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LETTERS TO LOVEFRAUD: ‘O like Umbrella,’ and the shut down mechanism

You are here: Home / Recovery from a sociopath / LETTERS TO LOVEFRAUD: ‘O like Umbrella,’ and the shut down mechanism

July 14, 2024 //  by Lovefraud Reader

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UPDATED FOR 2024. Editor’s note: The following was written by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “Quest.” He identifies what he believes is the shut down mechanism that psychopaths use on their victims.

As most of us know what its like to be a psychopath victim; I am not going to go into all the details of my relationship with a full-blown psychopathic woman that turned my life into a living hell in just 18 months. What I really want to talk about is the mental effects that this woman was able to inflict upon me without my conscious realisation; gaslighting it’s called.

Just so there is a little background, I am a 55-year-old male and split from my ex psychopath female mate three years ago. We were in a relationship for 18 months. At the time we split up, I knew the relationship was beyond repair, but had very little understanding of what had really happened to make the relationship such a disaster.

Two weeks before I left, I had been on the Internet researching mental disorders and had by chance run into the classification “psychopath.” At the time my real knowledge of the intimate details of the psychopathic condition were pretty limited. Anyway I Googled psychopath and found Lovefraud.com, and as they say, the rest is history.

What had she done?

Two weeks after leaving I realised that I was now damaged goods. Many times I found myself asking myself, what had this woman done to me and how did she do it??? I read every book I could find on the subject, about 20 in all, but still did not seem to have a satisfactory answer to my question, and certainly no real way of fixing what had been done. Most of the books that seem to have been written about the psychopathic condition tend to deal more with describing the psychopath themselves, which is great, rather than figuring out what exactly has happened to the minds of the victims of these monsters.

So what were my symptoms? Initially it was hard to get a grip of even this concept. On weekends I slept til noon; on weekdays I had to force myself out of bed to go to work. I was in a state of awareness that I can only describe as being hypervigilant for other psychopaths, or the possibility of them. Basically everyone I met was a potential psychopath until proven otherwise. Paranoia was rampant. I actually feared psychopaths, as I did not understand what this one woman had done to my mental state, or even how she had done it. This left me open and vulnerable to the possibility of running into another psychopath and not knowing how to defend myself. I had no clue as to what I was defending myself against.

As time passed. I learned how to see psychopaths. It was as if a sixth sense had been awakened and I was wired to the symptoms of psychopathy. Any symptom set the alarm bells ringing in my mind. Well, all this knowledge and awareness was great, but I still could not fix the damage. Some days there would be realisations, some days were great, others not so great. Sometimes while in a crowded room I would suddenly be overcome with paranoia and have to leave. What was going on? It was as if my own awareness of myself had somehow been turned off and I did not know where the ON button was.

In the last three years I have talked to many people about psychopathy. Some found it fascinating, some were victims themselves and could recognise what I was talking about. Most did not seem to have a clue as to what I was talking about and basically thought I was nuts.

Spelling error

So — “O like Umbrella” — where does that fit in you may ask? Well, one day while at work, I was on the phone talking to an East Indian guy. He was going to buy some products from the company I work for, and we were going to be shipping what he bought to him. Well, the guy’s name was one of those ones that you can’t pronounce or spell. He proceeds to spell his name — B like Bob, A like Apple, O like Umbrella — ????????????

He continued to spell but I heard nothing because my mind was stuck on, “O like Umbrella.” What had happened?

Well, while this was happening another part of my awareness had the sudden realisation that I had just been shut down. There was no “O” in “umbrella” and because he had said something that made no sense, my mind had basically shut down. At this point there was a kind of eureka moment, as I realised that that was how psychopaths get into the minds of their victims.

Anyone who has spent any time in an intimate relationship with a psychopath knows that things get very confusing at times. What appears to happen to the victim is a kind of mental shut down that seems to happen at a subconscious level, beyond the normal conscious awareness of the victim. The victim, not realising what is happening, slowly gets lulled into an almost vegetative state where they can hardly recognise themselves. It feels like their very essence or soul has been sucked right out of them, leaving a confused, rudderless entity, almost a zombie.

So what is happening here? Did I just have the ultimate realisation about psychopath victims because I had been able to watch my own mind get shut down by a spelling mistake? The East Indian thought “umbrella” was spelt “ombrella.”

Nonsense

As the days went by, I often thought about and talked about my revelation. How relevant was it? Would it make a difference? What I began to realize was that I now knew what my psychopathic ex had done to me, SHUT ME DOWN, and also I knew how she did it.

Having a conversation with a psychopath is not like having a normal conversation, especially if you are in a relationship with them. Initially in the early days of the relationship, everything seems normal. As time goes on, however, things tend to slowly become confused. Every conversation turns into a never-ending argument that seems to go round in circles, until the victim just gives up. Nothing is resolved and the arguments become more and more frequent, and more and more confusing.

The victim tries to make sense of what is going on around them. What they don’t realise is, nothing is supposed to make sense. The psychopath is in full attack mode on the victim’s sanity. The psychopath is basically talking nonsense, but the victim is not aware that it is nonsense, or that they are under premeditated attack. As the victim’s mind tries to make sense of the babble, not realising that its not supposed to make sense, because it almost does make sense, some part of the persons thinking processes shuts down. How this really works I am not sure, but I feel as if I am getting close to the realisation of it.

Shut down mechanism

One thing about the “O like Umbrella” incident was that I now had knowledge of how the shut down process works. Now, suddenly, I knew what had been done, shut down, and how it had been done. Suddenly the fear was gone, I now knew what I was defending myself against.

