Editor’s note: The following story was submitted by a Lovefraud reader whom we’ll call “Marsha” about the coldest man she’s ever known.
I just wanted to write and share my story. I did some research on all the characteristics of what makes someone a sociopath. My father is a psychologist and knew my situation. He had mentioned the concept that my ex-fiance was a sociopath after everything that happened to me and I didn’t think to ask him more about what that meant. After exploring this site with the symptoms, I realized that my dad was 100 percent right. Here’s my story:
When I met my ex-fiance, it was through a mutual friend. He was charming, funny and seemed to be very witty and smart. He displayed himself as a go-getter, very ambitious, etc. We were friends for several months when our relationship seemed to get more serious. It was around that same time that I was living in an apartment that I loved within five minutes of my workplace. He lived in a fairly expensive high-rise condo on the beach, a condo that he owned, whereas I was renting.
He was a mortgage broker at the time and the housing market was steadily headed into the downfall. As we continued to date, his job stability as a broker seemed to be in question. Sure enough, about six to eight months into our relationship, he lost his job working for one of the major banks as they had some layoffs. He faced the challenge of paying his bills and mortgage in his condo as he waited for the opportunity of new employment.
Moving in with him
He created this idea that our relationship was headed in the right direction and that he “loved me.” He advised that really the only thing to do at this point would be to move in together. He urged me to quickly move into his condo so that we could play house in a sense and combine our incomes. Looking back I realize just how much I was duped.
I decided to give up my wonderful, beautiful, convenient apartment to move 30-45 minutes across the town to his location. I began paying him rent, month after month and not really seeing where the money was going. It turns out he was saving the money with plans to not pay the mortgage and lead his own self into foreclosure. He then anticipated that since we were not married he could just short sale the property in my name.
Now during all of this time, I let a lot of these financial plans slide through the cracks. I trusted him and figured that he had a plan. I didn’t know that this was a true con artist act in disguise.
During the span of time that I lived with him, he had kept in contact with an ex-girlfriend and stated that they had to keep in touch because he had known her for so long and that she was a friend. Again, I let this slide, even though I didn’t like the thought of it. Mainly because the communication was often and not of real purpose. Flirtatious, in many ways.
The marriage proposal
After one year of dating and living together I truly felt that I was in love with him. He proposed to me but even the proposal was cold and emotionless. We were arguing one afternoon and he laid the ring on the table showing that he had gotten the ring and that this should get me to stay.
This was never what I would have thought my proposal from the love of my life would have been like but again, love is blind and the sociopath can find a way to have you hanging onto a relationship that you know deep down doesn’t make sense.
He wanted silence
Needless to say, after several additional months his personality began to change and change and change. I never knew what personality I would get on any given day. He was oftentimes very irritable and mean. He was cold. I would come home from work and he would state that he couldn’t talk to me, he wanted silence. He would spend nights upon nights sleeping on the couch (by choice). What young engaged man chooses to sleep on the couch and not in the bed with his woman by choice?
Read more: Seduced by a sociopath — it’s not love, it’s love fraud
It was as though all he cared about was the money that I was paying and the plans for the short sale.
He would talk sometimes about how people always betrayed him growing up and that he blames his father for being abusive. But, he rarely ever showed affection — kisses, hugs, terms of endearment.
I made excuses
I always would make excuses for him and say to myself — He’s just going through a lot right now —or he really cares, he just doesn’t know how to show it. Yet, over time it just seemed to be that he was purposefully being emotionally abusive and standoffish. He told me that I was too close to my family and should cut the close ties. It was almost as if he was jealous of my close relationship with my family and didn’t want that closeness to continue on.
Looking back, I realize that he didn’t want anyone else to figure him out. He didn’t want anyone else to realize that he was a fake, a fraud and that his love wasn’t real. His love didn’t mean anything.
He would always find a way to charm me, or reel me back in like a fish out of water, when I started to question his intentions or when I would take a stand. Then, there were other days where he just really didn’t give a crap.
I can’t say enough how this was the coldest man I’ve ever known.
Charmed again
After additional communication between he and his ex surfaced, along with his decision to allow a buddy of his (male) to come stay in our house for well beyond a few weeks, without asking me of course. I decided it was time for some separation. Although separation was there I still missed him. After a few days, he charmed me again and offered the possibility of my coming back home and things changing.
I came back, of course, and things didn’t change and he was as aloof as he had always been. The problem was that I still loved him and wanted to marry him, wanted to change him. Within a few additional days something very devastating took place — He cut the ties of the relationship with as much care or emotion as a gravedigger. Again, it was cold and at this point he devastated my life — he told me that he just couldn’t deal with this anymore and couldn’t be in a relationship.
