Wow, last week’s course with Dr Robert Hare was absolutely amazing! A huge eye-opener on how offending psychopaths are measured and dealt with in the criminal justice system — and also an insight in to the astonishing man who has given so much to so many of us. I’m planning to cover more about that in future posts…
This week I’d like to talk about another subject that came up last week. It was also spelled out loud and clear in the Fishead movie that I know many of you have seen. It’s the point that, even though it’s widely acknowledged that a psychopath cannot ”˜get better’ (and therefore it stands to reason that we cannot change the way they behave) it’s also true that the vast majority of the population are inadvertently supporting these types of people as they continue inflicting damage on individuals and on society itself.
I know”¦ that was a pretty strong statement to make. Believe me, it’s not one I make lightly.
The movie, Fishead, made a point that I found absolutely fascinating. Talking about famous psychopathic leaders, it invited us, the audience, to consider whether it is solely the psychopath who is responsible for the bad things that happen. Couldn’t it also be argued that it is the rest of us who are also in part responsible, because we are allowing the destructive behaviour to continue? Albert Einstein said, “The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it.”
Stand Up, Speak Out
I had to agree — it made perfect sense to me. In particular, I could identify with this from my years of experience working with teams and individuals in my professional career. Too often people will choose to keep their heads down, say nothing or let things wash over them in order to keep the peace. They’ll smile and say that everything is ”˜fine’”¦ Despite the fact that they may be desperately unhappy with a situation or a person they work with! Everything is far from fine. And no, it’s neither OK nor right that people should be expected (even encouraged!) to carry on regardless. This isn’t what the human race is about! This isn’t how we’ve made so much progress! This isn’t how it’s meant to be! My job, in those instances, is to encourage people to speak out and find a way to openly and honestly address issues in a healthy way that benefits them as an individual as well as the wider team. And it works. Every time.
It was the next part, though, that really made me sit up and take notice. Because just a few moments later, the film explained what percentage of the remaining population would need to do something different in order to have an effect on the rest. Before the answer was given, I had a stab at guessing what the figure would be, and felt confident that they would say around 20 — 30%. But you know what? I was totally wrong. The film said that it would take just 5% of the population to wake up and make a stand against the unacceptable — even just the small things — to make sociopathic behaviours that much harder to stick. Just 5% of us”¦ that’s all. Just that small amount to stand up to actions we know are wrong. To say “no” when we’re not happy. To demand a change when something goes against our values. Because when one of us starts standing up for what is right, then it encourages others to do the same. It wakes people up. It gives people permission to speak out and stop tolerating stuff that is harmful or hurtful to ourselves and to others.
“Having good morals” somebody said in the film “is contagious — just as much if not more so than bad morals!”
The thing is, though, while we block our instincts, shut down our emotions, and glide around in a pretend bubble of “everything’s fine” we are providing the perfect breeding ground for predators. They’re free to fine-tune their approach, hone their skills, and continue with their actions against humankind because we do nothing to stop them or at least ”˜call them’ on what they are doing.
Behaviour Breeds Behaviour
Yes, this is a scary world. It is also a world of opportunities and magic. A world where we can make more of a difference than most of us realize. And, in my opinion, the more people who become aware of how little is necessary to make a massive difference, more will join our growing army of fighters determined to do something to stop the predators, warn others against them and help those of us who have already been hurt by them.
It doesn’t take much you know. It really doesn’t. From my own experience, I know that as I have become stronger at simple things like setting boundaries and saying no, then my perspective of the world and, therefore, my experience of the world continues to change for the better. I feel more confident, and more in control. My heart is more open and I can clearly see with love and kindness. Each day I am more joyful, and each day brings more wonderful surprises. Did anything change on the outside? Does it mean that I have managed to rid the world of people who would do me harm? No, it doesn’t. It simply means that what I am now allowing in to my world is a deliberate and conscious choice — and I no longer stand for any kind of nonsense.
Can you imagine what would happen if more of us took the conscious decision to say no to anything that wasn’t useful or pleasing in our life? Can you imagine how inspiring it would be to others? Can you imagine how wonderful things could eventually become — and how impossible it would be for sociopaths to thrive as they have been”¦?
My friend Rachel pointed out when I was telling her all about last week’s course “Well, we can’t keep all the psychos locked up — so we’ve got to learn how to fight against them!”
