Today I would like to reach out to everyone here on this site. I have been deeply touched by your comments and on-going conversations, and I feel so much of the pain and confusion that many of you are still experiencing. Your stories resonate so strongly with me on numerous levels — because I’ve been there too. I know how it feels. I ache for each and every one of you who is currently going through the heartbreak and insanity. And I’m here to tell you, today, that it WILL get better. You WILL come through — particularly with the help and support of sites like this — and there WILL come a time when you can look back at where you are now, recognize all you have achieved and give yourself a huge great pat on the back. I know this road is painful. I know it’s fraught with dangers. I also know from my own experience that it’s a road that leads to someplace better than I could possibly have imagined back then. So, in my opinion, it’s a hugely valuable journey — although there were certainly moments when it didn’t feel that way!
When I first discovered the extent of my soul mate’s betrayals, I honestly thought that I would die from the pain. It was excruciating. Not just emotional, but physical as well — I’m quite sure that I actually felt and heard the sinews snapping as my heart ripped in two. The days were horrific and the nights were torturous — nightmares haunted my sleep, and when I awoke I found myself still caught in the murderous grip of a ghastly and terrifying dream. But there was no escape. For this was no dream. It was my reality. And, like it or not, I had to deal with it.
Why Had This Happened To Me?
No matter where I went, no matter what I did, no matter who I talked with, I could not get away from the daily torture that had suddenly become my reality. I admit that there were times when the pain was so bad that I actually considered the alternative to living. I have never been so desperate — and I have never felt so alone. And the worst part of it was that nobody seemed to understand what had happened — least of all me. I had given everything to my husband, and I loved him with all of my heart, all of my soul, and with every nerve cell and fiber of my being. Where had I gone so wrong? Why did the man I loved treat me so badly? How could I have been so blind?
The questions ran round and round my head — taunting me, poking at my wounds and eating away at my confidence. Yes, I judged myself over and over again, much more harshly than even the meanest jury — and it hurt. It hurt like hell. People would tell me with the best of intentions that things go wrong in even the best marriages. They assured me that I would eventually pull through. They promised that I would heal and they even dared to venture that one day I would find love again. But I couldn’t hear them — I wouldn’t hear them. I convinced myself that mine was no ordinary marriage. I told myself that I had been lucky enough to find true love — and stupid enough to ruin it. That my husband was one in a million. That I’d never ever feel so safe and so loved ever again. Oh yes, my mind did a really good job on me in the beginning!
For me, the turning point came some ten weeks after he vanished from my life the evening I discovered his betrayals, when an old friend emailed me with the suggestion that my estranged husband was in fact a sociopath. I was in bed at the time, another restless night, bloodshot puffy eyes and the heavy heart that had become my constant companion. The email had arrived on my iPhone — I had never heard the word sociopath before and I started to get curious. I quickly found Dr Hare’s checklist and my eyes widened as I ticked off just about every point. A few minutes later I found the Lovefraud website, and was both horrified and relieved to find out that I was not alone. As I read the countless stories from people, just like me, who had also been lured and conned by a heartless sociopath, I started to believe that perhaps I could wake up from my living nightmare. Knowing that it was not me who had been stupid, realizing that I had been a deliberate target, and understanding that I had found a place where people shared my experiences and empathized with my pain, I took my first faltering steps on the slow road to recovery.
It’s Personal Now
I’m not saying that it was easy — far from it in fact. But from that moment I decided to keep focused on the fact that I had not been dealing with a ”˜normal’ person. I distanced myself from the last connecting emotions that were binding me to him, and concentrated instead on my own feelings. I knew in that moment that in order to heal myself, I would need to confront my own emotional patterns — many of which were still subconscious. I would need to venture in to the parts of me that I had locked up and hidden away. To open up old scars I thought had healed long ago — and to take a long honest look at who I was and how I had become such an attractive target.
From that moment on I became a friend to myself. The self-berating stopped — as did the vulture-like questions that had circled me for so many weeks. No more did I question why this had happened or what I had done to deserve such a cruel betrayal. Instead I focused on how I could move myself through the pain and re-claim my life. In a very short time I even dared to start considering what sort of life I’d like to create for myself — going in to great detail about how I would feel once I’d achieved it. I didn’t think about how it might happen or what I might need to do — nope, I just focused on how I would like to feel. I even managed a laugh when I realized just how divorced my chosen feelings were from the ones I was currently experiencing!
That was when I realized that, against all my best intentions, I alone had been keeping myself a prisoner in my misery. Yes, you read it right — the gatekeeper, the warden was not him at all”¦ it was ME. Because I’d kept on torturing myself long after he had gone.
