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.)
Thank you, Ox Drover. I have been reading this forum throughout the day; I am new here and on my 6th day of NC….trying to build an impenetrable fortress against his next attack / attempt to worm his way back in. I do not feel that he is quite done with me. And I have faltered and thrown the door open….too many times now.
I have read many of your comments and am so very grateful for the insight, knowledge and experience you share; as well as the many others here. I am still hyper-vigilant, afraid to check my email, going to check the front windows every few moments to make sure he is not here. The weekends are the worst, but I am hopeful that next weekend will be a bit easier.
I have an idea, though…..let’s all just throw down and buy a private island somewhere and leave these freaks behind. Come on!…we could build such a cool, awesome new society!! (and of course I could quit wearing out the floor pacing back and forth to peek out my windows while we’re at it!!). xoxo
Steve
Thanks for posting about the things we all are thinking about. Your articles always make me revisit and re-examine my encounters with the sociopaths in my life.
Personally I think I have never Encountered a sociopath who was not malicious And who’s behavior was n ot fully derived from malice. But they are good at making you think that they were simply being inconsiderate. In fact my exP asked me, ” do you think im thoughtless and inconsiderate?” That is why They confused as to their motives. That is why we cannot fathom how they can cut off their own nose to spite their face. malice is not amotivation for us.
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Enigma…I was betrayed by a spath. Here’s an island we can go to. I love this song…so happy. Let’s all let go…just for a minute.
Weezer..Island in the Sun
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnAy_ba-3Pg
Hip..hip.
I’m having a hard time posting from my phone so I need to finish here. The other example I have is my sister. As an infant At 9 months old She demanded My doll. She didn’t want my older sisters doll, she wanted mine and proceeded to destroy it. I was 3 years old and traumatized by this. But my parents were training me to become a good little supply so I simply put up with it.
Soon after, she got her own doll and would have nothing to do with it. To this day it is in pristine condition.
I’m not saying that this infant was a sociopath, necessarily. All infants desire what others have , they copy and they mimic. That is normal. But this infant had no other motivation than to take away my doll from me because she was unable to rationalize any other motivation at 9 months old. Furthermore when she got her own doll a very similar baby doll only prettier and bigger, she didn’t want it. As an infant she was able to read an emotion in my face and that was her motivation.
she grew up to become a sociopath
and her motivation continues to be watching others suffer. But she will state various other reasons for the things she does. none of which are congruent to each other. Sometimes she does not bother to defend herself only walks away.
maybe she doesnt know that sadism is her motivation. Maybe she does not examine her motivations. But watching her actions I can see she gaines nothing except pleasure. The logic follows…
Hi, skylar! My Sis doesn’t have any patience with my mental disabilities and still doesn’t. I babysat my nieces and nephews when they were little, but they have never sent thank you notes or have ever called me. I am still close to my one surviving Aunt…my Sis never followed through with obligations. I don’t think she is a spath… I don’t know what the problem is. Sorry you are hurting, too. I am the baby of the family, and always had problems with fears and tears.
I guess I never lived up to my Sister’s standards. Well, what can I do?
O.K….when i was 38, I babysat for my Sis’s kids. I finished taking a shower, and I ‘felt’ like someone was watching me. There was…my nephew, who was 15 at the time. I was devastated. The father of these kids had left to ‘find himself’. All I asked for was an apology. I never got one. my Sister told me…’you should be happy you look so good at 38′. I’ve tried to move past it, but she has always disliked me. What can you do?
going back to the island. good night.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnAy_ba-3Pg
Pefect, Steve!
I’ve tried so hard to puzzle out how this man—this gentle, kind, nurturing man—could’ve been the cold monster that he turned out to be. He was So different from a lot of the SPs described here. But reading the comments to your SO spot-on blog post, I see that there are other women who’ve experienced the SP type that I did! Like everybody else has said, you gave me a heavy-duty AH-HA moment with your analysis & explanation of SPs.
S_Innocence,
as always, you’re either reading my mail, or I’m reading yours!
And Zelda, Hopeful, & Enigma,
I can tell that you’ve had a similar experience to mine & S_Innocence’s. Your comments echoed mine & another friend’s SP experience in many ways!
Oxy,
I totally related to your “violent metaphors”….you’re right: they don’t “feel” the bump…they know there was a thump, but feel it as just another minor speed bump that made them slow down just a titch on their road to where they want to go. As adamsrib said, they are, “serial killers without the [physical] murder.” There isn’t a corpse, but there is the (hopefully temporal) death of a spirit, & the near-terminal wounding of a soul.
I am SO thankful for LF, & all the wisdom I find here! Like Hopeful & others, sometimes I just have to take a break to let it all sink in…& then it’s time to pour in more….kinda like making a carafe of coffee with a Melita filter. š Only so much will filter thru at a time!