Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following letter from a reader, who we’ll call Matt.
I am a gay man and a criminal defense attorney. After 22 years in my business I though I had seen it all, heard it all, and knew it all when it came to the bad side of human nature. That was until 15 months ago when I became romantically involved with a sociopath.
Hook, Line and Sinker
July. I met “S” when I was facing 50, flying solo and fearing my own mortality — I had just come from signing my will. I walked into a bar and S homed in on me like a heat-seeking missile. He had a beautiful smile, but I remember how it never reached his eyes — they were laser intense, but flat and unblinking. A few drinks later and big pools of chemistry were forming under S and me. That night, he put the ”˜good’ in good night kiss.
August. S launched a full-blown charm offensive. In one week I was swept up in a whirlwind of romantic dinners and phenomenal sex — he made me feel like I was the best lover on earth.
At the end of the week I went on vacation. While I was checking into the hotel a florist showed up with a beautiful arrangement. I said to the desk clerk “Somebody got lucky.” He looked at the card, handed it over and said “Somebody did.” S had sent the arrangement. I fell for S like the proverbial ton of bricks.
Danger Will Robinson
September. The red flags began to pop all over the place. S refused to take me to parties because his ex would be there. S never left messages on my answering machine or voicemail. S never had me over to his apartment though he lived two blocks away. S was secretive in the extreme. But, I ignored the red flags because S was still showering me with attention and the sex was great.
October. Hindsight being 20/20, I could have walked out when S stood me up for a date. I would have walked out when S confessed that he had only broken up with his ex three weeks before me met, not a year earlier like he originally told me. And I should have walked out when S told me that he had been released from prison three weeks before we met.
But, before I could walk, S hit me hard and fast with the “pity play.” He “came clean” and told me how he got hooked on cocaine after his beloved mother was left brain-dead by a stroke. S was convicted of stealing paychecks from his employer to buy drugs. Then S began to sob and told me he didn’t want to “bring the problems that being an ex-con has to your doorstep because I love you.”
As odd as it sounds, S had been lucky. He was sentenced to a “shock incarceration facility” aka “scared straight boot camp,” instead of prison. S also served 10 months of a one-and-a-half to three year sentence and was then put on probation. Another stroke of luck.
If anyone should know from experience that all criminals and ex-cons lie and play people, it’s me. But, S stirred up the caretaker in me and I vowed to help him rebuild his life.
November. I was so besotted with S I ignored even more red flags. He repeatedly violated his probation by leaving the state without permission of his PO. He conned his group therapy leader into letting him out of his post-release program early. And when S informed me that “From here on in I’m only thinking about number one” — I was a fool not to take him at his word.
S finally introduced me to his “ex.” I now see that he was deliberately pitting the two of us against each other for his own amusement. S also did this to increase my jealousy. And it worked. I opened the financial taps. Each date became more lavish than the last.
December. S no longer wooed me with dinner and flowers. S wasn’t concerned about me or his problems. And why should he be? I had become S’s personal ATM, social director and lawyer. I had become S’s one-man Salvation Army.
Devalue and Discard
January. S chose New Year’s Eve to pick a fight with me for agreeing to spend the holiday with “his” friends without his consent (the fact that he had told them this was fine with him two days earlier escaped him). And I took all the abuse he heaped on me. Why? Because I was determined to win back the man I fell in love with.
February. I should have paid more attention to S’s choice of friends — and lack thereof. I threw him a catered birthday party. Forty of his friends said they would attend. Six showed. I actually hurt for him. It wasn’t until later I realized that this indicated how little his so-called friends and colleagues thought of him.
But I was asleep at the switch when S reestablished his friendship with his college roommate – who was also his “former” drug dealer. The night they reconnected S picked a fight with me in a bar. He stormed out and “broke-up” with me by text message.
S made me crazy that night. I walked around his block for eight hours straight. The next morning S finally let me into his apartment. Then S blamed me for his cashed paycheck being lifted from his back pocket and told me “I need your help to pay my February rent.” I agreed to “lend” him the money and wrote the check then and there for $1,550. Why? Because I was determined to win back the man I fell in love with.
