When reflecting on the sociopath’s style, I often find myself thinking metaphorically. For instance, in an early LoveFraud article (Sociopaths’ Cat and Mouse Game) I explored the mind of the sociopath via the metaphor of the cat toying with the mouse.
In this article, I probe a different metaphor: the small child abusing the captured insect.
But a caveat’s in order: Just as I wasn’t impugning cats as literally sociopathic in my earlier piece, I’m not suggesting here that all children, including bug torturers, are developing sociopaths (anymore than in my last LoveFraud article I was suggesting that all practical jokers are sociopaths).
On the other hand, I am suggesting that there are states of mind—normal states of mind—that approximate (more closely than we might think, or want to think) how sociopaths perceive and relate.
And so I invite you to join me as, together, we watch a small child, who sits on a curb in front of his house, a daddy-long-legged spider in his clutches.
Let us not mince words: the child has intentionally trapped the spider; and he fully intends, and fully expects, to have his way with it. Moreover, he confidently feels that he has power over the spider to do with it, to toy with it, to experiment on it, as he wishes.
Does any of this, already, sound familiar?
But let us proceed: The child may (or may not yet) have formed an agenda for the spider—that is, he may already know what he plans to do with it, and how he plans to entertain himself with it; or, he may not yet know these things, but rather may be operating more impulsively, or perhaps taking things a step at a time.
In either case, as he stares down at the bug, the child does so with a feeling of omnipotence—that is, he has, and relishes, a sense of omnipotent control over the spider’s near and long-term destiny: he will be deciding its short and long-term fate. He knows that he can dominate the spider any way he likes, and, as we’ve established, he intends to exploit his dominance: the spider, he is well aware, will be helpless to defend itself against his designs.
And so, one by one, the child begins pulling the legs off the spider. He finds this interesting, amusing, and even thinks it’s a little funny. He wonders, fleetingly, in pulling the spider’s legs off, if this hurts the spider?
His curiosity, however, is detached and superficial, lacking compassion and empathy. For, although it strikes him that if someone were to pull his legs off it would surely cause unspeakable pain, yet his intellectual awareness does not translate into empathy for the predicament to which he’s subjected the spider.
(The child, in a word, fails to apply the principle do unto others as you would have others do unto you. Sociopaths, of course, notoriously forsake this principle.)
And so the spider might look a little funny with no legs. And it could be amusing to see the spider, as its legs are systematically ripped off, reduced to the size of a small nipple. And it could also be amusing to watch the spider try to walk with its legs missing.
All of these (and other) prospects for entertainment intrigue the child, and support his abuse of the insect. We can say this with certainty: in his relationship to the spider, the child is solely interested in how the spider can entertain him—that is, he is curious about, and interested in, only the gratification he can derive from the spider (and from, in this case, the spider’s predicament).
The child regards and values the spider purely as an “object” which, if properly manipulated, can yield him some worthwhile satisfaction.
And so the spider, now legless, doesn’t move. The child notices that its legs, however, which lie beside it on the concrete curb, twitch all by themselves, as if they’re separately alive and as though being animated by a mysterious force. This intrigues and amuses the child who, incidentally, has momentarily lost all interest in the spider.
That is, the child presently is no longer interested in the spider, but only with the spider’s legs (which of course he tore off), finding their twitchy, independent movements curiously entertaining.
I think we can safely add that the child doesn’t hate, or feel malice towards, the spider. That’s to say, none of this is “personal.” When he sat down on the curb, the idea of targeting a spider to exploit may, or may not, have been on his mind.
The child may have been actively targeting a vulnerable insect, or maybe not; maybe the spider just happened to enter his attentional orbit at the wrong time (for the spider), and in so doing primed the child’s exploitive inclinations.
In either case, it’s easy to describe what the child feels for the spider; he feels towards the spider precisely what he feels towards any object—appreciative of it only for the satisfaction it supplies him.
Short of this, the spider rapidly loses its value for him.
This is occurring presently: As the spider’s novelty is fading, the child’s investment in it wanes. He valued the spider purely, remember, for its gratifying properties; now, as the spider grows less novel by the second, the child grows increasingly bored with it. The spider’s value, its use to the child, is steadily, rapidly depreciating.
This could be good news, or more bad news, for the spider. As his interest in the spider expends itself, the child may decide to move on. He may be finished with the spider, and so he may, finally, leave it alone. The spider may have a chance to escape with its life. That could be the good news.
