By Steve Becker, LCSW, CH.T
Editor’s note: The author has a private psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, and clinical consulting practice in New Jersey, USA. For more information, visit his website, powercommunicating.com.
Let’s get inside the head of the abusive mentality. But first let’s define abuse. Abuse in a relationship reflects a pattern(s) of behavior that is manifestly (or passive-aggressively) bullying, demeaning, manipulative, intimidating, threatening, coercive, and/or restrictively controlling.
The key word is pattern. Most non-abusive individuals perpetrate insensitivities from time to time that may be experienced as abusive. This may make the behavior abusive. But it is the pattern of behaviors that makes the individual abusive.
What do we know about abusive personalities? We know that they are controlling. Then again, aren’t most of us controlling at times? Sometimes very? What, then, separates your garden variety controlling personality from an abusively controlling personality? The answer, fundamentally, is motive. Where the motive is to coerce—to remind one’s partner who’s in charge—this suggests the machinations of the abusive mentality.
What else do we know about abusers? We know that underlying their “requests” is often the lurking threat, “Cooperate with me”¦or else!” The subtext is, “You don’t want to disappoint me. Consequences will follow from your disappointing me!” In other words, appeals that may seem reasonable on the surface are often, beneath the surface, less appeals than warnings, demands.
Let me stress: Abusive individuals rarely makes requests. More often, they make demands disguised as requests. When you frustrate their demands, you are defying them. There is no middle ground: either you are cooperative and accomodating, or else perceived as defiant. Their thinking goes something like this:
I’m asking you to stop hanging out with that guy.
Translation: I demand that you stop hanging out with that guy. I expect you to meet my demand. Less than your full compliance with my demand means that you are defying me, Your defiance of me is punishable.
The abusive person, in this case, doesn’t just want things; he or she feels entitled to what he or she wants. Again, the thinking:
I want.
Translation: I must have. I’m entitled to have!
As in all narcissistic/sociopathic disturbances, an inflated self-entitlement informs, indeed drives, the abusive mentality. Not only do abusers feel entitled to what they want, but also how they want it, and when and where they want it.
Merely by virtue of their wanting it, abusive individuals will feel automatically entitled to your cooperation, undivided attention, compassion, tolerance, respect, compliance, admiration, you name it. And because they feel entitled to these things, they feel they don’t have to earn any of them.
This, of course, is the very nature of entitlement. Theirs are unearned privileges, yet their unearned status in no way diminishes the abusers’ perceived right to them.
The abuser’s rage feeds off his or her sense of entitlement. He or she thinks:
I want this.
Translation: I am entitled to it. You owe me what I’m entitled to. If you withhold it, I’m entitled to be enraged. In my entitled rage, I’m not responsible for my destructive, abusive response!
The abusive clients with whom I’ve worked are consistently stubborn, dug-in rationalizers. They chronically see themselves as victims. Their sense of themselves as victims is deeply entrenched and invested. They may feel “the victim” of many, many things, including being inconvenienced.
It is from their self-engendered victim status that blame flows so naturally; from blame, the anger/rage; from the anger/rage, the rationalization of aggressive/abusive responses.
It’s also the case that once abusive individuals have established a pattern of their self-perceived victimization, their threshold for feeling subsequently victimized decreases; now, it takes less and less for them to feel victimized, perhaps only a minor disappointment or frustration. This is why many abusive individuals can find almost any basis to complain, to feel slighted, thereby tripping (and licensing) their abusiveness.
Abusive individuals, at bottom, feel entitled not to be burdened by whatever feels burdensome to them. It is your job, your responsibility, to alleviate their burden. Your failure to do so, from their self-centered perspective, is an abdication of your duty, a form of betrayal.
Not surprisingly, many abusive individuals tend to think in paranoid and problematically rigid ways. They tend to rigidly attribute malice to those who disappoint them. Deploying spectacular powers of rationalization and projection, they see themselves ironically (and, of course, conveniently) habitually as victim—as the betrayed, exploited party—a warped perception that ratchets up their anger, lubricating their impending abusive response.
Sometimes underlying abandonment issues (including borderline personality disorder) fuel the possessive/controlling behaviors of abusive individuals. In such cases, their thinking chain goes something like this:
Don’t leave me.
Translation: Alone, I am nothing! For this reason, you can’t leave me! If you leave me, you will be defying me. If you defy me, I’ll make you pay!
