I am loving the honesty, support and wisdom shared by members of this community – and I feel deeply honoured to be here. Lovefraud is such a safe place, such a help to all of us whose lives have been touched by a sociopath. And your comments have inspired me to write about something I call the ”˜code of silence’ this week. Something that, in my experience, exists among so many of us who have experienced abuse.
Let’s make no bones about it – escaping from a controlling or abusive relationship is difficult enough. Accepting the truth that you’ve been treated so badly is even harder. But having to explain what happened to other people is excruciatingly humiliating. Particularly when they will often need to question your version of what happened because they have only known the public mask: “What are you talking about? He/she has always been such a lovely person! Surely there’s some mistake!” That one’s a double whammy, because if they decide to believe your story then they also have to realize that they have been duped as well”¦ it’s tough going!
Then comes the underlying implication that you must have been extremely gullible – stupid even – not to notice the signs. “If what you’re telling me is true, then they must surely have been so obvious – how could you possibly not have known? Surely you must have realized something was wrong?” And so it goes on… It’s exhausting, and each time becomes a public tar and feathering, as you are forced over and over again to explain exactly how you were so stupid to let somebody else put you in this position.
This is why, I believe, there is an unspoken code of silence among the vast majority of people who have suffered through any kind of abusive relationship. Whether through a partner, parents, siblings, friends, bosses, colleagues – the list is endless, as are the stories and perceived seriousness of the abusers’ misdemeanors. Different accounts, different histories, different responses. But the pervasively malignant feelings of disgust and self-hatred that become lodged deep within the victims seem to be the same. A universal sense of shame that permeates to the core, no matter the circumstances.
Not long after I made my discovery, I re-connected with an old friend I hadn’t seen for many years — to protect her privacy I’ll call her Beatrix. Our children had grown up together. We shared similar professional interests. We shared a healthy caring friendship. It also turns out that we shared another bond that only came to light as we continued talking. She had also been married to a charming sociopath — in her case it had been for 20 years, double my own sentence.
Our husbands had got to know each other while we still lived in the UK and they had done their level best to break our strong bond of friendship. For a few years it seemed they had succeeded, but now we are closer than ever. Ironically it is that same destructive behaviors of our respective husbands that have made it possible. Because since we found each other again we have been able to share our stories. Compare our experiences. Help each other through the dark days. Encourage each other to notice some of the deeply ingrained responses we sometimes fall back in to as a habit following years of deliberate conditioning. We know what it’s like. We understand the pain and indignity. We can identify on levels that people who haven’t been through such an experience could never possibly understand. Because we share the common bond of survivors of abuse – and at first, we thought that very few people would ever be able to empathize. We were wrong – and I’d like to explain what I mean.
Towards the end of 2009 I read a powerful book called The Bigamist, written by best-selling author Mary Turner Thomson. Taken aback by the punch of her story about her marriage to a sociopath, together with the striking similarities in our backgrounds, I decided to introduce myself by email. She called me on my home phone less than three days later, and straight away we chatted with the ease of old friends, as though we’d known each other for years. Right from that very moment I felt the unspoken connection of recognition with her – she knew what it was like. She’d been there. I didn’t have to explain. She instinctively knew, and though we didn’t say it at the time, there was an instant bond created between us.
A highly intelligent, sassy, accomplished, strong woman and certainly nobody’s fool, Mary and I have since become firm friends . We call ourselves ”˜soul sisters’ because we know what it’s like to be deliberately targeted, deceived, manipulated and controlled. Soul sisters who know how it feels to realize that what you thought was true and lasting love was nothing more than a sham. Soul sisters who understand the shame and indignity of having to face the truth – as well as the on-going difficulty in convincing well-meaning friends and family that you haven’t lost the plot.
Beatrix and I talk about this regularly – as do Mary and I, together with the many other survivors I’ve met over the past couple of years, men as well as women. As a result I’m convinced that there IS a code of silence. And along with the silence is the instinctive yet unspoken point of recognition whenever one survivor meets another. After just a few words, the nod of acknowledgement passes between us – sometimes without the need for any further discussion or admittance. We just know. And judging by the number of survivors I’ve met in my daily life since I became free, there must be millions of people who walk around in silent pain, people who are still bound by chains of humiliation and self-loathing.
