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.
p.s. sky – your writings about your mom are very interesting. SHE didn’t see YOU for what YOU are. i think all spaths are like that. I know the times when the spath thought i might be hiding something or not revealing something, she was enraged…because she could only think that i must be like evil her, not that there were perfectly ‘ordinary’ reasons for omissions or that things read a completely different way to the NON DISORDERED.
Wow, One Joy, you’re mean!
😉
couldn’t you have used the pity ploy? Like, “I’m sorry but I’m brain dead right now and if you could just push the buttons and make it GO, I’d be awful grateful, m’am.”
I only get vicious when I’m in the hospital. Then I threaten to murder people. but that’s justified, isn’t it? 🙂
yes, I think my mom sees others as extensions of her, to be used as a way for her to create her own reality. She doesn’t manipulate that much, it’s just that she is disconnected from other people as humans. It’s like she’s 4 or 5 years old.
I feel sorry for her. to a great extent. Unfortunately, I also think that I trigger certain things in her, like envy and dislike. My spath bro also does that. She only “loves” my little spath sis.
When spath sis and I were in the hospital after a car accident (i was 18 and sis was 15), my mom wouldn’t come see me. She only would go see my spath sis. We were in different hospitals because she had a head injury and I had internal injuries. My dad came to see me. and later my mom came WITH my sister when she got released.
This thing with my parents is the one biggest things that I cannot seem to overcome. It’s bigger than me. It’s crippling me in every way. When I think about them, my brain literally ceases to function except to contemplate them. It’s a huge rumination and focus on them. I can’t even describe it.
sky, no, i so didn’t want to engage with her. no thinking, no strategy, wasn’t able to. IF i had said something like that she would have continued talking….so not the affect i was going for.
i can really feel the enormity of the situation with your parents. its visceral. i was saying to someone tonight that i am ‘stupid’ when i am anxious. i just lose brain power and don’t act in my own best interest as i am not present. you go away when you try to look at the situation with your parents – you go away to being a good child…focusing on the parents/ their needs. but, you TRY Sky. keep at it, it WILL crack. a question that comes to mind is: ‘if i could focus on myself when i think about my parents, what would that look like?’
we are OF them, in every way. groomed to be supply – by intent or circumstance, with years of thinking of them first, or soley. changing this is formidable, as we become orphans if we succeed, and i think we fight against that. if we have no parents then we are closer to the grave. if we have no parents, we are well and truly alone. if we have no parents, do we have a past? (if a tree falls in the forest….)
I have such a profound feeling of discontinuation in my timeline – somehow, now feels very separate from 2 years ago, and my entire life.
in fact, i think i might start saying that i am an orphan. i came from people…but now they are gone. …just like the spath story, it wasn’t real. i am a good person. my family doesn’t deserve me. (and neither does the cashier.)
i want to do the national geographic genome mapping for both the maternal and paternal sides of my family. i want to know where i come from. i am an orphan.
on the subject of hospitals and homicidal rages…i remember almost taking out a nurse a few months ago….
i think it would be most helpful to write a list of places i need to wear a muzzle to.
ROTFLMAO! muzzle….
When I told the nurse I was gonna kill her, I was completely immobilized, suffering from internal bleeding and could only talk in a whisper. I asked her to come closer so I could whisper in her ear. She ran out of the room crying and never came back! That’s what I wanted because she was physically hurting me in her desire to follow regulations and turn me over to avoid bedsores.
It’s funny how spaths think I’m a pushover, isn’t it?
It must be from being raised by spaths. I have that duality thing going on.
But the parental units…argh.
what would it look like? I would feel nothing for my parents. That’s what I want. It’s frightening because spaths feel nothing. I don’t want to be that, but is there any other answer? I need to be able to function.
okay, i LAUGHED aloud at your asking her to come closer to whisper in her ear. i got that duality thing going on now, too.
maybe if we let THEM go sky, then there is space for ourselves and for others. sure as hell isn’t, if we hold on to them. it’s about us having the capacity and surplus to love ourselves and potentially others, if our minds are not bent into little parent shapes. to stop caring for them isn’t about not caring – it’s about caring for US.
peace out. really nice to write to you tonight sky.
Skylar,
the part about your mom seeing others as extensions of her… that is such a hard thing for a kid to come to terms with — I think it may take a lifetime. It is hard enough when that person is your spouse. But if it’s what you’ve grown up with, very tough. Especially if there is no overt abuse involved.
I had some of this in both of my parents — never any overt abuse, though (other than an occasional hurtful comment that I tried not to take personally because none of us is perfect, right?). And that is all I knew.
Then I married it! But a much worse (overt) version. Then left. Then another, but back to the covert narcissism… then I left him, too.
It has been this successive encounters with it, in various guises, that has helped me finally nail it down — I mean, like a bug on a pin, I have this thing nailed.
i sometimes wonder, why did I even ever have to go through this in the first place?
The only answer which brings me any comfort is a spiritual development explanation. Any other way of explaining it (i.e., “life isn’t fair” or “you made poor choices due to low self esteem”) brings me no peace at all.
But thankfully now that I have about 50 years under my belt, I can see the progression and patterns more clearly, and am very grateful that I’m at this point in the journey. What a difficult ride it has been!
20years, I don’t like these “lessons,” either. I don’t think any of us do. And, just why any particular person ends up having to learn them wouldn’t help me if there even were a plausible answer.
In Tolkien’s written trilogy, “Lord of the Rings,” there is much discussion about Gollum being pitied and being spared, even though he definitely deserved to be put to death. Some things have a part to play in life, though even the wisest can’t see what that role is. That’s the way I have to sort this out for myself. For whatever reason, I’ve been dealt this hand and I’ve chosen the wrong cards, so far – time to start counting cards, reading the “tells,” and turn my life around to accomplish something meaningful.
Brightest blessings!