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Getting the sociopath out of your head

You are here: Home / Explaining the sociopath / Getting the sociopath out of your head

December 10, 2012 //  by Donna Andersen//  567 Comments

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I once heard from a woman whom we’ll call “Rochelle.” She related her story of reconnecting with a long lost love, which turned out to be a fake love. As it is for many Lovefraud readers, the hardest part of breaking away was getting the sociopath out of her head.

When Rochelle was in her 50s, through a high school reunion, she reconnected with the first boy she ever loved. Rochelle had a crush on him when she was 14. They dated for almost five years, although he always seemed to have an eye out for other girls. When they broke up, Rochelle was heartbroken, but she moved on, married, divorced, and life was reasonably good—until that first love came back into her life.

He poured on the charm, and Rochelle felt like finally, after more than 30 years, she had her chance to be with the guy she always wanted. Rochelle left everything to move out of state with him. They eventually married.

Well, he lied, fabricated, manipulated, accused, took her money, ruined her credit, filed for divorce behind her back, and left her with nothing. It was the type of behavior we all know so well — sociopathic behavior.

Rochelle realizes that the guy is disordered; she was exploited; he never loved her. Still, she wants him. Yet she also realizes that she’s in love with a person who does not exist.

She asks, “When does it get to the point where he stops taking up space in my brain?”

Scope of the question

The first thing to understand is the scope of this question. “Getting the sociopath out of your head” is the ultimate goal of everyone who has been betrayed by one of these predators. Once you’ve achieved it, you’ve achieved full recovery.

So cut yourself some slack. This individual probably crashed through your life like a battering ram. Your emotions, finances, home, health and/or psyche may all be in splinters. This is going to take time to repair. If anyone says to you, “Just get over it,” this person has no idea what you’re experiencing.

Understand what happened

You were probably blindsided by this experience, so in order to move forward, you need to understand what happened. We have lots of material here on Lovefraud to help you. Many people have told me that my books, Love Fraud and Red Flags of Love Fraud, were especially helpful.

Here are some key concepts:

  • Sociopaths exist. They are social predators and they live their lives by exploiting people. They do not feel remorse for their actions, and they will never change.
  • The sociopath never loved you. You were targeted because you had something he or she wanted. It could have been money, sex, a place to live, business connections or cover for his or her secret life. Or, the sociopath messed with you simply for the fun of it.
  • There is nothing you could have done to make the sociopath treat you any better. The involvement was always about exploitation. You were probably targeted because you were good, caring, giving, responsible, and in some way, vulnerable.
  • The blame for what happened rests squarely with the sociopath. This person lied to you, manipulated you and betrayed you. You were guilty only of being human.

Acceptance

Recovering from sociopaths is a process. The key to the process is accepting what happened. This does not mean that you excuse what happened, or that you try to forgive and forget. But you must believe that yes, he or she did it, and yes, the sociopath knew what he or she was doing.

You can’t make time go backwards. You can’t take back the things you said or did that enabled the sociopath to become part of your life.

Once you come to terms with the fact that yes, it did happen, you begin the healing process.

Addictive relationship

In the case I described at the beginning of the article, Rochelle said that she still wanted the sociopath. This is not quite accurate. The truth is that she was addicted to him.

Relationships with sociopaths are highly addictive. They actually cause chemical and structural changes in the brain, similar to what substance addictions do. Therefore, you need to treat leaving the sociopath like kicking an addiction.

The way to do this is to have no further contact with this individual—no phone calls, no email, no text messages. Certainly do not meet the person. Don’t even go to the individual’s Facebook page.

If you must have contact with the individual for some reason—like you have a child together—do your best to implement Emotional No Contact. That means you remain absolutely neutral in any interaction. Sociopath love to get emotional reactions from their targets, and will do whatever they can to engage you. Do not take the bait.

Staying away from the sociopath can be really difficult. But the longer you stay away, the stronger you’ll become. If you give in and have contact, you’ll have to start all over again.

Processing the pain

This was not a normal relationship, and it’s not a normal break-up. Even if you weren’t physically or sexually assaulted, you suffered massive emotional and psychic injuries. You have losses that need to be grieved, including your loss of trust.

I believe that you must allow yourself to feel the pain of the experience, although you may not be able to do this right away. In the beginning you may just be numb. This a protective measure taken by your psyche, because the injury is just so massive.

Eventually, you need to let yourself feel it. You cannot bottle the pain up within you. It will either poison your life, or it will make you ill. You must get the pain out of your system.

Cry your eyes out. Stomp you feet in anger. Take up boxing and hit a punching bag. It’s scary at first to face your own anger, embarrassment, rage, humiliation—whatever the sociopath caused. But allow yourself to feel the emotions, honor them, and then let them go.

Let joy into your life

Draining the negative emotions will leave an energetic void within you. How do you fill the empty space? You allow joy into your life.

