Custody cases are often referred to as “custody battles”. Lately when I hear this term, I have to chuckle to myself because a “battle” seems so mild and finite compared to what I have been dealing with since the night I fled my ex’s house with my newborn son.
A “battle” might be an appropriate title when the case is between two rational parents. If you are dealing with a sociopath in a child custody case, however, you are probably experiencing what feels more like a war. Some battles are won and some are lost, but it is never just ONE battle with a person like this. I am blessed to be able to share my war stories in hopes to give others ammunition that I didn’t have (and maybe even gather some tips/weapons from others who have been here before me).
My story begins…
The first time I walked into my lawyers office, I probably looked like a crazy woman (and to some degree that is how I felt). I still remember the black sweat pajamas and spit up stained shirt I was wearing that day. These were the only clothes I owned because they had been the ones I fled Lucifer’s house wearing (Lucifer is what I am calling the psychopath – Luc for short). My two week old son was in my arms, despair and fear were the written all over my face, and I was visibly shaking as I held out my hand to meet my new attorneys.
As I sat in their office and told my story, I felt their judgement and disbelief. They had seen so many scorned women come through their office with false accusations and unbelievable stories. To them, I was just another one of these women who was determined to get some sort of revenge on her ex. It took me nearly a year to convince them that we were not dealing with a normal and healthy man. That, in fact, we were dealing with someone who very likely had a dangerous personality disorder – a sociopath.
A little background:
Just a few short weeks after my son was born, Lucifer’s mask fell. After he threatened to kill me, me and baby boy fled the house and never looked back. In the weeks that followed that horrible night, I learned more about Luc than I knew about him in the whole two years we dated. What I learned was very disturbing and, frankly, continues to scare the hell out of me. I learned he had lied to me about everything from his name and age to how he made his money. I also learned that two of the most important women in his life died of unnatural causes. While a lot of terrible things seem to happen around Luc, he has yet to be convicted of any crimes.
Things I have learned from my Custody War:
- Family court is not about what is best for the child. It is only about dealing with parents. Every time I hear people talk about “father’s rights” and “two parents are better than one” I want to throw up. Again, these might be totally justified ideas when the father is not a sociopath. Family court is “one size fits all”. Judges are not interested in making sure the child is safe and healthy. They are only interested in making parents happy enough so they don’t have to deal with the case again.
- Sociopaths are very good at finding people who will lie for them. This includes professionals. Luc actually found a psychologist to take the stand for him and testify that while he was at risk for a mood disorder and “socially maladaptive”, she didn’t have any concerns about him. She said all of this after learning that he had lied to her about previously receiving a psych exam and about what he did for a living (among other things).
- The courts don’t recognize psychological abuse as abuse. After only a few months of supervised visits, the judge awarded Luc unsupervised visitation with my non verbal baby boy. The judge stated that unless baby boy was returned with cigarette burns on his back, the threshold for abuse would not be met. He noted that he didn’t think Luc was a good guy, however, unless Luc was arrested, he would be allowed unsupervised visits with baby boy.
- No matter how many mistakes a sociopath makes in family court, he will always be given the chance to try again. On the day of our initial trial, Luc showed up by himself with nobody to testify on his behalf and not a shred of evidence as to who he was. He believed that the mere fact that his sperm contributed to baby boy’s life was enough for him to be awarded at least joint custody. He wanted the court to make me pay him child support so that he could continue to sit at home and play video games all day. This behavior went on for several months. Luc even tried to get jurisdiction changed to his state after he had disappeared from baby boy’s life for three months without even a phone call. For a while, I felt like I was in court with Luc every other week. These trials were sport to him and he knew that the judge would keep giving him chances. He continued to drag out proceedings and not pay his attorneys, while I drained all of my resources trying to show the courts who his true motivation – money, power, and terror.
- Perjury might still be against the law, but don’t count on it being enforced. Luc is a pathological liar. Throughout the custody war, my lawyers were able to catch Luc in several lies. Let me just give you an example of one of the basic and most glaring lies Luc told to the court. About half way through the year, Luc’s age changed. The age he testified to at the original trial was false (even though he had managed to obtain an official drivers license with that fake age). When we were able to prove this lie through official Social Security and Department of Homeland Security records, he pretended as though he had never testified under oath to a different age. This ridiculousness continued throughout the custody war.
