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.
Annie,
Thanks for sharing your story with us…in some ways it was “different” and in others, the same old “Song of the P”—and NO, you are NOT ALONE. I wish I could say you were, but unfortunately there are “zillions” of us there beside you, this doesn’t seem to be a rare event by any means. Sometimes it seems “like they are everywhere.”
I am so glad that you are healing and learning from this “cat and mouse” game that he played with your heart. YES, you DO deserve better. I am glad that at least he cheated himself out of his pension–good enough for him! Sometimes they do get justice on this earth! Thanks again for sharing!
OxDrover : Good Wednesday evening.
What made you think he cheated himself out of his pension ? Do you know something I don’t ?
As far as I know, he is still a sheriff, going on 23 years now.
I think it was the commenter ‘nightmare’ whose cop got fired for cocaine use
Karma WOULD be nice, but I don’t need it to be at peace with the whole thing finally. Maybe because finally what happens to him doesn’t matter.
I almost don’t care enough to be interested anymore, (I care more aboiut my own life) and that is a VERY VERY good thing.
And HolyWaterSalt : Read the link you provided here to your blog post – and the four before it.
OMG. I’m sorry you had to go through that – and he your guy and the cop could have been twins.
Unbelievably similar words and actions – and so were your repsonses just like what I felt.
Your writing has helped me tremendously. I’m so glad you came by my blog a few months ago and commented !
Knowledge is power and freedom and peace of mind eventually.
No more sociopaths or emotionally unavailable men for any of us !!! Just Say No 🙂
James : True. The power thing never entered my head. I’m learning things at 50 I wish I had learned at 15 !
Thanks for the website link – those articles helped a lot too !!! It’s like all this information is lifting the last bits of clinging to the illusions/confusion – and dispersing them 🙂
Liane L : I look forward to reading your article !
Aloha Traveler : Yes, I was ‘controlling’ by paying a year’s worth of his overdue property taxes. (now I do admit I invaded his personal privacy/boundaries by doing so without his knowledge. Good intentions or not, I wouldn’t do something like that again. Recsuing IS co-dependent, and anonymous gifts only seem to be a thrill when you read about them in People Magazine 🙂
p.s. There is another excellent website for information about guys like this called Bagge Reclaim – and it in it was great series of articles on Emotionally Unavailable Men
http://www.baggagereclaim.co.uk
I think I found the link on HolyWaterSalt’s blog.
Finding out my own part in all this has really opened my eyes. At first I just blamed myself for it, felt endless shame, guilt, remorse, wanted to ‘fix’ it (illusion #99) — now I see the real issue is about fixing myself so that a guy like this – or a sociopath – isn’t of any interest to me, no matter how cute he is or how charming he pretends to be initially.
There is a difference between taking responsibility for my actions – and accepting unacceptable behavior.
OxDrover
“I think many of us tried to be “fixers” and in truth became “enablers—”doing for others what was their own responsibilities. We hid it from ourselves by telling ourselves we were being “helpful” “giving” “caring” “sharing” etc. but in the end, we were trying to fix the unfixable. EVen though our motives were “good—“still, we were doing something we shouldn’t have done.”
Thank you and I couldn’t had said it any better! THANKS!
rperk6069
“It makes sense to me. When someone gives to me, I feel that no matter what, I have to give back”
I agree that I have done this as well. Thank God it’s only a learn habit. Anything that we “learned” i.e. train in we can always unlearned it or better yet, retrain ourselves not to do it. Habits can be stopped. Like let’s say like smoking. Nasty habit for sure, but we can quit if we want too. It’s not going to be easy for sure (I am a smoker and hate the habit) but it can be done. I always believe the reason I started to smoke and sometimes enjoy it is because my “oral stage” i.e. Basic Themes of Freud’s theory, oral stage: major conflict: Weaning, Oral incorporative (0 – 6 months) Oral sadistic (6 – 18 months) wasn’t completed normally. Well just a theory of mine. Another theory is that smoking help me in the short term when dealing with stress. Remembering my own “roller coaster” ride with my ex P. During World War II, cigarettes was given to the troops to help with combat stress. Thank you soooo much Uncle Sam! But hey, we didn’t know about the danger of cigarette smoking back then. We do now!
