Not long ago, I heard from a woman whom we’ll call “Rochelle.” 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 my 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 two 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.
Ox
We are gays and not allowed to get married therefore we call them our partners not our husbands or wives lol
Yes he has a romantic partner of 12 years and I have one of 11 years.
However his partner is a ‘useless idiot’ he uses and abuses to get what he wants, where as my partner and I have a normal, loving relationship 🙂
The stalking does worry me, but as I have no ‘proof’ it was him, I really don’t know what else to do about it. He definitely stalked me before we met, he used to joke about it and made up elaborate stories about how he was only seeing my friend to get to me blah blah blah. But that stories changed so many times it was difficult to work out what was real or fake.
never again,
I was thinking that, but wasn’t sure, since you said you had a “partner” but were sleeping with this guy.
Of course he will say his partner is a “useless idiot” and he will say the same thing about you…
I suggest that you be very careful though, because people who STALK can and frequently ARE violent, It may be in a sneaky way, but it may not be either.
I would also suggest that if your partner does not know you slept with this guy, that now might be a good time to tell him, as this guy may try to get even with you by informing your partner, and it might be better coming from you than from out of left field.
Ox
My partner is fully aware of everything that happened, I told him what was going on while I was in the process or ‘getting rid of ‘it’, so he is 100% up to speed on all of the events. He knows he is a psychopath etc as well and we are both very vigilant about ‘keeping an eye out’ for anything suspicious that happens.
The minute I have proof of anything he does to me I am going straight to the police and spilling my guts as the computer hacking of his partner (if true) does worry me quite a bit as LORD knows what he gets up to doing that. I do not want to go to them with that though as I don’t know who else he has ‘bragged’ that information to and if he is lying he will know it was me who reported him for it at that may unleash his true on me fury.
He has very bad scarring on his torso that he explains away as a childhood incident, but after reading about what these people are capable of and the lives they hide, I am very wary to say the least. It would not surprise me at all if when it all crumbles around him, that he is in far more trouble than anyone would ever think possible.
Never again, I’m glad your partner is up to speed on what went on. BTW I’m not as “out of it” as you might think, though I am an old woman, LOL my granddaughter is gay and she and her partner have been together for about 5 years now. Her first partner of any duration was high in P traits but the gal she is with now is super and they are HAPPY! Which is all I care about!
Thanks, Truthspeak. Yeah I think part of the problem healing is that we tend to think too much, to interpret too much, and therefore we often end up distorting, more or less, some facts.
I’m finding very interesting all your lattest contributions. And KatyDid i find has given a specially interesting, and very realistic one based on observation, not in interpretation. I also think many psychopathic behaviours are natural or innate. They’re much more less romantic than we would like, more simplistic.
Somebody has called them animals. Let’s not insult animals, please 😀 Though it’s true they’re very animalistic they’re also partly human, at least they have the dark side of human nature, but that make them much more dangerous than any poisonous or predatory animal because those animals are predictable, psychopaths are not so and that’s what make them so dangerous.
By the way, it comes to my mind an author I have a weakness for, Jiddu Krishnamurti. He may seem a bit simplistic at the beginning but if one reads him foward maybe one can find some inspiration. Maybe he could be of some use to any of you discovering which is important in life, and to overcome the psychopaths.
Thanks Qxy
Yeah the understanding can be tough to grasp at times. Then others it can come like a flood. Life isn’t what we thought it was. And that is a nice thing to know.
Hindsight 20/20. Know the feeling.
What happened in the past happened all we can do is to see it for what it real was. That they where doing these things not because of who we where but because of who they where. They will do this same type of stuff to who ever they can. That’s their nature. Nice people will treat others in a nice manner with a blurp here and there. We all have our moments. Evil will always do evil. One can tell the difference in how they handle the blurps. Nice people will own what they did. And try to make it right. Even if it cost them. Evil won’t. Unless it will cost them if they don’t.
Take care
spoon
I’m ‘still trying to process it all’ or figure out how this happened to me.So,my eyes are tired from all the reading and research.But what an education!I used to tell my husband he was narcissic,not expecting him to agree with me….but he DID and in a GLOATING way!I read about the personality disorder….fit him to a T!But I still believe that somehow all these personality disorders put together make up the spath!My spath also had OCD.Sometimes I feel a little sorry for him that he has all this stuff to cope with.But we’ve all got things to cope with!And the thing is,just because you feel sorry for the old snake doesn’t mean you gotta lean down and kiss him!
Right on Blossom4th, I’m glad you are on the right road toward healing, and you will get there I feel sure! You have your head on straight and you sound like you are processing things appropriately.
TIME will help along with the work and reading and learning. At first we learn about them, then we learn about US and why we allowed them to abuse us for so long. There are MANY ARTICLES here about healing and so just process them as you have energy and time. Good luck, you’re on your way.
“Yes, tell them you love them and they will RUN or treat you like crap.”
Louise;
Or simply say and do anything intimate.
BBE:
I agree. It doesn’t even have to be as deep as professing your love for them. Anything intimate and they can’t handle it.