We recently received the following letter that expresses very well what many victims tell us they feel. Although I have written on this subject before, this week I would like to share new insights on healing and recovery.
I spent two years in a relationship with an antisocial psychopath. In the last four months, since I last saw him, I have built a new life, I get on with my life, I am successful in my job, I am a good mother, I am comfortable in my own skin, and, for the first time in my life, am content to live a single life.
This sounds like a success story, but in every minute that my mind is not occupied by the routine of daily life, I am totally consumed by thoughts of my “ex”. Most of these thoughts revolve around the things he did and said. As we all know – the words and actions of these people are almost always opposite. After all, someone who “loves you more than anything……wants to be with you more than anything…….wants to marry you….is 100% committed to buying a house with you”, doesn’t hit you, trip you up, get on top of you with is hands round your neck, spit on you, and leave you to pay $4,000 a month for a house you moved into a month before (just to mention a few of the nightmare scenarios).
I need help with two things in particular:
– Every morning now, for over a year (since he left me paying for the house, a day after my dad died and my ex said, “you should be glad he’s dead”), I have woken up, and the very first thing that enters my mind is him. I am totally emotionally exhausted. I dread going to sleep at night. How can I stop this? It is worse, in some ways, than the abuse itself. I have considered going to a hypnotherapist, but am scared that, like medication, there could be “side-effects”. What should I do?
– My ex and I had an amazing sex life. I know this is common with psychopaths, and losing this I can live with. What I can’t live with is remembering how we were together in bed, in a very deep emotional way. We could lie there for hours, just stroking each other, massaging each other, “grooming” each other. When we fell asleep we would move through our three positions every night, all the time touching and stroking until we fell asleep. I can’t get that out of my head, and I miss it so much. I can read over and over again that, “it wasn’t real”, but it doesn’t remove the fact that it happened, and the feeling was real. How do I disconnect that amazing feeling from the person who gave it to me?
I really need help. Being so completely unable to control my thoughts is killing me, and though I can keep thoughts of him out of my mind when I’m totally busy, I can’t be busy all the time as I’d be exhausted!
I hope you have some insight, and thank you for your help.
First let’s repeat the basics. You cannot heal mentally without also addressing your physical health. Our friend is wise to be concerned about her state of exhaustion. It is important to eat healthy foods and get 30 minutes of moderate exercise a day. Also consider taking a daily multivitamin with minerals like calcium. Please limit alcohol and do not use street drugs.
It is very common for victims to respond to the financial and other life stress by feeling like they have to be energized and vigilant. This feeling that we have to be “on alert” is magnified by what our friend describes in her letter. The minute we slow down, we experience “the thoughts.” In fact, hypervigilance is noted to be a symptom of PTSD.
For many victims the hypervigilance comes naturally at first due to stress hormones. But, since this feeling of energy and alertness becomes a habit, victims want to maintain it. To do so over the long run they turn to caffeine.
Excessive consumption of caffeine (more than about 120mg/day) leads to insomnia, anxiety and depression. It is not difficult to overconsume caffeine since a Starbucks’ Grande has over 300mg.*
Many victims are afraid to cut down on the caffeine because they fear that if they are not super-alert they can’t keep going, and the thoughts will come back. Victims are also afraid to fall asleep because they fear being attacked in the night.
So how do you end the vicious cycle? How do you stop wanting to be on alert? First, you have to convince yourself that it is necessary to slow down and you have to have a means of coping with your fear/anxiety. Acceptance is an important ingredient here. Unfortunately, we have to accept that we are going to feel pain, fear and anxiety. That is a normal and even necessary part of this process. We often spend too much energy trying to fight the pain, fear and anxiety. A good therapist will tell you that tolerating these is an important part of recovery.
It is OK to let yourself feel it. I can say that to you because I say it to myself.
Apart from tolerance, coping by using relaxation techniques, exercise, psychotherapy and friendship is important. I recommend Stress Management for Dummies. I use that book to teach therapy students about stress management. Everything you need to know is in there and it is an inexpensive book.
About sleep- if you don’t sleep well you will be too tired to heal and you will be even more likely to need caffeine. Please discuss these alternatives with your physician, but I will mention two over-the-counter sleep aids that are considered safe in the short term that is why you can get them without a prescription. I believe Melatonin is the best option because of few side effects. Diphenhydramine is another option found in over-the-counter sleep aids. Be aware that this medicine causes weird anxiety reactions in some people and can cause you to want to eat at night. Since it dries out your mouth, it can also be bad for your teeth if you don’t brush well before bed.
Now I will specifically address the good and bad memories. In many experiments researchers have shown that good and bad memories are part of separate brain circuits. When people are in a good mood they have better access to “good memories.” When they are in a bad mood they have better access to “bad memories.” That is why the more you fight the pain and the fear, the more you will only remember the good part of that sociopath you were involved with. The good experiences you had with him/her are stored in a different brain circuit from the bad experiences you had.