Read more: Gaslighting — 5 key points you need to understand

If it doesn’t make sense it’s probably nonsense and you are probably dealing with a psychopath. Because a psychopath is so good at hiding nonsense in amongst sense, most people miss the nonsense. Being aware of this puts the power in the hands of the victim or potential victim. If the victim is aware of the nonsense, it can’t shut them down, I hope. At this point, I at least feel more relaxed than I have in a long time.

So gaslighting shuts the victim down mentally. I feel it is important to realise this, because once a victim is shut down, it will take a long time to wake them up again. I guess the revelation here is realising the relationship between gaslighting and the shut down mechanism. It’s all in the nonsense.

If one can listen to the nonsense and realise that it is indeed nonsense, then theoretically, it will not shut the victim down, hopefully. I have yet to prove this concept. I’ll need to find another psychopath to test the theory.

Learn more: Tools for navigating narcissists and other manipulative people

Lovefraud originally posted this article on Jan. 15, 2011.

Category: Letters to Lovefraud and Spath Tales, Recovery from a sociopath

Previous Post: « Game theory and the sociopath
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petite
14 years ago

thanks Shabbychic,
yes, I had very poor boundaries, so I beleived every word that came from his mouth and his intention to change and not to reconnect with the past, so I wanted to give him (us) a chance. I had no clue that he would do all the gaslighting and send me into spin cycles making sense of the nonsense.
when the inconsistencies were staring at me during this last trip he was here last week, I told him on his face, this was too much for me and my gut feeling told me to take time away from him.
yes, I also got that feeling of turning into a pretzel and it was not good for me.
I am taking it day by day, hour by hour to grieve and come out of the fantasy, will keep working hard and read all the advice given here to me.
petite

petite
14 years ago

Hi Quest,
I told the jerk few days ago, that I needed time for myself and time away from him. He lives in USA and me oceans away in another continent, he was here for a conference and left 2 days ago.
having said that in the last 48 hours, I am grieivng his loss.
It was his inconsistencies and statements not matching or adding up and not giving me adequate assuring explanations that made me want to tell him – no more.
Now I am going back and forth thinking – did his nonsense make sense, should I make sense of it and give him a chance, maybe there was some sense in the nonsense, maybe if I only understood it better etc. that is when I saw your excellent post on O for Umbrella and I was taken aback that what he was trying to do was induce a mental shut down in me and make me start losing grasp on reality. so pathological.
hence I asked you – how can one avoid the temptation of making sense of the nonsense, in a way try to ignore the nonsense, so as to bring the good times with him back into my life.
I think your post answered it very well.
thanks
petitie

one/joy_step_at_a_time
14 years ago

don’t really have anywhere else to tak this: i am so angry my head could explode. work related. a designer and a developer who have, through missing deadlines, and doing sub par work, messed with my timelines. I am so angry i could just spit. but as i am the lead, i am not allowed to spit at work. 😉 Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck. god, i had shoddy work. and people who make doing my job a whoooole lot more difficult. grrrrrr. errrr. grrrrr.

lesson learned
14 years ago

(((((((((((( One )))))))))))))))))))))

Peeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeace, breathe sista 🙂

Questy…..this O for umbrella stuff is REALLY bugging me.

LL

aussiegirl
14 years ago

akitameg –
Everything that one/joy said, with this addition:
it’s not MEN you need to avoid, it’s SPATHS and other TOXICS. Remember, there are plenty of female spaths out there too!

one –
Hope things settle down for you. It’s rotten when other people mess up all your hard work. x

LL –
Do what you gotta do babe. x. Take however long you need to take. xx. Listen to your gut – if it’s telling you to bail for a while, it’s because you need to bail for a while. I won’t hunt you down, but if you ever feel like an email chat, copy and paste this to Donna – I am happy for you to have my email address. xxx.

lesson learned
14 years ago

Aussie,

IDK what I want to do. I love it here. Just sometimes overwhelms me. What I’m learning is that it has caused me to pay more attention to how I’m responding/reacting and what I need to change. It’s a definite learning curve for me. I’m still trying to learn how to even accurately assess how I feel at any given time, where it’s coming from and how to deal with it.

I would love to have your email address!

I feel I’ve made a lot of new friends here. And that’s always good when the goal is to achieve healing 🙂

XXOO

LL

skylar
14 years ago

OneJoy,
Anger is good for identifying what the problem is, which boundaries were crossed and then demanding better.

You’ve done the first 2. Now go demand better. Then breath down their necks or can them and replace them with someone else.

one/joy_step_at_a_time
14 years ago

sky 🙂 xx

i wish i could fire them/ breath hot fire on them. they are sponsors. ergghh.

it’s all about COMMUNICATION – AND THEIR FREAKING LACK OF IT – MISSING DEADLINES AND NOT COMMUNICATING. AND NOT AN APOLOGY IN SIGHT. GRRRRR.

i have found the work around with one of them (cc everything to his partner), but the other, not yet.

so there is no progress on the website, but some on the other marketing materials.

i was REALLY grumpy on friday – i figured it was from being sick. but today i want to murder people – and i am feeling a familiar little tug in my groin – this might be hormonal. I only menstruated once last year and twice the year before. and each is linked to physical stress (illness and travel) or emotional trauma (fake boy fake dying.) Hopefully I bleed and everyone gets out with their cajones attached.

lesson learned
14 years ago

One,

I hear ya. I just got over one period, now heading into another with a two week break in between. And this is suppose to be menopause?

UGH.

I hope things get better for you chica.

one/joy_step_at_a_time
14 years ago

thanks ll! 🙂

i almost died bleeding heavy 4 years ago. blood transfusion almost died. was bleeding long, heavy and often, like you.

i’ll let you know what helped me, in case the info is of use to you: a drug that is used to control short term bleeding in hemophiliacs (ie during surgery), cyclokapron; and bio identical hormones (progesterone and testosterone, and also DHEA, a precursor to testosterone. regular hrt damn near drove me insane.

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