By Ox Drover
Many of the people who have been victims of a sociopath have commented here at Lovefraud about how much “different” breaking up with a sociopath is than a “regular” break up, how much more painful. I’ve read comments from former victims about how intense the feelings are after being conned by a sociopath whatever the relationship has been, whether family member, spouse, lover, or child.
I have also felt these same profoundly hurtful feelings as I have worked my way along the difficult and rocky road toward healing. Even though my profession was as a registered nurse practitioner, and I’ve studied “the grief process” as outlined by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, one of the people who has defined and studied “grief” for many years, knowing about something and experiencing it are two different things. However, learning about and naming some of the feelings we have as we progress through this painful period and resolve the feelings and pain of profound loss does at least let us know that what we are experiencing is expected, and though painful, is very “normal” and that it will not last forever.
What is grief?
In an article called “The agony of grief” for the magazine Utne Reader (Sept/Oct 1991), the author, Stephanie Ericsson, who had suddenly lost her beloved husband while pregnant with their first child, stated, “Grief is a tidal wave that overtakes you with unimaginable force, sweeps you up into its darkness, where you tumble and crash against unidentifiable surfaces only to be thrown out on an unknown beach, bruised, reshaped”¦.” “Grief is utter aloneness that razes the rational mind”¦.”
Just exactly what is grief, though? Most of us know that “grief” is a sadness we feel when someone we love dies, or even when we lose a beloved pet, or something in our life that we value is taken away, but grief is much more than just sadness and tears when someone we love dies. Grief is a predictable cycle of feelings we have as we resolve the loss of anything that is important to us. Grief over the loss of something or someone very important to us may actually take many months, or even years, to resolve into acceptance of that loss.
Grief that is not fully and completely resolved can last a lifetime, and cause a lifetime of continual pain. Resolving and processing the cycle of emotions caused by the loss of an important part of our lives, is a valuable addition to the healing we need to experience after the sociopath is gone.
Wikipedia defines grief as a “multi-faceted response to loss, particularly the loss of someone or something to which we have formed a bond of attachment.” The few words to describe something so profoundly emotional and deeply painful still doesn’t scratch the surface of such an important concept.
In some way, a relationship with a psychopath has hooked us so deeply, that when that relationship turns from “wonderful” into deep emotional and/or physical abuse, we are devastated, I think, more than with the loss by death of a loved one (with the exception of a suicide possibly), because we know that the loved one didn’t die to hurt us, to leave us, but left us unwillingly. Realizing that a psychopath seems to enjoy hurting us or is totally uncaring about our pain caused by their abuse is some how a deeper, more significant loss than an “ordinary” loss of something important.
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, in her 1969 book On Death and Dying, described grief as a “five step process.” Her focus was on people who knew they were terminally ill, however, later she expanded this to include the feelings of anyone experiencing a profound and deep loss.
The stages of grief
According to Kubler-Ross’s model, the five stages of grief are:
- Denial: The grieving person will use the temporary defense mechanism to diminish the huge loss that is being suffered. “I feel fine,” or “This isn’t really happening to me,” are some of the responses a person in this stage would feel.
- Anger: “Why me?” “Who do I blame?” are some of the questions the person in the second stage would ask themselves as they recognize that denial is futile and replace the denial with anger and a hyper-awareness. This stage of anger may be demonstrated by bouts of rage and anger at anyone or anything that can be “blamed” as having caused the loss that led to the grief. This is why many people become angry at the physician over the loss of their loved one, or the hospital, nursing home, etc.
- Bargaining: “Ill do anything ”¦ to reverse or postpone the loss.” The person grieving may at this time frantically search for some way to alleviate their suffering by regaining what was lost. Anxiety will be high.
- Depression and sadness: “Why bother? There’s nothing left to live for. I can’t go on.” Crying and depressed moods are the hallmark of this stage and are an important part of the process. Many people who care and attempt to be supportive of the grieving party may try to “cheer them up” in some way. Feeling, processing and experiencing the sadness is an integral part of the process though for the grieving individual.
- Acceptance: The grieving party comes at last to peace, acceptance and understanding of the importance of the loss.
While there is some debate about the “five stages of grief” as described by Kubler-Ross, and though each person experiences grief in a unique and individual manner, there is much commonality in our experiences. The one thing that is almost universal, however, is that the stages are not in order, but a cycle of “roller coaster” rides that repeat the up and down, and changes from one stage to another and back again.
