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.
Skylar, your question about envy, and not finding enough people not filled with it, is interesting to me.
I’m guessing it’s NOT that easy to dissipate envy, for most people.
This probably is a continuum. I have never had a big problem with envy, but I have noticed that others seem to be caught up more in it than I am. And as I’ve gotten older, I’ve become even less envy-prone, while some of my childhood friends seem very stuck in it… and this has bothered me.
I think we can view it as a boundary issue in some ways. If we envy, then we want something which is not ours, and probably we want to TAKE it from the other person so WE can have it, rather than share in it (either one is a boundary issue).
I also like to view it through the Bowen Theory of differentiation of self, and in this theory, more-differentiated people would be less envious of others, and below a certain level of differentiation, the individual would be oblivious to their “envy problem” and it would be hopelessly entrenched.
I see it also as one end of the continuum being very sticky, and dark, and you can’t see your way out of it, you don’t even know there is an “out of it” place… and if you do, then it is a sort of grasping, “gimme” what’s out there, even if I have to snatch it away from you, and take it for myself. But the farther out of this end of the continuum you get, it is less sticky and dense, and there is more room and light to see that we are separate people with individual rights and no need to covet what others have. And I imagine, at the far end of the continuum (the “saintly” end or more differentiated end), it is back to experiencing oneness or all-ness, and is a place without ownership where sharing of yourself with others can be done with reverence and respect.
And depending where we are on this continuum, is how we see things. So, different levels of awareness and framing of human interaction, different emotions in reaction to our differing experiences and interactions with others at various stages of development or places along the continuum.
To answer: I think most people have blindspots about their weaknesses. I think this unawareness is what makes it difficult to advance or progress. I think that is actually what progress along a path is: developing awareness, removing veils or blindspots, realizing that there is more yet to learn (i.e., I do not have all the answers yet!). I also think this is why Jesus said, “they know not what they do” — it is a matter of realizing our ignorance, or that we misperceived and acted or thought accordingly. Only then can we correct our mistakes.
or maybe I DO have an envy problem too, but I’m blind to it LOL
20years,
I can see how envy would be a “hidden” emotion since it is derived from shame, which in itself is hidden. Shame is not even talked about because it even shames us to talk about shame. Envy used to be avoided in the same way, but now people have disconnected it from shame to some extent and I’m seeing it used in ADVERTISING, of all places.
There’s a hair salon called Envy, there are teeshirts emblazoned with the word and I even met a VERY narcissistic woman who NAMED HER CHILD Envy!
It has become, I think, a goal for some people, to be envied by others. Oh my! if they only knew the ramifications of being envied by a spath. I think the reason people need to be envied is because it helps to overcome shame. When you envy others it is because you think they are better than you and you are in a shamed position in comparison. When they envy you, the roles are reversed. You can discharge your shame onto the ones who envy you.
This explains why people are so materialistic, the more stuff you have, the better chance you have of being envied and not shamed.
Michael Lewis, the researcher on shame said (paraphrased), “shame is like a subatomic particle. One’s knowledge of shame is often limited to the trace it leaves.”
I’d also say that shame is like a game of hot potato, you won’t get burned as badly if you can pass it on to the next guy!
20years, I don’t “envy” what I perceive to be happy/healthy unions or relationships. I’m happy for them, but I have to say that I DID envy them shortly after the discovery of the exspath’s activities.
In light of my experiences, I have really, REALLY got to reign in my distrust and suspicions that everyone out there is involved with a sociopath. I have to stop LOOKING for red flags, signs, and symptoms of spathy in every relationship and remind myself that spath red flags will wave themselves about of their own accord – I don’t have to go looking for them.
Additionally, I cannot allow myself any type of inner glee that someone realizes that they’ve been invovled with an spath. That anyone else might experience the same things is a tragedy, and I won’t smirk, nod, and say, “See? I told you so.” Although it might stroke my bruised ego that someone else will be able to identify what I’ve been going on about, it is nothing that I woud wish upon another human being. THIS is something that a lot of us experience, I think – not that it makes us “bad” people, but it’s something for me to keep in mind.
