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
Oxy:
Now just WHAT are you suggesting hens loads his balls with?
Just curious?
🙂
Dear ErinB,
I’m not even going to bite at that one!!!! BE GOOD GF!!! LOL
🙂
One thing I have learned in this process is that there are no quick or easy anwsers. I must have the self help section memorized at Barnes and Noble but none of those books truely prepared me for the pain in this journey.
To hear my daughter singing, is a great joy, and I take comfort in the joys in my life. Sometimes I don’t stop and look at the truely wonderful people in my life because I’m overwhelmed by the negative situation of living with the spath.
LF has been a blessing, has opened doors for me more than the self help section ever has. For that, I am eternally grateful.
Tomorrow is the last session with Dr. S. and I am going to let him know that I want a divorce, periord. I’m filling and it’s for the best, I hope we can be amicable and work out the best situation for our children. I’m terrified, as always. I used to write letters to the psychologist when we were in couples therapy, because I was too afraid to speak aloud. He only went ‘for me’, cuz it was my fault afterall. Wow, I was a sissy.
Anyway, hope tomorrow goes well and my anxiety is for nothing.
“LF has been a blessing, has opened doors for me more than the self help section ever has. For that, I am eternally grateful. ”
I second that…
hope4joy – you will need to be as strong as you can for the appt tomorrow. please don’t hold out any hope that the process will be amicable. it won’t.
you will have to fight. so, be prepared in your mind that it will be difficult, BUT that you CAN do it. we are here, and we will help all that we can.
be strong.
take good care – you are worthy and you and your family deserve a good life, not what you have been living. keep that in mind, and hold the image you created to remember what he is.
Hope:
Do you need to tell him? Or are you hoping counseler will guide you through separation?
Don’t plan on amicable…..
I’d make sure attorney is ready to fire right away with docs.
His niceties will surely change….
He’ll flip flop between kiss ass and nasty and back and forth.
Make certain you have everything important out of home…..things will disappear or get broken.
Good luck….i;m sending you some EB mojo!!!!
{{{{Hopeforjoy}}}} EB has it spot-on, kiddo. It is not going to be amicable. It’s just not. The counselor being a witness is fine and dandy, but once you’re both out of the office, it’s going to get ugly. The games will begin in earnest. If you believe that the soon-to-be-ex was being nuts, recently, it’s going to get much worse before it gets better.
Now, I don’t say these things to frighten you or to cause you to waffle on your decision. I’ve been precisely where you are with the same type of Thing that you’re dealing with. It is a pattern – when they believe that they’re goint to lose their property and source target(s), they turn nasty very quickly. It may be a pendulum thing where he’s lovey-dovey one minute, and explosively vicious the next. And, it does change from moment to moment.
The one thing that the counselor told me when I had made my decision to divorce was this: I did not HAVE to engage in conversation or discussion with the ex spath. Even where the children were concerned, there would be no semblence of reason. The children were property – TOOLS – to use to cause harm and damage.
Just be prepared, Hope. I’m with EB and sending you positive vibes and healing energies. Brightest blessings.
EB I think you need to bottle that mojo of your’s and sell it by the ounce. EB MOJO. Glad the subject got changed since your post this morning..you can tell OX and Onestep I am still upset that they called me stoopid.
HopeforJoy and Blues Eyes – I agree with your feelings about lovefraud, it’s a great place.
Hens….I say…..get the paintballs ready and aim at Oxy and One……
One likes rainbow colors…..
Oxy….well……she wants them filled with something special…..
your guess!
XXOO
EB