What is the best way to support a grieving person?
Being able to verbalize our feelings and having those feelings validated by others is one of the most healing salves that can be applied to grief. Each of us must do our own grieving, but having someone to whom we can verbalize our feelings, and feel in turn that they validate our feelings as legitimate and real, is the best medicine for grief.
The person listening doesn’t have to do anything, but rather be an active listener. To be present for us. Just their presence says to the grieving, “I hear your pain, and I am sorry you are hurting.”
Not setting time limits is essential in the grief process, either for ourselves if we are grieving, or for others. Unfortunately, “bereavement leave” for most jobs is three days paid leave for the death of a spouse, child or parent.
Disenfranchised grief
“Disenfranchised grief” is the term denoting grief that is not acknowledged by society. For example, when one has had an affair, and it is discovered and broken off suddenly and the secret is kept as quiet as possible, open grieving for the loss is not acceptable. Shame and guilt contribute to the disenfranchised guilt as well and make it difficult to process.
Grief for unmarried partners in the event of the death of one of them is many times disenfranchised since the union was not a “legal” one, whether the partners were heterosexual or not.
Setting “artificial time limits” on grieving will also cause it to become disenfranchised grief, as the normal societal support network will withdraw support for the grieving individual by saying “It’s time you get on with your life and get over this.”
Not having closure is another cause for the disenfranchisement of grief.
In Part 2, we’ll explore some of the ways we can help ourselves with our own grieving process, and to be a presence for others in their grieving.
Cherre,
he has made sure that he provides you with every emotional need that you have, so that he can continue to abuse you.
when you try to really break away he will come after you.
You need to find other emotional crutches so you can break away from him. I would recommend that you just become strong enough to stand on your own, but that’s easier said than done. Find other friends and other ways to feel secure. But when you are ready to get away from him, don’t break up with him. You must become BORING. They hate boring. That’s the only way to make them go away. Be boring, monotoneous, answer without emotion. He is feeding on your emotion. Don’t give him any. If he goes away on his own, then you will be free. If you try to break away, he will turn it into a drama. You will become involved in it and then you will need him MORE, to soothe the pain. It would be a vicious cycle. That’s why you have to prepare to not need him and then become boring.
Cherre, He is a sex addict!!! He may or may not be a P. But you are his co-dependant as long as you enable him in his sex addiction. You talk about feeling confused. Of course you are confused. Every contact with him feels both good and creepy. You want out, but you can’t let go. You know he’s bad for you, but you can’t wait for him to call. On and on ad infinitum.
If you stay around here for any length of time , you will learn that I am the residant 12 stepper!! I’m sure some of my fellow LF’s get tired of hearing it, but we all agree on one thing, it takes what it takes.
I would suggest you take a look at sexual co-dependancy. There are 12 step groups, on-line you can attend.
Keep coming here and let us give you support and validation.Take it one day at a time and go NC. It might take a little while, but it will get better.
By the way, Sex addicts some times exhibit something called,” sexual anorexia” in relationships. They prefer the fantasy to reality, and real intimacy is too uncomfortable for them, so they starve. I just learned about this at LAA on line, for anyone whose interested. Let me just confirm, I’m not the SA, but I’m the perfect victim, the LA.
skylar = So that’s what happened , he became very bored with me, I just ran out of energy keeping him intertained and satisfied, it was a constant thing. And boredom is very common with narcospaths, they need constant stimulation of some sort, they can never set alone with them selves and be content just being. So he became bored and I was boring, and he left and I thot I would never see him again, but two weeks after the final split I changed phone numbers and here he was pounding on my door wanting to know why I did that and telling me he missed me – sheesh maybe being boring is not such a bad thing after all..
Interesting Kim,
I’m not sure what I am. 15 years without sex…
but not that I didn’t want it. Just scared to have it with someone you can’t trust but still love.
So, wouldn’t an SA/LAA meeting be just too dangerous with all the SA’s preying on the LA’s and the LA’s looking for other LA’s but they were actually SA’s disguised, because they are really P’s?
I was thinking maybe I could find an LA meeting and meet someone nice who won’t dump me.
