By The Front Porch Talker
“Who in the rainbow can draw the line where the violet tint ends and the orange tint begins? Distinctly we see the difference of the colors, but where exactly does the one first blendingly enter into the other? So with sanity and insanity”¦the soul would have no rainbow had the eyes no tears.” From Billy Budd (Herman Melville).
We all live the lie sometimes: everybody lies. Lying is part of the American social contract; a matter of civility and manners, in some circles. Culturally, we even eschew the truth sometimes, equating it with rudeness. Who wants to hear that they are looking old or that their appearance is less-than-stellar? While our American cultural values appear friendly—albeit naïve—to the world, we are fiercely private and “independent” about our deeper feelings. Nobody wants to seem powerless or out of control.
We all know why we lie: because it is convenient; or, maybe it is easier just to keep the peace—so we believe. Sometimes we lie by saying that everything is just fine when it really isn’t. We tell our friends that we are just fine to signify that our real feelings are private. I do feel a little better now, just saying I’m fine. In turn, they tell us the same lie—it’s quid pro quo social management. Sometimes we lie to protect others from our reality; or, to protect ourselves from our own reality. We tell ourselves that we should be fine and that by saying it aloud we will be fine.
The truth is: not all lies are equal. Some people lie because they can and because it serves them in some way. They don’t live by social rules—or any rules, except as it harms us and benefits them. They are not part of the social contract of civility or convenience. They are “people of the lie,” as Scott Peck calls them in his book of the same name. They are the narcissists and sociopaths who live among us, undetected, and wholly without a conscience. They imitate our emotions to fill the vacancy of their own. They pretend to care, to have feelings of remorse even, if it will serve their own ends.
Sociopaths run the gamut of the danger zone—from the trusted partner or friend who steals your identity and every dime you have, to the person who commits violent acts against innocent people who “trusted the wrong person.” They are the “people of the lie.” They will take everything you ever had, including your dignity, then move on to the next person, leaving us to wonder: what could we have done differently? But even that is part of the manipulation. The truth is: there was nothing you could have done, or that anybody can do, especially if they are well adept at evading the law, which most of them are.
They hurt everybody, and because we would like to believe that they are “just like us—”you know, with morals and a conscience, they continue to offend. I have known more than my share of sociopaths and others who have no discernable conscience. I’ve spent half of my life blaming myself for “letting them” harm me and people I’ve known. I always wondered why sociopaths do what they do—it’s because they can.
I am thinking now of the anniversary of the month that my college student was murdered, back in 1993. Lisa had been moving from one apartment to another, and had solicited the help of a stranger. It had been a violent death: and, it is still unsolved. She was only twenty-two years old at the time.
At a memorial service for Lisa I read the following quote, which I’d written as part of a eulogy for her.
“Who in the rainbow can draw the line where the violet tint ends and the orange tint begins? Distinctly we see the difference of the colors, but where exactly does the one first blendingly enter into the other? So with sanity and insanity”¦the soul would have no rainbow had the eyes no tears.” From, Billy Budd (Herman Melville).
The truth is: we don’t know exactly where one color in the rainbow ends and the next begins. It seems that I’ve learned a lot about the colors, which I’d like to share with you. From Lisa’s death, I learned that fear is a good thing, unless you run with it. Many of us see a person whom we fear, for whatever reason, and we bypass our intuition to let them in.
For all the violent events that I have witnessed in my life, I will name a color. Yellow is for all the charming sociopaths who made their way into our apartments, and ultimately into our lives, then betrayed us—or worse.
Red is for the raging friend in high school, Barbara, who beat-up another girl, Aileen, in my presence and in the presence of the whole school. Aileen later died of a concussion. Barbara was never charged.
Green is for Tucson, Arizona where I witnessed a murder and a near-murder. For the man who lived next door to me while I was in graduate school—a gun lover. I heard the gun go off, then saw the man dragging a woman across the bare parking lot. I reported this to the police and even showed them a puddle of blood in the parking lot, but nothing was ever done.
The Green near-murder would involve me. While living alone in Tucson in a big house on Speedway Avenue, near the center of town, I was interrupted from my writing one day. My dog never barked. Something just told me to walk through my fenced back yard and look over the gate to the narrow space in the side-yard. A man was attempting to hoist himself up and into my kitchen window. The press had called him “The Prime-Time Rapist.” As my dog and I stood there staring, in shock, he jumped down and stared back. He was maybe twenty feet away. The moment we locked eyes was the pivotal moment. We both ran, in opposite directions. That night, he was gunned-down by the police.
