A reader posted the following comment on Lovefraud’s Facebook page:
“This website helps me too, but now, as I venture into the world of dating again, I find that my past is terrible hindrance. So difficult. Any advice gratefully received. Just want to be happy.”
Many times I’ve been asked, “After what your con artist ex-husband did to you, can you ever trust again?” Yes I can. I do. I am remarried, and I am happier now than I’ve ever been, in fact, I’m much happier than I ever was before the sociopath.
So how do you climb out of the abyss of profound betrayal? How do you recover? How do you move forward, to the point where you can actually love again?
Here are some lessons I’ve learned along the way. Maybe they’ll help you.
1. The only way out of the pain is through it
It hurts. Once you finally realize that your entire relationship was a mirage, that there was no love, that the sociopath’s intention all along was to exploit you, the pain is shattering. And, to make matters worse, you feel like a complete idiot for falling for the lies, for allowing the sociopath to take advantage of you as long as he or she did. Not only were you conned, but you participated in being conned.
You are filled with disappointment, despair, anger and outrage. You are totally justified in feeling these emotions, but they’re really unpleasant. It’s so painful, and you just wish it would all just go away. You may feel so overwhelmed that you ask a doctor to “give you something.” But although antidepressants may help you cope in the beginning, when the shock is so raw, they don’t solve the problem, they just mask it.
So sooner or later, if you want to recover, you need to face the pain head on. You have to get the toxic emotions out of your body, or they will eat you up. But you can’t analyze yourself out of the pain. Emotion is physical, and it needs to be drained off physically.
The only real way to end the pain is to allow yourself to feel it. I spent many hours curled up on the floor, sunk into my grief. I screamed in rage. I envisioned my ex-husband’s face on a pillow, and punched it until I collapsed.
Whatever technique you use to drain the emotion, you’ll have to employ it more than once, because there isn’t just one disappointment or one betrayal. Sociopathic relationships create layers of them, so getting rid of the negative emotion is a process. As you release a layer, another one will rise to the surface.
Here’s the good news: Getting rid of the pain creates space within you to feel healthier emotions, like peace, happiness, gratitude and joy. The longer you travel down this path, the more the balance shifts. Your negative emotional state gradually transforms into a positive state.
I can’t tell you how long it will take—everybody is different. But eventually, you can get to the point where you’ve released the pain. You don’t forget what the sociopath did, but it just doesn’t affect you any more.
It’s best not to start dating until you’ve made good progress in dealing with the pain of the sociopath. If you try to meet someone while you’re still wounded, there’s a good chance that it will be another predator. He or she will seem to swoop in to rescue you, but the real agenda will be to take advantage of you—again.
Wait until you’re feeling better before trying to date again.
2. Learn the core lesson
Sociopaths set out to exploit you, and they are fully responsible for the pain that they cause. Still, there was something within you that made you susceptible to the sociopath’s charms and promises. Even when you felt misgivings, there was something that made you doubt yourself, listen to their explanations, give them another chance.
After this terrible betrayal, it’s time for you to figure out what that original vulnerability was and heal it.
You may realize that you’ve experienced betrayal before. Perhaps your parents or other family members were disordered, and you grew up believing that manipulation and emotional blackmail were normal. Perhaps you experienced psychological, physical or sexual abuse, and never really recovered from those wounds.
Or maybe your parents did the best they could, but you still absorbed damaging beliefs. In my case, for example, I grew up believing that I wasn’t good enough as I was; I had to earn love by being the “good girl” or getting all A’s in school. Where did that idea come from? Well, perhaps from my parents. And maybe that’s what they learned from their parents, who learned it from their parents. Mistaken ideas can be passed down from generation to generation.
It’s time to break the chain.
Often, when you honestly examine the pain inflicted by the sociopath, you find that it is directly connected to some earlier, more hidden emotional or psychological injury. And that’s when you may realize that you can draw value from the run-in with the sociopath. As you release the pain of betrayal, you can go deeper to release the pain of the original injury as well.
But it’s important to be gentle with yourself. You didn’t know about the deep injury, or to protect yourself, you pushed it out of your awareness. Now you need a shift in consciousness. Now it’s time for you to believe that you are worthy, you are lovable, and you deserve the true gift of life, which is joy and happiness.