But it’s also possible that the child, seeking a last satisfaction of his thirst for stimulation, may decide, perhaps impulsively, to squash the spider, to crush it, like the bud of a leaf. And if he does this, it still won’t be personal. The child doesn’t have it in for this particular spider.
This particular spider merely happened to conveniently enough meet the child’s criteria as an exploitable object.
And so it’s 50-50 whether, in his boredom, the child will move on, leaving the legless spider to regroup after its traumatization; or whether, also in his boredom, he’ll decide to mash the spider between his fingers so he can feel what it’s like to mash an insect into a paste. That could be a curious sensation, which he’s never had (or hasn’t had it in a while).
He might find that sensation interesting, or maybe not.
And so comes the abrupt, anticlimactic end of our story, which was simply about the intersection of our neighborhood child with the unsuspecting spider.
Postscript: The child spared the spider, not from compassion, but because a cramp in his leg prompted him to rise, and stretch. But in walking away, the child inadvertently stepped on the spider, flattening and killing it. But even had he known this (and he didn’t), it’s not likely that the irony would have impressed him.
(This article is copyrighted © 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors discussed.)
One more thing…
I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that there’s no way I could have rid myself of generalized anxiety and panic attacks without the loving, merciful, compassionate, invaluable help of the Triune God.
I tried for years to just do it by myself and always failing, never going forward but moving backwards instead.
I guess I came to a point where I was so very weary, energy depleted and realized that my obstinacy, my do-it-yourself attitude was just not working, accomplishing nothing.
I reached out, body-mind-spirit, to the Heavens and my prayers were answered. It felt like a tremendous burden had been taken off my shoulders and I felt free for the first time in my life. Really, I did.
I was agoraphobic at this time, terrified of social situations, people and simply going outside my house. Awful time.
But I was firmly dedicated to conquering those stupid, suffocating, irrational fears and began taking long walks through the neighborhoods of the little town in Central Texas that I’d move to after leaving Houston.
I was never alone. Jesus the Christ was holding my hand the whole scary time. Little by little, forcing myself outside every day when the weather was nice, my fears began to evaporate.
I would greet people in the street and start to chat with them about anything and everything under the sun (this is a little town in Texas…most people were very kind and friendly.)
I’ve always been a curious gal so as my irrational fears of being judged harshly and critically disappeared, my gentle smile emerged and the true, real, personable, friendly woman appeared.
It was marvelous to say the least…haha. It felt so darn good conversing with people. And, with many things, practice makes perfect. Or, maybe not perfect, but much more comfortable, relaxed and calm in my own skin.
Please believe me when I say I’m not discussing my experiences to elicit sympathy. I no longer suffer from these disorders. They are gone, poof, in the past. Vanquished and forgotten are the terrible obsessive thoughts and fears, the creepy physical sensations.
I write about it on LF only to help others. Or at least try to help.
If I can be totally healed from GAD and panic disorder so can you. Have faith and love for yourself and it can happen!
🙂
newlife08:
Thanks for your good wishes.
Glad to hear your daughter is making progress and will be back in school on Monday. I’m sure that her father will revert to his usual self now that the crisis has passed.
Also glad to hear that you are making progress on the divorce front.
I was thinking about your situation and how your S-ex drained funds from jyour joint accounts and properties and then plowed them into “His” restaurant, construction company, rental properties etc. Has your lawyer traced the proceeds from the jointly held accounts and properties to “his” accounts? Tracing the proceeds (following the money) is the way fraud is proved, etc and then recalling the funds. Seems to me the same principles would apply in a divorce situation. A court could take the position since they were jointly held assets he had the right to use them, but it seems a strong counter argument could be made that while that is true, he cannot convert them to assets held solely in his name during a marriage. That flies in the face of marriage being viewed as an economic partnership. Just a thought.
As for my relationship, it is going very well. We’re going on 8 months now. He’s 100% supportive of my taking this position and is planning to start job-hunting in WDC himself once I get settled in. In the meantime we’ll commute back and forth on weekends. Fortunately with my new job I get every other Friday off so I get extra time that way. How different life becomes when you have somebody who supports you instead of undercuts you every step of the way.
