Sooner or later, those of us who are romantically involved, or have been romantically involved, with sociopaths and other exploiters recognize that the relationship is bad for us and must end. Although we know this intellectually, often we still feel incredible attraction, even love, for the individual. How do we break the emotional attachment?
For example, Lovefraud recently received the following letter:
I am single, and I think I was with someone very narcissistic, if not outright sociopathic. The thing is, even though I am no longer with him (and he did not get to my finances), he broke my heart.
My question is, how do you get over him? I have tried to date others, but no man has compared with the chemistry and (you know, all the rest) that I had with the narcissist. I have a man now who truly loves me, and we are soul mates. I just don’t have that “sizzle” with him that I did with the one who was bad for me. Do you think I should “settle” for the good, honest man? I mean, I am attracted to him; it’s just not the mad passion like the narcissist brought out.
Many, many readers have told Lovefraud that getting over relationships with sociopaths (narcissists, etc.) is much more difficult than getting over other relationships that they’ve had. The reasons for this are complicated, and are rooted in both normal human psychology and the sociopath’s pathology.
The seduction
The first thing to understand is that sociopaths engage in seduction. This is significantly different from a normal dating relationship.
When two relatively healthy people begin dating, they are both testing the waters. They are spending time with each other to see if they like each other enough, or have enough in common, or get along well enough, to keep going. Yes, one party may be more interested than the other, but neither of them has made a decision.
In contrast, sociopaths purposely and consciously seduce their targets. They lavish the person with attention. They want to know everything about the target, they call and text constantly, they shower the person with gifts large and small. Sociopaths move fast, and quickly begin talking about love, commitment and marriage. This is called love bombing.
For most of us, the only experience we’ve ever had with this level of attention is in a fairytale. We are swept off our feet, caught up in the intensity, the magic, of Prince or Princess Charming. We’ve heard all those stories of “love at first sight,” and hope that it’s finally happened to us. We think it’s real.
Here’s what you need to understand: The sociopath’s extraordinary pursuit is never about love. It is about predation. You are or have something that the sociopath wants—at least for the moment. Despite what the sociopath says, his or her interest in you is not about building a relationship or future together. It’s about acquiring a possession.
The sex adventure
Sociopaths, both men and women, are hard-wired for sex. They have high levels of testosterone, and a strong appetite for stimulation. These two facts are probably responsible for the “animal magnetism” that we sense with them.
But that’s only the beginning. Sociopaths are often extraordinarily energetic and proficient lovers—at least technically. Because of their tremendous sexual appetite, they start young and have a lot of partners, so they quickly become experienced. And, because they have no shame, they feel no inhibitions. In fact, they frequently want to push their partners’ boundaries.
Is this passion? No—it’s boredom. Sociopaths quickly tire of the same old thing, and want new sexual adventures. Getting the target to go along with their desires offers two types of rewards: They enjoy new modes of stimulation. And, they manipulate the partners. This is especially fun if the partner initially resists the demands.
The sex connection
From Nature’s point of view, of course, the purpose of sex is propagation—the continuation of the human species. Nature wants children to survive, and the best chance of that happening is when parents stay together to care for them.
Therefore, sexual intimacy causes changes in the brain that contribute to bonding between the partners. One agent for doing this is oxytocin, a neurotransmitter sometimes called the “love hormone.”
Oxytocin is released during sexual orgasm, and, in women, in childbirth and nursing. According to Wikipedia, here’s what the hormone does:
Oxytocin evokes feelings of contentment, reductions in anxiety, and feelings of calmness and security around the mate. In order to reach full orgasm, it is necessary that brain regions associated with behavioral control, fear and anxiety are deactivated; which allows individuals to let go of fear and anxiety during sexual arousal. Many studies have already shown a correlation of oxytocin with human bonding, increases in trust, and decreases in fear.
So during sex, your brain is being flooded with calmness, trust and contentment, and fear and anxiety are alleviated. If you’re involved in a true loving and committed relationship, this contributes to bonding, which is fine and healthy.
Sociopaths, however, do not bond in the same way that healthy people do. Although we don’t know if oxytocin works differently in sociopaths, or perhaps doesn’t work at all, we do know that sociopaths are deficient in their ability to love. So while the healthy partner develops a love bond; the sociopath does not.
The addiction
A love bond is created by pleasure, and during the seduction phase of the relationship, the sociopath generates extreme pleasure for the target. However, addiction research has discovered that although pleasure is required to form a bond, pleasure is not required to maintain it. Even when a relationship starts to get rocky, normal people still feel bonded. Again, this is Nature’s way of keeping people together. If parents split up at the first sign of trouble, the survival of children would be in doubt.
Sooner or later, of course, relationships with sociopaths get rocky. Perhaps the sociopath engages in cheating, stealing or abuse. The sociopath’s actions create fear and anxiety in the target. But instead of driving the target away from the sociopath, anxiety and fear actually strengthen the psychological love bond.
