By Ox Drover
One of the themes that seems to run throughout the stories of many of, if not most of, the people who have had experiences with psychopaths is that we have either had repeated episodes of being abused by the same psychopath, even after we saw their dishonesty, or had episodes of being sucked into the webs of multiple psychopaths. Or, we have both of these—multiple episodes with multiple psychopaths.
Most of the people I have known who were formerly victims of psychopaths are not stupid. In fact, some of the smartest, most accomplished people I know are former victims, and have been repeatedly victimized by one psychopath after finding out that this person was dishonest and abusive. Somehow, they kept on going back to the relationship, even after multiple attempts to disengage from the abuser. Why? Why does a person who is smart, accomplished, and otherwise successful in life and business keep repeating the same behavior that allows them to be hurt?
There is an often-used quote, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” It seems by this definition that the victims of psychopaths are “insane,” because we keep on trying to have a relationship with someone who is repeatedly abusive. There must be some reason that otherwise smart and successful people keep repeating the behavior that is unsuccessful in its outcome. There must be some common thread among victims and former victims that makes us susceptible to frequently returning to an unsuccessful and painful relationship.
Here’s a little story that may contain what may be a grain of truth that might point us toward the answer to the question of. “Why?”
The Chief and the Snake
Once upon a time there was a very wise and kind Indian chief. One day as the chief was walking through the forest, he came upon a rattlesnake in the path. He stopped and started to go around the snake, not wanting to hurt it, but not wanting to be bitten either.
As the chief started to pass around the snake, the snake spoke to him (not an unusual thing in those days) and said, “Chief, please have mercy on me, my wife and family are on the other side of yonder river, and I can’t swim, and I can’t get to them. Won’t you please pick me up and carry me across the river?”
The chief looked at the snake and laughed a bit and said, “Why, if I tried to pick you up you would bite me and I would die. I am sad that you have a problem but I must not be bitten, or I would die and my own children would starve because there would be no strong man with a bow to hunt brother deer to provide meat to my little ones. Though my heart feels sad for you, no, I must refuse to pick you up.”
The snake then spoke to the chief saying, “But such a brave man as you should not be afraid of such a small snake as I, and I promise from the bottom of my heart that I would never harm you if you were to help me across yon river. I am so afraid that if I am not able to get across, my wife and children will perish. Please help me in my hour of need.”
The chief looked at the snake and his heart was sad because he knew what it was like to have one’s children without food. His heart took pity on the snake, and he agreed to take the snake across the river, if the snake would agree not to bite him.
The chief reached out to pick up the snake and held him high over his head as he waded the swift and cold waters of the river. About half way across the river when the chief was doing his best to protect the snake from the cold waters, the snake reached down and bit him on the neck, sinking his poison fangs deep into the chief’s blood stream.
The chief was surprised and said to the snake, “Brother Snake, why did you bite me, now I will die and you will drown as well. You promised on your honor not to bite me if I would have mercy on you and help you, now we shall both die and our children starve. You promised me.”
The snake replied, “Ah yes, I promised, but you knew what I was when you picked me up,” as they both sank under the swirling cold water of the river.
What we have in common with the chief
What caused the chief to reach out and pick up a snake that he knew was poisonous, that he knew had the power to harm him, and that if he was wrong in making this decision to pick up the snake, and the snake did bite him, that his own children would suffer because of his decision?
Empathy is what the chief had, empathy for the children of the snake. Because the chief loved his own children, he assumed that the snake must also love its children. Just as the chief would do what was best for his children, he empathized that the snake would also do what was best. Since the chief knew that he would never do anything deliberately to cause consequences for his children, he did not see that the snake would deliberately do something that would cause problems for his own offspring.
Thinking that others have the same motivations that we have can get us into the same problems that the chief got into. The chief wanted to help the snake. He felt pity for the snake. He knew that he would not want someone to refuse to help him if it meant that he would die and his children would go hungry, so it never dawned on him that the snake would be willing to make a decision to do a deed that would insure that the snake-children would go hungry.
The chief’s empathy and his thinking that others had the same empathy, the same motivation for their behavior, and no reason to hurt another, even at the cost of hurting themselves or their near and dear, caused him to want to believe the snake’s promise not to bite.
The snake, however, was right. The chief knew what he was when he picked him up. When we allow ourselves to believe the promises of people who have proven that they are dishonest, we open ourselves to be repeatedly injured or even killed. When someone shows you what they are, believe your eyes. Believe what you see, not what you hear.
