Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail from a reader who we’ll call Carla:
Can you help me with co-parenting with a sociopath? Divorced three months ago, after a two-year fight for my rights. He is not complying as you know.
I am going crazy with the way he only shows his wonderful, smooth qualities to the children. I have three boys. I can’t stand sending them on weekends to a man who never calls them for two weeks and then lavishes them with charm and gifts. It makes me sick that I am struggling because he has not released even one of 26 accounts to me as decreed in the divorce settlement. He pays my bills and deducts them from the alimony. He follows the agreement under his own conditions and it confuses the attorneys. He won’t discuss the children with me or offer any assistance to them as a father. He is 100 percent focused on his new victim, his girlfriend, a new young, widow. Spending all the money he hid on her. But the kids have “buddy” to whisk them from one expensive activity to another while I am struggling to pay the bills.
I have greater anxiety now than when we were married. He openly emotionally abuses me. Before it was more covert and I got immune to the invalidation and blame. NOW I am discarded since I chose not to play by his rules of cheating, drugs, gambling, lying, withholding sex. He isn’t nice to me at all. Cruel. It was easier being married. He did all these things and he kept me blinded by being secretive and giving me a high-income surgeon’s wife lifestyle. I know the secrets now along with my attorney but he looks perfect in the community.
I miss the financial security and vacations. Now someone else shares those things with him and all I did was give him three beautiful children to brag about and add to his narcissism.
I say terrible things about him to the two older children, ages 6 and 13. I tell them how he is not following the agreement, lying and spending money on drugs and women.
Is so frustrating. I see what is real but no one else does. I am afraid my children are going to prefer him (and his girlfriend) because he is so charming and generous and I know he is pathological and I can’t give them the expensive gifts and ultra stimulating activities.
How do you deal with the frustration that you are the only person who knows someone is a sociopath? I had to live 15 years with him to figure it out and go through four therapists until the last one nailed him as anti-social/schizoid personality disordered. Then I validated her “diagnosis” with Lovefraud. He has all the signs with a very high IQ and status of a medical professional to hide behind. Will anyone else ever figure it out? I don’t believe that what comes around goes around when it comes to a sociopath as intellectually clever as my ex-husband. I do have a few very perspective people who picked up on it. I don’t think my kids will ever see it and I think he will destroy me even post-divorce. Why is he so relentless? He has his freedom and his money. Why not leave me alone? Is it because I get one-third of his income in alimony?
After the divorce
Probably the most shocking thing about divorcing a sociopath is that even when it’s over, it’s not over. The attorneys have argued, the court has ruled, this is how it’s going to be—and it’s not. The sociopath doesn’t comply, twists things the way he or she wants them, uses children against the other parent, and no one seems to care.
This leaves the non-sociopathic partner—like Carla—angry with the sociopath, frustrated that he’s getting away with his lies and manipulation, and upset that he won’t do what he’s supposed to do, baffled that no one else sees the truth—all while still mourning the life she thought she had. Carla wants her ex to pay her what he’s supposed to and be a dad to their children. He’s not doing either, so she wants other people to know that behind his charming, successful veneer, he’s vile.
It’s a toxic brew of emotions. But the emotions will never affect the sociopath. They will only affect Carla, and possibly her children.
It seems to me that Carla needs to be able to separate what’s going on into four categories: financial considerations, the children, dealing with the ex and her emotional recovery.
Financial considerations
First of all, Carla needs to get her financial situation straightened out. If her ex is supposed to give her 26 accounts, she needs to get that enforced—soon, before the accounts are empty. I hope her attorneys put a time limit on when these accounts are supposed to be turned over, and specified exactly how much money she is supposed to receive. If not, she is in trouble.
Carla cannot allow her ex-husband to pay her bills. By letting him do this, she is allowing him to control her. He is deducting the money from her alimony? He is probably exaggerating the amount of the bills just to pay her less. Plus, he may decide to stop paying the bills, and she would never know it—until the cable service or electric is turned off. Carla must demand that she receive the full alimony, then get her bills in her own name.
Carla did not mention a house and mortgage. If the sociopath’s name is on the house or mortgage, that is a disaster waiting to happen. He may stop paying the mortgage and allow the house to slip into foreclosure. He wouldn’t care, but Carla would have no place to live.
The children
Carla complained that her ex won’t discuss the children with her and won’t offer any assistance as a father. He doesn’t call them during the week and only wants to play with them on his weekends. I’d recommend that Carla use this to her advantage.
Here is the bottom line: Sociopaths are terrible parents. At best, they view children as prized possession. At worst, they actively try to corrupt the children. Therefore, the less interaction a sociopath has with his or her children, the better.