Purple is for the female sociopath who stole my identity and everything I had in my life, then changed her name and found somebody else to steal from. I had been a “trusted friend” for over ten years. I had helped her through her years of disability. I knew her children and her grandchild. But nothing in the world prepared me for what she would do to me. I lost my job, my retirement account, my house, and all the money and credit I had worked so hard to earn, all because I had trusted a sociopath with a very long history of scamming people.
The most difficult part for me is the trail of tears we leave behind with all of this unfinished business and grieving—for what never was. Sociopaths steal our innocence, and perhaps our naiveté too, for no particular reason and with no particular meaning. They leave us unfinished too, at least privately.
Unfinished, but not defeated. We look to some higher power to finish what we cannot. We know that pain is inevitable in life—for all of us. But suffering—that is optional. We love who we love, because we are human and we have a conscience. We love people imperfectly, then when we’ve held too long to the outcome drawn somewhere in our imaginations, we detach with love and let go to a power that some call God. Fly high and free!
In the end, I tell myself this: there are plenty more colors in a rainbow, if you look closely. Some are nuanced or muted; some appear tinted at different angles, with more or less light than when you first had seen it. Some colors form hazy borders about exactly where the colors become “blendingly into the next,” just as “sanity and insanity does.”
Truths are blendingly complex too—a sign of intimacy. Whatever we reveal to others we are also revealing to ourselves, simultaneously. The pain is tacit and unspoken. But paradoxically, we are freed of suffering and that need to control or soften things with our lies. The only truth that we can know for sure borders on solipsism: that we know that our own mind exists; all else is speculation, at best. We can only know our own private and ineffable experiences of what is or isn’t the truth. The rest is beyond us to know for sure.
And, I will repeat the words I began with: we can never really know what is in the hearts of others. We can hope against hope, but never know for sure.
I will never be the same trusting person I once was. Thank God. The muted pinks and blues and greens are becoming clearer, with more defined lines now. I know that it’s time to finish my novel, and get on with the business of living, and to honor those who, for whatever reason, weren’t as lucky as me and didn’t survive.
We may not ever really know what is in another person’s heart, but now—now that we’ve seen that vacant look; and, now that we’ve heard the superficial stories and lies that never did quite add-up, because they didn’t. Now that we are older, and probably wiser, we can cut through the artifice, the faker, the liar and cheat, the approximation of humanity—like butter, and spread it over so many slices of proverbial bread.
dude, i think i need to find my stash of fairy dust. damn spath.
can’t last long typing laying down. damn muscle spasms in my back.
i just watched inglorious basterds. whoa. I want a movie like that about spath revenge. yah, i know, best not to harbor resentments…snicker………
i’ll take a dusting dear hens ….in purple and green please.
Hens, I think this is a different jane smith, the other one is JaneSmith,
I was a bit confused at first.
Jeez, I so relate to everything you wrote!!!!!!!!
It freaks me out, I feel like you are reading my mind!
Sprinkle some fairy dust on my brain! Thanks!
I’m not sure what I thought about that movie “inglorious bastards”–in a way it was a caricature and in a way it was “campy” but the subject was so serious and the violence so real….my son D liked it very much but I can’t make my mind up about whether I like it or not. Some days I think I do and other days I’m not sure.
Henry,
Hello, nice to hear from you. You’re right. party on!
The lovefraud gang is growing everyday. And there are others like us. eventually it will be so big that the sheer numbers will outweight the Spaths. Yep, the parasite always ends up killing it’s host or being killed by it. Their strategy is flawed. We need to be prepared for the day when we finally say NO MORE! and it is coming.
Problem is, the only thing that gets people to join our group is the tragedy of a sociopathic encounter. Without that, you’d never even imagine what it’s like. So pain is part of it. What doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.
will the real JaneSmith please stand up? I am totallly confused – where is the Jane Smith that dance’s and sprinkles fairy dust? Sorry your back is out 1steprs, and I know what you mean by ‘out’…I sneezed a few days ago and was out of commission for three days…Shabby shab – lean in close too your monitor and I shall boink ya gently with fairy dust ~~~!!!