So I had a choice. To support myself through what I knew was going to be a difficult journey, or to keep asking myself hurtful questions that only served to keep me stuck in my suffering. I chose the first option.
Dealing With The Practicalities
At that time I was absolutely penniless. I had closed our business, I had no work and to top it all I was strapped up in a full leg-brace because I’d had an accident and torn the cruciate ligament in my left knee. I couldn’t drive, I could hardly walk, and I had no idea how on earth I was going to survive — let alone support my son. But I focused on the things I knew that I could do — and one of the first things was to re-claim my home. I threw out anything and everything that reminded me of him, and I put up all the photographs and ornaments that I’d hidden away because he hadn’t liked them. I hobbled around the village and collected fruit from the trees, teaching myself how to make jams and chutneys that I knew I could give to friends for Christmas presents. I kept firmly focused on the idea that I was taking control of my life — of who I was and of how I chose to live — and my internal mantra became “everything I need is already within me” so that, even though the bills were coming thick and fast, I refused to be overwhelmed. I kept on top of my finances by selling everything I didn’t need on Ebay — it’s really quite amazing what some people will buy! It’s true that one person’s rubbish is gold to another — thank goodness!
All the time that I was doing the practical stuff, I also went deeply in to my emotional healing. I read and re-read all my self-development books (Louise L Hay’s “You Can Heal Your Life” being a particularly old and trusted favorite), I scoured the internet for positive stories, and I learned all I could about sociopathy. I devoured stories that inspired me — personal, honest accounts from people who had overcome difficulties, as well as stories from people who had been through a similar set of experiences as my own. I chose my friends, and only spent time with people who energized me, refusing to deal with the mood-hoovers who threatened to sap my positivity and bring me down. I ate healthily and I made sure to get out and about as often as I could — I became quite the expert at shuffling along on my crutches!
It was by no means straight forward, and I fell at many hurdles along the way. But I remained focused and determined — and always gave myself credit for even the tiniest of steps. And slowly, slowly I started to heal. I was open, honest and gentle with myself at every step of the way. When, some days, I didn’t feel like getting out of bed, I would stay there. No guilt, no beat-up, just the acknowledgement that my body was telling me to rest. When I felt overcome with emotion, I would let it happen. Never again was I going to stay quiet or bottle up painful feelings that just needed to come out. So, yes, there were times when I encouraged myself to shout, sob and wail until I was exhausted. Times when I let myself sink in to the pain and hurt — knowing that each time I did so another part of me would heal.
And it worked.
Slowly slowly I began to re-connect with myself. Little by little I started to re-claim my life and bit-by-bit I once again dared to start dreaming. I began to like the reflection I saw in the mirror, and I made sure every day to be thankful for all the good things that were around me — even if on the bad days the only thing I could find to be grateful for was the fact I was still breathing! I stuck loads of messages of support around my home — some from friends, as well as messages to myself. Everywhere I looked there were reminders that I AM ok, that I AM loved and that I AM surrounded by friends who care. In the process I lost some friends, made some new ones, and deepened connections with many old friends who happened to re-appear in my life. I blessed the daily miracles that were helping to transform my life and I re-awakened my belief in magic.
Where I Am Now
Today, two and a half years on from that soul-defining evening when I discovered the truth, I am chuffed to bits to tell you that my life now is better than I could ever have imagined. My business is once again up and running (better and more profitable than ever it was when I ran it with my ex!), I have lost 25lbs in weight (the fat is just melting away), I am authoring here on this site, I have just landed a book deal with an international publisher, and my social life is richer than it’s ever been before. I am happy, content, safe and hugely excited for the future.
So I’m here to tell you that you CAN make it through. If I can do it, then you can too. I’m here as living proof that the human soul is stronger than we think — and that we CAN heal, no matter how devastating or overwhelming the damage might seem at the time. As I said, I experienced many moments when I thought it would be better to die — and, in a way, I suppose I have ”˜died’. Because when I look back now at the person I was when I was trapped in such a toxic relationship, I simply cannot recognize myself. And now, as I review the journey I’ve taken since then, I am filled with pride and love for myself for achieving so much. Yes, maybe the old me died — but it’s been worth it, because now I am living in paradise, and I know the best is yet to come!
I hope this has been helpful — I would be happy to answer any questions so please feel free to email me at mel@lovefraud.com.
With much love and blessings to all.
