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 now realsie I have been desperate for love my whole life and this is what gets me in to trouble…I also have difficulty seeing other people as they may be, I look at them and attribute the way I think with how they must think. Its horrible but a fact there are people out there who see other as targets, but I see this now and I think its going to be the strat of a whole new life for me and the kids.
Dear Muldoon,
I think you SAID A MOUTH-FULL THERE, with what you have told me about your old man (notice I didn’t say “father” because I don’t think he was a “father” in any way!) and how he clouts your mom, and tried to grope you sexually, you obviously grew up in a terrible situation. Any chld growing up where they are not loved, nurtured and protected has a NEED FOR LOVE that we take into adulthood and anyone who is “kind” to us we cling to like glue, and when that person is a Psychopath, and then starts to abuse us, we go back to the coping skills we developed at a child—trying to placate them, get them to be “nice” again, and that doesn’t work as an adult, we end up staying in abusive relationships because we perceive them as “normal” WHEN THEY ARE NOT NORMAL.
Yes, it is the WHOLE NEW LIFE when we realize what healthy relationships are like, and we learn to set BOUNDARIES and to demand that people in our lives treat us with kindness and respect or GET OUT OF MY LIFE, NOW AND FOREVER.
When people treat us with disrespect—lie to us, talk nasty to us, try to cheat us, etc.—they are telliing us that THEY DO NOT CARE ABOUT US, so why in the name of anything do we put up with that in people that are supposed to “love us”
PEOPLE WHO TRULY LOVE YOU DO NOT TREAT YOU THIS WAY!
LOOK AT HOW THEY ACT, and turn off the sound (what they SAY) because ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS!
Right now you have ONE task, and that is to keep yourself and your kids SAFE and get OUT of this relationship legally and physically as quickly as you can. Once you get to where you have little or NO CONTACT with him (as little as is legally allowable since you have kids with him) you have to learn to heal yourself of the things that made you vulnerable to him.
Learn to love yourself and put yourself first. Your safety first. It is a long hard road, but you have taken the first steps on it. Stay here and read and learn and read and learn. We will be here for you, but YOU are the one who has to make the decisions and act upon them.
Good luck and my prayers are with you! (((hugs))))
Wini, thanks, I’ll check that out.
Dr. Steve wrote: 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?
These questions have really been on my mind. When I honestly answer them, sad to say, my first inclination is always to give someone the benefit of the doubt, another chance, overlook a “problem” they have, etc. I am getting better at recognizing this, but at Christmas, when an abuser (psychological) that I KNOW is a bad person went at me, I rushed to placate him, sooth him….and my husband stepped in and dealt with the guy PERFECTLY, took the wind out of his sails by just refusing to “dance the dance”. Basically said, okay, if you are angry and that’s what you want to do…do it, that will be fine. And the guy was stunned, because he didn’t want to do what he was threatening to do, he just wanted everyone to know he COULD and supposedly WOULD if we didn’t all start doing things exactly his way.
Anyway, I realize that if anything happens to my husband I am STILL very vulnerable to P’s, N’s, etc, and that like an alcoholic, I’m going to have to treat myself like I’ll always be an alcoholic and at least stay out of bars! By that I mean if I ever date, I can’t be hooking up over the internet, I would just need to date men I happen to meet in my real life (like a hiking club or whatever) and be FRIENDS long before I date.
I also still tend to put some people on a pedestal because of their education, wealth, job, whatever….and I need to learn to ignore those status assurances that someone is “good” and “mentally healthy” because of those things, because it simply is not true!!! I don’t have the opposite problem, I never think I’m better than anyone and I have friends at all economic levels….but I do recognize in myself that tendency to put someone on a pedestal. My P was a mega millionaire doctor and so often I’d say to myself “well, this appears bad, but after all, he couldn’t have succeeded in running his business and practice if he were all screwed up mentally”…I know better now intellectually, but I realize the lesson has sunk in as deeply as it needs to.
And MULDOON, I have the same problem….like I totally panic at the thought of life without an intimate love. I understand the roots of that, been in therapy, and I make plenty of money to support myself, I’m secure financially, so that is not the problem. It is from my childhood. So even though I’m married, even while I work on strengthening my marriage…and that is going great, I stand up for myself without being critical, and I don’t just roll over either….I also have to work on feeling that I could make it without an intimate love in my life. that other things really matter, like my animals, my friends, my job…..but I know I still don’t really believe that inside. And that makes me vulnerable to any sweet talking man. Sigh. Well, at least I can see the problem. Sounds like you see yours too and are resolved to make a new life. GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!! You will make it!!!!!!!!!!1
I meant the lesson has NOT sunk in as eeply as it needs to.
Justabouthealed, I can think of nothing more evil than to use the need for love againts someone to destroy and rule them. Childhood scars it would seem are with us for the rest of our lives and there are those that see this flaw in us.
Muldoon: That’s because these idiots believe they are of this world!
Hey, they want their kingdoms down on Earth … so be it! I’m sure we will meet up with them in the other realm and they will all be singing a different tune!
Peace.
Now it looks like it’s gona be a lab 7 pit mix Chocolate!:)~
but the puppy is only 3weeks old
Indi, Indi, Indi … My parents had a chocolate lab. They are great dogs.
I’ll tell you the story how they obtain the puppy. The pups mother “Budweiser” used to go to all the neighbors houses and stay for hours … then she’d find her way back home (which was across the street from my parents).
Well, Budweiser found herself with puppies. She must have had about 9 of those pups…. what did she do after they were weaned? Yup, she walked all her puppies around the neighborhood and all the neighbors took one of her puppies. The brown chocolate lab she brought over to my parents house and that’s how they got their lab.
She was a very smart dog … and knew who she wanted to raise her pups.
Peace.
Indigoblue: In my “real” life I’m very involved in animal work. The puppy IS going to stay with “mom” until at least 6 weeks I hope? There can be problems if taken from Mom before that….sometimes unavoidable (mom dies) but not a good situation.