Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following story from a reader who we’ll call “Kay.” She discovered that her magic relationship was all about him.
Kay and the Loser in Aluminum Foil
He was prince charming, at least to me he was. We liked the same music, the same food, we spoke about the same topics, liked frequenting the same places, everything was so right.
My friends, however, had a complete aversion to his instant overbearing interest in all things Kay. He completely immersed himself in my life and was constantly “making sure” I was okay. He made sure he monopolized all my time. He would call me approximately 20-25 times a day. During working hours he made sure he called me at least 12 times. My friends did not think this was healthy, I thought it to be quite flattering. He wanted to know everything about me, everything my ex-husband of 15 years did not care about, he did. From what perfume I wore, to what my favorite color was, my favorite food, my problems with my friends, what caused the demise of my marriage, what I really wanted out of life. This was all his way of controlling me and my every move. This would also help him know what buttons to push. He wanted to know who I was with at all times, where I was, how long I had been there, where I was going, what I was wearing. It was upsetting to everyone around me, however, I found it strangely comforting that someone cared so much about every single detail.
Read more: 12 seduction strategies from the sociopath playbook
As time went on, I realized that he made 100 percent sure that everything I was lacking in my former relationship he would make certain NOT to give me this go around. Empty promises were the basis of everything to do with us. His wife had left him. She had filed for divorce to be with another man, another man that had promised her the world. He made himself out to be a grand victim of her mistreatment. She never did anything right. She could not move out right away. He would photograph her shoes on the floor that she had not placed properly in the closet, he would take pictures of her clothing stacked up in a corner, he would call her derogatory names, but it did not change the way he treated me. For me he was a knight in shining armor.
Misogynist
It became apparent he was a casebook misogynist. He hates women. Actually he loathes them. It took me a while to really realize this man had no friends, family members stayed away. He complained that her family hated him and they were instrumental in the demise of their marriage. I believe his former wife’s family wanted what was best for her, which was clearly not him. From all accounts, everyone that knew of that relationship never understood why they were together and why she would put with this broken behavior. I think he destroyed her self worth and confidence, something he was never able to do to me.
Sex was another ordeal. It took months before it happened and it was over in minutes. So long as he got what he wanted, how he wanted it, it was fine. It had nothing to do with pleasure, only control. Control over everything. For me, it was emotionally and physically painful and even more painful to watch how someone could so completely disconnect himself from the act and transform into what was his real persona, empty. He was devoid of actual feelings. Devoid of anything real. Pain is all he knew. Guilt, domination, gaslighting. Classic textbook sociopath.
I called off the relationship on several occasions because I was tired of the empty promises. He promised vacations, holidays together, all sorts of outings. He strung me along to punish me. I was being punished for the love his mother did not give him, and I was further being punished for the things his ex-wife did not do “correctly.” She could do nothing right and he was the victim. Actually, in time I realized we were all victims of his wrath. He found women who were extremely attractive and tried to break them down to the point where they lost their identity and became what he wanted them to become—dependent on him and his mood swings and his dysfunctional behavior.
Wants me back
I broke off the relationship and when he found out that I became engaged to another man, he quickly came back professing his love and even so much as “planning” the purchase of engagement ring. He had made a mistake; he could not live without me. Not for a minute. He wrote page long emails, texting me 24/7, calling me, visiting me at work, everything. I called off the engagement and returned to this “magical” situation. He was once again my “knight in shining armor.” Of course that did not last very long. Several weeks at most. Then we were back to the same old control/punishment cycle. I quickly realized he was not Knight in Shining Armor but a Loser in Aluminum Foil.
I was always crazy and his favorite lines were, “that is not what I said,” “I don’t know what you are talking about.” He had a hidden addiction to pornography that was quite disturbing to me. It was a “bad thing” and it had to be a secret. He was very secretive about everything, however, he required that you give full disclosure; this was so he could control everything at all times.
It became apparent to a friend of mine through a “social networking site” that he had been stringing the former wife along the entire time, giving her some sort of hope. My friend began forwarding those “status updates” which were indicative that something more was going on than met the eye. Naturally he denied it. Everyone was lying. When I confronted him, he said he did not want to be in this relationship and he did not know what he wanted. He was a pathological liar and I started seeing the holes in his stories. The stories became a sort of “strainer.” They would not hold water.
Never going to work
Everything finally came to a head on my birthday when I realized that this was never ever going to be a good or healthy relationship. This was all about him and all about what he needed. He asked me to be patient with him and give him time and that I was wanting to run to the altar. No. What I wanted was a normal relationship, someone that was consistent. Something he could not relate to at all. He was devoid of any emotion and when some emotion (sadness) came about at the loss of this relationship, he would quickly disappear and block. Avoidance is key with these individuals. They don’t want to feel. They hate themselves and they want you to hate yourself. They will avoid everything, including you. They move on to the next victim and repeat the cycle.
I was in this situation for nearly one year and a half. The relationship was all about him. These types of individuals will make sure NEVER TO GIVE YOU WHAT YOU WANT MOST. Whatever that might be. They give you the false hope that this will happen, just not right now. No, it’s never happening. Not now, not in a month, not in 10 years. I did everything right. Right for someone normal, not sociopathic.
Breaking it off for good is very difficult. They love to leave “open-ends” to their phone calls, texts and actions. They want to know that they are still in control by leaving that window open. Lock it; board it up!
They are broken individuals. They don’t want help; they want to victimize themselves and others. That is how they get their kicks. I was wise enough to get out before it escalated. I am now engaged to a wonderful and, most importantly, a normal man. He functions normally and loves me and my child. He makes good on all his promises and comes through for us.
