While there are no sure-proof ways to avoid exploitive partners (short of entering the monastery), we can reduce our risk of getting too deeply involved with them. Why do I say too deeply? Because if getting involved with an exploiter at all isn’t bad enough, getting in too deeply is the disaster we hope to avoid.
One of the best (and most under-utilized) strategies to protect yourself is to properly“vet” your prospective (or new) partner. What I have to say ahead is especially applicable if you’ve been burned by a sociopath previously, and even moreso if you suspect in yourself a tendency to enter relationships with bad-news characters.
What do I mean by “vetting” your partner? I mean, of course, getting to know him as thoroughly as possible before deepening your investment in him. But here’s the rub: it’s the getting to know him through others.
By others I mean his friends, family, relatives and, indeed, anyone in his social orbit from whom you stand a chance to learn, or confirm, something meaningful about him.
And so while we can agree that no strategy alone guarantees protection against exploitation, I’d propose that vetting your partner intelligently increases your protection, and is much wiser than depending exlusively on him (especially if he’s exploitive) to furnish a candid history of himself.
In other words, your partner’s history of himself will be much less informative than, and dangerously incomplete without, others’ complementary history of him.
How exactly do you vet a prospective partner? It’s true you could take any number of draconian measures—like hiring a team of private investigators—to assist you in the process and, indeed, there may be circumstances where you feel this is necessary.
However, I’m going to restrict myself in this discussion to vetting strategies that might be described as “natural—”meaning, you have access to them in the natural course of your evolving relationship.
And it begins with several absolutes: for instance, you absolutely must meet his family. You must meet his friends. And if he has kids, you must meet them, too.
Really, your aim to meet anyone and everyone in his life from whom it’s feasible to derive, piece by piece, a more complete, validating (or invalidating) profile of him.
If he has no family with whom he’s in contact, and no friends, or, if he has them but discourages you from meeting them, or, worse, is unwilling to let you meet them, well then”¦Houston, we have a problem.
If his parents are in fact deceased (and he hasn’t killed them), there’s nothing doing there. But what about his siblings? And other relatives? And, I repeat, his kids (whether younger or older)? And vitally, his friends!?
My point is that it’s on you to ensure that you neither confine yourself, nor let him confine you, into discovering him within an informational vacuum. I can’t stress this point enough: you absolutely must not allow yourself to be confined, in your discovery of who he is, within an informational vacuum.
Translation, and again at the risk of repeating myself: sooner than later, you’ll want to meet as many people as possible in his life, past and present, who, collectively, can shed light on who your partner is.
Then, if he stonewalls you; if in anyway he restricts or censors your access to feeback through the human beings who’ve comprised, and comprise, his social network, well then”¦I repeat, Houston, we’ve got a very serious problem.
And so, for instance if, in your efforts to move the vetting process forward at a natural, efficient pace, he strings you along and is saying, week after week, I’ll introduce you to my family, just not quite yet, baby”¦I’ll know when the time’s right, trust me”¦.this portends disaster.
Similarly, if he says, ostensibly to protect you, “Trust me, baby, you don’t want to meet my family. They’re a bunch of lunatics,” trust me: you’ll want to meet them. He may be right—they may be lunatics, but you’ll want to meet them to assess the risk that he’s one, too.
Because when his brother Billy Bob, who’s had a few too many pops, tells you on an unscheduled tour of the family property, “Phil tell you how me and him used to set them cats on fire and watch ’em burn to a crisp? Damn, them was the good old days,” this feedback just might not square with Phil’s having told you what an animal lover he was as a kid?
In other words, even dysfunctional, unhinged family and friends can cough up really IMPORTANT information.
Like this, from his mentally challenged, but not necessarily delusional, sister, Crystal: “Good luck with Harold. You seem nice, honey. Maybe now he’s got a girlfriend, he’ll keep his hands off me.”
Okaaay, Crystal”¦thanks for the blessing.
And please, if he has no longterm friendships, do yourself a favor: Don’t rationalize this. Ask yourself, say, hmmm”¦why?
Why does this 40-year-old man have no longterm friendships? What could explain the fact that he has no contact with anyone from his past? (Incidentally, “They’re dead to me,” isn’t a reassuring explanation, especially when a lot of people, it seems, are dead to him.)
It’s probably unncessary to get mired down in defining precisely how far back you’ll want to mine his past? Maybe it’s unnecessary to go all the way back to elementary school? Or even junior high? But what about high school? College? Old colleagues? Cousins? Hell, even old prison buddies (sorry, I know that’s not funny).
