Last week I asked whether there might be physical consequences to life with a psychopath. Judging from the many and fascinating reader responses it seems that many people suspect that these relationships have indeed affected their health. Boldily pains, chronic anxiety, eating disorders, weight fluctuations, difficulties with sleep, headaches – all these and more either started or worsened at the time of the relationships. Some ailments straight away resolved themselves when the relationship ended, others linger.
Before I give a brief conceptualisation of a linkage between life events and physical health I must clarify terms. I am not talking here about hypochondria, imagining and and worrying about being ill. I am talking about psychosomatics, a term which has become confused for some to mean, ‘it’s all in your mind.’ Psychosomatic ailments are real ailments. A migraine headache, even if it has a psychological element, has real constriction of blood vessels, real pain, real vomiting, real response to medication – it is not imagined. As you’ll see below, to me it makes no sense to speak of something being only in the mind.
A personal example
Since childhood I suffered from migraine headaches. There is probably some genetic disposition at work – my mother and her sister were both migrainous. There were some physical things that seemed to make my migraines more likely – bright light, dehydration. However, there was also something psychological at work. How do I know? First, while I usually got three of four migraines a year, one year I was migrainous during each weekly session of a class I was teaching – too much of a coincidence. Second, although my migraines weren’t an actual topic during my therapy when I trained as a psychotherapist, somehow my migraines stopped then. Therapy is not all I was doing. I was seeing a chiropractor, doing Pilates, improving my diet, writing.
What happened? In short here’s what I’ve come to. For me migraines were in part the consequence of unexpressed anger. (During the course I was teaching I was angry about something but did nothing about it because one doesn’t get angry with one’s students, right?). Somehow the combination of psychotherapy and other activities untied that particular emotional/physical knot for me and since then it has not been necessary for me to have a migraine. Now if I feel a fluttering in my left temple I say to myself, “There’s something (emotional) going on”, and that redirection of attention seems to be enough.
I’m not suggesting anyone’s else’s journey will go the same way as mine did. In fact I know that’s most unlikely. Each person needs to work out their own – preferably multi-pronged – approach. NB Please do not take this a recommendation to eschew regular medical treatment; when I say ‘multipronged’ I mean tackle the matter from several angles including, of course, medical science.
Psychesoma, MindBody
Body-mind medicine is not everyone’s cup of tea. If you are interested see this review of a recent book on the field’s history.
Here are some notions on psychosomatics from Dr. Brian Broom (see also here and here):
What are some of the assumptions then, of MindBody healing?
- Body and mind are inextricably involved with each other, indeed they cannot be separated.
- Mind elements are important in developing, triggering and perpetuating disease.
- Mind elements also play a role in wellness and protection from disease.
- Sometimes there needs to be a pure focus on the body as the best approach to illness, while at other times a pure focus on the mind is more important.
- In many situations, however, a combined approach is likely to give the best outcome for the patient.
- It is important to attend to ”˜mind’ in all patients, even in what is normally regarded as ”˜physical’ illness. Attending to mind implies many elements including: respect for the patient’s ”˜illness experience’; listening for the meaning of illness; understanding the individual’s model of illness; regard for the role of trauma; attention to family, relationship, societal, cultural, and spiritual forces promoting illness or healing; regard for the influence of sociological factors such as poverty, unemployment, and loss of identity; and the role of biomedicine in rendering mind aspects invisible.
Chronic stress
Life with a psychopath provides great and ongoing inner tension and may also inhibit the ways that tension can be relieved. While it’s neither the whole story nor everyone’s story, it makes sense to me that there may be a lot more bottling up in a relationship with a psychopath than normal and what has been bottled up may well have consequences.
We are beings who, it seems, will make manifest what’s going on inside, whether we do it through action, emotions, expression, or bodily symptoms.
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Next week I will describe one simple method that has been scientifically shown to improve some ‘physical’ ailments which have a psychological component. In the meantime, what have you found that helps?
Dr Steve,
Thank you so much for raising these topics. Your articles and the subsequent posts are very helpful to many of us. A relationship with a P is like dealing with an alien from another planet and we have physical and mental problems that we’ve never experienced before. The worst thing is that no-one can see emotional and physchological trauma. To our friends and family we look and sound the same. It’s impossible to explain.
Things that have helped me are Zoloft which I started 2 months ago . I tried Paxil before but it was not so good. Now, I still have anxiety but am not in the black depression. This in turn has made it easier to DO more things which diverts my mind from thinking so much about the past. The increase in physical activity also relieves that feeling of panic. I have started meditation and I am getting better letting thoughts wash over me rather than dwelling on things.
