Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following letter from a reader who we’ll call “Nora.” The names in this letter have been changed.
One Saturday, in October 2009, I married someone I thought was the man of my dreams. When this man came into my life last year, I had suffered several losses and was very vulnerable. I thought I had finally met an honorable, loving, understanding, romantic, Christian man. We laughed together, planned our future together, and seemed like the perfect couple. I should have remembered when something seems too good to be true, it probably is. Although I didn’t expect everything would always be rosy, soon after we were married, I discovered that everything I thought I knew about this man was based on lies. He is the complete opposite of who I thought he was and has no concept of the truth or of being in a committed, loving relationship.
From my research since leaving him, I believe this man is a sociopath, and nothing, or no one, is going to change him. He initially presents himself to be a charismatic, romantic, faithful man, but soon the real man begins to emerge – a cheating, abusive, pathological liar. When I started questioning inconsistencies in his stories, he turned everything around to try and make me feel guilty for doubting him, and that worked in the beginning. Even though I was confused as to why I was no longer feeling love from this man, I tried to convince myself that everything would work itself out. When I started to realize this man had duped me, I also started to realize he was incapable of truth or love. The fact that we recited our wedding vows in the presence of God and family meant nothing to him. Everyone, including myself, asks the same question. Why did he marry me so quickly and what did he hope to gain? I don’t think there’s an answer to this question that makes sense.
Met on a dating site
I joined a dating website in July 2009 for the same reasons that most women like me do. I was having another birthday that month and decided I wanted to meet someone to enjoy life with, as I had been living as a single woman for over five years and hadn’t dated until the last year. Since I hadn’t met anyone the usual ways, I thought this would be a good way to pick someone who matched what I was looking for in a man. It didn’t take long to get winks from lots of men, but one man’s profile stood out from the others. We are both over 50 years old, but he is several years younger than me, and I often joked that my first husband was the same age as me and my second husband older, so I was looking for a younger man the next time.
We met for our first date a few weeks later at a public garden near my home. When I got out of my car, he met me with a dozen red roses, the first of many to come. At first, he was very quiet but told me later it was because I took his breath away and he hadn’t expected me to have that affect on him. We went to dinner that night at a nearby restaurant. The evening was perfect and he was everything I had hoped for. We agreed on just about everything and the next two months seemed as if we had been together forever — that we were who the other had been hoping to find.
My mom’s advice was not to rush into anything but he convinced me we should get married, and no one tried to talk me out of getting married so soon because they tell me now I seemed happier than I had been in a long time. I never once felt alarm or noticed anything that appeared to be red flags. If I had taken my mom’s advice and waited, the truth would have eventually come out before making the biggest mistake of my life.
Quick wedding
Soon after we started dating, “Gabe” booked tickets for a day trip excursion out-of-state. When we started talking marriage, it was decided we would get married in an outdoor wedding gazebo with the fall leaves as a backdrop on the same day as the planned trip. We left on Friday, the day before the excursion and wedding ceremony, to obtain our marriage license that he applied for online. He was anxious the entire trip, worrying that we wouldn’t get to the license office before they closed. Our children were meeting us the next day for the wedding ceremony and he said he didn’t want anything to upset our plans. Once we got the license, he relaxed, and the planned excursion the next day and the wedding ceremony that night are still wonderful memories and always will be as are the days leading up to that date.
The next day, we returned home and it was decided we would start moving my furniture and belongings to live in his house. My new husband, appearing to show concern, kept asking me if I was sure that’s what I wanted to do because his house is miles away from everything I am used to. I know now that his “concern” was how he was going to keep me from discovering the truth about his numerous lies. I told him I loved living away from the big city and didn’t mind the longer drive to visit with my children or get to my job. I had been renting my condo for over five years, so he said we would keep it until the first of the year, and then purchase it and rent it out.
Discovering the lies
Turns out, Gabe had not been divorced for three years as he told me. His divorce was final one month before our first date, making him ineligible to remarry sooner than 60 days. No wonder he was a wreck about getting the marriage license. He had lied on the marriage license application stating his last divorce was May 2006.
