At a Christmas party on Saturday night, the conversation turned to hot water radiators. My husband, who is mechanically inclined, explained to a woman, who was trying to save money by conserving heat, how to bleed the air out of an old-style hot water heating system.
Eventually, the conversation revealed why the woman was trying to save money. She’d purchased an old farmhouse for her business. She secured a $150,000 construction loan to renovate the house and retained a contractor. The contractor insisted on installing the thermostat for the hot water heating system on a wall directly across from a wood burning stove. (For those of you who are not mechanically inclined, this is a really dumb idea.) The contractor also told the woman that she couldn’t insulate the farmhouse because moisture would create a mold problem. (This is true, but it is a problem that is readily solved, and insulating the house is a really good idea.)
Further conversation revealed that the contractor, who was president of some kind of historical building society, had not completed $70,000 worth of work for which he had been paid. The bank repeatedly came to inspect the job, bought the guy’s stories about why the work wasn’t done, and released the next installment of money. The farmhouse owner, of course, signed off on all the payments.
At one point a bank representative asked the farmhouse owner, “Are you sure about this guy?”
“Oh, he’s fine,” she replied. “He’s the president of the historical building society.”
The contractor hasn’t paid the subcontractors, and they’re demanding their money from the farmhouse owner. She hired a lawyer, who went along with a plan suggested by the contractor’s lawyer, which was useless. So now the woman is trying to save her home and her business. Plus, she’s cold.
“Sounds like you’re dealing with a sociopath,” I said.
I don’t know if this woman has any good options. We suggested that she sue the bank, because the bank released the money. But she approved payments, so that may not work. She can’t afford another lawyer. As has happened to many of us who have dealt with sociopaths, she may be stuck holding the bag.
Fort Dix Five
This woman may suffer terrible financial losses. But others involved with sociopaths lose much more.
A few weeks ago, in The con man, the thug and the jihadists, I wrote about the five young Muslim men who were on trial for plotting a terrorist attack against U.S. soldiers at Fort Dix, New Jersey. Most of the prosecution’s case was based on conversations secretly recorded by an informant, an illegal immigrant from Egypt, who was paid $240,000 by the FBI.
I predicted that the jury would see that the informant was a con man who manipulated the young men. I predicted that the defendants would walk. I was wrong.
The five young Muslims were convicted of conspiring to kill military personnel. They were acquitted of the more serious charge of attempted murder because they didn’t actually do anything. Still, they all face life in prison.
Yes, they did go to a shooting range in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, shot at targets and shouted “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great.” They videotaped themselves doing this and brought the tape to a Circuit City store to be converted to DVD. One of them also downloaded violent jihadist videos from the Internet.
But would they have actually have gone any further? Would they have even discussed plans, which were nothing more than vague, wild ideas, if they hadn’t been goaded on by the sociopath, who was being paid to keep them talking?
I know how convincing sociopaths can be, so I don’t think they would have done anything without his encouragement. But I wasn’t on the jury, and the people who were apparently don’t understand sociopaths. So the young Muslims were left holding the bag. They may spend the rest of their lives in prison.
For his efforts, the con man informant, who was twice convicted of bank fraud, was promised legal residency in the United States, courtesy of our Justice Department.
Education is key
The consequences of entanglements with sociopaths are always negative, ranging in scale from unpleasant to deadly.
That’s why Lovefraud’s mission is to educate people about sociopaths. Right now, most people find Lovefraud because they’re already entangled with a sociopath and facing the consequences. We’ll soon announce a new initiative to help people cope with what has happened to them.
But eventually we hope to have programs to educate people about this personality disorder and the red flags of sociopathic behavior. Our goal is to help people escape the terrible consequences by avoiding the predators in the first place.
PS I do have a GREAT marriage now….it is just I know part of me is still hiding….
God, I hate how I sound in these posts, maybe it will help me change!
I have never been married, and although I would like to be, I don’t feel a big loss, like something is missing. I do sometimes feel sad for the death of some of the happy-ever-after fantasies I’ve had with a few of my exes. I’m a very relationship oriented person and feel I am not destined to be alone. However, this is the first year I was not the least bit melancholy during the holidays. I am taking pleasure in giving my friends a party tomorrow, as well. I have found that one of the measurements of how much I have healed is how much I genuinely care for other people, but not in a “rescuing” waythen . I feel I have been self-absorbed for such a long time and hiding in my little condo, coming out only to work. It’s my natural personality to be very social, so I’m glad I’m coming out of my shell a little more. I feel I’m not quite ready to meet a man, but it’s coming in time. It will be a race against time to see if I find that great one, but I know the odds are against it at my age, so I will find other things that make me happy. I feel as long as I can stay connected to my self (and my feelings), and to a few select friends, I will be okay. It’s the disconnectedness that’s so painful! That feeling of numbness, which is really not being connected to what I feel. I believe this is often what drives us outside of ourselves looking for happiness.
Justabouthealed: You are very honest in your posts, and I, for one, get a lot out of them.
JAH – Hey! You are great posting in your psychological underwear! I love the honesty!
I’m glad you have a great husband, too. You deserve it. And it sounds like, based on past posts, that your relationship with the S strengthened your marriage. Which is great. Who would have imagined that would have happened??
