Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following email from a woman who is herself a mental health professional. Names have been changed.
The sociopath has an amazing ability to determine who can be manipulated or is vulnerable. When I separated from my sociopath, I had to recognize how I was conditioned as a child to be trusting and compliant. I was rewarded when I took care of others; my parents wanted a kind child. Their shaping was successful and I care very well for others. What I lacked was the ability to care for myself and to discern who deserved my care, who would return the love and respect that I gave. Lack of this discernment exposed me to many abusive personalities. I became a magnet for abusive personalities and I did not know how to transcend betrayals of abusive people. My upbringing induced a delusionary state that if I were kind, this kindness would be returned. After I left my abusive marriage, I was completely vulnerable and kept attracting more exploitive and abusive personalities into my life. I was shocked at the level of predatory behavior I encountered in landlords, therapists, accountants, attorneys, judges, magistrates—people who wanted to profit from my pain and vulnerability.
I was angry, confused and hurt that I had very little support. I appeared as the angry torn soul to the court system, and my ex was the funny, successful guy. My behavior was from the trauma of war I had endured and the frustration of trying to leave. I had learned to live with my sociopath, but I had no idea of how to deal with the corporate sociopaths: the legal system.
My marriage to an abuser
I married a successful man. The typical wine, dine and travel occurred before our marriage. After our marriage, the lies about his first wife, the lies of his divorce and extramarital affairs, and on and on, began to take a toll on my spirit. I became angry and defensive. My husband became repulsive to me. I didn’t want to bring healthy friends to my home, because I didn’t want to defend or admit to the shame of what I felt. I covered my shame with anger. My anger helped me cope and I was afraid if I faced the shame, I would crumble. I remained in the denial state for protection and to keep an appearance of a family for my stepdaughter. My sociopath would traumatize me further by making the home a chaotic environment. He had to keep me in this state to remain in control. My life was enviable to the outside world, but I was tormented and tortured by financial, emotional, verbal and in the end, physical abuse.
My therapist supported me, but he did not know how to help me. There were times when I wondered if I would be able to work again. I didn’t know where to turn or how to help myself. I tried spiritual healers; they also took my money with little support or help. Some even blamed me stating, “You stayed too long.” I found that professionals who were treating me wanted to project the cause of my emotional state upon me. Thankfully, my anger carried me away from these individuals and I did find those who could help me process, explain and understand the tools of the abuser.
The false self
A healing concept I discovered through Adult Children of Alcoholics and Dysfunctional Parents is the false self. This concept of a false self is purposefully reinforced by a dysfunctional parent or in my case, my abusive partner. Others call the process brainwashing. This false self kept me in a state of helplessness. My ex would shape this false self by stating, “You need to be on medication,” “I don’t mind if you are fat, all my women gain weight,” “You are always so negative,” “You are so uptight,” “No one will love you like I do,” “There should never be a dish left in the sink.”
My childhood shaping of kindness and respect left me with very little skills. I had been taught to ignore dangerous red flags and make excuses for mean behavior, work harder to fix it and to please others to gain their respect. Without protective emotional skills, I developed an internal numbing when I experienced these betrayals. In this numb state the abusive words and comments began to shape my own opinion of myself, feeding the false self. This false self had a constant internal message that I wasn’t enough, didn’t do enough, wasn’t pretty, wasn’t perfect, etc. Abusive people know how to pick a flexible, vulnerable soul. With each assault, my false self continued to grow, like a cancerous tumor. The strength that I had when I came into the marriage disappeared. The daily assaults of chaos, verbal, mental and emotional abuse, feed the monstrous false self, which echoed his words and thoughts that I was damaged goods.
Isolated by shame, without support of friends and family, feeling damaged, I began to go deeper into my state of denial. My ex would also gather his tribe of admirers who would reinforce his comments and behaviors. Sociopaths also have the ability to coerce friends and family members who are similar to them, to join them and inflict more harm on the mate who is vulnerable. When I left, I stumbled upon an email written about me by one of his friends. This friend had never met me, but stated in his email, “Gary is a nice guy, he just has a crazy wife.”
When I began to see that the relationship was doomed, he would not change and that I was in danger, I had no support group. I listened to a few who said, “Get out before you die.” If I had known of Lovefraud, I would have read that you must have a plan and save money before you get out. I slept on so many couches, lived in my office and cried daily because I was so vulnerable. I often wonder if it was the legal system or my ex who wounded me so deeply. I believe it was the legal system. I could leave my ex. The abusive legal system hit me by surprise and there was no help or way out of it. I knew that my ex was damaged and would never change, but I thought I lived in a country dedicated to justice and there was a just legal system that would protect the vulnerable, especially when they were paid so well. These sociopaths tried to put the last nail in my coffin instead of upholding the law of the land.
