What can we say about the games sociopaths play in psychotherapy? We might start with: Sociopaths don’t seek counseling, ever, from a genuine motive to make personal growth.
This isn’t to say sociopaths don’t end up in therapists’ offices. They do, either because they’ve been mandated to attend therapy, or because they view counseling, somehow, as enabling their ulterior, manipulative agenda.
But never does the sociopath, on his own, awaken one day and say to himself, “I’ve got some personal issues I need to examine seriously, for which pursuing psychotherapy is probably imperative—otherwise my life and relationships are going down the drain.”
I repeat, sociopaths will never, ever, seek counseling for purposes of genuinely confronting their damaged, and damaging, personalities. This is so reliable a principle that its converse equally applies—however antisocial his history may be or seem, the client who seeks counseling with a genuine motive to deal with a issue(s) disqualifies himself, perforce, as a sociopath.
And yet we know that sociopaths (some, not all) will play therapy games. But what therapy games?
I’ve alluded already to the court-mandated therapy game, which prescribes the sociopath’s manipulative cooperation toward meeting the court’s mandate that he participate in some sort of counseling—whether anger management, group therapy around domestic violence issues, or counseling for sexual offenders.
This isn’t to suggest that all, or even most, court-mandated clients are sociopaths, far from it; even those who are court-mandated, the great majority of whom will be going through the motions psychotherapeutically, aren’t sociopaths. However, one can be quite certain that the court-mandated sociopath will most definitely regard the therapy process with absolute disdain; and, in my experience, unlike the unsociopathic client, the sociopathic client will be more likely to posture his sincere participation and recognition of his need for help. That’s to say, his tendency will be to “play” the system, more than even merely cooperate with it.
Then we have the sociopath who’s been read the riot act by, say, a seriously exhausted partner, and who agrees to participate in counseling. We might call this the appease his partner therapy game. In this case, the sociopath has reasons for wanting to preserve the relationship (or otherwise delay its dissolution)—reasons principally related to the conveniences the relationship offers or, just as influentially, to the inconveniences that a split or divorce would pose.
In these, and other, therapy games, the sociopath’s range of cooperative participation in therapy is rather wide—on one hand, he may present as compliant and receptive, effectively concealing his underlying insincerity and deception. Alternatively, because after all it’s incredibly inconvenient that he should have to take time out of his life to appease his exploited partner, he may make no disguise of how put-out he feels, and may visibly brandish his indignation, agitation and resentment.
The latter attitude, especially in cases of couples therapy, makes for a dangerous dynamic, wherein the risk of abuse, post-therapy sessions, rises. One hopes the therapist recognizes this risk and terminates the couples sessions, which are contraindicated where abuse is present and flagrant, whether overtly or covertly.
Of course it should only be so easy for any us to smoke out the well-disguised sociopath, who may just be a fantastic, convincing actor, and seem to seriously want to examine and own his misbehavior.
He may seem utterly sincere, for instance, in the therapist’s office, specifically in his contrition and his motivation to establish, or reestablish, himself as trustworthy. His agenda, even to the most astute clinician, may seem pure when it’s impure and merely effectively camaflaged.
Other therapy games sociopaths play include the I’m seeking therapy voluntarily charade, which can throw partners and therapists off, since we’ve established that clients who unmanipulatively, and voluntarily, engage in therapy, virtually by definition rule themselves out as sociopaths. This leaves us the tricky business of ascertaining the sociopath’s true motives for seeking therapy.
In other words, it’s not enough that he presents himself voluntarily for services, because his presentation, if he’s sociopathic, will necessarily be deceptive. And in any case, his status may be less voluntary than he purports; he may deny, persuasively, the court’s involvement when, alas, the courts (or probation) may be involved.
But even in cases where the court isn’t involved, although technically he may have sought services voluntarily, in reality (as we’ve noted) the sociopath may be complying with a different sort of mandate—the mandate, for instance, of a furious partner, or an exasperated employer, whom he’s willing to mollify purely from selfish motives.
And so, once again, we have the illusion of a client who appears motivated to seek help and make a kind of sincere reckoning, but who, instead, uses therapy to manipulate his way out of the doghouse and restore the old leverage with which he’ll continue, sooner or later, to exploit in his customary style.
Finally, for now, we have sociopaths who play the dedication to their spiritual development game. These are typically well-educated sociopaths with a polished psychological rap, who posture as committed spiritual seekers. Some of these sociopaths may go so far as to make a sort of cult—a seeming life mission—of their alleged spiritual development, raising irony and farce to new levels.
This category of sociopaths validates another principle that applies to sociopaths in general: While they are absolutely incapable of genuinely pursuing their personal and spiritual growth, yet smoother, more glib sociopaths can be highly capable of ungenuinely, insincerely, manipulatively pursuing their so-called personal growth.
Think of the predatory trollers (and rollers) at AA and NA meetings, and all other sociopaths, who posture one way or another as honest, open books seeking to confront their trauma responsibly and seriously.
Summoning guises like Mr. Sensitive, Mr. Wounded, Mr. Relationship Builder, Mr. I’m In Touch With Vulnerability, Mr. I’m In Recovery From Co-Dependence, and countless other pseudo-evolved raps, these sociopaths can be magnets—and they know it—for genuinely vulnerable women seeking sensitive, emotionally available, vulnerable men with whom to partner in their own recovery.
I’ve outlined briefly, here, several of the more common therapy games that sociopaths play. They are by no means an exhaustive account. In concluding, I realize there are several points and issues that scream (at least to me) for elaboration. I intend to address them in more depth in upcoming Lovefraud columns.
(This article is copyrighted © 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of the male gender was for convenience’s sake, not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
Off to get the Betrayal Bond…thanks for the suggestion!