March. I wondered where S’s family was. I remember when a friend of S’s said, “I never understood how S’s family, to a man, turned their backs on him when he was sent to prison,” Now I see that S had burned them so many times they cut S out of their lives. But, I didn’t. Why? Because I was determined to win back the man I fell in love with.
April. I took S to Washington, DC to see the cherry blossoms and to share with him a place that was special to me. S was overly eager to go to church. When we entered the sanctuary I learned the priest was S’s former partner (two exes ago). Shocked, I thought “I can’t believe he’s sandbagging a priest on the altar.” S thought it was hysterical. But, I hung on. Why? Because I was determined to win back the man I fell in love with.
May. S “needed my help” and handed me an envelope. A letter from his landlord threatening eviction. The landlord had rejected April’s rent check because S hadn’t paid February and March. I realized he had lied to me earlier and I had paid January’s rent. But, I didn’t ask any questions and agreed to “lend” him $3,750.
The abrupt personality changes, his constant lack of money. I knew from experience he was using again. But I rationalized it away. If he was using, he couldn’t pass the drug test run by his PO. Right? I ignored the fact that the system can be beat. And I didn’t call him on any of it. Why? Because I was determined to win back the man I fell in love with.
June. Weekend trips. Restaurant checks. Bar bills. Theatre tickets. I paid for it all. He went out of his way to ruin whatever I planned. I was going into debt. I felt more and more empty, more and more abused. I was in a relationship but had never felt more alone.
The more I gave, the more S withheld – Time together. Emotional availability. Sex. Love. And the more emotionally abusive he became. Why did I put up with it? Because I was determined to win back the man I had fallen in love with.
July. Our first anniversary. What was I celebrating? One year of emotional and physical exhaustion from dealing with his never ending dramas? One year of fearing his temper and was walking on eggshells?
S and I celebrated by returning to the “scene of the crime,” the bar where we had met. Over a champagne toast I handed him a ticket to Greece. He handed me an envelope saying “I’m going to need your help again.” Inside was another eviction notice.
This time I finally drew a line in the sand. I told S that I wouldn’t “help” him financially. The most I would do is walk him through the court process so he could represent himself and halt the eviction until we returned from Greece. Period.
The next day I did what I should have done early on — I combed every database I could — public (New York e.courts) and private (Lexis). I uncovered 15 judgments against S for nonpayment of credit cards, car loans, student loans, taxes, rent, and loans from friends and three more pending cases. Then it struck me — his secretiveness, desire to move, avoiding certain places — of the 18 people who sued, how many more hadn’t?
The Brain Fog Starts to Lift
August. I told S this trip to Greece was a chance for us to get back on track. We arrived in Greece. I promptly caught him stealing from a neighbor’s villa. His response? “They’re not going to miss it.” The weird grin on his face when he said it chilled me. Like I was the fool.
I would have put him on the next plane out, but he had the keys to my apartment. So, I spent the next two weeks watching him like a hawk, paying for everything and being made miserable in the process.
September. We returned. I changed my locks. The next day the judge ordered S to pay six months back rent by September 30th or the eviction would proceed. A friend told me that S was cruising bars and turning tricks. I knew there was no getting us back on track. I knew that we had no future together — our values were completely different. I knew I was never going to win back the man I fell in love with — that man was an illusion.
But, I still wasn’t ready to let go. I only curtailed contact, I didn’t cut it. I maintained sporadic contact. Big mistake.
October. Against my better judgment I went with S to his brother’s wedding. That day I went online and learned S had a court date that very morning regarding his eviction, but I didn’t say anything to see how he was going to play this.
Play it he did. The next night. In public. S deserved an Oscar for his performance — crying “how hard I’m trying to go straight,” how “I told my doctor he screwed up our love life with the beta-blockers he put me on,” how “my sister asked me if I was certain ”˜you were the one’ and I told her you were” and the capper, “last night my father told me that before the week is out, I’ll have to go home because he’s disconnecting my mother from life-support and going to let her die.”
That was the moment I finally realized I was being manipulated — no parent — no matter how monstrous, would say something like that at a child’s wedding.
