By Paula Carrasquillo
Editor’s note: Paula Carrasquillo is author of “Escaping the Boy My Life with a Sociopath.” Read Lovefraud’s book review.
A few years ago, I found myself in a relationship with a man who demonstrated zero empathy, zero remorse, zero compassion and seemed to lack any inkling of a conscience.
He lashed out at me often, raged and accused me of doing things I never did and of being a person I could never imagine being.
I tried desperately to make him “see the light” of his negative thinking and paranoia. But all of my pleadings and attempts to convince him that he was wrong about my intentions proved futile. The emotional, psychological and spiritual abuse he inflicted simply became more intense as time passed. And once he started emotionally abusing and harming my five-year-old son, I knew I had no choice but to abandon this man.
It was hard for me to give up on him. He seemed so lost and desperate. He was like an infant who had yet to learn the lessons of life and love.
Little did I know that he was a sociopath whose only usefulness was to teach me how not to be in this world.
What kind of crazy person would date a sociopath?
Many of you may be scratching your heads and wondering how I ended up in a relationship with such a person in the first place. It must have been my fault—I chose him after all.
Rest assured, I am not a masochist; if I had known from the onset of the relationship that I would lose myself, I would have stepped away at first glance.
Sociopaths are very charming, manipulative and cunning. As Martha Stout, Ph.D., notes in her book, The Sociopath Next Door, sociopaths are also narcissistic. Like their namesake of myth, Narcissus, narcissists appear to always and forever be gazing lovingly at themselves.
If you interpret Narcissus this way, you would be half correct. Narcissus is always and forever gazing loving at his reflection, not at himself—there is a difference.
A reflection of a person is a distortion; it is not the inner reality and nuances that reveal our nature. The narcissistic sociopath falls in love with a distorted self-image, not his spirit.
Sociopaths hide their true nature from themselves and from everybody else. Instead of being real and sharing their inner fears and shame, sociopaths present to the world an idealized reflection, a projection of who they want us to think they are and of who they desperately wish to be. These projections are mere shadows and imaginings of their surroundings and are composed of nothing real or tangible.
Just as we fail to grasp the ebbing and flowing tides, we fail to grasp the true nature of the sociopath. From victim to victim, the sociopath changes to fit the world’s expectations of him.
How does the sociopath project a self-image to the world that seems so real to us? Although the sociopath commits no time to self-reflection, the sociopath studies and mocks our nature, the nature of good people, daily. Our surface nature, the things we say and do, are what the sociopath uses to fool us.
When we first meet a sociopath, we would never guess he/she is a sociopath. They seem to act like us and think like us and have the same drive as us. We think the sociopath is normal and healthy and filled with the same wonders and imaginings we have.
Why would we ever think the sociopath was a sociopath?
We are easily fooled, because the sociopath has mastered the art of mimicking and reflecting back onto us our behaviors and conditionings, good and bad. We have unknowingly been the personal and collective Pavlov’s dog for all of the millions of sociopaths in the world today. (Think Jodi Arias, Drew Peterson, Scott Peterson, Michelle Michael and Josh Powell; all excellent examples of how society has been fooled by sociopaths who toss our ability to relate and empathize back at us in order to gain our pity and understanding.)
However, the tide is shifting. More and more victims and survivors of sociopaths are coming forward, sharing their stories and bringing awareness to the masses of the existence and prevalence of sociopaths among us. We are learning how to spot these predators, and they aren’t who and what we have been conditioned to believe.
What is a sociopath, exactly?
According to Stout, sociopaths make up 4% of western society. That’s about 1 in 25 people walking around among us without a conscience, without the ability to measure, or care to measure, the morality of their decisions and actions.
Unlike what we read on the television news or see in Hollywood movies, sociopaths aren’t just serial killers and murderers. Rather, they are members of our communities, possibly our mothers and fathers, our doctors, our lawyers, our judges and even our lovers, who seamlessly blend into society with the rest of us.
Dr. Robert D. Hare, Ph.D., author of Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of the Psychopaths Among Us , has developed a list of 20 sociopathic traits (available on the Key Symptoms page of Lovefraud.com).
