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.
Thanks Stargazer for all of your words of comfort and inspiration. It means a lot to me on this day.
There is less pain with him not in my life.
That is what I have found and I have also found that everything I thought about him is true. And, I know he can’t help himself so I am going to help the both of us.
I will never stop grieving this.
I will just find a different ‘outwardly way’ to process it.
Love ~ Dupey
Strongawoman, so much of what we do here is to help each other face our pain that seems so scary. Once we have faced the seemingly insurmountable pain, we have really looked the demon in the eye. It can only get better from there because there is nowhere else to go.
There is a very famous science fantasy writer named Ursula LeGuin. She wrote a trilogy called the Earthsea Trilogy, which I read years ago. It is the story of a young man who develops great power as a wizard because he learns the secret name of everything. He learns that everything he can name he can have power over. (This is a great metaphor for our inner thoughts, feelings, and motivations). But throughout his travels, he is constantly dogged by a huge dark fog, which he calls “the shadow” (another obvious metaphor). He always encounters it when he tries to sail his boat into uncharted territory. Whenever he encounters it, he flees in fear. It chases him until he is out of its reach. Wherever he goes, he tries to avoid it. It limits his travels because he is afraid of running into it.
In the third book of the trilogy, the young man, whose name is Jed, actually goes looking for the shadow to confront it. He sails to the far ends of the earth and finally encounters it. He looks at it squarely and calls it by its true name – Jed. Once he faces is and calls it by its name, it goes away.
Duped, I do believe your grief will end one day. It’s just impossible to predict when that will be. (((hugs))) I sometimes wonder whether my grief over my childhood will ever end, too. 🙁
Dear Dupey,
I just read through your recent posts and am so sorry for all you’ve experienced.
For 30 years I thought my ex was also my best friend. Turned out that he was leading a double life and I didn’t know him at all. He feels no concern, love or respect for me and has told people in Town horrible lies about me…..actually told them that I did what he’s done over the years. My gut tells me to fight back however I know doing so puts my son’s well being at risk so I’ve had to just walk away.
There are days I am still dumbfounded that this man I loved and thought was my best friend is really only filled with hate and rage underneath the facade.
Dupey, like you I grieve too. Like losing my Mom and Dad, I don’t think the grief will ever go away however I will eventually learn to live with it.
I hope 2012 will hold some days in which you will find peace.
~New
Duped,
I don’t think you are grieving him, you know he’s a lost cause. I think that you are grieving the investment of time, love and energy that you made in him. That is understandable.
It is also his intent. Spaths want you to lose, and to sacrifice on their behalf. That is the point to their nonsensical behavior, to see how far they can push us and still keep getting supply. Now that he’s taken years of your life with his BS, he would like nothing better than to see you waste more years lamenting what you lost.
The pain that spaths cause is an anchor around our necks. Letting go of it is difficult because it means accepting that we made a bad investment.
That’s how the spaths (of all stripes) keep us hooked. Financial cons all depend on “in for a dime, in for a dollar” thinking. This is no different.
This is why the banks duped us into bailing them out by telling us that they were too big to fail. We are so heavily invested in the financial disaster that we are afraid to pull out. Even as we see the destruction all around us.
I think you will be done grieving when you stop fearing that you wasted your time with the spath and begin to see it as the high cost of tuition for a lesson WELL learned.
Your diploma is waiting at the door.
New Beginning: He floats in and out of these ‘ugly and hateful’ moods. So unpredictable and unstable. We have been the closest of friends for a long time and it’s always so stunning.
I haven’t had him around me for over 8 months now and I am glad. He keeps going from a nice guy to a bad guy. It’s so confusing. I know he is dangerous and have known this since I first laid eyes on him. Part of why I have ‘hung on’ was out of survival mode and the other was my sense of civic responsibility.
We have been friends for such a very long time and when he is being nice, he is truly a great person. When he is being a demon, he is truly the demon from hell.
There was one point that we had talked about marrying but unknown to me, he was already married. Kept it a secret from me for four years. Like something like that can just slip your mind. All of the contact I have had with ‘other women’ including ex wives, that have been collateral damage in all this, they have told me they feel ‘targeted’ and ‘used’. I believe them.
It is grieving. I have grieved the past five years of my life. Here, I see before me, one of America’s finest – one of the best of the best and his life is just a disaster. He has lost everything and anything that has ever meant anything to him, on top of risking his life three times in combat situations. I kept thinking that since it was ME who had seen the problem, it was ME to keep a hold of it. Nobody else has or was. I see not only his life in grave danger but others who may cross him the wrong way. It is very ‘different’ having this in front of you and nobody seems to listen, except for you all. People just don’t see the seriousness in my words.
I have always said that if he could do these things to me, he can do them and will do them to anyone. And I seriously do mean that.