S then asked for my “help” with the rent. I refused. And I realized I had to do something or this was never going to stop.
To Get Rid of a Sociopath, Become a Sociopath
November. I finally realized I needed to get S out of my life to save my own life. I turned off my compassion. My understanding. My love. And my guilt. This one-man Salvation Army declared war on S.
S launched his next attack a few nights later. My phone rang at 11:15 and I was asleep. It was S, talking word salad. Then S moved in for the kill — he told me he had to be in court the next morning and didn’t have all the rent money. He asked if I would take some his jewelry as collateral for a loan.
I didn’t have the money, and started to babble something about taking a cash advance on my credit card when I snapped to and stopped cold. I realized he was manipulating me. I cut him off and told him to go into court with what money he had, the jewelry to show the judge he had something to sell to raise cash and take his chances.
The end came two weeks ago. S called me at 4:45 PM on Friday and told me that the landlord had changed the locks. S said his employer would lend him 10 grand to pay his back rent, but his bank was closed until Monday. S then asked me to lend him 10 grand CASH until Monday. I said “NO.” Then S asked if he could crash at my place. I agreed to one night — I finally decided we were going to have it out once and for all.
S arrived bloated (15 pounds heavier since the last time I saw him — he had already packed on 45 pounds since the start of the year), reeking of alcohol, with dirty matted hair, and smelling sour. I thought was “he’s manipulating you into feeling sorry for him.”
He launched his pity play. “How the person I hate most in this world (employer) came through for me again” (translation — I failed him). S then upped the ante and told me his blood pressure was now 220 over 180, his doctor thought he had diabetes and was afraid he was going to have a stroke. And on. And on. And on.
After four hours I finally told S that I didn’t know what to do for him anymore. I told S that I was sure he was on cocaine and our relationship wasn’t working since my needs weren’t being met in the least. S told me, “I love you and want things to go back to the way they were in the beginning.” I told him “No, you want me to pay your bills while you do whatever you want while I wait for you to call or text me. Those days are over. It’s clear we want different things, so I think its best if we no longer see each other.”
Then came the moment of true irony. I told S that I expected him to pay back the money I lent him. S replied indignantly “I always pay my debts.” I just stood there looking at him and thinking, “We’re standing in my kitchen at 2:30 AM because you have been locked out of your apartment for not paying your rent.” I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
The next morning I asked S if he wanted to take a shower. He refused. It dawned on me what S was up to — S was going to make the rounds, looking like he’d slept on a park bench and hit up everybody he could for cash. And then he was probably going to split.
Aftermath
Having read the stories of other Lovefraud bloggers, how they suffered at the hands of their sociopaths for years on end and ended up financially bankrupt, I know, on an intellectual level, that I got off relatively cheap. However, emotionally and physically, I feel like I’ve been hit by a freight train.
A friend of mine told me I must be incredibly strong to have withstood what S put me through — he said he would have snapped a long time ago. Strong? I don’t think so. If I were strong I never would have allowed S to cannibalize my life like I did. I would have stood up to him long ago. I would have gotten rid of him instead of hanging on.
I’m furious at S for using me and making a mockery of my beliefs and my love. I’m furious at myself for letting S do this to me. My friends and family can’t bear to hear another word about S. I expect to crawl over miles of broken glass on my stomach before they’ll ever listen to me again.
S hasn’t vanished yet. I suspect he’s still working his scam. He has started the smear campaign. Several nights after I ended it S started showing up at places I frequent and events I had bought tickets to. S ended up seated directly opposite me at one event (reserved seating). Once is a coincidence. Three times is stalking.
A psychiatrist I consult with periodically on my cases told me, “Don’t think S is going to go away easy. He knows how good he had it with you. And there’s only one way to beat him — NO CONTACT.” I got the same advice from my detective friend who also told me that I could get a restraining order. But, if anyone should know how worthless they are, it’s me. So, now I am constantly on guard and looking over my shoulder — and maintaining NO CONTACT.