I was also thinking of your S-ex’s recent behavior toward you which seems to be escalating. I disagree with the blogger who suggested you respond to his little things. I think you should hold the course and not respond at all. My take is the more he escalates, the more he’ll screw up and the more people will figure out what he’s all about. Basically, you’re helping him to self destruct. Not a happy place to be in, I know. But, I’m of the school of thought that you cannot placate these creatures even for a moment, because then they detect it as a sign of weakness. Once the divorce and economic turmoil are over your only contact with him will be over the kids, and since your son is younger that means what? 8 more years of his nonsense and then you can tell him to fuck off? Sounds like a plan to me.
Oxy,
Thanks, sweetie. But it is what it is. Some members of my “family” are dysfunctional, toxic. So I keep my distance from them. Literally and figuratively.
I don’t think my older sister likes the improved, blunt, intolerant for bullchit, fully aware and awake me.
Yes, I believe she loves me as I love her and my baby sister equally but she becomes frustrated when I insist on being realistic, truth oriented, residing on terra firma when she begins spouting her ridiculous, selfish nonsense to me. I got no patience for her crap and tell her so.
Guess that’s why I don’t hear from her anymore. Oh well. As the Cave Man boss tells his befuddled Cave man employee on that Fed Ex commercial…”not my problem”…haha!
I love reality. I accept, embrace and celebrate it cuz it’s the only way to fly! The path to mind blowing liberty, independence and universal truth.
Big huggles for you!!
🙂
(ps…totally diggin the edit/delete feature Miss Donna installed. Thnxs!)
GettingIt, robxsykobabe, JaneSmith, CAmom, Learnthelesson, NewLife, Oxy, and all others who took your time to comment on my article…thank you very much!
Your feedback inspires me.
bulletproof, i’m sorry the article left you feeling cold and uneasy. sociopathy is a rather cold, uneasy subject to examine.
also, and it’s probably unnecessary to have to clarify this, I wasn’t suggesting the child in my metaphor was sociopathic; rather, he was a “normal” child, he could have been any child! however, his relationship to the insect he trapped and was abusing had some interesting (I thought) analogues to the sociopath’s mentality. I thought that even this “normal” child had some things to tell us about how sociopaths think, and operate.
Best to all!!
Bulletproof :”I do not experience any relief at all knowing that the torture of me (or the spider) was “nothing personal” in fact, it makes it more traumatic.”
One_step ‘i fucking hate how hurt i feel. i am in a cafe to work ”“ wish i was private i need to cry. i feel abandoned and dismissed in so many ways by so many. i get so angry at those who have done this. every fucking day i am angrier and angrier.”
Girls I feel your pain. I know because I have empathy also.
To be honest, I hate empathy….it’s a damn curse. Other people say it’s a gift….all it’s given me is grief…it’s held me back all my life…..some days I’d love to be a psychopath….oh the freedom of not being accountable for any of my actions…ahh to live without any conscience…..to do what I like…bliss!
I read, I read, and damn well read!!!,….I get it, I get it, and I damn well get it!!!……
Knowledge is power they say. Workout the past so you can move on into the future…
I sit looking out the window of my apartment, over looking Sydney Harbour with the million dollar views. Tourists everywhere taking it all in. People say it’s so beautiful here..I should be sooo lucky…it’s paradise….couples walking by, hand in hand and in love…….I really don’t need to see this shit…paradise sucks big time….bring on a friggin tsunami!!
But me, I sit here looking out the window…..dazed, confused, angry, angry, angry, hurt, abandoned, used, devalued, sad, and ripped off!……
Logically I get it, I’ve gotten it for a long time, but my heart…oh the stooopid heart…..it’s pathetic…all I ask and want now is for this friggin pain to stop damnit….
God are you listening to me?…well are you?…I don’t want another day like this…I want some pain relief for shit sake!!
Dear Jake: what i bring to the table is my own pain and my empathy. these are the things that crawl most quickly to the surface in repsonse to your post. brother of the broken hearted tribe.