Hi Skylar I have been reading your post , good to see you back, I guess I will never go away..Ox I thot that movie your talkin about was violent, never was a fan of brad pitts anywho..two thumbs down for me..
oxy – i love tarrantino. his camp, his humor, his cartoon characters…but watching this i forgot it was tarrantino until the extreme close-up on the evening shoe.
it was the ‘no holds barred’ aspect of the movie that appealed to me. this would have been true before the spath too…but the idea of an elite killing squad speaks very directly to my desire for one to get rid of spaths. i know that you are not for the death penalty and understand the sound reasoning behind that, and that although you are tough, and a tough talker, you are also against vigilante justice.
but i am not joking when i often say, ‘spaths, can’t live with them, and can’t kill them with impunity.’
i know we are different in this way, and i respect your point of view – and i don’t mean that i respect our differences; my p.o.v. was similar to yours before the spath.
not now. i am different now, and i can understand the true feelings that would motivate real people to do what the characters did in inglorious basterds. because of the heinous nature of the genocide of the jews in nazi germany, people can easily accept the elite team in i.b. – and tarrantino manipulates that. whether that is right or wrong, you go for the ride with a film maker, or you don’t. he took me somewhere i wanted to go…to spath killing land, albeit in fantasy.
g’ night all…sleep tight, dream well.
Dear Oxy and Adamsrib,
Please forgive the delay in my posts – I don’t have Internet access at home and often go for days on end without a computer. (And when I get time to respond, the thread has often moved far beyond the topic that was under discussion.) Anyhow, thanks for your kind words about my post (I’m actually from the Eastern US, to answer adamsrib’s question!). I would add that I likewise find much humor and wisdom in the various things you (and several others) have written on this site. So it goes both ways.
GettingIt – your point is likewise well-taken. As an admirer of Holden Caulfield, I do appreciate people who (and adamsrib makes a similar point that you do) fight against “phoniness” and “superficial BS”. In fact, I would probably take an instant liking to someone who, if I said “Good Morning” to them, asked me “What the hell is so good about it?” But I think Oxy did an excellent job of fleshing out the meaning of my words – which I don’t think are opposed to your own in spirit.
Jane Smith – Yes, it is amazing how a single birthday card can dredge up so many bad memories and negative emotions! However, you don’t need anyone to tell you that that was a bad idea, because you’ve clearly said as much yourself. Nevertheless, I often wonder how much mischief has been caused by the whole notion of “soulmates.” Perhaps we would do better if we just went back to the old fashioned arranged marriage thing!
In any case, it seems to me that what you “love” about this fellow has almost nothing to do with him, and everything to do with the falsely idealized image that you’ve projected on to him. In other words, all the good, poetic, and loveable stuff is coming from within you, and has little or nothing to do with your ex. (I can speak authoritatively about this as it’s something I’m terribly guilty of myself!)
The more you realize this, the more you will be liberated from his toxic spell. Unfortunately, the chameleon-like nature of the sociopath often makes him uniquely suited to serve as the object of our projections. And for the romantic dreamer types, it’s damned easy to to make the most soulless creatures imaginable into sublime and flawless Romeos and Juliets. But seeing how this works is the first step in ridding ourselves of the illusion. And it is most certainly an illusion.
It takes time, but the pain ALWAYS lessens. My God, you’re only 40 years old! Send this joker packing in your thoughts AND your actions, and realize you have your whole life in front of you. Don’t let him steal even more time and joy from you!
Guys forgive me for chiming in on a total unrelated subject but just needed to talk. This morning i feel like my stomach is in my throat and like Im about to throw up. cant eat cant sleep cant do anything.
I’ve been here for a good while just trying to recover from the sp that was in my life. i eventually ran into a guy on an internet dating site that caught my attention. I eventually realized that so many things about him were exactly like the sp. Bad boy mentality, etc. They even had the SAME birthday. It was totally weird.
I met this guy for the first time and had sex with him (even though that was totally out of my realm!) i felt like their was a connection but I believe it was only bc i wanted him to be the sp.
The new guy is no catch. Probably worse than the sp. conceited, self motivated, only cares about himself, but I’ve made a total jackass of myself. now this guy thinks Im some crazy person…..what the hell is wrong with me. Now, even though I know this new person is no catch I have the same feelings toward him that I did the sp. He told me that I would get addicted to him and I did in just 2 or 3 weeks. What is going on? I just don’t understand my obsession with these types.
I keep thinkin im on the right track but today i feel like it started all over again.
Someone – anyone……plese help!! how can i forget all this shit and live a normal life?