Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail from a reader:
How do I process a relationship that had so many lies in it that I don’t know really with whom I was involved?
I miss the person I thought I knew so much, but at the same time, he was involved with someone else, and others, since at least last June. I thought he had had one affair—but not anything to the extent that it looks like now.
How do I process a relationship I never had? Was he lying the whole time acting out the “I love you’s”, the romantic comments, and the idea that we should be together? Is it all an act?
Most of us are reading and posting on Lovefraud because we were intensely, callously, brutally deceived in a relationship with a sociopath. The betrayal was so deep, and so profound, that all we can say is that the person we thought we knew, the relationship we thought we had, didn’t exist.
Much has been written here on Lovefraud about the different aspects of recovery. But in response to this reader’s e-mail, I’ll review some of the key points.
Understanding sociopaths and “love”
Sociopaths do not feel empathy for other human beings. Therefore, they do not have the ability to love as we understand it. There is no emotional connection, no true caring for the target of their “affections.”
What is going on when sociopaths say, “I love you?” They are not all the same, so there is a range of explanations for what they mean.
At the clueless end of the range, sociopaths may view the target as attractive arm candy, or may like the attention they receive from the target, or may enjoy sex with the target. Sociopaths may label as “love” whatever it is they feel with the target. So, “I love you,” means, “I like how I look when you’re with me,” or, “I like the fact that you’re showering me with attention,” or, “I like having sex with you.”
At the sinister end of the range, sociopaths know they are cold-hearted predators and view their targets the way cats view mice. These sociopaths play with their targets for awhile, then, when they tire of the game, abandon them, leaving the targets battered and gasping. Or, some sociopaths will go in for the kill, usually figuratively, but sometimes literally.
The reader asked, “Is it all an act?” Often, the answer is yes.
Accepting reality
The sociopath may have painted a picture of an exquisite future of unending togetherness and bliss. Or, the sociopath may have latched on to our own nurturing instincts, and convinced us that they can only survive with our caring and support. Then the mask slips, the story unravels, and we learn that everything we believed was a lie.
We must accept this reality. We must believe our own eyes and recognize the truth.
This may be really difficult. We thought we were working towards our dream. We made important life decisions based on what we were told. We may have spent a lot of money—maybe all of our money—at the behest of the sociopath.
We don’t want to believe that it was all a cruel mirage. We argue with ourselves—there must be some other explanation, some other reason. We may say, “I must have misunderstood; no one can be that heartless.”
Yes, sociopaths are that heartless.
The reasons they are heartless do not matter. Yes, in some cases they have had bad parents and a terrible childhood. But as an adult, they are not going to change. They are what they are, and the sooner we accept that, the sooner we can begin to recover.
Time and permission to recover
The psychological and emotional damage that we suffer because of our entanglements with sociopaths is often extensive. We may experience anxiety, depression, guilt, self-hatred, and perhaps even post traumatic stress disorder.
Some of us are so angry with ourselves for falling for the scam that we punish ourselves by blocking our own recovery. We say we will never trust again; never love again.
Please do not feel this way. If you never recover, giving up on trust and love, the sociopath will have truly won. Deny him or her that victory. Give yourself permission to recover.
Recovering from this damage is not an event; it’s a process. Readers often ask, “How long will it take?” The answer: It will take as long as it takes.
We may need to move forward in several directions at once, but it’s okay to move forward slowly. Some steps to take:
- Protecting our physical safety, if the sociopath has made threats, and what remains of our financial assets.
- Taking care of our physical health—eating right, getting enough exercise and sleep, avoiding alcohol and other substances.
- Finding a way to release the pent-up anger and pain within us, without showing it to the sociopath, because that will backfire.
- Rebuilding relationships with family members and friends that were damaged because of the sociopath.
- Letting moments of joy, no matter how small, into our lives. Joy expands, so the more we can let in, the more it will grow and the better we will feel.
The Lovefraud Blog has many more articles that focus on how to recover from the sociopathic entanglement. You’ll find them in the following category:
Believe in yourself. You can do this. You can get past the experience. You may have lost your innocence, but in the end, you’ll gain invaluable wisdom.
Dear Donna,
This has boggled my mind, how he could say he loved me and would never lie to me, to realizing that he can’t love me and has lied to me repeatedly. Recovery seems to be a feat that is not for the weak of heart. How do you recover from someone who breaks every rule you follow, every moral value you treasure?
When you finally get the courage to get out, they pull every trick in the book to get you to stay. You end up seeing what a wonderful relationship you could have had if it were real. It’s even more damning to see what you could have had. Why couldn’t he just go?
The final pie in the face is how they slander you to everyone and tell them you’re crazy. I am innocent, I did nothing wrong except to try and protect my children and to be a ‘good’ wife.
I don’t know who I married, I lost my voice and when I found it again, he hated it. I need to never lose my voice again and to not let him win. To actually live a life and not drift through it with my eyes half open.
Hopeforjoy –
How do you recover? You accept the fact that you were betrayed, you believe that it was not your doing, and you let him go.
