Lovefraud recently received the following email:
I suspected that my ex boyfriend was a sociopath, but your website confirmed it. I always thought that sociopaths were murderers like Ted Bundy or Casey Anthony, but I realize now that the vast majority lead “normal” lives (whatever that means).
I’m a divorced mom with a precious little daughter. My ex boyfriend was the first man I dated after a long and abusive marriage to an alcoholic. I was with my ex boyfriend a little over 2 years, although he exhibited signs of sociopathic (or what I considered narcissistic) behavior, including chronic infidelity, pathological lying, a grandiose sense of self, a total lack of empathy (particularly towards his five children whom he rarely saw), a lack of responsibility, impulsivity, etc. You get the picture.
Fortunately, he didn’t bilk me out of money, but, unfortunately, he completely drained me emotionally to the point where I feel like I will never be able to find or love a truly good, healthy man. I am a strong woman, though, and I know this feeling will subside over time. ”¨”¨After reading through your website, I’m 100% positive I will never see or speak to my ex boyfriend again.
The last time I saw him, he told me he was going on a secret mission trip and that he could not talk to me for at least two weeks, but that he would spend the holidays with me. I threw him out of my apartment that night, but I continued to email him while he was away on his important, “James Bond” business trip. To make a long story short, I found out that he was with another woman in a foreign country. I was not surprised by this discovery and, perhaps, it is a blessing in disguise that I found out. It strengthened my resolve to have no contact with him, as your website suggests.
My question to you is how do I forgive myself for staying in this relationship so long even though I routinely saw the signs of his sociopathic behavior? Most importantly, how do I forgive myself for putting my daughter in harm’s way by being with this creep? Finally, would it be best if I stayed away from dating for a period of time so that I can clear my brain of this whole ordeal?
I’ll address the reader’s questions one at a time.
How do I forgive myself?
We cannot blame ourselves for what we didn’t know. And all of us who have been targeted didn’t know about sociopaths, about what they really are and how they really behave.
Here’s what we all believed that is not true:
- Everybody wants to be loved.
- There is good in everyone.
- Sociopaths are all deranged serial killers.
Here’s what none of us knew:
- Some people pursue romantic relationships not for love, but for exploitation.
- Sociopaths can look us right in the eye, tell us how much they love us, and be lying.
- Sociopaths listen to us carefully not because they’re interested, but to figure out how to hook us.
- There are people who have no inner core—they change their personalities to reflect what they perceive we want.
- Sociopaths are motivated not by love, but by power and control.
- Sociopaths hijack the human bonding process.
This last point is very important. Sociopaths deceive us into falling in love with them. As we fall in love, all of the biological processes that Nature created in order to ensure the survival of the human race kick in.
When we love someone, we form a psychological bond with the person, so that we feel a compulsion to be with him or her. This bond is linked to chemical and structural changes in the brain that are much like the changes associated with addiction. So we feel an irresistible pull to keep the relationship going. This is why we stay.
Here’s another thing we don’t know: Sociopaths do not form these psychological bonds the way the rest of us do. But they’re good at faking it. So while we are legitimately falling in love, they are pretending to fall in love, and they are fabulous actors. In reality, they are only using us.
How do I forgive myself for putting my daughter in harm’s way?
You forgive yourself because of all the reasons stated above. But with your daughter, you take the next step. You teach her, in age-appropriate ways, that there are bad people in the world. There are people who lie, who cannot be trusted, and she must stay away from them.
You also teach her to trust her instincts. Our instincts will usually tell us when someone is bad news. But we’ve long been conditioned to override our gut feelings, to give people the benefit of the doubt, to wait for “proof” before ending a relationship.
Nature set up our biology to encourage us to stay with our partners. But Nature also set up our biology to warn us when predators approached. Make no mistake— a sociopath is a predator. So if someone makes us feel cautious, afraid or creeped out, we must honor that and run away.
Would it be best if I stayed away from dating?
