Editor’s note: This artice was written by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “One/joy_step_at_a_time.”
I have been thinking a lot about Donna’s May 28 blog thread, If you feel an emotional void, the sociopath will step in, and the responses to it.
Tonight I took a long walk and sat down by the lake and thought about what the spath drew out in me. She showed me ”˜the gap.’ It’s humourous to me to type the phrase ”˜the gap.’ When I lived in Eastern Europe, I heard a phrase over the loud speakers at the train station, over and over again. I finally asked a friend the meaning of the phrase, and he told me it meant, ”˜mind the gap between the platform and the train.’
I haven’t minded the gap. I realize that the spath drew out two parts of my personality, and that these two parts of me, the three year old and my young adult self, can both look in on a part of me lost in the gap. I have often gone back and investigated ”˜the gap’ in my life. But, in the wake of the spath experience I see that it is still there, still in need of having light shone on it, and that I now have the opportunity to view it from two very different perspectives.
Damaged family life
There were brutal things that happened before this, but when I was eight, my mother had a horrific car accident, which put her in the hospital for a very long time, and damaged her body for life. It damaged our family life and left my sib and I to fend for ourselves as my father tried to maintain the family farm. We were terribly isolated in our small rural area. We had no family close by, and my parents wouldn’t allow us to go to live with our grandparents where we would have gotten the care and attention we needed.
The spath drew out these two strong parts of my personality — one part that existed before the gap, and one part that existed after the gap. During the gap my needs, first as a child, then as a teenager, were neglected. I did not have a role model for understanding feelings, nor a way to contextualize them. Life was like a dark dream — even when I was happy, there was so much pain.
When my mom finally came home from the hospital, broken and battered, she screamed in pain for hours on end. My poor little empathetic heart broke. I was not allowed to go to her, but would endure listening to her. I would not leave the house. I would stand under her bedroom and wait. I am not sure what I was waiting for — except the cessation of her pain. When she was finally able to get around, she was not a happy woman — she was riddled with pain and drugs. She was bad tempered and not able to cope with the life she was living. We should have left the farm at that point, so that she did not have to go back to work to support the damned thing — but my father is an n and she is supply, and he wanted to farm.
At the age of 13 I was asked to write an ”˜autobiography’ for one of my school classes. I had a wonderful teacher that year; someone who showed compassion and who really tried to reach me. I remember discussing my autobiography with her when she returned them to the class. I had written about my life to the age of 8 or 9, and then from 12 onwards. I had skipped the years in between as ”˜I didn’t remember’ them.
Abuse
I ‘woke up’ at 14, and immediately started to club myself to sleep with drugs. I was emotionally and sexually used by the young men in our area. I met the son of one of them last week, and it brought shame to the surface. I looked back on all the boys I knew from the age of 13 on, and there was a lot of usery. I didn’t know that these boys were using me and my friends. I didn’t know that my feelings were indicators that another’s behaviour was bad for me (how could I stay in my house if I KNEW that), and I was innocent. I had no idea what they were up to. Just as I didn’t know what the spath was up to — as I had never run into that before either, and no one protected me with knowledge. Innocence isn’t lost. It is torn from us. Pulled out our souls, leaving great rivers of raw wounded feelings.
My parents didn’t do much to help me understand life. They didn’t give me the emotional tools or the notion of boundaries that would help me to take care of myself and make my way in the world. They yelled at me, they ignored me, and they smacked me every now and then. Most of the significant events of my early life were met with an emotional frigidness that left me feeling shamed and alien. My mother was supply, and was set on my sib and I being supply, too. Dad was an n. I did my best to fit in, and when I couldn’t, I took drugs. Lots of them. I also participated in my own abuse at the hands of others — some who were too young and dysfunctional themselves to really be held accountable. And I learned to hurt myself in many ways: emotionally, mentally and with the choices (non-choices) I made.
The spath and the gap
It was great to move out of home and BREATHE. I started to feel the beauty in the world that existed outside the dark dream and repression in my family. But I carried on making ill-informed choices. And all of these hurts and abuses piled up. They lead me to the other strong part of my personality — the woman who wants to run, the woman who would fight fist-to-cuffs, the woman who cries like a warrior on the outside and who holds a river of pain on the inside. I didn’t truly meet her until I was duped by the spath.