Peeling away the layers
Part of my healing involved peeling away the layers of anger, shame and guilt I had plastered around me. The criticism of my ex, his friends, his family, judges, magistrates, accountants, the words of therapists, healers, jealous co- workers and neighbors haunted me. I knew this wasn’t me. I began to understand this is their tool to inflict injury. I learned to ignore them and to practice positive self talk when I sensed I was absorbing their energy. I would not allow myself to focus on the pain, but instead on the goal I wanted to bring into my life. I listened to motivational speakers. I could not listen to music at first and I gradually began to reintroduce music back into my life. I drew my inner being and then drew layers around her and began to identify how these abusers had thrown their hatred upon me and how I had absorbed it. This drawing exercised helped me to understand my personal triggers and I was able to consciously recognize these triggers when they were being used by abusive people. When I exposed these painful memories, I would ask God to remove the pain. I listed all who had harmed me and how they had harmed me. I prayed for the ability to let this go and to forgive. Amazingly, the pain would lessen. I worked with a doctor who practiced biofeedback and neurofeedback (another important tool to release the emotional pain), chiropractic medicine, and acupuncture. These techniques were necessary and I did not need to talk about the pain, which would trigger my Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and I was not judged by anyone.
I have had to be gentle on myself. I left when I could, and did the best I could. I have to forgive myself for getting into such a mess physically and financially. I am aware of the parasitic sociopaths and can recognize much earlier when I am being manipulated or a boundary has been violated. I also listen to and ask for opinions of friends if I feel confused about a person or situation. I recognize that I am an easy target because of my nature and I continue to keep my eyes open and leave relationships where I am not valued. I continue to peel away layers of self doubt that were cast upon me by disordered abusive people who berate and punish the vulnerable.
Thank you for posting this, Donna. Very powerful for me.
Especially this-“Isolated by shame, without support of friends and family, feeling damaged, I began to go deeper into my state of denial. My ex would also gather his tribe of admirers who would reinforce his comments and behaviors. Sociopaths also have the ability to coerce friends and family members who are similar to them, to join them and inflict more harm on the mate who is vulnerable. When I left, I stumbled upon an email written about me by one of his friends. This friend had never met me, but stated in his email, “Gary is a nice guy, he just has a crazy wife.”
This is exactly the wound that would bleed the most for me. I hate to have to say it, but I am so glad someone else knows exactly what I went through.
I am in tears now because this author expressed so precisely my agony.
Thank you for Lovefraud.
Wow. This is so beautifully written. Thank you.
A lot of it resonated with me. The unexpected feelings of revulsion towards my husband and the SHAME of those feelings. The unexpected abuse by the legal system, heaping insult upon injury. Misunderstandings by absolutely everyone who could have been part of a support system for me (including therapists, spiritual healers, friends, family) who made things worse by blaming me or not believing me or by not SEEING me. It perpetuated and cemented that false self. The many attempts to self-heal, and finding success and progressw… but only through self-seeking, self-healing, and turning to God or seeking spiritual methods. I think it really is an individual growth and healing process. A lot of it has to do with re-discovering your true self and being that, getting stronger and insisting upon being that true self, and keeping out those who refuse to see you, or who tell you you are someone other than yourself, or who want to extinguish your self or spark. Evil.
You covered so many parts of this experience so well. Thank you.
To the author,
thank you for describing your journey. I can especially relate to the upbringing. If you ever figure out how to overcome that, please let me know.
Your experience reminded me of Jesus’ experience. He was slandered, accused and finally the legal system crucified him. This is the story of the scapegoat and that is how it always ends. The most innocent gets the burden of blame because we don’t fight back.
To the author,
THANK YOU! You have described the upbringing of many of us, and that compassion for the underdog, the idea that we can fix anything if we are just kind enough to someone, is “bred in the bone and reinforced by the raising” in us and it does leave us vulnerable to the abusers, users and psychopaths.
I am so glad that you escaped and found your own strength again! Thank you so very much for sharing your emotional journey with those of us here at LoveFraud. This is I think one of the best and most informative articles here on this blog and I think I’ve read all of them. Again, THANK YOU!!!!
Thank you so much for sharing your journey. Your isolation, confusion and pain especially hit home with me, as you were dealing with a “successful” sociopath.
One is caught in a web of lies that is layer and layer of deception. To the outside world, you look like the happy and successful couple, and he of course wants you to project that image- and I know in my case I did, trying to protect his “ego” while our reality at home was constantly one of crisis and financial chaos.
