The following story was sent by the Lovefraud reader who comments under the name “LovingAnnie.” This woman—we’ll call her Annie—spent four years waiting for a relationship to materialize with a policeman who tantalized her with flattery and promises. Here’s what Annie wrote:
Annie and the cop
I called 9-1-1 for the first time in my life (a neighbor problem), and when I answered the door, my first thought on seeing him was, “wow—he is sooo cute.”
We ended up talking for almost an hour and exchanging phone numbers.
He told me he’d been a cop for almost 20 years, was divorced with two kids. That a few years after the divorce was final, he had a girlfriend who was also a police officer, but they had recently broken up because they saw life differently, and she drank too much.
I’d see him every week or so when he was driving by, and he’d stop and chat for a while. He seemed such a perfect fit for me, and that we had so much in common. He was close to my age, so clean cut in lifestyle and appearance, liked to cook, liked to read, liked to exercise, had a great dry sense of humor, was politically incorrect and religiously indifferent, and we were physically attracted to each other as well.
He called, but he wasn’t asking me out. I tried to play it cool, let things unfold slowly, with no pressure, but something just felt wrong. He’d ask me what I was wearing, talk about how he wanted to kiss my neck ”¦ He seemed so connected to me when we talked, and I loved talking to him about anything and everything, it was just comfortable and easy. But he didn’t try to see me off of work; there were no dates. It was frustrating but I didn’t want to be aggressive.
This went on for months. He’d call, tell me I was beautiful, sensuous, intelligent, loving, warm, giving, beguiling—and that he was sexually and emotionally scared of me. That he knew I wouldn’t hurt him, but he’d hurt himself. That I was dangerous, that he got flustered around me ”¦
And then he would disappear ”¦ For a month or two, and then come back, always smiling, always sweet. (It turns out he had never broken up with his girlfriend at all, and in fact, they were about to buy a house together.)
But by that time I was hooked. I was so naive and hopeful and trusting, I believed every word he said. He was a cop, a good guy, he seemed so sincere and genuine ”¦
I thought he was really a nice guy and behaving himself, that he was waiting until they were broken up to do anything with me, being honorable. He told me he was fiercely loyal.
This went on for 3 years ”¦ I’d only see him occasionally, but he always made it seem like if I’d just be patient, things would work between us. I’d try dating other people to get my mind off of him, and nothing ever worked out, so back to the policeman my thoughts would go ”¦
He’d cuddle me; we’d just sit on the sofa for an hour or two wrapped around each other like 16-year-olds who don’t go past second base ”¦ He’d always be obviously aroused, but didn’t try to have sex with me—again, I thought he was treating me with respect, and that meant I could trust him. He wasn’t cheating on his girlfriend, we were waiting until things were right and we could be together.
He’d talk about how pissed off he would get at his girlfriend for passing out drunk, throwing up blood, going into rehab and then coming home and drinking again immediately, etc.
I thought for sure by comparison I looked like a prize since I rarely drank. I was financially stable, didn’t have any kids of my own, and had no baggage with an ex-husband. I even told him that he could come live with me if he wanted to, and that I adored him. He said I was so open and he was so guarded ”¦
He’d tell me he drove my house three times a shift. (He was lying, he drove by once every three weeks.)
I said, “If you know you aren’t ever going to break up with T, and you know you don’t want me for a girlfriend when you do, blow me off right now.” He didn’t. I said, “well, are you going to blow me off ?” And he said “no.” ”¨”¨He told me he looked for me, that he was so happy when he saw me, that the chemistry was so thick it was tangible, that he couldn’t keep his hands off of me, that he was emotionally, intellectually and physically attracted to me but that he couldn’t act on it—YET.
One of his friends told me that he was watching me when he was on the midnight shift, checking out my windows, (I live up on a hill and it is easy to see in from a street across the way) even spying on me with binoculars a few times to see what kind of life I led.
Even though it would have creeped me out if another guy had done that, I felt like I had nothing to hide and I was flattered; I thought it really meant he wanted me, and when he was available, he’d have gotten his courage and his info. Together enough that we would be solid.
