Editor’s note: The following article was submitted by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “Betsybugs.”
The term cognitive dissonance is used to describe the feeling of discomfort and confusion that results from holding two conflicting beliefs. When there is a discrepancy between beliefs or beliefs and behaviors, something must change in order to eliminate or reduce the mental conflict. Psychopaths use cognitive dissonance to entangle victims, to keep victims confused and docile and to create pain. My story is a story of cognitive dissonance.
My cognitive dissonance began in childhood when my father would go into rages, chase one of his daughters into a corner and beat the living daylights out of them while my mother stood and watched crying. When the beating was over, she consoled the victim (me or one of my sisters) and explained to all of us that Daddy really loved us but he just did not know how to show it. She was terribly emotionally abused too but drew the line at physical abuse for herself. I think that is why he beat us; he never laid a hand on our brother that I know of. It was a sick misogynistic thing.
First boyfriend
I had only one boyfriend before college and he broke my heart and was most likely a sociopath himself. He was a low class charming hooligan from the wrong side of the tracks, charming as in Westside Story or Rebel Without a Cause. He succeeded in getting me to fall head over heels in love with him and I thought it was “forever.” Stupid first love insanity but I was going to marry him and have his children”¦ in my deluded mind. All he wanted from me was my good reputation and virginity. After he got that he started lying, cheating, sleeping around and blaming me for not accepting what he was doing. His words kept telling me he loved me but his actions told a completely different story”¦at least in my book it did. Love was in diametric opposition to his behavior. More cognitive dissonance added to my book.
My mother was diagnosed with cancer when I was fourteen. I remember getting into a fight with my friend who I stayed with when Mother went away to the hospital. She knew and told me but I was not allowed to know; more cognitive dissonance. I had more and more cognitive dissonance as I went through high school seeing Mother have shooting pains and being told that nothing was the matter. I must have been told but then it was denied finally using Christian Science when she had six months left to live. My parents forced me to go to college knowing that my mother had six months to live. I did not want to go; I even tried to get kicked out of school and sent home. She always said she would have nothing to live for after her children were gone and I was the youngest and the last to go. It became a prophecy. She died before Christmas break. I blamed myself. It was cognitive dissonance again.
I tried dating but hated it. I was afraid of boys and badly burned by my first and only “true love.” I was love-bombed by a psychopath I met at enrollment my freshman year in college. He was a senior and was so overly attentive that it gave me the Heebie Jeebies. Red flag number one. There was a look in his eyes that I found terribly disturbing too. Red flag number two. I fled but to no avail. He love-bombed me until I finally just went out with him to just to get out of the dorm. I never loved him but he convinced me he was stable, caring and a good catch. I did not even want to love anyone again. I thought a nice platonic relationship would do just fine. I was alone in the world without my mother and no one in the family noticed. By now, cognitive dissonance was normal to me.
The big wedding
I guess we had sex a few times. It was nothing to write home about but I did not want that bonding sexual intensity again ever. I was afraid of loving again and he did not care or notice. He raped his roommate’s girlfriend while she was sleeping in her boyfriend’s bed and got thrown out of his apartment. She woke up with him on top of her raping her sleeping body. He was so pathetic and played remorseful and alone and I came to his rescue; I got pregnant and “had to” get married even though I did not want to. I was on the cusp of not “having to” get married I suspected I might be pregnant and just wanted to run away but he found out I was pregnant before I even knew and got his parents to plan a big wedding. I was still in shock from my mother’s death. I did not want a big wedding. I did not want to get married at all. I just wanted to have my baby and never tell him. But the wedding was planned in Kansas City where his parents lived and owned a jewelry store. All of their friends, colleagues and business associates were invited. We were registered for china and crystal at their store giving them all the profits. I had my family and three friends in attendance and all of the bills were sent to my father, all the way down to the bill for alterations for the bridesmaid’s dress we bought for his sister. That cognitive dissonance took me years to comprehend.
