The recent post on marital misconduct, and the many letters I have received from Lovefraud readers, have caused me to conclude that love fraud is a spectrum. Because love fraud is a spectrum, there is some confusion about it. To clear up the confusion, this week I will describe the range of motives for this fraudulent behavior. Remember that one of the most important biologic/social functions of love relationships is to produce and raise children. In my opinion, love fraud that involves children is the most serious. These children did not ask to be born and are at the mercy of the adults responsible for bringing them into the world. Next week we will discuss the implications of the spectrum of love fraud for children.
Love fraud perpetrated by predators
Perhaps the most serious form of love fraud occurs when a person who is certainly a psychopath or sociopath enters into a relationship with the sole intent of exploitation and predation. I believe I was a victim of this type of fraud. There are many other examples of men and women who have been victims of this most severe love fraud; their stories may be found on this web site’s True Lovefraud Stories.
Donna speaks primarily of this type of love fraud: Being the victim of a scam is embarrassing. Humiliating. Victims keep asking themselves, “How could I have been so stupid? Why didn’t I see it coming?” The last thing they want to do is tell other people how they participated in being duped—even though it’s not their fault.
Unfortunately, the type of person who uses the love bond as a lure to attract his/her prey does not care if children are produced in the relationship. In fact, these predators often use the children to further their own purposes. Sociopaths typically have many children with several different partners. When I first realized I had been the victim of a sociopath, I spoke with Anne McGuire from Fraud Aid (this was 2003, before Donna Andersen put up this site). I asked her, “How many women do you know who have had children with con artists?” She said, “The con artist doesn’t care about whether he fathers children. In fact, the more the merrier”¦ then he can use them as pawns!” With that I discovered I was not alone.
Love fraud perpetrated by parasites
As tragic as the True Lovefraud Stories are, they do not represent a very large percentage of the total cases of what I would consider to be love fraud. The next level of severity of love fraud happens when sociopaths and narcissists seek relationships because they want to be in a relationship. These individuals get married or form partnerships for reasons other than pure predation. They may want to use the relationship as cover to appear normal to the world. They may also dislike being alone. It is very important to understand that although psychopaths, sociopaths and narcissists do not enjoy affection, they are very social. They do not enjoy being alone. Thus, these people can be predators as above, or they can be parasites.
The difference between a predator and a parasite is that the parasite does not seek to destroy his/her host. The parasite just wants to suck energy from the host. The parasitic form of love fraud is very common. Prior to becoming a victim myself, I had not known of the predatory type of love fraud. But I saw many cases of parasitic love fraud in my practice.
Victims of parasitic love fraud are often more confused about their victimization and about the perpetrator than are victims of predatory love fraud. The motives of the perpetrator are less obvious in parasitic love fraud.
The parasitic love fraud perpetrator often sees children as competition for the energy of the host. These people often leave the relationship once children are conceived. They may also have abortions themselves, or pressure their partners into having an abortion.
The cheaters
The next most common form of love fraud is perpetrated by persons with narcissistic and antisocial personality traits but not the full disorder. These individuals are capable of a modicum of what might be considered “love.” They enjoy affection some, but have such poor impulse control and moral sense that they are not capable of a monogamous relationship. These are the chronic cheaters.
With the availability of divorce and alternatives to marriage, those that repeatedly cheat are also fraudulent lovers. The motivation to cheat rather than leave has to do with power and control in a relationship. The cheater wants to own his victims. The difference between a cheater and a parasite is that the cheater contributes substantially to the relationship. He/she may share the work of the home and is gainfully employed.
This last form of love fraud is perhaps the most difficult to process. The victim correctly perceives some degree of affection in the relationship. There are also social pressures on these victims. Well meaning friends and relatives may say, “At least he brings home the bacon and sleeps with you every night!” In my experience, most people are looking for real intimacy and fidelity in a partner in addition to sharing a home and finances. The cheater leaves his/her victim feeling inadequate, lonely and empty.
Chronic cheaters are also very problematic when it comes to children. People who repeatedly cheat are not capable of putting a spouse’s well-being above their own. They also are often incapable of the sacrifices required to parent. Cheaters are, however, interested in children as possessions, just as they are interested in lovers as possessions. Again, “The more, the merrier!” may be the philosophy when it comes to children.