The ”˜gap’ is the person who bridges these two strong parts of my personality. I don’t know what to do for this part of me, for this part of my past, but I need to shine some light in that frozen dark dream space. It seems to be thawing, yet again, as I look in from the eyes of the child and the eyes of the warrior. The spath once called me a ”˜magnificent creature’. It was a deep compliment to me. She saw both this warrior and this child. She called the warrior out. The fake boy (child) she made up needed to be cared for. I need to care for myself, but I learned early and repeatedly to care for others — even if all I could do was stand frozen in the face of their suffering. I wasn’t taught autonomy — I am lucky that it is natural to my character, but I still have to fight all of the time to develop it and retain it. The spath got me to care for the fake boy — instead of myself. But in the end I have learned that I want to take care of myself at the expense of taking care of others. My eyes have been opened to what my family members are, and what they would still take from me if I allowed them to. It has been a hard, harsh lesson.
i am susceptible to the tendency to rose color things too. I have made my anger and disappointment known to her and I imagine at least quite thoroughly. therapist thinks I “need to make her understand my feelings” but I think she protects the illusion and shuts me out. there was a time when she accused ME of being the manipulator. Have suggested we temporarily separate to clear our minds but she refuses to consider it. couples counselor is introducing her to the normal thought process whereby we feel and gather data through our senses, THINK about it, DECIDE if its good or bad, real or fake, and then allow our passions to rise to it versus allowing our feelings to immediately force us to spring into action. is this the Gap of which you all speak? skipping the think and decide?
It is a bit unsettling to think she does not recognize that he has already hurt her. and that though he left a big dent in the door of her car in a fit of rage, still she is clinging isnt she. does the guilt and shame of falling for this also repel her from thinking about it?
Rgc, making anger “known” and EXPRESSING it are two completely different species. My exspath “knew” that I was infuriated with regard to the compartmentalization of his deviant interests and activities. My EXPRESSION of that anger was raw, painful, blind, insane, and very, very vociferous.
Thinking before deciding is probably a wise option, but I have found that I (personally) am unable to make clear, sound decisions if I’m too deeply embroiled in a situation. I have had to make some very serious decisions that were not warm and fuzzy OR comfortable, by any stretch of the imagination, and I’ll likely be facing some options in the very near future that will be equally uncomfortable regardless of the direction that I take.
The “gap” that I refer to, myself, is that space that has been eviscerated by my exspath experiences. A void. A missing part that was simply pulverized into chicken feed. In order to FILL that “gap,” I have to use myself – me – who I was meant to be – who I am, faults and all – to cement that VOID closed so that the NEXT spath doesn’t swoop in and jump right into that gaping maw.
Again, you’re concentrating on HER healing processes. If she’s engaged in individual counseling, I would bet my spousal support that the therapist has mentioned “trauma-bond” and “shame-core” to her, already. Why she isn’t recognizing the damage isn’t for you to sort out for her – she’s going to have to sort that out, on her own, and directing her to websites, Wikipedia, or other sources of information may be a helpful gesture, but don’t expect too much, at present.
it was indescribable to sit in couples therapy before she physically left him to realize through her blurting out one day,”he says your mean to me” that he was effectively counseling her. and to see the reaction on the counselors face. _____, did you hear what you just said? no reaction from her. I had been told to “just ignore it” when she texted him or ran to him. “just be calm and speak her love language and she will be drawn to you.” well of course that was all crap until she managed to break away. what does she need, to actually be beaten by him or raped? why cant she go back and see how little respect he had for her by his callous disregard for her children, her job, her volunteerism, her boundaries, and YES, ME? It is hard to grasp how she can separate the ones who are part of her in order to excuse his actions. I know that the way I treat the ones who love her is a direct reflection of my respect for her. we now have individual counselors as well as a couples counselor who I made damn sure understand the pathological bond. neither of us is likely to fool them. I know I may never find the words to coax her into going back. i know it is going to be painfull for her and frightening but I see that that is the only way. my 1200 or so hours of study into the n, the spath, the histrionic, the sociopath are both a blessing and a curse. she doesn’t understand that lureing her away for mothers day weekend last year was risking creating a crime of passion on my part. risking the bond with her children, and grandchild! that if I had been less of a man i might have lost my cool and done something rash. he thought that the day she confessed to me would be the end of us. its amazing how tight his grip still is. and the heart wants to believe in the mirror image. ugh!