He finally broke up with his girlfriend over her drinking, and then disappeared on me for five months.
The same friend who had told me the other stuff told me that he was so stressed out about the bad real estate market, he was on the verge of foreclosure (even though he was working major overtime), depressed, not eating, and isolating himself. He had told me once he was borderline suicidal, so I got really scared. Behind his back, I paid his overdue property taxes, to try to help him out.
When I finally called him and told him I was lonely and I missed him, he told me to “go work for habitat for humanity and that we hardly knew each other; that he wasn’t ready to date but when he was, there was a probation officer who was interested in him.”
Then when I started to cry in pain, three years of hope now smashed in a minute, he told me I was guilting him and he hated it, and hung up on me.
He found about about me paying the property taxes and came to my house and was furious. I said I could cancel the charge on my credit card, and he said no, he’d pay me back when he got his income tax refund (he never made any attempt to pay me back) and he yelled at me, saying I had no right to control his life, and that he couldn’t trust me, I was acting obsessive.
I was absolutely horrified—I’d really been trying to help, to do something loving and supportive when the chips were down that only a family member would do for someone. I hadn’t meant anything bad at all by it, and yet he took it that way.
He told me I misread everything he’d ever said and done, that he was just being friendly.
Then he stood at my door and told me that he had wanted to make love to me every night, that he had fantasized about me so often, wanting me every way a man can have a woman.
I uncovered about a dozen lies after that ”¦ It seemed like he lied almost every time he talked to me. But I blamed myself. I thought if I hadn’t pushed him, if I’d just let him take the action instead of me, things would have worked out differently.
He came back nine months later (my burglar alarm had gone off by mistake), and basically just totally played head games with me for six weeks, e-mailing instead of calling, telling me how aroused I made him but saying that his little voices were telling him to “run baby run ”¦”
Then he just stopped contacting me at all, although he still read my blog on the web twice a week for the next two months. We finally got in a huge fight one night and he told me that he was never going to ask me out, never have a relationship with me, and never have sex with me.
I keep thinking everything is my fault. That maybe he really is a good solid decent guy and it was just me pushing that turned him off and made him go away.
I don’t understand how he could have played me for three years if he didn’t mean it ”¦
After all, he was originally married for 10 years, and then later on after he was divorced had a girlfriend for six years, so clearly he has long-term relationships.
Why aren’t I lovable? Why didn’t he value me?
I’m still grieving and stuck, and thinking I lost out on Prince Charming, that something is wrong with me that he didn’t want me, didn’t want a relationship with me ”¦ It’s so seldom that I meet a man who seems so right for me, and I’m just devastated. I don’t recover or bounce back easily, and now I’m terrified that there is something really wrong with me not to have known all along he didn’t want me.
This cop likes power
Sociopaths, as Dr. Liane Leedom says, want two things: power and sex. Some sociopaths—like this cop—want power more than sex, and are quite capable of withholding sex in order to assert power. That’s what this guy was doing.
For him, it was all about the game. The cop was getting his jollies from knowing that Annie wanted him, adored him, loved him—and he could mess with her mind and emotions with his push-pull routine. With his little intrigue, he was satisfying his need for entertainment.
That’s all Annie was. Entertainment.
In a previous e-mail that Annie sent me, she wondered if this cop would treat another woman better. I’d say it’s extremely unlikely. Although he might actually go ahead and have sex with someone else, that woman will be used for entertainment and sex. There will be no love.
Waiting too long
At the end of her story, Annie also expressed that she was afraid something wrong with her for not recognizing that the cop didn’t want her. That’s not quite the issue here.
When I was single, I also spent quite a few years pining away for men who never showed up. I kept thinking if I gave them enough time, enough space, eventually they’d come around. It never worked.
So did these guys want me? They seemed to, when they were around. But they did not come around enough for our interaction to advance to the point of being a relationship.
Here is the issue: By waiting for them, I was not believing in myself. Annie did the same thing. She spent four years waiting for this cop. This particular guy was a sociopath, but that is almost beside the point. The point is that any relationship involves two people moving towards each other, step by step. If that is not happening, there is no relationship, and no point waiting around.