So what do the targets do? They turn to the sociopaths for relief. The sociopaths may apologize profusely and promise to change their hurtful ways, reassuring the targets. The targets, feeling bonded to the sociopaths, want to believe the reassurances, so they do. Then the two people have sex, which reinforces the bond again.
From the target’s point of view, the relationship becomes a vicious circle of bonding, anxiety, fear, relief, sex and further bonding. The longer it goes on, the harder it is for the target to escape.
The result: For the target, the love bond becomes an addiction.
Vulnerability
How is this possible? How do targets get into this predicament?
Often, targets are primed for sociopathic relationships due to trauma that they have already experienced in their lives. As children, they may have suffered physical, emotional, psychological or sexual abuse from family members, authority figures or others. Or, the targets may have already experienced exploitative relationships, such as domestic violence, from which they have not recovered.
These abusive experiences create “trauma bonds.” As a result, abuse and exploitation feel normal to a target.
For healing to occur, targets need to look honestly into themselves and into their histories, finding the root of the issue. Was there a prior relationship that made you vulnerable to a sociopath?
Recovery
So, to answer the original question in the letter, how do you get over the sociopath?
First of all, you need to understand that what you are feeling is not chemistry or love. You are feeling addiction and a pathological love bond—the trauma bond.
Healing requires conscious effort. The book called The Betrayal Bond, by Patrick J. Carnes, Ph.D., is an excellent resource for doing this. Carnes writes:
Once a person has been part of our lives, the ripples remain, even though we have no further contact. In that sense a relationship continues even though we may consciously exorcise it from our conscious contact. Once you understand that principle, a shift will occur in all of your contact with others.
If the relationship was toxic, as in a traumatic bond, the relationship must go through a transformation, since it will always be with you. You do not need to be in contact with th person to change the nature of the relationship. You can change how you perceive it. You can change how it impacts you.
How do you do this? You commit to facing the reality of the relationship—all of it. Trauma tends to distort perception—you want to focus the good memories and forget about the bad ones. You must force yourself to deal with the truth of the experience—including the betrayal.
If you’re still feeling the tug of the pathological relationship, The Betrayal Bond includes information and exercises that can help you break free. The book is available in the Lovefraud Store. (My book, Love Fraud, describes an alternative path to recovery.)
And to the Lovefraud letter-writer: Do not confuse drama with love. Accepting a good, honest man is not “settling.” It is the foundation of a healthy relationship.
You can move forward.
LL,
I’m closer to where you are than you know. It’s pretentious of me to say I fully understand your pain, and even more so to offer advice. As I mentioned above, I was hurled into acute situational depression. I know enough about brain chemistry to know that constant depressive thoughts can upset the delicate neurotransmitter balance in the brain, for which the right antidepressant can quickly correct, so to be safe, I got a prescription.
But the erasure experience revealed something I alluded to you the other night — when I no longer “was”, I was at peace; when I reengaged with my “self”, the tsunami sent me reeling again. I realized that my attachment to “me”, that is, my mind’s obsession with every excruciating hurt, was killing me. My thoughts weren’t helping me, they were destroying me. My wife was gone, the house was empty. No one was hurting me now — I was doing it to myself. In fact, I was torturing myself every bit as much as she did, because I was relentless with myself (from years of abuse I’d become a master at self-fillet-ing). Not only had I suffered the pain of actual abuse, my imagination turned on every possible reality that MIGHT be happening somewhere. Or, tiring of that, my mind would go back in time and resuscitate every conversation we ever had in the past and rotate it, like on a spit, so I could agonize over “observations” on the “real” meaning of words said. Then flavor the agony with a heaping dose of guilt for good measure…
It had to stop. One day I sat and simply stared down the pain. I waited it out. I watched, and watched, and watched without judging anything that came up in front of me. And suddenly I saw that the whole construct, the entire edifice that I’d built over my entire life — my “story” — was a fabrication. Not wrong, but invented by “me”. In other words, my mind, that I identified with as “me” was just something I created — no one but me. And that meant that if I had created it
1. It was no sacrifice if it crumbled, and
2. I could rebuild it (me) any way I wanted, OR — not rebuild at all.
I chose not to rebuild, but to strip away. I have nothing to preserve, nothing to hold on to. No image of “myself” to protect, no standard to live up to. I chose to just “be”. Nobody. I discovered tremendous freedom in that space. Peace and quiet in that space. And each day that loads me up with all the sights and sounds and emotions, I unload each night.
As I said, it’s a process. It’s what works for me, that’s all.
Hope this made sense.
LL…If he wasn’t with another woman, how would you feel?
SHock
I do understand, with the exception of one thing…you said you allowed the thoughts, but without judgment. What did you mean by that? Would you please clarify that for me?
LL
tobe.
I can’t answer that question. Because, at least when he was with me, he was always ALWAYS with someone else that he let me know empathically was worth more than being just with me.
I don’t know.
LL,
It appears that you have gotten alot out of your system. Is your keyboard smoking yet? from all your typing? LOLOL
I hope you are feeling better! and a relief!!
