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.)
I also think that we are drawn to them by that Magnatizm!
For me , My Psyco was’nt smart just Good Lookin! And I persued Him. But once I had a taste of that forbidin Fruit I was Hooked! You could have stabed me with the red flag and I doubt I would have Listend! LOVE JJ
Hey Indi: I thought my ex was Good Lookin. But now, I see him in a different light. He looks ugly to me. Ewww. I could never go there again.
IKnow
I still Love Him! That will never Change! I know down deep in there is a Child that just wants to be Loved! He did’nt recieve it from day one so He has had too survive by Learning body language , Deserning how to get what he needs by manipulation and deciept! I like what was said earlyer about Instinc! If you or me could not speak as an Infant , and the only way we got our needs met was by learning what to do to get this or that . ie. Crying gets me changed! This face gets me picked up! If I throw up I get touched and cleaned. Do you see Where this behavior Originates from? Birth! There for If I know not Love or have never Learned Love how possibly could comprehend it! It does not serve my needs! They need our compasion! they Just dont recipricate!
Oh they know all the words! Just not what they mean! LOVE JJ
Right after my break-up with the S, I still wasn’t sure where he was coming from. I spoke with two women who were not licensed therapists. One was an energy worker I go to occasionally. The other is an intuitive. I was extremely lucky. The intuitive listened to my story and told me point blank he was a dangerous man and I should stay away from him. I told her about how he followed me around at the snake show. She is the one who told me that was a classic power play. She knew exactly what he was about before I did. I took her advice and didn’t contact him. The energy worker had been married to a sociopath many years prior. She was charting his slow downward spiral via internet news stories for many years, so she knew exactly what I was dealing with. Finding the right support was extremely important to me at the crucial time when I was confused.
Indi: It is true what you wrote … but, you forgot about God told us to be humble as we walk down on Earth. He told us to be humble for a reason.
Our EXs violate this very simple request from our Lord, insisting they live in their BIG EGOS.
Peace.
I’m printing out a hunk of this thread to give to my counsellor. I don’t think he questions my assessment of the situation, but I am afraid that folks really don’t get it, and I hope he shares this with his co-workers.
They aren’t all Ted Bundy, or Scott Peterson. They don’t all kill…but they are just as dangerous.
pb: Correction … they are all TED BUNDY’S and SCOTT PETERSON’S … they just haven’t gotten to that level of GREED yet. Just give them time loose in society with those egos going full swing. TED and SCOTT are just the ones that got caught!
Peace.
pb: My oldest sister called me the night before Christmas Eve … we were planning on going to our family gathering together. She said something to me that made tears come to my eyes, at the same time I never looked at my EXs this way. She said “Wini, I’m so grateful you aren’t a greedy person and you helped your EX every time he asked you for financial help … because we could be looking for your body chopped up in little pieces in other states if things had gone differently!
I burst in to tears because I never looked at this possibility … for I was still in the shock faze of uncovering all the lies and deception told to me by my EX.
Peace.
…Mine differed from the norm on two points – he has run himself into the ground racking up his credit in attempts to buy our love, and he never attacked my looks…he always told me I was beautiful.
He’s now $450,000 in debt and has to sell his house. He says it’s because it’s too much work, but he has no yard to care for. The only thing he has to care for is the inside of the house – which will be the same in a rental. His house is fully renovated.
See, spending all his credit on his women and daughter makes him look like the good guy and later bolsters his story of how we all took advantage of him…It lends credibility to his victim/pity story.
I fought back that night. While he was trying to strangle me, I punched him in the nose, and again in the mouth. Luckily he’d pinned me down on the bed by my throat, so I had the bed under me for stability. I swung as hard as I could realizing his hands were busy and he was in arms reach…Mind you, I got punched in the face four times after that…I’m soooo lucky.
According to his (oddly smiling) daughter, I kneed him in the nuts too after that, but I don’t remember.
Counting my blessings!