When you fully embrace these beliefs, you’ll find your life experience matching them.
3. Trust your intuition
You may feel that after allowing yourself to become romantically involved with such a loser, you can’t trust yourself to choose a healthy relationship. When you first end the relationship, this is probably true. That’s why you shouldn’t date right away. It’s also why No Contact is so important—it gives you the time and space to psychologically disengage from the sociopath, so you can escape the fog of manipulation.
But as you travel the road to recovery, you’ll become more comfortable believing in yourself, and trusting yourself. After all, you probably knew something was wrong with the sociopath, or the relationship, very early on. Most people do. But you didn’t listen to your instincts, and continued the involvement until it turned into disaster.
Here is what you need to know: Your intuition is designed to protect you from predators. Your intuition is the best defense you have against exploiters. So if you ever have a bad feeling about someone, if you ever sense that something is off, pay attention.
Of course, sociopaths are really, really good at the game, so you may not pick up a warning right away. It may be weeks, or even months, before you see some WTF? behavior. But if you see that first hiccup, or become aware of that first little twinge of suspicion, tune into your own feelings. If you keep getting negative hits, act on your instincts and end the involvement.
Then, don’t be upset that you attracted another one. Be proud that you caught on so quickly, before too much damage was done. It’s a sign of your recovery.
The more you clear away the trauma, the better your intuition will work. Eventually, it will tell you that someone is right and good, and that it is safe to open your heart again.
And then, with all the healing work that you’ve done, you’ll be able to experience true, fulfilling love.
But of course, I know that nothing like the “Bad Man” would ever happened to me again.
Too smart for that now.
Aloha
Oxy,
Yes, I have a good deal on my plate for the next few months and even years. I think that’s why I was upset at first.
It’s not a surprise at all that he loves me… I’ve always known he did (even in the way he expressed now), and he has expressed love for me before (as a person, as a friend, as soulsister) as well as sexual attraction, but not ever in this way… I just had truly and totally stopped hoping years ago he’d ever get the courage to admit it to himself, let alone to me. I always expected him to backtrack or leave an escape door open. So, that was the first shock yesterday, after first reading it.
And then I started to feel upset: what was I to do with it? For a moment I felt I was perhaps supposed to make some decision about this, commit myself, alter plans… And that is what I don’t want to do right now. It’s not because I don’t trust him, but because I made a commitment to myself for the time being and that has priority right now.
When I had slept a bit on it, and reread his message I came to understand he just wanted to make clear how much he does love me unconditionally. There is no pressure behind it. He doesn’t even seem to expect something from me at all. He just wanted me to know about it, and wanted me to have no doubt what kind of ‘loving’ he implied.
Aloha,
I doubt you would be so easy to fool anymore, you can have hope. As long as you are aware of YOURSELF, your own emotions and motivations, you can’t be fooled easily.
It’s amazing how I can smell a con from miles away now.
BF wanted to buy some machinery he found on Ebay. He thought it was a good deal. For some reason it smelled fishy to me. I googled the heck out the seller and found out he is advertising the exact same machine out of cities all over the country and he says “call me if you want to look at the machine.” The reason it seemed a good deal to begin with was because we thought it was nearby, but when we called him, he hasn’t answered. His “company” doesn’t exist, it’s located in a vacant house.
How could I smell the con? ONE RED FLAG: Frame control. I could tell he was very concerned with creating a certain image in the buyer’s mind. Normal people don’t usually need to do that to sell an item on ebay.
Aloha, as far as the bitterness goes, I can relate. I’m not really so bitter about my exspath, I’m bitter to find out that there are so MANY spaths!! My ability to smell a con is a double edged sword, it protects me from getting conned but it saddens me to know the truth, that humanity reeks with spath.
My spath once mocked me, “Living is easy with eyes closed.” I didn’t know why he said that. Now I do. He was mocking my innocence.
The con goes on.