Rgc, I dunno – a counselor suggesting that I “be calm and speak…love language and….(they will) be drawn back….???” Uh, no. Nope, nope, nope.
Nobody on this earth is worth my pretending that I’m calm and that I’m prepared to jump backwards through flaming hoops and juggling kitchen knives to win them back after they left me! Why are YOU trying to win HER back? Why isn’t she trying to win YOU back?
You mentioned that your treatment of “the ones who love her is a direct reflection of (your) respect” that you have for her. Personally, I am not required to maintain ANY level of respect for ANYone that does something to harm me, even if I “love” them. In my world, I give respect only to those who have earned it.
I’m just rather confused, Rgc. You put in 1200 hours of studying sociopathy. That adds up to over 7 weeks, nonstop, at 24 hours per day, and I’m simply confused because I don’t see anything about YOU, at all. What I’m reading is 100% all about HER….saving her….winning her back…..protecting her….loving her…..her, her, her…….
When I write or speak about my spathic entanglements, I speak in terms of ME – what happened to ME, how it affected ME, how I am healing ME, and so forth. I don’t see any discussion about YOU, on any level, except that you were of sound enough mind not to do something about HER choices with regard to Mother’s Day.
I mean…can you sort of see how I’m somewhat confused? I am not seeing anything about YOU, and it’s just confusing to me with all of the studying and counseling hours you’ve put into this.
Rgc I am like Truthy, I don’t understand why you are concerned with her healing…you are trying to rescue her, and that is not legitimate. The only “legitimate rescue” I was told by a therapist once is “to drag an unconscious man from a burning building.”
“rescuing” someone is doing for them (or trying to) what they must do for themselves….what they SHOULD do for themselves. If you loved your child so much that you couldn’t stand to see him or her get a bump or a bruise and you never let them learn to crawl or walk, you always carried them….you would not be doing them a favor. You would be crippling them.
Your wife is confused, but SHE is the one who violated the marriage vows, SHE is the one who needs to make amends, and get her own shait together…YOU are the one who needs to HEAL YOUR OWN WOUNDS from what SHE and he did TO YOU.
YOU are the “victim” here, she may also be a “victim” of him, but the point is that SHE has also violated her moral compass, and she needs to get her own stuff straight and make amends to you.
She may not be able to do that. She may not want to do that.
If he wants her and she wants to be with him, then more power to them, but YOU are the one who has to decide if you want her back under the circumstances or not.
It sounds to me as if you are trying to take on a rescue responsibility that is NOT yours. What does your therapist say about that?
Ho Hum…
Ingredients
One Mr Nice Guy and one Mr evil
Psychopathic script
One victim or target
One mirror/two sided
Some Pity
Pinch of blackmail
Hint of murder
Plenty of drama
Huge dollop of control
Mix in ‘knows the words and not the music’.
Some gaslighting.
Method
Take all ingredients and mix in confusion to make a pastry. Then roll out pastry and cut into jig saw pieces.
Cover and bake the psychopath pie.
Psychopath pies are not very popular because the filling is empty and does not exist. Ironically it is the lack of filling that makes a successful pie.
Some people layer with a mirror for the true effect.
Some people wonder if they should add multiple personality disorder to the mix.
It is really a matter of experience but the result usually turns out right in the end.
STJ
xxx
Sharing, what a recipe for disaster! Well done and very true
Hi Truthspeak
I got triggered by a poster. The whole scenario sounded so familiar.
STJ
xxx
sharing the journey, I dig your wry poem with its dry tone.
“Psychopath pies are not very popular because the filling is empty”
Brilliant.