The money I “lent” S? I know it’s gone for good. But S will be held accountable to a higher power — the IRS. I had the good sense to write “LOAN” on every check I wrote to S. And when I was taking care of one of the numerous problems S was too lazy to deal with himself, he gave me his social security number.
My accountant sent the first collection letter today. Two more will go out. And when S doesn’t respond — and he won’t — I’ll report his debt to me as uncollectible. I get the tax loss, S gets nailed for income. Hey, if it was good enough to bring down the sociopath Al Capone, it’s good enough for me to bring down my sociopath — S.
Hello Everyone. Most of your names and stories are very familiar to me and I have been reading your posts for months – but this is the first time I’ve logged on. I broke up with my sociopath boyfriend in March, and I am still picking up the pieces psychologically. I am blown away, absolutely blown away by his lies, betrayals, rages. He was so wonderful at first – my soulmate. And then after six months he became the most hateful person I have ever encountered. I’m a 38 year old woman, and have had relationships good and bad, but never, never, have I had my heartbroken like this. I’m functioning – I continue with my career and try to function like a human being, but this experience has shocked me, ripped me open, and my heart actually hurts. I am so grateful to all of you. You don’t know me, but you have been my angels, my tribe, for months.
Good Now perhaps we can get to what is really the problem Here!
My Beer and My Cigaretts ! :)~
Dear Healing Heart,
Welcome and I’m glad that you have been at LoveFraud, you already know what a wonderful place this is for those of us who are on the healing Journey. I’m also glad that you are seeing what “they” are.
I’m sorry that you are hurting, and all of the people who have said that they read here for months before posting, I wonder how many of them there are, and how much they are hurting. I guess sometimes I feel like I am sitting around a camp fire with all my best buddies and we are talking, as you seem to always do around a camp fire, but outside the ring of faces in the fire light, there could be 1000 people standing behind you, just outside the light, and you don’t even know they are there.
I hope that our words have helped you, comforted you, and let you know that you are NOT alone. Welcome, Healing Heart and please share yourself and your insights with us if you feel comfortable. Glad you joined the “club”–sorry you qualify for “membership.” (((hugs))))
Pearl: You gave me a good book lead — The Betrayal Bond — so now it’s my turn to return the favor. Have you read If You Had Controlling Parents by Dan Neuharth? I just finished it and it is an eyeopener. One of the recurring themes I’ve read in so many of the posts involve the control the sociopaths exert over our lives. And as you so rightly pointed out, at least in my case, the control often stems back to our earlier relationships with our parents.
My problem always was, I could never quite articulate how the hell my parents created that overpowering sense of control. Dan Neuharth breaks his book down into the various types of control. Reading it was a jaw-dropping experience — like he had observed what went on in that macadamia ranch (nut house) we called home. I recommend this book to any Lovefraud readers who are not only trying to recover from the damage the S has done to us, but who may also be searching for answers to questions arising from their earlier conditioning.
Wini: thanks for the reminder that we’re not like our exs. During my last encounter with the S, he accused me of being personally responsible for everything from global warming to erectile dysfunction. A friend who saw me a few days later told me she hadn’t seen that traumatized look in my eyes since I got out of Tower Two on 9/11 with it coming down behnd me.
At the moment I keep trying to remind myself that every malicious thing he ever said about me was him projecting his own baggage onto me, but it’s hard not to keep running the constant stream of abusive accusations through my mind like a never-ending loop. It helps to be reminded that we really aren’t like them no matter what they say.
OxD
So True! At the most it seems like 5 or 6 perhaps 10 on a good day! The ones who love the fire and the smoke and playing with it ! Stokeing the embers making it roar back to life!
But in the shadows are Many drawn to not only the Warmth of the Fire but the Warmth of the ones closest to that fire or LIGHT!
Our Club has no limits! age, sex , race, education , religion , economic , We are an equal opprotunity club! BUTT Membership Initiation is a WHOOPER! Welcome! LOVE JJ
Good Morning Everyone – these exchanges are so interesting and so familiar. Amazing that so many of us went through the same bizarre traumas.
