By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
One of my favorite quotes from Dr. Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning came to mind today. Dr. Frankl wrote his book after spending time in a Nazi concentration camp during WWII. He lost his wife, his family and most of his friends. His book was not just another list of the atrocities done by the Nazis, but a look at the emotional toll taken by the hopeless situations in the camps and how different people responded differently. I learned a lot from this book, and I highly recommend it for those who have suffered “hopeless” situations.
“We must never forget that we may also find meaning in life even when confronted with a hopeless situation, when facing a fate that cannot be changed. For what then matters is to bear witness to the uniquely human potential at its best, which is to transform a personal tragedy into a triumph, to turn one’s predicament into a human achievement. When we are no longer able to change a situation—just think of an incurable disease such as inoperable cancer—we are challenged to change ourselves.”
Over the past few years, as my age and “decrepitude” creeps up on me and I am no longer able to do the more active things I used to do, sometimes I get so frustrated I could scream! I want to be out galloping across the fields on my horse ”¦ I can almost feel the wind in my hair as the horse moves beneath me.
The truth is, though, I’m sitting here with my leg up after surgery to replace my Achilles tendon. Though it is probable that I will be able to walk again, probably with a limp, I am never going to be running freely or galloping my horse across the pasture. I am no longer, as the above quote says, “able to change the situation.” I will continue to get older and less able to do the things I did in my youth. That is just the cycle of life, and no matter how I wish I could be young again, have the young, supple body I did then, those days are gone by.
My son, the psychopath
There are a lot of things in my life that are not what I wish they were. I can’t change these things. They just are what they are. One of my sons is a psychopath who is bent on killing me, or having someone kill me, if he can, and especially before my mother passes away, because that would give him some financial advantages that would not be possible were I to out-live her.
Patrick was one of the brightest, most lovable little boys I ever knew in my life. He loved to fish and fly kites and play with the farm animals and our pets. He was a standout at school, and the teachers and other kids loved him. Plus, he was cute as a doggone button. He was unusually responsible as a pre-teen and I really enjoyed being around him.
When he hit the “terrible teens,” though, I was frustrated beyond belief that I couldn’t get him to continue to be the kind of kid that had charmed his friends and his teachers. It happened suddenly, almost overnight. It seemed that he morphed into this teen-aged monster. Somehow I had to change what was happening to him. I had to save him before he did something that would ruin his bright life of the future. What college would accept him, or give him a scholarship, with a criminal record?
Then the next thing I know he was in prison for a felony. I couldn’t give up though. People had found Jesus in prison, and maybe he could get out and go to college anyway, and “straighten out.” I couldn’t believe it was hopeless.
Accepting the situation
But it was hopeless, because my son, my beloved son, Patrick, is a psychopath. No one can force anyone to change if they don’t want to. That is the hardest thing for the rest of us to accept: There is nothing we can do to help the person we love(d) stop hurting us or others. There is nothing we can do with the situation except accept it, and find meaning in our lives in spite of what it has cost us to be involved with a psychopath.
I also dated a man who I believe is high in psychopathic traits after my husband died. I was extremely needy and vulnerable to someone looking for a new “respectable wife” to cheat on, and I think that was what he had in mind. Breaking up with him was one of the most difficult things I’ve ever had to do. I cried for months.
Accepting that my son is a psychopath and wants me dead, and accepting that the man I hoped to spend the rest of our lives together with was a cheat, a drunk, and not to be trusted, is all part of what I cannot change any more than I can change that I am 65 years old and not up to, and will never be up to, doing the things I have done in my youth!
Stages of life
Psychologist Erik Erikson’s “stages” of life is one of those interesting concepts that actually is quite simple. I am in the “integrity versus despair” stage of my life. This is the early end of “old age,” in which I, as entering old age, must review my life.
- This phase occurs during old age and is focused on reflecting back on life.
- Those who are unsuccessful during this stage will feel that their life has been wasted and will experience many regrets. The individual will be left with feelings of bitterness and despair.
- Those who feel proud of their accomplishments will feel a sense of integrity. Successfully completing this phase means looking back with few regrets and a general feeling of satisfaction. These individuals will attain wisdom, even when confronting death.
Now I can’t say that I can look back entirely without some regrets, or without feeling that I might have done some things better, but I have made peace with those regrets. I don’t view every mistake I have made as “worthless,” because I have learned from those mistakes.
