Sociopathy, many experts agree, is a deficits disorder.
The sociopath, in this view, is missing something—things like empathy, remorse, and basic respect for the boundaries of others.
When you think of a deficit—something missing—you don’t necessarily think dire consequences.
You may think, instead, things like less”¦incomplete”¦limited.
For instance, the idea of intellectual deficit might spark the association, mental retardation.
Instead of invoking fear, this tends to elicit our understanding, even empathy. The mentally retarded individual is missing something that most of us have—a normal intellectual capacity. You think, this is unfortunate, for that person.
When you think of kids with attentional deficits, you’re likely to bring some extra patience toward the challenges their condition presents. Your accomodation is based on recognizing their behaviors as originating in a deficit.
When dealing with the Asperger’s Syndrome population, you understand their social inaptitude as arising from a neurologic difference. And so in responding to the Asperger individual’s peculiarities, you allow that he or she, on a social level, is operating with less than a full deck.
In general, when speaking of disorders of deficits, we tend, or at least try, not to take the consequences arising from the disorder personally. We recognize the deficit as something the person doesn’t ask for and, at best, struggles to control.
This isn’t to deny, or minimize, the impact of the individual’s difficult behaviors. But in locating that impact in a deficit, we can potentially experience it as less personally injurious.
Sociopathy, however, presents an interesting challenge in this regard. Research increasingly implicates brain differences in sociopaths. Sociopaths, we are learning, fail to experience and process certain emotions like nonsociopaths. Their capacity to learn from aversive consequences appears to be compromised. And they show evidence of certain enduring forms of attentional pathology, involving defective inhibitory and impulse control.
The sociopath, in a word, appears to be a psychologically handicapped individual.
Yet it’s hard to empathize with the sociopath, who himself lacks empathy. And how not to personalize his actions—actions that can cause so much personal pain? And how not to personalize that pain, even if it results from the sociopath’s deficits?
It brings to mind the concept of processing a vicious dog attack. The dog is vicious. It attacks you. It knows it is attacking you. We can even imagine that it knows, on a primitive level, that it is wounding you. The dog needs to be leashed, kept away from others. Improperly secured, it sees you walking down the street, primitively registering your vulnerability. And then it attacks, remorselessly.
While it’s true that we can ascribe to sociopaths (and not dogs) a capacity to evaluate their prey and plot their means of attack, we run the risk, I think, of giving the sociopath too much credit.
After all, if the sociopath’s deficits destine him to interpersonal exploitation, does his exploitation become personal simply by virtue of his capacity to plot it?
Sure, the vicious dog, unlike the sociopath, may lack calculation and plotting skills. But for all intents and purposes, unless locked-up, both will inevitably attack and/or violate. The vicious dog, if it doesn’t attack you, will attack someone else. And if you are lucky enough to escape the sociopath’s transgressions, someone else won’t be.
From this perspective, the sociopath’s deficits will take forms of interpersonal exploitation just as surely as the child with ADHD can be expected to obnoxiously disrupt others, heedless of their boundaries.
From this angle, it’s possible to construe the sociopath’s aggression as tantamount to a hurricane’s damaging your house. The wreckage may be great, and traumatic; but it is the wreckage, ultimately, of an irrepressibly violent, impersonal force.
Arguably, this defines the sociopath: an irrepressibly [interpersonally] violent, impersonal force.
We hope, through our awareness, prudence, and luck, never to suffer its destructiveness. But if less lucky, we can remind ourselves that the sociopath, in the final analysis, is about as pointless, worthless, and arbitrary as a natural disaster.
(My use of “he” in this article was for consistency’s sake, not to suggest that men have a patent on sociopathy. This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
BloggerT7165: If we are all energy … then, is their studies of what was going on with the mom’s of said psychopaths at the time they were pregnant with their child? What life conditions were they in? Peaceful or fearful? Frustrating? What were these women’s psyches about at the time of giving birth?
There has to be some form of connection with all of them … and asking a mom after the fact … years later, doesn’t count … perception again … maybe they didn’t remember or didn’t know they were in danger during their pregnancy … if that was the scenario.
Again, just a thought.
Peace.
