Editor’s note: The following post was written by the Lovefraud reader “Adelade.”
According to my counseling therapist, I became involved with sociopaths as a result of their motivations and their abilities to note my strengths and vulnerabilities. My vulnerabilities were formed during my childhood and manifested as a crippling condition termed, “shame core.”
This core was based upon my experiences in a dysfunctional family environment of alcoholism. For whatever reasons, I believed that I was responsible for the happiness and well-being of everyone, and I mean everyone. This false sense of responsibility prepared me for a lifetime of fear-based decisions and choices that included marrying two sociopaths in a row.
Fear is a visceral response to threat or danger. When a child feels that they are “in danger” of being cold, unloved, hungry, and dirty, the response is to do whatever they can to avoid being cold, unloved, hungry, or dirty. If a child feels “threatened” with abandonment, dismissal, humiliation, abuse, molestation, hunger, or any other negative situation, that child will do whatever they can to avoid the threats.
Childhood threats real or imagined
For me, these fears were based upon experiences that were, at the time, facts. I was neglected, dismissed, unfed, unwashed, verbally and emotionally abused, abandoned, and humiliated on a constant basis. The humiliation of being neglected fed the Abandonment Monkey. The Abandonment Monkey would then pull the tail of the Un-Love-Able Monkey who would, in turn, scream at the Humiliation Monkey. Once this cycle begins for a child, it becomes a living, breathing part of their persona unless strong steps are taken to alter the child’s core beliefs of themselves.
How that fear translated into my core beliefs of myself were that I was abandoned, humiliated, unfed, and dismissed because something that I had done (or, failed to do). That meant that I was unworthy of love, undeserving of nutrition, and that I was, in essence, a waste of human tissue.
Adult threats real or imagined
As I moved into adulthood, these core issues and beliefs became the driving force behind nearly every decision and choice that I made. From partners to college courses, my fears of abandonment and feeling unworthy caused me to make some very tragic choices. In the case of the first abusive spath spouse, I was targeted and responded to the typical spath love bombing and empty promises because the sociopath was himself a tragic figure. His childhood story was appallingly sad and he was always beneath some mystical black cloud that I believed that I could help him to escape. If I demonstrated how much I loved and believed in this tragic man, he would, in turn, love me back and never leave me because I had proven my value to him by sacrificing for him. Well, of course, this course of decision-making was catastrophic on every level for me, and the children produced from this union.
The Self Destruction Exhibit
My fears of abandonment, ridicule, and the rest are what fueled all of the monkeys in the Self Destruction Exhibit, and I remained in an environment of violent abuse because of those fears. I wasn’t worthy of a strong and healthy relationship, nor was I deserving of educating myself and discovering my own independence. The monkeys kept me tied to a co-dependency that nearly drove me to suicide.
There seemed no other way out for me. I couldn’t take care of myself because I had been caring for everyone else throughout my lifetime. Whether it was a violent husband or sick children, I took my own needs entirely off of the stove and honestly believed that this was how it was supposed to be. I honestly believed that martyring myself would, someday, result in a Supreme Reward, and it never happened.
The second marriage was fear-based, as well. I hadn’t recovered from my first disaster and I was targeted by a non-violent sociopath and bought the illusion completely.
Perceived and true threats
What I have learned about my fear-based thinking is that it can truly be rewired. I don’t have to be afraid of things that are not true threats or actual dangers. What are the present threats that I’m facing today? What identifiable dangers must I avoid today? What I might “feel” is a threat, typically isn’t, and the same is true with perceived danger.
Perceived threats / dangers:
- Being alone means that I do not meet anyone else’s approval
- If I don’t tolerate bad behaviors, people won’t like me
- If I don’t give someone the benefit of the doubt, then I’m a bad person and unworthy of love
- If I don’t give someone a second chance, then I will be abandoned and alone
True threats / dangers
- Drunk drivers colliding with my vehicle
- Lightning strikes nearby
- Floods and acts of Nature
- Random acts of human violence
The point is that what my mind created is what disabled me to the point where I refused to construct and maintain strong boundaries. I was afraid to call a spade what it was because, if someone didn’t like the truth, then they wouldn’t like me. If they didn’t like me, then I wasn’t worthy or deserving of approval toss the monkeys some more bananas and the cycle would continue. The point is that, today, it’s not so much that I no longer “care” about acceptance, approval, love, or worthiness, but that I can provide those things to myself under my own power.
