Thank you. My last post seems to have stirred up some strong emotions. Then again I guess that’s my responsibility as a writer — to reach people and get the feelings going. Movement, after all, is surely the only way we can go forward? At the same time, my intent is to stir positive responses, so I decided that this week it would be a good idea to share a bit about the methods I’ve been using to help with my own healing. I recognise that for some the following article may be a bit tricky to digest – which is why I thought long and hard before deciding to post. I remember when I first discovered that everything I had believed in was just a lie, I was far too raw to ever have been able to contemplate some of the things I am about to share with you – my heart and my love goes out to all of you who are in that place. I know from my own experience that it takes time to come through – and the most important thing is to be gentle on ourselves during the healing process, particularly in the early days. I hope that for others of you who are already on the move, my message is more immediately helpful. Either way, my heartfelt wish is that this can be a useful piece for you here on Lovefraud – now and/or in the future.
Okay… I started by talking about my ”˜responsibility’ and so this week I have chosen to write about my take on the meaning of the word.
Before going in to that in any detail, I’d like to start off by saying that I believe all of us (yes ALL of us) already have the power to heal. I get the feeling though (certainly from my own experience) that many of us have forgotten that we have a huge inner resource of strength and power. I acknowledge that through our relationships with abusive people, our inner strength can be pushed down, boxed, manipulated and damaged to the point where we believe we really are useless and powerless. That we’ve become the small weak person the sociopaths would have us believe. That we end up thinking “well, he/she was right all along. I’m worthless. They’ve won”
And I’m here to say that I believe this is simply not the case. I’m aware this may appear somewhat controversial, but I invite you to consider the notion that perhaps it is BECAUSE of our inner strength that the sociopath was attracted in the first place? That, perhaps, it’s BECAUSE we have love in our hearts and a strong soul they wanted to possess and control us? After all, assuming that’s the case, then we already have — we’ve ALWAYS had — the very things that they can never EVER attain for themselves. So now it’s up to us to reclaim ourselves — to find a way where we can stand up tall and proud, and become the person we truly are. That, at least, has been my take during my journey, and I’d like to start sharing some of the techniques that have helped me along the way.
So let’s continue with the word ”˜responsibility’. For many, the word invokes heavy or burdensome connotations. In my leadership training groups for example, delegates often tell me that they feel a weight on their shoulders, or a need to behave in a certain way so that they can fulfill the serious expectations that responsibility carries with it. They perceive it as a load, something they have to carry — so the word itself, therefore, can often have negative associations. And I think that’s a shame”¦ I also think it’s untrue.
I’m sure you can imagine the scene when I bring this up with leadership groups. I will often be met with a room full of suddenly the folded arms and a series of harrumphs as delegates hunker down for a battle. “What?” they’ll grumble “We are leaders! We have to bear the burden of responsibility! It’s not easy you know!” And this is where the training starts.
The same as I do with these groups, I would like to invite you to explore another perspective. One that, in my opinion, can be a much more empowering way to look at what responsibility really means.
Let’s imagine, for a moment, that we can break the word in to two — “response” and “ability—¦. Meaning our ability to respond. Or, if you prefer, our choice as to how we are going to respond to a situation. It’s our opportunity to re-consider our actions, rather than coming back with a habitual or emotion-driven response.
It’s like this, you see. I often witness people telling me that “it’s his/her fault” or “my boss is to blame for my unhappiness in my job” or “my family makes me feel bad” or “that psychopath ex still makes me boil with fury”. You get the picture?
I believe with all my heart and soul, that the more we place the ”˜blame’ on another person or situation, all we are doing is giving away our own power. We can shout and roar as much as we like — or mumble and whisper, it doesn’t really matter. My point is that while we continue to focus outside of ourselves we are blocking our own ability to develop. The result is that instead of moving forward, we remain stuck in the very place we say we don’t like!
