Editor’s note: The following article refers to spiritual concepts. Please read Lovefraud’s statement on Spiritual Recovery.
How can this be? Is it right, or possible to have compassion for a sociopath? Why should I consider this topic after all the pain that the sociopath has caused me? For some, the very idea may make you angry. If so, my hope is that you read more”¦
In the beginning, I looked at my father as a spiritual vampire with no soul. A person that lived off of others, consuming their money, emotions, kindness and love, then moving on to another. In my dad’s case, he even took their very lives. He deserved to die, I thought. I was OK with the idea of him being condemned to death and being sent to death row. Why not? He deserves it, right?
When I look at a sociopath what do I see?
The sociopath is someone that cannot experience real love, only mimics it. They treat children and relationships like possessions. My father treated me like he would his favorite car, as long as I was good. He killed people because he thought it would make him feel better. This last statement led me to an important question of my own.
How bad could a person possibly feel inside to believe that killing another person would make them feel better, and what does that say about what value they place on their own life?
Exactly what am I seeing when I look at this picture? Another human being (yes they are human beings) that lives in darkness with no clue as to what life really offers, or a monster? A little bit of both I suppose, but the suffering human existence is something that I had not recognized before, because of the hurt that my dad had caused me.
I am trying not to use so many questions in this post, but I am finding it impossible, because this issue raises so many of them. What happens to a person that causes them to live in darkness with no awareness of what love really is? Image a father not being able to understand the love of a child, but to view them as an expendable possession.
During the recovery process, I became friends with a beautiful spiritual woman who also happens to be a licensed clinical social worker with a PhD. I was not a client of hers, but she became one of my most important teachers just the same. One morning, while demonstrating a wonderful technique that she uses to help people heal past emotional deficits, she treated me to a miraculous gift that corrected years of misunderstanding about my father. Since it is something that must be experienced to be truly understood I will keep my description of it as brief as possible. Words just simply will not do justice to this type of deep work.
My friend helped me to settle into a calm and comfortable state and then she began asking me some questions about my family. She asked me to select items in the room that might represent them, and then she asked me to place them where I felt most comfortable.
First, we started with my father, I selected an object that was hard, rough and had no qualities that resembled a person. I then selected items that represented my mother and me as a small child—items that were soft, had character and appeared to be very inviting, almost cuddly. I placed the item for my father across the room from me, and I set my mother and me close by my side. As I sat with this scene a while and took it all in, I noticed how far away I had placed the cold symbol of my father. It was on the other side of the room, as far from me as I could place it.
She then asked me if I could begin to imagine my father as a very small child, playing in the room in front of me. She asked me what that might look like. I imagined my father as a small little boy about two years old, wandering around the room and playing. I felt a since of warmth come over me. The tension left my body and I could feel my heart begin to soften. She asked me then to pick out an object that represented this image, and I found something soft and loveable that resembled the image I had chosen for me and my mom.
Finally, my friend asked me to create the perfect family for my father and to place them together somewhere in the room. I took the object that was my mother, found another soft object, and placed them right next to me on the couch with my father between the two, but touching. As I looked at this image, she asked me to think about what his life might have been like had he been given everything that he needed. I imagined that for a while, and I felt a sense of deep compassion come over me.
I must say that I have no idea what was lacking in my father’s childhood that made him what he became, but I do know this. I can no longer think of my father without the image of the little boy in that room, a little boy who somewhere along the line didn’t get what he needed either. The emotional deficiency regarding my father is no longer there because it has been replaced with compassion and understanding. The process of forgiveness has been completed for me.
This is a very short space to cover this topic, but this experience along with learning the process of letting go, has allowed me to look at all of my brothers and sisters with compassion. I do not know why some suffer more than others, but I cannot imagine a darker existence that one without God, love and fellowship.
I am not sure why we want to help people that are suffering up to a certain point, then decide they crossed some imaginary line that now justifies killing them?
