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 step i just read your posts. Are you going to be okay? I’m really worried about you now. is there no place you can be where you are not alone? No friends near you at all that you can go to?
Mike
Dear Onestep and Jake,
You are in the throes of grief and anger. I’m trying to remember when I was that raw, and that angry…Feb 2002 I moved out of the spath’s house. This house needed a lot of work. I remember calling painters, handymen, construction workers. I remember never bathing, and wearing the same bathrobe day after day, week after week.
I remember these workers coming over and I talked to them, and every one, every single one, had to make out what I was saying through my sobbing. I stood there, in that stained, stinking robe, no Kleenex, just a raw open wound with tears streaming, flowing, dripping off my face. OK, now I am back there, can feel that…and am crying again, now.
I stopped working, told the people I free-lanced for, “No, I can’t. I can’t.”
I did understand, in part, that my ex was a spath. And I already knew my dad and sisters were disordered. I don’t know if LF existed in 2002, but if so, I never found it. There was no place on the net to go. My friends said, “He’s an asshole. He’s such a jerk. I’m glad you’re out of there.”
And to take care of myself, but I had NO IDEA what that meant. Take vitamins? What the hell did that mean? I’d taken care of others most of my life. That was hands-on kind of taking care–helping my mother die, taking care of my autistic daughter, dealing with my dad’s so-called suicide attempts, dealing with my younger sisters suicide threats—chasing her all over Europe, always a train or 2 behind her, thinking she was really gonna do it. And taking care of the spath while he recovered from back surgery.
I was so other directed I could not imagine what taking care of me was. I still don’t. I wish there was a list called “How to Take Care of Yourself.” Because I still don’t know what it means.
I was too tired to be really angry. I figured I *must* be angry, surely I was angry…but all I felt was sadness, or wherever those tears came from. Then I started feeling used, discarded, less than human. I thought if someone took an x-ray of my body, all my organs would be in the wrong place, or missing, or shriveled up, dead.
I felt completely disconnected from others. Like I’d been through something no one could possibly relate to. My “good ex” had witnessed some of it, but I couldn’t tell him all of it.
Weeks passed. One day one of the contractors came over alone. I opened the door, still crying, still in that same bathrobe. He raped me on the living room floor.
I did nothing. Didn’t call the police, didn’t tell anyone. Didn’t even take a shower.
But at some point I began to feel anger. I hated the spath, trusted no one. My crying changed from tears sliding down my face to tears of rage and impotence. The realization of what was done to me began to hit me~~what the spath had taken. And what was left of me…not much. The rage took over. I hated everyone, not just the spath, but everyone.
I disconnected the phone. I tried to write down what he had taken, and filled notebooks full of FUCK YOU, that was it, FUCK YOU. It was so generalized…the magnitude of what he had taken was too much.
More time passes. I’m still in that bathrobe…the spath rage connected with my spath dad rage–they were so similar. I hated all men, all of them. I didn’t want to live in this world. I attemted suicide twice.
The old Mexican man next door who had seen me crying in that robe began watering my lawn. Cutting the grass. Left lemonade and flowers on my doorstep. Those gifts, that selflessness, that recognition of, well, he had no idea. Just that his new neighbor was incapacitated, in trouble.
Sometimes maybe those acts of humanity–small kindnesses, asking for nothing in return–can bring you back to a place where the world doesn’t seem so horrible and evil…that everything had a place, good and bad. It wasn’t as skewed toward evil as I’d beleived…And that my job, my work, was to learn discernment.
That was the beginning of my healing.
Querida – i need your neighbor. i need to fall apart – but i cannot.
trust is shattered. i would like to kill her.
besitos
mike – no, there is not. i am too sick. thank you for your concern. please remove the country name. thank you.
One step can you call 911. please? please tell them you are too sick and need help. someplace warm. some change of scenery. someplace you can be tended to. like a hospital ensuring you be warm and have nurses look after you. even if just for a day or too. is there anything like that there? or is it like just baker acted like here? anything where you can be tended to as an emergency physical illness for at least a day or two?
i have had bad panic attacks and would end up in ER for a bit until they assured me i wasn’t having a stroke or heart attack. but the day or days there would do me some good.
i was at one point overwhelmed with being ‘there’ for everyone here and the pressures and my being the only one worried about stuff like bills and mortgages and stuff that i’ve nearly felt i had a heart attack on several occasions. If it wasn’t my wife being commited by accident or my child running out of overgrown toddlers daipers or attempting to ‘streak outside after mushing poop on the walls…and things like that… that at one point i felt like i was going to break from all the pressure.. don’t forget the poop on the walls. POOP ON THE WALLS… just remembering about it sends me to shake…
i have full time nursing now so it took some of the strain off me. but just being able to lay back and have ‘my heart’ checked out and have someone feed me pudding and switch the tv on for me as i felt they should check to ensure i don’t have cancer somewhere, was just the break i needed.
of course it turned out to be just an anxiety attack. like JUST an Anxiety Attack? oh my. truly i felt like i was dieing…. after being served a hot tasteless lunch before being discharged one nurse upon leaving asked if i minded that i be wheelchaired out and i was like “Oh that would be wonderful..”
it was just that moment of being tended to that was worth all the dedeuctable i had to pay later…
Mike
Wow. So much pain and suffering going on tonight. I wish I could reach into your lives, and find just the right words to comfort you and take away that horrible sadness. I’ve been there too.
