Editor’s note: This article about the importance of boundaries and belief in herself was submitted by a Lovefraud reader.
It has been about a year since my story was posted on Lovefraud, Not one thing about him was real. It has been two years since I broke off the short relationship with this disordered man. It is a year and a half since he stalked me. I hope to share at least some practical points that have helped me in the healing process. It does get better. And it is a process.
I wish I could say that others may be helped PRIOR to involvement with a sociopath, but as we all know, sometimes the inevitable entanglement occurs before we even realize we have been manipulated. This entanglement would have ended much earlier if I had had clear boundaries, zero tolerance for lies and bad behavior, and the will to walk away alone and create my own closure.
There are many events and bizarre experiences with him, his family, his indiscretions, the pathological lies. I now realize that the ONLY purpose to ANYTHING he did was to make himself look good, please himself, hide the truth, devalue others for his own perceived greatness, impress people and get off on his lies and deceptions. He loves that he manipulates people to admire him as the hero, and to come to his defense as the broken victim that he plays so well. He doesn’t want you to realize he IS the stereotypical villain. He was just good at imitating the qualities that are truly admirable like modesty, bravery and dependability. Telling people he was a Navy SEAL hero, working for the NSA, CIA, using aliases, killing terrorists, giving away fake medals, telling stories of being tortured. It’s always about him. And what he calls LOVE is more like an OBSESSION.
He surrounds himself with people who are weak, easily manipulated and vulnerable. They WILL turn their heads to the truth. He wants them to need him. It’s tantamount for HIS very survival. Smart people will question him. Weak people will live the lie, sometimes because they need something from him and sometimes because they are just too weak to admit they have been conned. It’s tantamount for THEIR survival. I know because I was there for a short time. It’s a vicious circle and a world of denial that feeds his sociopathic hunger. In reality, he needs his victims more. He is only as good as the reflection he sees in the eyes of the victim. When I questioned his veracity, I was disloyal. But I was right. I asked good questions (eventually) and he could not keep up the rotting facade of his fabricated life.
Back to basics
I had to get back to basics in order to trust others, myself, my instincts, my intuition, my belief system, religion and all the rules I used to live by. I had to respect myself, gain back my self-esteem and learn to be tolerant but ONLY of those who do not violate my beliefs and boundaries. I also had to learn to stop accepting bad behavior much earlier and stop the self defeating behavior I recognized in myself.
I made lists of those “boundaries” and used them along with real life examples of behaviors that were no longer tolerable. The will to keep those boundaries safe came from the anger I felt after revisiting conversations and events and learning all of the lies. It was painful. I needed to forgive myself, not him, and I decided I would never allow that behavior again EVER.
Read more — Quiz: Are you a target?
I was mind raped. No doubt. I lost an innocence, not unlike being a rape victim. The abuse and exploitation is so ambient at times that you don’t even realize what has happened. It is ridden with intermittent generosity and professions of love while your thoughts, actions and behaviors are so closely controlled through undermining manipulation, guilt and shame. You are in a whirlpool of words and actions that are so inconsistent. And manipulation that has you believing you are wrong, and that everything you learned to date is wrong and that what you are witnessing must be real, while all you know to be right and good has defied you. My intelligence and good rationale failed me. Still I wanted to believe and have hope and faith.
I made lists
It was therapeutic for me to make lists:
- Things he took from me.
- Things I gave up to him.
- Lies he told.
- Red flags I ignored.
- Names he called me.
- Things he did and said to violate me and my children and friends and all the things he did (behaviors) which were inconsistent with the things he said.
I was too manipulated for far too long. NO MORE. Finally I understood that there was nothing of substance there in him to begin with. I thought he had more to offer me than I had to offer myself. But it was I who had what he wants and needs desperately. Perhaps he saw an innocence, a vulnerability, a naiveté about me and he knew I could be conned.
As much as I read and studied narcissism, sociopathy, and any number of disorders, I still could not comprehend why he lied and cheated as he did and why I allowed him to keep coming back for more. Someone told me that normal, healthy people cannot make sense of irrational, impulsive and sometimes delusional behavior because we simply rationalize. People who are disordered and impulsive just do what they do because they can and it benefits themselves in some way. It truly is that simple.
Creating boundaries
There are things I have learned to practice that have allowed me to find closure, take my power back, regain my confidence, which hopefully will keep me from EVER making this mistake again. I don’t need someone else to provide closure to a bad relationship or situation I never did. It was in me all along.
Creating Boundaries: These are mine:
- HONESTY — I ignored my instincts and the facts even when I caught him in lies.
