Lovefraud received the following letter from a reader:
I have been involved with a man for the past seven years. We don’t live together but he has stayed at my home on and off. Anything rotten in a relationship I have had to deal with–lies, cheating, humiliation, emotional abuse and financial, not that he took money from me but sponged off a single mother. This man makes good money and has never made a commitment to anyone, lots of broken promises and excuses. He has a problem with breaking the connection with me, always trying to get back in and regain his supply. I believe this man is a psychopath/narcissist. I have reverted to just trying to remain friends but I don’t think for him this is possible. He always tries to get back in. My married ex was also a psychopath and I was involved with another man, he was also a psychopath. How can we change this–always attracting the same?
It is not possible to remain friends with a sociopath (or psychopath or narcissist). The only way to deal with them is not to deal with them. No contact. At all.
But this letter asks a more important question, “How can we change this–always attracting the same?”
How to Spot a Dangerous Man
The first step in avoiding involvement with a sociopath is knowing that they are out there. If you’re reading Lovefraud, you’ve probably already had a painful run-in with a sociopath and are well aware that they exist.
The next step is to figure out why you allowed a sociopath into your life. For women who have been victimized, I suggest reading How to Spot a Dangerous Man Before You Get Involved, by Sandra L. Brown, M.A.
Brown describes eight types of dangerous men—men with mental illnesses and personality disorders that cannot be rehabilitated. Lovefraud readers will recognize most of the types as various shades of sociopaths. Brown describes their behavior, provides case studies of women who were involved with them, and includes red-alert behavior checklists. If you see the behaviors on the list, you should end the relationship.
Overriding our warning system
But many Lovefraud readers have intuitively known there was something wrong in a relationship, yet have had difficulty ending it. This is where Brown’s book will be extremely helpful.
Every woman, Brown says, has an internal system of red flags and red alerts that act as a warning system that someone is dangerous. Unfortunately, many of us ignore the signals.
“Somewhere between childhood and adulthood we have allowed many of our built-in alarm systems to become dismantled. Years of overriding internal warnings with reasons to move ahead anyway, combined with the ability to numb the feelings triggered by our own system’s messages, have deadened many women to the symptoms of being in a dangerous relationship. This perilous cycle can lead women to date four or five dangerous men before they begin to notice the spiritual, emotional and physical messages they have been ignoring.”
Brown then explains why women ignore the signals. Sometimes it is because of society’s expectations that it’s more important for women to be polite than to question the behavior of men. Or it’s more important for women to accept everyone unconditionally than to expect people to prove themselves as trustworthy. Or it’s more important to love the unlovable than to realize it’s not safe to love everyone. Or that it’s more important to believe everyone can change than to accept that some people can’t.
Dangerous Man Workbook
So how does all this apply to you? How do you figure out where you’ve been making mistakes? To answer these questions for yourself, I suggest that you also get the How to Spot a Dangerous Man Workbook.
The workbook prints lists of universal red flags—check the ones that you’ve experienced. It lists family traditions and early conditioning—check what you’ve been taught. And it lists loopholes for downplaying the dangerous behavior of men—check the excuses you’ve used.
In the next section of the workbook, you answer questions about your own experiences with dangerous men. How did you meet? Were they similar to your father or another influential relative? What were your first red flags?
If you honestly fill out the workbook, you’ll see your patterns and where you need to change. Because changing your expectations, enforcing your personal boundaries and realizing that you deserve better are required for you to stop attracting sociopaths.
Both books are available on Amazon.com:
How to Spot a Dangerous Man Before You Get Involved
How to Spot a Dangerous Man Workbook
Wow! I travelled lots of times alone through the backlands from US, from Salt Lake City to Albuquerque via Denver, from Mephis to New Orleans, and I hiked in the seedy suburbs of San Antonio, Texas. I loved it and it felt safe all the time. I slept in Motel6 which was just fine.
After reeading these posts I can’t help thinking that I must have had a squadron of guardian angels flying in shifts! I even did first aid once in the Delta near New Orleans, a biker was run over by a truck. I made sure that he moved away from the road (he was in the middle of the highway) and that he was o.K., and left without giving my address as the paramedics arrived. Lawyer-paranoia perhaps?
I read that in the Delta the ratio gun pre capita is highest in the whole US, but YOU USE THEM TOO???