Swallow
swallow – You’re welcome. Do keep an eye out for next week’s post – it might be useful as you build up your strategies against unproductive rumination.
Hi Dr. Steve,
I just started Therapy which I hope will help me to release the last residue of anxiousness. I was disappointed that the therapist wanted to start talking about meds right way. That’s not my thing and I don’t have anxiety attacks daily or even weekly.
I know I need to get out more. I really have to force myself. Anyway, glad you are addressing this topic.
I have been living in a state of constant anxiety for fear of what is coming down the pipeline next. I am in a custody battle for my son and as my wife has pointed out, she will do anything to fight me. I have found that exercise has been my best medicine. Sometimes I have to force myself to get out and not be consumed by the past and constantly trying to figure things out. I pray a lot and find expressing myself through writing helps too.
I have found that good friends, ALANON (helps me to focus on ME), therapy, this site, medication, and acupuncture…
…an open mind, an open heart, meditation, and regularly asking God for his guidance and support (connection to a force–love, if you will–a connection with the rest of the world)…eating well, lots of water, and physical activity. Writing and creativity helps my body/mind and spirit.
My family, home, and a faith in the unknown…are also keys as well. Forgiveness/letting go of some sort as well.
I could not live without any of the things I’ve mentioned above…
Thanks DrSteve…and to the rest of you…
I can attest to depletion of health due to living with a sociopath.
Within my 2yr. 3 month “marriage” (I liken it more to human sufferage one could experience as a crashing aircraft makes it’s final descent) I developed some acute and re-occuring sicknesses I had never even heard of before.
I developed reoccuring stomatitis. I developed thrush. My allergies which had been slight and seasonal in the past became terrible and I began taking allergy injections. I started getting recurring sinus infections that I couldn’t “kick”. I had always been one to need 8 hours of sleep and about 10 months into the “marriage” to date I can function fine on 5 to 6 hours. Simply put, I can’t sleep well. I experienced incredible anxiety. At the time I served my sociopathic ex divorce papers I was having some horrific nightmares which carried on for about a month after she was removed from my home by the court. I felt like my brain had been wrung out, and saying I was mentally exhausted is a grave understatement.
It’s been been 1 year and 34 days since she has left my home.
Not a case of stomatitis or thrush since, and my allergies are much better. I still can’t sleep well and suffer from bouts of anxiety, but I attribute it to the stress of being in family court litigation since divorcing her because I have a son and daughter by her.
I have custody and residency and decision making of my children and I am constantly under the attack of her lying, deceptive, manipulative schemes to deceive professionals (her attorney, the gaurdian et litem, counselors ~ anyone who she can manipulate) to join the attack to gain her custody of my son and daughter.
I place my trust in God. I pray. He is my refuge. He’s restored my health and my thinking process after all the brainwashing I’ve been subjected to. I’ve seen his miracles in my case and in the courtroom proceedings. He is sustaining me and my children.
I have been in a relationship with a man for over two years, and I’m not sure if he ‘qualifies’ as a sociopath, or is ‘simply’ an alcoholic with a shed load of baggage (anger, depressive tendancies etc).
In keeping with the countless other Lovefraud bloggers, I too got swept away by the initial euphoria of falling head over heels with a man who I thought was ‘the one’, but 7-8 months in when serious cracks started to appear in the relationship, I had some interesting physical manifestations, brought on by stress of being around him – these include sinus problems, urinary tract infections and a frequent sense of exhaustion and gasping for air.
For you fellow bloggers who may have these or other physical manifestations of a stressful relationship, I suggest that you look at Louise Hay’s “Fit for Life” book. Louise’s philosophy is that our ailments usually represent what is happening with us at an emotional and mental level – examples of this being:
Sinus problems – somebody ‘getting up your nose’
Urinary tract problems – somebody ‘P***ing you off’
breathing problems – somebody suffocating you
leg/feet problems – a fear of taking a step forward in life…
For most ailments, Louise gives positive affirmations for the reader to repeat constantly to themselves, so as to shift things on on a sub-concious level – I have found these helpful, but have also focused on getting exercise & fresh air (endorphins and quality time out to think!!), and also trying to eat a nourishing and balanced diet… While my belief is that there is no silver bullet for getting over the hurt and trauma of a bad relationship, I believe we increase and hasten our chances of coming out the other side by trying to take the best care possible of our bodies and minds!
Interested in Dr. Steve’s perspective on the above!
Regards, TusNua (meaning a ‘New Start’ in Gaelic!)