Gabe started to “disappear” and have lame excuses when he returned. He had said he would help pay my rent and car payments to help me with the expenses of two households, but he never gave me a penny. I discovered he was talking to other women online, but didn’t say anything at first. One night I asked who one of them was. He said a friend of his for over 20 years. Turns out, she was someone he had hooked up with in late 2007. He told this woman he was divorced and had an affair with her for several months before she became suspicious and called it off.
The real man
The last week I was there, the real Gabe emerged. I discovered he had changed all of the passwords on the computer and blocked me from using it, but this time, I wasn’t backing down. I knew he was hiding things from me and let him know that’s why I had checked the computer history. I found out he hadn’t paid any of the bills he claimed to have paid for the past two months.Gabe then told me our marriage was a mistake, we wanted different things in life, he realized he never loved me and to pack my things and get out of “his” house.
At first, I refused, thinking we could work it out, but after talking to my mom, something she said clicked in my head, and I suddenly realized what I had to do and started packing.
The day before moving, Gabe and his son moved my furniture to the downstairs garage. I rented a 16-foot truck, and my daughter, son and I loaded my belongings in it and moved out on what should have been our two-month anniversary, back to the condo I was lucky to still have.
More lies
Since leaving him, I have found out the truth about so many of his lies. He isn’t a military hero as he claims. He doesn’t have a Purple Heart Award or a Bronze Medal. He uses a fabricated DD214 and Bachelor of Science diploma as credentials. He never went to college to earn a computer science degree. The university he claims to have received his degree from never heard of him.
The ring – he made a big deal about giving me “his mother’s ring.” He told me he had never felt about anyone the way he did about me, and I was so special, he wanted me to wear it. Turns out, it isn’t even his mother’s ring. He tries to guilt me into returning the ring, saying it’s a family heirloom, and he will pay for a divorce if I return it. Like I’m going to believe another lie of his? There are too many lies to list, but they also include some really insignificant ones that do nothing other than to inflate his image.
Online profiles
I started profiles as his wife in hopes of warning other women about him and not to date him. I made it so anyone searching his name would find my profiles about him instead. He’s been seen dating and I’ve had him bumped from two dating websites after informing them he’s not single as he claims, but still married.
Who found my profiles were other women from his past who he lied to. They have let me know how thankful they are that I exposed him and that it has helped them to understand what they couldn’t before now. We have become informed by sharing and comparing our stories. We’re able to laugh at how he uses the same stories and calls us all “Pretty Lady” and “Bella Principesa.” Our “support group” has drawn us together and we now focus on hopefully sharing our knowledge with others.
Won’t divorce
I can’t get him to divorce me, but that’s one of his MO’s. He tells everyone his wives are the ones who cheated on him and divorced him after leaving him with their debts. He’s the only one who did the cheating. He’s the one who is financially irresponsible and has filed for bankruptcy — a fact he dropped on me after we were married. He had shown me a meticulously kept check register that turned out to be a fake. He refuses to pay for a divorce, so for now, other women are safe from him.
After leaving him and realizing he had not been truthful about his sexual encounters, I went to my doctor to be tested. Thankfully, only one STD test came back positive and it was treated with antibiotics. When I informed him he might need to get tested since he was having sex with other women, his only response was I got infected from improper feminine hygiene. He says ignorant things like that to try and upset me, but I know the truth, and I can hold my head high knowing I did nothing wrong other than to love him and trust him without really knowing anything about him.
I hope others will see there’s no shame in this happening, but I also hope they will read my story and others like it and think as many times as it takes to really get to know a person before making a bad decision while thinking something like this, or worse, can’t happen to them.
I mean P ex-boyfriend, not ex-P boyfriend
sweetcynic,
Isn’t it nice to have wonderful people in your life, who are there when you need them most? You just want to be the same back at them.
sweetcynic – your father sounds wonderful.x It warms my cockles to hear about your relationship:)x
I think I get into such a funk sometimes about never having people around me whom I can trust (big boo-hoo pity party me)… both you and bluejay have given me more positive food for thought. so thankyou too:)x
WOW!
OUr stories are so much alike!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks for sharing yours.
How did you get him bumped off the dating sites?