If someone violates my boundaries and says or does something that is unacceptable, am I really going to continue tolerating being treated poorly out of fear that this person isn’t going to like me? Why would I even seek the approval of someone who doesn’t really care about how their actions or words make me feel? That doesn’t mean that I’m impervious to the attempts of others to force their agendas upon me that will be a constant for the rest of my life because I finally accept that there are simply bad people out there who have an agenda with everyone, not just me. But, in order for me to avoid being exploited by another sociopath, I am mandated to draw that line in the sand and, regardless of who it might be, if that line is crossed, then the association is finished.
Rewired fear-based thinking
Fear-based thinking was rewired when I finally accepted facts as they are. “Acceptance” does not mean that I am obligated to “like” the facts, by any stretch of the imagination. I often do not like the facts, one iota. It is dreadful and grievous that some things are true. It’s dreadful that there are individuals who do not have a conscience and are incapable of feeling remorse for harming others. I don’t “like” this fact, but it’s undeniable. It is appalling that people produce offspring and have no intention of raising and caring for those offspring with love, nurturing, and boundaries. I don’t “like” this fact, either, but it is indisputable.
Acceptance, approval and love — for me
Accepting facts allows for me to approach any given situation with an objective eye. Rather than running on fear, I’m beginning to experience the liberation and supremely positive benefits that boundaries provide. I finally realize and “feel” that I am not responsible for the happiness, well-being, or success of any other human being on this planet. And, I won’t accept that responsibility ever again because I like myself, I accept myself, I approve of myself, and I love myself.
Of course, the previous statement does not mean that I travel with this backpack of healthy “Self-isms” on a continuous basis. To be sure, I have set that bagful of power down, from time to time, and experienced the reanimation of fear-based thinking. But, when I recognize that I’ve done this, I look back on my Healing Path to see where I left it and go right back and pick it back up.
Grateful for everything — including my sociopathic experiences
There are too many authentic fears and threats in life without my core issues creating ones that are not based upon facts. My perceptions are constantly evolving and becoming based more and more upon facts. So, the monkeys in the Self-Destruction Exhibit are starving, and they want to scream for sustenance, but they’re slowly beginning to lose their energy. For this, I am grateful and, as odd as it may sound, that gratitude extends to my spath experiences.
Had I not experienced the painful betrayals and subsequent carnages, I would not be at this point today. I would still be making fear-based choices and decisions, and I would still be the whipping post of every disordered individual that I came into contact with. Today, my sense of gratitude is colossal and I am understanding that all things happen for “A Reason.”
ImaContender: It IS surreal! I have to say, I was aware that I wasn’t the only one who had this background and ended up married to a narcissist/spath. But I really didn’t realize the stories were SO similar–and the community (relatively) large. It’s been eye-opening. I almost feel like my life was the inevitable result of a formula: Narcissistic parent (2) – Love+ Unrealistic demands -Support – Boundaries = Me + Shame + Spath
Wow.
I can totally relate to this post.
I, too, was expecting that “Supreme Reward” for giving up my own needs and caring for others, and of course all I got was the booby prize instead, many times over.
Trying to win validation or approval or love from people who don’t care about us is a losing and irrational game, one we don’t even know we’re playing until something comes along that’s bad enough to jolt us awake.
Boundaries are key. When I know where my “lines in the sand” are, life is different. I’m not quite as far along as you, but I’m well on my way, getting there with a lot of work and determination and self-compassion.
Thanks for this excellent article, Adelade.
Well, another eye-opener from the last two posts from LLMequon & Arianna.
But why am I surprised? If the spaths are all so similiar, then why am I surprised to find that WE, the LoveFraud posters/victims of spaths are all so similiar?
All people need love and support and validation. That is not what is wrong with us. What is wrong is that we are picking the WRONG people to get it from. It is as if someone expected me to be a brain-surgeon with no training whatsoever. With our backgrounds, it is inevitable that we would fail at choosing a healthy relationship vs the crap ones! Talk about unrealistic expectations.
I would be interested in knowing what the percentage of people who fit the above description in Adelade’s article post on this blog. Is it 50%? 75%? Higher?
I go to Mexico to the dentist (so much cheaper, even if I have to stay overnight on the American side!) Professionals in Mexico are very different than in US, perhaps because they are allowed to be. Recently, he told me that I have to learn how to care for myself. My response…”I don’t know how!” Everything I did, I did for and because of someone else. I have a real problem.