Here again we see how the abusive individual automatically codifies the failure of a partner’s compliance as “defiance,” which, in the abuser’s eyes, justfies the forthcoming mean, vindictive, abusive response.
From a gender standpoint it is clear that men have no patent on abuse. Women, like men, can be abusive in their relationships—to their partners, children and others. But men are better leveraged, in general, to exercise their abuse more harshly and dangerously, if for no other reason than their comparative physical strength advantage over women. There are many exceptions to this rule; but the rule holds as a generality. Accordingly, you’ll find more women seeking (and desperately needing) shelter from abusive men than men from abusive women.
What percentage of abusive individuals are out and out sociopaths? There is disagreement on this question. Clearly many abusive personalities meet the criteria for sociopathic personality, and many who don’t nevertheless share with the sociopath the alarming tendency (in their actively abusive states) to view others as objects whose principal purpose on earth is to meet their needs, however excessive, inappropriate, unilateral and selfish.
In other words, at the heart of both relationship abuse and sociopathy is an exploitative process in which one individual’s utter, contemptuous lack of respect for another enables the former’s self-justified exploitation/abuse of the latter.
In this sense, when abusive individuals are unleashing their abusiveness, they are objectifying, and demeaning, their victims in much the same (if not identical) way as sociopaths.
Great Post Donna, I am wondering if anyone can comment on STEALTH ABUSE, which I know other posters have also endured.
My PSN posed as the perfect dedicated family man, provider etc, but there was always a looming financial crisis that only he could solve. He would create a crisis, ( with lots of excuses that made him the victim) then watch me agonize, then fix, then be lauded as the family saviour, be generous, blow the money and start over with the sme loop. This is the stuff I knew about and dragged him to therapy about, and discussed nite after nite.
Now, six months out and NC I am uncovering HUGE amounts of money he was pilfering, (from a company of which I was president and he manager – we worked together on it, guess who manged the $$) while claiming we had no $$ for food, mortgage, tuition etc. During the period we were rolling our own cigarettes to save $$, he was absconding with tens of thousands on a regular basis.
It now seems to me that he was secretly enjoying watching my anxiety, deliberatly destabalizing my sense of security, (and my high school aged kids) while stealing the funds to prepare for the eventual discard. A yes, he is the master of the long deal.
My point is, this type of behavior gets him to have it both ways, idealized and feared as the flawed and victimized family “provider”- worshipped and thanked when he “comes through” – all of this a false reality, while secretly feathering his own nest and pursuing his own agenda – on every level I might add.
He was very careful not to appear controlling on minor stuff- and not jealous ( turns out he likes men) – but always kept me thinking we were about to die (financially) and made sure I had no resources in order to leave.
What a wasted way to live a life! How full his head must of been ( and still is ) of all his evel and manipulative schemes.
I wonder what the stats are on how abusive people end up in their waning years. Likely very alone and angry at the world for “leaving” them.
Meanwhile – should we seek justice or walk away? Presently I am pursuing some justice,..wish me luck. They did not send live Phirana’s to him at the office for no good reason, back in the day.
Hugs to all,
WOW, great post! Thanks Dr. Steve!
Whether a person’s “psychopathic check list” points scores enough to enable a “legal diagnosis” of psychopath or not, the old “if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck” cliche seems to apply here—the abuser is an aubser is an abuser, regardless of whether they are a Psychopath or not. All psychopaths are abusers, but not all abusers are psychopaths but sometimes act like one. QUACK QUACK–it’s a DUCK!!! LOL
Eyes wide shut, I wish I could answer your question about whether or not you can or should “seek justice”—my late husband had some corporate raiders take over his company and totally RAPE it. He spent the next 7 years and every dime he had (this was before we married) trying to get “justice” and ended up getting only the empty shells of the company back, worth ZILCH. He would NOT give up he was so enraged, but if he had just blown it off and gotten on with life he might have used those 7 years much more productively. Eventually one of the Ps went to prison for ANOTHER fraud, not the defrauding my husband, but sometimes it just isn’t worth the trouble and expense, but that is not for ME to even think about deciding, it is all up to you since it is your “ox that is gored.” That is partly what the Ps count on as the legal system is stacked AGAINST convicting a fraud.
