The connection between love and politics—that was the topic of commentary in yesterday’s paper written by Gregory Rodriguez, a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. The article, Love and politics in a cynical age, got me thinking about the consistency of behavior.
Rodriguez summarized how Americans have come to view the private lives and public lives of the people we elect to represent us. He wrote:
The truth is that we don’t generally associate politics or politicians with happy marriages and deep romance, let alone fidelity. The constant revelation of scandals and peccadilloes in the halls of power have trained us to expect the worst of those—particularly the men—we elect to shepherd and protect the interests of society. Somewhere along the line, Americans have even bought into the notion that a politician’s private life, in particular his love life, has little or nothing to do with his efforts on behalf of the public good.
In other words, people seem to think that just because an elected official cheats on his spouse, it doesn’t mean we can’t trust him with our tax dollars.
Not everyone holds this view. Ross Perot, who ran for president in 1992, famously said that at his company, EDS, lying, cheating, stealing and adultery were all grounds for dismissal. If he were elected, he said, the same standard would apply. Perot said:
“If a man’s own wife cannot trust him, how can the American people?”
This, I think, is a legitimate question.
Different behavior
People often ask me if a sociopath will be “different” with a particular person. For example, can a sociopathic man who hates and harasses his ex-wife love his children? Can a sociopathic woman who takes advantage of her family be true to her new boyfriend?
The short answer is no. Exploitative people exploit anyone who has something that they want.
The long answer is that exploitative people may seem to authentically care for particular individuals, but it’s probably just part of an overall scheme of manipulation. The sociopath is just softening up the target, preparing for the right time to strike.
Here is one of the most dangerous thoughts we can ever have: “Well, yes, he (or she) treated that person badly, but he’ll never do that to me!”
Remember: The best indication of future behavior is past behavior. If you know that a person has behaved in a deceitful or exploitative way towards someone else, sooner or later, the person will behave that way towards you.
Compartmentalize
So why do we compartmentalize? Why do people seem to believe that how our elected officials conduct their private lives has nothing to do with how they conduct their public lives? Why is it that when we hear of a powerful person who has a solid marriage, we are surprised?
Maybe we’re beaten down. Maybe we’re totally disillusioned. After all, stories of deceit, betrayal and treachery have been around as long as humans have told stories. Maybe we hear of so many scandals—from cheating spouses to tax dollars wasted—that we simply expect the worst of people.
Perhaps public life has simply gotten too easy in America. It’s not like the Revolutionary War, when men risked their lives and fortunes to stand up to the British. No, politics today is all talk and no consequences. That makes it an excellent career choice for sociopaths—all they have to do is be charming, charismatic and deceitful.
Sociopaths, after all, want power, control and sex. By getting elected, they have access to everything they want.
Liu Xiaobo
That’s why it’s so refreshing to hear about people, in this day and age, fighting the good fight from a foundation of love.
In the article that I quoted in the beginning of this post, the author, Gregory Rodriguez, also wrote about Liu Xiaobo. Liu is the Chinese dissident who recently won the Nobel Peace Prize. He, of course, was viewed as a subversive criminal by the Chinese government, and was not allowed to go to Norway and accept the prize. Rodriguez explained how his absence was handled in Oslo:
Actress Liv Ullmann read aloud the statement Liu released last December as he was awaiting trial for “inciting subversion of state power.” At the top, he sermonized against hatred (“enmity can poison a nation’s spirit”), but his ending was an exquisite love letter to his wife, Liu Xia.
“I am sentenced to a visible prison,” he wrote, “while you are waiting in an invisible one. Your love is sunlight that transcends prison walls and bars, stroking every inch of my skin, warming my every cell, letting me maintain my inner calm, magnanimous and bright, so that every minute in prison is full of meaning. But my love for you is full of guilt and regret, sometimes heavy enough to hobble my steps. I am a hard stone in the wilderness, putting up with the pummeling of raging storms, and too cold for anyone to dare touch. But my love is hard, sharp, and can penetrate any obstacles. Even if I am crushed into powder, I will embrace you with the ashes.”
Rodriguez viewed Liu’s words to his wife as a sign of passion and commitment, and the bad behavior in the private lives of elected officials as the opposite. The point, Rodriguez wrote, is that love begins at home.
