When people realize that that they are involved with a sociopath, the standard advice from Lovefraud is that they should, as quickly as possible, cut the predator out of their lives. That means no phone calls, no e-mails, no texts, and certainly no in-person meetings. It means No Contact.
Of course, there are times when this is difficult, as when our reader works with the sociopath, or they have children together. In these cases, they need to implement No Contact as best they can. But let’s now talk about situations where it is possible to get rid of the person, such as in a dating relationship.
What is the best way to establish No Contact? Clearly, firmly and permanently.
The rules of No Contact
The book called The Gift of Fear, by Gavin de Becker, devotes several pages to the topic of rejecting an unwanted suitor, and these pages are among the most helpful of the entire book.
De Becker writes in the context of a woman who decides she doesn’t want to be involved with a man. Do not, the author says, try to “let him down easy.” Here’s what he writes:
One rule applies to all types of unwanted pursuit: Do not negotiate. Once a woman has made the decision that she doesn’t want a relationship with a particular man, it needs to be said one time, explicitly. Almost any contact after that rejection will be seen as negotiation ”¦ If you tell someone ten times that you don’t want to talk to him, you are talking to him—nine times more than you wanted to.
Here are more points that de Becker makes in the book:
- If you get 30 messages from a pursuer, and finally call him back to say, “stop calling,” he learns that after 30 attempts, he will get a response.
- If you make an excuse like, “I don’t want to be in a relationship right now,” the stalker assumes you will want to be in a relationship later, and keeps calling.
- If you say, “You’re a great guy, but I’m not the one for you,” the stalker thinks you’re just confused, and will come around in time.
- Never explain why you don’t want a relationship. If you give a reason, it gives him something to challenge.
- A nice or delicate rejection is often taken as affection.
“The way to stop contact is to stop contact,” de Becker says. “I suggest one explicit rejection and after that absolutely no contact. If you call the pursuer back, or agree to meet, or send him a note, or have somebody warn him off, you buy another six weeks of his unwanted pursuit.”
Giving in
What happens if you’re wishy-washy about No Contact? Not long ago, Lovefraud received the following letter from a reader who we’ll call “Lenore.”
I literally had to count the days that went by as I refused contact with him, and on day 120, I celebrated because I felt healed. Well, on day 121, he emailed me, and against my better judgment, I emailed him back. He told me he had been in therapy, he realized what he had done wrong, he was on medication.
I was cautious and wary, and decided, amidst warnings of concern from my friends and family, to perhaps work on a friendship again. We worked on being friends for a few weeks, and everything was great and fine. I felt in control of the situation.
Then his old behaviors started creeping in. He installed a GPS app on my phone so he could track my whereabouts. He began calling and texting incessantly, and flipping out if I didn’t answer right away. The verbal and psychological abuse had begun again. Fortunately, this time it did not escalate to physical abuse. He began lying again, gaslighting and acting erratically, and began seeing other women on the side. Last night, it once again became too much and I told him not to contact me again because my heart and my spirit couldn’t take any more pain, and his inconsistency is so bad for my son.
So today begins Day One again without him. I am writing you today to tell you that your no contact advice was the best advice I didn’t take. For 120 days I went without him. It took a while, but by day 90 I was happy and free and at peace. Now I am back to square one.
No Contact is the path to healing from an entanglement with a sociopath. The stronger you can be about No Contact, the faster you will recover.
Seems it is normal in real primary psychopaths. I observed those details too, of course after the getting horrified by the character traits. Once i saw the character horrors i paid attention to the physical strange signs: unexpressive eyes, cold, kind of animal eyes when they expressed anything, and the face except for the smiles, nice ones by the way, it had a very narrow variety of expressions and some of them were not completely natural, they were kind of faked.
I realized there was something inborn. I really started to feel real fear. He attracted me sexually very much but i got scaried. And then i started my search for the theory of the pathology. And i’m still shocked of knowing these living things exist and that i’ve met a second one i haven’t asked for.
Eva,
Yes the character traits are most obvious….but I just thought the lack of facial expression, with VOICE expression was incredibly shocking to me when I realized what it was. Also, when they’re responding to you about something, it oftentimes is not directly related to what you’ve just said? Just odd
Lesson,
They fucking fake. I saw mine overacting, imitating me. I heard him by phone “crying” ridiculously. I cried several times in front of him and he didn’t react at all, just hugged me and waited for the “embarrasing” moment to finnish. So once, when i was already totally fed up of him, he tried to “cry” by phone. It was ridiculous. Obviously he was not trained. It would have been better to avoid that performance but… they have no sense of ridiculous. Sometimes i recognize i have laughed too, with him and at him, though i think this is a very serious pathology, not just an unimportant desorder of personality.
That i observed it too. It’s one of the first red flags as you call them. That’s because they just mind their business, as one clearly realizes later. They have an enormous ego, they’re just interested in themselves.
Hi All. I am new hear and trying to do the NC thing. Its Day 1 only and I want to contact him so badly :((
Dear SoSad,
Think of it like stopping SMOKING or any other ADDICTION….you just have to chew gum or do something else to get your mind off it for a while and keep on telling yourself that you MUST NOT DO IT, BECAUSE IT IS DESTROYING YOUR HEALTH. (which it IS!)
Welcome to LoveFraud….knowledge is power, so read the articles here (there are tons of them under different catagories) so start and read them!
Again, welcome and keep on learning!
Thanks Ox Drover. Its not really easy is it ? I want to call him so badly, but I know I shouldnt. I guess i dont understand why this is so hard, in theory it should be so easy. It was all lies, the person he pretended to be doesnt even exist. The man I loved wasnt even real. So why is is to hard to let go and walk away.
Sosad123, going “No Contact” is one of the most challenging things that a survivor will ever do – bar none.
Understanding of what happened, how it happened, and why it happened will come over time. It’s very difficult to process our experiences because what the spaths did do not fit into our system of beliefs: anyone that I love or care about would NEVER ______, so the exspath COULDN’T have done ________!
Once No Contact is followed long enough, these people cease being a factor in every nanosecond of our lives. The further we move from them, the quicker we take back control of our lives from them. It’s difficult, it sure is! But, keep in mind that no amount of tears, words, shouts, pleas, or promises will ever compel a thing that has no empathy or remorse to recognize what they’ve done, or hear our cries for mercy. They don’t care, they never DID care, and they never will care.
Brightest blessings
Thanks Truthspeak 🙂 Its alreay been over for more than 6 months, he ended it but I know it was right, but we still speak every once in a while. But I still miss him and still want to contact him etc. He owes me alot of money, and makes small payments every month, but I really need to try make the whole NO emotional contact, until he has paid me all the money. Cause then he will have no reason to stay in contact with me and will disappear anyway.
You think it is hard to have no contact with an ex-spouse. Try being his mother! My husband and I have had on and off contact with our only son for over 13 years. We have finally severed all contact with him (though the contact was very seldom in the last several years. I haven’t even seen him in 4 years). It was too destructive as well as him playing the victim. Now he has a child out of wedlock (has just recently hooked the mother of the child into marriage)and out of nowhere contacts us about us being in the child’s life and why are we punishing the child (no conscience and wants back into our lives with no remorse of all he has done). It is the same old stuff with him. You can’t have a relationship with a sociopath because nothing has changed with them. The only salvation to our sanity is to have no contact with him. It is not easy since he is our flesh and blood and the rest of our extended family has contact with him and thinks he is great (even though they know his track record and what he has done to many others in the past!). You can never start the healing until you let him go and sever all contact. You just prolong the pain and healing process.