Aliciad
I totally understand what you are saying! I did basically the same thing with mine. Every single time I spoke to him, he hurt me. Then one day I just told him that I need space and to please back off for a little while. Any NORMAL boyfriend would probably be kind, though maybe hurt, but more concerned than anything. Instead he went bonkers and sent me an email that I posted here in LF and others found disturbing. That was the first time that I got confirmation that I wasn’t nuts for being unnerved by him. There was something actually worth being unnerved for.
So I never told him why. I just kinda tried to sneak out while he was sleeping, so to speak. I would, if it worked, probably swear the moon to this guy if that would get him distracted long enough that I could bolt out the back door. Now he’s posting all over the internet that I am bipolar, because I “loved him in the morning” and then “needed space” in the evening. He’s calling me all sorts of stuff on yahoo answers (whoopie do) and yet simultaneously sending me emails claiming to still love me.
I really really think you should cut him off and go NC. I know how hard it is. I, myself, was stuck in this cycle of trying to run, and then halfway out the door feeling like I was going to shatter into a million pieces if I kept running, so I’d go back. This was my fear. This was what he had turned me into. He had deliberately terrified me to the point that I actually thought leaving him would somehow be harder than staying with him. He’s threatened legal action if I tried to use legal action to protect myself when he tried stalking me on one occasion in which I tried to go NC. He basically tricked me into think that leaving him was more dangerous and detrimental to my livelihood than staying with him. But he hurt me. Every. Single. Day. Just like you say!
Aliciad, my heart really goes out to you, because you are still with him. Going NC after being a yo-yo for over a year was a really hard step for me. It’s hard. And maybe he is puzzled by your decision now, since you’re not responding. But I want you to be prepared for some things (cause these spaths oddly seem to do the same crap for whatever reason). He MIGHT show up on your doorstep claiming the sweetest of loves for you. Be ready for that. He might bring roses. He might make other people call you. Mine would do all this and also start sending emails to himself as women claiming to have seen him at a party and fallen head over heels for him. He was trying to get me jealous or distort me into think other women liked him and that I must be crazy if I don’t think he is a God too. (Many of these women called him a God, but he wrote every single one of those emails I learned later.)
So, be ready. Be ready for 400 phone calls in one day, or 1000 emails, or him on your doorstep or standing outside the house. Be ready for a Mexican band to be outside your window playing music while he sings some sappy song. Be ready for him to say YOU are nuts for not talking to him. Be ready to be called cruel and unfair and crazy yourself. Be ready for his friends to contact you and tell you that you’re hurting this poor nice guy who is just in love with you and cannot understand what he did wrong. Be ready for people to follow you.
But do not talk to this guy if he hurts you every day. You don’t deserve that. Run like the wind. And then run some more. Keep running. Let him say or do whatever he wants, but run.
And if you feel like you are the crazy one because you were talking nicely to him one minute and then decided ENOUGH OF THIS and stopped talking the next, this doesn’t mean you are doing the yo-yo.
As Skylar so memorably told me: You aren’t DOING the yo-yo. You ARE the yo-yo.
Freaking run.
I really hope this gets better for you. Wish I could help. I’m just about a week into NC and he’s thrown a lot of curve balls aleady. It’s not easy, but IT IS SOOOOOO WORTH IT.
@....... aliciad456:
That is exactly how I got my Spath to leave me alone. I put in writing “NO CONTACT” and started ignoring all of his messages and texts and it drove him insane! He started getting more threatening and that is when I printed them all out and took it down to the police station. They called him and told him to stop contact. It worked, except for one last word (of course) and then he disappeared and changed his number. It’s worth a shot…mine said that he would haunt me forever…haven;t heard a word in 6 weeks. It is also a good way to make yourself accountable for the NO CONTACT as well, if you are having trouble in that area.
Stay strong and take control…there is nothing that a Spath hates more than to be ignored!!!!
Alicad…
Please heed the advice you are being given.
No contact is the MOST humane and thoughtful thing you can do in the context of a sociopathic encounter.
Talking and reason DO NOT WORK. He is a ONE WAY communication device. Nothing but nothing will reach him. So you have to stop trying.
He will take every opportunity to inflict injury on your heart and mind. His love-bombing is only a set up to get close enough to put another pin in your heart.
Change your #’s, block him from all addresses and social networking venues. STOP communicating with him.
It is honestly the only way you will begin to be able to get sane again. He will make sure, if you continue to try and be a normal and reasonable person with him, that you LOSE.
He needs everyone around him to lose. Either outright, or in subtle energy draining ways, that are so insidious you’re half dead before you notice.
