Editor’s note: Lovefraud received the following story from a woman whom we’ll call Hilary. Names are changed.
The night before I met Nick, I had a vivid nightmare. I lost sight of a caring man in a chaotic crowd, a baby was murdered, and I was poisoned. I awoke and heard, “Wait for the right one. Don’t try to save him. You’ll ruin yourself and your future.” The thought was so pervasive that, although I was perplexed, I wrote it down.
The following afternoon, I met Nick (with whom I’d connected on a dating site) on his boat at the local marina, and an afternoon sail turned into an “accidental” dinner with his parents and sister, drinks afterward, and hours of conversation late into the night. The following evening, he cooked me dinner. He began texting me first thing in the morning and throughout the day. We slid into life as a couple, and although things seemed to be moving quickly, we decided that we were in our 30s, we knew who we were and what we wanted—and we’d finally found that in each other.
Nick was good looking and dressed well. He was educated, highly intelligent and verbal, outgoing, well-read yet good with his hands, spontaneous, outdoorsy, professionally driven, and incredible in bed. Where we weren’t similar, we balanced each other out. There didn’t seem to be any reason to hold back. And yet I was. I’d recently had a brief affair with a pathological man, had learned about personality disorders and the prevalence of such, and—as I told Nick—I loved my life and didn’t want to invite anything into it that would upset it. Nick, of course, assured me that he was different. He’d never hurt me like that.
Nick had worked as a bioterrorism expert and eventually, he revealed, as a covert agent with the CIA. He said he’d been certified sane by the U.S. Government through a battery of psychological tests. He confessed that he had regrets about some of things he’d done and had moved back to his home state to reconnect with his family and his values. He told me about his ex-girlfriend, Grace, whom he’d nearly married. She’d cut him out of her life with no explanation, and his reaction to the loss had ruined his friendships and had nearly destroyed him. For the first time, he said, he’d met a woman he didn’t compare to Grace, a woman who was a better match for him and who challenged and intrigued him all on her own.
Spending time together
Within a week, he’d been forced out of his job and we began spending every spare moment we had together. Within two weeks, he began joking about marriage. Within a month, he told me that he loved me. I didn’t say it back, but instead asked him for his definition of love. “Each time we part,” he said, “it feels like too soon. When I see you, I envision a future, each tomorrow better than today.” I countered, “So it’s a short-term cost-benefit analysis? If we have a bad tomorrow or two, then there’s no future and therefore your love dies?” “Of course not,” he assured me. “I mean the average over the long haul.”
But something still wasn’t right. I asked how he could draw on his skills as a manipulator so easily for his job and yet separate that from his personal life. He appeared sad, assured me that he’d never lied to me—and then confessed that he had. It was a small white lie regarding our dinner reservation with his parents on our first date. I’d heard him on the phone with telling his mom that he’d forgotten about the dinner, that he was bringing someone, and was the reservation still for five? When I inquired about the phrasing later that night, he’d claimed he didn’t remember saying that. We’d had a few drinks, so I didn’t press it. When we later told the story of the date to a friend of mine, Nick said they’d had an extra seat because his sister was supposed to bring someone who’d cancelled. “I’m sorry,” he said now, “a friend was supposed to join me and she couldn’t make it, but I didn’t want you to think I was just plugging you in. I panicked and lied, but I’m a terrible liar when it comes to the people I care about and I could tell you saw through it. So I lied again in front of your friend to try to cover it up. It’s been eating at me since.” I believed him.
He said he was ready for marriage and children, and that I complemented his life. He took me to a suite at a fabulous hotel, he invited me to accompany him on a trip to a Caribbean resort, he did dishes and gave massages, took me to expensive dinners, and he was constantly giving me gifts both great and small. I was in the market for a house, and he accompanied me, talking about what we could afford together and which would allow room for a growing family. He charmed my friends, and they loved him. When the New Year rolled around, my lease was coming to an end, and I hadn’t yet found a house, Nick invited me to live with him on his boat. “It’ll be tight, but nice to wake up to you every morning,” he said. I declined, but took that as a sign of his love and commitment. He flew with me to meet my immediate and extended family, and they were charmed by him, too. I’d moved beyond simply wanting it to work with a man who seemed perfect for me, and I was falling in love, although I hadn’t said the words to him yet.