The adulterers
Adulterers are people who cheat because they are no longer “in love” with a partner and/or are not getting needs met, but they feel an obligation to stay in the marriage. Adulterers technically also commit love fraud because they do not live up to promises made. Typically, though, these spouses do not repeatedly cheat with multiple partners. An adulterer may form a bond with one other partner and leave the marriage once the responsibilities of child care are over or lessened. As a whole, this group is capable of loving relationships but made a mistake in choosing a partner, and they were unable/unwilling to correct the mistake through divorce.
Adulterers are generally adequate parents because they have ability to love. However, when children find out about infidelity they often harbor feelings of anger toward the perpetrator. Adulterers typically try to support the aggrieved spouse emotionally and financially because they feel guilty over their behavior.
The Inner Triangle
When interpreting the behavior of others within all love relationships it is very useful to consider the Inner Triangle. The Inner Triangle is Ability to Love, Impulse Control and Moral Reasoning. Psychopaths and sociopaths are people who have no ability to love, poor impulse control and no moral values. These people can only be predators and parasites in ALL of their relationships. Narcissists also lack ability to love, but have an understanding of morality and impulse control. Narcissists can be parasites or cheaters.
Many other people have problems with the Inner Triangle that do not rise to the level of disorder. These people can be cheaters and adulterers in one relationship and function well in another relationship they are better suited to.
The children are the victims
In any case, defects in the Inner Triangle impair a person’s ability to parent. This is discussed in detail in my book, Just Like His Father? Next week I will address predators, parasites, cheaters and adulterers in the context of child care and custody.
Thank you Healing Heart and OxDrover: I agree with each of you. But is it not sometimes as simple as “he wasn’t the one” or did I truly encounter another human being who is what is termed as “sociopathic” “narcissistic” because…well, there are folks out there who would say I am the same — because, I am unattached, I want, I need — does the difference lie in how we act? what we need? our motivation? I can say that he is a nice man, but something was “just not right.” His eyes were “weird”, he was a “name-dropper” “he engaged in self-grandization — was needy of attetion — does that mean he “wasn’t right for me” or does he just “struggle” like me?
greentrees52: That’s because our EXs … more so than anyone else … but it also applies to us … need to read the Bible and believe in God. It is reading and living our lives through the word of God that gives us substance … everything else is an illusion. MAN made illusion. No substance to man made existence (illusion) of how a person would live their lives.
Believe in God and read his word daily and you shall live! You become whole!
Believe in yourself (your ego) and you shall surely die! Figuratively … spiritual death to the soul! Boredom, resentment, anger, rage, envy, jealousy, greed, self centered, self absorbed, inertia … you name the sin … you will spin through it living life by EGO.
Life is very simple, man makes it difficult. Your choice (free will). Choose wisely!
Peace.
Greentrees, keep reading about sociopaths, and talking about the guy you dated. The more you read, the more you will know the truth about the man you were with. There are some great books out there: The Sociopath Next Door, Without Conscience, and How to Spot a Dangerous Man were all eye-openers for me. Knowledge is power!
The one I dated was–and still is–the nicest man on earth. He was always so kind and gentlemanly. Everyone loves him. And yet the things he did were beyond comprehension of any normal person. I read here somewhere that sociopaths are the nicest people in the world, but sometimes they go out and rob a bank.
Wini – I really like how you introduce a spiritual element to our blogs.
But I wonder about this last blog. My ex S read the bible A LOT. He quoted the bible. He knew more about the bible than any one else I knew besides my friends who were ministers, or priests at parrishes. My ex S claimed to love God, attended Bible studies, read the Course of Miracles, and talked about his relationship with God all the time.
I’ve not known anyone other than my grandmother, who was not a person of the cloth, but knew the bible so well.
And my ex S was one evil creature. He had hundreds of sexual partners, abandoned his wife and children, and betrayed me repeatedly. Yet he read the bible and quoted it, like there was no tomorrow
I think I will take the high road and assume he is a human being like me — and he wants and needs all those things that I need and want — because he didn’t meet my needs at my moment and I didn’t meet his needs at his moment — doesn’t mean either of us are a “sociopath.” I will not forget my own feelings nor will I forget his “odd behavior” But I will also recognize that my behavior is not always perceived by others as “what is the right way to live life..”