So I did some simple sums in my head. Granted we don’t know for sure, but let’s say that 1% of the free population is psychopathic. We all do know for sure that these people will all have many victims — most running in to double figures when you take in to account that they may have hurt colleagues as well as friends and family, let alone the mega-sociopath who may have hatched a scheme that defrauds hundreds or thousands! So, for argument’s sake let’s say that if each has ten victims, then at least 10% of the population has had personal experience of a psychopath — regardless of whether or not they recognize what they were dealing with. That doesn’t necessarily matter. What matters is the fact that they have been hurt. That in some way (or many ways) they have experienced the destruction that these individuals continue to wreak on us, their unsuspecting victims. The original nice guys who naturally choose trust over suspicion.
It Only Takes 5%
So, what do you think might happen if just half of those people could learn how to re-set boundaries? How to speak out? How to stand up? How to reclaim who they are? How to consciously choose a life that’s filled with happiness and positive experiences”¦ ? We’d have the 5% that the film talked about and, as I’ve already said, it’s just as simple to copy the happy stuff — if not easier in fact! The good stuff, the positive results, can be hugely contagious. What chance would the baddies have in such a positive environment where people would no longer stand for negative behaviour? Of course I can’t prove it”¦ but I’m pretty sure that they couldn’t survive.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again because I feel it’s important. It’s up to all of us now. We all have the power to heal and to make a difference – no matter how impossible it may seem at times. Yes, I know from experience that it isn’t easy. I also know that we are all at different stages of our journey and I also acknowledge that not everyone will be interested in reaching out any further. It doesn’t matter. Because either way, all of us here have first hand experience of “the dark side” — we know what it means and we understand the dangers. And our numbers are growing.
I believe that we are the ones who can band together and make a real difference. From where I am standing, it is our painful experiences that make us authentic, giving us the hard-earned power to understand and empathise at the deepest level. We’ve been there, seen it and got the T-shirt, and perhaps have more reason than others to make sure that we find a way to stop these people continuing to hurt us and others.
What do you reckon”¦? 😉
I see freezing as a type of panic… I see dissociation as remaining in an analytical observation mode
It depends for me, certain things cause me to freeze up… like my kids doing something dangerous and scary. I will definitely freeze.
If it with me, I will either shake and feel very cold, and not be able to speak, and basically fall apart, perhaps crying.
Or, kick into survival mode and haul arse out of whatever situation is going on.
Katy,
The first time I ever experienced the “freezing” I was 4 months preg with my first son, driving a small VW bug, at 70 MPH on a freeway, and my left front wheel slipped off the pavement about 6 inches down on to the shoulder and that wouldn’t ahve been a problem if I’d had time to just slow down and then get back up on the pavement, BUT there was a bridge abutment coming up and I was going to hit it before I could slow down.
I looked and saw it and “said” to myself inside my head. “I am going to die, there is nothing I can do. I am sorry the baby is going to die with me.” GO TO BLACK.
Wake up from BLACK in back seat of overturned car, (no seat belts in those days) What had happened while I was BLACKED OUT was, my husband had woken up, saw what was happening, grabbed the wheel, spun the car around backwards, it hit the bridge BACKWARD then rolled four times down a steep embankment and came to rest on its top. A couple from NJ had seen the wreck and stopped and were there when I woke up out of the BLACK.
I had a broken neck and broken back but NO spinal cord damage
I was taken to a hospital in AZ and put in removable casts like two turtle shells strapped together (those were the days before “halos” which screws the head to the brace to hold it in place, but I did fine actually.
I didn’t know what I did at the time it happened, I just knew that was how I thought and how I reacted. While I was “blacked out” which was well before the actual impact, I did not feel or remember any pain, or the jolts or the injuries I had all over my body. No , but bruised to heck and back.
Another time I was being charged by a rhino in South Africa, and I froze…couldn’t have out run it anyway…but fortunately it didn’t get me…another time was being charged by a cow that was determined to run over me, son D kept his head and threw his hat at it, hitting it in the eye ball with the bill of his baseball cap and turned it off me. At the plane crash I kept on functioning, and at car wrecks and medical emergencies when I was on the rural volunteer fire department I never had any problem, even when once there was a gun involved in a family shooting we were called to where a person was pretty badly shot up.
I think you can LEARN to not “freeze” in some kinds of emergencies, like medical workers…but other times, I think the “auto button” kicks in and you cant’ control the freezing as it is instinctual. The thing the car wreck blacking out voluntarily did show me though, was that the antelope were not in pain, they had “blacked out” from the trauma and the adrenaline overload.
Here’s some explanation regarding dissociation
http://www.therapist4me.com/Dissociation.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociation
http://www.isst-d.org/education/faq-dissociation.htm
a common daily dissociative state according to both sources would be when you’re driving the car to work… you zone out during the driving and cannot really recollect the way over to your destination. Auto-pilot is a type of dissociation.
Darwinsmom
I WISH I could have dissociated during the trauma from my husband, maybe the pain wouldn’t be so crippling.
