I’m going to address a disturbing subject: the motives, the thinking, of men who eliminate—yes, who murder—their partners.
But first a caveat: Females also sometimes eliminate their partners and share, I suspect, similar mindsets and motives with male murderous eliminators.
And so what I write, here, applies, I suspect, across gender lines.
One other caveat—when I use the term “eliminate,” as you might suspect, I’m excluding killings in self-defense, of passion, and as responses to insufferable abuse. This will be apparent as the discussion unfolds.
Last, by “eliminate,” I refer to two possible means of disposing of a partner—by one’s own hands, or by outsourcing the job.
So let’s hit the ground running: Why would a man murderously eliminate his partner? Here’s the short, but surprisingly complete, answer: He’d eliminate her because he perceives that she’s in his way.
That is, he experiences her as an unacceptable obstruction; and he concludes, eventually, that the only solution is to remove, to eliminate, the obstruction (her).
In the mind of the murderous eliminator, the partner to be eliminated is impeding something very important to him; something that feels vital to his selfish interests; something that promises him gratification that he must have; and something to which he feels strongly, compellingly entitled.
These factors of his thinking, in combination, support and groom his eliminationist mindset.
The idea that he should be denied access to what he wants feels wrong, intolerable. Worse, it feels like an injustice. And so he grows to resent, increasingly, the obstructive entity (his partner); and increasingly, he rationalizes the validity of his growing resentment.
The murderous partner believes, in his entitlement, that he is meant to have this “something,” this “experience” that he covets, as if destiny has promised it.
Consequently, whatever or whoever stands in his way assumes antagonistic, hostile properties, further supporting his rationalization that the obstruction (or obstructor!) isn’t just an inconvenient nuisance, but worse, malignantly undermining.
And so he develops a warped, almost paranoid view that the thwarting factor is inimical to the fulfillment of his agenda. This is a view that supports his inwardly germinating position that he is justified, if necessary, to remove the source of the interference.
It follows, then, that for the murderous eliminator, his partner isn’t just an object to him, which, of course, she entirely is; more than that, she is an object that is in the way of his getting something he’s determined to have, and to which, by now, as I’ve suggested, he feels completely, even desperately, entitled.
I repeat: the combination of these attitudes conspires to ripen his receptivity to the budding idea, to the cold-logic necessity, of eliminating his partner, if this is what’s necessary to ensure his access to what he covets and believes deeply is his right to possess.
Consider the archetypal case of the man who eliminates his spouse to end up with his mistress. In this scenario, from the murderous eliminator’s perspective, the spouse impedes, obstructs his access to his mistress.
Because he is desperate to have his mistress, and because his desperation is inextricable from his sense of entitlement, he experiences his spouse’s existence as less than merely a frustrating inconvenience than as a threat to his determination, capacity and right to possess what he feels he must, and deserves to, have (his mistress).
I’ve used the word threat carefully. Remember, threats must be trouble-shot. Whenever anything, in our minds, reaches a level of threat, we feel justified to act to remove it. This is a normal, and not necessarily sociopathic, reaction.
However the sociopath, in his abject narcissism, will experience limits to, constraints on, the gratification he is pursuing as threats! He will feel outraged, if not enraged, at circumstances that interfere with his pursuit of intensely coveted gratifications.
In his mind, these obstructions are perceived as threatening.
I stress: he will perceive these obstructions not just as the unwelcome, inconvenient life interferences with which most of us, grudgingly, come to terms; rather, from his more paranoid, grandiose perspective, he’ll perceive them as personal threats to his right to feel gratified in the way that he wants to feel gratified.
For the murderous eliminator, nothing must interfere with his plan—in this case, to clear a path to his mistress!
There may be children involved. He may spare the children if he thinks they won’t obstruct his plans. If this is the case, it may be enough to eliminate only their mother, who is in the way, while sparing the youngsters, who may not be.
To be clear, his decision to spare the children is made easier if he perceives that, in so doing, he isn’t jeopardizing his access to his mistress, the paramount consideration.
Conversely, it’s possible that he may deem the children, too, and not just their mother, as irremediable obstacles, in which case they, too, will be perceived as threats.
In this case he may feel the need and, on a twisted level, the right, to eliminate them as well.
This is all morbid stuff, of course, but we know that it happens. But who thinks like this? What kind of individual thinks like this? Most sociopaths don’t murder their spouses, or eliminate their families, to be with a mistress.
At the same time, only a sociopath is capable of conceiving, and executing, such a calculated, callous, coldblooded, selfish, murderous plan.
Dear Steve,
Though my psychopathic son is not my “partner” he surely perceived that I am a THREAT to him getting what he is ENTITLED TO and the best way is to ELIMINATE me. Since he is in prison, he chose a “friend” to do the deed, I am sure, promising this guy a share of the proceeds.
The amount of narcissistic thinking, to me, and maybe I am wrong in this assessment, in a particular psychopath makes them more or less lethal. My son I think is particularly narcissistic (at least it is very visible any way) and other psychopaths I have known seem to be able to hide their narcissistic impulses if they are, indeed, as Narcistically HIGH as my son’s.
I’ve known psychopaths who definitely FIT the criteria but I would never think they would be the kind that would murder. Financially plunder, etc. but not murder….but once a psychopath has crossed that boundary between “regular abuse” and “lethal abuse” it seems that they will keep on with using violence and/or murder as a “problem solving mechaninsm.” (whether or not it worked the first time or not)
Entitlement to all the family assets, yep, my son sure has that feeling! CONTROL of everyone and every thing. I am the ONE thing that stood between him and absolute control (if he got out or succeeded in having me murdered) My living one minute longer than my egg donor also keeps him from having any control over family assets, but it would not keep him from wanting to kill me for revenge if nothing else.