Control and manipulation tactics are common strategies employed by abusers. Basic yet exceptionally powerful, this form of power play isolates people from the people who support them and undermines their confidence to the point where they can no longer think or act effectively. Believing they are the under-dog, the target is then no longer in control of their own life. The tactics used by abusers will vary depending on their experiences, their level of skill, their targets, and their focus.
A corporate sociopath, for example, will typically be exceptionally well-versed in smooth language, subtle body gestures, and impeccable manners. A street thug is much more likely to use physical violence. Encounters with the latter will almost certainly leave you with bruises and perhaps broken bones. Encounters with either of them will leave you with a broken spirit and emotional scars that may never heal again.
When I was working as a Louise L Hay trainer in 1997/1998 I was always deeply touched by the intensity of guilt and shame regularly expressed by workshop members as they bravely shared their stories of mistreatment. Stories that, in some cases, had been kept secret and buried for decades. Having the opportunity to finally tell the truth of what had happened to them was a huge relief. As it turns out, it was also the easy bit – the hard bit was gently helping them to accept and forgive themselves for what had happened. Yes, you read right – the most difficult part would be helping them to find a way to forgive themselves. Not the other person or people, or even the situation – but themselves. To rid themselves of the shame and self-loathing for allowing such a thing to happen to them in the first place.
From my own experience, my first feelings of shame were when my sister and I were thrown out from our guardians’ home when I was 18 and she was just 13. Our uncle’s treatment of us was absolutely appalling – but I felt that I’d somehow failed. That it was MY fault. To make matters worse, because my guardian was a well-respected, charming, highly intelligent and very successful professional man (and yes, I now consider him to be a sociopath) nobody wanted to believe my account of events during the 22 months we lived there. It didn’t matter that my sister and I had done nothing wrong – far from it in fact. But, as with so many ‘victims’ I turned the anger and hatred in on myself. It took me many years to come to terms with what had happened and to finally forgive myself.
This experience, ironically, has proved to be one of the most useful lessons I could ever have learned. Not only has it helped me to move others through their own destructive patterns in my professional career, it also helped me explore my deepest held personal beliefs and thereby to heal fast and fully following the discovery of my ex’s betrayals.
Back to my friend Beatrix for a moment. She is now reclaiming her life – but it’s a long road. Last year was her first Christmas of freedom from a man who, to the outside world appeared charming, charismatic and witty – the life and soul of the party. A familiar story? Since escaping, Beatrix has forfeited a number of her friends who simply refused to believe that this charming man could possibly be guilty of the monstrous things she has accused him of doing. Abusers, as we know, can be very skilled. Although there may not always visible external injuries (in some cases, of course, the physical wounds speak volumes) the non-visible damage to self-esteem and self-belief can be severe”¦ even life threatening – or worse in some cases. Beatrix told me what an important time Christmas has always been for her. How for more than 20 years she’d religiously do everything within her power to make the most of the festive season – and how, every year, her husband would equally religiously take great delight in destroying her. He’d criticize her for spending too much or too little. Complain about the tree being too big or too small. Whine about the fact that there were too many or too few parties and house visits organized that year. Consistent, deliberate verbal abuse”¦ the psychological blows always accompanied by a Judas kiss or squeeze on the shoulder together with the assurance “But you know I love you!”
Abuse of any kind is a killer. The resulting silence is perhaps even more of a killer. It strangles people. This is why I’m so passionate about speaking out. Self-loathing eats away at confidence. It is malignant, oppressive and relentless – and in some cases it claims lives. That’s why I believe this site is such an incredibly helpful resource for all of us who’ve “been there, seen it and got the tee-shirt” — and that’s what I am referring to in the title of this article.
My own decision to break the silence was a massive step up in my own healing. The frustration I experienced when trying to explain what had happened to well meaning friends was always surprisingly difficult and at times frustrating to the extreme. I found myself once again thrown in to the old humiliating pattern of seeking approval and acceptance — a ridiculous state of affairs since I had done nothing wrong. And neither, by the way, had they. It was just that they couldn’t understand — exactly like Beatrix’s friends who decided she must be insane.
Breaking the silence is a powerful step to take. For me, I decided to write about my journey in a very public way when I started my blog. Fed up with trying to make myself heard by friends, I gradually found the confidence to express my inner thoughts and feelings to a growing audience of like-minded people. A process I found to be extremely cathartic. And my stories seemed to help others as well.
