I’m finally beginning to properly ”˜get’ the age-old adage that life is a journey not a destination. Let me assure you, my particular journey continues to be filled with the most bizarre ups and downs, and I’m coming to realize that truth really is stranger than fiction — well, in my case at least.
Many peculiar happenings and coincidences have been going on over the past few weeks, most of which I am not currently at liberty to share. When the time is right I will put pen to paper, but until then I’ve decided to fulfill my urge to write by focusing on my own personal experiences around the subject of love after the sociopath.
Being Human
As you’ll know if you read my last post, I am now in a relationship with a wonderfully caring soul who is the polar opposite from my ex-husband. He’s been through his own tragedies, losing his previous partner to breast cancer. He is real, he has feelings, he cares and, most importantly, he is human. That means that like me, he has his failings. It means that his responses are not always perfect. Along with letting me know how much he loves me he also freely shows his confusion, demonstrates his hurts, and tells me when he feels in any way upset.
My own responses though, I am coming to learn, often stem from learned behaviours that I came to know from my time with my so called soulmate. Life with him was so darned perfect that there was never a cross word nor anything that caused me to even consider that our relationship was anything other than a dream come true. That dream, of course, turned out to be a living nightmare — but I didn’t know that at the time.
So when Patrice (my Frenchman who speaks no English) becomes quiet or reserved, I instantly question his motives — wondering whether he, like my ex, is trying to manipulate or control me. Of course when my ex was around, I had no such internal guidance or red flags. I just took everything that he showed me to be true, and I continued to shower him with unconditional love. By the time his mask was slipping, I was so far hooked in to his trap that I believed his strange behaviour must be due to something I was doing wrong. And I responded by showing even more love and understanding, opening my heart and soul even wider to embrace and reassure him, so that he would know without question that I loved him wholly and completely. I thought that was what marriage was all about — my ability to love him through whatever issues or problems he was facing, choosing to show more love in the face of his increasingly irrational put-downs and snide remarks.
Trust Without Naivety
From the beginning, the only thing I have promised Patrice is complete honesty — and that is what he gets. In barrow-loads! I continue to do my best to explain to him why I am no longer that naively trusting soul. To clarify why when there is something that happens to concern or rattle me — no matter how small — I will not brush it under the carpet. Instead I will meet it head on, gently in the most parts, and get to understand what it is all about.
The first few times this happened, I felt myself shutting off to him — and I told him so in no uncertain terms. I guess in hindsight mine was probably a pretty harsh comeback when all he was doing from his point of view was sharing his frustrations. For me, it was also incredibly challenging to really speak up for myself. To ”˜go there’ when the circumstances seemed in many ways to be fairly petty. But I did it because I felt there was no point if I kept quiet — where is the honesty in keeping a painted smile?
And I’m pleased that I’ve learned to do this. I’m proud of myself for questioning every tiny misunderstanding, so that together we can understand, learn and lay solid foundations. This is the first time in my life that I’ve felt able to behave in this way with someone who is so close to me. So what has changed?
Courage To Be Real
Well, I think that once again it’s an opportunity for me to feel gratitude for all the unpleasant and sometimes downright ghastly experiences that I’ve encountered over my life so far. When I became an orphan I quickly learned how to fit in, shut up, put up and stay quiet — in short how to become invisible. I learned to ignore my own cries for help, and to push down my feelings of pain and loneliness. In their place I chose instead to focus on understanding and helping others — little realizing that through doing that I was simply pushing my own identity further and further within me, until I didn’t even know who I was. Oh yes, I had a mask of my own. But my mask, unlike that of the sociopath, was one created for survival. One that hurt nobody else but myself.
The mask of the sociopath, on the other hand, is a carefully crafted guise of love and devotion, designed to disable their target so they bend to their every twisted whim and manipulation. Is it any wonder that I fell so completely, hook line and sinker, for his practiced act of adoration and love? Having been starved of such connections for so many years, my ex was like a breath of fresh air. I truly felt that I had come home, and that life would be forever rosy. Looking back I can’t help but have a wry smile, realizing that I must have been a particularly easy target for him. They talk about rose-coloured spectacles”¦ well, mine must have caused me to be blind, deaf and dumb to his scheming ways. I was so wrapped up in the dream of finally finding happiness that I simply couldn’t see what was right under my nose.