- INTEGRITY — He was not and never will be a man of his word.
- FIDELITY/LOYALTY — The best indicator of future behavior is past behavior. (He cheated constantly on his previous wife, on me and on his current wife. I have been told she is wearing the same engagement ring I wore.)
- RESPECT — (The verbal abuse, the cheating, the lying, the inability to do as he says are ALL encompassing of issues of respect). The bad behavior, spitefulness, drug abuse and allowing all of the above with his adult daughters.
I learned all over again to verbalize my rule of zero tolerance. I didn’t always speak up in the presence of the sociopath because he HAD to be in control and raged or had a tantrum for days.
The closure I seek these days, which I learned as a practice from my therapist, is that when someone is disrespectful, lies or doesn’t treat me well, that I need to close it off with direct communication about what I think and feel and to NOT let them back in again. When I do, I feel like I am in control of my life, my beliefs, and displaying respect for myself (and in an appropriate way). I have truly taken my power back. It is important for me to say, “Don’t contact me again. You are behaving inappropriately. I am not interested in you any longer. I don’t like what you just said to me.” IT IS ok to protect yourself first. I explain this at the risk of sounding juvenile or patronizing but I truly had to relearn these practices, which came so naturally to me previous to the sociopath.
Recognizing my value
All of our lives are eventually a result of the decisions we make. This is particularly true of the sociopath. In fact, I prefer to believe that his life is like a constant panic of desperation to gain what others have, what he needs to see in our reflection to fill the emptiness of his disturbed soul. He can’t fulfill his own fantasies fast enough and so he scrambles daily to find victims to manipulate in order to feel superior.
Listen now — Don Shipley: Exposing phony Navy SEALs
Recently, this man’s family and new friends found the truth about him on an internet site where he has been exposed as a military impostor and con man. He has known of the exposure for two years after an investigation. He chose not to respond then. He has dishonored those who served and gave of their lives. Other women/people have now come forward and also identified him and his stories. Justice comes in strange ways sometimes. He counted on all of his victims to cower to his intimidations but HE is the coward. Those who continue to live the lie are the cowards. Yet he still has potential to be prosecuted for his crimes. HE IS EXPOSED. I prefer to be on this end simply observing the drama that he is creating with his new followers and family, with no involvement.
At some point I saw more value in what the sociopath had to offer me than in what I had in myself. And I was willing to give myself up to be what he wanted, demanded, expected. The abuse I suffered as a target of a sociopath has taken a toll. To recover, I first had to clear the fog, find myself, and understand my value and importance.
There is a kind of confidence that is exuded when we know who we are and what we want and don’t deviate too much from that. People see it in us and respect it as well. The road is long and this experience with this dysfunctional man will stay with me for a long time. I found myself through recognizing my value and making sure it is respected and appreciated, if not by someone else, by ME. After all, I am the one who has to face me every day.
Learn more — Survivor’s guide to healthy people and healthy relationships
Lovefraud originally posted this story on Dec. 9, 2009.
Matt, I like your point about them “garaging” exes. In hindsight, I see the gaminess of it all, because my thought is, if someone is still that prominent, why not just go back and give it another try. But no, the N/S wanted to keep the new relationship unbalanced — because that’s how they operate. And if we’re not careful, it can be easy to assume the exes are the problem, when really this approach shows symptoms/red flags on the part of the disordered person.
Like you said, we all have baggage. But immature people can try to drive you crazy with innuendo. It sure isn’t the best way to establish trust so new into a relationship by hinting about exes who are still flirting with them. Even when my exes flirted, I took responsibility for handling things so I wouldn’t send mixed messages to the new guy — my former N/S.
I once told my ex-N/S that I’m was willing to have old people from the past still in my life, but it would not be fair for me to burden him with nonsense. If I was uncertain, I would just say so, not make him think he couldn’t compete with what must have been my glorious past (yea right — exes are usually exes for a reason, the saying goes).
I once read a list of steps involved in internet “seduction” — and creating uncertainty advised as a way to help someone boost his value, if he can show that others also want him. To me, common sense would say that if I like someone, there are others who’ll like him too — so I don’t take people for granted, and don’t take well to someone taking me for granted either.
Like you said Matt, putting the past in perspective is a sign of a healthy individual.
Recovering, you have very good common sense. thanks for posting your insights. The P’s ability to “pop up” in their old friends’ lives reminds me of the song “POP GOES THE WEASEL”! LOL!
Matt,
another dupe of my spath’s is suing her for fraud. I have just started coresponding with her. She mentioned the possibility of a class action suit.