Don’t get me wrong – I’m not asking people to speak out or share their stories in such a public arena as the manner I chose. I’m simply inviting any of the silent people who have been there too – or who are still there in some cases – to know that you are not alone. I’m inviting you to reach out to the constantly rising number of people who understand. I realize, of course, that some may still choose to stay silent. And that’s ok. As I said earlier, the code of recognition is often a silent one – but at the very least it IS recognition, and that’s all it takes. It’s the relief of knowing that at least one other person understands and is on your side. And if you’ve kept things hidden away, known only to yourself until that point, well surely by finding just one like-minded person you’ll have doubled your team in one fell swoop.
As I write this, I am reminded of a comment made on this site by one of our members, who kindly shared the Latin roots of the word “person”. The word literally translates as “through sound” which denotes “can be heard” (thank you to libelle — much appreciated!). So I got to thinking — all of us here are human beings, people who can and should be heard. A person, by definition can be heard. We are all people who have something to say. We are the people who can break this unspoken code of silence.
One small step, that’s all it takes. One by one we’ll find each other. One by one we can join hands until we reach around the world – maybe further. Together we can stand strong, and put an end to this destructive cycle of abuse and shame.
I, for one, am determined to keep banging my drum and inviting others to join the crusade – because I know that together we can speak out. We can link our different stories and our unique voices together to create a harmonious choir. And together we can produce the sweetest sounds as our voices sing out around the world — warning new targets of the dangers, and inspiring deeper healing for those who already know.
Oxy-I AM grateful for a lot of things. I have made the list but it doesn’t make me happy. I don’t know how to be happy-in addition to being grateful. I am on the list to get a polydactyl cat soon and there is a stray at home that lives under my house too that has adopted me. I plan on getting a dog once I can be a cop and work 8 hr shifts. I think from now on I am going to be the spinster cat lady.
I am still just SO mad about what happened. That email she sent me makes me feel like such a gigantic fool and it’s embarassing. She clobbered me and I wasn’t expecting it and it was brought on by me having the nerve to tell her about what has been going on with me while I was away. I’m going to be mad for awhile.
Dizzy McLizzy you makes me dizzy…~!
Lizzy,
If you are traveling, how can you have a pet, a cat or otherwise?
You can’t just “become happy” overnight—it is not an instant fix.
The first thing you have to do though is to realize that BEING A COP is NOT GOING TO MAKE YOU INSTANTLY HAPPY. You still cling to that FANTASY.
FORGET ABOUT THAT WOMAN….your black and white thinking about her, one day she is a saint, the next she is a psychoapth, the next she is your soul mate, then you tell her you are gay and love her and she says she’s not gay, then she is your wonderful supportive friend then she is someone who doesn’t deserve your friendship….that BLACK AND WHITE THINKING is not VALID, you are swinging the pendulum WIDE and HIGH from BLACK to WHITE….so realize that there are GRAY areas in this life. Just because she was tacky to you doesn’t make her a demon. Just because someone is nice to you doesn’t mean they are an angel.
FOCUS on yourself, on being content with yourself JUST THE WAY YOU ARE. Then if you have a plan to get a job as a cop, fine, but the job is not what will MAKE YOU HAPPY, be happy and then get the job.
If you can’t get the job until you lose weight, then ACTUALLY lose the weight, you know how to do that, COMMIT to doing it not just giving yourself excuses of “I can’t exercise because of the heat, I can’t lose weight because I’m unhappy and upset, but I’ll be happy when I get to be a cop because that will be wonderful, ya da ya da”
If you want the job as a cop you need to either lose the weight and get the job or quit fantasizing about it.
I HAD to get real about losing weight instead of BS-ing myself, and I HAD to get real about low sodium diet, and quitting smoking, and so I COMMITTED TO ALL OF THE ABOVE and I actually DID it….got MORE TO DO, another 30 pounds but you know, I CAN do it, I AM doing it, because I made a commitment to ME FOR ME, and accepted my own responsibility for ME. Sure, I’d like to have a lover/friend/mate but I don’t have, but I’m going to be HAPPY ANYWAY. I’d like to look like I did when I was 18, but I don’t but I’m going to be HAPPY ANYWAY. I’m going to enjoy one thing today, and another thing tomorrow and all those little pleasures will add up to HAPPINESS. Find something pleasurable to do today for yourself. Explore your new city, go to a play, go to a park, go to a mall that is cool and walk inside.
