Editor’s note: The following essay was submitted by Lovefraud reader “Presseject.” This is part one of his story. Part two will be posted tomorrow.
By Presseject
A little over three months ago I had my heart ripped out from me. It happened suddenly and there are few words I can use to describe the pain I felt as dreams, hopes and even what I thought was my own sanity seemed to disappear quickly in a crushing instant that reverberated with off-the-scale emotional aftershocks for weeks into months afterwards. I suffered nearly two months of an awful nerve-wracking traumatic stress reaction, a hypervigilence that has finally recently lessened its grip on me. The Internet, along with my own participation, had provided me with what I have recently learned has many names but all very similar descriptions: a sociopath, a pathological narcissist, a sociopath “parading” as a narcissist, a man with antisocial personality disorder, a bad man, a bad egg, a loser. Many of the words describing this personality disorder I had never known much about, but as I pieced the crime together, these are the words that truly stuck. These were the words and the beginnings of an understanding that began act as tools to help me dig myself out of a very dark and deeply painful pit.
Just as the Internet had been a tool to help me find a perfectly destructive relationship, it was also ironically a perfectly powerful tool to help me recover. I found Lovefraud.com and this is where my mind found the sanity I thought I had lost, and to reconnect to the soul I thought had been nearly taken out of me. It even has helped to restore my heart, the part of me that has always given, that now wishes again to give and to be loved. With this site primarily, with the many caring individuals who have also survived this emotional battlefield and contribute here, my hopes for the possibility for my heart to become strong again has become a tender new reality.
I feel I am somewhat not your typical visitor to Lovefraud. I am a man who fell for another man. An accomplished man who found another successful man. I enjoyed a romance period that seemed like something from a beautiful movie, but in the end, I paid a heavy price to release myself from a strange hypnotic web spun by this man’s narcissistic needs and sexual desire disguised for six months as true love. At the time, it was all spontaneous and carefree. I learned afterwards pure impulsiveness is a defining characteristic of a sociopath (especially in reading Dr. Robert Hare’s excellent writings based on his 30 years of experience). I thought I had found a fun friend from a lost happy childhood perhaps. But these were two grown adults both ready at a second to take a trip, eat ice cream, take a long walk on a secluded beach, tour a museum, watch an intellectual film, make love and talk each night on the phone for over six months. I was hooked as many others have been that write into Lovefraud, but as I came to see, we were all mislead. It is this slow process of “unhooking” now that I am still involved in as I write. It makes sense to me, as part of this healing process, to share with others here the signs of my own progress that point towards a real hope of restoration, of healing that can take place when so little is left to hold onto. Again, without the warm, and at times angelic voices I found here at Lovefraud, I might still be lost in a stormy sea of tears.
I could describe all his shortcomings to you and there were many that came to light after it ended. But there are a few key things that some might find useful. Foremost, this man had been married, has two grown sons, and had once owned a very large corporation. He sold this large company, divorced his wife and built himself a huge mansion in which he was the star innkeeper renting it out on occasion to guests that he could dazzle with the toys on his estate. I fell for these shiny things too when I came to visit. He also gave me what many have described as the “pity play” (Dr. Martha Stout’s book “Sociopath Next Door” contains this important description). Examples of this beautifully constructed (like a glistening web) pity play were that his wife had been “abusive” towards him, self destructive and an alcoholic, he had tried to have a relationship with a man who cheated on him and nearly gave him AIDS, his sons had pulled away from him, no one else “could talk with him the way I could,” etc, etc. (I now wonder about this poor woman that could not possibly have had any life-affirming love from this man, who buckled under alcohol addiction to “escape” the “mental cage” he must have kept her in.) Ultimately, I fell for this (purely self-centered and guiltless) pity play as I have always been a kind man with an extra large heart, filled with compassion and empathy. In the gravest of ironies, I had fallen for a man with quite the exact opposite set of values, or, really a complete lack or black hole void of higher values other than his immediate needs.
