Editor’s note: The following story was submitted by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “Greenfern.” It is a classic story of sociopathic seduction.
When I first met the S, I was very young, 22, and in a pretty bad spot. I come from a broken, abusive family and I have been pretty much on my own since 16. I was managing by putting myself through college, working full time, step by step. A year before I met the S, I was hit by a car and the recovery from that sent me into a depression and hardship. I had no family support or insurance, so I pulled myself up by the bootstraps and tried not falling behind. I felt alone and struggling, but managed. I feel like I was a strong young person considering the circumstances.
Then the S appeared in my life. He was my TA at school. As it turns out he later told me that he had been observing me for over a year, but I was acting “stand offish” and “unapproachable” so he had difficulties getting to know me. So I guess when I hit the bottom after my accident I have become more approachable in his eyes and he pursued me.
Constant care and attention
He courted me very intensely, I felt off guard, like a deer in the headlight. He came across as this very dignified, old fashioned (he was only 28) gentleman with strong interest in my background. He kept asking if I needed help in my school work and brought me sandwiches and kept coming and coming at me. I felt strange, but I was flattered by the constant care and attention. Inside myself I felt weird, it did not feel right. But then I dismissed my own discomfort. I told myself “maybe I just need to relax and accept the attention and kindness”. I think at the time I have isolated myself from people and had little trust in myself being liked for who I was.
Read more: Dating a sociopath? Spot the red flags of love fraud
I told myself that maybe it was time to open up to people and receive. The problem with this was that I made the wrong choice of person to open up to.
He kept pursuing me harder, showering me with gifts and sweet little notes. He even branded my name into his arm. That should have been a big red flag. In fact when he showed me my name burned into his skin, I felt physically ill to my stomach and had a rising panic within me.
He wanted to hang out at all times. I felt like I had no time to myself at all. I kept telling him that I needed to do stuff on my own, but he replied to that by asking if he could come over after I do that thing. He wore me down with persistence and I did not say no. I did not know how to say no.
Phony clowns and bozos
Before I knew it, we were hanging out all the time. He told me about his problems with his parents, he made preachy speeches about the phoniness and hypocrisy of the world. He told me that now it’s us against the world and to “f___ the phony clowns and bozos of the world.” He convinced me to let him shave my head for a home movie. He told me that I was a mess and he will take care of me. He had me help him with his projects, including these films where he dressed me up as a boy wearing leg braces. He would pretty much decide when to eat and sleep. Many times I wanted to sleep at night, but he was asking for more.
In the same time he put me on this special pedestal, told me that I was the one for him and that I made him a better man. He said I was very special, he loved me, I was his best friend. He said we were meant for each other. He always asked if I was “the one” for him. I just could not say yes. I think this made him angry, but he would not say.
Completely suffocated
We moved in together, I have cut off my friends and social life. The S and I were doing EVERYTHING together. I felt completely suffocated, yet I could not even be clear to myself as to what was wrong exactly. I would have crying spells and could not put in words what was wrong. He delivered these little pep-talks about being strong and not caring about what the world says.
He took over many things in the household. Even though I was perfectly capable of doing those things, I have always managed previous to meeting the S. When I would do these things, he always made me feel like he could do them better; he would take them out of my hand. Slowly but surely he would be doing all these “favors” then make me feel like I owed him. He got mad at me because I did not say “I love you” enough in response to his million “I love yous” during the week. I did not love him. I dreamed of some miracle happening, so I could get away out of the relationship. I had fantasies of him just going away. The idea of me ending the relationship filled me with dread, dread to his response. I felt like I owed to him to stay with him. He always said “I saved you, you were a mess when I met you” then following it up with “I love you”.
He would go through the garbage to see what I was doing on my day off and I am pretty sure he was monitoring me, even though I have no proof. He grew marijuana and collected toy guns in his special room. He also hoarded his own urine in soda bottles. According to him, he was too busy with his projects to go to the bathroom. Gradually he has become too busy with his art projects to have time for me. He stopped initiating sex. When I wanted to talk to him about the sex issue, he shot it down with “sex is WAAAAY over-rated” or “what do you want me to do about it?”
I wanted to feel the way he made me feel in the beginning, but I did not understand why he took me off the pedestal. In the beginning he would want to have sex multiple times a day, but now he did not even want to hear about it at all. I did not understand what happened.
More and more criticism
At this time he started criticize me on small things. For instance on my grammar. English is not my first language, so I felt sensitive to the issue. He said I was sloppy in my language.
Then more and more criticism has arrived, and he has become more and more withdrawn, physically and emotionally. He refused to have any discussions about the relationship. He said I was the one who had a problem with the relationship. He also told me that his friends were surprised that he did not have a younger and prettier girlfriend.
I think what was the beginning of the end is that I got a good job that I liked, made me feel good. I think it really gave me confidence to stand up for myself more. I started pointing out some of his BS, yet I was not feeling strong enough to break up with him, even though I wanted to.
Bringing home a drunken girl
On our 7th year anniversary night he told me he would be home by 8 pm, so we could spend some time together. He came home at 4 am with a drunk girl, laughing. The girl was one of his students. He was offended that I thought that there was anything weird about the situation. I was livid. I felt like my world collapsed. He showed up with flowers the next day.
Then not much after that, we had a Thanksgiving party where he acted like a total ass. Then he broke up with me the next day.