Any kind of joy will do: Enjoying a sunny day, letting your pets comfort you, having coffee with a friend, letting a waitress be nice to you. Soak up any joy and pleasantness that you encounter.

As you drain the negative emotions, and replace them with instances of joy, you’ll slowly change your perspective. Gradually, you’ll find that the sociopath is no longer renting space in your head. And that’s what you want to achieve.

FREE! Your first step towards real recovery from narcissistic abuse and trauma

Category: Explaining the sociopath, Recovery from a sociopath, Seduced by a sociopath

Previous Post: « Psychopathy is a disorder, not an adaptation
Next Post: The high price of destruction »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Louise

    December 20, 2012 at 9:24 pm

    Oh yeah…the triggers…I hate them.

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  2. Louise

    December 20, 2012 at 9:28 pm

    Well, I know mine knew exactly what he was doing…no doubt about it. None. He orchestrated everything. Along with knowing exactly what he was doing, I believe it also comes naturally to him. He never misses a beat all the while acting like a little boy. That boyish charm. He uses it to the hilt.

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  3. behind_blue_eyes

    December 20, 2012 at 9:42 pm

    Louise;

    “He never misses a beat all the while acting like a little boy. That boyish charm. He uses it to the hilt…”

    That is m ex’s MO. Thankfully, he is rapidly loosing his boyish charm…

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  4. Louise

    December 20, 2012 at 9:54 pm

    BBE:

    Well, they are both English you know…they use it!! I KNOW mine does. He even admitted it when I said something to him about using his accent to charm women…he said, “I admit I do.” Blech.

    I wish mine would lose his boyish charm. Perhaps he is losing it, I don’t know. Haven’t seen him in a year and a half…can’t believe it has been that long. The woman who I believe he is seeing though is 10 years younger than him…I’m not surprised.

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  5. behind_blue_eyes

    December 20, 2012 at 10:41 pm

    Louise;

    Mine was in transition when I met him. For whatever reasons, looking at pictures and knowing him for only a short time, he aged more rapidly than any person I have every known.

    Literally 10 years in 3… I met him at 36, and he basically looked his age, but a bit rough around the edges. However, you could still see the boyish charm. I have seen pictures of him at 33-32 and he could pass for 26…

    Knowing him, there could be no worse punishment for his sins. It is like somebody destroyed the picture of Dorian Gray…

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  6. Louise

    December 20, 2012 at 11:16 pm

    BBE:

    Mine looked much younger than his 42 years when I met him. He is 45 now. The smoothest skin on a man’s face I had ever known. No beard, no hair at all. I don’t think I had ever met a man without any hair…I don’t think he even shaved.

    Wouldn’t yours have probably aged from being HIV+?

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  7. kim frederick

    December 20, 2012 at 11:43 pm

    Skylar, projection, or projective identification is a defence mechinism that all people use from time to time. My own experience of cog-dis is that it requires a sort of black and white thinking where it cannot accept or come to rest in a shade of gray….the thought process swings back and forth between, “it was ALL HIS FAULT”, and “it was ALL MY FAULT” and,” but he was such a great guy” he was SUCH a monster.”
    Ilooked up projection on wikpedia, and the article talked about counter-projection which is what we do.

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  8. behind_blue_eyes

    December 21, 2012 at 12:08 am

    “Wouldn’t yours have probably aged from being HIV+”

    Louse;

    That is pretty apparent. But I did not make the connection at the time even though:

    1) I was very sick at he time and had lost a lot of weight. So much so, that a month before I met the x-spath, I went to a dermatologist for facial injections, because I was scared people would thin I was HIV+. He refused. Told me: “you have a baby face, just gain some weight and you will look fine.”

    I took his advice and began eating working out hard and in a month I looked muck better. But forgot in him the very signs that concerned me.

    2) His body. The first time I saw him undressed, I was very concerned. he had a body unlike anyone I had every seen: slim arms and legs, no chest, but a paunch. It registered instantly.

    At the time, I was concerned he might be a severe alcoholic, but as soon as the HIV+ bulb went off in my head, it all made sense…

    His smoking and drinking lifestyle is part of it, but most is HIV meds.

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  9. skylar

    December 21, 2012 at 12:12 am

    Kim,
    is this the article you found on projective identification?
    It’s fascinating.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_identification

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  10. kim frederick

    December 21, 2012 at 12:13 am

    LMAO, moondancer……did he really piss on the Christmas tree? I feel like mine just pissed on my experience of Christmas, changing it forever. We got up early, watched the kids open presents and then he left…..I knew he had a GF, I had confronted him, but he chose to spend the day with her. Not the typical scenario, usually the OW spends the day alone, but just goes to show you who the better source of supply was. OFW. Life goes on.
    Wish I could squat on his tree skirt.

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