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.
Dupey ~ I agree 100%, whatever you think you need from the “one more contact” is just not worth the price.
Talking to these people is like sticking a needle in their eye, they will lash out.
“collect my love and affections” – whoa – read between the lines, that is where these people “tell” us there plans – between the lines.
Stay Safe # 1
We walked three battles together; survived many attacks; we have trompled through life together for a long long time…
I don’t know how you get past that except for filing it all away somewhere in one of those ‘ptsd files’ and shutting the drawer.
It’s all that left, it seems.
I can see nothing has changed and I am accepting that nothing is ever going to change.
I just have to learn to let go now.
That is all there is left.
He will NOT get close to me, I can reassure you of this.
If he tries, he will be arrested. That’s all that’s left now.
I had to see it and hear it and look at it one more time to be sure I was doing the right thing and I know I am, it’s just so hard to let go of someone you have loved so much and have come through so very much together…
All my 60 years of life, I have never encountered anything more difficult; seriously. But, I am not wavering and yes, I still champion NC.
I couldn’t leave him behind. I just couldn’t.
Now I know I have to.
Dupey
Duped,
I’m so sorry for what you are going through, but once you know you have to walk away, the real healing can begin. I had this long post written out to you about grieving, but I don’t think I need to say anything else about it. I hope you can be gentle with yourself for testing the waters one last time. It is human nature to want to avoid pain at all possible costs. And you have learned that in this case, it’s unavoidable. (((hugs)))
Stargazer,
Have you deleted your original post to Dupey?
Yes, strongawoman, I didn’t think all of it was necessary. I can get too worded sometimes.
Or did unread it on another thread?
Anyway, Stargazer I was going to make a comment that the words you used really moved me and I have thought for a while that I like and appreciate your point of view. You come across as a very warm, kind, human being. Just wanted to say that. Hope you don’t think it’s a bit OTT
Stargazer, it was very lovely. Struck a real chord here
That’s so very kind of you, strongawoman. You probably read the post I deleted. It was about grieving and how we only get to that point when we have no choice. I told the story of how I put off the euthanasia of my Siamese until there was really no choice, so afraid was I of facing the pain of loss. I think this is the motivation for most people – we are trying to avoid pain. This is why so many people keep going back to their spaths. It’s not that they love drama or they love being disrespected. It’s that they are avoiding the inevitable because the imagined pain of loss seems worse than the dull constant pain they already know. This is just human. That’s why everyone should be patient with themselves when they screw up and break NC.
Is that the post you were talking about? If so, I’m so glad you got to read it and got something from it.
P.S. Strongawoman, your compliment means a lot. I am not one to interpret a sincere compliment as “lovebombing”. I know the difference. (((hugs)))
Yes star it was the one I read and I loved what you said about avoiding pain. So true, sadly. It is like grieving isn’t it!
Sending hugs right back at ya 🙂