Imagine, for a moment, that you are pointing your finger at someone — or something. You’ll most likely have your index finger pointing out, with the rest of your hand curled in to a loose fist shape. All your frustrations are directed outside of you along that one finger. Don’t get me wrong, it may well feel good to do that… but at the same time, I’d like you to consider where your other fingers are pointing. Who are they pointing to? Who, therefore, might we be forgetting during a (justifiable) outpouring of frustration? Yup, we’re forgetting ourselves in the matter.
Again, at this point, my leadership groups will often become even more agitated “What, you’re telling me that it’s MY fault? That I’M to blame?” Of course, this is not the message I am giving them. But they have become so wrapped up in their frustration at whatever situation it is we’re discussing, that they find it difficult to move beyond that point. As I said earlier, they remain stuck.
No, the point I am making is to recognize that for the one finger that’s pointing away from us, we have three more pointing back at us. This hand gesture invites us to consider what else we can do in any given situation. It’s a reminder that we have more control than we often think. Three times the power. Three times more choices available to us. Because we have the opportunity to decide exactly how we are going to respond at any time – it’s just up to us to make the most of it.
OK, you may be thinking, that’s all well and good, but what does that mean to me? How can that help me in my situation? Or, as some delegates insist on telling me at the beginning of a training course “Well, it’s different for me you know!” Of course it’s different for them — it’s different for us all. And that, paradoxically, is where it’s also exactly the same. Because each and every one of us is unique.
It’s true, we can’t necessarily change the behavior of another. But we can always change our own behavior. And by changing our own behavior, well, then we’ve broken the communication dance of which we find ourselves a part. I’ll explain what I mean. Imagine you are going to shake somebody’s hand. They will give you their hand and you will shake it — because that’s what’s expected. That’s the automatic response, the well-rehearsed ”˜steps’ that we’re used to dancing. Now this time, imagine instead that when you go to shake that same person’s hand, you pull away at the last moment. What happens to that other person? They will have to do something different, because you have broken the dance. Do you see what I am getting at?
For me, quite early on in my healing, I decided that I would have a different response to matters every time I felt hurt, confused or downright furious at the situation I found myself in. I chose to ‘break the dance’. Don’t get me wrong, it didn’t come easy. But with practice, I discovered I felt freer and lighter as a result.
I acknowledge that my next statement is likely to prove controversial, but I decided that I would consciously choose to thank my ex for his actions, rather than dwell on the pain and suffering. I decided that each time I was hit with yet another debt, or more evidence of his betrayals, instead of automatically pointing the finger I would instead stop, get myself still, take a deep breath and ask myself “what can I do to feel better? How can I use my own power to make a positive difference to this situation?”
That’s when the learning happens. That’s when my brain searches for other alternatives. That’s when I look around my surroundings and realize that I’m still alive. I have my son. I have food on my table. I no longer have to pander to his demands — I am no longer the squashed manipulated woman I had been for far too long. And all of a sudden I can start to feel grateful. Grateful that he’s gone. Grateful that I have the opportunity to rebuild my life — for me. And, as I said before, it usually ends up with my thanking my ex. It doesn’t mean I forgive his actions. Neither does it mean that I feel any compassion for him. It DOES mean that I’m free from the pain — and that is a gift to myself.
It’s not easy — I’ve said that before. To quote the phrase ”˜better the devil you know’ it often seems easier to stay with the old habits. Those same old habits that keep us stuck. Change and healing takes determination — and when things don’t go quite as planned we can get discouraged. But how do we resist the temptation to dwell on the difficulties? To fall back in to the gaping hole of misery? I believe the solution is to identify a ”˜space’ where we can feel good — if not good, then at the very least a bit better! For me, I often use music to help me change the way I feel — two of my regular song choices have been Labbi Syffre’s “Something Inside So Strong” and Nina Simone’s “I Got Life” (with the accompanying video to a yoghurt advert). I also write to change my mood. One of my best friends goes out to tend her garden, another turns to cooking, and another takes himself out for a walk. What we do doesn’t matter in the slightest — it’s just about finding something, anything that can help us stay on track to achieving our end goal. To heal and to reclaim our life.