Distant and irritable
But when we returned from the week with my family, he grew distant and irritable. He confessed that he’d re-examined his values and it would be important to him to raise his kids in the Catholic Church—something he knew I was against. I said that his dating profile had listed him as an agnostic, which he denied. We talked for hours about religion and community and came to a compromise. “Don’t be worried,” he said. “It’s not a deal-breaker. I’m just trying to do the emotionally mature thing and talk it over before it becomes a big deal.” A couple of days later, I checked his dating profile. He was listed as a Catholic, but it also showed he’d logged on recently. I’d never thought to check his profile activity and was hurt to see he’d been online. But when I logged on again the next day to confront him, the profile was gone. I know now that I was lying to myself, that he’d changed his religious affiliation knowing that I’d check. But at the time, I convinced myself that he’d been online only to cancel his subscription.
A few days later, he was again irritable. “I’ve become skeptical and afraid you’re going to leave me,” he said. “I’ve laid it all on the line and made myself vulnerable to you. I need you to be as vulnerable to me. I’ve been hurt before, and I guess I’m just the kind of guy who needs to hear the words ‘I love you.’” And so I told him that I loved him and that if everything were still going well in a year, then I’d be ready to marry him and have his children. We made five-year plans and compared our goals. We agreed that neither of us had ever met another with whom we were more compatible. But Nick’s attitude did not improve. He started making racially charged statements and criticized my friend for being “dominant” in her relationship. He complained constantly about how sore he was from the gym, and made snide remarks about anything I was better at than he was. I asked him if he wanted me to be his ex-girlfriend, and he assured me that that was the last thing he wanted.
Depression
Finally, he confessed that he suffered from functional but clinical depression, and that prior to meeting Grace, he’d been on two antidepressants plus Klonopin and Adderall. He was in the middle of a series of rigorous job interviews for a top consulting firm, founded by an innovation guru, and was under tremendous stress. He said he was afraid I was going to leave him before he could get himself under control. So I promised him that as long as he agreed to help himself, I wouldn’t leave him. “But,” I told him, “this relationship limbo is my kryptonite. With my personality, what you’re asking of me couldn’t be more difficult.”
For the next three weeks, I was in hell. He encouraged me to move 45 minutes away to a place where we could have more privacy but that also removed me from my social circle. He saw me only during the day, then would become anxious and retreat to his parents’ house—or so he told me. He said he was trying to write to me about how much he loved me and what a weird place he was in. He said he couldn’t access his emotions, and it scared him. He said he didn’t know who he was without his job. I couldn’t sleep. I researched depression. I attended support groups. I was assured that although his treatment of me felt like emotional manipulation, it was just the depression. At one point, he had me convinced that he was suicidal, and I called his sister to make sure someone would look in on him. I didn’t know where to draw my own boundaries—where the illness took over from the man.
Then he got the job. He read me fragments of what he’d been trying to write, all of the reasons that he loved me. We were intimate, and he was soft, teary, and seemed desperate to access the feelings he’d been unable to before. I assured him I was still with him, and in the days following, he wrote to me of how much he loved me and we made Sunday plans.
Another woman
I was shocked when, on Saturday, I ran into him on the street with another woman. He told her that I was a crazy ex-girlfriend he’d broken up with before meeting her. When I revealed the truth, Nick accused me of “torpedoing everything in his life.” I discovered he’d been dating her the entire time we’d been together, getting serious with her at about the same time he became “depressed.” She’d never seen any signs of depression. They’d had sex (unprotected) for the first time the night before we’d flown to visit my family. He’d texted me from her bed, “Goodnight, beautiful. See you in a few hours.” He’d told her he was going to visit his friend Ben, who was actually a cousin of mine Nick had never met. He was looking at houses with me, but talking to her about moving with him to the neighboring state when he started his new job. He already had a plane ticket to meet her family. This woman didn’t want to know the truth; she wanted her Prince Charming. She took her first opportunity to shoot the messenger, and she blocked me from contacting her. As far as I know, they’re still together.
For one month, he compromised my happiness as I worried over his mental and physical health. For four days, I was wild with grief, and I’m not proud of my actions during that time. But on day four, I went alone to the counseling appointment Nick had agreed to when I caught him cheating. Still in shock, I told my story. And when the counselor said that I’d been involved with a sociopath, it was as if all the lights in my house went on at the same time. I’d already been involved with a pathological person, had done the research, and was in fact writing about it when I met Nick!