In the year since I left Luc, many people have questioned how I got myself into this situation. Here is the best answer I can come up with:
If you throw a frog into a pot of boiling water, he will jump out; however, if you put that frog in a pot of cold water and slowly bring it to a boil — before too long, you are going to have one dead frog. (In case it’s still not clear…I am the frog and Luc is the pot of boiling water)
The sad reality is that my war with Luc is far from over. Each day, I wake up wondering if I will end up like his older sons mother (in a grave). I have many days when I get discouraged by our terribly ignorant justice system. What is my silver lining, my ray of hope, and why I keep fighting? My baby boy. He is my guardian angel and the reason I wake up every day. I have been through a hell worse than I could ever have imagined in the last year, but I will do it all over again and for the rest of my life if I have to in order to save my son.
I hate to say it, but one of the most important things my therapist told me to do is to stop being such “a good girl”. Sometimes you need to fight fire with fire. In this particular situation, you might not be able to wait until the court allows her to go back to therapy. Could you choose to take her to one of your sessions without the father’s permission? Or…could you ask HER if she would like to talk to someone like a third party? (i.e. adult relative or friend whom you trust)
I also think its important to continue to let your daughter know that you love her and that if something is going on that scares her or confuses her she needs to try and let you know. Also, what about talking to the school about it. Your ex can’t stop the school therapist from talking to her can he? Does he even have to know? I may be wrong here but this seems like one of those situations where you do it and ask for permission later. You have a good reason to go around him and you can’t wait for this situation to get worse….IMHO
Worried Mom, I don’t know what religion you are, but a lot of Protestant pastors have doctorates, and a lot of their training has to do with counseling people, and many of them have undergraduate degrees in psychology, etc. I’m not as sure what the training is for Catholic priests, but I have heard people say that they found a priest who helped them a great deal with family problems of various kinds.
The counselor that I am going to right at the moment is a full time psychologist who I found out after about 18 months was an ordained minister as well. I have been to many psychologists, both court-appointed and self-selected, and this is the only one I have ever really related to.
I bring all of this up because even if you have some sort of court order which prevents you from seeking psychological treatment for your daughter unless your ex agrees, there may not be any barrier to having your daughter (and your son) spend time with a pastor.
Probably all pastors do at least some counseling at some point in their careers, and just like everything else, probably only 10% of them are in the “excellent” category, and teenagers are often very hard to work with, as they often do not open up to adults. And then there is the aspect of the patient being able to form a true connection to the counselor, even if the counselor is a good one.
For those of us on Lovefraud, many of us have had the experience of counselors who thought that “it takes two to tango,” and that if we weren’t so puffed up with pride and self-importance, we would be able to sit down with the ex and work something out. A lot of Christian counselors are probably very naive, and believe that Jesus can solve any problem, because everybody is basically good and both parents want what is best for the kids.
Obviously, by the time you get to LoveFraud, you are well aware that evil really does exist in the world, and people are just plastic pieces on a chessboard to your ex.
If you are dead flat broke at this point, consider having your children attend the youth group at whichever church in your area has the best-run youth group.
Worried_mom, CappuccinoQueen, et al, I want to offer something that I discovered from my personal experiences: do not utter the word, “sociopath,” in your sessions, for the love of GOD. Let your therapist draw their own conclusions. Once a client throws that word out, on their own, a lot of counselors draw back and cannot help but view them with suspicion. Why that is? I can’t answer that, but it is an extreme caution against using the term to directly identify someone. “Fits the profile,” is apparently acceptable…..Again, I can’t explain why this is so, but it is.
Brightest blessings
CappuccinoQueen, the story of the trolling man and his young wife occurred in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. And, I am not exaggerating about the Court’s stance on visitation – it was an outrageous ruling, on every level.
First a brief note to worried_mom – Please get in touch with your attorney, today, and see if he/she can file a motion with the court to have your daughter AND son evaluated and enrolled in therapy by a child psychologist. This SHOULD either make your “x” comply or file a motion in opposition to your motion. If he does that he will have to explain his objections to having your daughter in therapy. I agree with what others have said, he does not want your daughter talking and this isn’t a red flag, it is a big red banner.
CappQueen ~ EXCELLENT article and spot on with your 5 points. I have been out of town for the past 2 months and was not able to reply to your article, but have been reading it and all the excellent comments.