Oxdrover – thank you so much for the hug! You seem to be the grand maternal figure on this site with so much to offer everyone. Your words, and the words of the others on the site have been so helpful to me since April, when I started reading. Somehow I was afraid to log on myself – like that would make it all real. But it is real, and I’m realizing that people who haven’t been in relationships with a sociopath just don’t understand. Even my therapist (who is excellent and well-reputed in my city). People don’t understand why I can’t just get over this “he’s and asshole – move on.” I don’t talk about him, and the relationship, at all, with most people, as they just don’t want to hear. Yet I think about it A LOT. And despite the fact that I haven’t communicated with him at all in 3-4 months, he keeps sending cards, daily texts, emails (I keep blocking his addresses and he opens new accounts) telling me he loves me and not understanding why I won’t give him another chance. He moved in with me (insisted) after 3 months, WITH HIS KIDS, and then cheated on me (sometimes WHILE I was taking care of his kids). He had an ad posted on match while living with me, and had a large number of unprotected sex hookups with random people he met online. He would scream at me when I confronted him on my suspicions – yelling at the top of his lungs that I was crazy and was suffocating him. Finally I threw him out. For a while he seemed content with just hooking up with the myriad of women out there – but now his sights are on me again, and he is reaching out desperately – sometimes lovingly, sometimes angrily. He really seems bewildered that I won’t take him back. It’s insane. It’s absolutely beyond my comprehension. He was horribly abusive, lied, cheated, CONSTANTLY, yelled at me, swore at me – when I asked him to stay home one night, and now he thinks I should take him back. These men (and women) are absolutely nuts. And then the crazy CRAZIEST part o fall is that sometimes I have to hold back from contacting him! From inviting him over! The addiction is fading, but it’s still there – and it, also, dumbfounds me. Thank you all for your words, Your experiences have helped me so much – and helped me see I am not crazy, as many people in my life would have me believe (Just get over it!)
Oxdrover: I have been reading your words since April. You, Beverly, Wini, LostinGrief, IndigoBlue, Stargazer, Henry, James, Iwonder, keepingfaith – and so many more. Your words, your stories, your conversations back and forth with each other were so helpful to me, and I read them all! For months – you have been the people that I understand. You seem to be this warm group of people who understand these experiences, thoughts, feelings, that everyone else seems to think are crazy.
I’m willing to bet that you are right, and that there are literally thousands of women standing behind you and your girls (and guys!) as you sit at the fire – and hanging on your everyone word. Your conversations with each other have been priceless to me, and at times feel like they saved me life. I’m not sure why it was so hard to finally log on myself, but here I am – 9 months after tuning in. 🙂
Healing Heart: I’m glad you logged on to tell your story. Yes, it’s mind boggling how “they” WILL NEVER slow down. If they did, they’d get to analyze their thoughts of the day … and that Healing Heart is what they are always running from. Where they run to and what they do when they get there is beyond me … I just know they are always running, always changing partners, always having multiple partners … and always blaming others (all others) for what they need to heal, which is to reflect inward … to find their problem(s), admit it … so they can move towards healing.
We can’t do this for any one, we can only do it for ourself. If we can heal, so can every one heal (them) included. Healing is NOT instantaneous, it’s not a quick fix … it takes dedication and work … daily, step by step to face the problem, acknowledge there is a problem, the desire to change the problem … change for the better … and … work through it (no matter what it is) to healing and compassion again.
I wished there wasn’t a condition like our EXs have to create so much heartache … but, it does exists. Since it exists, it’s good that we have this venue to share our thoughts … because sharing our thoughts helps us all to heal.
Peace.
Thank you, Wini, wise words. It’s amazing, the path of destruction they leave behind. This guy, with all his charm, good looks, and knight in shining armor act, has engaged countless women in this city (and their children – he charms them as well!) and then leaves them devastated and incredulous. Sometimes I kick myself for falling for his act – after all, I am a smart, educated, experienced woman…..but so many of us are….and his act was incredible. He came across as incredibly kind, generous, and noble.
HealingHearts
The Truth will set you Free!
I like that anoince – MIND – SCREW!
Welcome come sit next to me . Let me tell you a story about a Tiger in a Cage! LOVE JJ