“How did he really feel?” and “What did he want from me?” are two questions that often haunt victims of sociopaths. The reason we are haunted by these questions varies but often stems from the habit of over-focusing on the sociopath instead of ourselves. That being said, victims also have a healthy ”˜need to know’ that can help with recovery and healing.
I struggled with these questions in my own healing. I remain baffled by my observations of enjoyment of affection on the part of sociopaths. Early on, I told my own therapist that I had come to the conclusion that sociopaths exploit those close to them to the point of death, then, cry at the funeral. At the moment the tears are shed, I believe they do represent a grief of sorts. The feelings of loss experienced by sociopaths are however, short lived. Victims also have to beware because, although sociopaths are said to be incapable of feelings for those in their lives, they do become obsessed with them. Psychologists have not yet explained this obsession. If they don’t attach, why are they obsessed? Those who have read my other entries know that I believe that sociopaths do attach. It is what they do with attachments that is disordered.
How did he really feel?
In response to the picture of a sociopath crying at his victim’s funeral, my therapist said, “He feels what he tells himself he feels.” To help you understand what my therapist meant, I will explain what is known about how people usually experience feelings.
There are two components to feelings. The first is a physical sensation. When we experience a feeling we feel something in our bodies in relationship to that feeling. Think about loving someone close to you and sense how your body feels. Is it warmth in your heart? That is usually what people report.
There is much evidence that these physical sensations are disordered in sociopaths. Sociopaths do not generally experience the physical and hormonal changes that go along with feeling emotion. If they do experience them, it is to a lesser degree. Physical responses are blunted.
The second component of feelings is called attribution. Attribution is a cognitive process. When I feel that warmth in my heart as I see my children, I attribute the sensation to my love for them. Thus the physical sensation alone does not make emotion. Emotion is physical sensations and our interpretations of these sensations. There is also evidence that the parts of the brain responsible for attribution do not function properly in sociopaths.
There is one emotion that many sociopaths experience in a not so disordered way. This emotion is anger. Sociopaths do have blunted physical responses to anger. Despite this blunted responsiveness, they seem aware of angry feelings and make correct attributions about what makes them angry. Again, science has not even addressed, much less explained this observation.
Since the physical sensations and attributions that allow for the experience of emotion are disordered in sociopaths, their inner world is very different. They are left to make sense of themselves and others without the tools most of us use. Other parts of the brain fill in the missing processes. The person who is credited with first describing sociopathy in depth is Hervey Cleckley. He proposed that sociopaths are at least of average if not above average verbal intelligence. This makes sense because they have to use their verbal intelligence to make up for their lack of emotions. They do indeed feel what they tell themselves they feel. Scientists say they mimic other people’s emotions, yet again there is no real proof of this.
What did he want from me?
This question is easy to answer intellectually, but very hard for victims to accept emotionally. There are three pleasures we get from our love relationships. The first is pleasure in affection. The second is sexual pleasure. The third is pleasure associated with dominance and control. Sociopaths experience sex and dominance as enormously more pleasurable than affection. Therefore, they are in relationships to get sex and power, pure and simple.
If you love deeply and feel affection for others, you cannot fathom the inner world of an emotionally disordered person whose primary pleasures are sex and power. To understand another’s world you have to imagine yourself experiencing what the other experiences. You can’t do this with a sociopath.
Louise Gallagher said in her post The six steps of healing from a psychopath that the first step is acceptance. We have to accept that we can only know in part how sociopaths really feel and what they want from us. We can understand intellectually, but never emotionally.
Wow, PARRRRRR-TAY TIME!!!!! Saturday night and no one has a date! LOL Just got back from the auction….had a great time and lots of laughs! Saw some friends and old friends, and even ate an ice cream cone! (cheated a little bit!) G’nite you guys!
Goodnight Oxy! I wish i had an ice cream cone! Of course, with what I’ve been eating this week, it’s probably better that I don’t. 😉
Oh my gosh: I just looked outside at the full moon!
::spath alert::
😛
Dupey – Go for a walk in the moonshine, be adventurous ~!
Hens ~ you gave me a giggle with this one! Wouldn’t that be a good way to pickle your feet?? walking in the moonshine… roflmao
Another good one, though it gives me chills.
This part: “sociopaths exploit those close to them to the point of death, then, cry at the funeral.”
To the very T!
He strangled me nearly to death, then took me to the hospital with my torn esophagus. To this day, if you ask him about that night, he will go into a long monologue about how much HE suffers from this experience. I can barely wrap my head around this way of functioning….so basically you strangle your “love” nearly to death and then gee POOR YOU that as such a hard experience. Not EVER did he seem to grasp in the slightest that maybe, just maybe, it was a hard experience for ME too!!!!! I tried explaining this to him, and he would just respond that yes, this is why he suffers so greatly. Reminds me of parents saying: This will hurt me more than it hurts you.
He feels what he tells himself he feels. I think he assigned “obsession” the label “true, selfless love” because he was ready and willing to cut off his own arm (selfless) in order to guarantee his dominion over me, and then he’d go on and on about his arm, the one he himself had cut off, as a way to demonstrate his devotion, but actually to further emotionally warp my senses. How he could rationalize — Poor me! I strangled the woman I love! — just BAFFLED me.
After nine years without him and having rebuilt my life, some kind person gave him my address and he turned up on my doorstep! I told him where to go and he didn’t bother me for a while. Unfortunately, however, the woman he was with after me and subsequently married committed suicide in the summer (I wonder why!). He then turned up on my doorstep again and every time his mouth moved I knew he was lying. He made me feel emotionally blackmailed because he was crying and carrying on and all I wanted was for him to go away. He then went on to say that he wanted to get back with me and I told him he was wasting his time as that would never happen so he then retorted that he had a girlfriend anyway! I told him I knew his girlfriend and had her number in my phone and that’s when I saw a genuine emotion from him – worry that I may call her and tell her!
Has anyone else had this sort of experience? I’m hoping that my actions may have seen him off but he is so thick skinned and pushy I’m afraid I’m not too optimistic.
Panther
Wow. He sounds so warped. Keep your distance. Distance will give you clarity.
DenialMomma: Keep reading the blog Candy gave you. Be kind to yourself. Get sleep, eat well, and exercise. It really helps.
Believe in your higher being. Mine is God.
I left my spath the first time 10 years ago. I finally left him for good the second time and divorced him 3 years ago. It is very hard, but I know you can do it. Even if you loose everything. It is just STUFF. If you are hurt and your children are because you stay, what good is the STUFF.
Everything can be replaced, but not our previous children and people that we love. DO NOT GO BACK. THEY DO NOT CHANGE.
I made that mistake. Please learn from my mistake. Spath used the “love bombs” with me, telling me that my children need an intact home. NO. They need a loving home.
Talk it out with us. We have been there. We will support you and help you as much as we can. Pray — prayer is very powerful.
Do not waste another minute with this evil monster. They are evil, master planners and manipulative. Save yourself and your previous children.
Good Nite.
I’m just at the early stages of recovery from a bad experience with a spath, a guy I met through an online dating agency one year ago. He is still obsessed with me and even though I tell him that he does not love me, that he cannot love, only manipulate and control, he says everything is my fault that it is me who does not love him. I don’t know what to tell him so that he stops writing me emails and phoning me. He just can’t take no for an answer FGS.
Can you give me feedback?
Courage to all of you to carry on, we are worth it, we have a conscience.
Thanks