There is no way to convince someone that has been deeply hurt by a sociopath to have compassion for them, but I found my own freedom in this very change in perspective. For me, it brought a sense of understanding that carries over into all of my relationships. I don’t judge people so much anymore. When I see someone acting out or being cruel, I now wonder “what happened to that person to make them feel that way”. (This does not mean I trust them or interact with them, but I do often pray for them. I find great peace (for myself) in praying for others)
I understand that many people believe that the sociopath is victim to a hopeless human condition. There may be no solution today, but I no longer believe in such a thing as a “hopeless human condition”. Until 1930 alcoholism was considered a hopeless human condition and a Miracle changed everything. They locked alcoholics in insane asylums until a miraculous solution was given to the world that now affects millions of lives.
Personally, I have witnessed too many Miracles to considering anything hopeless. I once thought my life’s situation was hopeless and I was wrong. Thank God! I no longer “think” that I am qualified to determine these things and I am much happier this way. A funny thing happens when each situation is approached with hope (not ignorance, but hope). Miracles Happen.
When I approach life with compassion, compassion is exactly what I find! To give IS the same as to receive.
I will continue to write weekly here, but for those that are interested and willing to go more deeply into the process of letting go, please join A Course In Forgiving (begins January 19, 2012). I did not come here to promote The Course, but to offer it to those that feel moved to do something more about the pain in their lives.
There is no fee of (optional donation of up to $25.00) for the six week online course. This Course is designed to guide participants through the Step by Step Spiritual Process of Letting Go with weekly lessons, readings and exercises that are intended to open the pathway to healing and Peace.
If interested, please visit www.victorythroughpeace.com and click the link in the left hand column titled “Six Week Course Online”. For those that participate, I will be available by phone and email to share experience in addition to this weekly blog on Lovefraud.
Peace.
STar I am totally with you and Travis about the forgiveness being essential to our healing because it is NOT VALIDATING WHAT THEY DID as OK, and it is NOT absolving them of responsibility or consequences and ALL it is is that WE GET THE BITTERNESS against them out of our heart. WE ACCEPT what happened in the past and quit feeling HORRIBLE about it.
Just as in a way, I had to “forgive” my husband for dying and leaving me (though he didn’t do it on purpose! LOL) I had to disconnect that HORRIBLE VISION of his death and get the bitterness against the man who caused it (again, unintentionally) out of my heart….and that guy is also NOT a friend either as he tried to cheat me out of money he owed me. So when I ran into him the other day we DEPARTED the area. I try not to feel BITTER toward him (forgive him) but I sure do NOT want a relationship with him.
I sold son C a truck a while back and he had left it here. He came to the house the other day to get it and I had to sign some papers and he came in and talked a minute and I didn’t get upset or my gut flop over, but at the same time, he knows that our relationship is “business” and “mutual interest” (keeping Patrick in prison and broke if we can) and I can occasionally see him and do okay, but you know, I am not going to invite him for dinner or EVER TRUST him to ALWAYS be truthful with me. I have ACCEPTED what he is (a liar) and I have withdrawn my TRUST from him, but I have LET GO OF THE BITTERNESS and accepted that he is what he is and I’m not gonna change it and neither is he.
QUOTE STAR: Everything in life is a choice really. I feel the choice you made was empowered. You had a reason, and you learned from it. This, to me, is actually more important than following the group mentality here of what we all think you should do. Having said that, though, I hope you got the message this time, and don’t feel the need to “stick your finger in the hole” again.
GREAT POINTS STAR!!!!
Oxy, Thanks for your validation. Though I don’t really require the validation of people here, it still means a lot, especially from you.
You know – I’m going off on a tangent here, but bear with me – it’s relevant…….It all goes back to what Victor Frankl says about the meaning we assign to our experiences.
I have a new massage client who is a 40-y.o. doctor. He comes from a very happy, loving family, a lot of money, and a promising career – all the things I often lament that I don’t have. And you know what? He LOOKS UP TO ME. Can you believe that? He actually admires me because I’m so independent. He had such a sheltered upbringing that he is afraid to travel on his own, afraid to leave the country, afraid to take giant risks. His whole life has beena about academia.
