I recently received email from a woman whom we’ll call Adriana:
I am told I am a very beautiful, intelligent, fun, woman, but that is all subjective. I am 61 years old but pass for late 40’s; good genes. I have been divorced for 10 years and engaged once during that time. I have dated so many men and feel that I have no purpose because I can’t find “him.” I don’t find most men attractive don’t have chemistry with them and I don’t want to settle. I have not been successful in love at all and have tried to look within myself to see my faults but the truth is I just want to love and be loved.
Anyway, I am so tired of dating and getting my hopes up each time I meet someone I really am attracted to. I was setting up a booth for a trade show and a man from the booth a few down came by and gave me a bottle of water (he is a manager for a water company) and I said thanks and did not really pay much attention to him ”¦ he was ok looking.
The next day he was all dressed up looked so nice and he came to my booth looked me dead in the eyes and said “so where are you taking me to lunch?” I was so charmed by his approach and of course we ended up having lunch and then went out that night, but he conned me into dinner than back to his apt. Where he put the move on me. I am a savvy woman, but I must have been stupid. We spent the weekend together and he began to change plans on me, would get all emotional and cry but I never saw any tears, anyway bottom line is he is a liar, he never asked me for money ever, but the rest of the stuff on your sociopath list he is guilty of.
Everything is about HIM AND ONLY HIM, I think his cold hot actions were to throw me off and keep me under his control. Anyway my question is how could I have such deep feelings for this man I have known for two weeks, and if he is only like eight out of your 10 markers does that mean he is not a sociopath? He has done so much damage to me that I prayed to die. I feel worthless, unworthy, lonely, and I still miss the jerk.
I tried to level with him and told him no more games, I wanted to be loved and he said he could not give me that now. That was the first honest thing he said to me I think.
Please help me figure out if he is or is not a sociopath ”¦
Adriana’s first question was, “How can I have such deep feelings for this man I have known for two weeks?” The answer: Adriana was the target of calculated seduction.
She didn’t provide a lot of detail about her interaction. But a man who walks up and says, “Where are you taking me to lunch?” has obviously targeted her. So I assume he also employed the rest of the strategies in the sociopath’s playbook, such as love bombing and the sudden soul mates tactic. I explain them all in my book, Red Flags of Love Fraud—10 signs you’re dating a sociopath. The bottom line is that for two weeks, Adriana was probably subject to over-the-top attention, and she responded.
About her second question—If Adriana saw eight out of the 10 Red Flags of Love Fraud, then that’s warning enough. It doesn’t matter if the guy doesn’t completely qualify as a sociopath, he certainly qualifies as bad news, and that’s exactly what I told her.
Emotional void
But reading this email, I was more concerned about Adriana’s frame of mind. She came out and said, “I feel that I have no purpose because I can’t find ‘him.'”
This is precisely the type of emotional void that a sociopath will happily step into.
I am not criticizing Adriana. I know exactly how she feels, because I once felt the same way. I was smart, successful, attractive, looked younger than my years—and none of that made any difference to me because I was without a partner.
The emptiness in my heart was certainly palpable to me—and perhaps to the sociopath as well. James Montgomery quickly figured out that I was an easy target. He complimented me, poured on the attention, proclaimed I was the woman he’d been waiting for all his life, painted a shimmering picture of how wonderful our life together would be—and I swallowed it all, hook, line and sinker.
Vulnerabilities
Sociopaths specialize in preying on lonely people. So if you are walking around with a big hole in your heart instead of the fulfillment of love, imagine that you are also walking around with a big, red target tattooed on your forehead. KNOW THAT YOU ARE VULNERABLE.
Sociopaths have an uncanny ability to sense emptiness. For this reason, if you feel lonely, it is critically important that you know the Red Flags of Love Fraud. Because sociopaths all seem to use exactly the same strategies and tactics, I’m beginning to believe that involvements with these destructive individuals are totally preventable, if you know what to look for, and, if you spot the signs, you get out.
But you also need to know yourself. Sociopaths target vulnerabilities, and there are many more vulnerabilities besides loneliness. You can be overly trusting. You can be wounded from past betrayals. You can be suffering from grief.
Vulnerabilities are not necessarily flaws. We are all vulnerable in some way. It’s part of being human. In fact, we must allow ourselves to be vulnerable in order to have a fulfilling relationship. But we must recognize that vulnerabilities also leave us open to exploitation by sociopaths.
Red Flags of Love Fraud Workbook
To help you become aware of your vulnerabilities, and recognize when someone is trying to take advantage of you, I’ve put together a companion for my new book called the Red Flags of Love Fraud Workbook.
It’s a small book—only 40 pages—with checklists and questions to ask yourself, and spaces to record your answers. Its purpose is to enable you to think carefully about your internal reality, so you can strengthen your resistance to predators. And if you’ve already been snagged by a sociopath, answering the questions will help you figure out how it happened, and what you have to do to get out of the involvement.
