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.
Sadme,
there are different reasons why you feel that way and the spath is the cause of all of them. You have to work on each one separately.
For me, the first thing that helped so much was learning about spaths. Learning as much as I could. Read, Read, Read. Get books and read, not just LF. Go to the library.
I think that the reason it helps is because part of your aweful feelings are coming from FEAR. You were so vulnerable to a deception and you NEED to know it won’t happen again. You need to feel safe. Knowledge is power and you will feel safe again when you know more.
Another part of your pain is GRIEF. You experienced a terrible loss and you need time and space to grieve. You need a supportive environment. Grief is a horrible feeling, but it subsides with time. One way that it subsides is when you begin to see that you have GAINED more than you lost from that spath. You gain knowledge, you learn gratitude, you learn about yourself and you gain wisdom. When that realization comes, you are more willing to let go of your loss and move forward with what you gained.
These are just 2 of the things you are experiencing. There’s more. Work on these for now, you’ve got a lot on your plate
((((sadme)))))
here’s a song that I like and Superkid said she likes it too and it helped us both so much during the initial shock.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOgpT5rEKIU
skylar:
I love Alanis Morrisette. Have liked her for years and have actually seen her twice in concert. Love the “Thank You” song!!! Thank you for posting this video!
sadme:
I really feel for you right now. I am feeling bad also the past few days. I’m trying to come up with some advice for you.
I will tell you why you feel this way from my perspective of why I feel this way. I can bet we will both be coming pretty much from the same place.
One thing I think I can tell you with some certainty and that is that I think you will get closure. I tell you that because I remember around April 2010 I was feeling just like you and feeling that it would NEVER come. But the OW he was triangulating me with told me it would. She said she could almost guarantee it would and by July it did. It was almost spooky the way things came about. I thought I would never even talk to him again and then one night BAM he was standing at my table at a bar/restaurant. I couldn’t believe it. He had literally not said a word to me in four months and then there he was. So…I can tell you that somehow, some way, you will get closure. And I think this mostly because they ARE spaths and they will always pop up when you least expect them to.
You are feeling this because you obviously thought he was the one for you…maybe everything you had always dreamed of. That is hard to give up in our minds whether we KNOW they are spaths or not. I remember thinking this about how I felt about mine after I had met him…it was like when you get something you didn’t even know you wanted or needed until you got it?? That’s how I felt about him.
Anyway, it is tough, but you are going to have to work through this pain as we all have. No one can do it for us unfortunately 🙁 I am here for you!!! I am on here all the time; you can always count on me and the rest of us to help you!
Thanks, I listened to the song. It made me cry. I wish I could just erase the past 2 years. We broke up Sept. 28th. 2010. He would drag me back into his web. He had already found his new victim 12days after our break up, but continued to contact me. I would think this time he is gone, I would start to get strong, then bamm he was back again and again. He broke me down. The last time he moved back in with me and I poured my guts out to him. When I came home the very next day he left me again. I as so crushed… how could he be so evil. I as in a 15 year marriage to man that I barely shed a tear over. I was glad to be rid of him.. But the spath I knew only for a year, has crushed me so completely.
I want my life back. He has stole so much from me. I hate the fact that he has stolen days from me. Days that I cant get back. I have cried for days. Hours on end. I feel like I need to purge him out of me. I have this empty feeling that I want to purge out of me. I hate this feeling I hate him for doing this to me.
92044,
so glad you liked the song.
sadme,
yes it’s a song that makes me cry too, but in a good way.
eb
Yes, I thought he was the one! I thought I had finally found my true love. After a 15 year marriage to an alcoholic who was verbally abusive , narcissistic man , really. I thought I finally found the one.
I am obsessed with thoughts of him. Thoughts of him with his new wife. ( the women that he met 12day after we split up) She is a 38 year old woman that had never been married. She wants children. Yikes. I tried to warn her, but I believe that she is a sociopath too. I don’t know. All I know is that she knew he was coming back to me and knew that he cheated on her 3 times with me. They got engaged within weeks of know one another. She was such an idiot to me. I wish I could be there to see it all unravel. My friends and family that are understanding of what I am going through say ” she will get hers” I warned her about him.. I sent her websites of other victims of his. There are post about him on womansaver.com. I didn’t know about them until after our breakup. I warned her, but it backfired and she used the site to slam me and other woman that posted warning about him. She used my name and where I worked. The spath put her up to it.
I am told that I should be happy that he has moved on….
I should feel better that he is out of my life, but he is still in my head. I want him out, but I want what I lost. I lost. I lost something that I thought was there. Where did it go. I just feel like I don’t know where I belong anymore. My compass is so off course.
Sadme
Going NC is one of the most challenging things with the Spath, because of the addiction we’ve developed to them. We get used to the drama, we love the persuit, the power we feel when WE are the the ones REJECTING them by not responding to their contact attempts …..and they know it!
We love the honeymoon when we have contact…even if it’s painful, it feels good at first, but then it feels horrible because they played us again…..that’s the addiction!