– warning to all who don’t wanna hear it, it’s goona get ugly now –
i have done what i had to today. I could not work. there was too much contained anguish and too much physical pain. so i came home and took something for the physical pain and the anxiety, and i lay down in my shitty apt and tried to rest. i have lost another day of work, which i will have to make up tomorrow. and i try to think of this without anxiety – how much i need to do my work to finish my contract in the next week, and how much i really need tomorrow off – but here are competing needs.
i have flopped as a worker in the last months since the spath left. day in day out up and down. laid waste somehow.
i am running out of steam. i struggle to write here. i struggle to write email. to commit to caring for myself; it is a job bigger than me right now.
and i need so much more love and help and gentleness in my life. i cannot pull it out of my ass right now – i am laid waste.
i don’t know how old you are jake. but i always thought it would get easier with age to do live and to take care of myself an d fend for myself and really do what i want. but it has gotten harder and in hard moments – i see the spiral continuing. i know that if a few things went right that i would be more alright. the spath showed me how terribly wrong things could go.
i did everything i could for her. everything. i loved her like she was a child in need of care. it fullfilled me in ways no one knows. and she gave me laughter – gold dripping laughter. honey to my ears, balm to my spirit. time every day, just to be together. to ‘be’ with someone, to feel deeply connected.
she has eaten others like me. like bulletproof, i am not comforted. l feel lost, abandoned, hurt.
people feel like more trouble than they are worth. ’cause truly, what i am going to get? people give so little. they are callous and uncaring and full of themselves. and it’s okay if this is self pity that i am expressing. i don’t know what it is. i just fucking know i have been run over by a truck, am on the side of the road, and the flies are gathering.
i am melting down. no doubt spurred on by the assholes who stole my lunch money last week. i look at most people’s actions and hear their words and i think, liar, coward, poser.
i am accountable in a sociopathic world. i don’t know how to reconcile that with what i am. that’s the crux of it.
where are the people with their hearts opened by suffering? hwere are they in my life? do they not exist anymore? did they ever? cowards, fucking cowards, everywhere. shallow callous cowards. i fucking hate them.
i never knew what a lack of empathy was. to literally not be able to undertand that someone else feels pain. and that it matters. i have been not only empathetic, but empathic, my whole life. and trauma bonded by my family. but i was not BORN with THAT. that was a gift from generations of fucked up cocksukers: my family. i think that the gift and secret lay in unraveling the trauma bonds. these last days i cannot feel that. do not see it. feel only pain adn illness and fear of what is to come in then next weeks. and i swear to god if one more person tells me to ‘take care of myself first’, (deleted, cause i don’t mean it personally, but good fu8cking chr**t …and this piece is deleted too.) i need depth. i need people to fucking listen to me. to sit with me. to stand witness. to fucking care. to actually fucking listen to what i am saying.
there are spaths here. and others. i see them weekly. fuck you.
Dear Jake,
Yea, I too live in what I always believed was MY “paradise” and it became like Dante’s HELL, covered with a black cloud, and the total feeling of “home” is no longer here, even though my family has lived on this piece of dirt for more than 170 years. It is like I disconnected from this place when I had to flee it for my life.
I have since come to see that our “home” is within our hearts, and “paradise” is within our souls. I know you are hurting, and that you “get it intellectually”—but that is the first step. It is a big one too, so don’t undercut yourself on how BIG a step it is. It is ESSENTIAL to healing.
The second step, getting it emotionally, is the difficult one as well, and is a roller coaster ride, up and down, swaying back and forth, and feeling like you are going to fall, going down the hill with your stomach in your throat, but it is not fatal, just painful.
Google Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s name. She is an expert on grief processing and that is what we/you are doing now, processing the GRIEF that we have experienced from the losses we have suffered. Even if you didn’t get financially ripped off, you “lost” what you THOUGHT you had. It wasn’t REAL, not really, just an illusion, but you thought it was real, it felt real, it touched real, and now…it is gone!
We also I think lose TRUST IN OURSELVES to keep ourselves safe, and that is a big loss besides the other things.
My life is not all roses and violets, but it is sure a lot better, and what I do have now IS REAL, and the friends I have left are REAL, the love I have now is real, and there is no one who will betray me left close to me. I have cleaned all the rats out of my cellar and my heart! Hang on Jake, stay here and keep on reading, learning, growing and don’t give up. No matter what, don’t giv e up! (((hugs))))
DEar Bullet proof
Like Steve I am sorry you got triggered by this article, but it does happen sometimes. My own posts have sometimes triggered others, and others have triggered me. I think I saw the article a bit different than you did, partly because of my med/psych background. SMALL children are not capable of real empathy when dealing with an insect, and so they do things that you or I would not do.