His calm, carefree exterior disguised the fact he registered zero on the empathy meter. I was also distracted from this fact by the (impulsive and self serving ) “gifts” (which were also somehow kind of “off” since, without empathy, a gift can oddly miss the mark and not feel personalized) along with the spontaneous trips and what I thought was his sincere interest in the affairs of my life. I learned recently that sociopaths can “mock” listen with words that sound like interest, but that in their mind, I would only have been a source of supply to their narcissistic needs. I was put on a pedestal, the compliments were intense but also in an odd, broken record kind of way, rather repetitive. There were times I had an uneasy feeling, but I often ignored my instinct which told me he wasn’t “quite right.” But that pervasive “charm” that so many describe here was powerful! My initial explanation for this attraction to this kind of deceptive charm is that I have been a worrier a lot of my life and to be around one who never seemed to have any deep worries was very liberating to me. (There is, however, a deeper explanation to be found towards the end of what I am sharing here). And, it seemed only good things were possible with him, that there were no limits to what we could do as a couple. When it ended suddenly, you can see why shattered dreams like this built on the freedom from fears can hurt so much. Yet, through my recovery, I learned some important things about myself that helped me to understand how I had let myself escape into this fantasy land of romance with someone who simply wasn’t capable. Healing this part of myself has taken the most amount of work, it is something I am dedicated to now, as others are here. This site is where I come back for support and quick reminders stay out of the pit and not to wax forlorn.
I have learned to be gentle with myself, letting go of the voices in me that told me I was defective for falling into this. I read many passages here and elsewhere about forgiveness. The key to forgiving I found started with myself first. It just can’t be done the other way around. I wasn’t able to think “I forgive him” for a long time until I found I needed to forgive myself first. In fact, this will be essential to me for finding a better way to live the rest of my life now as it cuts through many layers of pain I have kept with me for so many years. (I learned about my own pattern of connecting to those that are not connected to others, a long seres of toxic relationships sadly, and how these seem to be related to my abusive childhood.) And the only way I got to this point was through prayer, through reaching out for help to a higher power.
This reaching out was a decision I made when I first found out the “impossible innkeeper” had “other guests” he was soliciting about three months ago… (yes, I discovered on his laptop emails from a dating/sex site that led me to question). I played detective and found the site he was on and sure enough saw a very active pattern. It was at this crucial turning point I turned to God to help me to confront and question the very foundation of the tangle I had found myself in. By turning to a higher power, I have been able to walk through this and away from this (I was actually spit out by this predator when I confronted him in the most gentle of questioning then. It was your classic instant “devalue and discard.” Typical, is it not!) And it is to this same higher power that I return each day. Each day is step away from the abuse and each day is a step closer towards love from above that I can take with me and share how I see fit. Yes, it is about finding our self worth this way, of setting boundaries and learning about healthy relationships. Just like the “impossible innkeeper,” I had been, in my own lost way, soliciting visitors to my heart allowing myself to be just an accommodation to them and not much more. I followed this journey into the darkest place of pain to see I finally had some choices other than being a victim, a caretaker, or an “object.”
The darkest secrets that came to a useful light were not his, but my own. About ten years ago I was able to admit my father was/is an alcoholic. In my recent quest for answers, I learned the deeper truths about sociopathy and personality disorders and now better understand, and work on forgiving my father as one who had suffered the addictions and illogical abusive rages associated with borderline personality disorder. I realized his mother may also have been sociopathic, never validating him as a child etc. Sadly, in the midst of all my other despair from this most recent broken relationship, I essentially learned my own father had never been able to break his own prison of narcissism. And, having always sought his love, I began to see I was somehow “programmed” to accept other men into my life that fit his same mold, others that were smart and accomplished like my father but who, inside, also could not love with any depth.
Here I am finding a few tears as I write this last realization to share here with you. But this is how I am going forward. I too can be fearless, not to the point of using others, but when it comes to finding my own healing and loving others in a much more healthier way. Because I can connect to others, share an empathy with others like myself at this site, (thank you again so much to all who build this safe place of healing here). I know I can become a happier, stronger person in this awareness and not some fearless self-centered addicted maniac. There is hope. It is the awareness of healing I have only recently begun achieve for myself. It is powered by my faith in God. It is validated by God’s own supreme example of forgiveness and resurrection. Without this, I (we) would still be at war. I don’t need the weapons anymore. I am free to leave the battlefield and perhaps, by following God’s eternal example of grace, create peace.