Absolutely yes!!! You must give yourself time to heal.
Remember, sociopaths are experts at finding our vulnerabilities. If you are still feeling injured in any way because of your experience with the ex-boyfriend, you are a walking target for another sociopath. Many, many readers have told me that they escaped an abusive relationship, found someone who seemed to be the answer to their prayers, and the new lover turned out to be worse than the previous one.
You must make a decision to recover. Face what happened. Allow yourself to grieve and get the negative emotions out of your system. As you put your emotional and psychological health back together, eventually you’ll find a new relationship without even trying.
The answer is always within. Heal yourself, and the rest will fall into place.
Donna, thank you SO much for this article and my heart goes out to the person who sent this gut-wrenching email.
The grieving emailer wrote: “…I feel like I will never be able to find or love a truly good, healthy man.” This is one of the false beliefs that women MUST begin teaching their daughters that we are complete and whole within our own selves and are not obligated to “find or love” someone in order to BE complete and whole. We are VALID because we exist and we need not seek the false validation of being attached to someone as if they are a vital biological appendage.
Donna is 1000% spot-on: dating isn’t a goal to be working towards. Identifying and healing the inner self is the primary objective. “Looking” about for another partner is only an attempt to avoid being “alone.” Being alone – without the demands or obligations required by another human being – is NOT the end of the world. It does not mean that we are unloved, unloveable, unworthy, undeserving, or invalidated. It simply means that WE CHOOSE based upon facts, reasonable expectations, and strict boundaries. And, those vital core-values cannot be supported by anyone other than ourselves.
To the emailer, I would like to convey that you are worthy and deserving of the best that Life has to offer, and so is your daughter. Read Donna’s words in reponse to your grief, and take time to process those strong words of wisdom and power. Keep coming back. Post, respond, and vent. And, empower yourself with your own strengths and qualities that make you unique in this vast Universe.
Brightest and most supportive blessings
Healing is a slow process, but forgiving yourself is absolutely essential in order for healing to take place. I stayed with the abuser for 12 years, and had three children with him. During the courtship (which was really an entrapment) I ignored my gut (like Donna says, this is common) and I rationalized the red flags I saw away because I simply had no frame of reference in which to evaluate his antisocial behaviors. Nothing in my life had prepared me for the fact that men (and some women) do these things. There’s a verse in the Bible that says, “For lack of knowledge, my people perish.” Lack of knowledge leads us to trust those who are not trustworthy. Our society does not teach us to spot and avoid these monsters, and many of us suffer because of it.
Anyway, I’ve been blaming myself, and tormenting myself with guilt and shame over trusting that monster for a long time, but finally I am starting to see that healing is contingent upon forgiving myself, and forgiving myself is a choice I have to make.
This recent article helped me on this journey of forgiving myself so much. Reading here frequently helps me tremendously. Glad you found us and hope we can help you forgive yourself and heal.
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2013/02/03/letters-to-lovefraud-not-my-sociopath/
Forgiving myself was I think harder than any other part of the healiing process…but one thing I have learned about “forgiveness” whether it iis forgiving them (quit being bitter toward them) or forgiving myself (quit beating myself over the head for being stoooopid) is not a “one and done” thiing but a CONTINUING PROCESS.
Just as the “GRIEF PROCESS” iis a long, up and down, back and forth process so is “forgiving ourselves”
I would advise the e mail writer to focus on HERSELF AND HER DAUGHTER’S lives and health and not worry at this time about getting to a point where it is “okay to date”
The “needyness” of feeling like you are incomplete without a man (or woman) in our lives is what makes us I think more vulnerable to the NEXT psychopath who comes along and “love bombs us”
I would advise this e mailer to READ and learn and take 1-2 or even 3 years before she even thinks about dating. The DAMAGE done to our minds, brains and spirits is a SERIOUS and difficult thiing to recover from. Just liike a case of CANCER it takes TIME to recover….and the “chemo” takes a toll on us as we heal.