Mostly I am accepting me as what I am. I am working on finding that wisdom that Erikson talks about. Working on finding dignity and peace in what is left of my life. Not giving in to despair about things I cannot change. I would change Patrick if I could, but I can’t. That’s just the way things are. I am not going to hold out unreasonable hope and then feel despair because I can’t achieve that unrealistic hope of “escape” from the emotional bondage of loving my son. I have accepted and I have “escaped,” and I will live free from unreasonable expectations.
Shane, thanks for telling me who said that I have CRS (can’t remember stuff! LOL) I think the trick is to do it the FIRST time they show us who they are. I’m learning that slowly, and getting better at it.
Thank you, ladies!
I was doing so much better before he appeared again. My worst fear now is what he will do next. I have a very hard time being mean or unkind to people and I don’t want to be that way to him, but I also don’t want him to ever come near me again. I want to tell him that he needs to call it a day, but I don’t think he will listen and continue to try making my life miserable.
OxD, I am so very sorry to what happened with your son. You are truly a strong lady and there is a special place for you in heaven!
Findingtruth, your “worst fear” is an attempt to predict – we do not have that power. But, what you DO have the ability to do is determine whether or not you are safe.
That you have a very hard time being mean or unkind to people are just the human qualities that spath abusers love to take advantage of. Your kind and gentle spirit is a QUALITY – something that is valuable. But, to spaths and abusers, it is a VULNERABILITY to be exploited.
Any attempt that you make to tell him anything is an exercise in futility. He is not going to hear you because he doesn’t care. He doesn’t care. He simply does not (and, never did) care. He is a predator and he most certainly will continue making your life a living hell – that’s not an attempt to predict, Findingtruth. That is a fact.
Brightest blessings to you
OxD, the CRS(can’t remember stuff) support group meets every Thursday at…..oh, crap….I can’t remember what time……
Brightest blessings
You are very welcome, Ox Drover. I have the CRS’s left from my P experience, so I understand.
I know we have different situations/are in diferent stages of the game, so to speak, however, I am in the “just comining out of the fog” stage of my recovery, and in turn having memories and flash backs. I remember the P ALWAYS carries a pad of paper and a pen, in his shirt pocket.. He only bought shirts with pockets for this reason. He used the pen and paper to write things down that people would say, then used those words of others, to write (unauthentic) poems with. He said he had always written poems but had to use this method, because he “Has Asperger’s Syndrome” LOL. He also incorporated quotes from famous poets, musicians, U.S. Presidents, etc. He blamed all of his (VERY BAD) behaviors on being Autistic and thinks he can get away with this, due to some similarities he has read about, regarding empathy and emotion. Unfortunately for him, I do Swim Therapy with children and adults who are on all different levels of the A spectrum, including those how are Aspies, and in addition I have friends that are Aspies. In the end I assured him that weather or not he has Asperger’s, he is a disordered pathalogical abuser and has at least one personality disorder, and told him to depart, imediately. What a Bastard he was. CanNOT wait to be rid my aftermath symptoms… Thanks for listening…
Finding truth,
You say you have a hard time “being mean” or “rude” to anyone…..
What you are saying is that you do not know how to SET BOUNDARIES.
Boundaries are the limits that you will allow others to be mean and rude to you.
Saying to someone who has hurt you “I do not want to be around you right now, please LEAVE” IS NOT BEING “RUDE” it is setting boundaries.
Going to your local police department and filing a STALKING order or whatever is filed in your area to keep them away (because THEY WILL NOT RESPECT YOUR BOUNDARY BUT WILL CONTINUE TO VIOLATE IT)
People who respect others respect the boundaries others set.
People who do NOT respect others do not respect their boundaries either.
You have a perfect right to NOT SEE OR SPEAK WITH ANYONE that you dont’ want to see or speak with AND THAT IS NOT BEING RULE.
They know thhis about you and are using this “I can’t be rude” thing against you…what you need is a NEW DEFINITION OF WHHAT IS AND WHAT IS NOT “RUDE”
THEY SKEW OUR DEFINITIONS—my egg donor’s definition of “forgiveness” meant that I had to pretend that the person never hurt me and that they would not do it again (when I knew they would) but I realized HER DEFINITION WAS WRONG, “forgiveness” is in my mind now, simply getting the BITTERNESS about them out of my heart, but it does NOT include pretending it didn’t happen or trusting them again. (unless they ahve shown LONG TERM PROGRESS IN REPENTING AND BEING TRUST WORTHY.