B/c my husband convinced me that I was a crazy woman, when I left him I wanted to NOT BE CRAZY (my mom was a crazy woman, I did not want to be LIKE HER.). SO I’ve read a LOT of books on the brain, and have had classes in A and P, biochemistry, etc so I have the capacity to understand the books or AMA articles, etc. I am interested in different points of view and yours is one I’ve seen in theory but never read – where S and P are separated into biogenetics vs environmental beyond the theoretical (opinion). Will you share books which form your understanding of sociopathy vs psychopathy? How do they account for anomalies? Boy if we could predict it or test for it, think what that would mean?!! I sure would not give birth to a psycho if I knew my baby definitely possessed that attribute. Who cares what the sex of a child is… I’d wanna know if my baby had the attibute to be a pedophile. I wouldn’t want that kid to be born either.
I met my bff’s MIL when she got married. Then she had a baby who did NOT meet the MIL until she was 8 yrs old. Yet that little girl is a carbon copy of her grandma, all that hysterical response drives me batty. Her dad is not like that, her mom isn’t. But Granny? BINGO. Skipped a generation. Or at least seems to have.
“Women who love psychopaths” explains sociopathy as non-genetic and psychopathy as genetic.
The skipping of generations… when I was a young child, people would often remark that I looked like my mom, but had the temperament of my father. However, when I had my sense-of-life crisis at 27-28 my mom revealed that I actually remind her in many ways of her own father, my grandfather. He was an emotional and dreamy like man, creative, idealistic (he was an architect)… but also the chaotic professor who was clumsy when it came to daily life and administration stuff.
I wish I didn’t dissociate from the hurtful and painful moments (some of them very early on in the first couple of weeks), because I would have been more aware of how hurtful he was. Maybe I would have run sooner. It was only towards the end, the last half year, that I truly started to think it would be better to stop the relationship. I was hurting so often, that I could not dissociate anymore from it. And when he ditched me the way he did, it was so overwhelming that I was able to totally reject him. It’s in the weeks after that, that I started to have dreams of the early weeks and the painful moments then. I would wake feeling gutted. Only then did I realize I was finally feeling the pain he inflicted so early on already, and how painful it had been, enough to even then say ‘run’
I agree that Dr. Leedom and Sandra Brown described it in that book at the “differences” but that is their opinions, not the way the words are commonly used in research or among professionals and non professionals alike.
Dr. Robert Hare one of the earlier of the researchers prefers psychopath, but because of some political differences of opinion the DSM committee did not go with his name recommendation.
Functionally though “a rose by any other name…..”
Darwinsmom
What about when someone is already what we call sociopathic or psychopathic, that is without conscious connection to empathy and they have a disconnect from reality?
My husband is def without connection to empathy, but I will say that I can “wobble” him. I say weebles wobble but they don’t fall down. That’s him, a weeble (doesn’t anyone remember those childhood toys?). I can TEMPORARILY knock him off his center of control, and it’s like he short circuits, I call it a psychotic break, except it only lasts for a few hours like 12 -24 hrs. He goes off by himself and comes back centered and in control of his logic again (I don’t agree with his logic that he must protect the BORG, but he does have it, twisted that it is.)
Darwinsmom
Sandra Brown has credibility issues so while she writes some stuff okay, her conclusions are not consistent with her theories (not logical conclusions based on her premises.) She write Opinion, with a capital O. No science at all. Subjective. I don’t mind opinion when it’s clear logic that gives me a place to begin testing the theory.
What do you think of Steven Pinker?
My collegues BIL is a pediatric neurosurgeon. I’ve read a couple of his books.
When I mention dissociation and serial killers in literature, it’s because I used to be an amateur researcher regarding the Jack The Ripper murders on the Casebook website. I published an article in an Australian Ripper magazine on one of the non-canonical murders, and argued how she most likely was one and why it deviated from the canonical pattern and actually was the learning experience for the serial killer to develop his pattern with the canon-murders. I did this research between 1998-2002.
Often the literature would not go into this from a psychopathic or sociopathic point of view at all, just the serial killer patterns and myths. One of the often remarked states mentioned is that of dissociation.
However, since now I’m mostly learning about psychopathy and sociopathy, for which serial killing is an extreme form of psyhopathy. But I have not seen dissociation mentioned.
So, I’m trying to see how the two can match.
But here’s a link to literature on the mind of serial killers, where dissociation is mentioned. http://www.scribd.com/doc/13073170/Analysis-of-the-Mind-of-Serial-Killers
just type ‘dissociation’ in the search option at the bottom of the screen and you’ll be directed to it in the book. The book is actually a study on literature about serial killers… so it sums up the different researches done and the different point of views and theories.