Yellow flags, red flags
How could I have fallen for it again?! I didn’t listen to my intuition; when I saw yellow flags, I didn’t slow down; and when I saw red flags, I didn’t turn and run. And although I’d learned what to look for the first time, I didn’t realize what it was about my own behavior that allowed/encouraged these pathologicals to manipulate me. Several months into our relationship, a friend asked if I was sure Nick was right for me, and I said we were perfect for each other. The fact was, I’d had a nightmare right before I met him. In the days following, I was slightly nauseous when I thought of him or heard from him, although he was saying and doing all the right things. And although I’d never had hives before, for the entirety of our relationship, they broke out in half-dollar size across my chest nearly every morning.
Also, Nick was incredibly out of shape for a man who claimed on his profile to work out 4x/wk. He used Grace as his sympathy story, and the way she cut him out of her life completely was a warning. He lied to me on our first date. He had no friends. He was an admitted risk-taker who’d been extremely promiscuous and hadn’t practiced safe sex. A man with his supposed diagnosis on four medications would not have been a CIA operative. He said women were terrible consultants and was obsessed with power dynamics in relationships as well as business. He was a pariah at his office Christmas party. He’d had five jobs in five years. He was volatile when he drove or when we tried to get his boat off the dock or even when the boat rocked with the outgoing fishermen in the morning. He showered and did his dishes and laundry at my house, (which I excused because I know how hard it is to live on a boat.) He claimed to have gutted his boat and refinished it, but after months of spare time and my offers to help, he hadn’t completed the simple plumbing for his sink. Changing his profile to Catholicism caused me to doubt myself and what I knew to be true. He kept the attention on himself/distracted me through physical complaints and claims of mental illness.
Something inhuman
When I met him, he said “Sorry—I’m sorry” seemingly habitually. After a couple of weeks, I told him to stop apologizing—and he did. Even then, I recognized that there was something inhuman about being able to stop seemingly habitual behavior on a dime. But I ignored these things because I wanted so badly for him to be real. Because of my age, I’m running out of time to have children of my own, and I very much want a relationship. This makes me vulnerable.
I’m an open book. When he asked, I revealed. I told him about my family, about my ex-boyfriend (into whom he molded himself), and about my own fears and dreams. I handed him my kryptonite. I revealed my weaknesses and pleaded with him to hold my heart carefully. Instead, he intentionally tried to destroy me.
Afterward, I kept digging. Even those Nick considered friends were eager to speak out. I learned that he’d lied about past girlfriends being just friends; he’d lied to one that he wasn’t dating anyone even as he was making plans for a future with me; he’d expressed desire to raise our kids on a boat for a couple of years, but complained to another that he hated living on board; his resume is full of outright fictions and stretched truths; he’d been drinking to excess for years and was often thrown out of bars; he’d lied about the CIA; and his sympathy story regarding Grace omitted that she’d discovered he’d been cheating on her. The list of smaller lies, omissions, and character flaws is quite long.
Grace herself will not respond to my requests for her side of the story. She seems to have cut not only Nick out of her life but all mention of him. I can’t help but wonder if it’s out of fear, a desire to protect herself emotionally, or if she’s just as stubborn as Nick said she is. I’m struggling with my frustration toward her for not helping me to uncover more of the truth.
If you want to believe
To women who’ve yet to go through this or who want to believe in their mate despite the evidence, please listen to those who came before you and keep speaking to those who come after—even if they shut you out, accuse you of jealousy, and insist that you’re crazy. Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior, but we want to believe that we’re different, we’re special, and so he loves us. It has nothing to do with us. He’s incapable of love. He made those other women feel just as special as you feel now, and then he served their worst nightmares on a silver platter. They get away with it, in part, because we don’t trust each other. If we valued and sought out other women more than we valued these men, many of us could have been spared a good deal of pain.
Another of the greatest dangers we face is our refusal to acknowledge until it’s too late that evil is out there in the form of pathology. A pathological person will use our belief that everyone is inherently good, or can be better, as his greatest weapon against us. He is indeed some mother’s son. He’s a beloved brother. And he’s also your worst nightmare. For god’s sake, not everyone is capable of change, and if there’s one thing I took away from my Catholic school days, it’s that the devil doesn’t approach you with horns and venom, but beauty and a kiss.