How people conduct their private lives is absolutely relevant to whether or not they should be elected. People who cannot be trusted by their most intimate loved ones cannot be trusted by anyone. And people who feel genuine love and compassion for their families can extend their love and compassion for the greater good.
spath
#4. There are consequences for your actions and decisons in life
Petite
#4. There are consequences for your actions and decisions in life
I think so far I have just hit on the first basics if being human and spath hasn’t fallen into it.
OMG…. I feel like I am talking to my xspath!
Where does the list split off and go way out in left (xspath) field?
HMMMM AHHA MOMENT HERE!!!
Lesson Learned:
My point to Petite, and I guess I better stop trying to get through to her, is that she keeps circling back. I keep asking, in various ways, “What for?”
In spite of the spath story, can’t you see how maintaining a boundry of “NO MARRIED MEN” saves you from being used to create or having your own heartache?
Petite keeps saying what he told her about planning to move out, but the fact is, separated is STILL MARRIED. What Petite does NOT know is if the WIFE knew he planned to move out or if she just got tired of ANOTHER woman and made him leave. Wives do that, thinking that husbands will realize the error of their ways and MAN UP. (That is husbands who are Not SPATHS but honestly, wives are trying to keep their families together, NOT face the horror of being married to an spath.)
Guilt/shame are product of a conscience. Don’t discount their value! (as opposed to FALSE guilt /shame) I did try to prick Petite’s conscience and save herself from shame and I do not apologise for that…
What stands out in Petite’s posts is that she thinks of herself, and what the spath promised HER, but not at all considering the full consequences.
Finally, Petite’s story has changed, from a chance fling at a conference to now revealing this affair has gone on far longer. It also seems her questions are directed to continuing the affair, not taking control and ending it.
As I said before, Petite is a lesson b/c she is the BEFORE story, and most of us suffer the aftermath. It’d be nice if just one of us could be saved.
LL,
Give it a rest! HUGZZ!! Can’t wait to see you back!!! Get some rest. Sweet Dreams!
Hi Katy!!!
Good Post!! What is she NOT getting???
I agree that Petite’s is not an SPath but for some reason, she is processing with a very narcissistic attitude (she wants she wants and dismissing the warnings that she is responsible for her actions no matter what HE SAYS.).
LessonLearned: Wouldn’t you have rather AVOIDED the spath than to have suffered this hell? I can tell you that if someone warned/told me the truth about my husband, I would have made different decisions, esp to protect my wee daughter.
I am not saying she is an spath… but look at the similarities in dealing with her (they sabatoge their own lives and don’t care… to get that adrenaline rush or live out that fantasy in their heads)… so is my list so far just the narcissistic list? I feel like I have been talking to my xspath about making the correct decisions and not being stubborn and etc. etc. If I thought more about it… I’m sure I could come up with more to add to the list.
I’m sure you wish you had a warning tp protect your daughter.. All of us deserved that warning!
NTCRZE1!
LessonLearned:
I have a VERY close friend who had an affair with a married doctor (not an spath Dr, just an a$$h@.......!#). It ruined her life. She says she could live with that but she has spent 30 YEARS in depression about what it did to HIS kids and HER kids.
She feels that her Redemption comes from saving someone else from that feeling.
This is too close to your pain, esp with the recent events in your life. PLEASE do not take my words to Petite onto yourself. They are NOT for you or your circumstance, they are for Petite’s circumstance.
and by the time you come back, Maybe Petite will be able to dedicate her success to you. 🙂
N1,
I guess Petite’s outcome will reveal whether she is merely N, or also Spath. She says she has a conscience but I did not see it when she dismissed his kids or wrote about his wife as if she were unreasonable when dealing with a cheating spouse and ANOTHER affair.
Her compass IS broken or she would NOT be having these kinds of posts.
Katy,
What in the world would happen if he showed up for this conference and said… I’m all yours…. I’m divorced!!! OMG and P didn’t have a clue!!! OMG!! I’m here to stay and don;t have to go back to the US/
lessonlearned, OMG!! I have been the OW, I did what I did and I don’t have to explain it to anyone here, I still write about it, I have a boundary now – just like you do! I have been discouraged and depressed, felt like I won’t recover… but we don’t give up! Never!!! You are recovering now, it’s no easy task, that’s why we’re all here! I paid a big price for this life lesson. I get that you want to step back for a few days, focus on school, xooxo ((hug))