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To recover from the sociopath, first recognize the depth of your pain

You are here: Home / Recovery from a sociopath / To recover from the sociopath, first recognize the depth of your pain

April 26, 2020 //  by Donna Andersen

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Letters to LovefraudUPDATED FOR 2020

A Lovefraud reader who posts as “LadyA” sent Lovefraud the following email. At the end, I suggest how she can recover from the sociopath.

I’ve spent a lot time thinking about my experience with my spath, and how it affected me and the people around me. I have read article after article, story after story. I now fully understand what spaths do and how they do it but I didn’t understand why I don’t feel any better about it. What was I missing?

When I left my spath it was a fairly dramatic experience. He had just been sentenced to serve jail time on the weekends for an obstruction of justice charge. My mom flew into town and in one swoop we packed up everything we could get in the car and left the province to go back to my hometown. I had to quit my job over email and send a goodbye text to all my friends.

I am thankful every day for what my mom did for me. I sure wasn’t happy about it at the time but I knew I needed out and this was my chance. What I didn’t know is how much moving back to my hometown would affect me emotionally. I had originally planned on only being back for six months. Just long enough for him to move on and get me out of mind, but it has now been just over three years and I still haven’t moved back. I got settled in a new job, new friends, and a new relationship. Even after all of this I haven’t been able to figure out why I’m not happy. Until three days ago.

Pride. I was proud of myself for the life that I had built. I moved 1200 km’s away from home right after high school to a big city. I was on the fast track to a strong career in a competitive field. I had a brand new car, paid all my bills on time, and was saving to buy a house. I was independent, reliable, strong, caring, and had a really great outlook on the world. Not many people can say that at 22.

All of that was ruined by a six-month “whirlwind romance.” I’m no longer proud of myself. I feel like I have failed because I came back home with my “tail between my legs” to my mommy. I no longer have a new car because it was repossessed as soon as I got back here. I am jaded, I don’t trust people easily, and I am no longer as strong as the face I put on the outside. I’ve gained weight because deep down I just don’t care anymore. My career is now on a plateau due to the location where I live. I don’t have one reason to be proud of myself right now.

How do I get my pride back when I know what happened? I want to feel proud of myself for my life but I just have zero idea where to start. I’ve thought about moving away again, but I don’t really know if that’s the answer. How can I be proud of what has happened in my life? I’m really honestly just so ashamed.

Donna Andersen responds

Dear LadyA,

I am so sorry about your encounter with a sociopath. Although this is not a normal breakup, the good news is that you can recover from the sociopath.

Right now, however, it does not seem that way. Why? I can see two reasons.

The first is that betrayal by a sociopath is a huge emotional injury. In the beginning of your email you said that, after all your reading, you now “fully understand what spaths do and how they do it,” but you don’t feel any better.

Understanding is a critical first step to you to recover from the sociopath. But understanding is an intellectual process, something that you do with your mind. The wound you experienced is also emotional. It needs to be dealt with emotionally.

How do you do that? You allow yourself to feel the pain of the injury.

This means letting yourself cry. Letting yourself scream and wail. Letting yourself experience anger — I’m sure there is anger — perhaps by working it out on a punching bag.

This isn’t pretty, and you probably want to do it privately, because other people often have difficulty being around this. Or, you may have a good therapist who can help you.

One way or another, any bottled up emotion you have within you needs to come out.

Underestimated the injury

Next you wrote that you identified the reason that you’re not happy as “pride.” But it seems like you are regarding pride as something bad, like one of the seven deadly sins.

You had every reason to be proud, because your pride was based on your achievement. And the sociopath took this away from you.

Here is what I think has happened: You have underestimated the scale of the injury, and the severity of the betrayal.

LadyA, you were building a life for yourself. You went out on your own; you started building a career; you were moving forward.

And some manipulative, deceitful parasite, who did something bad enough to end up in jail, ruined it for you.