Thank you for your story. You are a smart woman…getting out so soon. I was blind to it for 7 months while he emotionally manipulated me. When it turned physical my world started to spiral out of control. But just in the nick of time….I called him on his behavior and within 2 weeks he was on to his next target, who he probably had lined up long before!
All I can say is that they are truly sick individuals. We cannot fix them…but they can destroy us.
Happy you are free of it!
Hilary:
I am so sorry for this pain you went through. It sounds like a real nightmare.
But I must say, I do not blame “Grace” for not wanting to speak with you. She is only trying to protect herself and obviously wants nothing to do with him or with anyone who is or was associated with him (meaning you.) You shouldn’t take that personally, she is just doing what is best for her after all the pain she obviously went through due to this jerk.
Also, I must comment regarding women helping other women by warning them, etc. I agree with you…women SHOULD stick together and help each other with knowledge, but if what happens is anything like what happened to me, you don’t trust other women anymore either. Now you don’t trust the men, you don’t trust the women. To keep it brief…I had another woman warn me about the guy she had dated. I was his next target…he had already told her he was interested in me so she wanted me to know he almost destroyed her. OK, fine…I listened and then I did what I wanted to do which was wrong. But the scary part was that even though she warned me, she was still seeing him and LYING to me. She kept me on the line to get all kind of info from me (which she didn’t get because I had nothing to tell) and was telling me that it was OVER between them and I find out later that all along, she had been asking him to go on vacation with her, was sending him half naked pics of herself, texting him constantly, etc. She was relentlessly pursuing him while telling me they were finished.
So anyway, just a word to the wise…it can’t get worse than that. You also have to be very aware and watch for the red flags from the other women.
I agree. I wouldn’t contact the new woman. She is being wooed and love bombed right now so she won’t believe anyone. Time will tell. Maybe someday she will be contacting you for answers.
I did contact his ex and got so many answers. She told me that she was emotionally abused by him and believes she will never totally recover….she now has trust issues because of the cheating and also has weight issues from his comments and abuse. She was with him for 5 years and now cannot believe she put up with it.
If his new target ever contacts me all I will do is refer her to this site and psychopathyawareness.wordpress. I definitely would be afraid of what he would do if he knew I was reposing him
Thank you for this story – painful as it is to read, as all of these stories are, and it sent chills down my spine as it was so similar to mine, except I had no previous experience of this kind of hardcore sociopath and there were no exes I could talk to. It seems ALL we can do is develop an absolutely infallible relationship with our intuition. Yes, we can, and must work on that. But the other part of it, the seeming prevalence of this pathological behavior, from reading these stories, is so profoundly depressing. It’s as though we’re surrounded by wolves, ravaging a community that doesn’t exist any more in the sense that we can be warned, protect ourselves and warn and protect others. Especially when we meet people online.
I live in a fairly out of the way area in the French countryside and so don’t have much chance to meet people. But now, 2 months after this experience and reading these stories, if I go online I find myself wondering what demons are lurking behind the profiles; WILL I, even now, be able to be so on guard as to be deaf to ANYthing but my intuition, cool and judgmental enough to quickly size up red or even pink flags, vigilant enough to ask all the right questions, able to discern if the answers are lies or not?… When I ventured online again a few days ago, I did a search instead in my native UK as I may move back there. The only “surprise” was to see the ex-path, who also lives in France, with a fake UK profile. I read it and it was gone the next day. Should we rally for much more stringent sign up procedures on dating sites? Would that work? Do the sites really care anyway? At the moment I’m not at all sure I’ll ever be able to put myself out there again.
Hilary, thank you for sharing your story. It’s so alarming, yet very real to realise just how many of us are subject to such emotional torment and abuse. When I look around at other peoples relationships where they are happy and function as a great team, it sadens me a little (as like all of us would agree) because that is all any of us want. We all deserve true happiness and true love yet we are debilitated by someone we loved and trusted. If only they were capable of realizing the long term effects of their actions.
Hang in there and stay strong minded. You seem very switched on and like us all, did not deserve to be treated the way you have been by this horrible, worthless human being x o
Years ago, I knew somebody who fell for a guy that I thought was a first-class sleaze.
She went on and on how he was with the CIA. She’d wait for his calls and when he didn’t call, she would say that her “psychic” radar had kicked in and she knew he was back in town. She’d call him.