I “found” the recordings I made from the night the stbx was committed…I made them because he had successfully conned the police who came out that morning. I could not find them under recordings and accidentally found them under ringtones today. I listened to them…OMG – all the terror from that night came rushing back but at the same time I realized I have the last piece of evidence to thoroughly prove my case in court next week.
They also reminded me why I am divorcing him and why I don’t want him back…horrible, horrible stuff he said and called me…all the good times in the world (and there were definitely more bad than good) doesn’t make up for the crap I went through…~shudder~ I am keeping them to remind me when I do get weepy!!
Yeah cause its often shortly displayed. My dad admitted to go see a counselor but he wanted to go together. I was like no. Cause I know if we both go I won’t get the help I need. Fake tears and lies. He does that to a lot of people. If you aren’t careful, you can get tricked quickly. My dad’s mad at me for no reason right now. He’s so fake! Everytime he’s angry, he always brings people over. Just to get the attention and all. Like his gf only comes when we are not talking or he’s angry at me.
myboys! good. rock that courtroom!!
Myboys:
I was told by my attorney…..that the V. recordings must be transcribed….
You can do this yourself…..
Just type out VERBATUM….what the tapes say…..and who is speaking.
Ie.
Spath. XXXXXXXOXOXOXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Spath. XXOXOXOXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
You: UUOUOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Like a deposition transcript.
Take both into court…..3 copies of the trasncripts…..You-judge-opposing……
AND the tape……with a device to play it to court.
Good luck!!!
Heightofconfusion
hi, just read your answers, thats great because I have got to know you a tiny bit more!!
You say that you are :
Stressed but coping, okay that things are the same even though he is describing you as moody/sulky
You still think you love him and can make a difference, and maybe you can…you are in a “nice stage” where he feels caught and is trying to reassure you again.
I remember a whole month where the P in my life tried to make it up with me. He stroked my hair as I cried, and with tears in his eyes he promised never to cheat again and if he could turn back time he would do it differently. I was like a small infant baby at the mercy of his words. He broke every promise and left me in a terrible mess later on even though I accepted him back after transgressions that were the hallmark of a psychopath.
I hope you have a human being there with you and not a psychopath but you are on lovefraud and that’s a sign you are thinking the worst.
If you have a human being that’ s troubled, confused and trying to work it out with you then great, wish you both best of luck. If you think he is a psychopath then you are in trouble and just know we are all here to help, and even though its a terrible shock you CAN WORK IT THROUGH just slowely, in your own time and on your own terms….I’m here (not long enough to do conversation, but in and out)
Please mind yourself. Be kind to yourself and give yourself space and time to do anything you want! if the life you live is ok for you, then it’s ok…..We will still listen and throw advice at you!! maybe you are the loving energy that it takes to cure a psychopath…brilliant, I wish I was.
stay talking, describe what it’s like. thinking of you. best of luck xxx
ErinBrock,
My feelings exactly, if only someone will listen. Oh, I don’t think it’s who is sleeping with who – I think it is who is serving the magic mushrooms. I’m not joking.
Milo
I smell legal system EXPOSURE ON THE HORIZON……..
I NEED HELP understanding something.
Three months ago, I sent an email request to my son’s father to substantiate his drug tests of the past 14 months and all future tests, with verifiable information; since he forwards the results to me via email and is purely capable of falsifying them electronically. I also asked he provide evidence, in payment stubs or insurance statements that he is, in fact, in therapy. Both the drug tests and therapy are part of our custody order and his behavior had been consistently suspicious since he showed up at my house a few months prior asking for supervised visits and begging me to protect our son from him, after his girlfriend broke up with him.
He refused. So, through very expensive litigation, we found ourselves at a pre-trial conference nearly two months later. He and his lawyer came with nothing to validate the tests and basically tried to make a case that I’m controlling and that he refuses to cooperate with my controlling behavior and will only allow the testing company to send me results directly if I pay for the tests.
The order remained in effect and the conference officer explained to the S that he could have stopped this thing right then and there. That it was clearly an issue of trust, that my written request was not unreasonable and that she felt sorry for our four year old son that his parents couldn’t resolve what appeared to be a problem with a simple solution.
We requested the follow up drug test, with results sent directly to me or my council, and a response to the S’s willingness to participate and pay half of a psychological evaluation. After over a week, we got neither. So, back to the judge we went and he order the results be sent directly to his council and then mine and ordered the psych eval.
A week later, three months after this whole process began with a simple and reasonable email request, we received copies of the results from his council and they all were in line with what I had been receiving from him by email.
What I don’t understand is WHY the f@.......#k he wouldn’t have just simply had them sent to me in the first place!?!?! Why would he allow three months of litigation go by, and a conference to try to stop this thing from going to court, without simply providing indisputable documentation that the tests were not falsified? He is cheap and doesn’t like to spend, nor does he have much of a financial base to spend, significant funds on litigation. Yet, collectively, this process has probably already cost us nearly $5k combined.
Help me understand the motives of someone who would do this????????
duped – it’s a control play, designed to mess with you financially and to assert his dominance.
i am very sorry.
it is about the WIN for these folks. they don’t think about the consequences of the win, just the win.
perhaps you could do some writing and list other times he seemingly bites off his nose to spite his face.
and the ‘save our son from me’ is just pity play crap. flush it.
one_step,
I did flush it and refused to supervise his visits as long as our son was ok. I also refused to take him to yet another psych eval, like he requested.
From that point on, our son started having difficulties. It’s like, if I can’t get you to get involved directly, I’ll do it indirectly through our child. I’m not even certain he’s aware that he does it.
duped