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.
Little White Horse,
I would so be on the same page as you if in your circumstance. Cannot imagine what that has been like for you (((hugs)))
~New
Travis,
Thank your for your kind words.
I am struggling with your comment “I do not like, or trust my dad, but I do have compassion for him. It also does mean that I have a relationship with him. ”
…the “it does mean that I have a relationship with him”. Because you have compassion for him or because he is your father?
Forgiveness has given me emotional detachment and the ability to forge boundaries between what is mine – responsibility..and what isn’t – his actions. I don’t want to believe that compassion keeps the tie (between me and him).
My current learning is now in compassion and being able to trust again…and I’ve quickly been burnt…where kindness and teamwork (co-worker situation) has resulted in me feeling weak and vulnerable.
I want desperately to keep my compassion but also protect myself.
Just posting here and reading so much – although helpful has also resulted in a spiralling anxiety/depression. Thankfully I am able to go to work training for two weeks that will give me some space/different environment to calm my inner self.
Shelley
Shelley – for me, compassion does not mean that I have a relationship with someone. To me, it simply means that I recognize sociopaths as very sick people. My desire to help them goes no further than prayer.
This may be a bit overwhelming, but there is so much hope on this site…so many people with experience that can really help with the many questions that you have.
Travis, same here in that my desire to help is only in the form of prayer. I’ve learned to stay out of their path..or even being anywhere near their path. As you stated in an earlier post, for me it’s also about maintaining who I am and not allowing the socipath’s actions to change that.
Travis,
Yes, it is a lot overwhelming. I am 2-1/2 years from my spath and he has no influence anymore….it is just a matter of me putting the pieces (of me and my life) back together. I am glad that I found this site because I needed to know that I wasn’t alone. I explained to my son yesterday that..no, I don’t go out or do much away from home..but that is ok, I’m just not ready to trust quite yet. He seems to understand that (he’s 16). He was worried, I think.
Ironically, I found this site through searching for help in dealing with a work spath. I’ve read Hare and Stout in the past…and nothing connected – I wasn’t ready to hear it, I guess.
To make things more complex…I am now working at my ex-spaths old worksite. He retired from here in 2008 and I was not living in this community. We split up in 2009. It was through him that I learned about this type of work and was fascinated…so through my work benefits (I was on disability for extreme anxiety – the aftermath of him) I was able to transfer into this job and move back to be with my son.
It is a complete switch for me – from social work to enforcement..but despite the steep learning curve, I enjoy it.
In honesty, it was hard the first few weeks – as his picture is on the wall. But by that time, I’d been NC for over a year and my focus was on learning the job and my son. He came to the work site a year ago to visit – the first time I’d seen him in a over 18 months…a shock. I did not engage and went outside. Unfortunately, I hadn’t realized that he tried to sabotage my placement with slander…I found this out 6 months after I’d been in the job. That was hard…it shook my trust in my co-workers…and trust in enforcement is essential.
However, all this was just milestones in my own healing. The real issue is that my co-worker, who has been at the site for 7 years, worked with my ex (in extreme conflict then..but now they are friends…mutual benefit)…has taken on the role of trainer. He is a spath. Within a week of working with him, I was in extreme discomfort. He exhausted me. He has no integrity. He lies without a pause, he is grandiose, he is a bully…and so on. He is charming if I am of use…otherwise he is dismissive and rude. I’ve spent the last year trying to figure out a way to work with him…impossible. He’s had conflict with everyone who has worked with him. Nobody can. Our supervisor is in retirement mode and weak. This person has such passion (as presented) for the job..and does much of what the supervisor should be doing..that the supervisor lets him do whatever.
I have “Snakes in Suits”….and I’ve done everything wrong. Discussing my discomfort with my supervisor hasn’t worked, other co-workers are simply glad they aren’t the spath’s target…and I’m an easy one because I already felt insecure b/c of my ex’s influence there..and the slander. The more I have to work with him, the more unconfident and anxious I feel.
My team leader (thankfully as of the New Year, I am on another team and no longer work with this person…said to me that he doesn’t know anyone that thinks like this guy. Ah, yeah.