Jake B. I live in a sea-side town in Florida, worked in a fine-dining restaurant, with rooms up-stairs, on the beach watching lovers climb the staircase or walk into the sunset….it was so damn painful. I have also felt as if someone had cut me in half and scooped out my insides, and I didn’t know if I would ever be happy again. People would ask if I was alright and I would answer no. I’m not alright.
I was sooo afraid, I felt crazy and so very alone. I remember crying tears into my cat, (my greatest comfort…if it hadn’t been for that cat…who knows.)
And One-step, I know how that anger feels, too. You said you need to fall apart…can you allow yourself to fall apart just for tonight?
I know how impossible it feels right now, but try to believe it will get better…one day at a time. I don’t know how you feel about the God thing…but it doesn’t hurt to talk to him, lay it all down at his feet. Tell him exactly how you feel….
I wish I could make you a cup of tea and sing you a lullabye so you could fall asleep. You are in my prayers.
One step, maybe the poop stuff doesn’t seem like much. but think about an unfunny Monk episode. it wasn’t enough to clean the walls. they had to be bleached and repainted and even then i was like this is still not okay. so i had the sheetrock replaced before i was happy. so i’m nuts. i guess. but there it goes. i was honey i love you little girl, but you are going to kill daddy if you keep playing with your poop…
anyway i’m just rambling now but i want to keep talking to you right now. even if it’s poop stuff or anything else. if you can keep posting until i know you are there that would be wonderful. i’ll stay up all night posting back and forth if you need to.
Mike
Hello, I have been lurking around the site for over a week now, reading, relating, understanding, and feeling all the pain here. I have my own painful story also but will save it for another time. I have been prowling the web for some time now searching for information on P/S and found loads of great useful sites and information.
I found one site that seems to really explain a lot about the healing process and helps me as I start the healing process. However, I do not know if it is okay to post links here to other sites so I have taken a few great pieces that help me in hopes of offering some help to the rest of you who are in pain and healing. Thank you all for being here and making me aware that I am not the ONLY one who has dealt with this type of individual and that my feelings and my pain are valid. That I am NOT the off balance one : ) I hope you all find some hope and help in the following pieces.
“As long as we believe that someone else has the power to make us happy then we are setting ourselves up to be victims”
“Your idea of happiness was probably initially developed around the relationship or the fantasy that was painted for you about him, the relationship, or your future. Instead of understanding that happiness had been sought from someone (whom by the nature of their disorder could never deliver happiness) you were held captive in the compulsion of repeating the same scenario with him and still trying to find happiness in the very person who is hard-wired to NOT produce happiness!
Not all of this seeking happiness in the wrong place is the result of his pathology. Some of it is the result of our own unknowing about where happiness is found. It is not found in someone else. Instead, it is found inside of ourselves rooted in our own spirituality through God. It isn’t about them. It’s about us.”
“What we experience is our desperate search for happiness where it cannot possibly be found. The key to our happiness is not lost outside somewhere in the grass”“it is not lost outside of ourselves. It was lost inside ourselves when we began looking for it in someone else. We need to look for it where it can actually BE found.”
“Pathology Effects EVERYONE the SAME!! (Unless she’s pathological as well”“then who cares if he goes on to have a relationship worthy of a Jerry Springer Show?).”
“Your life is right now”“not back there and not up there in the future.”
’The First Step Towards Getting Somewhere is to DECIDE That You Are Not Going To Stay Where You Are’
“Non-victims can’t understand this, but the P really does suck the life out of a caring person. I try to think of them now as a slimy suckerfish right out of the swamp, vacuum-lips out and prowling for someone”
“open the emotional door of possibility that you will not always be where you are today”
“even if you go back, you are still alone”
I hope none of these are too harsh. I am not targeting anyone, just working on my own healing and hoping these help others like they have helped me.
Knowlegeempowers
These are AWESOME! POWERFUL! HEALING PIECES!
Thank you for reminding me I am totally on the right road…being that I can finally relate to the above comments…
Thank you for your post.
Welcome to LF…sorry you are here, but glad you are in the healing process as well… GREAT POST!
Thank you so much learnthelesson, I was worried : ) Its a long hard road, the healing and recovery starts deep within me, I have to remember what its like to be happy. That happiness was found in myself, its time to find it again : )