How many folks does it take to make a class action suit?
one step
Donna,
your article was just the closure/validation that I needed to find within myself. When I stopped trying to get an apology – or even an addmission of his lies…. the S no longer had any power over me. I kept trying to have a heart-heart and he kept lying. This only prolonged my pain and validated HIS need to feel important and powerful. Your method of making lists was my roadmap out of the crazy-making! Thanks so much! Cheers to all of us Survivors – we can’t change others but we CAN make ourselves even better than ever!
AbuDhabiEyes,
You are so right! QUOTE: ” we can’t change others but we CAN make ourselves even better than ever! “
Matt,
First of all thanks Matt…my family lives 3 hours away…I have no support system here. I could live with my family, pay off my attorney fees with no rent to pay, AND make more money because teachers get paid more in that county.
The reason I ask is because S/P is using mileage as a bargaining chip…I will never get the 220 miles I need in the bargain. Only 60 miles in EXCHANGE for an additional night every other week FOR S/P.
SO I am considering settling for the 35 miles he is offering, knowing I have a secure job and won’t HAVE to move any time soon, and NOT letting him have the additional night.
In the future, when I suspect he will stop visiting so much and (he is already dropping our son in the care of others’) may be in arrears, I would like the HOPEFULL option to petition the court to move.
Cheers,
Banana
recovery,
Wow this topic of “garaging” past lovers is triggering me.
Just another reminder of all the red flags we ignored.
I was able to actually get the story from the Ex love whom my S/P slept with and even got pregnant just months before our wedding.
Red flags…pics of various women whom he would explain were just friends and repeated contact with the ex ie: exchanging belongs each one had of the other’s for a few months into our relationship, a gift from her of concert tickets (said she couldn’t go, but why were there two? I can’t remember what she said of that, but I suspect they were supposed to go together since concert tickets are usually purchased months is advance….they also played PS2 online together). Boink!!!! Wish OXy was there to say, “HELLO????? and wake me out of my stuppor with a CAST iron skillet.
There were others I am sure.
But closure for us is yes….STOP WONDERING, STOP ASKING THE QUESTIONS, and I think I need to start some lists.
START FOCUSING ON OURSLEVES.
PEACE AND JOY TO ALL AT LF in this holiday season.
-Banana
Good Morning.
Wow… today is NC with “N”/”S” for six weeks. This has been a difficult year for me.
I so happy to have had a little peace this last week and the thoughts of him changing. I’m not angry but feeling compassion for another wounded soul himself. It won’t help me or him to be together so it has to be this way.
Don’t like it but for both it’s the best. I am trying to recover and do my own work. He doesn’t admit he has work to do so therefore there is no work being done on his part.
I know how difficult it is for me to stop and think about my problems and do the work so I know he has a long way to go if we were to ever be around each other again at all.
I would be so triggered if he called or I saw him. No contact has finally begun to take stress out of my life.
Again, I don’t like having to go through this. I literally threw up from the pain when I had enough. Can’t believe it almost but that’s how sick I had become in July.
Holidays are difficult. Hang in there anyone struggling today. It gets better.
Dear Sotired,
NC will give you the emotional space to start to recover–congratulations!!! When we break contact it sets us back to SQUARE ONE.
Don’t pity him, however, he is what he is, and pitying him, feeling sorry for him, will usually be counter productive to your healing and moving on. He IS WHAT HE IS, AND HE HAS A CHOICE—just like you do. But he doesn’t see a need to change, or want to change. NOTHING you could ever do would motivate him to want to change. Nothing anyone could do would motivate him to change. But he DOES have a choice. We all do.
Making healthy choices for yourself is a good thing, and the only thing any of us can do. Setting boundaries with others, and enforcing those boundaries will protect us.
It was so hard for me to set boundaries with people I had relationships with of any kind and I walked on egg shells around them to avoid hurting their feelings while they walked all over me with golf shoes with spikes—but no more.
Hang in there and stay strong on the path to healing and you will get there! Take care of YOU!!!
Sotired,
YES. Do hang in there. No Contact is SO important.
I too got cought up in thinking he was a torutred soul and was the product of his environment…heck, for many of us that was why we loved them, we wanted to help them, then we thought our love could change them; help them to be a better person.
They are SO caught up in their pathology that they CAN NOT change. HE is NOT aware of his illness.
Stay in NC for you. YOU are the only one YOU have CONTROL over. If it makes you feel any better…yes NC is also best for him, he WILL only get WORSE if you ENABLE him. SO STOP enabling his ILLNESS AND keep AWAY…FAR FAR AWAY.
Wishing you the best!
BAnana