Take pleasure in the small things and you’ll find happiness in the larger things.
Mel
You are adding so much value to this website and the blog.
Thank you.
SK
Oxy-I am losing weight as well as I possibly can without being in contact with my doctor-since I have female problems. I am not fantasizing about being a cop, it is GOING to happen and I am doing what I have to right now. This is financial as much as it is about weight loss. I am trying to downsize my life to take a big paycut-which includes paying off bills and being unemployed for 6 months really put a kink in that and put me behind. ALSO I cannot be a cop anyhow until either one of the two police departments where I live start HIRING again. They are just as affected by this economy as everyone else. So, yes I have some time to get my ducks in a row and do what I have to finish with my weight and money before that happens.
As far as the woman goes, she hurt me and I feel that pain. I can’t help it. Right now I am upset about that and you need to remember that I have to live next to her when I get home. I need to get over the hurt so that I can relate to her peacefully when I have to interact with her. There isn’t anything black and white about that. I don’t understand why you feel like I’m not allowed to feel hurt.
erin72- it’s like when we first come here and everyone screams ‘NC’ at us. it’s because we are caught in a fog and we don’t really understand that NC will help us immensely. I think we are all trying to get through to you, but you don’t see that – we are just unsupportive people who ‘don’t get it’ and make you angry when we don’t go along with your perception of your actions.
I have watched you go back and forth about your neighbour and your family a lot. I was shocked when you wrote that your dad was rubbing your back one night – ????? i thought he was an n you needed to stay away from, not a loving father there for his upset daughter.
Many of us who irritate you most here – and i include myself in that list, see patterns in your behavior that you may not, and that seem to be doing you harm. here’s my list: black and white (or all or nothing) thinking; emotional immaturity, dramatism, magical thinking, skewed self-perception, and a lack of discernment in interpersonal relationships.
I am particularly struck by your emotional immaturity in personal relationships. It’s not that you are not allowed to feel a certain way. for me it’s more like you keep setting yourself up and wallowing in it in the same way that teenagers do.
you can be a cop, you can lose weight. you can figure out how to deal with your neighbour, and it may hurt, but what would help you most is to figure out why you are so hooked, and how to get unhooked. from her and from your family drama. it’s not about her – it is about YOU.
one joy, irritating as usual.
Dear Erin,
I agree totally with One/Joy’s assessment. You have been in constant turmoil or pain since you came here with only the names of the “bad guys that hurt” you changing….and then the next week, those same people are the “good guys” (specifically, your N dad and your Neighbor woman) and you are “dying” because you can’t get a job and then you are “dying because…..” (fill in the blank) it is all BLACK AND WHITE…no shades of gray and you have this idea that WHEN YOU ARE A COP you will be totally satisfied and happy…which is “magical thinking.” NOTHING will “make” you happy. Even if you won the 100 million dollar lotto tax free you would not be “happy” for very long, you would find something to be miserable about.
I know this is NOT WHAT YOU WANT TO HEAR….and believe me, I’ve been on the RECEIVING END of some of these talks too….so I am not just “throwing stones” at you, Sugar, I KNOW how it is to be WALLOWING IN MISERY….and One/Joy has wallowed in hers until I got tired of listening….but now she is coming out of that wallowing, pity party shiat and she is getting her carp together and I’ve been saying for many moons now she is STARTING TO SOUND SANE, and I see a great deal of progress that she is MAKING both in her emotional and financial life, in taking care of One/Joy instead of just looking at what she doesn’t have she is making good things happen….you are not there yet.
You have got to first of all take some responsibility and be accountable….your drama-rama will not fly in the real world. I know it takes us different amounts of time to heal and to start to get our shiat together…but sit down and look at the pattern of your last few years…getting involved with a married man who demonized his wife, then ends up going back to her….and that causes problems for you emotionally and at work…then you get into it with your co-workers and/or boss and get fired on what were probably trumped up charges, but they were looking for a “reason” to fire you because of the drama that encircles your head and they made up something.
You started out to be a cop but were depending on the married doc to help your living costs when you quit your nursing job, but that is depending on someone else.
Depend on Erin, work for Erin, get happy with erin, LIKE and LOVE Erin….live life for Erin!