Disappointed,
I am sure there are many more readers, than posters, but -as you know – this is a great site for support and information exchanges. I’ve learned a lot by asking the questions
I am sure if you choose and request that some of posters do not respond to your posts, your request will be honored
there is something liberating about being able to share your story and get feedback too. I am sure we are as different as we are alike in our grief, and each one deals with it in their own and unique way. I felt compelled to respond to you because nobody else did yet. but, I don’t do empathy well. Hell, I am just happy when I don’t offend anyone.
Dani S
Ha Ha I thought he was ‘gorgeous’ too, what kinda spell was I under. All the feelings I had for him are really falling away…the guy was rotten to the core…He “thinks” he is GODS GIFT TO WOMENKIND he would have no problem feeling ENTITLED to any woman he likes, using all his slimy ugly cunning….picture this good looking guy smiling and the rotten teeth…that’s my lasting image of him.
He was using my money to get fillings etc but you would need replacement teeth his problem was so bad….METH? no…this guy despised drugs (and drug addicts) but I have seen him accept a smoke that was being passed around…ONLY so he could blend in. I would say it was sweets and not brushing his teeth…he was a minimalist when it came to grooming.
He travelled light, just enough so he could up roots anytime and walk. As long as he was moving he was living….he either moved around fast or conked out asleep, not much in between….but boy could he shmooze up to women, he had this honest vibe (Yet was a total liar) I think he was so dedicated to getting by undetected, he would really model honesty, loyalty, genuineness – they were the class acts if you like, his winning deck of cards. I can just hear him bullshitting some innocent woman out there, he had so many on the go the last time I heard (year ago)
I would really love to put a warning out there about him but fear the consequences. I am getting my life back, surely that’s enough. I can’t track this evil…but I do feel restless that he is out there like a modern day vampire sucking the life blood out of innocent empathic women (and god help the children) yes I am angry…I could really destroy a psychopath today with this anger!!! they would probably enjoy it too much
disappointed
Don’t let one person (or anyone) stop you from expressing yourself (like you just did) You are as valid as anyone else on this site and I would love to hear more of what you think, but obviously you have been here longer than me and I accept how you feel. Every one is going to be different, difficult, yet it is still okay to express it. That is my belief otherwise I wouldn’t be here either.
I am very angry and whilst I apologise if I trigger anyone, it’s just where does this anger go? I don’t want to spew at loved ones who by and large don’t really “get “how impacted I am by this experience…you folk here on lovefraud DO understand. I am a year away from this man and still I am haunted by revenge fantasies, withdrawal from life, isolated with the impact because no one wants to hear it…why would they ..it’s nearly impossible to understand unless you have been there.
Of course there is going to be ‘group dynamics’ whether we are in the same room or on a site, the energy has certain dynamics.
We usually end up assuming a role we had in our family of origin UNLESS you decide to interact DIFFERENTLY (My role was rebel and I tend to want to tussle with your view of the world, once I cop on to what im doing I stop it, and just listen because I have reframed it to everyone’s opinion is valid whether I agree or not ) so I invite you back on here to try and relate to ‘that person’ again with exactely how you feel, my total support to you in doing that.
Dear Nora, Thank you for sharing! I find no shame at all in what you’ve written; instead I find courage and strength! You spoke of many of the traits these people have and I related to much of what you said. You also sound as though you are well into the healing process and that you know yourself well. Kudos to you!
My ex-spath was still married when I met him, though I didn’t know it. He was divorced 2 months after we had met. He had failed to tell me this. He also failed to tell me he was an addict and had a criminal record as well. I had always believed that a person is innocent until proven guilty. Today, I don’t think that way at all.
Like your ex, mine moved with lightening speed. Before I could blink, we were under the same roof and he was calling either home or where I worked constantly to just tell me how much he loved me. Yeah…right.
I had to smile about the roses. My ex sent roses to where I worked, constantly came home with them or something else for me. This was all in the first several months of meeting him. Those I worked with thought he was wonderful and that I was a lucky woman. Little did they, or I, know what was to come.