As I have said many times on my blog, this is NOT about him, it never has been. This is about ME. Since discovering the truth I have refused to allow him to impact on my journey — no matter how hard he may have tried to hurt me, I simply will not let it happen anymore. I can always choose my own responses, no matter what is going on around me — and most of the time that is exactly what I do. Yes, there are times when I forget, and there are many more times when it’s been hard work to find an alternative. But with persistence, focus, and a determination to create a better life for my son and myself, most of the times I get there.
For all of us who have been hurt by someone else, the most important thing is to remember that we DO have the power to do something about it. We CAN change the way we feel, and by doing so we change our immediate experience and increase our ability to heal. Perhaps our biggest challenge is simply to acknowledge that fact. As I said earlier, I am convinced that we must already have demonstrated our inner strength to attract a sociopath in the first place. Does that mean we should now hide our light under a bushel? Does that mean we should now stay in the fear and pain? Or does that mean we should reclaim who we are, fan the flames of passion and become even stronger than we were before? Surely that’s the best revenge against those who tried to put us down in the first place, isn’t it?
So next time a proverbial ‘hand’ is offered to you, are you going to shake it automatically? Are you going to continue with a habitual response? Or are you going to move your hand away, step back and take control of the dance? It’s up to all of us, of course, to choose the route we take — not just sometimes, but all of the time.
Incidentally, once my leadership groups grasp the sense of what I mean, I am always met with a room full of calm and smiling faces. They feel safe in the knowledge that responsibility is something they’ve always had — it’s just that now they know how to use it more wisely.
I hope this has been helpful — I welcome your thoughts and feedback.
Until next week, love and blessings to all my new friends here on Lovefraud!
TO ANYONE WHO IS CONSIDERING GOING BACK TO THE SPATH:
This is the BEST article I have read for anyone who is considering going back to the spath because it shows things from the spath’s perspective! READ IT!!!!
Many of the victims who are tempted to get back together with a psychopath have a nostalgia for the luring phase. They don’t dream of getting back with a cheater, a pathological liar and a controlling narcissistic individual. They long for the return of the seemingly loving person they first encountered. In other words, they want the psychopath to put his mask back on: only this time they want the mask to be real–his real self–not just a ruse.
During this honeymoon period the psychopath put on a very desirable front. He was helpful, attentive, respectful, flattering, generous, romantic and nice. He made promises that sounded great. He pledged commitment, fidelity, loyalty and everlasting love. He looked into your eyes and told you he doesn’t need any other partners. You were the person he looked for all his life. Let’s face it: cheesy lines sound very truthful and romantic when they play on the chords of the tune you want to hear.
Psychopaths are good enough actors to make such cheesy lines sound plausible to their victims, not only because of what they say but also how they say it: looking into your eyes, speaking in a low, hypnotic voice, even blushing with emotion or shedding a tear or two at the right moment. For me, the Chris Rea video below captures very well the nostalgia and the hope that you can return to the honeymoon phase of any romantic relationship the second time around:
http://www.youtube.com/user/ClaudiaMoscovici?feature=mhee#p/f/10/FIL8PxLmjm4
But the psychopathic bond is no ordinary relationship, as the one featured on this video. It’s an extraordinarily toxic relationship that involves predation. As seductive and appealing as the luring phase with a psychopath may be, as the victims who reconcile find out, this illusion only happens once. I’d like to analyze here some of the reasons why even those who make the grave mistake of returning to their psychopathic ex’s–and thus jeopardize their recovery, their happiness and perhaps even their lives–cannot recapture what they experienced with the psychopath in the beginning.
From the psychopath’s perspective:
1) You are no longer a new pursuit for him. Psychopaths are excited by novelty: by duping and seducing a new person. Within a few minutes, hours, or days of getting back together with a psychopath you will see that he considers you as familiar as a pair of old shoes.