I recently ran into my ex spath (liar, cheater, porn profile, etc.) with his new conquest. I checked around and found out he is now living in her house which is estimated at around 1.1 million. The best thing is her husband or ex (can’t figure that out) has his legal office at the house – the house has 5 bedrooms and 5 baths. The husband or ex – is some big deal lawyer – so is my ex now shacking up there with everyone? His lies are so good.
Lawyers are supposed to be good at figuring out the truth -so my ex would be a shoe in for political office.
It’s unreal how they can go from one to another – I knew my ex was always after $$$ and looks like he hit the golden goose…
When I first met him he said to me “I know how women think”…. scarey thought now… He does, he knows how to con women and have no remorse. He said to me he sleeps well at night – without a conscience one would..
Good luck to everyone who lives in that household…. It is just a matter of time.
Having had a p as a father, of couse I married a p and stayed through all sorts of hell for 33 years. I seem to pick bad guys to date as well, the ones who only want to use me for sex. I don’t understand, I think I’m attractive but the two I had gotten involved with only wanted to hang at my house and not take me out into public which hurt my self esteem. I think I need to put dating on the back burner. I did dump the duds I was seeing and need to look in other directions. I’m 56 and maybe I’ll be alone for the rest of my life. It would still be better than the hell I grew up in and the hell my marriage was.
cathy ann,
you nailed it. You think you are attractive. You very likely are. The spaths needed to take you down a peg. You aren’t allowed to think anything good about yourself, and they will see that you don’t.
they zoomed in on your attractiveness because they could see it was a source of self-esteem. They hate to see others have what they don’t.
Skylar, you said:
“I’m not really so bitter about my exspath, I’m bitter to find out that there are so MANY spaths!! My ability to smell a con is a double edged sword, it protects me from getting conned but it saddens me to know the truth, that humanity reeks with spath.”
How about the other side of that coin? Now you can spot spath-ness, but ALSO aren’t you a lot better at spotting people who are decent and good to the core?
At first, I was paranoid and afraid I couldn’t trust my own judgement. Now, I am getting to a place where I am not so easily fooled. I’m not saying it can’t happen — just that I am more often right than wrong about people, nowadays, and it does work both ways. I am more drawn to the good/kind/decent ones, and my spathdar helps alert me to the dangerous ones, and also I’m better at being able to discern the fence-sitters… it is still very much a work in progress, but getting better all the time. I’m developing more confidence in my discernment.
But you are absolutely, 100% right — going from innocent to disillusioned/bitter is very, very painful.
Going from disillusioned to realistic, though, is peaceful.
Czarinamom, lawyers are NOT the best judges of character. Lawyers are the best at sniffing out income.
An attorney is paid to research and perform. An attorney is paid to “represent” the “best interests” of their client, regardless of WHOM that client may be. An attorney doesn’t have to “believe” their client in order to represent them. An attorney doesn’t have to LIKE their client to represent them. The only thing that an attorney has that the average layman doesn’t is an education in Law.
My personal response to the subject of dating where I’m concerned is: hell no. Hayell no. Hayell TO the NO. Nope. Won’t. Can’t. NOPE. LOLOL
Donna, this is a great article which is of immense value in healing, even if we are not yet ready to date again. The principles still need to be applied to our recovery from them, no matter what stage we find ourselves in. Thank you for writing this.
Wow, Skylar, OMG, you really hit the nail on the head as far as my PDH/spath, when you wrote,
“cathy ann, you nailed it. You think you are attractive. You very likely are. The spaths needed to take you down a peg. You aren’t allowed to think anything good about yourself, and they will see that you don’t. they zoomed in on your attractiveness because they could see it was a source of self-esteem. They hate to see others have what they don’t.”
This envy is also what’s behind his issues with “Schadenfreude”, which means he takes pleasure in others’ misfortunes. He would rather spend his time and energy on bringing others (esp. me) down to his level and knocking the wind out of their sails in the process (this is what makes him feel good about himself and superior), instead of working on himself so that he too has those positive traits. He doesn’t know how to feel good about himself from within, so he uses others to make him feel good about himself, though the effect is only temporary. He is all about the negative, whereas I have always been all about the positive. He only pretended to be like me b/c he was mirroring, but I could not see that for a long time, which is why I was fooled for so long.
