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.
I am worried about my son. He does not seem right. I feel guilty for saying or thinking this, but it is what it is. I know most people tip-toe around the subject of Sociopath’s offspring, in fear that a parent will treat them differently if they know what they are at a young age and that a parent might look for behaviors that aren’t there. This is NOT the case with me. I love my son so deeply and truly. I do everything for him and then some. Knowing what he could become does not change my love for him. I am someone who does not like things to be sugar-coated, so can someone please honestly answer my question?
Did you see anything abnormal about your Sociopath child when they were toddlers? Please be honest. If I don’t figure out what is wrong with my baby, I think I may go out of my mind. I need to know how to help him. He’s not right. There’s no way around it. I have worked with babies my whole life. I knew what to expect. I was very close with my 13 nieces and nephews. I have never, ever, ever met a baby like mine. He has his dad’s personality. I love him deeply, but am so concerned about his little personality and behavior. I don’t know what to do. I’m so worn out by him. I am at a complete loss. Leaving his dad did little good. I feel that there is a part of him inside him.
I can’t help but remember when his dad was driving at 100+ mph on a highway, promising to run into a semi the second he came upon one. He was banging his fist into his head and screaming, “I’m going to kill all three of us” over and over again. I had just found out I was pregnant and he had forced me on a hike that was 24 miles long in 12 hours in the Grand Canyon. I had a broken toe from when he had thrown a dining room table at me and then slammed me in the door a week later. He had been making me go faster and faster when I could barely walk during the whole hike. That night, at the hotel, I took a pregnancy test and found out I was pregnant. The next day, on the way home, is when he had his scary driving tirade. I thought I was going to die. I tried to brace myself for impact, in a tiny ball. I prayed to God and plead with my dead mom to save me. I begged my ex to pull over. He kept saying how he was a “bad seed” and that he should have never been born and that he was going to save the world from his offspring and that his baby was going to be a “bad seed” too. I finally talked him into pulling over and I lived that day.
That background brings us up to speed. Please believe me when I tell you that I’m not suicidal at all. I am very loving to my baby and am so happy I have him in my life. At the same time, I’m scared to death of this situation and what my baby’s personality is showing. I think it’s just survivor’s guilt, but I think that my ex was onto something that day. That is all. Please don’t flame me or judge me or read between the lines. This is very difficult and painful for me to admit and I have kept these feelings inside me for so long that it’s eating me alive.
I dreamed of being a mom for so long. I wanted it way more than any of my friends. There is nothing I wanted more. I believed I was a good, kind, loving person that had much to offer the next generation. I wanted to raise someone to be compassionate and giving. I wanted to make the world a better place for many generations through my offspring. I prepared so hard for it my whole life. Having a baby was my greatest dream-come-true. Now, I’m scared to death that I might have made the world a worse place by breeding with my exS.
Again, please don’t judge me. I’m very fragile right now.
I’ll add that this episode was in the Grand Canyon in July. The temperature was 118 degrees. I couldn’t figure out why I was more hot than usual and why I kept throwing up and passed out twice on this hike. Now I know because I was pregnant in the Arizona heat with a Sociopath who had kept me up, beating me for weeks at night!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
P.S. I’m so, so, so very tired.
Jill, tell us what you are noticing in your son.
also, i detect in you that you are experiencing a cycle of PTSD. that’s how it is. It doesn’t just get better each day, it comes in cycles or waves. better for a while and then worse.
I’m in a worse stage right now too. It is set off by triggers, things that set off an emotional reaction, bring on the waves of anxiety.
So please tell us what is concerning you.
Okay, Jill,
Let me answer your question….STOP WORRYING ABOUT YOUR BABY, THERE IS NO WAY YOU CAN DO ANYTHING BUT WORRY, BABIES ARE BABIES, and you need to go buy yourself a cast iron skillet and everytime you start to think there is something wrong with your baby, BOINK YOURSELF UP SIDE THE HEAD REALLY HARD!!!!
Honey, I know there are genetic tendencies in psychopathy, but you child can’t be displaying his father’s “personality” at a year old! YOU ARE BORROWING TROUBLE, WORRYING WHEN THERE IS NO WAY YOU CAN DO ANYTHING BUT STRESS YOURSELF OUT.