Yes. Absolutely. That’s why, originally there was just one group, S&LAA, and there are still some of those groups, but now they have seperate groups for LAA, and incidently, LA’s can also be sexual anorexics. I think I am. Been four years. Two of which I was with him. I’ve just lived this life of trying to find a loving partner, an intimate friend, someone who loved me for soooo long, and I’ve always felt exploited and all the nasty shit that goes with it. I give up. At least for now….I am willing to be open minded and look into all possibility’s, if it will help heal me. Love.
What are all of the SA, LA, LAAs?
I can see that he definitely has some very weird, freaky sex stuff going on but he’s just beginning to let me see that. AFTER I sent him the link on the Sociopathy. Its like he doesn’t care what I know or see anymore.
The last few months I’ve been monitored, spied on, stalked, have my phone monitored, have had to answer for every second of every day. Some days he’ll call me repeatedly where I’m literally on the phone with him for 10 or 12 hours. I have to tell him every single thing that I’m doing; then he says I’m boring him. lol
Lately its sex. Constant, constant, sex. This is fairly new, the explicit sex talk. I won’t stay on the phone long for that.
When I hang up or don’t answer, I have to pay for it later. Sometimes he calls just so he can hang up on me. He exhausts me. Totally mentally exhausts me!!!
I’m not allowed to talk to anyone on the computer but him. I’m not allowed to get email from anyone but him and one girlfriend. He reads my text messages, checks my phone logs. He somehow knows all of my banking info, personal info, stuff there is no way he should know.
I’ve had things come up missing, and “felt” that someone had been in my home while I was out. Sometimes the mail had been gone through. I’ve come home to find all of the locks had been unlocked. I’ve had extremely important mail not arrive only to find that it had been returned. We have locked mailboxes here.
He’s the one who protects us.
I’ve had to make up 2 email accounts since I started coming on here (since August). I had to have the LF newsletters sent to these other accounts.
I just (an hour ago) had to sign out of 2 different messaging chat things where I was talking to my girlfriend because he’s harassing me that I’m on the computer not giving him my full attention. I’m not allowed to be on here except with him and if I take 2 minutes to answer him he totally freaks out and becomes accusatory and abusive. Sometimes I have to bathroom!!!! This isn’t a laptop, I can’t take it with me.
This week I’ve even had to take him with me to shower. I haven’t even gotten to that today.
2 days ago I took exactly 2 seconds, from 6:04 he messaged me and my response was 6:06 and I had to explain that for hours — why it took to long — it was seconds!!!!!!!!
I archive all of our conversations now and have been keeping the emails but I don’t read them once I put them in the folder. I do this because, 1) he’s a secret, 2) nobody knows that we ever had a “thing”, just that we are friends, 3) because he lies so much and tells me so many different things that I thought that I was going crazy. Now I can look back and check and reassure myself that my perception of reality is ok.
And remember, WE DON’T LIVE TOGETHER. He’s only been in this house maybe 4 times (Except in an official capacity)and during the day for a couple of hours. Only once were we alone here. He lives about an hour and half away with his family.
I said before, he’s in law enforcement. I don’t know if that’s how he knows this stuff or what but it was really freaking me out at first. Now I’m used to it, how sad is that?
He knows everything I do. He knows my schedule, my children’s schedules. I made the mistake of trusting him, confiding in him, believing him.
The last couple of weeks, he’ll look me in the eye and say, “You don’t know what I’m capable of. You have no idea what I’m capable of.”
He thinks he owns me. He tries to control me. When its not working he switches tactics so fast it makes me dizzy. Right now maybe that’s what he wants. You know what made him let up last time? A couple of years ago I told him that I was crazy in love with him; then he all but cut off communication. Ironic, isn’t it?
I have 3 great children who need me and boy do I need them right now!! To just play a boardgame and hear their laughter is the best!!
I’m physically disabled as the victim of a violent crime. I can’t lose my mind too, I just can’t.
By the way, I accidentally stumbled across some cyberpath stuff (I think that was it, hadn’t heard of it before). It explains the way some people use the net to prey upon adults and was interesting. There was a link to LF there. I didn’t get the link saved.
Major thunderstorm. Have to sign out. BUT THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH!!!!!!
Cherre,
And WHY are you staying in this PRISON with this particular warden??
You get right to the point don’t you, Oxy?