Editor’s Note: This article was written by the Lovefraud reader who posts as “Snow White.” She previously wrote “He is not Prince Charming, and you are not Snow White.“
After months of pursuit and ultimate seduction by a psychopath, which eventually lead to an affair with this man, I can now honestly see that I am making my way down the road to recovery. When I first started to open my eyes and began noticing red flags in the psychopath’s behavior, coupled with the deep sadness I was experiencing about ending my marriage, I took the first gigantic step of actually listening to MY feelings. Even though the love bombing was so intense and the psychopathic bond well established to the point that I completely believed his declarations: “We are destined to be together. You are my future wife. We are soul mates. You must leave your husband—¦well you all know the routine”¦. my gut instincts persisted, increasingly telling me to get out.
Although I didn’t know if our marriage could be saved at that point, I did know that I could not end my marriage because someone was telling me to do it. If my marriage is to end, it will be because he and/or I decide we cannot be married, not because someone else is pressuring me to do it. The control he had over me was so powerful that it rendered me helpless in thinking for myself—that is until I woke up and saw through his hollow eyes, the soulless person he is, the strange behavior, manipulation, and lies. Reflecting on the last five months of recovery, a pattern in the healing process has emerged, which I’d like to share.
First few weeks
The best way I can describe the recovery process so far is to separate it into months. During the first few weeks, I was in emotional turmoil. My weight was at an all-time low. I was so confused as to “what” he is, what had happened to me, who I had become, and if my marriage would survive. After much prayer, the first step I took was to refuse to see him and ended the relationship. But I needed answers. I contacted the psychopath’s ex-girlfriend. She was the one who educated me on his personality disorder. I had no idea what psychopathy was and began researching it. Over the next month, I read everything I could get my hands on such as the Love Fraud site and books. Claudia Moscovici’s work, Dangerous Liaisons, profoundly described what I experienced. Additionally, Red Flags of Love Fraud precisely delineated the process of the relationship and his characteristics. He exhibited all the traits except for defrauding me out of money.
I started simultaneously educating myself and working with a marriage counselor. Although I sought help from a counselor before my affair became physical, I was too far gone to stop it. In retrospect, I can see how the luring and honeymoon phases played out. He innately moved me through the process. While in the midst of it, I did see that what I was experiencing wasn’t normal and continued to see a counselor. However, either I wasn’t accurately articulating what was happening, or the counselor wasn’t schooled in psychopathy, or I was already too emotionally controlled to really hear her advice. When I learned I had been involved with a psychopath, I told her about the books I read, but she was not interested in reading them. Even though she wasn’t able to point out the possibility that I was dealing with an emotional predator, I do credit this counselor with helping to save my marriage. Fortunately, the marriage counselor we are working with was open to reading the books and resources I listed above to better understand what I had experienced. Never having sought therapy before, I now know that it is a process, and there isn’t a quick fix. It simply takes time.
Month 2 cognitive dissonance
During the second month, I continued reading and posting on blogs. On one site, I met a woman from the UK who experienced exactly what I did and was much further along in the recovery process. She spoke with me about her experience and provided so much support. I also began phone counseling sessions. Within the first five minutes of our session, I realized I had finally found someone who could explain what I was experiencing psychologically. There was a name for it—Cognitive Dissonance—and it doesn’t happen when normal relationships end. There would be no closure from him. He is simply not capable. I have to come to terms with it and create my own closure. Most importantly, I must know and feel that what we had and who he presented himself to be is not real.
Month 3 learning about me
While the first two months were spent on learning about psychopathy, by the third month my focus shifted to healing. I continued to read, but whereas before I gravitated toward reading about HIM, now I started reading about ME. Some might say it is unhealthy to continue researching, but I find that the more I educate myself, the more empowered I become. I also continued working with my counselor. Her goal for me is to eliminate any doubts about whom I was dealing with so that I could develop a clear picture of the dangerousness of this man. She had me complete a checklist of his behaviors. One would think that even after seeing it all in black and white and living it, there would be no doubt—not so simple. Cognitive dissonance is a tricky thing.
