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.
Brotman, something feels very wrong about your posts…past and present. You are trying to come off like a professional. I see there is a Brotman Med Ctr and you are perhaps hopefully pretending to be a nurse there. I would be horrifed to think an actual nurse would write these posts.
If you’re fooling around, you have no idea how harmful that can be on a forum like this. Many will laugh it off as a troll invasion of sorts. I don’t like it.
You make these logical, sensible statements which are definitely your right (about moderators, the seriousness of the subject matter here) then state in so many words that you are pissed because you aren’t getting support or feedback that others do.
Whether you are getting your jollies from this or angry because you aren’t getting support for your opinion, know that this forum is moderated, and the exceptional people who post here care about and support each other in a way I have almost never seen before.
Again, if you find it fun to troll around, that’s your business. But if you need help or support, you aren’t approaching it appropriately. I must say I did see your screen name on a site that was kinda nasty. I couldn’t care less but it does bring your credibility into question…
Wondering if you may be a sociopath who has found a place to roost here and there and drop a poison egg here or there.
Don’t waste your time, it won’t work here.
My apologies in advance if you are for reals….but um, even so, your posts are inappropriate and don’t really ring the thoughtfulness and caring bell at all.
Brotman,
I would be remiss not to comment on your statement:
” I have been personally attacked in the past, when I offer an alternative view.”
This did not really register with me the first time I read it, but I’m wondering if perhaps this is part of what’s making you angry if in fact, it is a sincere statement. Since you do read this blog, you know some of us have been duped (is that where the nickname Dupey came from? OMG – I am sloooooooow) simply by trusting sick men and women who don’t care about or have any idea what the word means. Many of us are trusting by nature but not anymore! Therefore, at least when I read comments like yours, red flags go up.
If you are pissed because you were “attacked” (and I’d really like to be read that day’s comments), it’s so much better to just say so instead of putting the group down or making it seem unhealthy. Again, if you are for real, you would get nothing but support or at least an honest explanation for the “attack.” OK, enuf for me….I was sucked in by a huge path, so what do I know…but fwiw.
the infamous pity ploy is usually at the top of the bag of tricks, right under grandiosity.
still reeling:
you are right, those are the typical arguments and sayings from the occasional visitors here who don’t like it that people label people who show sociopathic behaviour.
First red flag: minimalisation of Adriana’s experience and feelings about it, or what we call ‘gaslighting’… calling her 2 week hurtful experience a ‘date going sour’
Second red flag: exaggerating Adriana’s expectations to spend her time with a decent man who treats her with respect as her ‘looking for the perfect man’. This is another gaslighting hint and blaming Adriana.
Third red flag: arguing people’s rights or abilities to judge whether someone is toxic enough to turn your back on
Fourth red flag: implying anyone who dares to judge someone as a possible sociopath as ‘damaged’ and ‘in need of therapy’…
Fifth red flag: mixing up laymen judging someone as a possible candidate for the sociopath diagnoze with actually diagnozing… none of us claim that; so another exageration
Sixth red flag: referring to a discussion possible sociopathy about a nameless case as “smearing”… another exaggeration.
7th red flag: judging members here and then say you don’t want to judge them…. ain’t that typical: doing the opposite of what they claim.
8th red flag: disagreeing responses are called ‘attacks’ or implied to be coming from a ‘sensitive, damaged place’… meanwhile their own disagreeing opinion is called an ‘alternate view’… different measures are used.
9th red flag: starting to set up pity play – poor me, I’m being ‘misunderstood’ just because I don’t agree
10th red flag: implying this blog is wrong because there’s no professional counselor who’ll warn us against labeling people as sociopaths when they treat us bad… reveals a wish for someone to ‘control’ and ‘dominate’ us, especially when it comes to forming our opinions who’s a sociopath or not.
and the list goes on…
And all nicely packaged in a mask of innocent concern for our mental well being 😉
Love fraud doesn’t need a licensed professional counsellor to mediate the site. As has been mentioned already, this is a support group. We speak fro experience about our encounters with toxic individuals. For many people here, myself included, it is the first time we have had that freedom to express what has happened to us. And some anonymous individual wants to censor that?
Brotman speaks for who exactly? She/he defends the indefensible IMO.
I am free to speak. I am free to say what I want from my life and i am free to say what I don’t want to happen to me ever again.
And, if there are people here who ask for help……just like I did in the beginning and continue to do, then I am going to be there for that person and walk with them on the path to a life free from domination and misery.
Wishing all my fellow LFers a good night and a massive vote of thanks to you all.
Next year the oscars!!
serial poster’s ?
‘ duh, would that be me?
You serial poster you….hehehehehehe
YOU ARE ALL SERIAL POSTERS!!!
(Thank goodness you are, too!)
mwahhh!!!! xxoo
oh, i thought he meant cereal posters….like a food thing….
well, at least we ain’t serial imposters…bwhahahaha
lol one/joy, like Tony the Tiger posters? hehehehe
cereal im posters you mean…
I go cuckoo for cocoa puffs.
mwahahahaha
😛