5 years ago I was offered a transfer to another city and another position – a plum one! It was a wonderful chance to create a new start for myself and my son – but back then I was still involved with my ex-spath and..well, epic fail. For me and my son…so now this past year I’ve been back in this town..with my son and he is doing so much better and compared to then..so am I…but here I am, back dealing with another one.
We have our own home again…much smaller and pretty dismal than the last place..and financial debt. Spath aftermath..
So now…two weeks away at work training in the beautiful city of Vancouver. And time to read and think.
NC is the rule with spaths. But when they are in your workplace? When and ex-spath still has/had influence?
To build on what I have – a rather decripit home (of my own) where I can get back in financial shape…..and support my son until graduation…..while deflecting my co-worker spath…………or seeking another move – would be the 3rd in a year to a safer work place (same job..different city…less supports…family etc….but no spath that has the work place pretty much posioned).
I guess these two weeks away may help.
I can pray for them, that isn’t a problem. Trying to survive in contact, without support…that’s a dilemma.
When I’m further along, I look forward to participating in your online course.
Shelley
The thing to remember about the sociopath is this. Sympathy for the sociopath because they have no awareness of their problem – none. They can’t feel love. They can’t feel remorse. They feel nothing. What a cold and empty world it is preying on the weaknesses of others. Ultimately, the sociopath winds up empty handed and with nothing. Hollow souls.
….that’s exactly why I have compassion (not sympathy) for them. Who would ever “choose” to live like that?
I hope that someday I can reach your degree of healing.
If I was asked to present objects that represented the people who raised me and one for myself. I couldn’t at this time have an object to represent the psychopath only a powerful emotion of hate and disgust, for myself would be an object of dung.
I ask God to help me with healing my relationship with him. My feeling for God is deep hurt.
I have a ways to go before I can reach your path however; I don’t want the person who tried to destroy me to rule over me any-longer. These words are so easy to type yet: for some reason difficult to carry out alone by myself.
Shelly,
Working with them is working in a “War Zone” and I understand what you are going through. Several times I have voluntarily left jobs because of psychopaths in the work place. One time the Spath actually destroyed the entire institution of a 150 bed specialty hospital. It bankrumpted and closed. After 6 months of her being there half the nursing staff left, after another 6 months the other half of us left and left only ONE woman who had been the infection control nurse for 20 years that stayed. At the time nurses were difficult to get and specialty nurses impossible to find even through an agency. It was a shame what one person could accomplish in wrecking a place in an effort to control it.
I’ve seen lots of places with only a few people who were abused by a psychopath, and other places with many employees…sometimes they are supervisors and sometimes they are co-workers. It just is what it is. Good luck. (((hugs)))
Shelley –
“what I have ”“ a rather decripit home (of my own) where I can get back in financial shape”..and support my son until graduation”..while deflecting my co-worker spath——or seeking another move ”“ would be the 3rd in a year to a safer work place (same job..different city”less supports”family etc”.but no spath that has the work place pretty much posioned).”
While escape is critical, stability is also very important and so is a solid support network. It may well be that even if you moved on, the spath would “follow” you in some way – either trying to keep in touch or trying to influence coworkers at the new job. It could be that there is another spath at the new workplace – or even more than one! Many workplaces have them.
What you have where you are seems to be –
1) security in your housing (okay, so it’s little and it’s not flash; those things can be remedied over time or when you are ready to move on in the future);
2) stability of location for you and for your son (until he graduates, which by the sound of his age, is not that distant in the future); all house moves, even those that are also exciting and positive, bring stress with them and maybe you could do without extra stress right now?;
3) support of friends;
4) support of family.
Three moves in a year is huge; four could be the straw that breaks your camel’s back.
If you have managed to hang on to a job you enjoy, in spite of spath’s best efforts to discredit you and as long as spath and coworker spath are manageable, then perhaps staying put for now until you are able to regroup with more strength would be the way to go?
Or perhaps you are ready now? Only you can tell. Whatever you decide, I wish you peace and calm and success.