SC1
S1,
**Sigh**….well, the smoke alarm hasn’t gone off yet.
I”m guessing that that means no? LOL
Love ya S1 🙂
HUGS, you silly goose you 🙂
LL,
How much more can it take before the smoke alarm goes off? LOLOLOL…. Mine is wipping sweat of it’s forhead watching all that you are typing!!! LOLOLOL
I hope you are feeling better getting all of this out of you!!!
SC1
Love back ya LL!!!!! Get it out of you!!!! Feel better and relieved like a block off your shoulders!!!! Keep going woman!!!
shock,
your ability to disagree with me so diplomatically has me purring all over my keyboard! excuse me while I rub my face on the monitor screen. 🙂
Seriously, if there is anything I love more than a rational argument, it’s a rational argument with diplomacy and humility. You hit it just right, purr,purr purr. BUT I still disagree with you. LOL.
That quote, “insanity is doing the same thing over and over but expecting different results” would not apply to gamblers, at the one-armed bandit machines. The machines are pre-programmed to pay off 35-40% of the time. sooo, you get the picture.
I tried looking up “insane” and the definitions used the word “insane” so I was disappointed that these self-references would be allowed. To me, insanity is a delusion. If a person is delusional, then they can be considered at least partially insane. So I looked up delusional http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delusional_disorder
it means holding beliefs that are certainly false. What they don’t describe is the CAUSE of the delusions. For example what caused us to be deluded?
the definition for deluded includes DECIEVED. LIES.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/deluded
We were decieved. At least on that we do agree, right?
So I’m not saying that we are clinically insane, just that we exhibit many of the same symptoms of the insane. And, truth be told, for most of us, when we FIRST got out of our relationshit and tried to explain it to the FBI (or whoever was on your list, mine was the FBI), they said, “you sound crazy”. A lawyer said, “I think you were involved with a spy” ARGHHHH! It’s because we didn’t (and they STILL DON’T) understand what happens to the human brain when it is lied to OVER AND OVER AND OVER again for 25 freakin’ years. Our brains naturally try to make sense of everything, but how can we reconcile ALL THE CONSTANT AND UNNECESSARY LIES?
Shock, I gave my exP permission to have sex with anyone he wanted to, so why lie to me about his promiscuity? Why would he fly a helicopter without a license when he could just get one? He is the best pilot ever. Why? Why do everything illegally when the legal way was easier? Why lie to everyone about everything all the time? part of the problem was “o” for umbrella, but the other part was just the need to reconcile that he was “normal” so I lied to myself to make the puzzle pieces fit. I was delusional in my attempt to believe what made sense to me. Rather than change my world view that everyone is normal, I found ways to delude myself.
You said, “I submit that believing someone who lies to us is not like being insane, it is being trusting…That I chose, on an unconscious level, to forego rigorous objective analysis of her behavior I chalk up to love, for I loved her dearly, and in that I was complicit; I volunteered. ”
I’m so with you on all of that. Not calling you insane, so much as wanting the delusion and you can take it from there. I feel like no one could have been more deluded than I was. The signs were all there, PEOPLE WARNED ME. A woman I worked with said, “that man is NOT for you.” To top it off, he was UGLY AS SIN! But he was so charismatic and also needy as a child at the same time. the ugly duckling, needy child, It’s the perfect storm for a compassionate empath.
Well anyway, perhaps our definitions of insane are different.
My perspective is that believing what isn’t real is delusional and who deluded us is not part of that definition because it doesn’t matter. Delusions are false and falsehoods are spath specialties. This is important for this reason: we are still deluded each day of our lives. we are constantly being barraged (sp?) by the media and other people who want to control our behavior. Lets learn about this now and be wiser in the future.
Skye,
Can’t stay long so I’ll be brief. Love, or at least infatuation, has been described as temporary insanity in some psychological circles. Certainly, there’s a normal wish to believe in the best with our loved ones. If we have childhood issues such as abuse which we carry into adulthood, we may have a predisposition to overlook even more of our spouses behavior, in order to keep the peace, or because it’s comfortable to us; it’s what we grew up with at some level, and familiarity is a form of security. We’re always looking for security.
The thing is, (and here I may part with some) our “spirit”, or “soul”, the heart of who we are, knows the truth. It knows what’s best for us and what we should do in any situation. If we don’t act in alignment with our spirit, there’s an immediate conflict set up within us which begs to be heard, in order to bring us back to purity and wholeness. If we ignore our spirit, or simply can’t hear it through all the clanging of our minds, we set off in a direction that will ultimately bring us sorrow. Others may warn us, too, but if we are caught up in our minds we’ll make wrong decisions that will come back to haunt us one way or another.
We delude ourselves constantly by confusing what we want with “what is”. They’re often two very different things. “What is” is sometimes not what we want it to be, so we (our minds) tell us a story (rationalize) that’s more compatible with what we WANT the person or situation to be. It relieves our internal tension for the moment, but the truth eventually catches up with us. Then we often blame others for our pain, when we can only take responsibility for ourselves.
I can talk later today. Have a good day!