Carla should actually be grateful that her ex is staying out of their children’s lives as much as he is. She should use her time with the children to shower them with love, nurture them and provide them with healthy guidance. None of that will happen when the boys are with their father. The kids will eventually sense that there is no real bond with the father. As time goes on, they may also witness him moving from girlfriend to girlfriend, and eventually start rolling their eyes at yet another one.
Carla needs to be their rock of stability. She also needs to stop badmouthing the father—even if he deserves it. This is important for two reasons. First is the emotional health of the children—they should not feel in the middle of her issues with the ex. Second, she does not want to give her ex the ammunition to come after her with a parental alienation lawsuit, in which she could lose custody of the boys.
Her best plan of action is the stay neutral about the father. One mother’s standard response whenever her children brought home news of the ex was a noncommittal, “That’s nice.”
Kids are smart. Sooner or later, they will realize that the sociopath cares only about himself.
Dealing with the ex
Carla asks, “Why is he so relentless? Why not leave me alone?”
Divorcing a sociopath is not like divorcing a relatively healthy person that you’ve just grown away from. In a normal divorce, mommy and daddy don’t want to be together anymore, but they can cooperate for the sake of the kids. This is not going to happen with a sociopath.
Sociopaths only want three things: Power, control and sex. Carla and the surgeon have divorced, but that doesn’t mean he has given up his desire for power and control.
Carla says her ex-husband is openly abusing her. She must eliminate his opportunities to do this and go No Contact with this man as much as possible. I don’t know if she is allowing him into her home, but she shouldn’t. The child exchange should be arranged to minimize interaction. Any communications regarding the children should be conducted via e-mail. Phone conversations give him opportunities to abuse her.
The key is for Carla to be strictly business. She must recognize that the sociopath will not play nice. He will do everything possible to avoid paying her. He will continue to manipulate her through the children. She must learn not to react when he baits her. She must learn to be calm and collected, yet make him toe the line on his court-ordered obligations.
Emotional recovery
All of this is pretty raw for Carla right now—the divorce was only three months ago. She is outraged. She is frustrated. Carla misses the status, money, vacations and cozy lifestyle of a surgeon’s wife. She is justifiably angry that he cheated and hid money, and probably still reeling from being devalued and discarded.
Realizing that she’s been in a relationship with a sociopath has probably rocked Carla to the core. Nothing was real. Everything was a lie. And plenty of people in the community still believe the lie. This is a massive shock, and it takes time to come to terms with the magnitude of the deception.
Recovery is a process, and there is a lot of information here on the Lovefraud blog that may help Carla:
- She must realize that the ex is a sociopath, and this is the way he lives his life. Nothing she did or didn’t do would make any difference.
- She must realize that she was targeted, probably because of her good qualities.
- She must allow herself to feel her anger, disappointment, grief and even hatred—and then let it all go.
This will take time, and will probably come in waves—a wave of emotion, followed by a wave of calm. Eventually the emotional periods will be shorter, the calm periods will be longer.
Carla is in for many years of aggravation with this man. She needs to get to a point of equanimity, where his antics no longer affect her. When she gets there, no matter what the guy does, Carla wins.
Freemama, nobody deserves this – it’s just something that we’ve all had to learn to cope with.
The “happy ending” is being FREE of the spath. Take that to the bank, ladybug!
HUGS!!!!
Go back and request ALIMONY also……due tot he fact he’s making it impossible to keep a job with these games.
You need to find some way to back spath him…..to make him think twice about messing with you.
Money always seems to work! 🙂
How well do you know this babysitter….is she a good friend of yours……?
I agree…a po box you pay for in her name is a good option.
I do know…..since the tpo is for you and not the child…..the tpo court won’t get involved….but you need to raise this issue in family court.
EB is SPOT-ON!!!! Hit them in the wallets – it’s their only vulnerable spot!
Can you get alimony when you weren’t married? I’m thinking not. Oh, man – he would do the work thing a lot when we were doing exchanges at my work place. He just wouldn’t show up, wouldn’t answer the phone. It’s not pleasant to be in a railroad yard with a 3 year-old… I’d have to go home sick and get in trouble for “laying off on call”. I’m just envisioning that as my future now…
Freemama, it’s called PALIMONY…..and, depending upon your State, common-law-marriage may apply. A good attorney can get this done for you. 😉
Sorry…I was thinking you were married. My bad!
But buttons is right…..check into Palimony if you were together long enough…..and fit the criteria in your state.