I will finish with, that, yes, I agree with all I have read on this site — “they” don’t care, they don’t feel, they don’t experience emotion, they don’t feel remorse, they don’t feel regret — and we here.
Oh, My ex S could also seem incredibly nice at times. But it was always at his choosing. He would never be nice if he didn’t feel like it, wasn’t in the mood, or it was inconvenient. He could seem unusually kind and generous when he felt like being that way because it served him in some way. In the first few months of our relationship he seemed to want to wait on me hand and foot – and couldn’t do enough favors for me. But that’s because it served him – and I was fresh supply – filling him with fuel.
When I really needed him – after having a surgery and being in a lot of pain, after I had a major loss in my family – he was not there for me. In fact, he left me on my own in both of these cases to have sex with another woman. Staggering cruelty and lack of compassion.
But he could seen unusually kind and generous at times. But the key is, it was ALWAYS only when it served him to be that way. Never if he had to put himself out.
Oh, Gosh, Healing Heart: I meant no offense. And, yes, my experience was the same — he certainly wasn’t there for me during anything I had going on — unless it was social and he thought he could gain something from my social/work connections (he always got awfully nice then).
I didn’t miss that. I know that I liked the “illusion” that a man loved and cared for me… that is my “down-falling” — but I didn’t perputuate it but for so long — I asked myself “why, when you knew, did you continue” and I walked and spoke every moment, while also knowing on another level — to a certain extent, that means I can only place blame so far away from myself
Oh, Greentrees – if I seem worked up its because I have strong feelings on this topic, and have been coming more and more to terms with what he was, how much of a victim I was (though I did get out fairly quickly), and just how often he betrayed me. It’s important for me to face the truth with this as for a long time I made up excuses for him, pretended not to see things he was doing, and forgave him so much. Because I loved him. I loved him with all my heart. And it took a lot of really poor treatment from him – it had to become pretty awful, before I was willing to admit that he was not a nice person, was actually a bad person, and that he had no trouble hurting me. I needed to come to terms with that. And I am still in that coming to terms process. And the lovely men and women on this site are helping me do just that, and holding my hands as I do it.
When I sound fired up, its because I am talking about my own truth.
I didn’t take offense at what you said. And it may well be that your guy is not a sociopath or narcissit. I hope he’s not!!!! For your sake, his sake, and the sake of the world.
But if you are on this site it is for some reason. Most of us don’t get here unless we’ve been treated badly.
If your guy is an S, and you are like me, it will take you a long time to admit it to yourself. I read this blog for nine months before logging on myself and participating (and now I can’t shut up). I really didn’t want to admit that he was an S. But he is. And it is setting me free to feel my anger and speak of my pain.
Greentrees, I really hope you are not involved with a sociopath. But if you are wondering, just keep educating yourself as to what they are, and keep your eyes open with your man. That doesn’t mean you are judging him unfairly, it just means you are keeping your eyes open.
Much peace and love to you
Greentrees, as others have said to me today, the label is not so important as looking at how you feel after being with him. I respect your openmindedness and not being quick to label. However, if he is a sociopath, and you are mistaking him for a basically good person, you will get hurt. I hope you keep reading to make sure. If your guy is a sociopath, no contact is the only way to recover from the damages. There is no mistaking when you’ve been with a sociopath. You feel like a tornado just ran over your house, then turned and went over it again. This is what sociopaths are–human tornadoes. They do not have a shred of good in them, though they can play the part exceptionally well.
Greentrees….the book, When You Love A Man Who Loves Himself, does a great job in the first chapter of comparing a normal failed relationship to a failed relationship with a narc…or most bad guys. You can read it online on the “excerpt ” or “first page” link in “looking inside” the book at http://www.amazon.com/When-You-Love-Loves-Himself/dp/140220342X
Further into the book he has graphs about intimacy and satisfaction, etc. that show the difference between a normal relationship and one with a narc. He also has checklists to help you.
Though I agree that the wound you feel is a pretty darn good indicator. I’ve been dumped many times in my life. But only four times did it devestate me and send me into a tail spin, and each time it was with this stupid same P/S/N whatever poison he is!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1