When I was going through the paperwork on my husband’s situation years later, it was OBVIOUS that they had committed fraud but they knew how to use the legal system to cover it up in COURT. It didn’t matter how illegal or immoral it WAS it was how it APPEARED in court. Good luck, I do hope you get some justice, you certainally deserve it.
I think, juust MHO, that many of them end up like my mother, alone and bitter, having “used up” any relationships that they have, but others, if they have enough money may at least “keep up a front” of not being miserable and alone. Some are like the “winner” in the old country and western song where two guys at a bar are talking and the “winner” is an old man without teeth, one eye poked out and both ears bitten off in fights, but he “WON” them all! LOL Sometimes it just doesn’t pay to get in the fight even if you “win” in the end, it just takes too much out of you. So sometimes the Ps I think end up “the winner” but I’d rather not “win” if that’s the case. LOL
This article is detailed and to the point. What I noticed with my EX is he never let his guard down. Always portrayed himself the GOOD GUY, responsible, caring, loving, intelligent, considerate, would never do anything negative to anyone, it was “he and I together, thick or thin, good times and bad”. To find out in my horror, everything he told me was a lie. He He used my focusing on my suit against my managers to play me for everything I was worth … stating it was my managers doing this to me and him because he was my fiance and they knew he was standing by me, backing me … so their wrath extended to him to divide and conquer us, get him away from me so I would have to go solo on my suit, no one supporting or backing me up, building me up, protecting me. Made perfect sense at the time and of course I believed and trusted him and couldn’t see the reality until months after it ended. He kissed me goodbye for what I thought was another business trip, taking with him thousands of dollars worth of my possessions telling me he was going to use them and what was the difference, he’d be back in September after this business deal was completed. That was the last time I saw him … kissing me in front of my house as he tooled down the street – a thief – knowing and playing the system for everything it was worth. Analyzing everything after the fact, hindsight is 20/20 … he is the second eldest of siblings. His sister is the oldest, then two more male siblings after him. I believe it’s the hierarchy of the family unit where he was able to start living from his ego. Controlling the younger siblings and either being real with his older sister, siding with her to control the other two. Going from the family unit to grade school friends, high school, college, then the workplace, always keeping that superior attitude of being the 2nd oldest and the oldest son. I believe parents do not pay attention to this rivalry or control issue starting in the family unit. I believe parents, due to their busy schedule of work and maintaining the home and family allow this controlling pattern to develop in the family making it easier on the parent’s busy schedules (aka older siblings taking care of younger siblings). I think most families think this is “normal” for older children of a family to “control” and take care of the “younger” siblings in a family and this is where the Narcissism stems from.
Do we blame them for acting the way they were trained since childhood? Why wasn’t this behavior stopped at an earlier age?
I see a lot of “pot holes” in the system. From the school system pushing them through and stroking their personalities (aka the “golden boy/girl” oldest in the family, to the churches, to the immediate family unit.
I think this is why what we call “abusers” have no clue what we are talking about. Their abusive behavior was instilled and conditioned in them since childhood. What family gets a “how to” manual when starting their family? The churches do not hand this out, the government doesn’t hand this out, the schools don’t hand this out. Every sector is saying “that’s not my call” or hand it over to this office, or that office … and you are in the endless loop of who does what.
I also believe that my managers and my fiance all played me to get what they wanted. There were too many things that only my fiance knew directly from my mouth to his ears … that my managers ended up knowing. After I retired, I found one of my manager’s business cards in my fiance’s attache case. Why did and how did he have this business card?
As for the experience of going through a suit against anti-social personalities. It was the most devastating
experience in my life. You are forced to have that evil penetrate ever pore of your being, day in and day out until the resolution. Even after it’s over, it takes years for that evil being released from your pores and your mind. I do not recommend this abuse for anyone. But, if you have to file suit, do what I did. Read your Bible every day. Pray every day and have God in your corner. Reading the word and praying to God was the only positive in my life during this most horrible of ordeals.
Peace.