You might as well worry about “what if my child goes blind” or “gets bone cancer and loses both legs?” or “what if he turns out to ….._____ fill in the blank!
Jill you are MEGA ANXIOUS and “borrowing trouble” I know you love your son, but your worrying is worse for YOU and HIM.
Just LOVE HIM and he will be HIMSELF. Teach him to trust, and to return love, that is all any of us can do with our children. Setting expectations for our children to be X, Y, or Z is setting themselves and ourselves up for failure.
Sure, we all want our children to be good, warm, and caring people, but sometimes our children are marching to their own drummer. It is OK. Not every child with a psychopathic parent becomes a psychopath, I have one wonderful son besides my psychopathic one. He is ADHD and was a “challenge” to raise, but he is a caring and wonderful man who will turn 40 tomorrow and I am so proud of him, and the kind of man he has become. Is her perfect? Nope, but that’s okay. did he become the PhD I wanted him to be? Nope. But he is happy with his work and with his job and with his life now, and is a loving man. What more could anyone want!?
Relax, and let your baby be WHO HE IS, and don’t start “borrowing trouble” Or I will have to get my skillet out and boink you! Lovingly of course!!! ((((hugs)))) and my prayers for you sweetie!
Okay Jill:
Talk…….
As I recall your son is a toddler?
I am reaching at stones here…..but no matter what or who your son turns out to be…..good/bad/ or ugly…..there is only the nurturing you can make a difference with now….
You can’t live teh next 18 years, until he is an adult in fear of this.
I know others here can direct you to books recommended for such thoughts….
Just like his father is one…..
I beleive the only thing you can do is continue to show him love, support an nurturing…..allow lifes consequences to ‘happen’….you touch a hot stove, you get burned…..kinda stuff….and try and be aware of protecting him too much from any of this…..I’ts really a hard thing….and I look back and see how I was overprotective with my kids…….can’t go back…..but we are all changing now! I didn’t know I what I was protecting them from and who……but if I had of backed off, the trasition would have been a bit easier I think.
I went from mama bear to mama bear after they leave the den……
I would recommend you prioritize what you have to tackle in your life……and if indeed your son is very young….it is not worrying whether or not he is or isn’t a s.
So….what if he is……..what would you do?
So….what if he isn’t…..what would you do?
Nothing different……he’s too young and just needs love and nurturing.
So……go get in that tub…..get that good book and let your mind go free….
Remember…..99% of what we worry about is in vain!
XXOO
Sorry Jill…..Oxy and I posted over each other…..
You got the double whammy!
XXOO
Oxy,
If I were to describe my son, I would say that he came out of the womb with his fists ready for a punch. I have never seen so much angst in a baby. I have met his months of colic and screaming at me with so much love, gentleness, love, affection and compassion. I am only admitting all of this after he has gone to sleep, in hope I can renew myself enough for round #4,890,745 in the morning. I feel beaten up. I have never, ever known a baby like this. All of my neighbors have constantly complained about him and throw things on their hardwood floor, which sound very loud on my ceiling, which does not help my PTSD, especially with his screaming. Everyone on the board keeps telling me how much easier a baby is than what comes later and that makes me want to well, it just is not good for my emotions because he already has me hanging on by a thread. To other people who attack him and his behavior all day long, I defend him tooth-and-nail, because I’m his mama, but it has worn on me. I just need to figure out what is wrong with him. I’ve never been anything but loving to him and patient, with much affection, so why do all of the bad moms around me have such nice babies? What in the hell am I doing wrong??????????????
I think I am going to look into having him adopted. The bad part about this? His dad is still technically a legal parent, even though paternity has never been established because I have fought (with my attorney) tooth and nail to make sure this is never done. If I were to ever be gone? He would go to his father. I can’t have him adopted because he would just go to his father and obviously I can’t do that, but I can’t keep going on like I have been doing so because I just can’t. You have no idea how hard I have tried. I JUST CAN’T ANYMORE!
P.S. My ex and I were still legally married when I had my son, even though I had not seen him in months. The bad part of that news? By the laws in both the state my son was born in (my state now) and the state he was conceived in and the state my ex was granted a divorce in (without my knowing. . .), he is considered his dad’s legal son, no matter what. I have no solution to this problem. If I even were to check myself into some kind of hospital, with upcoming custody battles, his dad would get custody. I have no solution. I AM SO TIRED!