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.)
Blogger,
You said : Psychopathy is not an official personality disorder in the DSM.
And maybe that is where part of this problem begins. It should be an official disorder in the DSM. And maybe this is some of the reason that this diagnosis can’t be said “outloud” in the real world. And why society in general doesn’t get it.
Columbine massacre is a good example of one size doesn’t fit all. Two boys commited the same crime. Different diagnosis.
Does that mean that if they were still alive one might be “saveable” and one would not be? Possibly.
A study of the Mafia would be really interesting. You would think that an organization such as the Mafia would have its share of a psychopath or two. Yet many would be “born into” this lifestyle as well. What would be the possibilities of reform in this kind of organized crime?
The fact that most do not want to specialize in this field, I think speaks volumes. But working with the younger offenders also makes sense.
Locking people up without reform, and letting them out again after doing time, w/o reform certainly isn’t the answer either.
What is the answer?
Hi..Happy Easter and Passover!
My fat a*s ex p went to the same behavioral clinic as me. He was ‘diagnosed’ as being bi-polar. I’ve had ‘mental’ problems since i was a little kid, so I’ve done a lot of reading on the subject. I knew his doctor, and asked her how he could be bi-polar? In the 16 years I knew him and the 1 1/2 years I lived with him I had never seen any evidence of this. I understand that she could not discuss this with me, but she did say that it takes only ‘one’ incident. Never sat well with me… I know now that he was playing them so he could get SSDI.
He never did..after 3 appeals…the last with a lawyer..he never got SSDI. I don’t know all the details…but ‘they’ got it! I’m so sure that his work history was crap…he probably did not have enough ‘in’ to qualify. “oh, my wife went to work and I raised the boys” Disgusting lies, lies lies.
After I kicked him out and he started stalking me one of the therapists called him a psychopath…so they knew, too.
I still go there for therapy (he is banned), and next week I will be tested for ‘adult female’ aspergers. I guess I was just a sitting duck.
I just feel really awful today. The ex-p stalked and smeared me on a chat board i used to frequent (isolating). Today is Easter and a bunch of women still think that I’m the stalker and I lie. It’s very frustrating. I try not to let it bother me, but it does. I’m so alone.
A “consicence” (i.e. a belief in what is right and what is wrong) is I think TRAINED into a child from birth by the culture they are raised in. However, some children, for whatever reason (those who group up without a working conscience) are not able to ABSORB this training, no matter how much I tried to teach my P-son about what was right or wrong, he did not absorb these things as APPLYING to himself. Therefore, he has no active conscience which would make him assume guilt or shame or sorrow over having “violated” what he DOES know society sees as “wrong.”
He also, assumes these things are wrong for others to DO TO HIM. Such as someone telling a LIE to him will ENRAGE HIM. Someone “telling on him” to the cops will ENRAGE HIM and makes it okay for HIM to kill them. Makes them, in his mind DESERVE to die.
A person growing up in Iraq in a very religious Muslim household of extremist Muslims who truly believe that anyone from America is a Satanic being that should be killed—if they strap on a bomb and blow themselves and others up, does it mean they ahve no conscience? That they are a psychopath? I don’t think it does, as they are ADHERING to their conscience and belief system that they are fighting for their belief in God’s will. They have a conscience AND they are abiding by the RULES of right and wrong that they have been taught from infantcy and their conscience is clean.
St. Paul, before his conversion to Christianity participated in the stoning death of St. Stephen. Later, Paul stated that he had a CLEAN CONSCIENCE even though he had participated in that death, because at the TIME HE DID IT, he truly believed he was DOING RIGHT by helping those who killed Stephen.
After Paul became a Christian, his version of what was RIGHT and WRONG changed, and he saw that what he had done in helping kill Stephen was OK by one set of rules, but NOT OK by the one he NOW espoused. He changed the CONTENT of his conscience, so he was different but still adhered to his conscience.
Sure, there are some Muslim psychopaths, but not every Muslim that blows themselves up is a psychopath, and though WE see this as “terrible behavior,” they see it as “holy and religious.”