Fear and relationships
I am not being critical of Annie. As I said, I did exactly the same thing.
So why did I do it? Why did I hang in for these men who did not show up? Fear. I was afraid that there was nobody else and I would be alone. I could only think in terms of the men that I knew. I could not think in terms of men whom I hadn’t yet met.
Fear also made me vulnerable for the sociopath, James Montgomery. When he rolled into my life with flattery and the promises, I fell for them. I noticed he was moving far too quickly, but it was a welcome relief from the men who didn’t show up at all. His agenda, I later learned, was manipulating me out of my money. He was also playing a game of keeping multiple women on a string at one time.
Finding a real relationship
The key to finding a real relationship, I believe, is overcoming fear and believing in ourselves. This is possible, even after a run-in with a sociopath.
Many Lovefraud readers, having been victimized by a sociopath, have commented that they no longer trust themselves when it comes to relationships. This is fear still speaking. They are afraid they will be fooled and victimized again.
We all know the devastation that comes from the encounter with the sociopath. Here’s what we all need to know and believe: Healing is possible. This seems unlikely while we’re in the midst of the turmoil, but it is true.
Healing does, however, take time. It requires processing the emotional pain, re-establishing connections with the people who truly love and support us, and perhaps dealing with legal and financial consequences. But this can all be done.
The devastation is a phase. An ugly phase, but a phase nonetheless. As we go through it, our goal should be to eliminate the fear and begin believing in ourselves. We now know what a sociopath looks like and how a sociopath behaves. We can come through this experience wiser, more in tune with our intuition, and with an open heart.
Then everything—including a new and real relationship—will fall into place.
Thank you so much for the Journey song, Learning!
I LOVE Journey (with Steve Perry, of course).
Journey….great memories…..
learning:
Believe me, it has taken tremendous energy, pain processing, knowlege and time to learn to trust/love again.
For me, one elemental key was…forgiveness…both of him, but equally important, of myself (for my blind faith? trust? naivete’?)
FYI, a reference to an article I wrote over a year ago:
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2009/01/22/the-gift-of-forgiveness/
Even if I WAS ready, and EVEN if I did meet MR. Right….with what broke out today…..
I’m sure there will be some who will judge, because I chose him as my husband….
I understand, and I take my responsibility for my closed eyes…..and my own denial…..
I’m off into town…..so I don’t appear to be hiding in HIS shame!!!!
It’s NOT mine….I don’t own it….and I WILL NOT take any flak for what HE chose to do!!!!
I will not keep his secrets……which are no longer secrets due to HIS OWN ACTIONS!!!
I will continue to hold my head high and be proud of who I am!!!
I have no skeletons!!!
🙂
So…..today……I don’t expect to meet Mr. RIght…..
🙂
Dear Peggy,
Its a terrific article. One that I embraced and found healing with choosing to interpret and find my own inner forgiveness necessary for me to move on and continue to heal.
I re-read some of the interesting responses to your article….
Two that stood out to me were Kathleen Hawks and Aloha Travellers. I would like to copy and paste what Kathleen and Aloha wrote in response to forgiveness:
Kathleen Hawks post:
“We are the lucky ones, because we heal and learn in the terms that are important to us. We become better at loving. Better at managing life in a social world. More aware of the risks, but also more aware of who we are and what we need to do to improve our social world.
They get none of that. They are like addicts stuck in their hamster wheels of need and fix. And the nature of their deficiency virtually ensures that they’ll never get out of that rut. If we ever loved them, or if we even imagine that their partial humanity entitles them our social feelings of compassion, it’s almost impossible not to feel sorry for them, while never forgetting how dangerous they are.
But we do it for ourselves. This letter is a record of understanding. Of giving up the struggle to fix what can’t be fixed. Of handing it over to God or the Karma police. Of freedom from the need to try to balance it all ourselves, whether in vengeance or attempts to recover what is well and truly lost. Of letting go.
When I got to this insight, like Oxy, I found it hard to maintain. There are still times I revert to anger and the desire to right the balance. This insight is one that our egos don’t like. It really stops the internal drama. But when I got to this, I was looking to clear my mind from this negativity, from the suffering behind the anger. This insight enabled me to begin practicing thoughts that not only put the sociopath in perspective, but my own role in the relationship as well.