Ok Kewly
Thanks BTK Thats ( a joke )
So 1. Psycopath is Heritary version
2. Sociopath is the Nurture version
3. Combo Meal Deal or you may choose to eat from our Unlimited Buffett! Ever notice who eats at the Barn Hogs? maybe it’s just me?
Oh Indie: You are sooooooo wasting your talents buddy tuddy. You always make me laugh … you have such a warped sense of humor. (LOL).
Peace and hugs.
We are not all energy. Energy is nothing more than the capacity of a physical system to perform work. That is the definition of energy. Which makes me think of all the possible psychopaths selling their quackery on their informercials and making millions off people. Kevin Truduea is a perfect example. I think one problem is that there are a lot of intelligent people but not many people who are taught or use critical thinking skills any more. (watch this free movie to see what I am talking about http://herebedragonsmovie.com/)
And Wini like I said I am firmly in the camp of psychopaths are born that way and sociopaths become that way. Now psychopaths becoming the way they are because of something in pregnancy may be a very valid explanation and certainly something worthy of research. But that is much different than a person conditioning themselves or being conditioned to be one.
Ah but remember it’s your perception of what you read as 60 99 percent of the meaning is lost in the wires! :)~
Warp Speed Scotty! I don’t know If She can Take much more of this Capton Kirk! But Jim ? Hey Does’nt Sam Donaldson Look like a Vulcan? Or is it just me?:)~
BloggerT:
I think sociopaths know right from wrong but choose wrong. I think psychopaths haven’t a clue about right and wrong. Your thoughts?
From what I observed of my ex, he didn’t seem to think lying was a terribly big deal. He would leave me a phone message apologizing for lying as if he accidentally stepped on my foot instead. Then he would change the subject as if it were no big deal. I think they only know it is “wrong” because they observe that certain things upset other people. When those upset people are a source of supply to them, they try to smooth the upset feelings, but they don’t personally understand them. They have learned to say the right things, but they don’t really mean them.
I agree on the know right from wrong for sociopaths. I think psychopaths do as well but it is different than how normal people see it. They know we think and say it is wrong. But they feel much the same way about doing wrong as many people do about doing “wrong” by breaking the speed limit. I do not feel sad, remorse, or really any emotions when I break the speed limit even though it is “wrong”. Now if I get caught or it something happens that causes it to be inconvenient to me then I might feel something but not initially. That is a psychopath. To take it further I would feel bad if my speeding hurt someone where as a psychopath would not and would probably blame the person who got hurt for not getting out the way, etc.
Khatalyst,
Absolutely fascinating, incredibly insightful writing on your part. And I thought I was deep!..haha..
As I was scrolling down this thread, reading the priceless comments from all the LF peeps, I saw your name and instantly said to myself..”ooh! she always shares something of tremendous value that expands my mind to a place I didn’t know existed”..and, so you did again.
I’m a searcher, as I am aware there are others on this blog who are the same (Oxy, Stargazer, Blogger, etc…) and what my searching consists of is striving to glimpse other’s lives through their eyes, through their experiences, through their beliefs and opinions.
I don’t want to be a linear thinker, focusing on my situation, my own awareness of self in exclusion of the rest of humanity. To me, that is an arrested state of development; spiritual, emotional, intellectual, psychological growth stunted by my own foolish self absorbtion.
I need to be able to visualize the big picture, to gaze upon the world as not a reflection of me, but as each living organism being it’s own entity, it’s own individual self and to respect, admire, celebrate, and possibly nurture that reality to correspond to my own existence.
I’m working on it, believe me I am. And I think you have moved to a place in your life, in your journey, where you profoundly recognize the meaning of true compassion, as stating you don’t point fingers at others proclaiming them to be evil. Wow, that’s a struggle for me, I admit it. But how arrogant am I to judge people with the label of evil when I am oblivious to their circumstances? Their tragic childhoods? Very arrogant.
Anyway, you have caused my thinking cap to move in hyperspeed which can be a laborious task for a plodder like me…haha.
Thank you, dear Khatalyst, for your bearing of the soul and for openly sharing your own spiritual miracles that have transformed your life for the better and continues to do so.
~Kimberley