Month 4 feeling peace
By the end of month four, moments of feeling at peace within myself and my marriage are more frequent. I learned that I must practice mindfulness, or living in the moment. Focusing on the past leads to depression. Focusing on the future generates anxiety. Being present is the path to peacefulness. Learning to live in the present is a gradual process for me. Like learning to play a sport or an instrument, I must practice it. The moments of mindfulness are becoming more frequent. This is what it looks like: When I’m out with friends and it hits me, I look around and say to myself, “Wow! Look at me. I’m actually having fun surrounded by people who really care about me. I am not tied to my phone having to answer his incessant texts anymore.“ I started noticing myself enjoying the moment. For me, the moments of “noticing” my enjoyment with my husband, children, and friends is practicing mindfulness.
July 4th
The intrusive thoughts have not entirely ended. I still have nightmares about how I drank the Kool Aid and was so brainwashed and manipulated by some manufactured, fraudulent fairy tale. However, they are lessening. While watching July 4th fireworks on the dock overlooking the lake near our home I felt at peace, truly living in the moment. Last year on the fourth, the love bombs were exploding, I was being held captive by his texts, and the emotional control was well underway. This fourth, I said to myself, “Look at me. I actually feel peaceful and am enjoying the evening with my husband. I am at a good place. I’m free!” I don’t know why I have these internal conversations with myself, but they help.
The night before the fourth as I was lying in bed, I actually said to myself as I felt the breeze blew across the room, I’m ready to let this go. I asked the wind to take the intrusive thoughts of him and our relationship and blow them out of my mind and life. They say that psychopaths intuitively know when you are letting go. If that’s true, I’ll never know for sure, but that fourth of July, just as the fireworks were about to start, I received a friend request on my phone. It was from a man I do not know. I hit ignore. Half an hour later, I receive another request. The next day, I received a third friend request. The first two may have been a coincidence, but the third??? So I looked at his page, which was public. I know that looking at the page could be considered breaking No Contact. I got weak. I looked.
It was a fake page. The photo of the man was taken off the Internet. There is a website where you can match photos to photos posted on the internet, called Tineye.com I was able to identify that a fake persona was created using someone else’s photo. Other signs of a fake page I noticed were that he only had one friend, a Russian woman, sketchy biographical information, and the time of the postings corresponded within minutes of the time the friend requests were sent to me. The most disturbing parts of the page were the postings that directly related to our relationship. Two that smacked of misogyny and the other two were pity play tactics.
Minor setback
Fright was my first reaction to the FB postings, and I thought about deleting my Facebook page. Doing that would disconnect me from my family and friends. I refuse to live in fear. I learned how to lock down my page further so it is not searchable to strangers. I blocked him and will block any strangers who send friend requests. Should it happen again, I must simply click ignore and NOT look at the page or risk staying embroiled in his sick mind games. This was a minor setback for me, bringing more intrusive thoughts and nightmares. When the experts say maintain No Contac ”¦ they say it because they know that it is essential to our recovery.
Process of recovery
While I am not proud that I allowed myself to succumb to his pressure, cross boundaries I never imagined I would, and hurt the person who has always been there for me, my husband, I am committed to doing to the hard work necessary to getting back to the person I was before my involvement with the psychopath. The process of recovery involves:
- Awakening to the dangerousness of the person and his pathology and ending the relationship
- Educating yourself on psychopathy
- Leaving no stone unturned in your quest for knowledge
- Reaching out and seeking help from people who “know”
- Working with a trained counselor to learn the strategies to break free of the memories of the idealization phase
- Rebuilding the relationships in your life that matter, and
- Living an honest, healthy lifestyle.
Most importantly, it is not enough to just “know” what he is. The knowledge I’ve obtained about psychopathy and my feelings must be in synch, and therein lies the work to be done. Periodically, the cognitive dissonance surfaces, and when it does, I take some time to keep myself in check by reading from the Love Fraud articles or Claudia’s blog. Slowly my outgoing, energetic spirit is returning, and I am rebuilding the bond with my husband. Thanks to the work of Donna, Claudia and others, my questions have been answered. I must now use the strategies I’ve learned to continue moving forward.
Dear Scarlett,
You are what is called “trauma bonded” and there is a book by THE BETRAYAL BOND by Patrick Carnes that will explain why you go back and try to escape then go back again….That woman who was with the man who kidnapped Jaycee Dugard was in that same position, and the woman with the man who kidnapped Elizabeth Smart, and those two little girls stayed “voluntarily” after a while because the trauma bond,, the “BETRAYAL BOND” is stronger than a chain.