Today I was driving home and got behind a slow moving tractor trailer truck and for some reason I remembered a movie that I never forgot as a child. The movie was called “Duel” The movie came out in 1971 and was Steven Spielberg’s film debut. The plot of the movie is…. While traveling through the desert for an appointment with a client, the businessman David Mann (Dennis Weaver) from California passes a slow and old tanker truck. The psychotic truck driver feels offended and chases David along the empty highway trying to kill him….. I remember one image shot in the movie is the front license plate of the truck is made up of all the other cars the truck had wrecked….We never see the face of the man who drives the truck, nor do we know why he is intent on killing David Mann… but the terror of being chased and hunted down by someone who remains faceless, and without knowing his motive has stuck in my conscience for all of these years…..In fact while watching the movie, I almost forgot that there was a man who was trying to kill Mann.. to me it was the truck that was evil….I remember for a couple of years after that everytime my sister and I were in the car with our parents, and we passed a old looking truck, we’d remember that movie and be sort of scared of the truck…..Spielberg went on to direct another movie a few years later about a killer without motive, without conscience… the movie was “Jaws”……. sorry to have got off subject.. but for those of you that have ever seen “Duel” you would not forget it….Even as a child of 9 years old when I saw it, I remember thinking “why” did that trucker want to kill Mann…. and that’s the thing I remember most about that movie… a killer without a motive, or at least one that we’d understand…. I think it was really the first time I had ever seen sociopathic behaviour….and even though it was a movie, I never forgot the anxiety I felt as a child when I watched that movie…… anyone else remember that movie?
southernman429: Because “they” are living from their egos and not being humble (which allows you to be in touch with your emotions) is the reason why all the games are perpetrated on society. They look at us (with emotions) as odd little toy soldiers to move and play anything they want. When the game bores them … like a child being frustrated (called a temper tantrum) they swipe the board … and all the pieces (aka us) going flying across the room (aka the WORLD).
I don’t remember if I saw that particular movie (I most likely did see it) but I do remember the movie about the truck driver tying a woman up between his truck and another’s … as they were about to pull her literally limb from limb.
What I am observing is that anti-socials aren’t creative individuals in their own right … always replicating their MOs from movies, books, TV, MTV, videos etc. Taking bits and pieces from here and there to do their damage on others. Only those living a humble life (God’s way) can go into the “now” and be creative … receiving directly from the God source.
Peace.
I totally remember “Duel”, Southernman, and I’ve watched it a few times since the first time, even though it is a difficult, extremely discomfiting movie to view.
I think to me it conveys the evil incarnate that dwells in the minds of psychopathic strangers. Here you are driving down the road, all of the sudden a person cuts you off. You’re shaken and angry over the complete disregard for your safety by such carelessness so what do you do? Make an angry gesture at the drive. He/she then decides to make you pay. And pay…..dearly.
It’s so dangerous to react to any strange person’s negligence, irrational behavior perpetrated towards you, especially when that person is behind the wheel of a massive vehicle. They then use their vehicle as a weapon. Scary.
About 10 years ago, I was on the freeway and I slowed down to let a driver in my lane from the on ramp. 3 people behind me in a beat up old truck, started honking and riding my bumber. I gave them the universal “you’re no 1” sign, which was so stupid, careless of me to do, and that’s when the driver of the truck started chasing me. I was terrified. I was speeding on the freeway, trying to get away and he was following me with every desperate move I made. I eventually cut across lines and fled down an off ramp. He stayed on the freeway.
I learned a serious lesson that day. I’ve never reacted to vicious drivers again. I just mind my own business, and smile so as not to anger a potential vengeful psycho.
Thanks for the post, Donna & Steve. It truly astounds me at the intense malevolency of the patterned abusers sick, twisted mind. I consider it important to learn as much as I can regarding abusive people, but it doesn’t make it any easier for me to understand, and accept their motivations. I just don’t think like that and I don’t want to.
Here’s a link to watch the movie online for free…. I rewatched it this afternoon, and those old scary feelings came right back…lol… all in good fun..those chase scenes are still intense…..In one scene, the truck driver sticks his arm out the cab of his truck and waves Mann to come on and pass him.. as Mann pulls into the left lane of a two lane highway, he nearly hits a oncomming car head on… Mann jerks his car back in line behind the truck, and in that moment he knows the trucker is trying to kill him…whew.. JaneSmith, you’d be surprised at how well the movie holds up to time.. hard to believe it’s 37 years old.
http://www.classiccinemaonline.com/cinema/suspense-thriller/duel.html
I think the mental health community should experiment with known anti-socials to find out (I’ll volunteer mine, I can give you his address and I’m not LOL):
1. If what Tolle wrote explaining how to quiet yourself, go into the “now” can be taught to them by mental health professionals monitoring that they do it correctly.