Just checking in. The last paper was signed today – the second time my ex spath didn’t contact either me or my lawyer until the day before trial, ensuring that I spent lots of money in preparation. You can’t imagine how infuriating that was! Well… you probably can. The last order of business was our restraining order. He wanted to add language that I can’t “harass” his significant others or go to their houses. Ridiculous… I’ve known about his new girlfriend for months thanks to discovery, and I have NO desire to contact her. Just a way to “put me in my place”, I guess. Then he wanted to add language that our communication be “respectful” and “business-like”. I saw the writing on the wall for that one… he does his spathy passive aggressive/gaslighting/abusive stuff, and I have to take it “respectfully”. I saw that as a pretty clear indication that he was hoping to drag me to court over and over for contempt. No thanks. So today he offered to simply not have restraining orders. I went for it. If he’s gonna harass me, I know very well now how to get a restraining order. I don’t trust him for a second, but I’d rather take my chances than risk going to court again and again. So at the last possible second (AGAIN), he signed. It’s all over. He got everything he wanted (50/50, joint decision making), and I’m out $15,000. I had my first Christmas without my son, and am looking forward to New Year’s alone as well, thanks to this wonderful parenting plan. And the man who SWORE in document after document that he wanted to be actively involved in his son’s care and I was a total liar by telling the court he didn’t do anything, now he’s refusing to answer any questions about taking him to upcoming appointments or getting him on his insurance. He just ignores the requests completely. The “joint decision making” deal is that one parent makes a request, and if the other parent doesn’t respond in 5 days, that parent has the tacit approval to make the decision. To him, it says, “If I just ignore her, she’ll do all the work because she’s obviously the only one who cares about this”. My son is special needs. He has a LOT of appointments. Secretly I kidded myself into thinking he was sincere about wanting to do these things… he told the court I “wouldn’t let him”. What a joke. I should know by now. And of course, in the two short weeks since we signed the parenting plan he has given me no less than 5 extra days, which of course I am happy to take, but what the heck happened to the man who would do ANYTHING to spend even “one precious minute” with his son as he wrote to the court??? Jeez. At least I got child support.
I wrote before how the parenting class facilitator (the class he was forced to take for being abusive to our son) wrote glowingly about how far he had come. She even wrote that she was so impressed, she asked him to come back and mentor the class. She offered to testify on his behalf at his trial. Well, now that the paperwork’s signed, I called her up and asked if maybe there was a class that could help me deal with co-parenting with a sociopath. She recommended an “anger management” class, since I was clearly off my rocker with unresolved rage for no reason. I calmly explained that anger management was not appropriate for victims of domestic violence. She basically sat there on the phone and told me it never happened! She had never once spoken to me… that was how passionately she believed his lies. I wrote a brief e-mail explaining how sociopaths operate, especially in the court system, and recommended she read “The Sociopath Next Door”, and perhaps someone like me might benefit in the future by her knowledge that there REALLY ARE sociopaths out there, and they’re not too easy to miss when you know what to look for. I doubt she took it seriously… she sounded like a total bee-atch… probably a spath herself!!
Anyhoo, I’m doing okay despite it all. He’s tried to bait me so many times since the papers were signed, but thanks to the wisdom of all of you here, I recognize it for what it is and refuse to give him the energy he so desperately wants. I finally feel like I can deal with him. I’m just really mourning for my son. He’s only 5, and tells me constantly that he doesn’t want to go to his dad’s, and there’s nothing I can do. Maybe dad is giving him to me more because he simply can’t deal with the anger from the boy like I can. That’s fine. I just hate every second that he’s not here. That spath is not a father. Not anymore than swimming in a lake makes me a fish! He’s a monster who’s been given permission by the state and its endless parade of bureaucrats to kidnap my kid once a week. That’s what it feels like. Please please please someone tell me it’s going to get better!
Free:
It does get better……
and the more ‘time’ he has with Jr, the more bored he will become……
The more you ‘need’ him to coparent……the less he will.
So…….let him be the parent……’allow’ him more time, more access and more authority……like apts etc…..
DO NOT show anger……you know this….
Just let him think he’s winning…..
He’ll move along when he feels jr is no longer a prize to get to you.
It does get better…….just bite your tongue until then.
I’m glad you got the divorce final. That’s a HUGE step!!!!
freemama, think you might ask him to put a condom on before you ‘respectfully take it’, again.
you’ve got his number, and that poor sap of a facilitator is duped. she’s in for a rude awakening. it’s good that you tried – you had to. And you have given her info for when, not if, it all goes to hell.
‘He’s a monster who’s been given permission by the state and its endless parade of bureaucrats to kidnap my kid once a week.’ he WILL fuck up sooner or later and in such a way that it affects his rights. document and keep protecting yourself. the power you do have is to wait and seize the moment when it comes; you have that, and a big love for your son, and a damn clear mind, given the circumstances!
freemama,
(hugs)
make him think that you are using the time he has with your son to go to a spa and get your hair done. Don’t tell him, but drop clues – reciepts or face book posts or other ways. Soon he will be so envious that he won’t want the child. At that point sound angry and disappointed, tell him it’s unfair to the child that he can’t see his dad. It’s easy to dupe the spaths because they have no idea what normal is and they can’t tell when we are acting. They are stupid beyond belief, the only thing they have going for them is that we can’t imagine being that way. But once we do… game over.