So hang in their girl fiend, you gonna make it….
Thanks, OxD.
I am having another sad day and I hate that I feel this way.
I just returned from church where I prayed, as I do every day, for a miracle regarding him.
I don’t know how to just let go.
He told me in the past that he knows there is something wrong with him, but with him people can either take it or leave it. That is his philosophy and he stands firm with it.
I read Joel Osteen’s word every day and he says to pray big, that things cannot happen in the natural, but God is supernatural and can make anything happen. Working in medicine for most of my life, I have seen miracles, many of them, where the physicians treating patients (cardiology and cardiovascular) have said there is no way a patient should have lived, and yet they pulled through, without lasting effects. Those physicians all attributed to a higher power.
What are your thoughts on prayer and sociopaths?
Shane: Oh my gosh, my spath always has paper and a pen, too, forever writing things. If he had something to say to me, he always had notes, like he prepared a speech.
Truthspeak: Thank you for reminding me that telling him anything is futile. You were reading my mind, in that I have gone over and over what I would like to say to him and I know in my heart he would just be amused.
Every MONTH on the anniversary of our first dinner, at 5:17 p.m., which is when I walked across the parking lot to meet him, regardless of where we were, together or apart, he would make it a point of saying the most beautiful, loving things to me. When we had been together five months, we went to Toronto and then Niagara Falls. In NF, he knelt down, and for 10 minutes, with so much feeling, told me what his life meant with me back in it, that he had loved me for 30 years and he never wanted to lose what we had.
He is very good with money, manages it well. He is not a druggy, nor does he drink.
He has an aunt that is my age. She has told me some disturbing things about him from the past, but she stays true to him because he pays a lot of her bills. Whenever I needed to be alone after one of his tirades, he would get his aunt to call me to tell me how much he loved me. Keep in mind, his is almost 53-years-old! I had contacted her a few months back as her husband, a carpenter, had my mother’s vanity that he was restoring and I wanted to make arrangements to pick it up. She did not return my call. I then sent her a letter with this info, along with a self-addressed, stamped, envelope to write back to me, which she did. She noted she felt “awkward” talking with me. That told me that he obviously lied to the family about me yet again.
I don’t know how I would get through this without all of you wise folks. Love you all!
Findingtruth, this may come across harsh and it’s not my intention to hurt your feelings. “Miracles” happen – they do. But, they don’t happen because we want them to, and there is no prayer in any language in any religion that is going to make a “miracle” change from a sociopath to an empath. It won’t. Sociopaths are sociopaths until the day that they die. They will glom onto religion, spiritualy, or drinking their own urine if it means that they can exploit and harm empathetic, caring, kind, and good human beings Period.
I’ve typed this, before, but whomever you hold to be your Higher Power has already granted empathetic human beings everything that they’ll ever need to “make it.” It’s up to US whether or not we use our instincts, talents, gifts, and qualities in a positive, meanigful way.
Sociopaths aren’t all addicted to alcohol, drugs, or money. What they ARE all addicted to is using and discarding. Everyone and everything is disposable. Human emotions are to be eploited to their advantage. Money will be spent upon what THEY want or “need.” Religion will be practiced in the manner of THEIR choosing – people actually change religious beliefs FOR other people!
As long as No Contact is continued, each day is a day of forward momentum. Moving further and further from the source of our negative experiences and closer and closer to ourselves is the most positive aspect of NC, IMHO.
Sure, he lied to his family – he’s a “nice guy” that could probably be nominated for an award if he were a member of the Screen Actors’ Guild. He’s an consumate actor, and that is all that he is.
You will be fine, in due time. Be kind to yourself and recognize that you are a priceless part of this vast and mysterious Universe. You have value WITHOUT him.
Brightest blessings
Truthspeak: You are definitely making me see the light. I have read so many blogs on LF over the past months and I understood and applied everything being said. Then he showed up. I was so proud that I was 4-1/2 months NC and then I opened the door for him. It won’t happen again. I was healing prior to this and, within minutes after he left, all the terrible old feelings came back. No more.
Thank you!
Blessings to you.