2. Being court ordered that they give up their egos and pray to God to bring them closer to him. After this … letting them read the Bible, having them attend Bible classes daily, while incarcerated.
All this is by being incarcerated because incarceration is a must … they won’t do it on there own like the rest of us can. So being confined is a must here … no home arrest with ankle bracelets on these cartoon characters. Then professionals in touch with their emotions monitor their every move and advancement.
Peace.
Wini, my exN was such a HARD MAN, I dont think anything would permeate his ego, not even the threat of death. He didnt seemed to be bothered about anything. Even when he told me that a woman in a car nearly knocked him off his bike, I was more concerned than he was. Problem is Wini, alot of antisocials live BELOW the law. He works in the security business, so he has to keep his nose clean, that was one of the things that I thought he must be ok, because he doesnt have a record and all his friends said he was decent. I really sounded him out at the beginning, I was really cautious Wini – but I realised afterwards, that all the things that I thought were indicators of good character WERE NOT.
There was a programme here to say that some men in the security business have had past misdemeanours. I even went on the security website to check it!! I didnt just blindly accept him at the beginning, I spoke to his acquaintances who all said he was a decent bloke, his family said he was decent.
No Wini, they wont choose to do it, to let their egos down. Mine said he solves his own problems himself, when I offered him help. He didnt want to know.
Southernman, I saw that movie several times and yes, it is a scary movie.
Jane, I too have given the “universal you’re number one” sign to another motorist and I had exactly the same result you did. I was fortunate that I came on two state troopers side by side talking on the side of the road and I pulled off and gave them my tale of this nut case just as the nut case sped by at probably 90 and they took off after him, but I have NEVER NEVER in the 25 years since then given the “signal” to any other driver. This ROAD RAGE thing is scary. I can’t believe I did it the first time, but it was the LAST time I can tell you that!
Wini,
There have been plenty of attempts at various therapies from 12 step on tried with psychopaths both incarcerated and not incarcerated and it has been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that therapy makes them WORSE as they use it to learn new manuvers.
The problem is, Wini, you cannot nor can anyone else FORCE people to learn from even the best sermon, teaching, book, the Bible or anything else. If they do NOT want to get the good out of it you could force feed it to them 24/7 for 100 years and they would not gain a thing from it.
It is the old “you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink” thing. “Old sayings” are “old sayings” because they are true!
I am so glad that you got sooooo much out of Tolle’s book. For you it was a Godsend, but if you had not been receptive in mind and spirit, it would have not done you any more good than reading it in Korean would have.
Viktor Frankl’s “Man’s search for meaning” was an eye opener for me, but because I was RECEPTIVE. If I had not been receptive to the message, nothing on this earth would have made me get benefit from it.
A psychopath can quote scripture with the best of them, or philosophy, but it isn’t memorizing the lines that makes the difference, it is internalizing the CONCEPTS and the feelings that go with them.
Psychopaths have brains that by the time they are recognized as psychopathicly disordered are SET IN CONCRETE. God COULD force us all to obey him, but He choses to give us the CHOICE. Somewhere along the line, the psychopath has made a choice that because of their attitudes is not changable. Even fear of punishment doesn’t effect them. Their narcissism and grandiosity is so ingrained by the time they are adults there is no turning back.
I don’t think that they are “set in concrete” at birth, though they have genes that point in that direction, but one thing is sure, by the time they are adults, they ARE set in concrete because they do NOT value any other opinion except their own.
My P-son was raised in the same environment with my other sons, but while all three of them are very well versed in the Bible, and the others internalized the concepts, he did not get the “concepts” he can make as good an “argument” for love as anyone, but he just can’t FEEL it. He uses his knowledge of the Bible as a cloak to cover his real evil intentions. My mother uses it to try to beat others into submission. I’m not sure my mother is actually a psychopath, but she is so dysfunctional she might as well be.
The Pharisees in the Temple actually heard Jesus speak, but they were psychopathic in their pretense of religion and holiness while they abused others financially etc. Even hearing Jesus himself speak, they became ENRAGED, not humble or listening. We all make our choices, and the Psychopaths made and make theirs and no amount of “teaching” is going to teach unless you have a willing learner. And that’s the sad part.