Keep on reading here Erin, and look up various articles on healing and don’t focus on them, but focus on yourselff, YOU CAN BE WHATEVER YOU WANT TO BE. COMMIT TO THAT! (((Hugs)))) and my prayers darlin, I am not just bashing you, I hope you know that, I am spending my time typing to you because I DO CARE. If I didn’t care, I wouldn’t waste my time. I also think One/Joy cares or she wouldn’t waste her time either. So ponder on what we said from that perspective. We do care.
Oxy and Erin,
I agree with everything you are telling Erin, except one thing: the n-father. He sounds like mine, in a way.
My dad also rubbed my back and hugged me and offers me money. It is all about control. He doesn’t know (I don’t think) that he is all about control, because he is an N and they don’t see how their thinking and behavior is skewed.
When he does things like hide his knowledge of people wanting to hurt me (like your son C, did) he really believes I deserve it and will learn better. When he hugs me, he thinks he is being magnanimous (sp?). It is ALWAYS ABOUT HIM.
He is such a loveable N that it’s hard to get past his “sweetness”, but I WILL. Because sweetness and all, he comes from a long line of toxic people and he is toxic to me.
Not every psychopath (or N) doesn’t do some nice things, and not every nice person doesn’t do something nasty once in a while.
I’ve been reading the posts on this thread. Wow!
I say that because the support here is priceless. The wisdom
and insight that people here, who have agonized for a long time when hitting rock bottom after an abusive r/s ended…is something that is hard to find elsewhere.
We go through life, not really seeing how we set ourselves up for hurt and pain. We get involved with people, not having the knowledge of “red flags”, and somehow, along with self doubt, low self esteem, and not feeling worthwhile enough…we allow people to treat us less than perfectly.
When I finally took responsibility for how I’ve made my life..with the choices “I” made…then I was able to learn and change the things that weren’t working.
It takes hitting rock bottom to finally wake up and face OURSELVES and look inside at what WE ourselves are doing to make our lives miserable.
It happenned to me a few years ago when my introspection led me here, at LF. After my marriage to a true Sociopath, I avoided relationships with men and many people. I was raising my 3 children alone..ages 2,3,4. No financial help..totally responsible to care for three little girls. I look back and wonder how I did it…and how I am still doing it.
I only got involved with one man, and I really wasn’t ready to get seriously involved with anyone because I had no time to grieve, heal and CHANGE. So, I attracted the same type of person basically. My self esteem was still low, and I allowed him to take advantage of me.
When I realized that staying with someone who was selfish and controlling and manipulative, I knew that I had to get out. But, as we all know, it isn’t easy once they suck you in to fill “their” needs..and manipulate you to think that they really love and care about you. I spiralled down…and when I hit rock bottom…and couldn’t do it anymore…I ended it.
Its been a long road back to ME. I finally realized that I had to rebuild MYSELF. Not look for someone “out there” to love me and take care of me…but to become INDEPENDENT…emotionally.
And, until then, I dare not get involved with another man!
Until I have the strength to DEMAND the best treatment from anyone..I will NOT seek out a close relationship!
Yeah, it gets lonely sometimes…but I was lonely IN the relationships I was in! Its worse to feel lonely with someone than to just get lonely because your ARE alone!
So, I have put all of my energy and effort into the few close people I have in my life…friends. There is nothing better than healthy friendships..give and take..with people like yourself..sincere, good hearted, stable. We DO attract people like ourselves.I am VERY selective with who I let into my life.
If you can’t GIVE..you don’t GET my friendship. I got tired of
always being taken advantage of. Now, at this point in my life…it really is all about ME. I do whatever it takes to entertain myself, take care of myself, fill my own needs…and
take care of my 3 girls. Thats my life right now.
I’m getting stronger and wiser and better every single day. The more I do for myself, the better I feel. I need NOONE to depend on for happiness. Anyone in my life, is just there to enhance it and make me feel better about myself. In other words..treat me like I treat you..or you lose me.
My whole point is that until we feel 100% good about ourselves, we will never attract the right people into our lives. So, we need to work on feeling good about who WE are.
The women I know who are in healthy relationships are all strong women. They demand and feel deserving of the best treatment, or they don’t bother. These women are MY role models. They are independent and strong.
This is what I am teaching my 16 yr old daughter…to be tough. Its a cruel world we live in today. And the strong and smart women are happier and have healthy relationships.
It all comes down to how you feel about yourself.