Americans have generally been brought up to believe that freedom of religion is a good thing, others are brought up to believe that freedom of relligion is a bad thing. Both have “pure” consciences, one in allowing his neighbor to believe what he wants tom, and the other in killing the neighbor for not conforming. Neither is however, a psychopath. Both have working consciences, just the CONTENT is different where “right and wrong” is concerned.
I think a person without a conscience (A “psychopath” to give such a person a term) should be determined not only by what they DO so much as the context within which they DO it. Therefore a kid who is born into the projects and joins the gangs isn’t necessarily a “psychopath” without conscience, so much as a kid conforming to the larger CULTURE into which he was born and grew up. It is possible I THINK he could be a psychopath AND a gang member, or that he could be a conforming gang member and not a psychopath. In the latter case, he could be rescued by teaching him a different concept of right and wrong more conforming to the greater society and culture of the country, not just his gang.
There was a crisis that occurred at the end of last week, another bomb dropped, that I dealt with, brought on by my husband, the sociopath. This evening, after thinking about a response to a question that I posed to him earlier today, it hit me (for the first time, really sinking in) that he really does lack a conscience, not caring one wit about how his actions can produce upheaval in my family’s life. It is agonizingly frustrating to be dealing with someone who is a sociopath. My husband does not seem to be embarrassed by some of the stuff that he does, slowly acknowledging to myself that he is bizarre. He doesn’t care if he causes me to have a meltdown, that’s for sure, having felt anxiety-ridden, unglued over the weekend. I can’t stand him. I almost feel like I had some kind of slight breakthrough within myself when I realized that the man literally has no conscience.
Dear BlueJay,
NOPE, they don’t…and it is difficult for us That do I think to truly comprehend how they think. It is like us trying to imagine how a lizard thinks…we can’t quite do it. We can see how they act, but not really how they THINK.
The only way to “deal” with a psychopath is NO CONTACT—get and stay away from them. We can’t fix or deal with them, only take care of ourselves. (((hugs))))
Dear Caroline, How are you going? I feel that we havea lot in common, us both having spath daughters, with all the unbelievable[literally} pain the cause us.Are you ahving a reasonably happy Easter? On the negative side, I have tried over and over to contact my son in law, witha view to having him bring the kids over some time. I havent seen my Gs in 18 months,{Xmas, 2008}, and havent seen the 2 girls, now 15 and almost 9, in exactly a year. We got to see them with my SIL on Marys 8th Birthday, havent seen them since.
Im now realising that he isnt any more reliable than my daughter, we were supposed to see them Xmas, then it was N year,on and on, STILL hvaent seen them. he never returns my phone messages, or emails, and Zi now fel sure Im being quietly “dumped”, as too much effort on his part.
Part of the reason is that he is schmoozing{lovely jewish word!}my spath daughte so she will have her own kids weekends, so that he can drive 3 anda half hours each way to
see his 31 year old GF.{He is 46 in 2 months. } As Matt said recently, long term relationshipe dont work.He is prepared to drive ll that way every weekend at the moment, but really I think the Relationship is doomed. He is much much older than her, he has no money and a mountain of debts{around A$120,00 I think he told me recently!} he cant even give her a kid as he had a vasectomy after M was born 9 years ago.
The fact that the Gf has moved that distance away and taken a job as a cadet reporter on a newspaper in a city 4 hours from Sydney, makes me wonder if she is quietly hoping it will fizzle.I cant ring the kids at home weekends now, in case I speak to the spath daughter,[who obviously has no intention of meeting my reasonable boundary, ie, one apology for years of abuse, con tricks,lies, wrecking 2 homes plus her bedsit. desoite evereything, I still worry about what will become of her.
On the positive side, dave and I hada fantastic, happy day yesterday with our new “kids!”