Hang in there, Sweetie, a BIG cyber ((((HUG)))) for you!
This article does pinpoint the attitude of many sociopaths. They do play with us like everything/one else they find entertaining at the time. Some of them swing both ways and would probably do the insect too if that would be possible. But what I want everyone to see is that they are not powerless against psycho/socio path. We are not little by any means compared to them; we are better because we can take a licking and keep on ticking enough to pull their wings off or take off their fake halos or whatever is necessary. That is what I think anyway. But not because we are mean- because that is justice prevailing. Sometimes the wheels turn a little slow for our liking, but think about it in the long run when God let’s you shoot that everlasting burning arrow into their back. Or maybe things will be so good for you that messing with the insect won’t matter anymore.
Hello Steve, we just re-watched a movie with some kids in our learning collaborative called “Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter, and Spring”…by Kim Ki-duk:
http://www.sonyclassics.com/spring/shell.html
“….We are introduced the life of the very young Buddhist apprentice with his master on a small floating monastery, drifting on a lake in the serene forested mountains of Korea. The apprentice and his master live a basic life of prayer and meditation, using an old rowboat to reach the bank of the lake where they regularly go walking, for exercise and to collect herbs. One day, in a creek amongst the rocky hills, the apprentice torments a fish by tying a small stone to it with string and laughing as it struggles to swim. Shortly after, he does the same to a frog and a snake; his master quietly observes on all three occasions, and that night ties a large, smooth rock to the apprentice as he sleeps. In the morning, he tells his apprentice that he cannot take off the rock until he unties the creatures he tormented – adding that if any of them have died, he will “carry the stone in his heart forever”. The boy struggles with the load on his back through the forest, and finds the fish, lying dead on the bottom of the creek, finds the frog still alive and struggling where he left it, and finds the snake in a pool of blood, presumably attacked and killed by another animal, unable to get away. The master watches as the boy begins to cry heavily upon seeing what he has done to the snake….”
We also are to watch this coming week, “Butterfly: The Story of a Life Cycle” this is to help teach the children at an early age respect and wonder for all kinds of life as well as biology … we watch nature shows alot as well as having real life interaction with them…
I love to show movies like Babe and Milo and Stitch, The Bear March of the Penguins to individualize and personalize animals to children so they learn empathy and to relate to insects and animals at an early age.
Watching and being aware of children’s behaviors and intervening even when kids ar just being ‘kids’ is also something we like to do with them like when once a kid was taking a magnifying glass to burn ants under the florida sun. and he laughed and we waited. Then we we asked him now we’ll give you ten dollars if you last ten minutes if you take your turn under the magnifying glass and set it on your arm. Ten dollars if you last ten minutes… In the blazing sun of the Florida sun so of course he didn’t last ten minutes… a bright red burn on his arm showed up and he flinched and pulled the magnifying glass away to stop himself from burning any more… some peach fuzz hair on his arm frizzed from the burning sun magnified in strength by the magnifying glass.. Who do you think suffered more? we ask, you or the ants?
Maybe it’s just kids playing but it’s never too early to teach them awareness, respect and empathy for life.
I also like Kind Book http://www.kindbook.com : Educational Stories on Moral Education… We also do Philosophy for kids, where kids as young as four are asked to contemplate the purpose of life.
I like teaching awareness and thoughtfullness to kids. and subscribe to international mediums if limited here.
Also our parent groups and myself limit television exposure in kids unless it’s nature shows or Sesame Street, or educational stuff. Most of the other parents are Waldorfy too, just as i was instructed and nurtured under. So some of us don’t even own televisions.
We teach mindfullnes and fill the kids days with working activities so our kids make and create alot of stuff. (this is in the learning collaborative that i also assist in) They are making and selling natural handmade soaps locally now.
We try to push for learning to use their energies to create so they exhaust themselves with creating that it also overpowers their inclination to destroy things.
Appreciating taking time to enjoy things, like growing an organic garden and then eating from it. things like that. we make this part of our routine and rythym, mindful instruction early on as a habit and so the addictive pull of television and it’s promise of superficial instant gratification may be delayed or put off altogether by making self discipline habitual early on and very young.
Not that the child is a sociopath in the story but things like this story when we witness something sort of the same we take notice on and try to make a lesson of it immediately.
I truly beleive in whole child education.
Mike