Keep in mind that in order for someone to be suspected of being a sociopath and accurately diagnosed, at least 10 of these traits must occur as an all-pervasive, repeated pattern of behavior. More importantly, if and when the individual is called out on any one of these negative behaviors, that person is unaffected by any hurt or harm they have caused. In their minds, their behavior is justified and everyone else is just a bunch of suckers for having been fooled.
Why didn’t you just leave?
I did leave. I left him twice, but both times I was wracked with guilt for abandoning him, so I returned. Regardless of my gut repeatedly telling me to get out and stay out, I ignored my instincts, because I honestly thought he could be “fixed” and that I was the one who could help him.
I was clueless about Hare’s list and had no knowledge of Stout’s book. I did not understand that, as a sociopath, he was incapable of changing his behavior.
I tried. But regardless of my many attempts to meet the demands he placed on me in the relationship, I failed.
He repeatedly accused me of not loving him enough, of cheating on him, of choosing my son before him (like that’s a bad thing), of not paying enough attention to him, of not needing him the way he needed me to need him and of behaving as if I mattered. (But I do matter, right?)
I was a bad mother, a hateful girlfriend, and a disrespectful human being. Imagine the most hateful word you could call someone, and that’s what he called me.
“Whore!”
I gave up.
I avoided social situations in which I had to introduce him to people as my boyfriend. Although no one was able to see through his mask upon first meeting this man, I knew a mask existed and desperately wanted to keep others from the inevitable harm he would cause them once he decided to unmask himself. I wanted to protect others more than I wanted to save myself.
I blamed myself.
As time passed and I listened less and less to my instincts, I became more and more isolated and ashamed of myself. I was ashamed to be with someone who I allowed to control me, someone who lacked care and empathy and who hurt others with impunity. At the same time, I allowed this shame to define my self-worth and self-identity.
Like Narcissus, we see ourselves as a reflection of what and who we are surrounded. When I gazed at my reflection, I could only see the ugliness and darkness inside of me that came from this man’s projections onto me.
Fortunately, unlike Narcissus, we have the ability to change our perspective and unburden ourselves from eternally gazing upon a false sense of self that the sociopath created and presented before us. We have the power within ourselves to reach through the material waters and grasp our spirit and bring it to the surface.
I have no idea what finally took over me and guided me (other than my instincts and the need to keep my son safe), but I finally escaped this man. I left and never returned.
It has taken me nearly two years to regain what was lost: my ability to love myself so I can love others completely.
Along the journey of discovering myself, I gained clarity about life and love that had eluded me my whole life:
The most difficult place to get to in life is a place of self-love. Self-love requires you to care for yourself, respect yourself, take responsibility for yourself, and know yourself. With self-love, we find peace within, which leads to peace without.
I understand now that I needed to experience the sociopath’s darkness in order to find self-love and learn to appreciate the lightness of being.
It’s a lesson I hope I never forget.
Namaste!
Paula,
Thank you for posting your story.I can relate to trying to “fix the sociopath”;even returning twice to do so.In return,as you said,I felt worse about myself,not better.
You also said “If and when the individual is called out on any one of these negative behaviors, that person is unaffected by any hurt or harm they have caused. In their minds, their behavior is justified…”.How often I called him out on something;yet not only me but family members,and he COULDN’T COMPREHEND that he’d done anything wrong! For ex,he would excitedly tell me about the cute babes in the bikinis a few yards over and I’d ask him how he’d feel if I found a couple of muscle builders and told him about them….that was the only way I could get him to understand how it made me feel! Before I left him,he was talking to a former girlfriend on the phone.I asked him how he’d feel if I got back in contact with one of my former boyfriends?!He would never have allowed that!Yet he expected me to grin and bear it!
Thank you, blossom4th. The entitlement and superiority among sociopaths is so high, it’s comical. (At least it’s comical once we’re on the other side of it that is.) I was not even allowed to have any male friends, regardless if they were past lovers or not. Having a Facebook account was viewed as sinful if it meant I communicated with anyone outside of “our circle” of friends. And when you’re aligned with a sociopath, the circle seems rather large at first, but it slowly shrinks as time goes by. And it’s always those who exit the sociopath’s circle who are accused of that which the sociopath himself is guilty. It’s maddening and incredibly insidious.