There is no “relationship that you could have had.” It was all an act, a mirage.
Why did he want to pull you in again after you left? One of these explanations is probably correct: 1) He viewed you as a possession, and did not want to lose his possession. 2) When you left, his reaction was “game on” – time to see if he could seduce you again. 3) He feeds off of your reactions – any reaction will do. 4) If he gets you to return, it enhances his sense of power and control, and to him, power and control are everything.
Yes, recovery means actually living your life. This is your goal.
Dear Donna,
Thank you for your reply. Your reasons were right on, number one especially. My daughter even said this to me a year ago. She was way more wise to human nature at 17 years old than I was at 44.
This all makes sense but I need to get myself moving toward a goal and stop treading water.
I’m so happy that you responded to me, you made my day Donna!!!! Lovefraud rocks!!!!!
These were my sentiments just months after my “world” fell apart and just days after I could identify my husband (at the time” as a Spath.
It DOES get better. I am frustrated as I have to “co-parent” with him.
This reader is in a MUCH better situation, and I have faith she will recover.
My latest complaint brings me back to this.
I have times like today, where although I knew there were others before me and during me, I fear that THIS one is the real deal. That his now 3rd WIFE (just married this weekend) will somehow meet a much better fate than I.
I am not jealous of her, I have found that just as Romans 5:3-4 states; “…but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” I have greater strength, character and confidence than I did before I met my Spath. And I have Beautiful son.
BUT I get so frustrated that SHE just doesn’t see it, AND he is unemployed and living in the luxury of her $.
I can’t wait till he gets his due.
FightAnotherDay:
Don’t worry, SHE will see it soon. He cannot keep up the lie for long. I posted this yesterday to someone telling her that one of the ways I deal with getting over this is realizing that the next one will not mean anything to him…just like I didn’t mean anything or all the ones before me didn’t mean anything. We are/were all just something to occupy his time.
After everything my spath tries to do to hurt me, he wouldn’t come out and say, “we got married this weekend.” Jr. eventually told me.
They (spath, in his wife’s handwriting) just said they went away for the weekend.
There was a good article about the way the spath affects you… just read it a few days ago. And larn2becop had a GREAT post he posted on a social networking site…where was that?
All I need to add is how the Spath uses the children as tool.
Peace, for now.
Dear FAD,
((((Hugs))))) Well, bless her heart! That’s what we say when someone has STEPPED INTO IT UP TO THE KNEES….and by marrying him she has done just that. She doesn’t know it yet, but we do.
Now that he has her “hooked” his fangs will start to show very soon, you know that. Boy did she get a catch! An unemployed psychopathic creep! LOL Who when he is working is a what, wanna be cop security guard!? Yea, great catch!
bad day today-I can’t stop crying. I am devastated and feel like I can’t handle the stress anymore. I went to counseling this morning and she took my history. I am so distraught that I can’t find a job. I am applying for everything and I can’t even get a phone call from an HR person. No attempts to contact me for interviews. I don’t know how much longer I can handle this. I am applying for govt assistance tomorrow-if I can figure out how the hell to do so. I am probably going to be living out of my truck soon-just like Oxy said. I feel like I have so many facebook friends but how many of them actually give a shit whether I live or die. I am trying to be strong about this but all the rejection further pulls down my non existent self esteem and I just wanna die. All I wanna do is drink until I pass out, but I don’t even have enough alcohol in the house to do that. Nobody wants me and I don’t know how to deal with that. My family won’t help because all my other siblings are having money problems and I’m the only one who didn’t produce grandchildren and I’m the only one who educated herself and didn’t get knocked up or knock someone up.
Dear Nolarn,
Okay, the pity party is over! STOP!!!! NOW!!! STEP AWAY FROM THE PITY PARTY!
First off, can you apply for unemployment? In some places after a certain period of time even if you were fired you can apply for unemployment. Call the unemployment office tomorrow and find out. If so, apply for it.
Go down and find out about food stamps and/or welfare.
Go to your local food pantry and get whatever food basket they pass out.
Call your local board of nursing and speak with a counselor/advisor there about jobs.
Talk to your land lord or mortgage company TOMORROW.
Like I told you before they can’t throw you out the first day the rent is over due…if you are renting it will take a minimum of 90 days most places. If you are buying, it may take MONTHS….but CALL and find out.
Gather up whatever possessions you have that have cash value and get them advertised to sell. Use the money to put a shell on the back of your pick up just in case.
Quit staying in panic mode that no one loves you, no one is there to rescue you and RESCUE YOURSELF. You still have plenty of time to do this, but you can’t do it while you are running down the street screaming “no one loves me, I’m gonna go eat worms!”
Okay, your face book friends aren’t gonna rescue you, your parents aren’t gonna rescue you, the nut job lady next door isn’t gonna rescue you, but YOU CAN RESCUE YOU….AND IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO DO SO. (((hugs))))
Oxy-I don’t care if you think the pity party should be over. I don’t care anymore. I am tired of having to deal with this and having no real person to talk to. I seems so easy to you but it’s not.