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.)
Oh Rosa……Couln’t be more right there!!!!
The S LOVES to talk…..I listen to tapes of him ‘talking’….he’d call it a conversation…..but it’s HIM talking….me shutting up…..sometimes for over an hour…
The more he said….the MORE HE EXPOSED….once I learned to shut up and not take anything personally…..and listen and decode his ‘words’…..
This was the best thing I could have done for myself….to gain insight……FORGET my feelings….he didn’t care….he wasnt’ going to listen…..just SHUT UP EB and let him talk, talk, talk……
Once I shut up……I learned so much about what I was really dealing with.
It was like I had to separate myself off from myself….to be able to not take his ‘hits’ personally….and just listen…..with NO RESPONSE.
He didn’t even notice I gave no response……he couldn’t pull away from his chatter long enough to even question why I wasn’t ‘fighting’ with him, or arguing or even NOT SPEAKING…..NEVER NOTICED my change…..
HA!
Yes, ErinBrock.
Another Golden Rule that I learned in sales training was, “A great salesperson knows when to SHUT UP & LISTEN!”
This is another valuable nugget of wisdom that I was taught early, and I still apply it to my life today.
This is what it says in “Stalking the Soul” about communication in an emotionally abusive relationship:
Page 95: “Establishing firm control requires procedures that give the illusion of communicating–a singular kind of communication that doesn’t really aim to connect but, on the contrary, aims to maintain a distance that will prevent meaningful exchange between the partners. The goal of this distorted communication is to enable the other person to be used. He must be verbally manipulated in order to keep him in the dark about the process and make him even more confused.”
Rosa, don’t delete that comment, it is too good and too right! You are so right, shut up and listen, they will reveal themselves, their narcissism is too much for them not to.
EB you are right on there. I listened but I did not hear the messages partly because I was EXCUSING them or triavlizing them, but NO MORE I am turning the sound mostly off and watching the actioons as well as comparing actions vs words. They never match!
Great timing on this one for me. But, I also need to know what can be done expose them. Especially since the daughter is about to call her latest counselor to the stand to testify FOR her.
I have found the daughter on social web sites like Meetup trying to form support groups for childhood abuse victims, dysfunctional families, depression, ocd (you name it). She doesn’t have any problems dealing with any of it, but wants to get down what Steve refers to as the “polished psychological rap”, she wants to steal other group member’s emotional identities.
If a therapist or counselor even begins to catch on, she just goes out and finds another. She has had 5 in the past 4 years.
We have had custody of her now 9 year old son for over 5 years. She has not had any contact with him for over 4 years, but now is taking us to court in an attempt to get him back.
MiLo
And can’t forget the sociopath as therapist–my ex is one. And fits the spiritual seeker also–the transpersonal guru. He’s an author of a book on transpersonal psychology. Someone who is very intelligent, highly educated, and charismatic.
I hope this is extremely uncommon in the profession–and would be very interested in any statistics or anecdotal information on sociopaths who choose a career as a clinical psychotherapist? The real and potential damage a disordered therapist can cause is immense.
And as a spouse, your chances of surviving the onslaught of what I called “the diagnosis du jour” are minimal. Which probably explains why I was wife #4. (Wife #2 was a psychiatrist; Wife #3 was a LCSW–Wife #2 is now a candy striper who never returned to psychiatry after he was through with her, and #3 was in therapy herself for years after their divorce)
One of his closest friends is also a PhD in clinical psychology and refers to himself as a “recovering narcissist.” Seriously. I guess that shows some insight, but he uses that description as both an excuse for really bad behaviour, and as a “see, I’m trying!” ploy on his wife.
Milo:
4 years???? No support, financial/emotional for the child??
HOW is she going to prove a fit mother?
What can she show has changed? True or portrayed?
What basis is she going to court under….I’m the mother?
Well….I think your case of ‘what’s best for the child’ shines through here…..
Why does she need a phychiatrist to show she’s a good parent?
I think you can use the physchiatrist against her…..by asking the ‘right’ questions, based on your documentation you have collected and put together.
Not seeing a child in 4 years….after abandoning him in very formative years, then reappearing and wanting to play mommy again is just not feesable…..or healthy for the child.
I don’t think you would have a problem in court exposing her behaviors….current/past…..to predict what this child would face in the future.
Keep it factual….gather up your evidence and documentation and this should speak for itself.
At best….I see high level supervised visits under strict conditions …….and if she doesnt have the $$ to pay for these supervisors…..well then…….that might just be a problem for mommy-0!
Good luck!!!!
Thanks so much for your comments ErinBrock. It is a longggg and complicated story which covers two counties, four different courts, thousands and thousands of dollars and several years. Our experiences in trying to save our grandson was the Murphy’s law of court cases. I’ll give details later.