Not only did he cost you money and hurt your career, he corrupted your outlook on life. You’re jaded; you don’t trust; you don’t care. You are not the young person you once were all because of the sociopath.

Recognize that this was not a normal breakup after all, you had to flee your home, job and friends.


Your life was shattered. Your psyche was deflated. This is a massive shock to your system. It’s no wonder that you are still struggling.

Drain the emotion

So what do you do? In my opinion, you do exactly what I suggested earlier — allow yourself to feel the pain now, knowing that the pain is bigger than you originally thought.

So you cry. You stomp. You imagine him standing in front of you and yell at him. (Do not, however, attempt to confront him in person. This would be counterproductive.)

The idea is to drain off the negative emotion.

As you drain the emotion, a void will be created within you. It’s very important to fill that void with joy.

This may sound preposterous to you, like you have no reason to be joyful. But don’t look at the totality of your life right how.

Do any small thing that makes you happy: Go for a walk. Play with your pets. Have lunch with a friend. Listen to music.

To recover from the sociopath, it may require many rounds of draining off the negative and replacing it with positive. But with time, you’ll find that your entire outlook will change, and you’ll be able to get back on track.

Importantly, with the wisdom you gained through this experience, you’ll never fall for a sociopath again.

Lovefraud originally published this article on May 12, 2014.

Category: Recovery from a sociopath

Previous Post: «Spath Tales High school boyfriend pursues her, then abuses her
Next Post: A story of classic sociopathic betrayal: ‘The most vile person I ever met’ Spath Tales»
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princessleonor
10 years ago

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

kaya48
10 years ago

Jenna
I am sure they laugh about us. Mine was sipping champagne with her on a cruise while I was texting him to come back home to his family. He said “sorry there was no service “. No kidding, there was no service in the Bahamas. He had fun with her. What seemed then do painful is now my victory. I divorced him. I would not have someone disrespect me and my son like that. No one , not even Cpt America. (His minions called him that at work ). Yuck.

kaya48
10 years ago

Jenna
Same with me. He actually got a vasectomy, no need for protection. He exposed me to all kinds of std’s with the party girls. He vowed to protect and cherish me with his marriage vows. When I trustingly believed myself to be 100 percent safe, I have unknowingly been having unprotected sex through him with strangers and all their sexual partners. I am ok, fortunately , but just for that I will never forgive him . How dare did he take it upon himself to risk my life.

eyesopen123
10 years ago

Omg…mine had a vasectomy too…he completely swooned me….gave me all the “Love” I had always dreamt of…and fast as lightning! Then took me for a TON of money…I read these articles over and over and I just can’t believe I fell for this type of manipulator!!!

eyesopen123
10 years ago

Thankfully I got out and I’m on the path to recovery…Will likely never see my money again…But I will chalk it up to a huge life lesson. But I’m making a doc appt tomorrow to make sure i am safe. I have this overwhelming urge to try to get the other victims in his life to see the truth…but I’m not sure if that’s even possible.

kaya48
10 years ago

Eyes
I also had the urge to earn the other woman, the new victim. This was right after the discard. They are both cops and it only almost got me in trouble. As he was filing a restraing order against me. He, the one who cheated, tried to get me in trouble with the law. Fortunately my lawyer and 1400$ layer it got dismissed by the judge and the ex looked like an idiot. That experience taught me to not contactl anyone , including new victims. That’s none of my concern. Also that incident started the no cobtact. Almost 2 years ago and for ever .

kaya48
10 years ago

Jenna
Very good advice. No contact including his victims. Another advice from my experience is to stay away from any social websites. Don’t put anything on facebook. I don’t have a facebook page and I don’t check his or his minions ones. None of his doing is my concern anymore. When I first found this website I was a total mess. I did not know how to stay “no cobtact ” and relapsed many times , only to pay the price for it. More blame and more insults thrown at me by him, causing me pain and agony.
The day I decided to go no cobtact I started this calendar with happy face stickers for every day that passed. After a year I stopped but I still have it as a reminder of how far I came. In the end, they don’t care one bit about you or even the children. They only care about the control they lost.