Thanks for pointing that out to me. (PS I am the oldest of 8 kids)
Yes, New Life, there are similarities in US just as there are in THEM, not identical of course, but similar. Many of us lack appropriate BOUNDARIES, many of us have been taught as children that WE are responsible for the happiness of others and must sacrifice our needs for the needs of others (husband, kids, parents etc) Of course there are other things that make us RIPE to become VICTIMS but that’s a pretty universal start.
Of course if we FAIL at this IMPOSSIBLE TASK, (which we are bound to do) then we are shamed and abused because we are “failures” and “unworthy” of respect and love.
I think many of us here can relate to these “problems” but at the same time, I think as we are healing we are realizing we are NOT responsible for anyone else’s happiness, and we MUST LEARN to set REAL BOUNDARIES. I “thought” I was setting boundaries but I wasn’t, but I am NOW because NOW I have learned what a REAL boundary is.
I’m also learning to take care of me first. And learning that “Me first” is not a bad thing but a GOOD thing!
New Life,
I can relate to many of your posts. Taking care of other people is what makes me happy, taking care of myself doesn’t. This is a big problem because it attracts spaths.
BTW, I’m the middle kid.
I know that I had a gut feeling that the spath was dangerous since the very first time I met him. Over and over and over, I ignored the gut feeling until it became just part of the background noise and I could no longer hear it. All the spath had to do, to make me ignore my gut, was to show how much he loved me, with flowers, kisses and attention —LOTS of attention.
I think that there are people out there, the normal ones, who DO NOT ignore their gut feelings. For them, their instincts are part of who they are and their self-esteem makes them honor those instincts. (Some people call it intuition, some call it instinct.) These people are of no interest to the psychopath, he can’t get his hooks into them.
We, on the other hand, have been suppressing our instincts since childhood. We have rational minds and that is a good thing, but we are lopsided we don’t use our instinctual/right-brain as much as the left brain, so we don’t know when to run.
It’s like we’re the antelope who sees the rest of the herd running away and we stop to see what caused all this commotion. Then we get eaten.
Skylar:
Your last line is so true. Human beings are the only animals that ignore their “instincts” whether it is due to politeness or childhood training or just thinking we misunderstood what was happening. And then we give everyone the benefit of the doubt. Or we want them to “like” us. The antelope don’t give a carp whether we like them or not, whether it is impolite to run away. And they don’t give us the benefit of the doubt…they are out of here!
When I was in my early twenties, I worked in a big building in a major metropolitan area. I had gone out to get lunch and was bringing it back and since it was lunch time, the building was pretty deserted. When I approached the elevator waiting area, a man was standing there and had just let an elevator go without getting on it. My alarm bells were ringing. I waited there with him for the next elevator and when it arrived, I got on. So did he and he stood behind me. And for the few seconds before the door closed, I kept hearing, “Get off, get off NOW!” in my head. So I did. Then SO DID HE!
I immediately went to the security guard in the lobby, briefly explained and pointed him out. He started running. I don’t know what happened after that but I knew one thing…I listened to my gut instinct. And I was safe.
I’m going to be that girl again. By golly!!
Yeah, I have always thought there was something wrong with me when it came to men even though everyone says I’m so beautiful, sweet, kind, etc…so then why can’t I seem to ever have a normal relationship? The reason being is that I am choosing unavailable men…either literally or emotionally. It will never work when they aren’t available or able to give us what we deserve.
Newlife, have you read the “Gift of Fear”…..it’s all about trusting our instincts and what happens when we don’t. Your story immediately made me think of a particular event that the author writes about.
Hi Everyone, I so can relate to this article. I should have run at the first red flag but didn’t. I am a people pleaser or peace maker, whichever you want to call it.
Even last night I had a discussion with the exBF and he talked so nice and his voice was so smooth. Even throwing in some compliments. After the conversation, I realized that the tone and smoothness of his voice was all a trap. I had one thought come to me that “maybe he isn’t so bad after all”. I quickly replaced it with the truth of remembering the lies that he has told me, the controlling nature, the emotional rollercoaster that he put me on. I had broken up with him and he still wants to keep tabs on me. I know he is already seeing someone, and I am pretty sure he started it before I got rid of him.
Newlife, TOWANDA and good for you! Listen to your instincts and your gut!
To Be Free, in order TO TRULY BE FREE you must go NO CONTACT wiith him, no telephone, no Texts, no e mails, no chats and no contact with anyone who wants to talk about him, and no checking his face book page, just like he died or moved to MARS. He is gone.
At that point you can start your healiing but contact sets you back.