We will find out tomorrow, after an “attorney only” meeting, in front of a Magistrate, exactly what we are facing. Instead of filing for visitation or custody, where best interest of the child MAY have some bearing on it, she and her esteemed attorney are looking for loopholes. They motioned the court stating I was pretending (for 5 years) to have custody when actually the case had been dismissed. However, in fact, there was ANOTHER case after the dismissed one which granted me legal custody. The daughter never showed up for that case and we think she will claim she was not served. We know that that is not true, BUT – Murphy’s Law. Oh and the Magistrate that it is in front of tomorrow – she dismissed the first case and was removed from the second for making prejudicial statements against us and our attorney – Murphy’s Law
She has been seeing a therapist to prove she is JUST FINE – a totally changed person because of the abuse and neglect charges she was up against last time, as well as alcohol and drug use and abuse. She hopes she can avoid a court ordered eval this way.
Like I said way complicated and my time is limited right now. I must mention my 9 year old grandson – diagnosed and treated for RAD, ADHD, OCD, Sensory Integration and just recently on the spectrum – high function autism. She knows NONE of this and could care less. Oh, and her attorney, he works for FREE because he SO BELIEVES in her.
Thanks – I need all the help I can get – and no not even a card in 4 years.
MiLo
How does one every trust anyone to be normal after dealing with all the deception, acting, crocodile tears that are pure fakery?
I am afraid after my terrible mistake of a marriage, I will think everyone I meet is a sociopath or a narcissist.
Milo:
Regardless what she/attorney says about being served or you having the kids illegally…..whatever…..
WHERE HAS SHE BEEN FOR 4 YEARS?????
when my kids were kidnapped…they were taken by their father to a famlies home in another state…..
I NEVER stopped trying to reach them, speaking with another family member close by, keeping tabs on their myspace pages, contacting the school (who had been told there ‘wasn’t’ a mother)contacting the Dr. I saw they visited on my insurance… and when I felt it critical to show up…..and I wasn’t willing to risk one of their suicides….I SHOWED UP…..without warning…..
I knew it wouldn’t be prudent, due to the situation and stress they were under, ptsd, lies of me faking cancer and other lies to keep them from talking to me…..I knew it would cause them more harm if I showed up and rambo’ed them at school, put them in the car and carted them back to my home 600 miles away……I knew the S set this up so they wouldn’t go, due to what he was ‘feeding’ them……
So I had to wait for the right time and place and situation to get my kids.
All along, I had NO legal custody change…..I am their mother, I have raised them, I have cared, fed, educated and doctored them as their primary parent…..but THEY had to see what their father and family members were doing to them……to be able to come home in peace.
My guardianship/legal custody was Never in question…..I reported it to police, but I shared custody with their father bevcause we were not divorced at that point.
Point is……there was NOTHING in the world that was going to create a gap in my parenting my beautiful children. We had a physical/emotional gap…..BUT…..that was what they were brainwashed into believing…..
Your daughter, if truely interested in her son, would have been co-parenting with you…..she would be in contact with the school, dr’s, having playdates at the park, attending soccer games and coming over for Sunday dinner at moms…..to see her son….
I hope to god you have been REALLY CLEAR to your attorney that you are ONLY interested in your gs’s best interest…..and you could give a rats ass about any loophole she’s trying to slither through….he is to protect that child!!!!
It would be shocking if a court would go off an attorny’s recommedation that she is drug free…….without testing her through the courts…..
Her psych’s evaluation might pull…..but cross examining the psych is also an option and he may admit to not knowing what you ask of him……because she’s never spoken of it…..
the not being served ‘ritual’……okay….fine….standard claim….but WHERE WERE YOU all 4 years, coulda mailed, coulda shown up…..what was stopping you…..THE CRACK PIPE???
With medical history on Gs…..I am sure no court would just hand him off……he’s not a giapet….hes a child with special needs……his needs are being met in his current environment….
and with her legal actions…..she’s not making her relationship with his current/past providers a good one for the future.
She’s really got nothing to lose if she’s not paying for her representation……(financially at least)…..so hey….why not file a suit against mom and pops……I want my kid now…..
CROCK!
Why hasn’t your attorney petitioned the court for a new magistrate to hear your case? She’s already been removed from a case you’ve had in front of her…..this shows severe predujice.
The courts DO offer second chances……but NOT without major proof….
With the bits youv’e shared….
I really DON”T SEE this happening for your daughter……
Good luck tomorrow and have one last chat with your attorney and make it real clear…..DON”T SELL MY GS out!!!!!
Dancing,
I hear what you are asking. Been there all day myself. And I don’t know that there is a better answer than understanding that we have to be present in each moment as they come and if in some future moment I need to evaluate whether somebody is good or evil, then I have to run that checklist and it will be committed to memory. I will measure words against action. I know how now.
But until I have to do that. I don’t have to do that.
I know that staistically the majority of people are not these bogeymen and that as I learn and grow through the discoveries I make after this last debacle, I’m going to see myself and them differently.
I’m going to take better care of my trust because my little me is going to get to stand up behind the grown up me who has an awful lot of experience in her intuition.
When it rings like a bell, I’m gonna listen more closely.
And you know what, I’m gonna learn oragami so I have the tactile sense of folding tigers into swans……
Until then, life is good. And when I come up against them and I can’t handle it alone, I know where to find a really supportive and wise group of folks to consult about it and I know that Oxy’s skillet among the many voices is gonna ring out before I do something stupid.
There are so many books and articles and people and tools now that I didn’t have before. Me and you, when we go out in the world we have an ARSENAL we didn’t have before.
Not bad Huh?