When I think sociopath, I think this: as a pattern, he is willing, with awareness (hence, with intellect intact) to hurt people, or leave them feeling violated, in order to pursue hisĀ gratifications and interests which, for him, are always more important than the pain his pursuit of them inflicts on others.
Malice (as I’ve written about elsewhere) may or may not be a motive or factor. It’s true that for some sociopaths the gratifications they seek are predatory-based; for these sociopaths, the process of exploiting others becomes central in their violating behavior.
But this isn’t true for all sociopaths, many of whom are not driven, primarily, by a malicious or sadistic agenda.Ā
For many, if not all, sociopaths, the core motive driving their behavior is to satisfy a present impulse, desire, or felt need. But the problem with sociopathsāand surely one of their distinguishing, defining qualitiesāis the alarming indifference they bring to the collatoral damage they cause others, about which, at least intellectually, they have awareness.
This speaks, of course, to the sociopath’s deficient empathy and tendency to callousness. But again, the deficient empathy by itself isn’t so telling; more telling are the empathic deficits in connection with the pattern, and the sociopath’s intellectual comprehension, of his grossly violating behaviors.Ā
I stress that it is this confluence of the sociopath’s intellectual awareness of the damageĀ his pattern of violating behaviors causes others, coupled with his striking emotional indifference to his damage-causing behaviors, that seems to announce we are dealing with a peculiar personality called āsociopathic.ā
For the sociopath, interpersonal commitments can be maintained so long as they don’t interfere with the pursuit of his targeted present gratifications, or relief. But just as soon as the sociopath perceives a commitment or agreement to interfere with his present agenda, it becomes, for him, effectively null and void. The previous commitment and agreement are now utterly discardable and meaningless.
Whereas the nonsociopath would feel some shame, some uneasiness, to suddenly, unilaterally blow-off, and render nonbinding, a commitment he made to someone else, the sociopath feels relatively untroubled doing so. Why?
One reason is this: Whatever, in the sociopath’s mind, emerges as interfering with his present, immediate interest(s)ābe it previously accepted obligations, commitments, responsibilities, and, yes, relationshipsāthese become experienced, for the sociopath, as presently obstructive, and thereby antogonistic to his current agenda.
Therefore, he now feels the right, in effect, to protect himself against the assault of intrusions and unwelcome constraints to his agenda, whatever their source. He protects himself (and his interests) by, metaphorically, flipping his middle finger at these unwelcome disturbances to the pursuit of his immediate interests.
The sociopath feels entitled to do this! In his mind, things, or you, have gotten in his way. This makes him, in a sense, the victim, and you, or whatever now obstructs his agenda, his victimizer.
Yes, this is an extremely narcissistic position, and yes, the sociopath embodies narcissism in its most virulent form.
Let’s look at an arbitrary example: If you were to ask a sociopath, āHow could you have just, blatantly, without shame, left your āĖdate’ waiting at that restaurant, where you arranged to meet at 8 pm, and never showed up, and never even called to say you weren’t showing up,?ā here are some things he might say, versus what he might have really been thinking:
He might say, āYou are right. That was inexcusable. I should not have done that.ā (Reflecting his intellectual awareness of the social inappropriateness of his behavior.)
But he might be thinking, āI left her there because I had a chance to go out with that cashier I’d been scouting at the CVS for the last couple weeks; and I sure as hell wasn’t gonna let that opportunity pass. I wasn’t gonna let her (my date) stand in the way of my pursuing a better, more exciting opportunity.ā
Or, he might say, āYeah, I should have at least called. That would have been right.ā. (Reflecting his intact intellect)
But he might be thinking, āCalling her would have taken time out of my life at that moment, when I was concentrating on my present priority, which was to impress and seduce this cashier. I did not want to be hindered in my present agenda. I should never have to be hindered in my agenda, and anything, or anyone, that hinders me by introducing inconvenient expectations of me is obstructing me and antagonizing me. So if she was pissed off and hurt that I blew her off, too bad. She became a nuisance.ā
When the sociopath feels the need to rationalizeāand he is so narcissistic that he may not even feel the need to do soāthis is the kind of rationalizing he does. His present needs are always preeminent, and he feels little, if ever any, conflict about this. He is comfortable making, experiencing, his present needs as preeminent regardless of what this means to the needs, and expectations, of others around him.