If you will read that book I promise you it will help you break free, dispose of your own guilt and realize that you have been “bewitched” and “enslaved” by your own emotions and him pulling the strings. You don’t have to stay there forever, you CAN BREAK FREE. You are in my prayers and thoughts. God bless.
Scarlett
If you havnt done this already, contact the institute for safe rekationships. Jennifer is a phone counselor with Sandra browns institute. She helped. E tremendously and is the the only counselor I have spoken with who gets it. Within the first five minutes of speaking with her, she explained exactly what I was going through psychologically! You wi be amazed with how much she will help you!!!!
Snow
Scarlett,
I’m sorry that therapy has gotten too expensive.
the good news is that LF is, IMO, better than therapy.
You get to talk to dozens of people who have experienced what you have. Many of us know more than the therapists about what it feels like to be a victim.
The wisdom and compassion here is going to help you.
Oxy is right, read about the trauma bond. I’d also add, read about cognitive dissonance.
what you will find is that it begins about learning about the spaths, but then you find out that you learn more about you and how to become a better, stronger you.
Thank you for all the suggestions and support. I have already started to look into the books and other support sites. Skylar what is IMO? Right now these blogs and this reading information is all I have. Here I don’t feel crazy, I feel like I have alot of work ahead of me and I hope I’m strong enough to get through it all, because I know it is about to get worse before it gets better. My husband won’t let it go, he resents me and insists on bringing up my affair over every little thing that upsets him. I know that the minute he is upset by anything he targets me and makes it about my affair. It’s been over a year and it’s not getting any better. He wants to hold onto the anger, to the hurt and he wants his revenge. I just want to be free of all that, I don’t want to get revenge on my sociopath, or have anger or feel hurt. For me I’ve felt all of those things for too long, all this pain has to be for something, something good needs to come out of this. I want to walk away from this experience a better person for it. If I don’t then I have failed myself again.
Scarlett,
IMO, just means “in my opinion”. Some people say IMHO (in my humble opinion), but I don’t pretend to be humble, I know that I’m opinionated and not always as humble as I should be. When I AM humble, I will say it that way.
We all have dysfunctions and personality disorders. I try to be forgiving of others’ PD’s if they are sorry and working on them, but if they aren’t, then it isn’t my responsibility. your husband has his own issues he needs to work on. You have your problems and they caused you to make a mistake. Maybe your husband’s issues added to it.
The point is, you have to both have the same goal: to be united in love, not as rivals.
You will get through it with time, either together or apart. 3 years seems to be the average for getting through the worst of it. I don’t know why that’s the “magic number”. Work hard on it. Work to understand yourself. Read as much as you can. Not just here, but books too.
My heart goes out to you. This trial is not something I ever would have imagined in my own life. It was such a shock.
Mo mac. and snowwhite,,
my wife seems distant, and i get the gut feeling that intimacy frightens her or something. ?? I know I was so ashamed of myself when years ago i had a brief indiscretion that i couldnt enjoy intimacy with her for months. eventually i think i dealt with it and we became closer than ever. i dont ever expect her to be the same. but, will she ever be able to forgive herself? I have been working on my feelings, alone and letting her be. i feel more calm now than i have for about a year and a half. she told me yesterday that she has noticed this calm. was i pushing her away? with my intensity?
scarlet,
I can see that you feel that your husband this and your husband that. you sound just like my wife.
dont know about him, but heres how i really feel.
if she’d only be willing to let me know she’s working on it,
if she’d only quit trying to read my mind and have the guts to ask me how i’m feeling instead of reading my moods as always relating to her affair. (this happens a lot)
if she’d get to a place like this and face it head on like people here do.
if she’d talk to me and refuse to shut down and stand up to me.
if she’d quit saying she wants to forget it.
i think for us the open and honest communication has to be re-established.
and, as visceral and so much like a man as the following may seem, us guys bond a whole lot better when were intimate with a woman. no i’m not saying its the only way. but your hubby has just been in effect told that what he has to offer you in the intimacy department does’nt measure up. and if you feel something getting in the way, in his mind there is going to be a little voice telling him he’s not making it happen.(see, he’s probaably reading you wrong too) what mr s path did to you is teach you that you can lie and fake and i’m sure many other things that were WAY beyond your boundaries.
what i need is for my wife to get herself past the guilt and shame, and begin getting what she needs from me and someday really let herself feel like she deserves what i have to offer her in THAT department.