Speaking of prison, here’s a concept I ask you to entertain: if you should happen to establish, through your due diligence, that your Romeo has a prison record, how can I say this diplomatically? Remember the books See Dick RUN! See Jane RUN!
Well this circumstance—a prison history—dictates that, just like Dick and Jane, you run! Because it’s amazing what a good, smart, well-timed flight can protect you from!!
Back to the longterm friendship matter: If, in the course of the vetting process, you discover that, alas, your new partner has, indeed, maintained friendships since childhood, or made and maintained solid friendships as an adult, this is a good, positive sign. Is it certification of his integrity and authenticity? Of course not. But it belongs in the plus column of your assessment. It’s the kind of discovery, among others, you’re glad to make.
Let’s say your new partner’s alleged best friend and, for that matter, all his important “peeps,” allegedly live scattered across the country, thereby, he laments, complicating your opportunities to meet them face to face. What now?
Well, where geography deters you from breaking bread with them in person, technology to the rescue! Use skype! Talk to them, see them, interact with them on the computer! At the very least, talk to them on the phone!
There are plenty of feasible ways, in other words, in this technology-enabling world, to connect with those in his life whose geographical situations make for impractical face to face meetings. And so, if he keeps you at arms’ length from them, he’s telling you something very ominous that you need to heed carefully and proactively.
Let me stress: you aren’t just evaluating the dish you get on him from those who’ve known, and know, him (ostensibly) best; you are also evaluating the dishers! You are evaluating the evaluators!
Who are those who comprise his social network? What are their values? What’s their integrity level, as best your instincts tell you? Do they strike you as—even if not admirable in their own right—credible character references?
The answers to these questions matter a lot. It may be nice that Don, his best buddy since third grade, swears on his own family’s life that your boyfriend’s character and integrity are beyond reproach. But if Don’s done time for armed robbery, the credibility of his glowing reference suffers.
You are also evaluating how your new partner relates within his social circle. Does he maintain his “integrity” around them? Does he treat you with a consistent level of attentiveness and respect regardless of the audience? Conversely, does he become a different person around different people, revealing unexpected, disarming sides of himself?
Again, please remember: The vetting process I’m suggesting needn’t be, or seem, formal or contrived; rather, it should be entirely unforced, entirely natural. And your new partner should enable this process by welcoming you into the lives of those with whom he’s shared, and shares, his life!
If he doesn’t make this process natural and seamless—if he filibusters or stonewalls you—this is, I repeat, a serious problem.
What are you looking for in all of this? You are looking to confirm that, by and large, others’ history and experience of him line up with yours! Because if they don’t align, that’s a fatal sign. (Yes, I’m channeling my inner Johnny Cochrane!) If they don’t align, that’s a fatal sign.
So what do you with reasonably unfettered access to these valuable, potential Judas figures in his life? At the risk of overkill, you listen to them, listen to their stories of him. As we’ve established, they will tell you stories. And if they don’t tell you stories, you can ask for stories. And when he says, glowering at his buddy, “Let’s not go there, Al,” you know that’s a place you want to go.
And when he says, even more sinisterly, “I’m not f’ing kidding, Al. Let’s not go there,” you know that’s exactly one of the many places you may need to go.
Sometime the stories aren’t verbalized, they’re just implicit; and sometimes the stories come in the form of questions, like, why doesn’t Tom have relationships with any of his kids?
Listen for the excuses and heed their meanings. Their mother poisoned them against me. Even worse, their mothers poisoned them against me.
In other words, if he’s been married more than once, and hates all his ex’s, and all his ex’s hate him, and all his kids hate him, then 2+2 doesn’t equal he, poor guy, has been repeatedly victimized.
Beware of the partner who’s a lousy parent. While it’s not a guarantee he’ll be a lousy partner, it’s a warning that the same self-centeredness that corrupted his relationships with his kids will surface in his relationship with you.
More generally, beware of the partner who has a history of discarding others in his life. You want to assess this history very carefully, because this is a history that will repeat itself, you can be quite sure of that.
You may be the passion flavor of the month, or year, even five years, but when the edge of his passion fades, watch out. He will cast you off as he’s cast off the sundry others in his life, perhaps even his kids from an earlier first marriage.
Do not be fooled for one second into believing that you are who he’s been looking for all his life. He may delude himself, again and again, with this fantasy, but it’s your obligation to yourself not to collude in this delusion.
(I thank Lovefraud poster Silvermoon, who, while she may or may not subcribe to my ideas, sparked my thinking for this article with her extremely stimulating feedback. As always, my use of male gender pronouns in this article was for convenience’s sake, and not to suggest that females are exempted from the attitudes and behaviors discussed. This article is copyrighted © 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Erin,
Thanks. I’ll document and I got a caller ID phone so I can keep track.