Abbri- Good for you for resisting listening to voice mails. I have T-Mobil too and they told me I couldn’t block a phone number unless I paid for that service monthly….something I can’t afford to do right now, nor can I change my number since it’s on hundreds of resumes I’ve put out in my job search. So in the mean time, I have to challange myself and control myself to NOT look at text messages and NOT respond! He is so PERSISTANT tohough, that when he dosent get a responce one way he tries another way….even through other people. I’ts a game to them, and one, we can’t beat!…only resist….and with it GET OUR POWER BACK WITH NC, NC, NC.
Sadme- I’m sorry for your pain, be patient, it takes time, be good to your self and honor what you are feeling….this too shall pass…..take one day at a time, your compass is spining out of control right now….allow it to, feel it and then know that when you wake up tomorrow morning, it’s a new day, a new beginning and another day farther away from pain, and closer to healing….your compass WILL get set again!…(((hugs))) to you
eb,
Wow, I am touched by your post but sad that MY post about the peaceful feeling of being with the spath made you cry. Bless you, I can tell your feelings are raw and I don’t think it’s a coincidence at all that others feel that sense of peace.
I’m coming from a different place then you are, having met my spath nearly 10 years ago and with a lot of history, back and forth. Much of the time I feel that I am nearly recovered but because I see him at work events and have these occasional setbacks, there is no closure.
Two things about the addiction (and it must be an addiction because it is not love): Think of it like a serious drug addict that finally gets a fix. The addict will relax and doze off into his or her own world of drug-induced euphoria. That is what being with the spath feels like. When I saw mine recently, we had the most intense conversation about life, goals, the hereafter, leaving our mark on the world.. you name it, we were talking about it. We both expressed fear for what the future might be like as we get older. It was a great conversation and lasted for several hours. I can tell him my innermost thoughts and feel totally comfortable… and have NEVER been able to talk to anyone else like that.
Most of you reading this know that another hallmark of being with a spath is the feeling that they “get” you like no one else does. So that is a large part of the “hook” that keeps us addicted.. there is a comfort zone just inside the danger zone that feels like a safe retreat. But if we are honest, we know that part of the lure is they are a challenge to us, and we have to prove we can win.
Another example of a victim of the addiction: Phantom of the Opera. Christine is drawn to the Phantom although he is damaged, mysterious, a loner, and lives in a dark world. She resists but he gradually wears her down. She is nearly hypnotized by him and is pulled towards that existence, only to be rescued by a Prince Charming type that truly loves her. Alas, after the spath most of us don’t have a Prince in the wings which is why we long for the spath. Deep down we also know we are settling for second best and that the spath long term would probably destroy what self-esteem we had left.
Once bonded to the spath (after being intimate), it is very hard to extricate oneself. I believe that spaths have a high level of intensity with every woman they have been with and after the relationship ends, most of the women feel like we are feeling now. The most vulnerable types of women are ones in the helping professions: nurses, teachers, etc. and women who thrive on codependency. We initially thought that we could fix their flaws and that no woman was as special to them as we were. The jealousy we feel when we imagine them with another is related to that “fix it” tendency.. in other words, “How could he possibly enjoy her as much as he did me? What we had was so special.. there could never be another woman to top that.”
It’s also a sense of pride and ego which is then crushed when we finally have to admit that we are one of several (or a string) and are all just characters in his play. (Remember the story of the spath that couldn’t remember the color of his ex-wife’s eyes..)
I have noticed through the years that the spath cannot feel other people’s pain the way most of us do. He will express concern about others but I don’t think he really “feels” it at all. He even told me that several women have commented to him that he has no emotions and he didn’t understand what they meant. When I have cried at him out of pain in the past, his response would often be a patronizing-sounding “I’m sorree” like he just pitied me and did not connect it to anything HE had done. He has even said things like “We are BOTH hurting” when he was the one who inflicted the wound and I did nothing to him. He truly doesn’t see what he does to women as horrific… and he moves through life continuing to get away with it.
I never felt power when I rejected him or his phone calls..yes it was all about taking back my power but I never felt power over him, i just knew it had to stop, it didnt matter if he was my soulmate from the universe, I had to let go or die.
mo152:
Don’t feel bad about what I have been feeling. It just blew me away when I read your words.
I can’t imagine going through this for 10 years off and on the way you have. Because I left my job, I have absolutely no idea what is going on there, but the triangulation woman is still there and I really hate her (strong word, but sorry, I pretty much do), but at the same time, I kind of feel for her because the fact that she is still there means she will never have NC as long as they both are there. Hopefully, one of them will move on soon. And really in all reality, they are probably still involved in the cat and mouse game.
I get what you were saying about the feelings of addiction like a drug and that I also felt like he “got” me…like we had a lot of things in common even though he is from the UK. It was so exciting for me to have someone who was cultured and worldly interested in me…the type of man I had always wanted.
I agree that the spath has intense, short lived relationships with women…leaving the women feeling dumped and confused and they just go onto the next one. I even told mine that I knew I was one of many and that I wasn’t “special.” I felt EXACTLY the way you mentioned as far as feeling that I WAS “special” and how in the world can he feel this bond with anyone else?? Then your whole world collapses when you realize you were never special and there’s a string a mile long.
I noticed also about not feeling pain. Mine only feigned it; he was very good. So cunning it is unbelievable.