Please don’t curb your honesty. I find it very helpful! This is the one place in world where I feel like we can truly talk about what we think and feel – and not be judged!
You all are so kind, you made me cry. Thank you. And yes, the whole damn mess made my marriage much better. What a price to pay! At least I’m the only one who paid. I’m not sure I DO deserve a great husband, but I’m trying to make sure I do NOW.
Signing off, peace and love and a much better 2009 to everyone!
Stargazer- I too, am a relationship oriented person and have grieved the “happily ever after”scenario a couple of times but always got over it in a healthy manner and timeframe. But with my “S” gone now its seems like this one is hitting me in an extreme manner. I totally understand the “disconnectedness” you have experienced because that is very prevalent in me now. Not only did my “S” totally alienate me from friends Ive known for 20+ years, she also succeeded in alienating me from myself. And now that I am alone my feelings seem like they are under a high powered microscope being magnified at its highest intensity! I too have kept myself in the confinements of my home only emerging when I had too but that is slowly changing day to day. One thing else you said was that you enjoy genuinely caring for people but not in a “rescuing” manner. That rang a bell in me and made me realize I have been a “rescuer” all my life! Not just with my personal relationships but with my family as well. And Im like you, at my age it will be a race against time to find the relationship I am looking for but also have the optimism that it will come. Thank you for reminding me that I need to “stay connected” to myself for once. I was on the verge of a pity party I was about to throw for myself since I am spending New Years alone but i read your post and it changed that outlook. Happy New Year to everyone!!!!!!!!
I’m glad anything I say would help, anetsu. You have to numb yourself out to stay with sociopathic or otherwise abusive people as a survival response. I shut down very early in my life, growing up with abusive, narcissistic parents who needed as much parenting as I did. I am always so grateful to feel my feelings, no matter how painful they may be. They remind me I’m alive and that I’m human, just like every other human. Guys, I think when all else fails and you are home alone and lonely on NYE, it never hurts to meditate and just breathe. This is what I am doing tonight. Notice what is going on in your body, and what you are feeling. When it feels like you have no one else, you at least have yourself (and if it is part of your belief system, you have a higher power, too). And you are now part of this community too, which is really a great gift for all of us!
People put so many expectations on the holidays and NYE. Everyone is supposed to do this or that or have someone to kiss on the stroke of midnight. Really it’s just another evening! And another opportunity to do something that you would enjoy doing. If you can’t enjoy anything or don’t know, it’s time to meditate, go inside, and get to know yourself. This is my small contribution this evening, as I’m an old Buddhist meditator from way back when. When I used to sit long retreats, my teacher used to say, “Sit regardless of body or life.” What he meant was that no matter what you were experiencing, let it become part of the meditation. It didn’t matter if it was NYE (I think I once did a silent retreat on Xmas), or whatever day it was. Any day was a good day for meditating!
What am I meditating on tonight? A lot abandonment feeling coming up from the depths. I am feeling the abandonment of many many relationships past. It’s like a big knot in my gut, and I’m just breathing into it. Sigh. Feels like it’s neverending sometimes. As yucky as it feels, I am just sitting back and observing it and feeling it. It’s kind of like watching a movie–the movie of my life, as it was in the past, and as it is in the present. Going inside can be very interesting sometimes!
I am always so interested in hearing people’s honest feelings. Everyone here is so real, and that’s the reason I come here. Thanks to everyone for this safe space to heal.
Logged back in for one last post before the start of a NEW YEAR! (and thanks for the beautiful entry above, Stargazer)
What I have tonight is great sorrow”.
Sorrow for the time I wasted on someone who is only out to serve himself
Sorrow for the love I wasted.
Sorrow for being such a big f***ing fool, when there is so much beauty in the world, so much good I could have been accomplishing, all the help I could have been giving and instead I wasted all my time and efforts on a selfish b*stard.
Sorrow for all the incredible stress I put my body and mind through.
Sorrow for the people and animals in my life I ignored because of my pain. That is the worst.
Sorrow for all the wondrous stuff I could have done with all that creative energy.
Sorrow that I wanted something so badly for myself (selfishly) and for him that I ignored every crude red flag he waved in my face.
Sorrow for all that I gave of myself to him that he just exploited.
Sorrow for my past hurts that helped blind me to the hurts he inflicted.
Thankfulness that I did put on the brakes.
Thankfulness that I sought help early.
Thankfulness that he was so awful so early.
Thankfulness that I was able to discover so much and set my mind straight…eventually.
Thankfulness that somehow I made my life better as a result of all this pain, significantly better. And the lives of some dear to me.
Thankfulness that my body got so sick at the thought of him that I knew I had to get away forever.
Thankfulness that I was able to make amends to those I wronged, unknown to him, thankfulness that no one else was hurt but me.
Thankfulness that I don’t have a crippling personality disorder or worse.
Thankfulness that NEVER AGAIN will I allow that kind of exploitation of me to ever occur again. NEVER.
And I pray that I will be able to somehow use all this to accomplish good.
PS AND HUGE THANKFULNESS FOR THIS SITE AND ALL OF YOU!!!
HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!