I really thought about that. I realized that for all the horrendous crap I went through growing up, it taught me how to be independent and to take risks. Because my parents were so unhappy with themselves, they thought the grass was always greener somewhere else. So we packed up and moved a few times with nothing but a few suitcases and the clothes on our backs. The last time, we moved across the country from the east coast to the west coast, where we started all over again. This was a huge culture shock, and it was very difficult for me to start again. I cannot tell you how much I HATED them for pulling me away from my few friends. But you know what? That was the beginning of my travel lust. Without those experiences, I would never have had the courage to go to Europe for a year or to just pick up and go to Costa Rica alone, not knowing the language. I didn’t realize what a huge thing this seems like to some people. To me, it is a given. And it is a gift I received from my abusive parents. They gave me the gifts of wanderlust and self-sufficiency. I APPRECIATE them for giving me this gift. It serves me well in planning my future, because I can think outside the box and look at other countries, while this one is going down the tubes.
So maybe I’m just pollyanna, but to me there is ALWAYS a lesson or a gift, even in the darkest situations. Sometimes we just can’t see it yet.
Really well said Star. Thank you.
Duped, I understand why you broke NC. You had to see, one last time !!! The only thing that concerns me is that you fully understand that the things you said to him, YOU needed to say, one last time BUT it simply went in one ear and out the other to him. He did not “hear” you and never will. I am sure you do realize this, but sometimes we just need a reminder.
Love and hugs – MiLo
Star, I totally agree with you. We must be SELF VALIDATING about our choices and our thinking. We can discuss things here but in the end, we must do things because WE think it is right.
I have a friend that I correspond with by e mail and he has changed my thinking on several things…not because I wanted him to validate me (because we ARGUED the pros and cons) but I saw he was RIGHT and that I began slowly to agree with him, and I took what he had said (not his opiinion of it) and I changed my thinking…one thing was capital punishment. I am NO LONGER in favor of it, mostly be cause I realize our “justice system” is anything BUT JUST. The thought of a single innocent person being put to death is not worth the “vengence” of a 1000 people who “deserve” it being put to death. Let them ROT in solitary confinement 23 hours a day for the rest of their miserable lives in a maximum security prison. WHAT COULD BE WORSE? Not much really because they wouldn’t have an audience for their admiration, just 4 walls.
A while back we were talking about Woodly Harrelson’s father who is a complete psychopathic serial killer, a prisoner in solitary for 24 hours a day. He wrote a letter which was published on the net to a “friend” who came to visit telling him how great life was in a solitary cell…has his own shower a TV and radio and LIFE IS WONDERFUL…I don’t believe that for a single minute. They LOVE AN AUDIENCE….without an audience they are not even “real” to themselves I don’t think. He may write a letter saying how wonderful it is, but I think it is a FAKE.
MiLo: I know….
Thanks everyone for the support.
There won’t be many tears the next time I say ‘good bye’ and it’s coming soon. I had to stand up for myself and I am using HIS intrusion to do it. I want NOTHING left unsaid. Even though I know it means nothing to him, I still have to say it and I am so serious this time. There is no coming back now. I told him that right up front and he is not a happy camper.
Said he is ‘coming for me and my affections’ and won’t take no for an answer. hahahaha We’ll see about that bull-pocky!
I am standing my ground and feeling more empowered than ever. He is now feeding MY power. Imagine that.
I am alright ~ especially knowing I have all you with me.
Love you all.
Dupey
http://todayhealth.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/20/10199663-doctor-offers-new-details-on-teen-girls-mystery-illness
Off topic but too interesting not to post.
strongawoman: send me roast beef!
hahahahaha
skylar: how weird!
I was in the grocery store one time and there was this lady in there with tourettes and she was shouting and whooping…I didn’t know if I went to walk by her if she would try hitting me or not. Very strange disorder. Thanks for sharing.
I have read in my medical training where sometimes these symptoms can be caused by chemical exposure. Interesting.
Dupey ~ I did hesitate to write that, because I know that you do KNOW it. I just remember all the times I would try and “get things off my chest” and say all the right things to my daughter. When I started with my therapist, she said, STOP – Milo, you have to understand, say nothing or speak your piece, it means the same thing to them. Save your breath.
Also, a very dear friend of mine, who was badly abused as a child, once told me to write my feelings down in a letter. Tell them how you feel, tell them to go to he**. Then burn the letter. Closure.
Please know whatever you decide to do, you are right, you have all of us with you. My prayers are for your empowerment.
Sky, I saw these girls on a TV show last night. My immediate thought was PANDAS. I’m sure the health department (or hope they would) would check for this.