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.
I read a book along time ago entitled, “Obsessive love”, and the tenant of that book is that obsessive love is fuelled by rejection. Why, I don’t know, unless it’s because it triggers our emotional wounds from childhood.
It was a really good book, though and helped.
Hi Kim,
Yes, they instinctively know that addiction is the key to controlling…
LL,
YOU ARE WRONG!!!WRONG WRONG!
YOU DID NOT DESERVE THIS AT ALL.
He wanted you to think that you did. That is what he SLIMED you with.
Dear Lesson learned,
Sugar, I hear the despair in your posts. I strongly suggest that you get some real world counseling to go along with lovefraud. The depth of your despair is of concern to me. You seen also to be bouncing up and down pretty regularly as well but I think more so than to be expected.
Get yourself evaluated by a mental health professional, not just your family doctor for medications for depression. Please don’t try to handle something this overwhelming by yourself. If your leg was broken (instead of your heart) you wouldn’/t say “well, I’ll just tough through this and it will heal on its own, I can set it myself” so don’t try to do that with serious depression and emotional pain either. GET HELP!!!! ((((hugs)))) and stay around here too!!!
You seen also to be bouncing up and down pretty regularly as well but I think more so than to be expected.
Ox, it’s not normal to be so up and down like this? That scares me. Am I sick too? This isn’t normal? One minute I feel okay,the next I’m a mess. One minute I feel absolutely clear, the next I’m not…
With what you’re seeing of me…..with and down regularly as well but you think more so than to be expected…
Am I sick too?
Lessonlearned… Don’t kid yourself, that just because he’s living with a woman he’s going to be treating them any better. In fact i think it’d just make them more privy to being brainwashed and get them deeper into stockholm syndrome. Knowing what you know now about the P, ask yourself why that is even significant. Is a shark going to be any different with their prey if they live within the same habitat or not? Would a lion sink his teeth into a sheep any more softly if he’d donned a sheep’s skin and pretended to live in harmony with them in their environment? You have nothing to prove to a sociopath!
You absolutely did NOTHING to deserve what you got. You are not at fault AT ALL. Remember you were preyed on… it really upsets me when people go around stuffing these ideas around the throats of targets of Spaths/Ns/Psychopaths.. that they somehow did something to deserve it… that if they did WHATEVER they would have been able to escape the P’s grasp. As Robert Hare has said, if one is targeted by a P NO ONE IS IMMUNE. Remember that! You could have been the most responsible self-assured person… it wasn’t your fault.
I do have faith in your healing LL, because I’ve been down this road twice ( not with two male Ps but a female and male ) and I have been down in the pits of despair before, not knowing when I’d ever see light again… feeling that I was ruined. I understand where you are and all i can say is that Know that it will Pass and Know that it is NOT your fault that this happened to you. You are innocent and he attempted to steal that from you. You have something good in your heart and he wanted to destroy it.
They’re perverse and sick, and use women like masturbatory toys and it really repulses me on just about every level. But let me tell you.. that’s THEIR disgust, that’s THEIR perversity. You didn’t know any better.. getting involved. I hope and am confident that you will realize one day that he will never be able to touch that part of you. You may have offered him your best but he’s never seen it because there’s nothing inside of him. I truly hope that you are able to tangle his projections out of your self-image… you are a beautiful person inside and out and he wanted to destroy THAT with his perversions. But he can’t.. he won’t, he never will. And you will heal.
(((Hugs)))
LL you are normal. This is normal… guess what- healing from something ABNORMAL is going to seem pretty damn ABNORMAL at times. THAT is natural. Also, I think you would benefit from reading this bit on “Healing” ( from http://narcissism-support.blogspot.com/2009/01/healing-facts.html )
The following “Healing Facts” were written by Dee Ann Miller, RN, BS
Invicta’s commentary on the article which I thought was also important to add :
Lesson learned
You are over reacting to various posts on here, and I think you are over reacting to the one I just posted, that is what I mean by more than to be expected in the up and down part.. SOME is to be expected, but I am saying that I think you might need to be evaluated by a mental health professional to see if you need medication for Depression or other problems and/or some therapy.
IT does not mean you are “sick” in terms of “oh, my God, she’s mentally ill!” It means that PROFESSIONAL services might help you over come what could be depression, anxiety, etc. and I am suggesting that you get some diagnosis from someone who is qualified and available to treat you. I am a retired mental health professional myself, but I went for evaluation and treatment from a person qualified to do so, I didn’t try to treat myself. I know my symptoms were over the top, I have PTSD and medication and therapy and time have helped me learn to cope and the symptoms decline. It was difficult for me to seek help and to be on the “wrong side” of the clipboard and to be the patient instead of the professional. (that’s a professional hazard for health care workers) LOL But it helped me greatly, so I suggest that you might also want to seek some professional help as well as lovefraud. An evaluation might give you some guidance. ((((hugs))))
to be.
I was a client of his. I met him 20 years ago. Just before he started seeing wife #2. I was still married, but separated.
It was a casual business relationship until six years later, when we became friends.