SAVE YOUR LIFE! Do it now. Please….
GREAT ARticle, Mel! Thanks for sharing your wonderful insights!
Hello all,
I have a question which I hope one of you might be able to shed some light on. I’ve been involved with a sociopath for about 5 years and have probably experienced every emotion that there is…mostly despair but also an unhealthy obsession with needing him in my life. Even though I’ve been hurt too many times to even count, I always felt that we’d be tied to one another in some way because of the drama that has occurred in his life of which I was a part.
After finding out about yet more lies, deceitfulness and other women, I thought I’d play it “cool” when he texted me to invite me over one day. I informed him that I had a date and asked if I could have a raincheck. (I never really had a date but for all he knew, it could have been with one of my girlfriends.) Anyway, the only thing he said was “have fun” and I haven’t heard from him since. This happened about 3 months ago.
I honestly thought that he’d be trying to call, contact me, etc. but it’s like I don’t even exist for him anymore. I’ve planned to bump into him but he barely acknowledges me and has moved on. I am so stunned…I thought that what I said would get his attention and after hearing how so many of you are being hounded by your ex’s, he would do the same.
Needless to say, my plan backfired and I know that I should be grateful that he’s out of my life, but each day seems to get harder instead of easier. I would much rather have him yell and scream than to realize that he could care less about me. I suppose I have some kind of addiction and my mind tells me I’m so lucky to be away from him, but my heart and emotions are so raw that it’s hard to even make it through the day.
So, does anyone have any insight as to why he just dropped me after 5 years and never tried to contact me? The reason why I’m so upset is because I’m the one who caused the split and I realize that I really can’t contact him now…I wouldn’t even know what to say.
Any suggestions? Thank you for listening to me.
Dear Baltimore,
And you want a person who has HURT YOU REPEATEDLY to come back into your life WHY?????
It is obvious to me that you are aware that your desire for him to contact you, and to “play games” with you, is not “normal” or “good.”
Now that he is out of your life, I think you should 1) thank your lucky stars he is gone and not stalking you and 2) start figuring out why you crave the company of someone who is obviously hurtful to you, and 3) why you are so invested in this “game” of telling him lies and expecting him to do the push/pull dance of an unhealthy relationship.
Welcome to LoveFraud…I suggest you start in the archives about healing and work on yourself. It is where we all end up anyway…it may start out about them, but ends up being about ourselves and our healing. Good luck.
baltimore:
Join my club. Mine did the same thing to me.
I can tell you exactly why he is not contacting you…he has someone else. You already said you knew about the other women and all the lies. He just has someone else right now, but I am sure he will contact you again when he becomes bored with whoever he is with. But if/when he does, you must remain strong and ignore him. Trust me…I feel exactly like you…I could have almost written your post so I feel for you, I really do. It hurts very badly. My thoughts are with you.
Baltimore,
5 years, 25 years or 5 days. They have an equal amount of attachment regardless. That attachment is based on how much they think they can control you.
When you said, “I have a date.” THAT WAS PRICELESS. There must’ve been an angel on your shoulder that told you what to do. They understand that emotions are the key to controlling you and if you are already dating, then they know you are lost to them because your emotions have detached from them.
He probably scratched you off his little black book as absent mindedly as I scratch my ass. All the drama you experienced together was MEANT to bond you to him. He probably set most of it up and it wasn’t real. He had no investment in you, except as a game.
There is only one thing you left hanging. There is the issue of the narcissistic injury you caused him, when you said you had a date. They harbor resentments a long time. I hope he forgets about this one – but I doubt it.
I think he has written it on his calendar to get back in touch with you in a year. When he does, he will set out to punish you severely. If you think things were bad before, you ain’t seen nothing yet.
Each time I left my spath and was drawn back in, he hatched an even more diabolical plot to destroy me. Once you leave a spath, NEVER go back. It’s very dangerous.
Baltimore, Be careful what you wish for. Been there done that. Leave well enough alone. What your feeling is normal. Hang in there and dont jump back on that rollercoaster.
Baltimore…..I’d chalk it up to….”Well…that was easy”!!!!!
You are experiencing the emotions of grief…..bottom line is…..allow the grieving process and remove your ego from it all!
You said he wasn’t good for you……BOTTOM LINE….RUN and be damn thankful for this outcome!
It is an addiction…..get help for it. Quit playing games with YOURSELF….it’s a dangerous way to live (that’s the ego part).
Get down on your knees and kiss the ground…..YOUR OUT!
Now allow the process of healing. It takes time darlen!
XXOO
EB