Only after finally jumping off the cliff of the marriage did I come to learn that all of the chaos was manufactured, deliberately to crush me, to gaslight, to destroy.
I was actively being “false” to others on the outside ( including my children, to protect their father, and keep them out of the worry and chaos)and tortured by the unreality of my reality, while there was another lie on top of that, under which lay pure malice on his part.
The cruelest irony was the fact that – even knowing I no longer loved him- I felt I had to stay because he was doing his best and really, really, loved me. When that bubble finally burst I was free of guilt and shame. Gobsmacked by the deep state of denial I had lived in, but not guilty or ashamed.
What is so marvelous about LF “ers, is to hear again and again how the ultimate victory of the human spirit leads us finally to recovery.
Welcome to LF and congratulations on your escape and your healing journey.
Dear Author
So much of what you write is what I have struggled against. I know what it is to be depicted as the crazy wife, to be “worth less than nothing”, to be thwarted in every venture tried (so I could feel I had value) and to be contstantly exhorted that if I’d just accept how worthless I was and what a parasite I was, then all the drama would stop b/c the drama only came from my refusal to admit nobody liked me. And like you, the world seemed full of exploiters and users and abusers and “helpers” who affirmed there was NO protection, NO justice. The law is not followed, it is perverted in favor of spaths, the ones who know to “work the system”.
I have found a measure of healing by focusing on my anatomy/physiology/biology. I would be very grateful for you to write more on the process of your healing, esp neurofeedback, maybe recommending an author or resource where I could do some research?
And bless you for finding a way to care for yourself. I had a very good therapist at one time who told me that most in such a situation commit suicide in some form. Your article proves that ultimately your existence has profound meaning, in the now where you are such an inspiration, and in continuing to be “NOT LIKE THEM”.
Best
Katy
To the author,
Thank you for your contribution. I really needed to read this today. Especially helpful to me were the concept of the false self created by the abuser and the section on peeling away the layers.
It amazes me how similar all of our experiences are with the absuer. I am still haunted by the words and judgments of those within the ex Spath’s sphere of influence. And the harsh judgments of “friends” who don’t understand what I’ve experienced.
I met with a new counselor yesterday who claims to understand what I mean when I say my ex is a sociopath, but later in the session said “He does care about you, he just loves himself more.” I don’t think she gets it. I told her that would be dangerous for me to believe, as it might promote a malignant hope (just finished Ox’s article the day prior!).
I will try what you did, practice positive self talk and not allow the energy to affect me. All of the disordered and those influenced by disordered people are away from me, but the words and the pain of the experiences are still with me. I don’t know how to focus on the goal instead of the pain. I want to learn. I’m tired of suffering. I deserve to be happy and healthy. I continue to strive for this. I guess it’s probably just part of the process, with victories and setbacks along the way. I have been praying to God, too. Asking for release of the sick people and for protection against attracting more. I’ve become very afraid of others, and when I see the slightest suggestion of narcissitic traits, I’m watching.
LP Marie,
I think I would find another counselor….that counselor saying “He does care about you, he just loves himself more” shows that he does NOT get it. Trying to get you to believe something so WRONG concerning a psychopath would put me at risk I think of having him get me to believe something else wrong….like maybe it is best for my child to have contact with her father….”after all a child needs two parents.” WRONG!!!!
LPMarie,
It’s hard for people to understand the thinking process of a spath. The truth is that when he says, “I love you” it’s because he HATES YOU.
Even after 3 years of thinking about it, I STILL am sent into cog/diss by this realization. It’s just so bizarre, so out of touch with reality.
So your therapist may or may not ever get it. So many therapists only understand narcissism, in which case, the statement that “he just loves himself more” may apply.
But it doesn’t apply to a spath. Not at all.
Ox,
I think you are right about the counselor. I’m limited in resources with counseling, so I’m not sure what to do. She has a background with counseling addicts, and I think she is seeing my ex primarily as an addict. I explained to her upfront that I believe he became an addict because he was first a sociopath, but honestly, it did seem as though she just didn’t get it. I think people are unwilling to condemn another as an evil person, believing that everyone has some good in them, which is precisely how my spath got me! I’m glad to hear from you! How are things for you?
Skylar,
Thank you for your feedback. I’m still figuring it all out, so I’m not totally 100% understanding what you mean when you say that when he says “I love you” it really means he hates me. I’m certain he enjoyed hurting me and the other women he has victimized. If you have time, can you explain the love hate thing for me? How are things going for you?