Well anyway, habits can be stopped, retrain or relearned.
*I have been feeling stronger in the last week or so. Finally knowing that I don’t want someone in my life who is, for any reason whatsoever, willing to abandon me, play cat and mouse games with my heart and not be consistently present in my life. That even if he came back – and I know he won’t – that I wouldn’t want him. Because I see who he is now, and what his behavior is. I am not turned on by the illusions anymore – I deserve better. *
LovingAnnie, Yes you do (“I deserve better”). Much much better! And I know you will find it! Same as all of us, same of me. I deserve better! My children deserve better! We all Deserve Better! LovingAnnie, thank you for sharing your story and I know that took courage! Thank you!
Annie, Yes, my short term memory blipped again, I was mixing two stories—and you are right, it doesn’t matter if they get “just deserts” in this life or not, not for our healing, but if they do, that is only better.
The comment about joining an animal rescue society made me thinkk of something about “rescuing” that is recently a big deal in the farming community.
There used to be considerable horse slaughter for meat to be shipped overseas. Older animals or ones that were dangerous were slaughtered for meat for human consumption in Canada and France and other countries. Horse meat is quite good, and actually more healthy for humans than beef. The fat is less artery clogging etc and there is less fat and it is all very tender.
However, because in this country horses are considered more “pets” than cattle, a large group of horse lovers who thought this was HORRIBLE to harvest the meat from horses got a law passed that there would be NO SLAUGHTER of horses in US. There is now no plant that will take them at all.
So the RESULT? Old horses have NO $$$ value. They cannot be sold at all. No one will buy them. So if you have a horse which is old, infirm, in pain, injured, whatever—-that animal is 1200 pounds of suffering. What do you do with it? Pay $500 for someone to come haul off and bury it?
Recently, someone in our rurall area moved to town. They had a horse that was not rideable, it was dangerous, and they could not sell it so they just turned it loose on the highway where a car could have slammed into 1200 pounds of horse (a 100 pound deer can total your car) It some how got into my pasture. I tried to find it a home and couldn’t as it was dangerous. So I ended up putting the animal down and harvested the meat ourselves. Most people however are not able or equipped to do this. A friend in California had to find someone to put down and haul off one of her horses that was ill. People are taking horses to auctions, giving phony names and then when no one buys the horse, are leaving them.
This WELL INTENTIONED law has had horrible results for horses. More horses have suffered much more and in unintended ways because people became emotional about something that they knew nothing about. A horse is a large animal, disposal is difficult and costly, and as a result, the animal is actually the one to suffer because there is no HUMANE way to put them down. What is the difference if the meat is eaten or buried? People in China eat dog. I don’t choose to eat dog, but so what? When some animal is dead, what difference what happens to the body?
When we let EMOTIONAL concerns override our good sense, or when we focus on “preventing” problems for others, sometimes we CREATE more pain because we tried to “help.”
When I used to incubate eggs of various kids, I used to try to “help” the baby get out of the shell so he would not die before he was born. As a consequence I “helped” baby birds hatch that SHOULD have died by nature’s hand, because they could not have the strength to open the shell. My GOOD INTENTIONS were bad results.
When we ENABLE someone to behave poorly or badly and succeed anyway we are NEVER helping them. We frustrate ourselves and become resentful because our sacrifices to HELP turn out badly.
There is a BIG difference between “helping” someone and “enabling” and that is what we MUST LEARN before we can stop enabling.
When your teenager spends all their allowance on one thing, and then when tickets to a big concert come along, a once in a lifetime event, and they plead with you to “loan” them the money to go—if you loan it to them, you enable them. Letting them miss this TEACHES them that they should keep some money in reserve for “emergencies”—if you loan them the money they learn instead “oh, I can always borrow money from mom, and even if I have to pay it back I still dont’ miss out.”
Our current financial crisis of debt in the US today is because many many people have a credit card and NO impulse control, so debt creeps up until it is a mountain that cannot be paid back.