2) You have demonstrated weakness in his eyes. A breakup with a psychopath happens because he has mistreated you: lied to you, cheated on you, stolen money from you, controlled you. Whatever form the mistreatment took, it was serious. You may have broken up with him as a result of the mistreatment or he beat you to it and broke up with you first. It doesn’t really matter. The relationship itself was at the very least emotionally abusive. If you get back together with a psychopath you’re letting him know that you are willing and ready to take abuse. And he will dish it out. To him, your willingness to accept the abuse will be an indicator of your weakness, not of your love and loyalty as you may believe. Rather than a more enduring rekindling of the old flame you can expect less respect and more mistreatment. The fundamental inequality of the psychopathic bond will deepen, creating an even bigger and more overt schism of double standards in his favor.
3) You are showing neediness. If you need him so much that you are willing to return to him even after the abuse, then he will continue to play catch and release games with you in the future. Psychopaths are psychological sadists and as such enjoy tormenting their victims. By engaging in a series of breakups and reconciliations you have proved yourself to be an excellent subject for these cat and mouse experiments.
4) Relatedly, you have also proven yourself to be a reliable backup. Psychopaths return to their former targets out of boredom and the compulsion to maintain control over you and your relationship. Usually, however, those targets don’t excite them as much as new pursuits. They therefore use them as backups, to return to them periodically, when they are bored with everyone else, when a newer and more exciting flame is busy or on vacation, or whenever they feel like it. By getting back together with him, you are showing that you think so little of yourself that you’re willing to be available for a psychopath on his terms, at his beck and call.
5) Last but certainly not least, the psychopath is getting back together with you to punish and destroy you. How dare you break up with him? Or, if he broke up with you, how come you didn’t grovel enough to get him back? If he didn’t finish you off the first time around, by destroying you emotionally and financially, he may this time. He has a good shot at it, thanks to your willingness to forgive him. At the very least, he will humiliate you by waving under your nose his wooing other women and the honeymoon phases with them, which are forever gone for you. Needless to say, this is not the foundation for the romantic reconciliation you envision. At best, it’s the groundwork for being friends with benefits. Only the psychopath isn’t your real friend, but your worst enemy masquerading as a friend to use and hurt you some more.
From the victim’s perspective:
1) You’re not blinded by novelty and love anymore. In fact, you’re not falling in love with the psychopath at all. You are returning to a relationship you now realize is deeply flawed, hoping that if you both work at it you can correct it. You are therefore returning to the psychopath with a lost innocence (or blindness, more like it) expecting that he reform. It will not get better, however, it will get a lot worse. Which leads me to my next point.
2) Your expectations won’t be met. Psychopaths feign working at a relationship long enough to get what they want. If you already got back together with the psychopath, then he has pretty much lost the incentive to fool you, unless you have something else he wants, such as money. The more you see that the psychopath isn’t taking the relationship seriously again and willing to put in the work to improve it, the more you’ll express your frustration. In response, the psychopath will rebuff you and project the blame unto you. So what happens next?
3) You will either have to accept the fundamental inequality of the relationship or you will have to fight him tooth and nail on every issue. Either way, the result will not be particularly pleasant or romantic. You’ll either be reduced to the status of a subordinate in the relationship or you will continually fight for an equality and fairness that is impossible in a psychopathic bond. Such a relationship is predicated upon lies, inequality and dominance.
4) You are too aware of his deception. The original honeymoon phase was based on a huge pile of lies that you believed or at least wanted to believe. You believed that he loved you. You wanted to believe he could therefore be faithful to you. You wanted to believe he could care about you and your loved ones. You wanted to believe that he could consider your common interest rather than making purely selfish decisions. All these assumptions proved to be wrong. He was purely selfish. He loves no one but himself. He acted in such a way as to hurt you and your loved ones. They say that ignorance is bliss. But that’s not really true. Ignorance is vulnerability and what you didn’t know has hurt you. At any rate, it’s impossible to return to the original state of ignorance when you believed all his lies. You can’t even give him the benefit of the doubt anymore because he’s already proven to you that he doesn’t deserve it. Everything the psychopath tells you from now on will seem suspect.