I hope the healing power of Lovefraud continues to multiply. I see what kind of destruction is out there, how much we need support to make these kinds of changes in our lives. It can’t be done alone, most of us ARE human after all. Our strength is a shared strength. If any of my words can help another see a possible sign of hope for healing, the way others have shared their words here and have helped me to heal and to grow, then I will count this as a blessing. It is through giving we are seen and find validation, not from taking. I chose to walk this path now, sometimes with my hurt and pain, always in the direction of rising above this. Experiencing a person who couldn’t, can’t, and will never connect ultimately has helped me to connect… to good things I could never have imagined. My healing continues, I hope others are finding this as well.
Yes Henry: The only drama I want in my life is to flip on the TV or go to the movies and watch it. Not having these flames go up in my life. Didn’t ask for it … didn’t go looking for it … it found/finds me. Next time, I’m taking off to the other side of the world for a few years … maybe, just maybe they’ll go knocking on someone else’s door. Only kidding. Stand up and fight.
Peace.
Here I am on a Sunday morning….I felt I’d made so much progress getting past this guy I only dated 2-1/2 months that ended in the beginning of July. Why is this still so painful for me??
Though he hardly posts on my reptile site much these days, he is a frequent poster on a sister site that has all the same members. He is very well-liked over there and is friends with many of the same people I’m friendly with. I shouldn’t have looked. I usually don’t. But I looked this morning, and cannot tell you how much it hurts. There was a thread posted on that site of “post a picture of your significant other.” I saw that he had posted a picture there, and I went into a panic attack as I was looking for the pic he posted and wondered who it might be. When I got to his post, he had already deleted the picture out of his photobucket account. Based on the comments, I think it was a picture of his daughter.
I really need to stop feeling so awful about him–discarded and rejected. He moved on as if I had never even existed. I wish I hadn’t seen that.
I was recently contacted by his platoon sargeant asking for the evidence of his adultery. They will use the same evidence to convict him of “malingering” (faking medical disability to get military benefits). He acts so disabled there that he can’t even walk from the car to his appts, and claims he cannot drive. Just the fact that he managed to drive an hour and a half to see me is enough to convict him. He acted completely healthy around me! The platoon sargeant herself got played by an army guy once. She understands he is a sociopath, and she wants to get him like a heat-seeking missile. She told me that he is now aware I turned him in, and she has file a no-contact order against him. It actually embarasses me that he knows he is even still on my radar screen in whatever capacity.
I am really down on myself today. I wish I had never gotten involved with him in the first place. I hope I can get past this! I feel like every time I take a step forward, there is a step backward.
Are others feeling this way, too?
stargazer _ Yes I feel that way – especially right now. He lived with me 3 years, I knew him for 5 years. Have had no contact for 6 months. I despise what he is, who he is, what he did too me. But why do I still look down the drive way for his pick up? Why do I do thing’s around here that he might notice? Where is he? Is he still with the guy he left me for? Does he still have the same job? Is he alive? Is he happy? Did he/them go camping this weekend like we used too? I have tried everything to stop wondering about him. Most day’s i am ok and if he did show up I would tale a ball bat too him. But today if he showed up – well I don’t know – if Idid take him back I would lose everything – everyone – maybe tomorrow will be a better day stargazer.
the weird truth of my above post is that He does not want me – I am of no value to him anymore – he used up all I had to offer – and I have to rebuild a life – with out him-
I know exactly how you feel, henry (big hug) and I am crying after reading your post. It’s comforting to feel like I’m not crazy and that others understand what I’m going through. My ex is part of my internet community, and so I still “see him around” and get to hear what he’s up to. I left the community for a while but I missed it and still hang out there. The worst part is that he is so well-liked there. I suspect he has turned several community members against me, and it’s just not the same to be there any more. I have several friends from the site, but I’m not even sure who I can trust.
Even though I know what he is, part of me is still wishing he would try to contact me, just so I wouldn’t feel so discarded. He was never violent with me and never “devalued” me, either to my face or to others TO MY KNOWLEDGE. He never showed any jealously or anger around me. He was so laid back. It makes me wonder if maybe I am the crazy person.
Well I went off on a bit of a rant, but I hope tomorrow is a better day for you too, henry. I’m afraid I am not very uplifting today.
