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.
Yeah SK it does get better, you just have to do it a day at a time.
Lesson learned – loved your comment about vibrators!!! :-). Funnily enough mine had problems in that area – don’t know how much detail I can go into here – guidance please – but he concentrated more on how I felt & that was great. And yes I miss that feeling. You know in the wedding ceremony when they say 2 people become one, thats what it felt like, that I really knew that meaning and never had before.
I_survived_The_Bastard – they pay for a while, but it’s only a small investment to make sure they can fleece us later on. Mine was playing the good guy card in financial terms but he could not keep it up. They have no staying power when it comes to money in my experience.
I survived, love-bombing is what they do very early on in a relationship. They adore us, call us their soul mates, send flowers, call 3 times a day, tell us they love us in the third week. Then when were hooked, they drop the pretense and start the devalue phase.
Gas-lighting is a term that comes from Alfred Hitchcocks movie, “gaslight”, and it means the crazy making behavior that make you doubt yourself and your own perceptions.
Dear I__survived,
“Love bombing” is where AT FIRST part of the relationshit (purposely misspelled) they tell you how wonderful you are and “mirror” (reflect back) yourself to you…so you think they think you are great and you feel really good about them as a result.
Gaslighting is “twisting” reality—named for an old movie about a man trying to drive his wife crazy so he can inherit her fortune.
Google the word gaslighting and wiki will describe it….
I suggest to all “newbies” here that you go back through the categories and read the old archived articles….there are about 700 of them! Just read JUST old the articles, not the comments, until you ahve read them all….otherwise you’d never get done! LOL But it will give you an over view of THEM (psychopaths) and of HEALING YOURSELF…it starts out about learning about them, and ends up learning about ourselves and loving ourselves.
There are some predictable “stages” of healing and growing, and sometimes it is like a roller coaster, up and down, down and up, cry and laugh….but each of those stages will bring you fruther along the road toward healing and peace.
We do understand, and your friends and family may not…and that validation, that understanding is very healing! God bless. (((hugs))))
((Katy))
I understand what you mean, my life with spath trapped in a cabin on an island, felt like just existing. But you know what? You and I WERE gaining skills. We just didn’t know it. Every day that we survived was because we were smart and savvy. What we didn’t understand, we just dropped into the WTF? Bucket for later retrieval. Now I pull stuff out of that bucket and see it clearly for what it is.
That time with the spath was our schooling, when we left, whether we knew it at the time or not, it was graduation time. Your subconscious is absorbing data and directing you all the time. You knew it was time to leave because your subconscious warned you of imminent danger.
Skylar,
I think I am resistant b/c my spath would speak for me, as if he were me. So what is true for you is NOT true for me. I know ME so I do speak for MY experience. Thus I persist in Validating myself even as I acknowledge your perspective for yourself is not wrong for YOU or even others but it is not my perspective and My perspective IS valid for me.
Katy, respecting your perspective is valid for you but it is not my perspective and is not valid for me.
I survived/Bastard
LOL! I love your handle by the way….
Anywho, part of what might help you here is that NOTHING he said or DID, including sex was at all REAL. NOT for him. They do not bond. This is why they can screw so many at once. WE bond, THEY do not. WE have the fantasy, they merely suckered us into it.
For malicious intent. NOTHING they say is the truth. They lie and lie.
Even with sex, it’s all a lie and the point in making you feel good, was so your reaction would be so much WORSE when he made you feel bad.. build you up to bring you down. I believe Sky has talked about this before on the blog, but it is SO TRUE.
LL
LL
Katy,
I think the dif is that I don’t see learning to disconnect from others and my humanity as a SKILL but as a reversal into an abyss.
Did I learn to not trust, be paranoid, be secretive, not be honest, withhold, hide what I did, not be caring, etc etc. Yes, I learned things about humanity that I never wanted to know, but that is not a skill, that is a tragedy.
GROWTH, positivity, did not occur. I shrank from the world. And in fact, that was survival skill that I knew from childhood, so even that was not learned b/c of my spath.
Kim & Ox Drover – Aha! That makes SO much sense. I was bought roses – champagne roses every week for years, he sent me cards before he moved in, he would insist on buying each new book by a particular author, not in paperback, but hardback for my birthday, whether I wanted it or not, whenever we went out somewhere we had to buy a picture/piece of art as a keepsake. He would phone me at work (the new digital job not the stationery company) 3-10 times a day. It got so bad that people at work started to comment about that & I got very bored with it as well.
Can’t think of specific gaslighting behaviour, but perhaps it might be that whenever we or he went out there was always an altercation of some description. Someone annoyed him or he would wind people up just for the fun of it. It was never his fault, but always someone else’s.
Katy,
I’m sorry if I offended you. I didn’t mean to invalidate your perspective, only to offer an additional one.
I admit that how I learned to cope were more akin to survival during wartime than a normal life. In fact, I was describing to my friend the kinds of things I did to maintain some sanity and she said, “skylar, what you are describing is what political prisoners do to survive. I say “political” prisoners because you were innocent and didn’t deserve your sentence”
OK, so I see your point. My point is I hope, a complementary one. You see, when I first met the spath, I noticed how much he lied. It was mind boggling. So I went to the library and found Dr. Peck’s book, “People of the Lie” I read it and dismissed it. Without the experience I have now, the book just didn’t make sense. There are no books out there that would have opened my eyes to what the experience of a spath is really like. Now, when I read and learn about spaths, I can incorporate the information into knowledge and wisdom because of my experience.
So although I wasn’t able to learn from either experience or books alone, it was the merging of both that has produced the knowledge and wisdom I have today. So that is why I said that we were learning while we were there, in prison.