The friendship we had (I was back with exP and he was by then married to wife 2) “grew” (I thought) to a close friendship starting in 97. It did not become intimate until 2001. At that point, I was separated from my exP and he was still married, telling me he was going to separate from wife 2. Kept promising me that, that he loved me, and to “wait” for him. Part of what is so painful is that initially, I genuinely believed all the stuff he said about his wife. We were friends sharing horror stories. I wanted to “Save” him so I pursued him mostly at first. I genuinely felt sorry for him. I was deeply in love and wanted to take his pain away. There were many times during the relationship that I tried to extricate emotionally, but I would allow myself to get sucked in again. Over and over again. It wasn’t until he was put on AL about our relationship that I was getting some ideas about what he really was. We weren’t allowed to speak for three months during the investigation. I was still head over heels and even while his wife had started divorce proceedings he was telling me to be patient and wait. Then someone from work outted our relationship, thus all communication was cut off between us. When we were allowed to speak again, I contacted him first. He was pissed at me tellingme, “Why did you do this?” I didn’t do anything and told him so. Then he said, “You should have waited, I told you to be patient, you should have waited”…
Then he invited me out to his house and it was on again. But what I did not know nor understand was that he was setting me up because the hearing had not happened yet, as he was fighting being fired from his job. He was so kind to me leading up to the month of the hearing and I felt so guilty about what had happened, Ididn’t want him to lose his job…but there was nothing I could do about it. He provoked and hurt me the last week prior to the hearing, thus prompting text after angry text and IM from me. What I didn’t know is that he had printed out every single text and every single IM I had sent. And there was a stack of papers at the hearing to which he gave his attorney and to which I was questioned about. It was completely humiliating. After the hearing, I texted and called profusely wanting to know what was going on, apologizing profusely for what had happened……even though it was clear that he used communication to exploit me and further his agenda in keeping his job. And it worked. He kept it, even though they so badly wanted to fire him. They simply did not have enough evidence, other than his relationship with me, to remove him from his job. It was astounding because they knew he was intoxicated while he was at work. I allowed this treatment of me. But with that exploitation, I became more desperate for him. I was still overlooking the obvious for the promises he had made to me. After that day, we still saw one another and he used me to pit against his children as well. I bought concert tickets to his daughter’s favorite CHristian rock band for her. I wasn’t allowed to see them, but I did it anyway. I loved the children. So he provoked me with those tickets too. I told him that I wanted her to have them, then he told me she couldn’t go as she had other plans, then he told me he wanted to take me…then he said I was not good enough for him to go with him, so he told me to come get the Effing tickets. I was so angry,I went and got them. His daughter was there. I hugged her, told her I loved her, that I was so sorry about what happened. He was across the street drinking at the neighbors house. I got into the car (a friend of mine had come with me), and waited for him to show up to give the tickets back. He did give them to my friend and sat slyly smiling at me as I left the house. When I got home there was an email in my inbox that said, “FUCK YOU BITCH!! DON”T YOU EVER GET NEAR MY FAMILY AGAIN!! MY DAUGHTER IS IN HER CLOSET CRYING ABOUT THIS, YOU FUCKING BITCH, NEVER COME HERE AGAIN, YOU STAY AWAY FROM MY FAMILY, YOU SICK BITCH, FUCK YOU!!”
I forgot about that bitch story until now…
And still……….when he threw bait after that……….I went back and he acted as if it never happened……..
bits and pieces helped me to extricate even though I was doing crazy things and putting up with crazy, insane behavior. But it wasn’t until I stopped drinking alcohol, that things really started to shift in wanting out, but not wanting out…..
So little by little, it was ending…and each time I keep thinking…that because I was the mistress is the reason he treated me this way. Even with all the garbage he said about his ex wife, he treated her “better”.
And so here I am now….
trying to figure out why I put up with all of this in the first place….
Ox,
I’ll do that today. There is someone I think who might be able to help, if not, can lead me in the right direction.
I agree, I am very depressed. And suffering from PTSD.
While I’m still functioning, I’m not doing it well right now.
Thanks for being so honest with me.
While some up and down is normal and to be expected in emotional healing, I do think that educated people (even ones who are medically and mentally health educated) seek PROFESSIONAL DIAGNOSIS. The old saying about an “attorney who has him self as a client, has a FOOL for a client.” The same can be said about doctors and mental health professionals.
It amazes me when lay people read the DSM IV and try to “diagnose” someone’s mental or emotional problems by the listings, or get a Merck’s Manual and look up their symptoms and try to diagnose their own physical illness.
I do absolutely agree that an educated patient is a GOOD PATIENT, but at the same time, that does not mean that even a physician does not NEED A PHSYCIAN BESIDES THEMSELVES.
I have a great young doc and she LISTENS TO ME, but she’s the doc, and I’m the PATIENT. (I admit I argue with her sometimes, like about the sodium I was eating being what made my feet swell! and she was RIGHT! but she listened, and then I COMPLIED! I am also a good patient too! Compliant. Thus the diet to lose weight____ I’m down 28 pounds now_____ guys, and still on the LOW SODIUM DIET AS WELL!