I want there to be happy people out there. I want there to be honest, genuine, and healthy love. I want there to be honest, genuine, and healthy relationships between friends, lovers, family, coworkers, etc. I want all of these things for humanity. But, these “wants” do not screen out the facts that there are bad, mean, selfish, and predatory people out there. Evidence of happy, healthy, genuine relationships provides me with an inner peace, and I am happy for those people even if it’s a bittersweet happiness.
Brightest blessings
Skylar, awesome references to the shame-core!!!! YES!!! Shame. Makes absolute sense.
And, I just wanted to make a general, off-topic observation, Skylar – I was reading an article this morning from 2009. You have come a long, long, long way down your healing path!! You are a true inspiration – you and ALL of the insightful LF peoples. HUGS!!!!!
Truthspeak,
thank you. I’m still learning – every single day.
I’d be curious to read the posts you read from 2009, (it’s so hard to find old posts).
The shame thing is a new discovery for me. I now understand that it is what I’ve been calling SLIME.
It’s amazing that shame can be so hidden that I didn’t even have a word for it, didn’t know what the feeling was, didn’t know how it works, what it does, never even thought about shame. It’s the pink elephant in the room that nobody can see.
Skylar, I was trying to find the appropriate board to discuss recurring dreams under the topic of “Healing From A Sociopath,” and came upon “After the Sociopath Is Gone: Our Thoughts Become Our Reality.”
As I was reading the last couple of pages of this thread, I saw your posts and I am humbled by how far you’ve come – along with many other LF ID’s that I recognized. I’m inspired and comforted that there is actual evidence that spath victims not only SURVIVE but EMERGE and EVOLVE into stronger, wiser, and self-confident human beings.
Brightest blessings – thank you for the hopeful comfort of your recovery!
I have been out of my sociopath relationship for about a year now. I have been dating a very nice woman who I met about 7 months ago, but I didn’t start getting serious until March. Memories of my last relationship continue to haunt me. I was truly in love with this last person, and the revelation that the entire relationship (and engagement) was little more than a scam to get money really hurts. The person I am with now is beautiful and real, but for some reason, relationships no longer feel “magic” to me. It’s like whatever allowed me to completely open my heart and let go in my last relationship died with my last relationship. Now, like the sociopath that stole my love, I can no longer feel love.
I care greatly for my new girlfriend. I believe there is a wonderful future with her. I can’t let my slow recovery endanger what I now have with her. My internal struggle is my own private burden. I am trying to overcome it.
Dear Hungedu,
I’m sorry you are having trouble feeling love again, but may I kindly suggest that you not “be serious” with another person until you CAN feel genuine love for them. This may take a while and ask the person to be patient with you.
Many times I think when we are in pain we look for another relationship to heal that pain and unfortunately, no other relationship can heal the pain of the old relationship and the grief that we have not fully processed. I was a widow and in pain when I ended up getting involved with a psychopath. Of course I’m not suggesting that your current relationship is with a psychopath only pointing out that you may not be fully ready for another relationship until you are FULLY healed from the painful one. I was seeking I realize now in retrospect (isn’t it amazing how hind sight is 20/20?) I was looking for a new love to heal the pain of the loss of my husband, when in truth it only for a time covered up the pain.
YOu might want to consider taking the relationship with the new person slowly until you have fully recovered from the first bad relationship. good luck and God bless.
Thank you for the advice. Yes, I am taking it slowly. We live a good distance apart, and that helps make it go a bit more slowly. When I said, “serious”, I meant “exclusive”. We only spend a weekend together every couple of weeks, so it does provide some healing time for me. She is aware of the circumstances of my last relationship and understands my pain. It’s a work in progress. If I am ever to completely move on again, I hope it will be with this person. She is great.