There is light at the end of the tunnel, but of course, one must heal before this happens.
Learn more: Sociopathic Seduction— How you got hooked and why you stayed
Lovefraud originally posted this article on June 30, 2010.
LoveLost
I wrote the response I did b/c I’ve been there (confused and wanting to fix my marriage) and it took me a while of living the hell to realize there was NOTHING to fight FOR. That’s when I knew the only choice was to leave. But being as my husband is spath, I had to PLAN my escape.
When you get to that place of realizing that if you have to FIGHT for him to be considerate of you, then you’ve already lost the war, and then you too will know your only option is to LIVE a REAL LIFE FREE from his oppression and the ONLY way for that to happen is to live FREE from him in your life.
I wish the strength of TOWANDA on you.
Thank you all – skylar you expressed it so well, leaves you feeling like a remnant of a person.
I tried the ‘treating him the way he treats me’ – but he is better at ignoring it than I am.
I have thought (dreamed?) about walking away, but the problem is i still love him because he can be wonderful. After so long it is hard to find the strength to go alone, to build a full life from a remnant and throw away 20 years.
Strongawoman, I’ll try your mantra!
Lovelost,
for years I dreamed of leaving my spath. My life was so worn out and unfulfilled. After a few years that dream turned into anger every morning because I hadn’t died in my sleep. I would never kill myself, but I fully expected mercy from God – I didn’t want to live.
Lovelost, dreaming isn’t enough.
You have to change the way you think. The way you think is what he uses to keep you bound. He knows you better than you know yourself. He knows your buttons. Your weaknesses, and your strengths. He targets both. You are being subjected to psychological warfare NO DIFFERENT from what a prisoner of war is subjected to. NO DIFFERENT. He “can be wonderful” because it keeps you hooked. That’s called the whipsaw, the trauma bond, the pedestal, the rollercoaster and various other words that describe how ADDICTION works. Addictions are made more powerful if the drugs supplied are intermittant and you don’t have control over it.
You need to start reading lots of books. I hear the betrayal bond is excellent, as well as “getting it through my thick skull.”
Don’t let him catch you reading them. He will know what you are doing.
LoveLost
Skylar is right. Don’t let him catch you educating yourself or empowering yourself. Spaths don’t have true remorse, they have real revenge.
I used to go to sleep beside my husband every night and I said the same prayer, “Dear God, please open my eyes to the truth and give me the strength to bear it.” I wanted SO BAD To be WRONG. But I wasn’t.
and like an onion, as time went on, I discovered things were worse than I knew b/c he’d been so deceptive and deceitful. I kept thinking that “okay, this is the worst and i can handle this”, only to find I KEPT THINKING that again and again as each betrayal peeled away, there was another. I am nearly divorced and STILL uncovering betrayals and deceit. “He was the lie from hello to goodbye.”
BTW You think like I used to, that I wasn’t going to give up on all those years. But you are looking at it backwards (which happens when you live with spath logic). It’s not your past you need to worry about wasting. It’s your future. The past is over but by gosh, there is GREAT JOY in having control of my own tomorrow. That’s more than what I was EVER going to have with him.
Lovelost,
You said “to build a full life from a remnant and throw away 20 years.” but WHAT HAVE YOU LOST when you are so unhappy. What have you lost? Abuse? Faking orgasam because he does nothing for you and he’s Such a “great lover”?
You don’t have a full life now, so what are you losing if you start over and build a life WITHOUT abuse? Think about it. There is life after abuse. God bless.
Lovelost:
I agree with everyone here. I know it may sound like we are yelling at you (we are not) or not really hearing what you are saying. You love him and you are in denial. I have been there…we have all been there. The funny thing about denial is we don’t even know we are in it. It’s an elusive thing. I feel really sad for you when I read your post and all the horrible, abusive things he does to you and in your next post you turned around and said you love him. The posts from KatyDid and Oxy are so true…who cares about what you have invested????? That drives me crazy when people talk about that!!!! Look ahead…not backwards. You need to worry about your future and not look at your past or you will live the rest of your life like that…is that what you want? Think about it.
Lovelost:
OK, another thing that is bugging me that I have to get off my chest. The faking orgasms thing…that is a huge trap! I feel bad for you. Once you start that, how can you stop? If you stop, then your husband will say what’s going on? Then how can you admit you were faking all these years? He thinks he is pleasing you which leaves no room for him to ever improve. If you would have not faked in the first place, maybe, just MAYBE if he was any man at all, he would have found ways to improve and please you, but now if you stopped faking he would just be furious that you fooled him all this time. How sad. I feel bad for you that you are not receiving the pleasure you should. Sigh. Sorry…I hope you hear me saying this out of love. It just makes me so frustrated for you.
Louise
I am so disgusted with myself that I had sex with my spath, ugh, I just want to sanitize myself. How flipping disgusting.
It’s funny what clear insight that time brings.
Athena
Athena:
I know what you mean. Time away can make so many things clear. You hang in there, lady. Hugs to you.
Ladies, what about me? I had sex with a pro-stitute! icky!!!
I try to look at it as an interesting experience. Lots of young men are introduced to their first experience when an older man takes them to a “professional”.
Sex with my ex-spath was not my first experience, but he actually was the first man who knew what he was doing. None of the other men I was with ever cared if I had an orgasm. But spath was ALL about that. He manipulated every aspect of my mind and body to achieve great heights. The better to knock me down from, of course!
So yeah, a spath can take you places you would not ever experience otherwise. You just have to know when to get off the ride.