After all I had sacrificed emotionally and financially, he was just easily done with everything. I took steps to move out. After that point, he didn’t call; he didn’t attempt to communicate at all.
I would have never been happy
At first, I went through hell. Replaying the events and wondering what I could’ve done differently. But looking back, he just wanted to live by his own rules — he clearly was a sociopath.
What is he doing now? I hear he is still living in the same place, filed bankruptcy and works out all the time to make himself look more muscular. He dabbles into drugs and is even further down the wrong path.
I’m just happy that I got out because I would’ve never been happy. He had no care or concern for anyone but his own self. I tried not to blame myself or get depressed. I try to realize that people like this, I call them users, don’t have a heart. They don’t care! They are truly sociopaths and will do whatever they can to win and to live by their own set of rules.
Please learn from my lesson.
Learn more: Sociopathic seduction — How you got hooked and why you stayed
Lovefraud originally posted this story on April 30, 2009.
I agree with you LTL…I think I struggle to let go because I never saw this coming. Believing her like I did (her saying on the day I left her that I was no longer her “future” husband (a term she used often) but her “husband” gave me such a state of confidence and then it all came crashing down in a way I couldnt have dreamed. I think the natural reaction is to scramble to make sense of it, deny that she isn’t who I thought she was, and as a rational person try to fix it and make it right, right like it was before.
Well, you speak pretty eloquently for me, LTL. Thanks so much for the above long post. I’m going to memorize it! I do think it is very true, for me, that along with my good qualities, my very low self-respect made me vulnerable. I knew it intellectually, but I didn’t really know what to do about it. My experience with the SP and related toxic individuals made me realize I HAD to do something about it to save my life. It has not been easy, especially since I’ve felt so tired lately, but I have been working away at it now for two years, using a variety of sources and methods, and it is paying off. Thank God. I do think that, until we heal whatever buried wounds inside of us that attract vampires and make them seem attractive to us, we remain vulnerable. There is no getting around it, no quick fixes, no easy tricks. It is patient, persistent, demanding work. Oddly, I began to realize that the way I would always pick on myself whenever things went wrong felt oddly, comfortingly familiar. I had to get over that false comfort and become really aware when I was succumbing to it–consciously repudiate it and do/say/think/feel something nice about myself. This went against every grain of coping I picked up as a child–to take the blame, agree that everything screwed up was my fault, that I was a bad person and irredeemably flawed. Thanks so much for your insights, LTL, and everyone else on here. They help so much to keep me grounded and focused on what I really need to do.
Dear Good Grief,
I HEAR YOU. I personally want to thank you for sharing your story, your journey, your “place”, your rawness and realness — it too has been riveting for me – because I was right there – with someone else – but with all the same traits, signs, hopes, disappointments, emotions and reactions.
We “believed” things we shouldnt have… (the words, the terms, the “dreamm” but how were we to know? I guess at some point the numbers start to add up, reality sinks in and the ACTIONS SPEAK THE LOUDEST… and our denial catchesup to us…and we get to a place where we are afforded the choice to see it all at face value – and gain or regain or self-respect, self-value, self-righteousness, and self-love. When we are ready or when we finally see the light!!!! SOCIO-FREE
Good Grief:
By any chance, are you in your 20’s??
I bet you are in your 20’s. When you get in your 30’s, 40’s, 50’s, etc., there is NO WAY IN HELL you will put up with this shit.
This girl is a MAN-EATER!! Am I the only one seeing it???
Rosa I was in my late 30s!!! LOL
Rosa:
What’s my excuse? I was 50 when I met S and was brought to my knees.
Skippy,
Thank you..
You are right there is no getting around it, no quick fixes, no easy tricks..Just a lot of hard work and dedication to yourself!!! And the payoff is UNBELIVABLE!!
Hardest thing Ive ever done…last thing I would have ever thought I needed to do!
Glad you are staying grounded and focused, we all seem to help eachother do that here and there along the way!
Rosa…I just turned 30 andshe just turned 32…man-water huh? Feels like it, she ate me up and I doubt she knows it but she still is
Sorry guys!
I lost my head!!
And my own brother married the psychopath wife when he was 40!!
I forgot ANYONE can be fooled at ANYTIME when these psychos are “on their game”.
I’ll just speak for myself.
My 20’s were…..let’s just say it was “another time”.
I was not the sharpest knife in the drawer, nor did I care to be.