It’s only in recent years that people have shared with me their own views on my ex-soulmate. I’ve heard many words to describe the man I thought was handsome, charming, charismatic, and the life and soul of the party. Opinions such as ”˜cheesy’ ”˜fake’ ”˜annoying’ ”˜a braggart’ and many more are now being voiced by the people who knew him. When I ask why they didn’t tell me at the time, I receive the perfectly reasonable reply that they didn’t think it was any of their business. That I was quite clearly in love and happy with this person, so they didn’t want to rain on my parade.
I Still Believe In Magic
Hmmmm”¦. My own worst enemy? Well, perhaps so”¦ but only now with the insights I have learned through my own journey to recovery. Do I blame myself? Far from it! I am deeply proud of what I have survived — and I also believe that it was because of my stubborn belief in magic that I didn’t allow myself to go down when all around me was falling to pieces. Ironically, I now believe that it was those very same characteristics that kept me so blinkered to his ways (including my innocent belief in love and happy ever after) that eventually proved to be my salvation. Through the bleakest days weeks and months following the meltdown, I still held strong to my conviction that everything would work out in the end — even though there were many times when it would have seemed the more sensible option was to just give up and give in.
I remember consistently telling people that if I could feel so in love and so fulfilled with someone who was nothing more than a conman, then when a real man came in to my life, the experience could only be many times better! I confess that for a long time this was more of a mantra than a strongly held conviction — but you know what? It has worked wonders for me.
Because now, in the company of Patrice, I am able to check and double-check on everything that happens between us. I can ask what’s wrong when he seems to be less bouncy than usual. I can speak up for myself if I feel he’s being unreasonable. I can ask what he’s feeling when he seeks reassurances. I can tell him I need space when I feel too squashed. And I can let him know every time he makes me feel like a princess — and that feels great.
So, no, it ain’t always easy being in a ”˜real’ relationship after the false perfection that I knew for so long. But goodness knows it’s healthy and it’s honest. And through continued talking, sharing, hugging and learning about each other, I am feeling more settled, safe and loved than ever before in my life.
Does it mean I’m going to become a pushover with him? Heck no! I shall probably keep questioning even the smallest details for however long we stay together. I refuse to say ”˜forever’ anymore, because the last time I did that I lost any hope of remembering who I really was. Nope. This time it is day by day, and let me tell you that right now, with each day that passes, this particular relationship is more fulfilling, exciting, rewarding, challenging, and loving than anything I ever experienced with my ex.
As I said at the start of this post, I am finally appreciating the joys of life’s journey. I do not need to focus on a destination, because I will never be ”˜there’”¦ I am here. And here is exactly the right place for me right now. However long this particular ”˜now’ lasts doesn’t even matter in the grand scale of things. Because whatever happens in the future, I know I am at last able to be true to myself and to those around me.
So in actual fact the real love I’ve found is love for myself — and with that, no-thing and no-one can ever harm me again. As Patrice keeps saying to me “que des bonnes choses maintenant” which means “only good things now” — and you know what? I fully agree.
Thank you so much Mel for this wonderful article! I, too, had to reluctantly feel gratitude for the devastation wrought by my sociopathic ex-husband. Yes, he caused me tremendous pain – but the pain shattered the walls that I’d built around my heart, which meant I was open and available when real love came along. I can also say that, having been in such a sham of a relationship, I appreciate and savor my real love so much more.
A person has the exact amount of ability to hurt us as they have to give us joy…the more we love someone the more they can hurt us, but also the more we love them the more joy they can give us.
So loving someone is impossible without TRUST….and the more you trust the more you can love. Without trust, love is impossible.
As we trust and love, we open ourselves to joy. We also open ourselves to the potential for pain…either through the death of the loved one, the desertion of the loved one, or the abuse of the loved one.
No relationship in our lives is “forever”—even in the most devoted of love relationships, one partner dies before the other (usually).
I lost my husband to an accident, but he was 15 years older than me, so it was likely he would die before me. I married him, I loved him knowing that there was a good chance I would be a widow at some point.
Losing him hurt. But I know he didn’t deliberately leave me…he had no choice, but his leaving did hurt me deeply because we loved deeply. Would I do anything different? Would I have loved him less so that when I lost him it would have hurt less? Of course not.
It hurt when I realized that the Man I fell in love with after my husband’s death was a faker. A cheat. A liar. I grieved over him, and realized that I had let him into my life because I was still “needy,” hurt, and grieving over the loss of my husband.
Loving others, our soul mates, our children, our friends, our parents, leaves us vulnerable to loss of those relationships and the more we love those people, the more the loss of that relationship hurts when it finally does come to an end.
