Most of the people who will be bad for us are not sociopaths, and so we want our radar to be sharp, not specifically for sociopaths, but for wrong, bad people of every stripe.
True, sociopaths will be terrible people with whom to enter relationships; in the end, though, they will represent a small fraction of a much greater majority of very wrong people for us.
As I suggested in a prior post, there are two keys to protecting ourselves from Mr. or Mrs. WRONG: The first is developing intelligent radar; the second is acting wisely on that radar.
After all, good radar, no less than good CIA intelligence, is useless if it’s ignored or devalued.
Now, are there cases of sociopaths (and the lot of devious personalities) so slick as to be undetectable until after they’ve wreaked their havoc? Of course there are; to suggest otherwise would insult anyone unlucky enough to have crossed paths with such destructive individuals.
Nevertheless, in most cases, the wrong person—sociopath or not—will and does leave clues much sooner than most of us want to admit (until much later).
WRONG, by the way, for whom? The answer, of course, is, YOU!
It is tempting and, at some point, I suggest, unfruitful to get stuck on the suspected psychopathology of a partner (present, or ex). Because when you get right down to it, there are only two diagnoses that really matter: Is this person, for me, RIGHT, and GOOD? Or WRONG, and BAD?
Only we can make this assessment, and it’s our responsibility, of course, to make it as soundly as possible. By soundly I mean being as honest with ourselves as possible, and keeping our best long-term interests uppermost in mind.
What, then, is the first—and, for that matter, second—telltale sign that someone is wrong, and really bad, for you, sociopath or not? (And speaking honestly, should we really need more than a sign or two?)
The answer is, ANY EXPRESSED BEHAVIOR or ATTITUDE that leaves you feeling disarmed or disoriented by its inappropriateness, selfishness and/or insensitivity.
Take great heed of such an experience, because almost always, it is a sign that more are sure to follow. In other words, preparing to bail at this point is a wise consideration.
Specifically, what behaviors and attitudes am I referring to? For starters, how about the first, surprising flash of rage, contempt, arrogance, selfishness, coldness, presumptuousness, dishonesty, indifference, ungratefulness, even denseness; shocking acts of abuse, verbal or physical; and startling failures of empathy, or compassion.
It is really less the behavior or attitude, per se, that screams ALARMING”¦prepare to BAIL!, than the experience of it as, “Where did that come from?”
I stress: It is our job, first, to register these signs; and then immediately to register them as alarmingly ominous.
The question is, Will you be willing to see what you’ve seen? Will you be willing to acknowledge the sobering portent of the display? Or instead, for any of a hundred conveniences, will you find ways to pretend you didn’t see it, and/or minimize the ramifications of what you’ve seen?
It is perfectly fine to ask, What, in a new relationship, should I be watchful for? What are the signs that my new interest may be someone different than advertised? I hope I’ve addressed these questions.
Then again, such questions tend, I think, to promote a view of the world as waiting to unleash upon us ruinous new bogeymen and predators, instead of encouraging us to examine what can be harder, but perhaps more honest, useful, retrospective questions, like, What did I miss? Why did I miss it? And if I registered it, why did I choose to ignore or minimize it?
Insight into, and resolution of, these latter questions can confer the best insurance against future exploitation.
In most (certainly not all) cases, it may be less important to be wary of the next nightmare disguised as Mr. or Mrs. SENSITIVE, than more careful of our always lurking capacity for defenses like denial, rationalization and minimization to blind us to what we don’t want to see, and do.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Dear Matt,
Remember the old joke about “what do you call a doctor who finished last in his class?” Well, of course, DOCTOR!!!
Believe me it is the same in any professional group of people, there are some that are just not competent to practice, and it doesn’t matter that they passed the classes, admission test, or whatever is required to “hang out your shingle.”
I have seen physicians that were not qualified to treat anyone, and I have seen certified nurses aids that could see an emergency immediately and know what to do about it.
A “sheep skin” doesn’t convey good sense or competency and that is unfortunate but it true. I am fortunate that I do KNOW most of the physicians in the area and know who to go to and who not to. I know that any of them can make a “mistake” and they are human. Before I went to work each day I Prayed, “Dear God don’t let me kill someone today or miss something that will harm the patient” and as far as I know I never did, but there are some docs that miss it so often it can’t just be a random mistake.
About 15 years ago my husband had just finished a course of horrible antibiotics for a tick borne fever and he started to have head aches. Head aches are a side effect of this medication but my husband wasn’t a whiner and in the 35 years I had known him had never had a head ache. We waited and treated a few days but I became concerned when he started to act like a zombie. I took him to the doc that I worked with who assured me it was the medication he had taken, and I said, NOPE, this is something else. So he rather disgustedly told me, OK we will get a second opinion.
I went to a doc I didn’t particularly like but I knew he was a good one. My husband sat there like a zombie and he looked him over and said “Well, if he’s not better in a week, we’ll get a CT scan.”
I got up in the mans face, about two inches from his nose and said “READ MY LIPS, SUBTLE MENTAL STATUS CHANGES” and he replied, “Ok, goddamn it, we’ll get a CT”
Well, guess what! My husband had a HUGE subdural hematoma, blood leaking between the skull and the brain from a “slight” bump on the head two weeks before. Sure it was an obscure diagnosis, but because AND ONLY BECAUSE I was persistent, my husband’s brain function was preserved.
Therapists and even psychiatrists are sometimes personality disordered themselves, so they are not always competent or caring either, and sometimes are motivated by money to keep people coming back for the $180 50-minute hour.
I know surgeons who will operate when there was really no need to.
Just like there are mechanics who will “overhaul your engine” when all you need are new spark plugs.
There are incompetent and unscrupilous people in every profession or job type.
Oxy: First I had baseball bats placed appropriately though out my house. Then my friend Rose (rest her precious soul) came to visit and brought me old, old bottles of wine … the glass is so thick on those old bottles … so I situated those in handy places in my house. Then I blogged in here months ago … and decided to situate my cast iron frying places in knooks and cranies throughout … now you are telling me about the oven spray … that I can keep in my cabinets … it’s easy to get to.
Peace.
Easy-OFF Psyco-spray no lingering odur! Shots thirty feet
Yeah Indi and you probably always thought we were the weaker sex!
OsDrover:
Where did you learn about Easy Off? A “Hint from Heloise” perchance?
The Human Mind is capeable of Awsome Acts of Kindness BUT also the Most Horindous acts of Torture! Sex is Incedental! :)~
Matt: Easyoff is best used to strip paint from wood.
Peace.
I think Easyoff has Lye in it.
Ok I’m Sober-enough
To start Drinking again WHO wants to go get me Beer and Smokes ??? :)~LOVE JJ
Getting back to Steve’s topic post….when dealing with the big picture where as S is involved, having radar for the wrong people can include some counselors too! Perhaps we go to them thinking they will have practical answers for our situations, not realizing that their profession is set up to analyze and label (diagnose) the person making the appointment. The focus will be on the person sitting there and not another person we want to discuss.
I found an excellent book recently entitled “Freeing Yourself From The narcissist In Your life”, by Linda Martinez-Lewi, PH.D., which relates to discussions about identifying what is going on, facing facts, and making changes. I think there is overlap between narcissism and psychopathy. I don’t think these things follow rigid and clearly defined blueprints. They are more like recipes that include a lot of things and the amount of this, that , or the other will be different in every case.
Dr. Martinez-Lewi writes about high level narcissists. Individuals like Picasso, Ayn Rand, Frank Lloyd Wright, and others. Early in the book she makes distinctions between narcissism and APD. It’s a good book; one of the best I’ve read on the subject.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFcW_xhlCQE