So your relationship will be founded upon inequality, warranted suspicion and distrust, wounded feelings and impossible expectations. Anyone who gives a psychopath a second, third, fourth or fifth chance based on the fantasy of the honeymoon phase will live a nightmare in reality. Real life with the psychopath will be filled with double standards in his favor, with jealousy and deceit, with constant tension and fighting, with higher expectations from him and fewer efforts on his part to meet you halfway and improve the relationship. Keep this reality in mind whenever the dangerous lure of the honeymoon phase haunts you.
Idiot: Do not contact this man’s wife to apologize. The affair is over. He will never apologize to you for wrecking your marriage it’s not in his pathology.
Learn from this. Keep your distance and cut off all ties with him or them. Get into counseling for your marriage or join a church.
This brings families together. Don’t put your young children through the trauma of a divorce. Try to work it out.
You’d be surprised after middle age folks mellow out and if most folks stay married past 45-50 they more than likely don’t divorce.
Another note: After 30 it get’s very hard to find a quality mate.
Very few people get lucky 2nd time around. You will not have that sexy passion from a normal man you get from a spath so deal with it. Find ways to make your life in the sack more pleasing or learn how to pleasure yourself.
On another note: Spaths love to date married women and disrupt marriages but after they get you they throw you away and move on just like their other relationships. Once they’ve won the game they move on.
I think my advice to you is wise and I hope you take heed.
Joanie
Wait a minute…I don’t agree here at all. Why is idiot being attacked all of a sudden????? When all the married MEN seem to be able to cheat and stay with their wives and no one says anything about that????? I feel like she is just a married woman who made a mistake…was looking for something and ended up with a man who was ALSO MARRIED. And I have read many, many articles where it says that it is NOT always the right thing to tell your spouse you had an affair!!!! Anyway…
Sure – just let the innocent people walk around with all the blame never knowing the truth about their own lives, and feel good that you got away with being a lying, cheating, deceitful, hurtful person. When did this become a spath support group?!?
Joanie – you do get that you are telling her to do the EXACT same thing you’re faulting HIM for doing, right? Interesting distinction. Oh wait – apparently there ISN’T one! Did it occur to anyone that idiot’s husband has more cause to regard her as a spath? The lack of empathy towards those of us who don’t cheat – who are in fact the real victims – is shocking. I’m floored. Do you know who has a HARDER time finding new mates? Victims who were played by spaths for years instead of finding out the truth a lot sooner so they could have moved on instead of losing everything they had. Sure I wish the day I found out didn’t happen. It was devastating. But HELL YEAH I’m glad I was able to learn his true nature and live with the dignity that it wasn’t my fault. The truth will set you free… it’ll set everyone free. “Lie to your husband, then go to church!” WHAT?!? Seriously?!?
Dear Freemama ~ Wow, I can surely understand why this discussion has triggered you. I feel much empathy for you and others who have been cheated on. However, I also feel empathy for people who have made mistakes…
I am a firm believer in honesty. That goes for all of my relationships. Whether it be with my husband, other family members, co-workers etc. I do NOT believe in being deceptive.
However, I do believe that the truth should be spoken/written in a gentle and compassionate way.
We all need compassion and understanding, don’t we?
h2h
Freemama: I am by no means a marital counseling expert but I can tell you this. I’ve been happily married for 30 years.
Me & my husband have made it through thick & thin. The good times & the bad. We have raised 4 kids. Two were mine and two were ours. I college educated 3 so far. The baby is still at home.
Two of my older kids went into great professions and are happily married with families of their own.
I worked very hard at my marriage. I do believe God sent me a good man after everything I lived through with the spath.
As for idiot, yes she should go to church and ask God for forgiveness. Whether she does it directly or through her priest. Whatever her religious persuasion is.
As for telling her husband about her sin, that’s her business if and when she chooses to do so.
I agree with Louise if she tells him she should make sure it is the appropriate time.