I was vulnerable for my own reasons. I missed the signs, because I wasn’t looking for them. I was dazzled by my own dreams, dished up to me by someone who saw them as a way to use me. So what? I was being being human. Now I know more about the risks of life, and more about surviving and maybe even more about compassion. (Compassion is also the ability to recognize what someone needs, but that I cannot provide it.)
I know I once felt huge relief in finding this insight. But after the process of forgiveness, I am left with a residue of sadness. Love does heal a lot of things. But not for these people. That’s their tragedy, and it’s a tragedy that all of us live with.”
And Aloha Travellers post : 🙂
“Dear Bad Man,
I have really grown as a person and as a woman as a result of meeting you. It’s not what you did for me.. it’s what I have done for myself since I left your ass!
Here’s how I feel most days now that you are a distant memory— http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YMyDJMAlHGI
My life is great now!
Me
P.S. I don’t miss you at all!”
— TOWANDA !!!!!!!!!!!
Dear EB,
Well, you dumped him LONG BEFORE he outed himself, so I guess you are VALIDATED by his arrest!!!! I was definitely validated by the arrest of the Trojan Horse P and my DIL!!!! YEA for the good guys!!!!!
Sometimes even a “blind hog gets an acorn every now and then” and we weren’t such blind hogs after all were we EB!!!!
I hope you are able to be in court to watch his trial if he doesn’t cop a plea! What righteous justice that would be to sit there (on the front row if possible where he can see you) Even if he does COP a plea he will still have to come into court to plead guilty and be sentenced so you can at least get to be there for that if nothing else. hee hee I am such a witch!!!! TOWANDA!!!!
“and we weren’t such blind hogs after all were we EB!!!!”
NOPE!!
🙂
Nope, what? That I am a witch? YOu know that’s true!
Nope you don’t want to be there? I doubt that!
I would think yOu, of all people, would want to be there in a neon pink shirt that said “I told you so!!!!” LOL (((hugs))))
I remember my couple of days in court with the DIL and the TH-P (P-son always lied about when the court date would be so we could not see what evidence the cops had) The first time I was still in such crisis mode that I couldn’t see past my eye lashes, but did address teh judge to get their bail raised high enough they couldn’t make it even with the money they stole from my egg donor. It was sort of vallidating though to see my DIL come up the steps in leg irons, orange jump suit, jelly flip flops, and chained to another inmate. The TH-P was not the least embarassed and had a smirk on his face (after all, after 20+ years inside prison this was nothing to him) but she was definitely embarassed, not remorseful at all, but felt like she had gotten her tit in a wringer at least. Her first arrest and My guess is her last. I think the time she got beat up in jail and so on, did scare her enough she doesn’t want to go back.
I admit I was so angry at her then I waited at the top of the stairs until she came up in the chain gang and as she stepped out onto the floor where the court was, I said “fetching outfit” as I looked at her. Can you believe I was HOSTILE! But you know, I really don’t feel that way NOW–I occasionally do see her at the auctioon (not lately cause I haven’t gone) but it really doesn’t make an emotional blip on my radar any more. Just more of a mental shrug.
But the way things have been with yours I imagine you could enjoy a nice court appearance to see him ushered off to prison for a while! My DIL didn’t do me as much dirt as your X did you and his kids.
“The point is that any relationship involves two people moving towards each other, step by step. If that is not happening, there is no relationship, and no point waiting around.”
This is a really great point. I wasted a lot of time “waiting around” when I was young, too.
I don’t have that kind of time to waste anymore.
Time is precious….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyUZEVWuQtc&feature=related
“….gotten her tit in a wringer….” ROTFLMAOTMNR!!!!!!!!!!!!! Omigawd, OxD…..you are so kewl…..LOLOLOL
learning:
Best of luck and blessings to you on your journey…
Yah, Aloha always cracks me up. And I really enjoy Oxy’s welcoming support and wisdom here.
Haven’t been at LF much lately, because I’ve been having too much FUN!
Peggy