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.
Congrats to you! Aloha!
You are an inspiration to all of us here. Thanks for dropping by and letting us know that there is hope for us all.
Hi dear Emailer,
I can realate to your story fully and if not more so. I was married to my spath for 15years, and during those 15 years he sexually molested my daughter, who was nine at the time from my first marriage. We separated, but the addiction was there. His fake apologies and worst of all, his soppy speech of “I’v given my life to the Lord. I was possessed by demons, so please give me another chance” had me hook, line and sinker. To make matters worse, our ministers of the church and the attorney felt that he was a first time offender and deserved a 2nd chance. So the marriage continued for another 8 years and another child.
I wasnt able to go to church or get close to God because I was such a bad mother.
However, saying that, my daughter and I are inseparable and extremely close. She knew that she needed his love and approval as much as I did, because her biological father wanted nothing to do with her. We were both trapped by this monster and only when he tried strangling me did I manage to say, NO MORE!
Nearly 4 years later, we have filed criminal charges and we’re waiting to get a court date. But not all was bad, it has made us both stronger – what cannot kill you, makes you stronger, and more powerful. Yes, more powerful, because suddenly you know what he is – a SPATH – but the beauty is HE DOESN’T know you know. This not only gives you power, but the help of this site and the tips from all my friends here, I’ve realised:
1. No contact is essential and no conflict
2. The grey rock – as soon as you seem so boring, he loses interest
3. Grieve – this is most important, becuase its the most difficult – because as Donna says, we are grieving for someone who wasn’t.
4. If all of us who have been targeted by spaths, saw it, knew it and totally understood it, we would be SKILLFULLY CLEVER ENOUGH TO BE CONSIDERED A SPATH OURSELVES.
5. Whoever your Higher being is that you believe in, start believing again and allow God back into your life to make you whole. He didn’t make junk, he loves you and your daughter. Watch closely, as He transforms these bad things into Good for both of you.
Blessings and hang in there.
Shell
Shell:
That is such a good point:
4. If all of us who have been targeted by spaths, saw it, knew it and totally understood it, we would be SKILLFULLY CLEVER ENOUGH TO BE CONSIDERED A SPATH OURSELVES.
If I learn nothing else from this experience, it’s that I am NOT a spath, because I didn’t realize what was happening to me. He was an alcoholic, so I kept putting down his bad behavior to that addiction. But something still didn’t seem right to me. Alcoholism never really explained all of it and I was still bewildered on a daily basis.
I did take a page out of his book at the very end and became like him so that I could testify against him. Meaning that I put any emotions aside that I had for him and became as cold inside as he was. He was prosecuted and put in jail. There was an enormous amount of satisfaction watching him being taken out of the courtroom in handcuffs, while he was staring at me the whole time with a “deer in the headlights” look on his face, stumbling out of the room, led by the jailer. I stared right back and then slowly turned my head away, and haven’t seen him since. Towanda!!
Now all I have to do to have total revenge against this monster is to live well! And I’m gonna!
Shell, thank God you and your daughter are no longer under the same roof as this criminal. Peace and love to you, may you see justice done x
Check out this article about gaslighting. Explains it very well. Never mentions sociopaths though. Why is that?
http://theweek.com/article/index/239659/what-is-gaslighting
Newlife that is a great article on Gaslighting and explains it well, but the reason sociopaths are not mentioned is that the media as a whole seems to think only serial killers are socio/psycho-paths.
Shell, I hope he goes to prison, but I also wish peace and calm for you and your daughter. God bless.
“sociopaths hijack the human bonding process”…..
Words for thought in the most profound way. A sociopath undermines our capacity to love and exploits that capacity so that we begin to stretch way past our own instinctive boundaries.
Gaslighting is something that put me in therapy for the last 3 years. The guilt that I put my family in danger because someone rerouted my instinct circuitry to their own benefit, is still very hard to live with.
The important thing to hang on to, to remember, and by reading from all of us, is that eventually your instincts return and you do begin to trust them.
You can never gain back what was stolen. For many of us, financial and emotional ruin are devastating, but we can return to the land of the living.
Teach your children well, their parents hell. My daughter was badly abused right under my nose, and I live with that every single day of my life. I work very hard to show her that women can be strong, they can recover and go on to live healthy normal lives. Thats all I can give, plus my love and understanding that we lived through an emotional holocaust and that I support her endeavors to walk free.
Sociopaths come in all shapes and sizes, from all walks of life, just like we do. They are not big hulking monsters with an “S” tattooed in their foreheads. Their ability to integrate into the social/family framework and destroy it often happens quite simply because they “appear” like us.
When the grief process begins its often confusing. We make ourselves guilty for grieving for something or someone who really didn’t exist. But if you start at square one, and move through the levels of grief, just allow it to happen, it can be a very cleansing experience.
You must hang on, and move forward. Have hope in your heart and never let anyone crush that hope again. People here will help you. They saved me and it was the only place I felt comfortable even discussing it. There are still members of my family that have no idea what occurred under this roof for ten years, and would judge me harshly because they think I would be at fault. Its a shame really, because the terror, the horror, and the fear that we lived are not easily understood.
Get up, plant your two feet on the ground, lift your head and hold it as high as you can, take a deep breath, and slowly move forward.
Hurt Terribly
HurtTerribly, I’m so sorry to read of your painful recovery and experiences. Without identifying my own shame-core, I probably would have ended my own life, at some point, and that is simply NOT an option.
The shame is something that I’ve chosen to abandon, finally. Did I make bad choices and decisions? Heck, yeah, I did! But, I did NOT “deserve” to be swindled, defrauded, used, and left for dead. Nope, I did not deserve that. Today, I stare Ole Mr. Shame in the face and present my middle finger. That goes for his cousin, Mr. Blame, too. I don’t need anyone else’s approval or acceptance, anymore. If they don’t “get it” about what I experienced, then they can fugoff and be on their merry ways. I don’t (and, WON’T) waste my energy on anyone else’s perceptions. I require my own attention and my recovery is of the utmost priority.
Yours is too, Terribly – time for a LF ID change, too. “TerrificallyRecovering” seems more appropriate, right? You’re precious and priceless in this vast Universe. Your experiences will not be what defines you. Your strength, reslilence, and courage will be what defines you.
Brightest and most supportive blessings
Great post Donna. You do so much for us people who have encountered a sociopath in our lives. I am 6 years past a 7 year relationship with one. It was a life-changing relationship. I didn’t change until I hurt so much that I had to. Now I never want to go back to that kind of relationship and I think I have the tools (gained through counseling, insight, and your blog,) to spot the wrong kind of person. My problem was I thought the whole world was made up of people who thought like I did. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Beware the exciting, fast-talking, over complimentary types and go for the ones who don’t make you cry and second-guess yourself over and over.
Thanks Truthspeak. Im glad you are all here, it does lift each of us up. I think TerrficallyRecovering sounds wonderful and true. Thats a good feeling in itself, I so appreciate the support, and am here to give anyone else a lift that needs it.
Every day we walk the walk. Its so hard to fathom in the beginning that you are simply stringing one foot in front of the other, and then in time, you begin to see you followed the path to freedom.
If I have nothing the rest of my life, I have my freedom, I will never be threatened, gaslighted, beaten, stolen from, again – and not on any level. I filed my divorce papers this week. It feels so good to reclaim all of me. But, it took a long, long time. I feel weather beaten, sort of like old rough leather inside, but leather softens and remains supple with proper care: light, love, and positivity.
Thank you again.