Lo and behold! He was at his desk claiming he had just gotten back from his latest assignment! Sometimes, he had just walked in and put his things down. Really? The woman would be bouncing up and down for joy because her psychic abilities were so accurate. I’d be rolling my eyes.
Then he started telling her that he couldn’t see her because he was so important to the CIA that he had two other agents watching him fulltime.
I tried to reason with her. I asked her if she knew how expensive it was to assign an agent to one person fulltime and why on Earth would the CIA assign anybody to their own people? Nobody was that important.
She couldn’t even prove that she was calling the CIA. She had his direct line. Nobody answered that phone except for him. He could be working in a donut shop for all she knew.
She didn’t believe a word that I said.
Hilary, your story sends chills down my spine. I know these are the last words you want to hear and will prob always have some negative reaction to them, but I really AM so so sorry. The path in my life also said, “I’m sorry,” constantly. There was good reason for it.
I haven’t read any comments here yet, so not sure if I’m being repetitive. I think you are so absolutely correct that there is something in us that attracts, then allows these creatures into our lives. I saw yellow flags from Day 1. Thankfully, soon after we met, his world began crumbling as his shenanigans caught up with him and finally he was fired. (He was the manager of the office in which I worked).
But by the time red flags went up, I was hooked, making excuse after excuse for his behaviors that went from awesome to hideous.
I also became nauseous whenever it appeared that we might actually get together and go out (we never left the bldg we worked in and we were never intimate). I knew he was crazy and abusive.
You said, “I didn’t listen to my intuition; when I saw yellow flags, I didn’t slow down; and when I saw red flags, I didn’t turn and run. And although I’d learned what to look for the first time, I didn’t realize what it was about my own behavior that allowed/encouraged these pathologicals to manipulate me.”
Exactly. We need to be able to stop the madness before it starts.
Again, thank you for posting your story. It is so well-written and so well depicts the MO of these monsters. Honestly, I have no idea how they are able to undertake all the mental and physical work it takes to be them. I suppose if you have no emotion, compassion, empathy or conscience, it’s not that difficult. They are also probably in an adrenalin-soaked state most of the time, enabling them to run hither and yon, filled with sinister energy. You’re right about the devil. The horns are ugliness are inside.
Wishing you all the best as you heal.
Hillary, thank you for your truthful story – it is, indeed, painful to read simply because involvement with a sociopath varies only in the M.O., but not in the patterned behaviors and the carnage that it leaves in its wake.
Women, in particular, have been programmed to believe that they only require a “Prince Charming” to be complete human beings. At least, MY generation was. There is no such thing as “Prince Charming,” or “Princess Charming.”
What I find so glaringly patent in sociopathic games – romantic AND platonic – is the almost immediate isolation. In order to maintain control, they must isolate their victims, without fail. This second exspath isolated me quite effectively, and I can speak more on that in the future.
I think that the “YELLOW” flags are not discussed enough and I thank you for using that term so effectively, Hillary. The “red flags” are waving, screaming, and flapping whether we choose to ignore them, or not. But, the “yellow flags…..” now, THIS is something that compels me to open my eyes wider and fine-tune my hearing!!! “Yellow flags” are so subtle that they’re not “ignored” as much as “missed.” Subtle, subtle, subtle….
Again, thank you for your honest sharing and brightest blessings to you.
And…..as an side, here: HOW do sociopaths/psychopaths develop their “abilities” to manipulate so well??? Hillary’s recollections of the WORDS that Mr. Nutbag used are almost verbatim what the second exspath used with me. “I’ll never hurt you like HE did…” Well, no, he didn’t do what the first exspath did, but he hurt me in more inventive ways.
Do they develop these methods through trial and error, or do they possess an innate ability to hunt and peck the “right words” and mirroring for each new victim?
Wow…..lots to ponder, but even knowing a definite answer to this wouldn’t change the fact that they are, were, and always will be sociopaths.
Hello Truthspeak:
Regarding how do they find the words… at the height of my delusional phase with the guy I was involved with I once said to him “You have a great capacity for loving”. About 2 weeks later he said to me “You have a great capacity for loving”. I said, “Oh, that’s exactly what I said to you a while ago”. He seemed rather confused and said “Really, then I’m just repeating back to you what you say to me ?” Bizarre upon bizarre isn’t it?