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.)
BloggerT: That’s why they need to bring studying the Bible back into the school system. Forget this nonsense that it’s against your civil/constitutional rights … when they through the teachings of God’s word out is when our country started going down the tubes … now look at us (how many) years later? What were our politicians of that day thinking? I believed they got conned big time voting on the separation of church and state. There is nothing without God! PERIOD. Anything and everything hand in hand with God is positive … turn your back away from God … and look at all the greedy folks wanting a bailout. Yeah, we can bail them out … here’s a 29 cents kids bucket for you to play with! FOOLS … all of them FOOLS focused on GREED, GREED and more GREED!
Peace.
I disagree Wini and “God’s” teachings are not that simple anymore. Which version would they teach of the bible let alone which sect’s views would they teach and what about the millions of children who are not christian? It is acceptable to force them to study the bible? Our country has had awful corrupt times even when they had the bible in school and everything from slavery, corruption, women as non-entities, children in factories, and worse. And it was just as rampant if not more than it is today.
But I understand your point and agree that character education is something that, along with critical thinking, are things that would be much more helpful. But it is more than just what we teach in the schools. It is the societal norms as a whole that need to change. We can teach things all day in school but when you go home and see the opposite being promoted on the tv, radio, internet, etc it sends a whole different message.
Yeah, I have to respectfully disagree about the Bible part as well. My S was apparently really into the Bible (though he pretended he wasn’t around me). He grew up in the Bible Belt and listed in his profile on the reptile site under “books I like to read” THE BIBLE as the first one. He had Bible quotes in his signature and a user name that was the name of a Christian band. (I don’t know any non-Christians that listen to obscure Christian bands). I’ve also known sociopaths in the past (one I corresponded with for a very short time) who claimed to have “found the Lord” and read the Bible religiously. Still con artists. I’m not singling out Christianity here; I think they also use other religions as a way to make them seem trustworthy to others.
Any form of religion, spirituality, or psychotherapy that would help a normal person seems to be lost on a sociopath. It only becomes fodder for their games.
Star I have made a post on my blog about selecting and evaluating a therapist and it is up now. You can see it at http://whataboutwhenmomistheabuser.blogspot.com/
I had only one class in High school that taught anything about living with people COOPERATIVELY! I am Dislectic bd backasswards retarded slow! Most teachers had no time for individual learning speeds! In Public schools! Basicly for most , Public school is Daycare! and while your at it teachum disapline too! makeum behave! kay!
Let’s use the Scientology handbook to the universe! Yeah thats the Ticket! LOVE JJ
Thanks, BloggerT. I noticed in the part about how to evaluate your current therapy, it says “transference mismanaged” and “precipitous abandonment of therapy (client?)”. These are the two I have experienced with a few therapists. I tend toward therapists who have a background in energy work or other forms of body work. But they often don’t know how to handle transference when it comes up. So the place where the therapy should really begin ends up being the ending point. I know there are really good therapists out there, but they are usually very expensive. Even insurance copays are expensive.
You are welcome. If when you say energy work you are meaning something like TFT or EFT or something along those lines that would fall into being, at best, experimental and at worst (one psychologist has had his license yanked for using TFT on clients) junk science with no credible scientific proof that it is safe and effective.
BloggerT: I don’t know how many times I have to write this … but I will keep on writing and writing and writing … all our EXs … know matter what you want to call them or what the professionals can’t agree on calling them is about EGOs … living in their BIG EGOS. EGO equals Erase God Out.
I could care less if they read the Bible 24/7 for the rest of their lives … unless they shake their egos and surrender … go humble … they will NOT, NOT, NOT understand the true meaning of the word of the Bible. Period.
It’s about EGO .. it always has been about ego. This one kills that one … tell us the story … oh, booh, hoo … bottom line, your EGO decided to wipe this soul off the planet. Oh, you raped him or her … tell us your story … oh, bottom line, your ego decided it would be this way. Oh, you married 8 guys at the same time … tell us your story, boo hoo … bottom line lady, your ego decided that you should marry and take 8 guys for the money they worked for all their lives. Oh, you’re married with children … for how many years? Oh, and you have 6 other women going on the side … and you what? Wasted all 7 of these womens lives, your wife included, along with your children … bottom line, your ego wanted you to do this. Oh, Mrs. so and so … you killed your child because she was an inconvenience to you because you are only in your 20s and the guy you are seeing doesn’t want t be a father … oh, boo hoo, bottom line, your ego decided for you to do this.
Get real. Get humble, read the word of God and live … all the rest listening to the big egos in society will only be doom, doom and more doom.
Peace.
BloggerT, I have never tried those forms of therapy, but have done craniosacral and various forms of hypnotherapy. Of note, there was one hypnotherapist who was a licensed therapist with her PhD. I reconnected with her after not seeing her for a few years, and she did a few sessions with me until I ran out of money. Then she traded hypnosis for some stories I wrote about an interesting time in my life. Eventually, she invited me into her and her partner’s life as a friend. I was invited to their house and became a support for them while the partner had breast cancer. The partner, who was also a psychotherapist, also did counseling sessions with me. They were very kind to me and took me to dinner, invited me to parties, etc. But what I really needed was someone to help me work through abandonment/betrayal issues. When the transference started coming up, they didn’t know how to deal with it. They have moved out of state and still write to me and invite me to visit them and even to move out there! They are the nicest people. But I am left feeling very confused about their role in my life, and I decided to stop contacting them a long time ago. This was distinctly a boundary issue. Though they were interesting friends, what I really needed was a good therapist with good boundaries. I don’t talk to them any more due to the role confusion. I tried to tell them, but they don’t understand.
This is one of the reason it’s so hard for me to trust therapists. I think I mentioned I had another one who taught some sort of group therapy (she called it by some new age name). She tried to seduce my boyfriend behind my back! It was pretty horrible.