Guys and gals,
We are like a $100 Bill, we still have VALUE no matter how “ragged” or “stomped on” or “dirty” or even if we are 49% GONE! We need to realize that just because we got all this drama trauma, we are not valueless. But we NEED TO RECOGNIZE that VALUE IS STILL THERE.
Henry, I DO KNOW how it feels to be “NEEDY”—and that’s not a “dirty word”—humans are “herd animals” and they are animals that like to be “mated” (even after the child bearing years) and we all DESIRE that, well MOST of us anyway. That is normal and natural.
The thing is if we focus on the things we DON’T have instead of focusing on what we DO have, we get where we are “needy” and will “settle for less.” I, for one, am NOT willing to settle for less. I know if I am in a “needy” state, it is like being HUNGRY, I will eat just about anything if I am hungry enough, but I am more “picky” about what I eat if I am not hungry anyway.
So, I decided that as long as I am “hungry” for a “relationship” I am not going to be as “picky” as I NEED TO BE.
Another thing I think, Henry, is that we need to set GOALS for ourselves. Aloha has one goal that I know about, and that is to pay off her debts. She can MEASURE that goal everytime she makes a payment. Being able to “measure” the goals and how we are getting toward them is I think very important.
The goals don’t have to be something lofty or big, they can be small goals, but we need some GOAL DIRECTED activity to focus on in our recovery I think.
I did some soul searching a few days or a week ago. I realized I have been PROCRASTINATING on doing some things that I need to do, and working on some other things that can WAIT. So I am changing focus.
After the plane crash I had some of the “strangest” responses that didn’t make a lot of sence of why I did those things. Like for one thing, I WOULD NOT listen to the messages on my answering machine at the house. I am not sure WHY, and it doesn’t really matter exactly “why” but it was a wierd response to the PTSD of the airplane crash. I eventually got over that. I eventually made myself listen to a few of the messages if not all of them, and eventually got over that “phobia”—
I have also been still living in the RV even since we moved it back to the farm in December of last year. I just for some reason didn’t want to move back into the house. My son D moved back into the house months ago, but Ijust wasn’t for some strange reason comfortable in the house. Some how it made me feel “antsy”–WHY? I’m not sure, and it doesn’t matter, but my goal was to move back into the house instead of stay here in the RV. It still feels a bit “odd” to move back into my pretty large home after having lived in this RV for 15 months, but it is another STEP on getting “back to normal” but it is something I can MEASURE. I can SEE that I am making progress, not just “feel” it—cause you know how our “feelings” jump around like someone who is manic-depressive (bi-polar) sometimes, this day is good, that day is bad, the next one is good, etc.
I’ve also been working on some things for myself. I had an older mobile home that my husband had put behind the aircraft hangar for office space, and since he died it had turned into a big mess of stored junk. I cleaned it out, painted the inside, “decorated” it and am using it for my “art studio”–I have a room for my rag-rug floor loom to weave in, and another room for my oil and acrylic painting, and another one finished off for my sewing and other big “spread out” projects. Plus, I have decorated and furnished it with things I already had here, and have spent less than $20 total cost out of pocket, which is nice too. But I feel a sense of accomplishment. Not the overwhelming feeling of the task to do it is so huge I will never get it done. I have plenty of projects here that have been neglected for years and I am getting into them, as my grandfather would have said, “Like the cat ate the grind stone, ONE LICK AT A TIME.” It may not be moving along FAST, but I can look BACK AND SEE PROGRESS. Sure, there still may be a tall mountain in FRONT of me, but looking back at the goals I have completed, I can see I have done a LOT.
I am enjoying DOING the things as well, enjoying accomplishing the little goals that ADD UP TO the BIGGER goals.
By getting “satisfaction” from the little goals and the bigger goals getting closer to being done, I am not concentrating on the “needyness” or the “hunger” for a “relationship”—I am FEEDING my soul with OTHER ACCOMPLISHMENTS, so that I am not so “hungry” that I will latch on to anything that resembles a “relationship”—
I realize how STARVING I was after my husband’s death for a relationship and because of that I was ravenous when the P-XBF pretended to be that relationship, and latched on to it like I was emotionally starving (which I was at the time). I am now not feeling that “starvation” because there are OTHER satisfactions in my life that I am concentrating on.