Well, for my next holiday maybe a retreat in a SPA with Ayurveda or the like would be more nerve-friendly 😉
I seriously hope nobody of us here has ever the necessity to use a gun! ((((Hugs))))
Ups, should be “guns per capita”
Dear Libelle,
Not every gun owner is some crazed terrorist, most of us are law abiding people. I hope I never have to use my gun even to frighten someone much less put a hole in them, I have twice pointed my gun at men, and once just having it I think saved me, but at least two of the times I think having it saved my life, and probably all three.
There’s video floating around on the internet of an 11 yr old girl home alone who nailed two gun toting robbers who broke into her house, her dad had taught her to shoot!
There’s an old saying that “God made men and women” but Mr. Colt (a gun manufacturer) made them EQUAL. I’m not nearly as strong as even an unarmed man, andn if I was not allowed to own a gun, I would find SOMETHING that would help make me more equal in a fight and keep it handy.
I am a gun owner, I am glad tho that the bill did not pass to allow gun owners to carry them exposed. There are too many gun owners that have no business with a gun but how do you regulate that?
Dear Henry,
you can’t regulate away stoopid! LOL I open carry here on the farm, but that is legal, you just can’t do it off your own land. The one time lately I didn’t have a gun on me the dog had this HUGE water moccosin coiled up in the yard and by the time I got a hoe he was gone!
Haven’t seen any copperheads last couple of years so guess these giant moccosins are eating them! LOL That’s about all we have seen the last few years, makes me want to hire a dozer and fill in the pond by the house! Son D killed one huge one so far this year, guess it was the mate to the one the dog coiled up. Glad he didn’t bite the little dog that would have been the end of the small dog.
Guess I shouldn’t be talking about killing snakes, Stargazer may be lurking out there and BOINK me with my own skillet!
BTW, I got out of the house today, went to the community retirement party for our postmistress, then went to my friends’ farm and got the 2 kittens I had spoken for (for my barn) they are so cute, no tails, and SEVEN fingers on all 4 feet. I’ve got them in a crate in the house til I get them more gentle, they haven’t been handled much so they’re kind of SPITTY! Speaking of which, Son D’s House cat is REALLY SPITTY with these interlopers in HER HOUSE! The dog thinks its cool to have another self animated mobile toy in the house.
You guys have a good night, I’m off to bed, didn’t get my nap today! This retirement is really hard, get up at 9, coffee til 10:30 then take a break, then LF till lunch, take a break til 1:30 then take a nap till 3, then more LF, and then supper at 5 and feed the dogs, then relax till bedtime, then read an hour, then go to sleep! Ah, what a rigorous schedule! Don’t know how I keep up! LOL Nitey nite!
See how you are Ox, call me stoopid and go to bed. You are the only person I know that would be excited about gettin a cat with 28 fingers..now that is weird. spitty.
Rosa thinks it’s cool to have ‘another self animated mobile toy in the house too’!
From what I recall, hers has 7 fingers and many feet too!
🙂
hens: re guns – it’s not possible to regulate stoopid.
if it was, none of us would be HERE. 😉
I had no idea so many people were “packing heat”.
See….I’m not the only one who likes “gadgets”.
Looks like everybody’s packin’ somethin’. 🙂
When it comes to firearms, I would be happy to have a taser.
I need something that would allow me to shoot with reckless abandon, without causing too much damage.
I think tasers are the cat’s meow.
“Don’t tase me, bro!” 🙂
This is more of the effect I’m looking for, just until the police arrive….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkMkGOpAF4s
Hey ya’ll. I went to the range yesterday with my two guns. I’m going to be a cop so I have to practice. I am very seriously considering going active duty army beforehand-after I in get in shape. I used to be the naive one too-thanks to mom. I was the people-pleaser. I trust NO ONE now. It’s amazing how much I’ve changed for the better since the spath dumped me.
I have my glock 27, which is a subcompact little .40 caliber and I am good with it. My back-up is a little snub nose S&W .38 special revolver. I love going to the range to practice. It is such a huge stress reliever for me. I have been under chronic stress for years due to my low self esteem. I am hoping to start boxing/martial arts soon. There is a gym near me that is dedicated to both.
Yes, I am overweight but I am excited about the future and will hopefully start taking it off soon. I finally replaced by stolen bicycle yesterday and I’m so excited. I had been without one for a year and a half.
After the experience with the spath, I am finally getting my life together-the way I want it to be. I am so happy to be at the point where I rarely think about him anymore and when I do, there is no sadness or left over attachment-it’s just something that happened and now it’s over. It’s in the past.
I think of my sisters who are anorexic. One of them is meaner than a dog shittin tacks. One of my friends said: of course she’s mean-she’s hungry. LOL! I would rather be how I am now, with a lot of weight to lose, than to be her anyday.