Paula,
I often called my husband on what I called a “double standard”.To him it seemed normal.He grew up in a home where his mom worked secularly,but otherwise was a ‘homebody’,whereas his father ran around with friends,and had jobs on the side,that was “nobody’s business”.So my husband thought the way to keep his jealousy and paranoia in control was to keep me busy at home;finally isolated at home.
You said,” And it’s always those who exit the sociopath’s circle who are accused of that which the sociopath himself is guilty” While not having any evidence (and probably never will),I always wondered about his jealousy…I was never unfaithful!
Blossom
My husband was exactly the same way. He is so conceited that the day he was served with the divorce papers he had the nerve to send me an email. In it he said “if you think I am coming home by you filing for divorce you are wrong”. I filed for divorce and he truly thought I did it so he will return home. What are they thinking? Their reality is so distorted. To me it seems unbelievable that someone can function in this world thinking that everyone around them are stupid idiots. Every place my soon to be ex husband worked at, his colleagues and bosses were all idiots. That included generals in the army, Cardiac surgeons and many other highly educated professionals. The only person who was worth anything was him. But that was his thinking. I still hope that one day he will wake up and realize that actually he is not God and he will never be above God.
kaya48,
CONCEIT.It is their trademark!When my husband tried to act innocent and like he didn’t ‘understand’ why I would take him to court~~~my dad had had enough! He gave him an ‘earfull’…said he was surprised he didn’t hang up on him!My husband’s reply was that neither of us can remarry.WHAT WORLD IS HE IN?! I wouldn’t stay with him if he was the ONLY MAN in the world!!!
Hi Paula. Thanks for sharing this article and for all your work towards educating people. I can imagine that it must be exhausting sometimes given the fundamentally wrong preconceptions that most people have towards the covert predators who live among us. I wanted to thank you personally for your online presence, and to let you know that it was something you wrote that helped me to connect the dots between narcissism and sociopathy. I had known for a couple of years that I was dealing with a narcissist. Your halfway there analogy and reference to Dr. Martha Stout’s “the Sociopath Next Door” was just what I needed. After reading that book I soon found Donna’s website and have continued my education. Thanks for providing helpful info. It’s easy to get sidetracked by the less useful info out there. Take care.
Thank you for your thoughtful comment, 4Light2shine. It means so much knowing I was able to spark something inside of you through my writing. That’s really all I wish for… that fewer people who have been struck by sociopaths flail about as long as I did trying to make sense of it all. Donna’s site was very helpful in my awakening stage, as well. None of us deserve to be kept in the dark, and I think I’d feel a lot of guilt if I didn’t share what I learned along the way, even if it means sharing my many, many missteps and struggles. Namaste! ~Paula 🙂
For two years I had a most strange relationship with a man I now know to be a sociopath.He had all the signs. He took money from me and promised to pay, lied openly about everything and when finally I had the courage to ask for my money back he went beserk and threatened my family. He would have the most odd reactions to things, like blaming me for things out of my control, like when the restaurant didnt want to give the money back, he called me names and abused me because of that.He never ever kissed me and hardly ever held my hand,and once when I reached to his hand he threw a public tamtrum. He would fight over the phone, accuse me of cheating, accuse me of being deranged, told me I need a psychiatrist. Out of the blue he would tell me all that was wrong with me or write abusive emails, only to write a loving email again when he needed something or when he was afraid of me leaving him.
Once we went for a day trip and he changed from ‘normal’ to abusive in one second without any reason whatsoever, shaking a fist on my face and threatening me, there was absolutely no reason for that, I was stunned as one minute we were talking normally and next he started abusing me.Getting to the location, he again came back to ‘normal’ and was angry that I was still sad about his behaviour.
He flirted with everything in skirts in any location we went, restaurants, gas stations, pubs, day trips. I have to add that I payed ALL absolutely ALL that we did, he never payed a thing.
In the middle of it all he started seeing another woman, lied to me and to her, came back to see me and went to see her the same day, finally she got tired of him and booted him out, so he tried again with me, saying over the phone ‘buy a bottle of wine that Im coming’ like if nothing happened and I was that stupid to go and buy him a bottle of wine.This time I closed the phone on him forever, he has tried again dozens of times.
