through the relationship with the boy.
I just know one day we’re all gonna have what we deserve, if we just keep on keepin on!
Thanks, Kim. I feel the boy was actually a mirror for me to look at some areas in my life that need attention–where I am repressed, where I am unhappy, and all the things I need to change and let go of. It really has nothing to do with him; but he was the catalyst. In fact, if our paths ever cross again, I will thank him for playing that role. I’m sure he learned some things from me too, even if he is not forthcoming about what those things are. He may not even have a conscious understanding of it.
He was right when he said I need to do the 4th and 5th steps: taking a moral inventory and sharing it with someone else. This is the goal of therapy. I wish I had someone to talk to on a more ongoing basis right now, because I feel overwhelmed with all of this emotional material. I just shut down until my next session and I can chip away at it. In a way, I feel like I am almost autistic in how I shut down and keep feelings inside, projecting all kinds of unconstructive ideas into the world. One example is how I blame the guys when I feel bad about something in the relationship. That is very hard for me to admit, but when I feel jealous, threatened, or my rejection issue gets triggered, I just shut down and then make him bad or wrong. This is a form of control, and I am guilty of it.
I don’t like all the things I’m seeing about myself. But I feel it’s time to get very honest about who I am and how I operate. That’s the only way I can change. It may take a while at the rate I’m going, but I want to live my life and a genuine and honest person.
Stargazer:
What a healing perspective you have on yourself and your environment.
You are in a good and healthy place today!
I commend your growth.
We have good days and we have set backs……but we must keep putting one foot in front of the other and seek growth and self awareness.
Congratulations….I am very proud of you!!
XXOO
Stargazer,
You really have an amazing ability to see yourself. That is one of the hardest things to do. Your honesty with yourself is going to move you forward. I don’t think your average person can put their ego aside like you did. That’s an amazing strength, I hope to be able to do that as well as you do, some day.
Thank you so much for the validation, EB and skylar. I have a very good therapist, who is free for 6 sessions through my Employee Assistance Program. I actually feel different inside since the session, like I’m not projecting so much, and I’m not hiding from myself. It doesn’t feel great, I have to admit. But one difference I noticed is that I had the confidence lately to go out and apply for a better paying job. And I will apply for others in the next few weeks. I’ve been stuck in the same p/t office job for 7 years. I have decided it’s time for a change.
I remember talking with the boy about our healing process when he was here. He was telling me that he is really more concerned with his own part in what happened with me and him last time. He wants know what he did wrong so he can change those things (he’s probably going through it again after our last visit, too). So now I feel the same way. I am really only interested in my part, not in his, because I have no control over his issues. For my part, I SHUT DOWN and went into fear halfway through the visit when he started pulling away. His behaviors triggered MY rejection/abandonment issues. And when this happened, I’m sure I did some things to push him away even farther. This is MY responsibility, NOT HIS. Obviously, I can’t go back and change it, but I can work on those issues so I don’t act them out again. These are the things I do that have sabotaged many of my relationships. I’m seeing it very clearly for the first time. I can’t believe what a different perspective I have on him and our visit now. I had actually convinced myself that he was an evil sociopath who set out to destroy me. I think nothing could be farther from the truth!
Stargazer, I hope you understand what I’m about to say. Just because you see that He’s not evil, and he wasn’t out to get you doesn’t mean he’s not toxic to you, right now.
You can still become intoxicated by someone who is sincere, means well, is only trying to work on his own issues. You can be sabatoged by your own brain chemistry, and have to suffer though the pain of withdrawl all over again.
Take care of yourself and focus on you, for now.
You sound like you’re in a really good place. I’m happy for you!