Revenge for N-injury is, I think, as much a motive with many Ps who kill, as is removing the victim from between the P and the Ps desire. (like in this case, the mistress).
EriB & Wini, this is the only thread I can get on now, weird internet connection (or lack of connection) ErinB, Saw where he was served, GREAT!!!! Towanda!!!
Wini, I’ve had several dogs that could “P-detect” and they were always right. I don’t doubt that there is some smell that people give off, the same way any dog can know when a person is afraid of them, because our sweat changes smell, so there may be some detectable smell change in a P similar to that that a dog can pick up but we can’t. Their noses are over a milliion times better than ours. Some breeds more than that.
Funny thing though, my parrot,, which generally doesn’t care for men because he was hand fed as a baby by a woman, just LOVED the TH-P from the first moment! Of course I think at times the bird is a P—arrot! LOL
The dogs I have now love everyone, but the P-uddy cat only likes MEN! She’s really ticked that son D is gone and she doesn’t know where!!!! Yowls all the time wanting into his room! I keep the door shut just to SPITE HER!!!! hee hee hee
Oxy, I know my Neuphy (God bless his soul) was the most mellow dog in the world, but, when it came to the fraidy cat mail man that used to deliver to my home, he used to bark like crazy. Just because he could smell this guy’s fear two blocks away. No matter how many times I introduced him to my dog, allowed him to pet him and show him how friendly Neuphy was … the guy was afraid of his own shadow. I guess Neuphy loved to goof on him.
On the other hand … I think with the Spaths, their brain is working over time … acting calm, cool and collected as an outward appearance, yet, at the same time they are sizing things up … who they can con, what they can steal etc. Maybe it’s the duality of their presence (spirit not being calm) that the animals are picking up.
Very well may be, Wini, I know that dogs are very sensitive to smells, and I also know that we humans have two different types of sweat glands. One set gives off signals for sex, fear, excitement, etc. and the other just gives off water and salt to cool our bodies when it is hot. The one smells loudly and the other doesn’t smell much at all. So it is possible that the excitement the Psychopaths feel is coming out in their sweat glands and the dogs can smell this and show aggression toward it (or some dogs at least).
I know that if I am very afraid or stressed I can “Smell” myself as the musky odor is quite apparent even to myself. Some people are more prone to the musky smell than others, but everyone has some of both types of sweat glands.
I’ve talked with people who train rescue and cadaver dogs and there are some interesting things about the dogs and how they seek and find. Differences between dogs who sniff the air and search for ANY human in a given area, and dogs who sniff the trail and search for a SPECIFIC human in a sea of humans. The long ears of the blood hound even have a function to stir the air of the scent trail to better enable the dog to find the trail. They are using a lot of border collies now for search and rescue (they are air sniffers) and cadaver dogs. I met a lady whose collie found a man drown in Ark river under 15 ft. of water. I’d say that’s pretty good sniffing.
Excellent post. As usual you exactly pinpoint the thought process of these guys. That same thought process applies to things other than murder, of course. Always the entitlement.
I don’t know if this is a topic you are interested in or someone else might be willing to write about it….but what is “intensity” in a relationship and how does it hook us?
Steve,
I enjoy your articles, explaining to the reader how a spath thinks, operates in the world. Being married to a spath (we’re separated) has given me a crash course into what this disorder is all about, having experienced enough disturbing behaviors to drive me nuts. Since my h-spath gets sick at the sight of blood, throw-up, etc. (bodily fluids), I think I’ll be okay – he wouldn’t want to eliminate me, preferring not to see any of that nasty stuff. What a relief for me.
Dear Bluejay,
Don’t forget about other methods of elimination—hiring someone else to do it or poison (no messy blood spatter!)
Dear Neveragain, when you say “intensity” are you meaning how quickly the relationship becomes INTENSE? It seems to me that the “love bomb” which is the QUICK route to hooking us where they tell us how wonderful we are, how perfect, ya da, ya da, which is a manipulation done by many cults and pseudo-religious groups. AT FIRST everything is all your dreams come true—until you are hooked, then things start to be different. There are several threads and articles here on Love Bombing that might interest you.
OxDrover,
Oh yeh, I didn’t think about those options, a hitman and/or eliminating me through poisoning. In all seriousness, I have thought about this topic (having read another article where a writer posted that she thought that all spaths were capable of murder), so that post set me thinking. I personally don’t think that it will happen. Knowledge about this disorder is power! The information that I have gathered from this web site has been helpful in knowing how to deal with the h-spath (for which I am greatful). I don’t go out of my way to “push his buttons”, being aware that anything could happen (you really can’t fully predict their actions). I would rather be safe then sorry, trying to remain alert to anything that could be “off” in our world. When you are able to “figure out” (to the best of your ability) your particular spath, then you have a better idea of how to maneuver in life.
Always so succinct insights and analysis, Dr. Steve. Thank you.
I can’t remember the name of the article (CRS!) but there is a thread on here somewhere about the psychopath actually being SIMPLE rather than complex. I think this article goes along with that train of thought. It really IS pretty simple when you think about the REASONS they would consider killing someone, and along with the ARROGANCE of thinking they have the PERFECT PLAN and no one can catch them, it makes it fairly simple for them to decide to off someone who is in their way in one way or another. Whether it is to gain “freedom” from a marriage they want out of without having to split the property or for purposes of revenge or monetary gain. The psychopath’s feelings of ENTITLEMENT make it all the easier to consider murder I think. But I also think that in many cases they view it as JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE rather than “murder.” (as we might see it)