HOW the relationship ends can also be something that causes us more pain than the “ordinary” loss of a relationship. The BETRAYAL aspect can increase the pain by many factors….increase it well above the death of that person causing the end of the relationship. At least when the person we love dies, we don’t have to cope with the betrayal aspect as well, The wounding of our soul, the rejection of our sincere love.
Learning to spot the kind of person who is likely to betray us helps us to be cautious in giving our trust and our love to others in a way that leaves us open for “betrayal paiin.”
The RED FLAGS so clearly pointed out in Donna’s book, and here on this blog in 1,000+ posts gives us a guide line in how to keep ourselves safer and give our trust to deserving people. People who are also genuine and love us back.
None of us are perfect, and we can’t expect perfection in others, but what we CAN be and what we CAN expect from others is HONESTY. If we are honest with those we love, and they are honest with us…everything else can be “worked out.”
Without honesty there can be no “working out” or true intimacy.
I’m happy for you, Mel, and glad that you have found someone you can be honest with.
This is my first post here or on any other website about sociopaths. I just found out my ex is one. After 12 twelve years and a beautiful little girl that I so desperately wanted to have both her parents in her life happy and together. I’m crying as I read your post. I never let anyone close to me before him aside from physically and it’s tearing me up inside knowing that the one person I did trust is so sick. I didn’t even know these type of people exist. I guess it’s a lesson that I should have loved myself more before I loved anyone else. I hope one day God brings me someone who truly loves me and that I’m not so heartbroken to see love when it shows up. I will question it just like you are doing. You are doing the right thing. After feeling the pain of my heart literally breaking after he hurt me I know it is much to precious to give to anyone else and no excuses should be made. Congratulations to you for finding love again and for loving someone else again. There is a difference. And I think trusting someone else enough to give them your love again is probably the hardest. May your creator bless you for loving others as He loves you. Hope that’s not too sappy but I get emotional just thinking about love again after finding out I lived a lie for so many years. Good luck
Welcome to Lovefraud, mypain. Very sorry about what you are experiencing. Sending you lots of LOVE and hugs, and best wishes on your healing path. I will include you in my prayers, this evening. Love and Peace to you~ Shane
Mypain,
give yourself time.
The initial shock is just filled with emotion.
I worked on mine by reading, reading, reading about spaths. The more i learned, the more I read, the more I understood, the less it hurt. Not only was I distracted from my pain by reading, but I was also informed. It helped me to focus my emotional state.
You’ll see. Just TIME ALONE is a healer. it takes about 3 years, usually, be patient.
Sky, In your personal opinion, do you think it is normal that it has taken me almost 10 months thus far to recover (and I am still not quite ‘there’, yet), even though the duration of the relationshit was only that of three and a half months? Or could it depend on the depth in which he took things with me, in terms of both, the ugly and the pretty? Unbelievable to me how long I have been in a state of recovery, the ebb and flow, if you will…
Hi Shane,
That is a long time, proportionally, it seems to me.
I think that the length of time is relative to what drove you to the spath in the first place. If you had a disfunctional family then that isn’t long at all. You need to heal from all the spaths that you encountered BEFORE the big spath.
My experience with relationships is that I’ve never had a “short” relationship. Mine were always long, and always dysfunctional. 3 years or more. Yes, I’m very good supply and that is the reason.
In the end, I’d have to say that 10 months isn’t long enough to recover from most things. Imagine if it was alcohol that snagged you for 3 months. Would that be long enough? or meth, or crack? would 10 months be long enough? probably not. you would need more time to know that you were finally over it
With a spath, it’s even worse. They are human, not drug. They mimic humanity, yet they are addictive.
I can tell you from experience, that even if you know what they are, they are still addictive from the beginning. With me, the reason is that I had been groomed beforehand to love spaths. My family, my early boyfriends, everyone groomed me to love spaths. They are so charming.
The key to healing is to get past your upbringing.
it isn’t going to be easy.
My family, ironically is the most healthy part of me. I don’t talk about it here. I read about other’s families and I feel like am an outcast of sorts, like it wouldn’t be ok to express that I come from a healthy past, childhood, etc. Getting over the shock, anger and humiliation within myself is what has taken the longest of symptoms, to dissipate. Thank you so much for your response to my inquiry.
…I do see now, however, that prior to spath, I don’t think I had any clear boundaries. Of course, I do, now. Boy do I ever. But I am now looking at possibilities for spath entanglement, stemming from something, somewhere in my past. Working on this in therapy. If this makes any sense.
Shane,
I just lost a long post.
I’ll try again.