I think that the more we heal and recover from our relationship with the spath, the less we feel like “half a person” if we are not yet in a new relationship. But for a while, there can be an empty void, where the spath used to exist. Even when the relationship was bad, there is still a grieving process involved. Seeing others in happy, successful relationships can feel very painful, b/c it reminds us of what we once “thought” we had, which has sadly disintegrated. Yes, there are so many painful, heart wrenching, very difficult emotions we must process. We do have to allow ourselves to feel them fully, before we can let go of them and finally move on. Sometimes, we think we are through, only to discover we are not, if we have been triggered yet again in a deep way.
I think it is wise not to enter into a new relationship, until we first feel like a whole person again.
For me, it is learning how to be “me” again, independent of anyone else in my life. When I am “me”, I am not only connected to myself, I can also more easily connect with others around me, whether I already know them, or whether they are strangers I will probably never cross paths with again. I just naturally connect with others, when I am “me”. For what feels like the first time in my life, I do not always have the ability to be “me”, so therefore, I do not always have the ability to connect with others, let alone myself. Part of the damage I sustained while being in relationship with a spath was that I lost this ability to “be me”. But I am actively working on rebuilding myself and on regaining this ability, among others. It is all helping me improve my self-esteem, which was good when I met “him”, but which wasn’t so good, after taking many systematic hits from him that were designed to make me feel broken, and designed to break me, yet at the same time, were disguised as “innocent” remarks, gestures, behaviors, or actions. Of course, “I” always misinterpreted or misunderstood his real intentions, which were never what I initially thought those were, if you listen to him.
Like Truthspeak and others here, I have no interest in dating, let alone in having another romantic relationship. I too hate men. Not all men ”“ just some of the ones I have chosen, this last one in particular (the spath). I can appreciate the concept of romantic love, when others I know experience this and are in successful relationships, but for me, I want no parts of it.
I used to feel sad about this, but I no longer do. I now accept it. I realize that in the future, I may feel sad about this again at some point, if I find myself feeling lonely. But most of the time, I am okay with the thought of spending the rest of my days alone, or at least without a man in my life in the romantic sense. I’ve learned to enjoy my own company again. I’ve strengthened my ties with family and friends. I’ve learned to give myself time and space to grieve, or to feel my negative emotions, when those hit. Yes, I’ve had to do this at least several times each week. But after I do, that is when feelings of inner peace return. No, they don’t last, b/c right now, it is inevitable that the negative emotions will hit again. I am still living under the same roof with spath, so therefore, it becomes impossible to fully heal from the damage. I can only do so much with him still here. But at least that inner peace is there in some moments, which is more than I can say in terms of what I was going through before. Only some days, and only some moments, feel like hell on earth now. That is not a constant like it was, so I must be making progress.
But I still have difficulty “being me” all the time. I am still processing a lot of the emotional pain. A large part of it for me is the shock of what he’s done, which of course involves the betrayal components. Even though my rational mind knows what he’s done, a large part of me still can’t believe what he’s done. Not being able to get my head around what he’s done keeps me in part of the denial, I assume.
I swing back and forth between all the 5 stages of grieving. On the heels of feeling the shock comes the anger and depression, followed by the numbness again, and some level of denial accompanies this. I guess it is my mind’s way of not sending me into overload, b/c I can only handle so much at one time.
LookingForTruth, your frankness above is precisely why “dating” for me is out of the question. And, to clarify: I do not hate men. I mean that I DO NOT hate men. I hate sociopathy and the carnage that spaths create. I have known many, many women who fit the profile and they can be far more subtle and manipulative in their setups.
I think that the grieving process takes a good, long while. OxD’s response to my inability to imagine the loss of her husband was eloquent and bittersweet to me – I had always imagined myself with a partner that I would love until the ends of my days. I dreaded the anticipation in the event that HE would pass away, first. Well, in a sense, both exspaths DID pass away – at least, the fantasy of what they SHOULD have been died just a surely as if they’d both been struck by a train.
I don’t want to become stuck in the grieving loop. I think that “regret” would be the tether to swing me back around where I am concerned, and I so badly want to cut that cord so I don’t cycle back into those stages over and over, again.
Brightest blessings on your healing path, LookingForTruth.