He was was unfazed and calm. He combed through all of our stuff to make sure he took everything he felt a right to. He went about with complete calmness, purchasing new bedsheets for his new place. Completely cold. He told me that he was now seeing a therapist and he thinks he is pretty depressed. For the last 3 years I was BEGGING him to see a therapist. He would not even talk about it. But I think this was just an act. Later I found out that he was cheating on me for the last year and a half with the woman he married not much after we split up.
I have been in therapy for a while now. I realize that those years I lived in a complete lie and I chose to be blind to it. My task is to recognize that blind spot and protect myself from Sociopaths like him. I’m a work in progress.
Please if you are out there involved with a sociopath, trust your intuition!
Lovefraud originally posted this letter on Jan. 26, 2009.
Midnight – Thank you for sharing your story. Your statement – ” I came back feeling hollow but responsible for him” my X did the same thing to me – the suicide threat’s and attempt’s – Oh how I felt so responsible for him and wanted to help him so bad, the poor guy has had such a horrible life, maybe I can help him and the two of us will be happy ever after……I am at one year no contact and dont feel hollow anymore and he is someone else’s responsibility now….
Thank you for your story, Midnight. I saw the movie Australia the other night, and the sage/child in the movie kept saying that the most important thing we have is our story.
I can’t imagine what it was like to be with a sociopath at such a young age, and to have that as your first major dating experience! We don’t often hear from people who have 10 years of healing. I am curious to hear about your healing and how your life has changed. At what point did you realize he was actually a sociopath? When did you start trusting yourself and men again? I hope to hear more.
I think the guy she described is a’ cluster B ‘ they are sociopaths with a mental illness. Borderline + sociopath + physcopath + narcissist, they are different, they do extreem damage to their victims..
after 10 years she still needs to talk about it.
Midnight…all I can say is “wow” Glad you’re here. Sorry you felt the need, but welcome. This is a good place.
Henry: The damage can be that deep. And, what if we don’t know what we tangled with? I married one when I was 18. I thought I understood something about how screwed up he was after I divorced him at 24. I had no idea how badly he traumatized me, how he prepared me to accept other predators in my life.
This last encounter was so over-the-top devastating, that I have had to research, meditate, cogitate . . . in order to rehabilitate. (Yikes! Where did THAT come from!) And in the process of all this learning, I’m going back through my life and understanding how many severely disordered people I have tolerated over the years, and how much damage they have done.
Midnight is lucky she has come here to talk, and be with all the warm hearts in this community. She may still have much healing to do.
Rune – You sound like me – determined to find some peace within – glad you are here to share this journey. I look forward to hearing more from Midnite – we may learn from her…I love this place~~!!
Rune-ruminate (after cogitate)-you’re creating an epic poem!
Thanks, Jim! Sometimes the words just happen that way!
I actually haven’t thought about the S for a long time, my goal for several years was to stop thinking about him and just start moving forward. I guess after all this time there are still things that need to be aired now that I’m in a better place to face them.
To answer Stargazer’s question about when I realized the S was a sociopath, that would be about three days ago when I came across this blog. I knew there was something terribly wrong with him, already knew he was narcissistic, but didn’t consider that he could be a sociopath until I started reading the articles here. I stumbled upon this site while I was bored at work, I was looking up Stockholm Syndrome because of an odd dream I had the other night.
I’ve made a lot of mistakes on the healing road, but I guess we all have to find our own way. I hit bottom about 5 months after I broke up with the S. I got into therapy about a month later. I went on antidepressants to get me to the point where I could function again, I was just so tired and I had been stressed to the point of breaking. I started therapy around the same time I started dating someone new. Not the best idea, but considering we’re happily married now 9 years later it wasn’t an entirely bad idea. However, we went through some pretty low points together to get where we are now.
I was in therapy and on the antidepressants for around six months before I got to the point that my counselor felt I was recovered enough to stop our sessions. I had a lot of anger issues while I was in therapy, as I got over the fear and shame and realized how unacceptable the things were that I had allowed the S to get away with. The biggest problem I had then was that my personal standards had gotten so low anything was wonderful after the S.
My new boyfriend came from an abusive family like the S did, he was emotionally withdrawn and depressed, but he wasn’t mean to me. He had major trust issues in the beginning, but over the years we worked through both of our depressions, the trust issues, and grew stronger. Unfortunately, his biggest problem was responsibility. I paid all the bills, first from my part time job while I was in college, then I got a full time job once I had my degree, while he was unemployed as much as he worked. I married him anyway because I loved him.
We still had issues until this past year, put we’ve both grown up a lot. My husband has a full time job as a stay-at-home dad to our now one year old daughter which suits him well. I’ve learned to speak up about things that are bothering me and to expect equal effort in a relationship and I won’t tolerate disrespect.
I like living a peaceful, some may say boring, life. No more drama, no more walking on eggshells or bottling up my feelings. I honestly would rather live alone than deal with that again. Yesterday I was happily washing the dishes, something I used to hate doing, but I like having a clean house now, I care about how I live. I have hobbies I enjoy, I spend time with my family, and I have a few good friends that I visit with when we all have the time.
The most important recovery work that I’ve done is realizing that I have to be selfish sometimes. I can’t save anyone else, they have to save themselves and I have to save myself. It’s not bad, it’s just the way it is. In the case of the S, the more I gave the more I hurt myself, he didn’t want to be a better man, he wanted me to make him feel like a better man. Even my husband, who was not an S, didn’t benefit from my saving, he didn’t learn to take responsibility for himself until I stopped doing it for him.
There’s no magic cure, but time, introspection, reading articles and self-help books, journaling, talking it out, crying, whatever you need to do, just keep making little improvements as you can. There’s no point in trying to change anyone else, you’re the only one you have any power over.