And this applies to guys, too.
I felt humiliated, tricked, drained and betrayed from the experience with my ex-gf.
As you wrote: “When we love someone, we form a psychological bond with the person, so that we feel a compulsion to be with him or her.”
Right on.
I was told that I was needy, nosy, childish, insecure, etc for wanting or asking for anything beyond the gf’s ‘program’ or, for asking anything whenever she disappeared or acted strangely. Of course, this alternated with affection or acts of generosity. Classic ‘Projection’ by her with resulting Cognitive Dissonance. Thus, I was continuously ‘off balance,’ and left feeling the same way: that I will never find a ‘good, healthy,’ woman.
Thanks Donna for posting this story emailed to you from a reader.It could have been me;except for the fact that my daughters are grown now.
I had the same questions;the same difficulty with forgiving myself.But,all of the above have been resolved since becoming a regular reader of lovefraud and gaining the knowledge I needed.It was like a hand helping me out of a deep dark pit!
As for being alone….it has given me time to find myself again and heal.That means so much to me! I don’t miss ANYTHING about the days when I was still with my husband.
Fixerupper, I just “lost” my response in the Great Beyond Of Cyberspace.
It does, indeed, apply to men and the problem that I see with the male in recovery is that there is this huge STIGMA associated with surviving “bad women.” Females are “expected” to be emotional and “more apt” to react while men, on the other hand, are “expected” to remain stoic and rock-solid. Well, this just isn’t so.
Neither in family nor in formal education are we taught that we do not NEED someone ELSE to validate us – that we have the power to validate our own selves and provide our own emotional needs. And, for those of us who were raised in dysfunctional environments, we’re caused to feel all the more “needy” for validation and acceptance from outside of ourselves.
I have no delusions about “Mr. Right” or “Mrs. Right.” I have no belief in the existence of “soulmates,” anymore. My vulnerabilities and issues were so pronounced that the first dipshit that came along and truly lovebombed me was IN. That will never, ever happen, again. I don’t need anyone to tell me that I have value or importance, anymore. I know that I do. And, so does everyone else who is recovering! But, my typing that won’t make it “true” in anyone else’s mind. Each one of us has to learn, re-learn, and re-re-learn how to validate our OWN needs, first, before even considering allowing another person access to that level of control, ever again.
Fixerupper, I don’t believe that you’re aware of how far you’ve come down your Healing Path. You’re typing words in reference to YOU and YOUR healing, now – and, I hope that you become aware of this.
Brightest blessings
Blossom4th, awesome……..I don’t miss one single thing about the exspath. Not one.
Every day, I’m learning something new about myself, my resolve, my courage, and everything else. I’m taking and making steps that I never thought I could, and they are based upon me and my goals and NOT some fraudulent buffoon’s tantrums. Oh, my independence is hard-won, and I’ll be dammed before I ever allow anyone access to my Self, again.
Brightest blessings
TOWANDA!
Blossom4th……….TOWANDA, inDEED!!!!! ;-D
Dating:
Knowing my feelings after the spath… has become a benchmark to measure my recovery. One of those feelings was that I NEVER wanted to be close to anyone ever again, NO relationships.
But what I learned was how I got it WRONG. I had a little laundry list in my head when I was “that age”, the age of looking for the “one”. NOW, I realize I had it backwards. I now start with enjoying/appreciating the person, looking for character, and making no excuses for LACK of character. I look for a certain morality, not what he says but HOW he is.
When I was able to meet someone and not jump into romance mode FIRST, that’s when I knew I was mature enough/recovered enough/emotionally healthy enough for what may come my way. B/c DATING is NOT what comes first in a relationship.
ps I don’t know who said it, but I read someone’s post that she wouldn’t be able to fully get over her spath until she met someone new to replace him. PLEASE, that mindset is the invitation for a new spath! Danger Danger Will Robinson! Grow your emotional healing so that you stand on your own, completely healed.