No Contact
“No contact” is the commonly accepted “treatment” for any abusive relationship. This means that only contact that is required by law (such as meeting that person in a courtroom due to a law uit) or the minimum amount of contact required by law to co-parent with such a person, is the only interaction between you and your former abuser. No contact allows the injuries to cease, and keeps you safe from new and repeated injuries from the abuser.
“No contact” also includes not stalking the person’s Facebook page or other social media. It means blocking or deleting any text messages, phone calls, e-mails or any other form of communication, including having others tell you what the former abuser is “up to.” Refusing to engage in tale carrying, gossip, or drama involved with the former abuser is also essential. If you must speak about the relationship, do it ONLY with a trusted friend or family member who sees that the relationship was/is abusive, and with assurances that the person will keep your information in absolute confidence. This process can be likened to “not renting them space in your head,” which includes wondering if they have a new relationship, and if they are making this new person happy o,r if they will change for this new person, or wondering if you were wrong about what they are.
You know what they are now, so don’t pick them up. NO CONTACT WORKS.
Oxy-part of my problem is that I have a really hard time making friends. Most of it was cuz N mother never let me be away from her when I was young and I grew up not knowing how to make and keep friends-and my low self esteem doesn’t help. I don’t know how to do all this. All I do is feel extreme lonliness. My neighbor lady is so much like me and she does the alone thing so well. I just wish I could figure it out. I’m just sad right now.
nolarn2bcop – I have been thinkin about drama, the drama, where is it? Well it wasn’t me creating the drama, I was just a sponge for somebody else’s drama. So now, these past 3 years, minus my X, minus my mother and brother, just me here now..So why do I sometimes feel lonely when in fact all this peace and quite is great? I avoid drama of anykind, driving into town is to much drama for me, just thinking about going ‘out’ is drama for me. I mean whats up? why cant I just relax and enjoy being alone? well it’s gettin pretty darn comfy, being drama free that is…hey i am even cooking good meals for myself..before I would never of taken the time to cook unless it was for someone else – well to hell with that, I can do good things for me. nothin wrong with that. One life Erin72 – learn how to slow down and enjoy it. I was never one to make friends, just friends that used me up. SO, now I am kinda anti-social – if that means I am disturbed well so be it…….
nola – you have to give this time. a lot of time. right now you have the vacuum of absence to deal with – you have to get over the hump of wanting a distraction now that the drama is receding. this isn’t YOU…it’s part of the process. As you get to know yourself and live with your own feelings and create esteem that isn’t connected to your family, all this will change.
i kinda suck at the vacuum of absence, but through experience i recognize it. we have to sit with it all – and not want to fill it up with some other thing. if we sit and listen we will hear ourselves talking to ourselves…it takes a lot of practice and time to learn to be quiet and listen.
Hens-you’re not disturbed. I just wish now that I was better at being alone. I admire you for being able to do it. I realized a few days ago that I was even starting to create drama because I was SO freakin used to it being there, and I didn’t even know I was doing it. I am actually staying away from my neighbor lady now because I feel like I am drama to her. Even though I want to be close to her, I can’t. It’s not good for me-and probably not good for her. We’re too much alike and Kim Frederick said we would be bonding over trauma/drama in our lives.
Being w/o a job is making it worse too. Usually when I would get like this I would throw myself into work and use it as a distraction, and now I can’t. I don’t have money to do the things I used to go do to keep my mind off it. I wish I could learn how other people do this alone thing. This used to never bother me and now it feels horrible.
nola – patience. cultivate patience.
onestep-is crying involved with this? Because that is what I feel like doing right now but nothing will come out.
of course it is sugar, but you have to feel safe enough to cry and strong enough to open to your emotions.
(if you want you could try watching a movie that makes you cry, or fake cry until it comes for real. crying is good for us; helps re-balance our chemistry.)
i suck at crying btw. i know that it is because i do not feel safe enough to cry. my emotional walls are too thick yet, and i know that my apartment walls aren’t.
FAD,
NO is a complete sentence. Kathleen Hawk taught me that. Nuff said.
My apartment walls aren’t thick either and SHE is over there on the other side of that wall. She’s watching TV over there. I do feel like I have to cry but it is not ready to come out. Maybe I’ll have a movie I can look at to help. I wish it would come out easier.
I recommend a good snot sloberin cry, I went thru a ‘cryin time’ a few years ago, it was like detoxing..I cry real easy now, over the silliest things.
erin why dont you go to a gay bar? meet some girls that can/will reciprocate and have a conversation…?