I am one of the walking wounded of the JV/Family Court system. My story, as many on here know, is a little different. My custody “war” was against my daughter, who abused and neglected her son (my grandson) since BEFORE he was born. Our battle has been going on for 10 years now. It has been in four different courts in two different counties. We have gone through four attorneys, four different judges, three magistrates, two GAL’s, one CASA volunteer, three court investigators and our retirement fund. Two years ago, we were awarded legal custody, for the second time. The first legal custody award was 5 years prior, my daughter never bothered to even call, write or visit for those 5 years. She then took us back to court. At that time, a clerical error on the court’s part was found and our custody was immediately voided. Thank God we had an old “emergency temporary custody” order on file and we were able to keep him during the year and a half battle. She now has daily phone calls, weekly visitation, holidays etc. As others have stated, now that she has “won” all this great time with her son, she has disappeared. In the past several months, she has abandoned her second child (3 years old), has been arrested twice for prostitution, once for drugs. She has been in and out of rehab. She is currently on probation and must spend 5 hours a day in some sort of court ordered program and give daily urine samples.
I know as sure as I know my own name that if and when she decides to take us back to court, she will come out looking like “mother of the year” and I will be the villian who “stole” her child. Now that I KNOW this, half the battle is won.
CappQueen ~ you brought up the question of fighting to keep supervised visitation. IMO, with a man like this, I would do all I could to make sure the visitation stayed SUPERVISED. Maybe go about it a little different – offer more supervised visits, or increased time. You said he is already having a hard time keeping what he has – offer more – offer so much time he can’t possibly make it. If he asks the time be changed, let him change it. Look so darn cooperative. At the same time, keep DAILY journals of EVERY little bitty thing, include good things to make it look realistic. If he is 5 minutes late, note it. THEN, before going to court or mediation, condense it, have the original with you, but hand over something like – “in the past 6 months, spathy was offered 45 total hours of visitation, he took advantage of 22 total hours” “in the past 6 months, spathy was offered 24 visits, he took advantage of 15, was late 8 out of the 15 times.”
The object is to make it something simple to read that does not take too much time and effort AND to set him up for failure. Take advantage of his weak spots.
Best of luck to you and your little one. Thanks again for taking the time to write about your experiences.
DONNA ~ thanks so much for making sure articles like this get here to LF. It is so important to let people know that they are not alone in the battles.
Hello Milo,
It’s good to have you back. I wholeheartedly echo the gratitude to Donna. Without this site I think I would be wrapped up and entwined with my toxic past irrevocably.
I would also like to thank……Oh dear it sounds like a speech! But I think it’s important to thank you. Your words of wisdom and your tenacity and willingness to help others is truly awe inspiring. I have missed reading you……you always make me smile and I still use one of your phrases……When tenderising a piece of steak you told me you “beat the holy crapola out of it”……works wonders for internalised anger and general pissed offness.
Hope life is being good to you and yours.
Hi there Strongawoman ~
Glad you are using my steak recipe – lol I have been making it a lot lately. Also I found satisfaction in building a rock garden, that is throwing rocks as hard as I can into a hole in the ground. Works quite well too.
At least my daughter’s latest legal troubles have given me a certain kind of vindication. After years of people believing her and not me, I started questioning my sanity. I think I spent a good deal of time running around screaming “I TOLD YOU SO, I TOLD YOU SO.”
Take care.
Gosh yes there have been times spent questioning my sanity…..a place where I don’t ever want to revisit. I’m loving the rock garden idea. Sounds similar to my visits to the bottle bank. Am sure you must have them in the US…..I like to throw the bottles in the bin “bank” as hard as possible so they smash! It’s very therapeutic, lol.
So glad to hear you are feeling somewhat vindicated. It must have been and still is, I imagine, an uphill struggle. To say the least!
I am humbled by the experiences of you guys who are forced to “negotiate” with these individuals.
Truly, yours is the hardest path. I hold out a hand of friendship and support. I was always too scared to leave the Father of my children. I should have left him but left it until my youngest daughter was 16. A whole lot of damage had been done by then. 18 months later I was in an even worse situ…..I met the spath. He once told my daughter he would turn her world upside down because she had dared to question why I was with such a creep.
I’m ashamed to say that he did. But not for ever. I am out the other side ……some scrapes, bruises and debts to show for my entanglement. I can get over that. I’m guna get over it.
Milo, it’s great to “see” you back…..
Strongawoman, I don’t know if we ever “get over it,” but I personally intend to take these experiences and do as much work on myself as I can. Stargazer’s response to my despair was spot-on, and I agree that my expectations were based upon a broken self.
I am very, very anxious to begin counseling, again. I am paranoid of everyone, hypervigilant, hypersensitive, and I am sick and tired of feeling sick and tired.
Brightest blessings
Well be kind to yourself my dear. I know it’s good to get honest feedback and It’s coming from a good place, but, I was a little concerned for your already fragile state. So glad you are still in positive mode despite the anxiety etc.
Hugs