He violently raped me on our wedding night in a run of the mill local motel. No honeymoon, no romance, no expense for him or his money gouging parents; just violence and vulgar displays of his ownership of me. The cognitive dissonance was so bad I just wanted to die. How could I have made such a huge mistake? How could this be the same person who worshiped me, doted on me and wanted nothing more than to be married to me? Sex was his domain throughout the marriage and he wanted me to play dead. Now I see that it was just more rape. He tried arguing and anger to control me but I was smarter than him and better at both. He tried physical abuse and I told him if he ever did it again I would leave him. Finally he figured out how to use cognitive dissonance. I never heard him apologize, it was blatant mind control. He was Jekyll and Hyde but he knew what he was doing. The world thought we were the ideal couple. But I was being slowly driven insane. The marriage was nothing but cognitive dissonance. I suppose it is with all psychopaths and cognitive dissonance is what prevents us from getting out. It causes us to believe we are the crazy one, the one even at fault while all the time they are doing it to us on purpose.
Fortunately my Spirit was strong and my maternal instincts were stronger. I was only wounded, not destroyed and I finished college, got a job and got out. It only took ten years, almost to the day. I did not know that such a thing as a psychopath existed. I finally realized he was incapable of loving and when we moved and he started shunning my son and love-bombing all of his potential friends, the new neighborhood children. He had just graduated from law school and wanted all the children to call him the judge, invited them in to sing while he played the guitar and would not include our son. I finally saw the cognitive dissonance. I tried to talk to him to explain how much he was hurting out son and he denied there was anything wrong with it. That was his big mistake and my wake up call. I did not know what it was called but I knew it was very bad and then I knew that he was doing it on purpose. I also realized that he had been doing it to me on purpose. Before that wake up call, I believed that all people were good, if not on the surface, at least underneath. My parents were very dysfunctional, but they were very good people underneath. They were defective people, hurting people, hurtful people; but they were also loving, caring, and real. A psychopath is inhuman.
Learning about cognitive dissonance
I only learned the term cognitive dissonance a few months ago and the definition is very mild compared to what a psychopath can do with it. A psychopath can use it to destroy his victims, get what he wants and seem benign all the time he is deliberately sucking the soul out of his prey. Before the psychopath I did not believe that evil existed. He took that away from me. I believed all people were good. He took that away from me. Now he has taken my daughter and I am seeing her cognitive dissonance. She is convinced that I am the evil one. Very few people believe me. They continue to treat him with respect and call me crazy. It is easier than believing in psychopathy. Even I know that. Cognitive dissonance is their shield and sword. But this time I can see the cognitive dissonance as I struggle to disengage myself from it with my daughter. I am again an invisible victim.
Knowledge is a tool. The knowledge that I am experiencing cognitive dissonance helps me from believing that it is my fault; that he is not a psychopath. It lets me know what I know regardless of what others believe. It helped me get out once. At this time I am not yet willing to give up on my daughter but I am getting there. I am not willing and will never be willing to give up my grandchildren. I know the insanity of the cognitive dissonance and this time I am using that knowledge to survive until I decide which way the situation will resolve. This time I may make a different decision and play the game my daughter wants me to play so I can have a relationship with my grandchildren. It will not be easy, but at the moment it seems to be the only solution. I am still in cognitive dissonance about it but knowing that it is cognitive dissonance gives me the power of sanity to protect myself and wait until I am able to make the right choice.
There was a blogger here who has now passed away, her name was NewLily, and I knew her off the blog. She had been physically, emotionally, and financially abused by her dentist husband for 45 years when he finally beat her so badly she feared for her life and she took a suit case and fled the state. She had always protected her husband from anyone knowing, even her kids, what kind of a monster he was.
He told her he would leave her penniless and he nearly did so, but she did get a divorce, but by then she was living friendless in a strange town, elderly and her health began to fail. She went into the hospital and her kids came, I’,m not sure what happened between the doctor and her kids but her doctor was concerned and told Lily “your kids are NOT your friends” and I can’t even IMAGINE A DOCTOR SAYING THAT WITHOUT A GOOD REASON.
