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.
Thank you dancing for pointing that out.
This might help… literally hundreds of videos, from a man who ‘is’ a Narcissist, you refer to as a spath, or sociopath.
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.archive.org%2Fstream%2FSurvivingTheNarcissist%2Fsurvivenarcissist_djvu.txt&h=21ae3
what your referring to is called gas lighting.. go here to see video: http://www.archive.org/details/AbuseInRelationshipsGaslightingambientOvertCovertByProxy and also on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mpX76Env1-A and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikouCKUwQ1Y
Eb none gets it unless they live it. I believe there are more of them lerking than stats show too. I think everyone has encountered at least one at some point. Being intimately involved however is very diff. Noone gets the SCIENCE or wants to believe in human evil. They just label spaths as jerks not accpting or even believing in human living without conscious. At first it is scary but after a while the knowledge you gain is comforting. It makes a lot more sense to understand the disorder.
Dancing I hate they cant feel too becuase God knows I have called my spath everything in the book. he probably was laughing, no Im sure he laughed! 🙁
The last time I tried NC by blocking his number along with his mother’s and brother’s, he was pretty scary. I dont jog anymore after that incident. I am more aware of my surrounding these days and take precautions. He cannot be trusted.
Just last week, he was playing the victim by telling me that he had talked to some of his friends (female) and they told him he was in a abusive relationship, the nerve! Now, I am the cruel witch that abuses him, go figure. I asked him why he would want to stay in this abusive relationship and he said “because I am scared of you, I am traumatized.” —- what an idiot x 100000!
farwronged, you just reminded me on how much he enjoyed my insanity. When I would be at my worse, upset at something he had done… he would have this stupid smile on his face and began his loud laughter… spooky. It was like and empty soul with sound. He enjoyed it.
They love it when youre confused and upset. Their words: MISSION ACCOMPLISHED!
it’s easier to manipulate and control a sleep deprived emotionally drained zombie..it’s all about control for them, control and power
Far,
I’m not the jealous type either. in fact, I don’t think I can even feel jealousy. I’m pretty sure I told him this at the beginning, 25 years ago. For me, if a man can’t value me more than any other woman, then he is flawed and she can have him. Period.
Unfortunately, that backfired. I shouldn’t have told him. Because of this, he never tried to make me jealous. Maybe occasionally he did, like looking at other women or being friends with the freak in the apartment upstairs. But I didn’t react at all because I didn’t care, I was sooo confident of his love. I’m sure now that these feeble attempts were just that, feeble tests to see how I would react. I wish I had.
Then he would have tried to triangulate another woman to get my reaction and I would have seen him more clearly. But I was completely clueless. Never suspected a thing – even when he came home REEKING OF SEX. I rationalized EVERYTHING AWAY.
I had to explain that to answer your question. Why did he treat her one way and you another? It has to do with what he perceived that he could get away with. He ran some subtle tests first. Then gauged your reaction. Then proceeded based on that premise.
He didn’t idealize her at all. He just watched your face as he spoke about her and “tweaked” the story as your expression changed. My spath would tell me outrageous things he had done, and watched my reaction. If I ever started to look disgusted with him, he quickly threw in an anecdote about his love of animals (violins! please!) and how he saved one that had been hit by a car and lost his job because he was late to work because he took the pooooor bird to the vet, but he knows he did the right thing and booohhhohhhhoooooo!
get it?
It’s ALL TAILORED to meet your particular disposition/weaknesses. NOTHING IS REAL.
There is one good thing about the spath (send him a thank you card, it will confuse him): his laser analysis of you can help you perceive yourself more accurately. You can see your own weaknesses much better after a spath encounter.
Alina, I hope this helps you too. It sounds like you’ve encountered several spaths in your life. Learning about spaths, starts with them but ends up being about you. You can learn sooooo much from this encounter and NEVER have to deal with another one again, if you make this about learning your vulnerabilities. You should reschedule the therapy appointment. It can be tremendous help if the therapist knows about sociopath PD.
FAD: Don’t worry about your ex’s 3rd marriage being the real deal because she has money.
My ex-spath married a very wealthy woman after me. As a matter of fact, he married me to use me as a stepping stone to get her.
He lasted longer with her than he did with me because of her money but eventually his appetite for other women won out and they broke up two years after we parted.
He did last 4 years in a committed relationship with the woman before me but he never married her or lived with her.
He cheated on her likewise. I’m sure she was aware of some affairs and maybe not all but she kept him by giving him erotic unconventional sex and BDSM. She also introduced her girl friends into his bed from time to time to keep him happy but eventually everything she was doing to keep him played out and he still tired of her. She also got in very tight with his mother and still had a relationship going with his mother after we were married. His mother never accepted me and wanted his ex back in his life.
Nothing you ever do for them if enough, whether it’s money or kinky sex it’ll never hold them. It may hold them longer than their other relationships but in the end the mask will still fall and their true colors will win out.
Joanie