This week while reflecting on the writings that most influenced my thinking about psychopathy/sociopathy, I received a letter from a mother of a five year-old boy whose father shows many signs of the disorder. She wrote:
Do you believe that children can show signs of being psychopathic? If so do you teach them to suppress the way they really feel by masking the problems with fake feelings? Can feelings of love really be learned? Just because someone on the outside appears like they have feelings does that mean inside they have actually changed? As you know they are good actors. The skill is learned very quickly to lie to blend in with the others. I bought your book off Amazon I should be getting it today. And i am also reading Dr. Hares book. I will try to look at your book some more today.
Shortly after my son’s father was arrested, I sat on my bed, with our seven month old baby asleep beside me, with the psychiatry DSM manual open to the page containing the criteria for “antisocial personality disorder”. I asked myself “do any of these criteria relate to common themes discussed in the child development literature.” I had to answer that question to know how best to mother my own child.
Interestingly, all the criteria mapped onto three developmentally acquired abilities: Ability to Love, Impulse Control, and Moral Reasoning. I then vowed I would read everything there was to read about each of these.
I started with Ability to Love. In my opinion the most important book about Ability to Love is Learning to Love by Harry Harlow, Ph.D. He is the scientist who demonstrated that a baby monkey clings to his mother out of pleasure in affection and “contact comfort” not because mother is a source of food. Prior to Dr. Harlow, scientists believed that the child learned to relate to his mother because she was associated with food.
The profound conclusion reached by Dr. Harlow’s research team is that babies are born to “learn to love” just like babies are born to learn language. We don’t come into the world talking but as our brains develop and we are exposed to language we learn to talk. Similarly, we don’t come into the world loving, but as our brains develop and we receive the right input we learn to love.
There are other interesting parallels between talking and loving including the observation that both are disordered in autism and both are influenced by genetics.
My world completely changed when I read page 44 of learning to love. It is on this page that Dr. Harlow discusses a very important developmental sequence. Ability to Love starts to develop before pleasure in aggression and competition sets in:
“The primary basis of aggression control is the formation of strong generalized bonds of peer love or affection… All primates, monkeys and men alike are born with aggressive potential, but aggression is a rather later maturing variable. It is obvious that a one year old suffers from fear and is terrified by maternal separation, but the child neither knows nor can express aggression at this tender age…This lack of aggression targets accounts in part for the fact that “evil emotion” culminates during the age-mate stage, long after peer affection and love have developed. It is the antecedent age-mate love that holds the fury of aggression within acceptable bounds for in group associates.”
Love starts to develop before aggression does, and has a head start in the race for the brain connections that form the basis of our values.
Now back to our 5 year old boy. I am very disturbed by the recent trend of referring to children as “psychopathic” in the scientific literature. Not that she does not describe symptoms of psychopathy, but to call a 5 year old psychopathic, negates the importance of learning to love and acts like it is an inborn ability.
I would say that this boy is learning disabled and requires extra help when it comes to learning to love. Just like speech therapy would help him if he couldn’t speak, love therapy will help him if he can’t love. Studies of autistic children show that a mother’s love makes a big differences for many severely affected children. Why shouldn’t we at least give this 5 year old the benefit of the doubt and give him love therapy.
Many studies show that the parents of at-risk children struggle with loving them. It is hard to love an impulsive child who goes after the cat with sharp tools. These parents are also harmed by suggestions that psychopathy is entirely genetic and firmly in place by age 3.
The focus on “discipline” also hurts these families because children need to learn to love. How can they learn to love if the people who are supposed to teach them are constantly yelling at them and scolding them or spanking them?
What is the answer?
An at-risk child is a full time job! Parents have to love that child 24/7 and not leave him alone to go to the kitchen to pick up the knife and go after the cat. Preventive positive parenting means waking up before the child, being there when he opens his eyes and saying, “I love you”. It means giving him hugs and kisses, playing and having fun together.
P.P.S. Because my family is Mormon and thought I should stay with my ex, even if he tried to kill me, beat me and was a Sociopath because they think “divorce is evil, no matter what”, and because my ex and I share the same group of friends, I have not been able to have ANY SUPPORT through all of this. I am with my son 24/7 without a break, EVER. I have maybe spent 8 hours away from him total, since the time he was born. There is no escape from my life.
JILL, JILL, JILL…..
You need help sweet….your exhausted and need a break….to rejuvinate JILL…….
STOP and remain in control of your own emotions until you can hire a sitter or have someone watch him for you…..
DOn’t let your mind go wild…..
I know how hard it is………it is a rollercoaster and you feel like you are being judged by neighbors, friends, the s etc…..
LIVE FOR YOU!
It’s all fear…..live for you my dear!
Try to figure out if you can do a co op with another mother, or if there is state funded mommy respit availablility…..or go to a babysitters club and get a teen for an hour or two….twice a week…..so you can have some peace!
If you are not good…..you will be no good to others…..
Don’t try to solve the world tonighj….
He is asleep……please do something for YOU!
Do not take him being a baby….maybe a hard to apease baby as personal……your not doing anything wrong.
Being a mother is the hardest job in the world……your in the tired adn beat up phase….