I didn’t want to be the unreasonable one.
Dear Dancing, Change the home number too. Block his e mails.
The daughter will be his next avenue of communication with you. He will tell her “tell your mother that…blah blah blah” or “I love your mother so much but she won’t let me speak with her, she is being mean to me”—so look out for this. Depending on how old your daughter is, I would advise her in age appropriate language that she is not responsible for the divorce, that you love her, that she is not to get or feel “in the middle” and that she is NOT in the middle and that you are NOT abusing daddy dearest and you do not want to communicate with him.
I also agree that you should DOCUMENT DOCUMENT DOCUMENT, and wouldn’t hurt to have copies of any e mails he sends to HER if you can get them. He will definitely USE HER.
No…you definately don’t want to APPEAR the unreasonable one…..but keep boundaries.
And I agree with ox…. he WILL use your daughter….so EXPECT that and be ready to ‘head’ off….or deal with that approach.
Caller Id is a MUST!!!!
Oxy,
I will document.
It seems like I have to MOVE to another continent.
He did send two emails–can I please talk to you? and I AM SICK can you talk to me?
My problem is I don’t know, yet, how to tune him out. He gets to me bec. I obsess about how to deflect him.
I can’t concentrate on things I need to do. This is like a seige in my own home!!
Dear Dancing Warrior,
IT SEEMS LIKE A SEIGE IN YOUR OWN HOME BECAUSE IT *****IS A SEIGE IN YOUR OWN HOME*******
That is exactly what it is. Mine was literally a seige, and I was holed up like in a fort literally expecting them to set fire to my house or shoot me through a window…I fled, literally.
Most of them though will do their attacks witout a gun or a butane lighter and some gasoline….and you must NOT let fear and imaginings make you CRAZY….don’t obscess about deflecting him. Actually, they are pretty predictable.
“Once you have seen one zebra you’ve seen them ALL”—though no two zebras in the universe have exactly the same stripes, each is just as indivdual and unique as DNA or a finger print, but they pretty much look alike and they act alike and are fairly predictable and identifiable as a ZEBRA. You never have to wonder, “Is this a camel?” “Or maybe an elephant?” NOPE you KNOW FOR SURE IT IS A ZEBRA.
Same with a psychopath. There are ones that are serial killers and ones that will just verbally abuse you, but still they are IDENTIFIABLE BY THEIR SNEAKY SELFISHNESS AND THEIR ATTEMPTS TO HOOK YOU IN….either by pretending love and insight or threats or alternating “love” and “hate” reactions.
So, expect both. But do not let it panic you when he flip flops from love to hate and then back again to love.
The POWER YOU HAVE is to NOT LISTEN TO HIM. That will infuriate him and make him TRY harder to get your attention.
Don’t let that spook you. If calling 100 times doesn’t get your attention he will call 1,000. If a “I love you baby” doesn’t get your attention an “You’re such a bitch” e mail might. If that doesn’t work, it will be back to stalling on the divorce, throwing things into the divorce to slow it down or scare you.
EXPECT THESE THINGS, then they will not come as a suprise to you.
Expect him to:
1. LIE TO and SMEAR YOU TO:
you, the judge, your daughter, his attorney, your attorney, your friends, your family, his family, his friends, the neighbors, people he meets at bars, at church, at his work, and to his girl friends.
2. LIE ABOUT:
how much money he has, how you have wasted money, how you are a liar, how he is such a saint, how you are such a bitch, how you are mistreating your daughter, how he loves his daughter, what a great man he is, how he has never lied, how you always lie, how you are crazy, how he only wants to be fair and how you are alienating the daughter from him, how bad you are to and for her, etc. you got the idea.
3: YOU CANNOT STOP HIM DOING THIS
4: YOU ARE BETTER OFF NOT DISCUSSING HIM AND HIS LIES WITH ANYONE EXCEPT YOUR ATTORNEY AND YOUR CLOSEST FRIENDS AND LOVEFRAUD. You can expect that others will not believe a word you say, or will believe him, and that they will think you are crazy. That’s just the way it is. EXPECT IT
5: THE DIVORCE WILL DRAG ON FOREVER IT SEEMS AND COST TWICE AS MUCH AS IT SHOULD.
6: YOU WILL BE TIRED ALL THE TIME, FRUSTRATED, ANGRY, SAD, AND YOUR EMOTIONS WILL ROLLER COASTER UP AND DOWN.