Some days I don’t make much progress on any of the goals, and I am learning not to beat myself up about that either. Heck, even God rested one day a week! LOL So I am listening to my son D who tells me to “take it easy” and not push too hard. For a “Type A” person who is always into doing things that is another life lesson I am having to learn, but am doing that too.
I know I will never be “perfect” but I am approaching “reasonable” again and “rational” again, and “good” again, and feeling my own value, and taking care of ME. Not depending on someone else to provide ME the things I need to feel good about myself. But providing those things for myself. And, HAVING FUN DOING THEM.
I am very fortunate that I don’t have to go out and make a living at a job, I know that takes a lot of energy, but at the same time, it limits my financial means a GREAT deal so I have to work within a very limited budget of “discretionary” money to spend. But at the same time, I am a “cheap date” as most of the things I enjoy are not expensive, or they are free.
The devestation that “they” have done to us is because we react to their devaluation, but WE, and only we, can change that. We can’t change what happened, but we can sure as heck change OUR REACTION TO IT. We don’t have to let them set the “value” on us, WE CAN SET OUR OWN VALUE on ourselves.
MY life is NOT ended or valueless because my mommie doesn’t love me, or because one of my sons is a piece of crap murdering psychopath. I am still the same person I always was, and my value doesn’t depend on THEM loving me. I don’t have to allow myself to measure myself by their rulers.
I HAVE MY OWN RULER. And, you know, what, they came up on the “short end” of that ruler. Not me.
I’ve “got my back up” like a mad cat, and I don’t intend to back down into a hole because THEY don’t like me.
My P-son used to tell me how well he “got along” with all the Ps in the family, and I didn’t, so therefore I was the one “out of step” and I was the “crazy” one.
But right and wrong is not about “democracy”–right is right and wrong is wrong no matter what the “vote” is—just like when everyone in the world except Columbus thought the world was FLAT, it didn’t change the shape of the earth one bit.
Sometimes “democracy” is like two wolves and a sheep voting on WHAT TO HAVE FOR DINNER. So if you are RIGHT it doesn’t matter what they think about you. Hang on to REALITY, and not THEIR PERCEPTON of it.
Now my Sunday SERMON IS DONE, Henry–and even without a boink from the skillet! LOL ((((hugs))))
Hi Ox. Great sermon. May I add that we need to love ourselves and be whole people in order to have healthy relationships. 49% isn’t going to get us much. The S’s out there pick up on neediness.
hey, where can i see ox’s pic?
lostingrief: you have to use your noodle and figure it out. She’s on the net … you just have to do some research first … reading her past blogs.
I wonder,
I think maybe I have NEVER truly been a “whole” person, I think I had issues about boundaries that made me vulnerable to lots of dysfunction. I was fortunate that my late husband and I had a good relationship inspite of that dysfunctional part of me. He was a very generous loving person and brought out the BEST in me. From the time I knew him first when I was a kid, he was a person who always built UP the other person, not tear them down.
He could be a SCRAPPER if it was called for, and wouldn’t back down from an unfair person, but with me, he always made me feel competent, important, and loved. What more could you want? I would have walked across hot coals for him because I knew he would have done the same for me.
I laugh about some of the disputes we had–the biggest was over what kind of refrigerator to buy! I finally gave in and let him get the side by side with the ice and water in the door, which made the freezer so tiny you coudln’t get anything in it. A few weeks later, he came home from the store with a FROZEN PIZZA and was trying to figure out how to get it into the freezer and I saw him. I watched for a few minutes, then laughed and said some “unkind words” (in jest) and trotted off VINDICATED! WITH A SMILE ON MY FACE. LOL He just rolled his eyes at me! But when that refrigerator died, I got the ONE I WANTED with the big wide freezer on the top. LOL
So the “great refrigerator fight” went down in family lore to be told and retold at every holiday meal! LOL
But you have to keep in mind that my late husband was an ENGINEER and they try to “improve” on EVERYTHING, and some things just don’t need improvement, they are fine just like they are! They also like gadgets. Other than that though, he was a pretty cool guy! LOL