In a split second he is willing, if necessary for his own, latest chance at gratification, to devalue and ignore his obligations to others.Ā And he does this from the sense that this is his most basic privilege; it makes absolute, comfortable sense to him.Ā Ā
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
Steve,
“Satisfy a present impulse, desire or felt need” EXACTLY!!!! And who cares who get’s run over by the bus.
Great Article – Thanks
MiLo
OMGsh….
This is the first time that it has clicked for me. I totally see where everything he did fits into this. I had such a hard time accepting it because I didn’t think he set out to hurt me. He didn’t plan to hurt me it just didn’t matter that he hurt me because he needed what he needed.
I feel like I want to cry rejoice all at the same time. Somehow getting this for the first time is a bit overwhelming!!!! It REALLY wasn’t me….I REALLY couldn’t have done anything more to help him!!! IT WASNT ME!!!!!!!!!!
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU
Milo and stolen_innocence, thanks for your feedback. I’m glad the article meant something to you. stolen–you are welcome.
Steve
I always find Mr. Becker’s posts very helpful. This one was particularly helpful to me. I believe that the sociopath in my life did not intend malice, but he certainly didn’t bother to lift a finger to stop it. I am still reeling two years later.
While I know that other people find it helpful to call names (malicious, callous, or ridiculous), I find that thoughtful essays such as this to be much more helpful to me.
Thank you.
Dear Steve!!!!!
This article is so right on I want to shout TOWANDA!!!! A thousand times over.
Some are malicious, and some are not. Some enjoy the pain caused, and feel a sense of WINNING when they accomplish a put down! Others just don’t even notice when they see the emotional “blood” flowing from the throat of their victim. They don’t even feel the wheels of the bus go “thump” as they roll over the victim. As long as they are in the driver’s seat, it is all ahead forward, damn the torpedoes!
GREAT ARTICLE. I actually think this is one of, if not THE, best article on LF or anywhere else that “explains” the psychopath! THANKS!!!!
I think that some do absolutely feel the “thump;” they just don’t have the capacity to act in any other way than the way they do. No skills with patience or with public embarrassment (or even chagrin).
I don’t ever doubt that he felt the thump and intellectually knew his actions were beneath contempt. For him, there was *no* other option.
That’s quite different from the previous assessment that comes with violent metaphors that are so distracting and destructive from the thoughtful article.
Dear Missgoth,
Unfortunately, sometimes the psychopaths ARE “violent metaphors….and destructive….” there’s no other way to describe them.
Fortunately, not all of them are physical killers–but killing the soul in my opinion is sometimes more destructive than killing the body.
WOW, this is truly the sum up of what sociopathy is! I have always said he had no real malice..just 100% selfish intent without concern or thought for the effects of his immoral, selfish and devestating ways. He simply KNOWS no other way..
I am 2 + months out…and working so hard on staying strong..he just reached out.. so nonchalantly …asking me how I was..and if I wanted to get together with him.. now, that comment alone just shows HOW incredibly sociopathic he is..with all that we had been thru..the abuse he inflicted, his cheating and lying ways….my ending the relationship d/t my awareness..and he even remotely thinks I would say, ‘YES, im fine..lets get together.’
UNREAL..
But i agree this is truly one of the best, if not the best article on LF.. it simply sums up what we have gone thru. why the experience with a sociopath is so perplexing, unreal and truly traumatizing….and why NO ONE, can remotely understand the suffering we go thru in the aftermath of their wake…
I know that the unintended consequences are severe and more harmful than violence. That is why I object to your violent metaphors. They confuse the issue and are cliche.
Dear Missgoth,
I’m sorry if my “violent metaphors” offend you and are cliche…specifically, which ones?