It becomes very difficult for me to just cut the rope and set him loose because I believe we are to leave nobody behind. Only in this case, he has been on a steady course for taking my life and I am not going to let that happen. There is no way. There just isn’t. I have already ‘won’ because he is not a part of my life. I am sorry for that but I have a choice too. I choose to not live in this madness and if that is selfish and hating, I suppose that is what I am. But one thing I AM NOT is a DUPE NO MORE.
I will be alright.
I have all of you to hold me up.
THIS situation is going to come to conclusion, very soon now. I feel it in my bones and I am not afraid so don’t any of you be afraid for me. This was my best friend and I have to let go; I know I do. You never come to really appreciate the water until the well runs dry and that is what I have been seeing since we started communicating again. It isn’t going to last long because nothing has changed. The attitudes have not changed, not one iota. I am still speaking with that 12 year old ADHD boy who can’t help himself and finds it amusing to play people and their emotions.
2012 IS already much, much, much, better than last year was and the year before that and the year before that and the year before that…so, I count my blessings daily. I do.
Thanks New for the support. xxoo
Please remember our returning warriors in your thoughts and prayers. They need all the help we can give them. They did what they did for all of us. It’s time now for the payback.
Dupey
skylar: I will never want to believe he is a lost cause.
Never. If I were lost I would want someone to light the way for me. And I know that in this case, that may be a very defeatist attitude, one deserving of consummation and my being consumed by very evil itself, however loyalty is sometimes the saving grace of life. Is it not?
Yes, this has been a HUGE life changing event for me.
Just huge. There has been a lot of water pass under the bridge and there is still a lot to go by, yet, I am sure. I said, once, to a VA counselor, who has been such an amazing friend to me:
“Request to abandon mission, Sir.”
I was granted that permission.
Do I really have to let go ?
Yes, I feel like this has been a complete waste of my time and have told him so on several occasions. However, I also believe that any investment we make in the good of another is worth the effort. Unless of course, it tries to devour you. Which in this case, it has, a couple of times.
I understand it but do not find it acceptable because we all must be able to control and contain ourselves. I feel like I have been the babysitter and guard for the past five years and I am tired of not living for myself. “IT” has NO conception. None. And, it really doesn’t care and I know this and that is fine.
I have done the best of my ability to make this situation right and to leave it on an up note instead of a down one. At least in my own self. Thanks for the diploma!
Now I know what ‘street smarts’ REALLY MEANS and I am near Los Angeles!!!!!
Dupey
You know, I’m one of the few here who believes that a personality disorder *can* potentially be cured. But it’s very very tricky and takes a great deal of intention and mental effort, and a very strong mind. For instance, I know I have a borderline pathology. I was diagnosed twice as a young adult. Even though I have done a huge amount of work on myself, I still see the tendencies. When someone does something that triggers a very deep abandonment in me, my first reaction is to just cut them off and never speak to them again. The “black or white” thing is very borderline. I have to work so diligently with this process, to keep from going into an abyss with my depressions.
So I would never say that anyone is completely hopeless because I know I’m not. However – and this is a big HOWEVER – I’ve had to decide if I want to have my life be about someone else’s mental illness, whether it’s a lover or my mother or whoever. The answer is a resounding NO. It is not my job to heal people in order for them to love me. So it’s almost irrelevant whether your partner can change or exactly how spathy he/she is. The question is “Is this what you want your life to be about?”
Star
What a great post. Hugs to you, girlie!
I don’t know if a PD can actually be “cured” but I believe some changes can be made. Not in who a person *IS* but in how they respond to things in the environment.
I love what you said: if I had to decide if I want to my my life be about somebody else’s mental illness whether it’s a lover or my mother or whoever, the answer is a resounding NO.
It’s not my job to heal people in order for them to love me.
BEAUTIFUL POST!
Athena
SKYLAR
You made a fantastic comment too. Woo hoo I am saving both of these.
You said:
I think that you are grieving the investment of time, love and energy that you made in him. Spaths want you to lose, and to sacrifice on their behalf. That is the point to their nonsensical behavior, to see how far they can push us and still keep getting supply. Now that he’s taken years of your life with his BS, he would like nothing better than to see you waste more years lamenting what you lost. Letting go of it is difficult because it means accepting that we made a bad investment.
Financial cons all depend on “in for a dime, in for a dollar” thinking. This is no different. This is why the banks duped us into bailing them out by telling us that they were too big to fail. We are so heavily invested in the financial disaster that we are afraid to pull out. Even as we see the destruction all around us.
I think you will be done grieving when you stop fearing that you wasted your time with the spath and begin to see it as the high cost of tuition for a lesson WELL learned.
Your diploma is waiting at the door.
Wow, you nailed ME.
Athena