I did the whole Easter thing, roast Lamb, all the trimmings,even tho the ey are Muslem, they hada half glass of rose wine each, and we raised out glasses, {as we did last year with them} and said,”Christ is Risen!” They love to hear about christ and jesus, but Im not pushing things. Just want to show them christian love in action! We had choc eggs, choc bunnies, a lovely choc swirl cake, topped with tiny eggs, fluffy chicks, then we had strudel, cream, and berries, then coffee.
Later we had savoury biscuits, stuffed olives, dips, salami,-they ate everything and loved it all. We watched a movie together,”Jean de florette”, which I love,and next time they want to see the sequel, “Manon des Sources”. They left with around 6 frozen meals made by me,plus extra choc eggs.
Lots of laughs, hugs, kisses, fun. It sur e makes up for around 30 years of ZILCH from my two! Im lapp ing it up! Roya rang her Mum in Teheran, and I spoke to her. She speaks no English, all she said to me, over and over was,”Thank you! Thank you,Thank you!. I asked Roya to say to her in Farsi,”Thank you for lending us your children, we love them I promise to be a spare Mum to them but will never repalce youRoya said her Mum was crying, and saying Thank you! again.They brought over th new Movie “UP”, and it was fun!
I feel so blessed and happy today, and I KNOW that these two are truly a gift from God to our love starved hearts!
Happy, happy Easter, from your happy Gem! and love to all of you!!Ps, Her Mum has 5 kids, of whom Roya, at 24, is the eldest. her Mum is younger than my spath daughter! She looks to be a beautiful woman in her short veil, wha t a lovely ,serene face.Pss. I explained to them that Jesus was the sacrifice for the whole world, that up to then, they sacrificed animals, and sprinkled the blood from the dead beasts on the people. But I told them, Christ was the Lamb of God,{the reason we eat roast lamb,} the one and only sacrifice for all time to everyone who asked Him to come into their hearts.How their eyes shone, as I told them these loveing words of truth!I gave Roya a book, a true story of a Muslem woman who became a christian, even tho her whole fmily denounced her, and plotted to kill her. She eventually escped with her small grandson to America.I got the book on Amazon, its a great read.
The book is called,”I dared to call him Father”, and its a wonderful, true story.Begum Bilquish ShaH is dead now, and was buried in her native pakistan.
OxDrover
I think what you say is extremely important:
He also, assumes these things are wrong for others to DO TO HIM. Such as someone telling a LIE to him will ENRAGE HIM. Someone “telling on him” to the cops will ENRAGE HIM and makes it okay for HIM to kill them. Makes them, in his mind DESERVE to die.
I am beginning to “get” it /their version of conscience /you describe it so well here.
geminigirl
Christ was also the child of God, so should we also be eating children?
Bulletproof, Sorry, I dont understand what you mean. Who is eating children? Are you perhaps a vegetarian, and object to me talking about eating roast lamb? If so, remember it says in the Bible, its not important what goes into the body,because it comes out of you and goes into the sewer.What IS important, it says, is what comes out of the mouth, kind loving words,not hateful words.
In Christs time, and in the Old Testament, meat was eaten, that is apart from pork,and other banned animals and birds.,{obviously for reasons of hygiene and health at that time, no fridges!}And Catholics to this day,{Im not one!} profess to be literally eating and drinking the flesh a nd blood of Christ.{Transubstantiation.} I DONT believe this, I see the communion cup asa symbol, not real blood!So, I dont really get your point. Love, Gem.
OxDrover,
While I was at work overnight, I relaxed. Acceptance of my reality is coming my way. No longer is there ANY DOUBT in my mind about the kind of person I am dealing with. Over and over, I have had hard lessons come my way due to my husband’s actions. He has let the mask drop for me, seeing his true colors. I don’t know whether others see him like he truly is, or if I’m the only one grasping what he is, a sociopath. They’re probably still explaining away his bad behaviors. He doesn’t bother attempting to be a supportive husband or a friend, just being an emotionally distant person. I have the idea (inside me) that I can move on, making plans that don’t include him, getting more comfortable about doing so. When planning for the future, my plans won’t include “us” anymore, just “me” or “me and the kids.” My husband is out of the picture.