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.)
A few more : )
“Be gentle with yourself. The rest of your life deserves it.”
“We have been talking about those changes”“what needs to change physically, emotionally, and spiritually. In the last segment, we discussed the negative ’world view’ effects resulting from pathological exposure. The negative world view impacts how you now see your post-pathological relationship world. This includes how you NOW see yourself, others, the world, your future, and God. ”
“One of the seriously ’under treated’ effects of pathological relationship exposure is the healing of the personal world view. The untreated aspects ’mimic’ PTSD symptoms with increases in depression, anxiety, fear, isolation, dread of the future and other similarly related PTSD side-effects. Healing your world view is critical to a healthy future.”
“Pathologicals are harsh. They leave people feelings irritated, rubbed raw, and chapped. Your interior does not feel ’gentle’ ”“it feels the opposite of it. Pathologicals are notoriously ’negative’ so you may have found your mood, thinking, and reactions to have taken on his negativity. It’s hard to heal when everything looks like he told you it looked”“bad (and it’s all your fault!) It’s hard to live the gentle life for yourself when your emotions are anything BUT gentle.
This is the point about the necessity of healing the world view”“it’s a critical part of your recovery. Because having been warped by a pathological, ’HOW you see determines WHAT you see.'”
“The last few weeks I have been talking about the necessity of living a gentle life if you are recovering from a dangerous and/or pathological relationship. The damage it does to a person is profound and many are often diagnosed with a chronic stress disorder OR Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) because of it. These disorders respond best to a ’gentle life’ that allows the body, mind, and spirit to rest from the overload of adrenaline and stress it has experienced in the dangerous relationship. (Read our previous newsletters about this topic listed on the magazine)
I have talked about physically how to ’adjust’ your environment if you have a stress disorder and we also talked about the emotional effects—anxiety, depression, and other after-effects associated with PTSD. Today, we are going to talk about the spiritual effects.
Dangerous and pathological relationships violate at a deep soul level. That’s because it touches on the core building blocks of our concepts about relationships”“Trust, Love, and Hope. Deception is evil and sick and when you realize ’who/what’ you have been with, there is a violation that cuts to the deepest part of a person: their spirit.
Often these kinds of pathological relationships have already ’played into’ your soul connection”leading you down the path of believing that your ’connection’ was spiritual in nature. There were probably lots of promises of the ’life together’ and all the ’reasons God brought you two together.’ In the end, they were lies but before you knew they were lies, they were HOPES.
~ “Hope is the thing with wings, that perches in the soul.” ~ (Emily Dickinson)
So many pathological relationships have “an intense attachment” that feels like ’connection’ or ‘soul mate status’ when in reality it is just the intense game of the ’pathological’ sucking you in and hoping you will confuse intensity with something healthy.
But Hope, Love, and Trust are all core spiritual values and when you have invested those core values and beliefs in someone and then the heinous deception is revealed that the ’goal’ of the relationship was to manipulate you all along, something ’rips’ inside of you. This ‘soul tearing’ brings a spiritual skepticism, a distrust that permeates everything you EVER believed”sometimes even about God.
It’s a disastrous wound to your ’world view’ and how you see yourself, others, God, and the world at large.
These mortal wounds to your world view can last a long time because, in effect, they are the ways you have come to ’believe’ about yourself (I can’t trust my intuition), others (everyone is evil), the world (it’s a sick place) and God (He didn’t protect me). This profound shift in your world view can increase the symptoms of PTSD”“depression, anxiety, alienation, loneliness, isolation, and a fear or dread of the future.
So often the spiritual effects of the pathological relationship are overlooked both by the victim and by the therapist. This ’world view’ earthquake has shaken the foundation of your belief system. Without repair to the foundation from which you build your self concept, healing is limited to only symptom management. Spiritual healing of your world view is paramount to your overall recovery.”
Again, I hope I am not violating any rules here. I just found all this so empowering and some gave me a sense of peace that I have long missed.
nice to meet you knowledgeempowers, I’m Mike and i post here with my wife Des. i’ve been here for about a month or so. I work with a psychopath and my nurse’s child was recently killed by one.
she’s in heaven now. the trainwreck is all the folks she was forced to leave behind here.
it’s been a bad two weeks for many of us folks here. also i’m not sure if another natural disaster is going to surface up. something is in the air.
Hang in there. repetition is the key i think. if we say it enough, it begins to sink in and then eventually we can believe it. it’s okay. everything is okay. Until eventually it actually is.
Mike
One Step Are you there?
Mike
One Step please just to ease my mind. just post even just to say i’m irritating the hell out of you. i just wont be able to sleep tonite until i hear from you again and know that you are somewhat sort of okay until another day when tonite and all this is but a bad dream.
Mike.
Oh Dear, Autisticouls I am so so sorry for your and yoru wifes loss, my heart goes out to you and yours. I can’t even imagine what you have gone through. Hearing that makes my own situation seem trivial. The pain here is unbelievable, but I also read much healing occuring here.
I think for each one of us trying to come to grips with our situations, what has been done to us and realising that it is not our fault is a step in the right direction.
I hope someday we can all find peace within ourselves and start having better lives.
Knowlegeempowers: Thank you for posting~~ it really resonates…thank you…
we will manage. the mother is having the worst of it. Well she will after she comes out of her valium haze.
i need to work on things and be busy and productive so as not to think about it. i don’t want to. des is still having nightmares.
i’m a bit worried about one step right now so i am keeping her in my head until i feel she comes through this. If you’de like you can help me reach out and we can imagine holding her somewhere safe and hope that somehow she can feel it/us. i think the only way i can save myself is to be able to be there for others.
Mike
Camom, i still am going through about 5000 emails from the past week and a half, but i’m praying something comes through there that i can link you to something for your daughter.
I’m so saddened by your story, but am grateful for your gentle mexican old man that came through for you.
Mike
Dear Knowledgeempowers,
Welcome to our “gentle place” though sometimes it gets a little hectic when one of us goes on a “rant” about some psychopath, but we are GENTLE WITH EACH OTHER!
Glad you are here and thanks for those wonderful posts of yours. If you have a good site link, contact Donna Andersen and let her know. Shes’ a grand lady and knows the score, she’s been through it too.
Again, welcome and thanks for your contributions! (((hugs))) and God bless!
autisticsouls:
Mike, Onestep emailed me and she’s OK, tired, has been sick.
It must be late in FL, so please get some rest and thank you for caring for all of us here.
Night!