And then the mask came off. I found out he had cheated on me and his response was INSANE. It became a twisted, contorted mess of lies. He “slipped”. He didn’t mean it. (That part is true, they really do NOT mean it becaue it means nothing to them.) The abusive, snide comments started and then he “fell off the wagon”, which I didn’t know he had been on in the first place. He was on dating sites, looking for women and men as well. He took thousands and spent it on drugs. All of it was too much.
There must have been a part of me that was paying attention in all of this because I never married him. Twice, he gave me a ring and I said no. I’m not surprised your ex won’t agree to the divorce. There is “something” in them that hangs on even while they have moved on to their next conquest. Divorce is something I have not had to contend with and I thank God for that! We do have a son together, but he isn’t even making any real attempts to see this child now.
I am SO glad you connected with his exes. While it must have been bittersweet, this is power in knowledge and out of this must have come a sigh of relief that you were not alone. While I have not connected with any of my spath’s exes, I truly believe today that they weren’t the witches he described them as. I’m quite sure they were, and still are, very nice women who happened to be the perfect prey for him at the time.
Recently, I came across an ad my ex spath had placed on a dating site. He clearly states that he HAD to leave his last partner(me) due to verbal and mental abuse and that he is looking for a REAL person who will treat him as well as he treats them. I’m thinking he’s not getting any bites at all! LOL! I actually laughed when I read it and there’s a part of me that wants to warn others about him. I just want to do it legally so as not to put myself in any trouble. I applaud you for contacting the dating sites and telling them about him. It most likely won’t stop him from doing what he’s doing, but if any of us can take any steps to at least try to help others, that’s a good thing!
And YES, you can hold your head high. I’ve come to realize that while my ex’s love wasn’t real, mine was and that’s OK. It is not ours to carry their lack of emotion and it’s not about being “good enough” for them. They simply cannot truly love.
Thanks for sharing and keep coming back! LF is a wonderful place and has been a saving grace for me.
Hugs,
Cat
Dear Nora
thankyou for having the bravery to share your story – you are with kindred spirits here who have been through the chaos and hell of a relationship with a sociopath. I am sorry you went through that – there are no words to describe the pain and anguish it causes. Well we each know that if we think back far enough.
Mine was similar to your situation. Quick courtship and into marriage quickly. Mine wasn’t even divorced from the previous wife at the time we met. After that a decade of awfulness while he tortured me in mental ways that I can’t even now coherently articulate. I lost myself in it. It was profoundly damaging and I am not the same afterwards.
I hope you’re recovering well from this and healing each day that goes by.
It is true that there are these disordered people in the world. It is true that the things they do fool the unsuspecting who believe them. And we were all caught there.
Caught like fish in a net.
Because what they did fulfilled some ideas we had about the way things ought to be. We did accept what we were offered.
Its not good or bad – its just true that we did. And that when we realized what was true about what we accepted, it rocked the foundations of our belief systems.
After discovering the truth, we are not the same. We can not be.
I take a dim view of anyone who says they would not have been fooled because I think that anybody could be fooled by another who does so with intention and there are greater and lesser proportions of it in all people.
There is no black and white, there are degrees.
This is true all over the world. But what we know is true, here, now.
I think Nora,Cat, Pollyanna and I married the same guy. It is amazing how close the stories are.
For my own part, I am grateful to the people who were looking for him who ultimately saved me from a long time in hell because it would have taken me a long time to find my way here I am afraid.
And for all of us here, away from where we were, of a different mind, we have much fortune. I can not help but feel for the many who belong but have not arrived here -yet.
This IS a journey not back from but in a direction that for so many of us is very different from where we might have headed without the experience that brought us here. And life has always had the power to serve any of us grievous experience. There are many options for that.
So I look for a way to be thankful for the chance to learn and to grow. I look for ways to release and let go of the one person who brought the experience to my door.
And for safe ways to enjoy the part of myself who was innocent and child like enough to trust. I won’t give her up, but, I must, as we all do have to protect that part myself better.
The key in it all, in all the writing, story telling, discovery and legal remedy is to let go of the perpetrators and to hold on to the core of who we are.
Tempered by these fires, made wiser by tribulation and learned that what love is, is much deeper and more positive than the experiences we had.
Find peace and strength in knowing it is much simply to be here and to speak out and that the journey goes on.