Many of the Ps took financial advantage of people here with our “helping” tendencies, which were really enabling instead. They used that “guilt” and “caring” to our disadvantages. I was fortunate that my P XBF didn’t do that to me, but my SON P did. I sent him money in prison for things to make his life easier, to buy a fan to keep him cooler in the summer, an electric razor, better food, money to buy tools for the craft shop, money he could trade for favors from other convicts, money to bribe guards for perfered treatment. Over the nearly 20 years he has been in prison, there is “no telling” how much money I sent him–thousands upon thousands–though I DELUDED myself I wasn’t enabling him because I never spent more tens of thousands to hire him a lawyer because I knew he was guilty and it would be a waste of money as it wouldn’t have gotten him off anyway.
For much of the time I was sending him the money it wasn’t just pocket change to me, but I was working very hard, over time, to just make a liviing, so it was really “out of my own mouth”–
When I stopped sending him money, my mother took over. She also spent nearly $10,000 to hire an attorney to represent him in his first parole hearing. Which thank God, failed to get him released…and with me working to keep him inside, he decided the best and easier way was to have me killed, for both inheritence and getting out on parole.
When we ENABLE/RESCUE someone, I think there are always unintended consequences. I had a therapist tell me once that the ONLY “legitimate” rescue was to pull an unconscious person from a burning building. I agree with her. If they can walk, they need to get themselves out, we don’t need to carry them. I’m learning, finally, and though enabling is a heavily ingrained habit I am doing my best to break it. Like Free says “baby steps.”
OxDrover,
What a horrifiying story. My empathy to you.
Your point about rescuing is well taken.
The only thing I wonder today is : Could he really simply be a human being who didn’t want me – and I am unbale to accept that rejection/fact and so I am looking for labels to judge him with ?
It’s absurd for me to try to be so fair.
Grrrrr. I feel great strong/clear for a few hours and then I slide back into self-doubt. I wonder what the purpose of that is – and it just may be habit. Habits can be broke, yes ?
Annie, thank you for your empathy, it is that empathy from other victims that has helped me make it through.
No story is more “horrifying” than another—all of us have pain that has FILLED our souls—Pain fills the entire being whether it is child birth or a smashed toe, or an amputated limb.
“Normalizing” these people is what makes us crazy–we KNOW it isn’t “normal” but we keep trying to fit the square peg into the round hole and we can’t understand why it won’t fit.
THEY ARE NOT LIKE US. We can’t make them like us. They don’t want to be like us. I do think that they know they are “not like us” but they despise us because we CARE. We are “patsies” because we care. They don’t care, so they are “superior.” (in their minds at least) We only make ourselves crazy trying to fit the square peg into the round hole. If it doesn’t fit–QUIT!
Realizing the narcissist in your partner is …
Like Death
It is like death,
Taking your every breath
Killing everything
Of anything left.
Nothing
And for always will be never
Agony anguish annihilation
Realization I have been deceived
Apparently you have been relieved
What a fool the things I believed
I thought you sincere I have been fooled
And you telling an entirely different story
I never saw it coming I have been schooled
Oh I wish for happier tymes
Before your poisoning mind infected myne
The dramas the scenes the hell bound maze
Over and over in my mind it plays
Like a big screen movie, your faults it displays.
Your f****d up deceitful; ignorant ways.
Unfolding it begins to reveal
The manipulated conditions
You were never real
You played a part that was not you but pretend
You overstepped the boundaries of friends
And so far beyond acceptable
Crucified it beyond amends
Scarred for life nothing will be the same
played I was, your terms your twisted game
Used and discarded but never again.
You are sorry that’s right, but not for what you’ve done
I have never been treated so disrespectful by anyone
You had no right, i didn’t know you could
You betrayed me in every way imaginable- but swore you never would
I am mad I am sad I am angry and I cry
No explanation, no excuses, you styll won’t say goodbye
And care so; little that you don’t even try
You made me question
Everyone’s best intention
For I had no previous apprehension
But of all the scheming and massacring
Of which you make no mention
You are foul acting as if you aren’t in the wrong
Its not important, because I was played all along.
Try as I might and hope as I do
I cry for the stories you tell as if true
I grieve the loss of someone I never knew
Unnecessary annihilation
I will never be the same after what you have put me through
And I regret the day I fell in with you
It was like Death
Taking my final breath.
Killing everything
There is nothing left.
Thank you so much for your blog I felt so alone and helpless-now I feel stronger and not so alone- Here’s to all the survivors!! Love and light
Taryn Trapp