Lovefraud recently received the following email:
Hi Donna,
I’m a huge fan of LoveFraud and can’t thank you enough for making it happen. I know from your story that you’ve found a wonderful man. So have I, and we’ve been dating about a year. He’s an upbeat, nurturing person with a great sense of humor and good boundaries!
Still, I’m finding it difficult to let go and love him. I’m really surprised how long it’s taking me to let go of my fear. (I’ve been out of my marriage 4 years and did a lot of healing before I met new guy.)
Could you address this in one of your articles? I see a lot of info on how to recover, and how to spot a spath so you don’t hook up with another one. But what about when you find a good guy? I’d love to hear about other people’s experiences, how long it took them to relax into love, and anything they did to facilitate the process.
First of all, I am very glad that you have found someone special. So let’s address the situation that you’ve brought up letting go of fear so that you can fully enjoy your new relationship.
Here’s the most important concept to understand: The key to finding and enjoying a good, healthy relationship always lies within ourselves.
If you’re still feeling fear about the new relationship, it means that you have more healing to do. This is not a bad thing. Keep in mind that when it comes to our emotional lives, another word for “healing” is “growth.” So as you move forward, you’re getting to the deeper issues that may still stand in the way of emotional fulfillment. When you address them, you grow.
Whatever you’ve been doing to get to where you are now, keep doing it, focusing on the last remnants of the fear that you feel:
- If you’ve been working with a therapist, ask him or her to help you.
- If you’ve been journaling, ask yourself what you’re afraid of, and write the answers.
- If you’ve been processing your emotions, allow yourself to feel the fear, until it is released.
- If you’ve been meditating, focus on the fear, and let the cause come into your awareness.
- If you’ve been using EFT tapping, state the fear as the problem you want to resolve.
Emotional growth is a lifelong process. All relationships are opportunities for growth.
Interim steps
Sometimes there are interim steps between getting rid of the sociopath and finding a true life partner.
If you’ve read my first book, Love Fraud, you may remember that I started dating a man, John, seven months after I left my sociopathic husband. John was a normal, affectionate, caring man. We had a lot of fun, and I truly felt love with him.
The relationship ended 10 months later. Quite frankly, the end of that relationship hurt more than the end of my marriage. My ex-husband had betrayed me. I grieved the loss of my money, stability and self-esteem. But I no longer loved him; I was glad to get rid of him. When John and I broke up, I was heartbroken. We did share a love, and it was gone.
Eventually I realized that my relationship with John was never meant to be permanent. We were both taking the initial tentative steps out of emotional disappointment. We cared for each other and supported each other for almost a year, and then it was time for both of us to move on.
Our partner’s problems
Even with Terry, who is now my husband, there was a time about a year into our relationship when it almost came apart. The problem wasn’t our relationship, but other issues in Terry’s life that made him feel like he couldn’t continue.
Sociopaths, of course, often have problems in their lives. So how do we tell the difference between a healthy person with a problem, who deserves our love and support, and a sociopath who will be an unending source of turmoil?
The difference is that when a sociopath has a problem, we’ll feel manipulated, deceived or bullied into fixing it. When a healthy person has a problem, we won’t feel used when we’re offering support.
I knew that Terry had to face his issues. I hoped that we’d be able to stay together, but there was a chance that our relationship would end. I knew that if that happened, it wasn’t because I was deficient. I’d be unhappy, but I’d eventually pick myself up and start again.
Always risk
Keep in mind that there’s always risk involved in entering a relationship, whether or not you were previously betrayed by a sociopath, and even if the other person is relatively healthy. When you reveal the contents of your heart, there is a chance that your feelings may not be reciprocated and you’ll end up with a broken heart. In short, that’s life.
If a relationship doesn’t work out, it doesn’t mean that there is something wrong with you. It may mean that you and the other person were only meant to travel together for a short time. It may also mean that the person was just a stepping stone to the real love of your life.
Love is a leap of faith. As you heal, you’ll be able to find the courage to make the leap.
Louise, same, here. For me, it’s ironic at how my world went from what I believed to be “safe and secure” to something out of a Lifetime movie took about 30 seconds. Of course, I had heard tell of situations like mine, but they always happened to someone else. The irony…..
You are 100% spot-on that we have no idea what’s on our own Life’s Path, ahead. I just do not have any idea how to keep an “open mind” about matters that I am so fearful of. And, I mean I’m terrified of a relationship enough to simply say, “Not gonna happen, ever.”
I would appreciate some serious discussion on this.
Brightest blessings
TeaLight! LMAO!!!!!!!!! “Valentine’s Day” = “Singles Awareness Day!” 😀
Sorry lou I posted my silly post over you. Lou, I saw the other day that you were thinking about scousepath’s spouse and her family, and I thought…no Lou! Get the scousepath family out of your mind! I know, it’s extremely hard, but really, the road forked for us and the creatures, and now there are not on our road, and we’ve got to look ahead. Yes, I admit, I think about Mrs Bates, ( the younger, not the mother) , and I have to kick myself. She is not my business. He put her in my head, wrongly, becuase he is unfaithful and sick and triangulates and manipulates women. But their wives do not belong in our heads. And thinking about the life they have with the creatures is a total waste of time, if it’s ‘good’ for them , it’s only becuase they are blind to the truth, or are being lied to expertly day in day out. You know the truth of scousepath, and you know he’s no good. Mine is no good either, and his wife is a total stranger to me and I must not think about them. x
Truthy, I’m a cheap date. I promise. SWALK 🙂 x
LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Truthspeak – I did the healing work that I referred to in the article. I processed the emotional pain, the betrayal, the anger, the disappointment. I got it out of my system. By doing that, I knew that I’d never be deceived and manipulated again.
That didn’t mean I wouldn’t be hurt again. Breaking up with John was very painful. But it was honest pain, not the pain of deception.
Also, I took things slowly. Going slow isn’t foolproof, because some sociopaths can keep the charade going for a long time. But it helps.
Tea Light:
Me, too. I actually turn my head or just look away or turn the station when any type of kissing comes on the telly. Hate it…it’s awful to feel this way. x
Even the most wonderful “true love” relationship WILL end one day, unless you both hold hands and jump off a bridge or die in a building falling on you, there is a 99.999% chance that one of you will die first, leaving the other one, either with an illness that you know about or suddenly in an accident like my husband did.
Very few couples, no matter how loving don’t have one member die before the other one, leaving one member alone.
In our culture for older (over 60 especially) there are many more single and widowed women than there are single guys, so if you weed out the drunks, psychopaths, and nere’do’wells, that doesn’t leave a lot to choose from and there iis a lot of competition from younger women for these same guys.
So I recognize that there iis not a lot of chance for me to find someone around my age (66) who is reasonably healthy, interesting, smart, so I pretty well accept the fact that just about anyone I WOULD be interested in is going to marry some gal about 15 years younger than me. LOL But you know, being alone doesn’t have to equal “lonely” or “dissatisfied”
Having a “partner” is not absolutely necessary to be happy.
Donna, I don’t believe that I’ll ever get to “that point” that I won’t ever be fooled, again. That’s what I mean – I have too much work to do to trust myself, I guess.
Doing the work is enough of a challenge. Cripes, and the prospect of vetting out a date is beyond my capacity to manage.
Tea Light:
I agree. I know I shouldn’t think about them. It’s none of my business what they do. It’s hard though. x