(This article is copyrighted © 2012 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
It can be hard to hate or despise even the most terrible human being so long as he’s inflicted his cruelty on others, but spared you. Take a sociopathic relative, even a close one.
If somehow he compartmentalized his life, lived a “double life—”in any case, if you learned that he treated you (retrospectively even) with an exceptional, aberrant mercy that he denied his victims, you might very possibly remain “loyal” to him. You might still even “love” him.
Various defenses are pertinent—such as denial, dissociative and other self-deluding mechanisms. Gratitude may also be present, expressive of a different defense mechanism: the “monster,” after all, spared you, but not others. He exempted you from the cruel fate he inficted on them, who were helpless to protect themselves, as you were too, only he spared you. So it may seem as if he were somehow “protecting” you from the “demons” he unleashed on others.
This kind of analysis can engender, as I say, a form of “gratitude” and “loyalty” towards the victimizing individual; it is a variant of “identifying with the aggressor.”
Now it’s true that many, discovering the unseemly truth about someone close to them, even if they were spared the individual’s predations, will modify their view of the individual, bringing it into conformity with reality.
But not always.
I stress: sometimes the monster will retain his “backer.” And the chief point I stress is that his “backer” will probably be under the sway of twin, interrelated and twisted forces of logic—if he didn’t do this to me, then how could he have done this to them? And if he did it to them and not me, then he must have somehow “loved” me?
In either case, “I exculpate him.” In this way, I can remain “loyal” to him,without feeling I’ve transgressed my value system.
Thus disbelief (enabled by denial), mixed and confused with the fantasy of having been a special, exceptional object of his “love” (thanks to which he “amnestied” you from the cruel fate to which he subjected others) supports the rationalization to “stand by” him.
We are strange in the sense of this contradiction: on one hand, we are highly prone to judging others; on the other, we have the capacity to utilize defense mechanisms in the service of “withholding judgment” whenever the need arises.
We do both regularly—that is, regularly we relent to the tendency to judge, while often simultaneously exercising the detachment necessary to “not judge” sometimes disturbing individuals and their alarming stories of transgression.
Many professions, like that of psychotherapy, require the capacity to “suspend personal judgment” just so its practioners can work effectively with a wide range of stimulating, and sometimes disturbing, information.
Families have been torn apart by this psychological dynamic in a sometimes brutal clash of dichotomous positions. I’ve seen this more than a few times. A violator in the family has wrought it shame, perhaps public shame. The violator has perpetrated terrible things now known to the family.
Some family members revise their view of the individual and come to despise him, want nothing more to do with him, have sworn the individual out of their lives.
Other family (especially those who weren’t personally victimized by the individual) may “stand by” the individual, “retain” their faith and belief in him; and thus a rift between the “factions” occurs, adding another layer of nightmare to the trauma precipitated by the violating relative.
This is a preliminary examination of this very complicated subject, to be explored in further depth ahead.
Yes, Oxy, when IS it our business, and when is it NOT our business? When is it helpful, and when is it meddling or intrusive or judgmental?
I think it can be OK to offer information about options sometimes, especially if we are willing to help shoulder some or all of the burden for the person, but ultimately, the choice is that of the person who will have to live with the consequences of whatever that choice or decision brings.
You would have to live with the consequences resulting from the decision about your dog.
I mean — I have even had “well meaning” people approach me to tell me what I ought to “do about” my hair! (which is long).
Kim, thanks for filling out the toddler theme more thoroughly than I did.
kim:
Absolutely! I agree with you and have even said these same things. I told my brothers that leaving her alone is like leaving a 4 year old just roaming around a house alone. And I told my mom herself just what you said…that now I AM the parent and she is the child and I want to take care of her…that she took care of me when I was a child and now it is my turn, but it falls on deaf ears. I agree her living with me wouldn’t be good not only for me, but for her. I want to do what is also best for her.
I did just call an agency, “Home Instead” about an hour ago. They sounded very, very nice. Someone is going to go out to my mom’s house next week and do an evaluation. I will talk to my mom about it in advance and I know she is going to refuse, but I am going to have them go out to her house anyway. It’s my duty. It’s expensive though. My mom has the money, but the money can get eaten up really fast especially if I decide to have someone stay with her all night so she is not scared. I appreciate your input, Kim…thank you.
OxD, I relate to your decision to put down the dog with hip dysplasia – I know it was a difficult decision, but you made the only one that made sense.
I recently lost a very, very, VERY old cat (almost 30 years old), and a friend of mine who is a huge cat-person asked if I was going to have him looked at by the vet. She actually asked me, “What do you think he died of?” Uh….old age? It was very sad, but it was quiet, peaceful, and he was surrounded by all of us in his own surroundings and not in a vet’s office. This friend of mine didn’t seem to understand that dying is dying, whether we expire in our beds or on a stainless steel table with an IV in place.
Louise, “Home Instead” is a good company, from all that I’ve heard. The money is going to go very, very fast in caring for mom. I know this from my own experience, and if it’s mom’s money, then it needs to be spent on her care. Just be very, very cautious about who handles her finances. And…..also from personal experience…..keep ALL of her financial stuff, yourself. No checks or checkbooks or banking information laying around her house. “Home Instead” does do pretty thorough checks on their employees, but that doesn’t mean that they can screen for predators.