Lily lived over that and went back to her house where she continued to decline in health. I spoke too her frequently on the phone and some days she was okay, and other days she would still hold on to the MALIGNANT HOPE that her kids or grandkids did really love her.
In her final hospital stay, the last day or so she was confused I could tell, but she was in great emotional pain over her children.
I heard from her next door neighbor that they cleaned out her house. I pray that Lily finally found some peace. If not in this life, then in the next.
Wanting someone to love us when they clearly do not, is a very painful state of affairs.
LETTING GO of that desire is the ONLY SOLUTION to the pain.
When it is your kid or grandkid it is I think in many ways more difficult than if it is your “lover” or “spouse” but I’ve had to let go of all three of those categories and I can’t say any of them were EASY.
OxD, you’re 100% spot-on, and I’m so sorry that NewLily passed in such a sad, sad state.
When our own children (or, grandchildren) “are not (our) friends,” it’s one of those truths that many of us simply cannot and WILL not accept. It’s too painful. It’s too shameful. And, it’s ugly.
Your reference to “malignant hope” is so, so spot-on, and I view malignant hope as a disease – something that is so damaging to self that it is a pathology. I almost bought into that malignant hope with my own son, and I desperately WANTED him to be a good, empathetic, with-conscious human being. Dear God in heaven, I wanted that to be true. But, it wasn’t. My eldest son is a sociopath, and he’s a dangerous and violent one, at that. For me to believe otherwise is simply false and untrue.
The “truth” is not always warm and fuzzy – most often, the truth ISN’T pleasant. I have often tried to rationalize that my son was raised by an abusive sociopath (his father), and that it’s “not his fault” that he has chosen to do the things that he has. Sure, I did! But, he had been offered every opportunity to sort himself out, and opted for deceit, violence, intimidation, and forgery. That’s it. That’s the truth. It is indisputable, no matter what I wanted to believe.
So, OxD, it was a matter of MY letting go of my own flawed beliefs and setting up fact as the guideline for my boundaries.
Of course, it’s difficult, but it is possible.
Brightest blessings
Betsybugs, I just wanted to reach out and type that you are reading very strong, today, and I’m grateful to read this.
Brightest blessings
Oxy:
That story about NewLily breaks my heart every time. 🙁
was watching my spath show and they had a quote that i think fits most of us here, sounds like it fit NewLily, certainly fits me:
“Sometimes the hardest part isn’t letting go, but rather learning to start over.”
— Nicole Sobon
When your whole life has been that other person that you committed wholly to. All that effort. For nothing. To lose it all. No wonder starting over seems so defeating.
Louise, it breaks mine too…she wanted so badly for her kids to love her and at the end when her mind was leaving her she started to hope again. She was the sweetest soul and I hope there is a special crown for her in Heaven.
That is why I can not and will NOT allow myself to get into a malignant hope again that things are gonna change.
Omg… I am shocked. What is going on with people?
May NewLily rest in peace.
Oxy:
I agree. NewLily’s story also makes me realize that things or people are not going to change. Malignant hope…nah, I’m done with that. I had it for a long time, but it’s fading fast…
So, I like the older television series that used to be entertaining in a more “healthy” way, even if they weren’t always historically correct.
“High Chaparral” is one of those programs that really fell off the re-run radar, and I just saw a scene with an absolutely incredible quote that I need to print out and put on the fridge:
“All you heard, my sister, were a few soft words. You cannot tell a rattlesnake by the sound of his voice.”
As absurd as it may sound, this is a profound insight. “Soft words,” flattery, uber-compliments, uber-declarations of love…..it’s all a bunch of “soft” noises that might be the voice of a rattlesnake.
Just a REALLY off-topic moment, here.
Nice quote Truthspeak. I’m going to have to pinch that one for my list. Best, Katy