He used to say to me things like’ you dont understand anything’, ‘you need your head examined’. He also said things to me that he totally denied after, and pretended I had invented them. Once he told me a long story about a person from his family and when I mentioned it again he looked at me like I had invented it and made me doubt my own sanity.
He never showed remorse for what he did and everything was alwaus other peoples problems. Hew told me he would kill someone easily if needed. He had odd reactions to everthing, one of the most strange was when one day I just stopped by the pub where he worked and on seeing me he started screaming he would call the police!!!!!!
It took ages for the light to down on me that I was dealing with a dangerous deranged person and I just escaped with my life and blocked him on my phone and email. Im glad to say that Im happily married to a very normal caring man who thinks the world of me and is very loving and do not fight or say things that hurt me.
Its difficult to escape a sociopath because we get too involved and we thing we can change them, well, we cant and nobody can.
Namaste, Paula. Great thoughts and revelations. Thank you for sharing.
I have been alienated by society (no word of lie). A social pariah. People have jumped away from me like they did to Glenn Close after her role in “Fatal Attraction”.
My existence is not at all good. People have reacted to me in this way because I have been, as Quinn Pierce put it in another blog on this site, in a disassociated ‘fog’. How do you act in this fog? Lifeless…a ghoul from Night of the Living Dead…sad all the time…soul-less…fearful…full of angst…unkempt, both physically and psychically.
No life even when trying to live it. No joy in anything.
Well its a lil twist to my experience. MY DAUGHTER IS A SOCIOPATH AND I DECIDED TO LET HER GO! ive always knew my daughter was deranged but i thought it was from my mom raising her under her sociopath stupidity. My mom stole custody of her when i was 19 years old. My mom lied behind my back to the police i neglected my daughter and she didnt know where i was. My did this when i asked her to baby sit while i hang out at grandmas whom was my breath of life. My mom alwayd send me away from home becuz she had it set up for children services to visit. Proving im not around. I didnt find out about this until i decided to leave her house and get my own apt with a rent subsidy. they found out i didnt have custody during the verfication process. I couldnt take it to court because the case was closed and i would have to get me a lawyer. I was torn. She manipulated forever coming between me and my daughter. Well my fell sick at 53 and the bitch died. My daughter just turn 18 at the tim and now she is 30. since we all know what sociopath does, lets just say my daughter went through it to the point she never ever experienced love or seen it in my mom home. In the last 13 years my daughter was just plain evil. Her siblings would warn me and i will find excuses for her. In the last 4 years weve been close, but my daughter shown no love for me behind my back. She would complasin to me about family members mistreating her the way they did me and when i get upset talking against them ,shevwill have me on speaker or if i text her about them she will show them. Everytime she get a new job or boyfriend she will put on facebook im jealous of her relationships. Her siblings will show me this, she also treat them bad but they dont deal with her and so close to beat her up. Anyway she gave me a grandson, hes 5. I barely know him because she used her stepmother as a victim to think she can be his full grandmother. Last week she accused the woman to be the hand that rocked the cradle and told herbdad his wifebis not welcome in her life. To manipulate the dad she told him all if his wife secrets, now hes on my daughters
…cont, now hes on our daughter willing victim agenda. Now this is what hasppened in the last couple of weeks my daughtet complained about her new boyfriend like she is a victim of his control, i backed her 100% with advice empathy and security. She even set it up for mebto get upset with him to the point i would fuss him out, now that im out the fog i noticed he would trybto defend him but shevwill over talk him wuth disrespect and he will look hurt and scared. The fog made it look like guilt. Do one day she asked me to keep her child i said yes but later she need to get a few things for me i have no car. AShe never showed up. I called and waited 6 hrs to reach her, so i textvher that i will leave hervson home alone if she dont answer just to get her to pick up, her boyfriend responded shes on hervway…anothervtwo hrs. She comes in upset running out the door. Said nothing. The next morning i wad concern and basically appoligized and told her the reason for the scare tactic. My daughter wasnt concern about the incident. She totally made it about me disrespecting her man and her man always liked me and all ever did was be negative towards they relationship i kept telling him howvyou was but he always had your side and so on. Im texting him to find out whats going on, shebis attacking me ttelling me to not text him she is next to him, leave them alone before they disrespect ne, and they going to block me. Im crazy and hearing voices, lol and lol, i kept telling her she was the one with the boyfriend problem. Do you guys know what she said? she said she was venting and he is good to her 90% of the time and she said bad things about him because single women gets jealous and start problems if she told good stories. Now her boyfriend hate me because he see im craxy and evil. I totally and completely went cold numb and empty. I saw a sociopath. I begin to think back and sawvi was in danger of a sociopath that is my daughter. I blocked her every access to my life. I told her siblings im done. Their sister is a maniac. im out the fog and no more excuses for her. Her history and misasion is to sabotage love around ppl and she dont have it to give. Then i began to listen to my other kids stories of being her victim. I just got rid of my sociopath boyfriend due to this sight i also have givin up on my daughter. Its so much more stories about my daughter victimizing me it will take a book to right about it.