I don’t put this woman’s mistake in the same context of what a sociopath does or is. Sociopath’s are not human and therefore you cannot compare them with a normal human individual.
Their sin is not the same as our’s. Their soul is NOT a human soul. Yes, she committed adultery but she was taken in by a charismatic slime ball. A normal man wouldn’t be so quick to have an affair with a married woman out of fear of retribution from her husband.
She should not be involved in this man or woman’s life and should cut off correspondence with them.
She should move on and try to correct her mistake and work at improving her marriage. She has children. Marriage is not a bowl of cherries it takes work.
This is the end of my 2 cents. I will say no more. If any one doesn’t like my response so be it. I will not answer to any one.
This is my own opinion on the matter. You can agree or disagree.
Joanie
Spath’s do NOT deserve that. Giving them that only keeps is tangled in their web. We give it – they never do. That’s exactly what’s happening here. When I make a mistake, I own up to it and make it right. That’s what makes me human. People deserve all the information. If you sell someone a car that looks good on the outside, but doesn’t work – and you don’t tell the buyer that, it is a crime. But when you sell someone on a relationship that they put a lot of effort into but you know it to be a lie, that’s okay? No, it’s not! It is a fraud. A LOVEFRAUD, to be precise.?People have a right to make an informed decision about their lives. It is not okay to deny them that information. I just hope anyone who doubts that poses the question to the “wayward side” board on Surviving Infidelity. If you don’t believe me, trust the people who’ve been through it. You won’t find anyone who says it’s okay – I guarantee it. And those are the people who had the courage to come clean! Many have reconciled . Some have not. In every case, it was always the betrayed who finally got to make that decision.
“Staying together for the kids” was disproved about a decade ago. That’s actually the worst thing you can do as a parent. Your children want you to be HAPPY.
I’ve read the various posts from and to “Idiot”—and my opinion, for what it is worth is that:
She was DISHONEST with her husband, her lover was dishonest with his wife. That doesn’t make either one of the necessarily a psychopath. It takes more than one dishonest act (I won’t call it a “mistake” because it was NOT DONE BY ACCIDENT, she and he both went into this affair with their eyes open and made a conscious choice) to qualify someone as a psychopath.
The problem now seems to be how for HER to get her own life and her own marriage back on track. Apparently neither of the spouses knows about the affair.
I am assuming that “Idiot” (I don’t like that screen name by the way, I don’t think you are an idiot at all) is remorseful and feels like she needs to apologize to the wife of her x lover.
I think that instead of “apologizing” to the wife that she stay COMPLETELY 110% away from both the man and his wife…TOTALLY NO CONTACT….That the “apology” if any is made to herself and her higher power. IN this case “making amends” is going to cause MORE PROBLEMS than it will fix.
As for her own marriage, I suggest that she GET tested For STDS ASAP and that she get into counseling and discuss with the counselor the options of telling her husband about the affair and working on improving the marriage, or leaving the marriage and/or never telling the husband.
If this has been a one-time affair, then the marriage in my opinion might be saved, if this has been a second or third affair, probably not.
To me DIS-honesty totally precludes TRUST in someone and in order to be TRULY INTIMATE you must have TRUST, so without HONESTY there can’t be true intimacy.
I’m not throwing stones at “NOT AN IDIOT”–I’ve done things in my life I am truly ashamed of, and I’ve told my share of lies–but I have resolved now to NOT LIE, and to not make dishonest choices, and to be honest with those I love and my fellow man. I can’t demand honesty from others if I don’t give it myself.
Since it is obvious this man is dishonest, and NOT an Idiot is no longer involved with him (however that came about) if she wants to have a good, intimate and trusting relationship with her husband or any other man, she needs to not only BE trustworthy and honest but demand trustworthyness and honesty from others. A married man isn’t being any of that. He can’t be. She has the option of changing her behavior as well as expectations.
It really isn’t about THEM, as this article points out, it is about US and how we ACT and how we RESPOND.