The Workbook will be available exclusively in the Lovefraud Store, and will be free with the purchase of the printed version of Red Flags of Love Fraud.
The key to keeping sociopaths out of your life is to know that they exist, know the warning signs, and know yourself. The two Red Flags of Love Fraud books give you the tools you need to stay safe and healthy.
Hi luzblanca82: Welcome to our ‘family’ of ‘survivors’. Sorry you have to join us under these conditions and situation but I am so glad you found your way here. Pull up your socks and hang on because you are in for an explanation of your life!!!
All the things we thought we knew, we have found out we really haven’t known, all along. I would strong suggest watching this movie: It’s about two hours long and can be watched on your computer, depending upon your internet connection speed. It very precisely explains and defines psychopathy and reasons it exists and explanations as to why.
http://www.fisheadmovie.com/
When you get to the page, on the left, click on “Where to See” and follow the instructions and you will have it in no time at all.
Yes, it’s a mixed emotion: sad we have to be here but aren’t we grateful to Donna Andersen for coming forward and sharing her story with us, bravely and courageously? There isn’t another place I know of that describes what we have experienced and what the rest of society chooses to ignore. There is no other place to find the encouragement and support we so long for. You come here anytime and someone will always be around to respond to you……..It some how rattles the cages of folks who haven’t experienced this in their lives, to even acknowledge this kind of evil exists, I think. From professionals all the way down. It makes them as vulnerable as we have found ourselves.
WELCOME! Stay with us, read and indulge in the truths you will find here. Apply them to your life and you will find a new person and a new life. Yes, we are all super careful now. If only we had known then, what we know now. Right?
Blessings of peace and resolution to you, luzblanca,
Dupey
one of my new skills is recognizing a spath by the third paragraph.
and one of my new hobbies is googling screen names.
OneJoy,
yes, you were right… I had to stick a needle in my eye to burn out the images. 😯
The reason I give some people the benefit of the doubt is because I’ve encountered christians who seriously think I’m being “judgemental” in my assessment of my spath.
ROTFLMAO!!!
How could they (or anyone) imagine that the word “psychopath” is an understatement, when applied to my ex-spath?
The first priest that I went to, said, “Don’t call anyone evil, we are all children of God.”
By the time I got to the second priest, I knew more and I elaborated a tiny bit more. He ran out of the room shouting, “I’m just a poor parish priest!”
The world isn’t ready to know what they don’t want to know.
hehe…
there is a popular late night talk show here that has a lyric that is something like, ‘good in everyone.’ I try to block it out, ’cause it ain’t true, amiga.
interesting paradigm: all children of god vs. scared child of god in denial.
guess Jack was right. 😉
off to bed…good dreams and safe awakenings to everyone.
TO QUOTE:
skylar says:
“OneJoy,
yes, you were right” I had to stick a needle in my eye to burn out the images. 😯
The reason I give some people the benefit of the doubt is because I’ve encountered christians who seriously think I’m being “judgemental” in my assessment of my spath.
ROTFLMAO!!!
How could they (or anyone) imagine that the word “psychopath” is an understatement, when applied to my ex-spath?
The first priest that I went to, said, “Don’t call anyone evil, we are all children of God.”
By the time I got to the second priest, I knew more and I elaborated a tiny bit more. He ran out of the room shouting, “I’m just a poor parish priest!”
The world isn’t ready to know what they don’t want to know.
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I completely agree with you. Calling my “IT” a psychopath is definitely an understatement of the century, if not all time.
As for people not relating: our ‘stories’ upset their nice, safe, little, organized, worlds. We bring visions of things they don’t want to know or hear. Tales of the evil that walks amongst us all. That is why they run and trip us so that the zombies will eat our faces and not theirs.
Dupey
Just read a couple of the comments to my post – and I realize that there are some very damaged people here.
This site is not an alternative to professional therapy, and can be destructive without a professional mediator.
I suggest that when someone has experienced a traumatic relationship that they seek professional help – it is available relatively cheaply – even for those that do not have private medical coverage.
Again a hurt person, as in Adriana case specifically, labeling someone she has known so briefly, only serves a purpose of self suffering, and the victim complex, which again adversely effects self esteem. It is not healthy.
He could easily have been suffering from depression, or PTSD – you simply do not know that, and without professional diagnoses it is wrong to smear someone.
Holding a resentment against somebody, is like taking poison, hoping the other person suffers.
The only person that really suffers is the holder of that resentment and it can destroy people from the inside out.
Again I am not being judgmental and only commenting on Adriana’s situation.
Peace and Blessing
oh my
Mostly a pathological liar,looted my Trust for 70k after 25 years together. I am now filing 16 months from the first event, and 10 months from the last event, with the States Attorney for Extortion.
He always said he picked me as his girlfriend because I was essentially alone; and both my parents had paranoid disorders.