Bless your heart……it’s a tough journey.
Brightest blessings
Louise..Taken on the responsibilty for other’s is what got me in the mess I got in.. Tried to recue my Xbf form his whorible situation and that cost me several grand and took twenty years off my life..
Tried to resuce my mother from her whorible situation, even knowing she was an evil mother, out of guilt and responsibility I felt I owed her that much.. Little did I know the nitemares that followed trying to take care of an addict mother with no conscience.. That drained me even further..
I am responsible for my dogs… I raised my son’s to be responsible for themselves.. I will never burden them with the responsibility of wiping my ass…
I will do what I can to help other’s,, but if I cant function to take care of myself then I aint no good to anybody…call me selfish but I know what I can and can not do..it’s called boundaries…….
I might not be proud of the fact that I have limitations but taking on more than I can handle only hurts those I want to help…
hens, there is so much love radiating from recognizing, accepting and embracing our acceptance of our limitations. xo
Louise, I think the “toddler” analogy is very good about your mom. You could not go to work and leave her the to roam around your house…or go to sleep at night wondering if she would wake up and decide to “cook” and burn the house down on both your heads.
People generally lose their faculties in the REVERSE order that they learned them. First they lose their judgment and higher reasoning power. One of the things I read recently talked about how elderly who are becoming slowly demented lose the ability to tell a “joke” or sarcasm and that is one reason they are so easy for con men to scam them out of their money.
Then they lose the ability to do other things until ultimately they can’t dress themselves or do other normal activities of daily living. If it goes on to the ultimate stage before they pass away they are in a fetal position unable to feed themselves. Just like a very young infant.
Even if we had a GOOD relationship with them before they start to “slip” it is very difficult to deal with the “loss” of mom or dad with them still breathing. One friend of mine whose mom was the sweetest woman in the world, and lived with her daughter at the end would curse her daughter and say AWFUL things to her and my friend would CRY, her heart broken that her “mother” said these terrible things to her. I tried and tried and am not sure if I ever got through to my friend that it was NOT HER MOTHER who said those things, it was her DISEASED brain.
I wish I could be my egg donor’s “parent” and keep her from doing the things she is doing, but I can’t. She is legally “sane” and entitled to do what she wants to whether it is WISE or UNwise. Until she is in such a state that a judge will order her to be taken to a hospital and assessed, and she is found an IMMEDIATE danger to herself or others” there is NADA that I can do to stop her or even protect her. (Or protect myself from what she does)
Hens, I also felt that “guilt” that I was OBLIGATED to take care of egg donor, but I came to realize that I could not do it, I had to put myself and my own safety first. I am glad that you have also reached that point. We are out of the FOG!
sometime’s trying to do the right thing does more harm than good. even when it’s between normal loving functional people.
Heylo 1steprs…….~! hope your doing well…
hey hens, waiting for test results. had a bronchoscopy on monday so that they could take samples for the biopsy and the 2nd CT last week. One more test to go, but do to a screw up by the booking chick it won’t be next week, but 2 weeks away. I am up and down. Had a few rough days.
I have been thinking about the original topic. Mostly about how it is easy to love the spath if you are the one being spared. It is a shock and not pleasant at all to think that I knew he had dumped people in the past and I felt I was the lucky one to be chosen to be in his inner circle. How naive and stupid.
I’ve been watching Jewel and the Crown and there is a character in this series who personifies sociopathy and people don”t connect the dots at all and figure out how he is destroying good people. The really good people. They irritate him or he feels inadequate around them and they are done for. And they haven’t done anything except attract the attention of the hunger tiger. Fate seems to be at work but really it is this insidious man. Society is often set up to protect such characters. I agree with Oxy that this is a huge topic that has not been delved into. We live in an offender protective society. Power and the persona of confidence trumps good.
I have watched this at work in the school system I work in. Teachers refuse to do the safe touch program because they don’t want to handle disclosures and principals shake in their boots at the thought of an angry, defensive parent coming into their office. There is no doubt whatsoever that the predominance of people don’t want to face evil and do anything about it. If anything, this tendency is getting worse as people become more disconnected from each other.
The very fact that people have to come to an anonymous site like this to tell their stories shows how little compassion and empathy there is for a victim.Over and over people here say that they stop telling anyone what happened because they feel judged by others and that implicit in their stories is the theme that somehow they asked for it and should have known better. How easy it is to say that for someone who hasn’t been emotionally raped.
Yes, there are a lot of psychopaths. say 1 out of 25 people but there are many times that number who go along with them in victimizing some innocent person. Who speaks up in a restaurent when they hear a parent verbally abusing their child? Who speaks up at the beach when some parent is being cruel to their child?
People don’t want to be the target of anger. I don’t know what to do about it. I don’t even address it with my own grown up daughter who adores her father who is a spath. She is so trauma bonded to him that I don’t know where to begin and if I say anything it is not welcome and seems to send her off the deep end.
I would really like to hear why the people around Sandusky kept quiet. There is a lot to be learned there. Not just that they were scared little rabbits who would not blow the whistle. There were people high and low who knew. And yet the silence. We need to know about that silence and understand it very well. Our society is set up to protect guys like Sandusky and it happens repeatedly. I would bet that these people may have tried to tell on him and tested the waters and found out that no one wanted to know and deal with the consequences. THAT is what needs to change.