Paula-
Your tale resonates on so many levels. Not only is it important to get the word out regarding how emotional predators operate, but also, what the toxic glue is that holds us in the relationship. Once people understand how emotional attachment works, it becomes far easier to detach and maintain objectivity.
Like you, I suffered a bewildering attachment to a man. Also, like you, it wasn’t until I saw the potential of harm toward my child that I was able to come to my senses. A great book to read that deals with this issue is The Betrayal Bond, Breaking Free of Exploitive Relationships. I’m also a hair’s breath away from releasing my own book on the subject.
We are all made up of brain chemistry. The same neurotransmitter that makes decent people trusting, loving and kind, works conversely when it is lacking in a person’s brain.
Acts of betrayal and abuse often trigger the exact opposite reaction than people would suspect, because the cessation of brain chemistry that makes us feel loved, creates longing instead of release. It works similarly to the craving of an alcoholic for alcohol. Because the chemical reaction is an unconscious one, we don’t see it, therefore, we don’t know to control it because it is controlling us.
Something has to trigger the end of a Betrayal Bond. For us it was concern for our children because we valued them even more than we valued ourselves. We are the kind of people who put loved ones first, and the predators in our lives spotted that in us as soon as we met. They have highly sensitive radar for sniffing suckers like us from across the room. My experience and knowledge have made me proud that I was a sucker. My experience has also taught me that I should be more wary of letting people know what a sucker I am when we meet. I no longer wear my heart on my sleeve. Some people call that “jaded.” I call it being “heart smart” and here’s a poem I’ve written about it:
Heart Smart
He’s so charming, it’s alarming
Bells and whistles sound.
He’s got flair, so debonair,
And you’re the mark he’s found!
Gifts, affection, no objection?
Moves in for the kill”..
Money, stature, fuels his rapture,
Beware of the thrill!
Don’t be lured, until you’ve heard,
All you need to know.
Check his past, don’t move too fast,
Or he’ll reap all you sow.
Want and need, are fraught with greed,
True love may not be part.
Don’t let him use, a caddish ruse,
As evil steals your heart.
Don’t fret you’ll lose, someone you chose,
By practicing “heart smart.”
(For the men out there who’ve sustained similar injury, please just substitute “he” for “she.” I in no way want to overlook you.)
For people who are not banged upside the head by the blow that set us free, it is difficult to draw the line. There is no clear cut awakening. That’s why this site and the improvement of public awareness are so important. Once a person understands they are with an emotional predator, they need to get away as far as they possibly can, as soon as they can, and never look back! We can’t change their way of operating, they will simply find a new cast of characters once we are no longer fooled by them.
Your article is immensely helpful.
JmS
I’ve found that we get lured into the sociopath’s twisted way of thinking but after awhile, one starts to realise that what they are saying is: “do as I say, not as I do”. We also allow our boundaries to be compromised to the point where our fundamental morality no longer exists. This is how a victim slowely gets sucked into the distorted, Alice In Wonderland type world totally unrealted to reality. We come to justify actions which we know, down deep, are evil.