kaya48
10 years ago

Exactly, that’s what they want. Portray you as crazy. My ex told his family “I had no other choice than to leave because she is a crazy b*****. ” they want to look like the victim. He told me that everything that had gone wrong in his life was my fault. My ex had no understanding what his behavior was doing to me and to our child.
You know once you remove yourself from this craziness you can see how it was all bad. Nothing was good about him. Today I say “thanks for making me a fighter, you totally underestimated me” . It should be a warning to him to never mess with me again.

NotWhatHeSaidofMe
10 years ago
Reply to  kaya48

kaya48
Your post touches the edge of another LIE that people repeat:
At least he/gave you your child.

That’s a LIE. ANYONE can be a sperm doner. My ex was NOT involved in parenting, not available to do anything but the fun. My child is who she is IN SPITE of him, NOT because of him. That she overcame her biology is a testament to HER choices of being NOT LIKE HIM (or his family/friends).

Another LIE that you refer to:
That there were good parts of our marriage. A BIG LIE.
You are SO RIGHT. Once I got out from the constant assaults, and was able to gain perspective, I realized NOTHING was real, NOTHING was good about anything that had to do with him. Even when he wasn’t being mean to me, it was because he was busy with his “others”.

My entire time with my ex was CRAZINESS, ALL BAD.

I had a good life before him, and I am pretty much back to a good life, albeit, not so naïve anymore.

HanaleiMoon
10 years ago
Reply to  NotWhatHeSaidofMe

NWHSOM, you are SO right – nothing was real about these relationships, and nothing was good, even the “good”. It was all a manipulation, and we were just playing a role. If we felt happy, loved, safe and full of well being (as I did at times with my ex), it was because they LET US and it was what served them at the time. The day before my ex discarded me for the final time, we spent the day planning the next phase of our future together, and he dangled my most treasured dream in front of me, telling me it would become reality in a short time. The next morning he started in verbally battering me from the moment he opened his eyes and didn’t stop until I dropped him off at the curb at the airport. I never saw him again. The verbal battering included telling me that my ex-husband was a con man who never loved me and that I was such an abusive b**ch that I blew it with him and now would never get that treasured dream. It took months and a clear mind to realize that it had all been pre-planned and staged in order to inflict the deepest wounds he could. He had his new supply in place, and he wrung the last bit of juice he could get out of me. There was nothing left to harm, so he threw me away like trash”trash who would keep paying the shared mortgage to protect my own credit, thus protecting his at the same time. Ugh!

To anyone who is still thinking it was you, and that your ex is treating the next victim better, I came across this article yesterday: http://www.heartless-bitches.com/rants/manipulator/special.shtml

It’s really long – you don’t have to read the whole thing. Pick and choose paragraphs – you will find yourself in one, or all of them. They were this way before us, and will be this way with all that come after.

kaya48
10 years ago

Jenna
Someone here on LF told me once “exposing him , contacting other victims, or embarrassing him will only make you look desperate and pathetic and you never get the satisfaction, you end up re-injuring YOURSELF instead of making a dent in him”. “If he was vulnerable to feeling hurt by your accusations, he would NOT be the kind of man who would cheat, lie, betray and run away with no regard for your feelings, he always had his armor up. ”
The best “revenge” is no cobtact and to live your life to the fullest , being happy and at peace. It worked for me.

kaya48
10 years ago

Not
You are absolutely right. NOTHING was good about this marriage. Even when I thought it was a good time, it wasn’t. Like you , I had a good life before him and have a great life now. Nothing was good about this craziness.
And yes, anybody can be a sperm donor, so true. Real dads don’t put their families through agony, pain, court and so on. Real dads don’t post nude pictures of themselves on the home computer. Real dads don’t cheat and lie. Real dads put the welfare of their families before their own needs.

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