I have lost 62 pounds, my hair is falling out, I get headaches, have night mares, anxiety attacks, & feelings of utter fear & sheer terror if anyone who even resembles him is in my line of vision. I live in constant fear, & get 3-4 hours sleep a night. This must be my punishment for being so stupid & trusting.
As a retired Registered Nurse Practitioner, in my practice in family medicine in rural areas, I saw countless patients who are “proof” that there is no division between mind and body, they are one. If the body is “sick” the mind dosn’t work well and vice versa.
Stress releases hormones that are beneficial in the short term (fight or flight) but those same chemicals in the long term are toxic to the immune system. With an immune system not up to “snuff” 100% you be come vulnerable to many diseases and other distress.
After years of stress that was “off the top of the scale” from multiple attacks of multiple Ps within my family, my own health began to deteriorate like a bobsled doing down hill, picking up speed as it went.
Change of any kind, even positive change is “stressful” but when you have constant threats to your mind and body, and have no time in between to reach eqilibrium the toxic situations can take a ghastly toll on health in all aspects, mental and physical (though they are one in my mind)
Depression, infection, injuries from lack of concentration, confusion, short term memory loss, allergies, autoimmune syndromes, chronic pain from muscle tension, etc. etc. “You name it”
Essentially, victims of destructive narcissists and psychopaths suffer the same degree of distress that victims of prisoner of war camps did/do. The body cannot be “healed” (restored to health) separate from the mental, emotional and spritual wellness, in my opinion, and I think there is sufficient medical research to back this up.
Sometimes this distress of the mind makes permanent changes in the chemical structure of the brain (much as addictive chemicals and drugs do) and requires medications to help restore it to optimim functioning. I have accepted the fact that I may never be able to stop taking antidpressant medication.
IN order to help restore my health, I have set a program for myself to restore sleep patterns and exercise to restrengthen my physical body which suffered a devestating series of sickness. I keep “stress” of any kind to a minimum, making peace and calm the biggest part of my day.
The Ns and Ps are totally out of my physical life (NC) and I make an effort to make them EMOTIONALLY and MENTALLY out of my life as well. I don’t dwell on them or their behaviors.
I stay totally away from irritating or frustrating people. I am fortunate that I no longer hold down a job, or have to deal with a P co-parent. I no longer have the need to provide nurture to a child who is also a victim of this kind of stress, so my situation is such that I can focus ENTIRELY on my own healing and peace.
I also firmly believe that the SPIRITUAL aspect of restoring health is very important. I am a Christian, but whatever a person’s belief, the spiritual aspect cannot be ignored in my opinon.
Dr. Viktor Frankl, in his book “Man’s Search for Meaning” was a victim of the Nazi death camps and survived. His spiritual and emotional concepts that there is “meaning in suffering” has been very healing for me. I highly recommend this book to anyone who has been a long term or traumatic victim of a psychopathic relationship.
He says “it is not the physical pain which hurts the most (and this applies to adults as much as punnished children); it is the mental agony caused by the injustice, the unreasonableness of it all.”
Dr. Frankl is also the author of the commonly heard phrase “An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behavior” and he quotes Lessing as “There are things which must cause you to lose your reason or you have none to lose.”
My constant, years long, living with multiple violent psychpaths within my outwardly seeming “normal” family definitely caused me to “lose my reason” and to accept their gaslighting assessment that I was the “crazy” one.
To Sstiles 54 I say, You are not being punished for being “stupid and trusting,” any more than Dr. Frankl was being punished by some cosmic force when he was put into the Nazi concentration camps because he was Jewish.
I can’t say “why” we (and not others) have been the victims of Ps, “Bad things happen to good people” to use a trite but true phrase. Finding meaning and growth in our experiences, even if that meaning and growth is only to help others overcome the terrors that we have experienced is something positive. God bless all the survivors.
For years my hair has been falling out, and just four months ago when my P moved out, it stopped. I find my hands shake a lot, and I am extra sensitive to noise due to all the stress I have been faced with. I, too, am taking an anti-depressant and it is helping me get through all the pain.
It is so true that the mental agony is so much worse than physical pain. You look normal on the outside, but inside you feel like you are dying. One day, everything you thought to be true is suddenly not, and it turns your mind and life upside down.
I am looking forward to next week’s post about rumination, because that is something that is difficult for me to stop. I have been told by my therapist to picture a huge stop sign in my head when I start to have these thoughts that won’t go away. I find that helps, but only if I work really hard at it.
None of us that have been victims are stupid, we are only trusting human beings who would never think of people we love to hurt us so.