The more you tolerate the pain, the more integrated your recollections will be because you will have emotional access to both the good and the bad at the same time. It is best not to try to over-control your thoughts, let them flow. Manage the pain and anxiety with relaxation techniques.
I also officially give you permission to enjoy the good memories you have. Those memories don’t have to cause you to try to go back. They are there as a record of your very real life experiences. The fact that you may have enjoyed some of the time you spent with a sociopath is O.K. and doesn’t mean you are a bad or stupid person.
Having said all this, it can take many years to get beyond all these symptoms. 4 months is a very short period of time, though it seems like an eternity when you are suffering. I am glad to see our friend is fighting, questioning and seeking. As for many of us, the well being of a child will be enhanced by her healing.
Please know that your children are aware of and observe your struggles. How you handle memories, pain/fear and anxiety can set a good example for them.
The best cure, is zero contact.
SisterSister:
“It’s like a tsunami of ignorance sometimes, all glamorized as cool by the mass media.”
I totally agree with that.
“Pop Culture” (if you can call it that) is in a sad state of affairs right now in this country.
And, who came up with this concept of “friends with benefits”?
Am I the only one who thinks it’s a crock?
Girls, if you agree to “friends with benefits”, you will ALWAYS end up getting the shaft (pun intended).
1) One-night stand, 2) fling, or 3) monogamous & mutually exclusive relationship.
Those are your categories, ladies. Pick one. “Friends with Benefits” & anything else (like three-somes) is a load of crap, if you are looking for love or a healthy, long-term relationship.
Guys, how about this, “I really like you, and would like to get to know you better over dinner. Can I pick you up at 7:00?”
What ever happened to THAT?? It is called COURTSHIP!
It actually worked pretty well for a few hundred years.
http://comics.com/its_all_about_you/?DateAfter=2009-09-01&DateBefore=2009-10-01&Order=d.DateStrip+ASC&PerPage=10&Search=&x=36&y=16&Page=2
This comic strip, “it’s all about you” is pretty funny. It’s about a bunch of self-absorbed narcissists.
Rosa, FWB is the same as #3, but without expectations for commitment because you really don’t know the person or yourself well enough to commit.
If it can be honest, then it’s a hundred million times better than living 25 years with a lying P. The last time I experienced “courtship” it ended up in a 25-year nightmare, so I think if I sense it coming around the corner, it would just trigger PTSD.
Rosa,
Friends with Benefits I would imagine was thought up by a man! And of course its a crock….All it is is sex with no strings attatched. Its not a one night stand, or courtship, or any of those things.
The problem with friends with benefits, even with TWO consenting adults is that you do have a relationship at stake, Your friendship
And everyone knows that having SEX changes everything…Don’t they? Or does it just change “everything” for women?
Since I seem to have been misunderstood, my point is:
I’m the codependent here. The kid seems to have moved on, but she can’t move on far enough out of the reach of a family that respects her for dropping out of high school to support their lazy asses.
And I can’t move on far enough out of caring about her. But I will. It’s wrong, and I’m going to tell her so and get out.
And it’s cool nowadays for teenagers to self-mutilate (tattoos and piercings), go “goth” and worship negativity, and reject anything positive in their lives — such as education, possibilities, and recovery from addictions and codependence.
Courtship is not the problem. Never has been.
It is the PERSON doing the courting, and whether they are a genuine, sincere person, or not.
Witsend:
I agree.
Men CAN have sex without becoming emotionally attached. Even the normal ones, who are not S’s.
But, WOMEN CANNOT do that, because we become emotionally attached. That is why women are always the ones who end up getting hurt in these types of “friends with benefits” or “open” relationships.
Men and women are wired differently, and I don’t see that as a bad thing. We, as women, just have to be careful who we choose to give our hearts to.
Men are ALWAYS going to want to have sex. That’s the way they are.
And, as long as we keep giving, they will keep taking.
What is that line, “Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?”
Rosa,
Yep….Maybe things have changed as far as how society looks at relationships now.
BUT what hasn’t changed is the way we are wired and the way our hearts react.
For most of us (women), sex is an emotional connection. And once we have sex with someone the rules change. Even if we don’t think they will. Our expectations change because of the emotional attachment. We want them to call us, we want to be exclusive, we want intimacy, we want to be closer……It comes naturally.
Well, maybe, you are right ladies, but I guess I’m going to find out. I’ve never been one to require anything of anyone but honesty. Just tell the truth, I can adjust my mental state to whatever that truth is. If my P had told me he was a sociopath, I would’ve adjusted my mind to that. Unfortunately, that would be an oxymoron, because P’s lie about everything. Therefore, there is no way he could tell me that he’s a P – which is why he’s a P! LOL.
I can’t get him out of my head. HE finally left (after I had nothing left to give…I’ve lost my friends, my job, and me…) and I haven’t spoken to him in about 2 weeks…. BUT I have access to his phone records and his emails. I check them all the time. I’m not a stupid person but I’m so lost and empty. I want him to contact me but I know that to have him in my life is just insane!!! How do I get him out of my head? I don’t even have a job right now that I “throw” myself into and get my mind off of him….