Try to keep it together…you CAN DO IT!!!
I’m sending you my mamma mojo…..
XXOO
Oh, dear Jill, I hear your pain! A baby that won’t stop crying is definitely a challenge, sometimes they ahve belly pain, sometimes people (medical people) have thought they might have headaches like migraine type things, but I had one who wouldn’t stop crying for 6 weeks, so I do know a LITTLE of what you are are giong through.
Believe me, if everything was “lovely” in your life, it would still be difficult to have a crying baby. It does NOT THOUGH IN MY OPINION MEAN HE IS A P—and I think Dr. Leedom will back that up as well.
1. GET HIM TO THE DOCTOR, and a good one.
2. HIRE A SITTER, even if you are so broke you have to sell plasma to afford one. GET SOME TIME AWAY FROM HIM. It is NOT healthy to never be away from him.
3. GET SOME REST!!!
Jill, your anxiety about being a good mother is showing, and your anxiety about him, and your PTSD as well. I wish I was close so I could keep him for a day or two and let you just walk in the woods and relax, but you DO need to get some time alone for YOU.
ERIN is right, you can’t solve the problems of the world tonight! Get some rest and we will see you tomorrow! ((((hugs)))) and my prayers sweetie!
Jill, not sure what state you are in, but some states will offer respite, Call child protective services. I think if you dial * 67 your number won’t show up. Say you might be facing a custody battle, so you don’t want any form of help that will hurt you, but that you haven’t been away more than 8 hours his whole life and can’t afford a sitter and just need some SLEEP.
Otherwise, go to any big church that has a nursery, and drop your baby off, go into the church, then slip out to the restroom, then go have a good cry there or in your car. Take a timer, so you are back inside in time. That used to be the only break I got when I had three foster kids that were so horrible that no one would take care of them for me.
IS there no low cost daycare in your area? His being lonely for a few hours a day will be more than made up for by having a rested mom.
Did he go rigid as a tiny baby, not want to be held? Even so, I know a person who was born like that, with definite P traits, but she has become a real success in life. A bit of a man eater, but otherwise okay. A wonderful daughter, really.
One year olds can still be molded. Read Dr. Leedom’s book. There is a big window of opportunity. I think at least until age 7. I have a wonderful friend who was adopted and diagnosed as having reacitve attachment disorder, and she is WONDERFUL today.
Justabouthealed,
Yes, he went very rigid all of the time as a baby. I took him to his doctor a couple of times a week. I searched (in one of the best medical areas of the country, if not THE best) for the perfect doctor. I did multiple “meet and greets”, in search of the best care for my baby I could find. No one could figure out what was wrong with him. I have done everything right, from the moment I found out I was pregnant. I didn’t even eat refined sugar or chocolate the whole time I was pregnant and nursing (I stopped nursing at 17 months old). I did everything I could and went to multiple specialists. I signed myself up for all sorts of “Visiting Moms” programs, city programs, Early Intervention and early relationship support therapists for help. NO ONE could figure out what was wrong.
I have so much anxiety about what happened with his dad that I’m OCD about him. I can’t bear to let someone watch him for a second, other than myself. I was raped for the first time at age 6, and so I’m scared out of my mind of someone hurting him. I don’t trust anyone with him, so all of the money in the world won’t solve my problem of not having a sitter.
Dear Jill,
The OCD (as you call it) and your hyper anxiety about leaving him with someone is understandable, but you must realize that it is hurting YOU and also hurting your child, because his mother is not able to get proper rest.
You said you were getting both group therapy and private therapy. do you take him to therapy with you? If not, who keeps him?
Your cry of pain and saying that you wanted to adopt him out, I know is not what you really feel, but a desperate cry for relief from your anxiety and your physical and mental exhaustion. (If you can’t leave him with someone for a few hours, how could you give him up to other parents?)
Jill, all the advice I can give you on line I do not think is enoug hfor the seriousness of the problems I think you have going on. Your own rape, your abuse at the hands of your child’s father, and your abandonment and emotional and physical abuse by your family is a LOT for one young woman to handle, plus take care and comfort an infant who is collicy. (however you spell that!)
Sweetie, you are not crazy, you are reacting the normal way anyone would react in such a stressful situation. ((((Hugs)))) You’ve just had more stress than is “reasonable” to expect to “get over” in a couple of years, and it hasn’t been all that long since you were seriously fearful for your very life!
Maybe your therapist can recommend some solution to your problems and your need for rest. Also you may have some post partum depression (I know it is late after the birth but with all the stress you have had anything would be understandable) Call your therapist. (((hugs))))
Oxy,
Yes, I take him to therapy with me. The therpist allows it because many of the other women in the group are low-income.
Oxy,
The cut-off age when they don’t allow us to take our children to therapy is 3 years old, but I suspect my son is already too old for group, as he shows signs of being VERY stressed out after my group.
Oxy,
I responded to a lot more of your post and had a very long post, but it somehow “disappeared” as my baby woke up screaming and my neighbor started throwing things on her floor. Gotta go.
jillsmith, I’m out here in cyberland saying a little prayer for you. 🙂