I looked back and SAW all the lies and how her very core was distorted. now i recognize that she still has a little bit of the “i can just lie about it to spare his feelings” crap going on.
point is here, its gonna feel a lot better when she learns that she can get what she wants from me, and that she DOES deserve it again!
I personally am not bothered if he taught her something new. bring it on and teach me how baby! i bet i can do it better! and, I will be around, and respect her, and it will be REAL.
respectfully yours
rgc
rgc,
I thank you for your comments, I appreciate you expression your feelings, it may help me to better understand what my husband is experiencing. Sometimes I get so wrapped up in my pain that it makes it difficult for me to see what is going on around me and how it is effecting my family. There are times that I do see and the quilt is almost too much, I’ve always been a very considerate person who always thought of others before myself. I was loyal to a fault, never cheated, never lied, and never thought I would. I’ve always been on the receiving end of the cheating and the lies. Although my husband swears he’s never cheated on me, his behaviour on many accounts was suspicious and led to a lot of mistrust in our relationship. What is so hard for us now to over come is that he is devastated by the fact that after 14 years of being together that his trust for me has vanished, and he always was able to trust me until my affair. I find it hard to get beat up over and over for betraying that trust and making him feel unsafe when for most of 14 years I felt unsafe and was not able to trust him. I know why I cheated, why I fell for the charms of my “sociopath” and my husband played a role. Do I think it’s okay to cheat, absolutely not. I wish I had been a stronger person and would have left my husband before I made that poor decision. Desperate people, do desperate things.
My goal in my recovery isn’t just to heal from the hurt and damage my sociopath did to me, which is huge, but to learn what is a healthy relationship, to be able to make sure my needs are met and to be able to find the courage and strength in myself to leave a relationship if it is not capable of meeting those needs.
As for your questions about intimacy, I found it difficult with my husband and still do. The sociopath violates you mentally and physically. He uses sex to form strong attachment, and with the love bombing you let down your guard and and let him into heart. I never felt more emotionally connected to a person before, the emotional and physical connection are like a pendulum, each contributing to the intensity of the other. WIth me I started to notice the pattern of my P using sex to distract me away from any suspicions I was having. With drawing love and sex, then seducing me. The more I saw the pattern, the more I felt violated. I become conditioned to believe sex = control and power. He was a rapist in sheep’s clothing.
You seem like a loving, dedicated and supportive husband who has made much effort in trying to understand and help your wife with her healing process. I hope that she can one day realize your effort and love for her and that she finds her strength. As for me and my husband I hope we find that as well for each other as well as for ourselves. I know I’m not the only victim who needs to heal, my husband and my son have been hurt and I know that I can’t undo what has been done, the only way I feel I can make it up to them now is to heal so I can be there for them.
Kind regards,
Scarlett
Scarlett’
learn about men. good men. they have faults too. and the wants needs desires of a good man can at times seem in some ways, like those of your creeper. the difference is in what motivates us.
you know how at Christmas and birthdays we are all usually taught to appreciate giving? watch our actions and you will see that we put our wives first. some of us struggle at least a little with this. and, i know that i had a hard time understanding that my wife does not express her love for me EXACTLY the way i express mine for her. once i realized this. a lot of tension left our marriage. (this was before this mess)
see, guys dont automatically understand. they have to try. At least i have to.
make your first priority healing from this, then make yourself immune to the creeper. let yourself get mad about it. let the hubby know it. keep working through it. and learn to forgive yourself. i know my wife didn’t sign on with her creeper for what she got. you didn’t either! you thought he was a friend. looking back, its obvious he wanted to garner for himself an omniavailable vaginal doormat. you didn’t sign up for that. what he was,,, pure evil.
a friend would have been content to point you in the direction of bettering your marriage. eh?
so keep working on forgiving yourself.
try not to assume hubbys moods are ALWAYS pointed at you.
make sure you give him the truth. (hiding things infers that you value them)
and remember that you are together still not only because hubby loves you, needs you, wants you, is an amazing man, etc. but also because YOU are worth fighting for! without that, he’d be long gone. yes Scarlett, its YOU!
sincerely
rgc
oh, and things are getting slowly better.