If you expect these things, EXPECT the worst, but don’t FEAR it, you will get through with some sanity. Come here for support on a daily basis. Be good to yourself. Don’t feel guilty. Don’t feel hopeless.
Get a therapist, get some medication for depression or PTSD if you need it, at least get evaluated. Take your kid to therapy or send her. She will need it.
Fight fire with fire and keep your INFORMATION CLOSE TO YOUR CHEST, make sure he does not get “on to” your plans by pumping others for information, INFORMATION IS GOLD.
Keep repeating to yourself “I WILL SURVIVE THIS” and chant it like a mantra! And remember you have the NETWORK BEHIND YOU, as Version says in their ads, the LOVE FRAUD NETWORK!!!! There are therapists, lawyers, survivors, and great folks here who DO get it and we are at your beck and call! Any time you need us, though we do get silly late at night and make some baaaad jokes! We are here if you need us for anything!!!! ((((hugs)))) and my prayers for you always!
Dancing Warrior,
You should be able to block certain users from emailing you. Your internet service will know how to do that. You can also create a different email account and stop using your old one. I’m not sure if you can close it altogether, but you probably can.
Hi Oxy,
I laughed, then I cried reading your message. It is reassuring that you and other LoveFraud writers understand.
Sometimes my body feels like someone beat me with a sandbag due to the mental stress he is systematically using, but the rest of the world sees him as so NORMAL. Normal?
I have told my mom what is going on, and she gets it because she experienced his crazymaking and cruelty–he could demean her because she was vulneralbe as a refugee.
I tell my therapist, who thank GOD knows him from our prior couples therapy–wow the stunts he tried to pull with her–he ran and hated her guts because she saw right through him and didn’t put up with his crap.
My lawyer doesn’t get it yet bec. he sees the “poor him”.
And I vent here, thank goodness, and thanks Oxy for the zebra/camel analogy. Made me laugh.
Stargazer,
I can and have blocked his emails. I unblocked him when I had to file taxes to tell him I’d file separately. Unfortunately, it seems hard to have TOTALLY no contact bec. of our daughter. He texts her and calls her cell.
She’s on a new bb team and he always takes her to games weekends. I had to email him to say I wanted to see her game and if he minded that I take her, bec. I didn’t want to be there with him. Thus I HAD to communicate with him–ironically, he never replied, but talked through daughter adn asked HER “can dad come too?” arrrgghh
My choice is not to talk to him and work around the discomfort of attending her game with him present, or since the parents are new to me, befriend a mom that I could go with in the future to have as a buffer. It’s my problem to figure it out.
Collaborative lawyer and a regular lawyer?
Anyone know how this works?
He hired a collaborative lawyer that won’t litigate but only work to settle. If we can’t settle, she’ll quit the case and he’ll have to hire another lawyer.
I think he did this on purpose so he won’t have to do discovery. Am I right? I KNOW he is hiding assets.
This is why I believe this. For 21 yrs of marriage he always controlled the $ 100%, and wrote out of my checkbook freely to pay bills till he wiped it clean. We never had liquid savings accounts–he didn’t believe in them bec. of low interest, but put ALL $ into tax deferred retirement accounts like 401K. He is 56, and he would talk of retiring around 60 and having enough saved to be able to live off the interest.
He is a VERY SHARP banker, commercial lender, and knows money. He is also obsessed with money. The amount he says he has is a tiny bit bigger than my savings, andhe is 13 yrs older, worked longer than me, and earned more than me. It deosn’t add.
I feel totally blind though in how I can prove that he has another account somewhere. His job may give him bonuses and my l awyer can subpoena his job to disclose that. His job has an expense reimbursement for mileage, and phone bec. he is a bank salesman now and travels a lot, but I don’t know how he handles these reimbursements/expenses.
I know his dad gifted him some treasury bonds in 2000 which have been accumulating interest, but I don’t know if a gift like that is marital property.
To avoid probate court, his dad MIGHT be gifting him money eahc year, I DON’T KNOW and I don’t know if that’s joint money, but I think not.
It just bothers me that he pleads poor me, poverty, while deliberately, I think at least, hoarding money someplace to make sure I don’t get my hands on it.
The only thing I can think is that I refuse any kind of negotiation/talk until he discloses what he has, but without tangible proof I don’t know how I can express my suspicion that he is not honest.
Dancing,
Hire a good PI to help you find all his accounts.
Then, get a forensic accountant to go over it and find all the stuff you need to know.
He is positioning to be a nice guy with a broken heart.
You need an all business posture and a GOOD lawyer.
Get your team together, make sure they are in support of YOUR interests because if they aren’t they should not be paid with YOUR money!