Lovefraud has heard from a woman who we’ll call “Sally.” Sally is dealing with a sociopathic man who threatened to kill her, sabotage her daughter’s career and injure other family members. She says law enforcement either doesn’t believe her or doesn’t care.
Sally has been in touch with another of the sociopath’s victims, and they’ve helped each other through the nightmare. Still, people in regular support groups don’t believe them, and friends and family members have backed away. A lawyer and a therapist have backed away.
Sally recently sent Lovefraud the following e-mail:
You just can’t imagine this, because I can’t either. The person that was me is gone ”¦ and no one has taken her place.
I know who I was with all my faults and history ”¦ I was comfortable there. I guess this is a journey ”¦ but to where I don’t know. There is no light.
For 62 years I was me and now I am gone. What will I be? Will I be able to live with who I end up being?
I’m sitting in my living room and I am crying and I don’t know why. For the loss of hope? For fear? Fear of the future … for breast cancer ”¦ for the loss of my two best friends? For being stupid? For losing my children? And I am responsible for these losses.
I am dull, I am inert. I fill my head with senseless TV – I don’t know what I’m watching.
I want to dance and sing and laugh. I want to ride bareback thru the fields and listen to the silence.
But I will do none of those things. They’re only dreams. I am too tired. They are too far away from my new reality. Reality is my home, my prison, the awake hours. My routine – sleep as long as I can – take pills to help me not to have panic attacks – sometimes I eat. Day is night, and night is day ”¦ there’s no difference anymore.
I am smothered in sadness – and I am so angry, at myself.
I used to accomplish so much in a day and now it can all wait for another day.
I remember the hopelessness. I remember feeling that I had nothing to hold on to, that everything I knew was gone. I had no plans for the future, no idea of what was to become of me.
And I remember coming to terms with it.
How can you possibly come to terms with the devastation wrought by a sociopath? My healing involved two related and intertwined adjustments in my thinking.
Acceptance
The first adjustment was that I had to accept what happened.
Everything I was told by my sociopathic ex-husband was a lie. I had been deceived, swindled and betrayed. He had convinced me to spend all of my money, and go into debt, to support his grandiose plans. I’d neglected my own business to participate in his schemes. I’d won a judgment against my ex in court, but it was useless. I’d spent money I didn’t have on collection agencies and lawyers, and came up empty. I would not get any satisfaction from my ex.
I was broke and had no prospects for stable income. I did not know how I would survive, and I couldn’t argue with my circumstances any longer. The day finally came when I had to accept that, for the time being, this was my life.
Present moment
The second adjustment in my thinking was to focus on the present moment.
We all spend a lot of time reliving the past and projecting into the future. We ruminate over everything that happened with the sociopath. We worry about what will happen to our jobs, our kids, our homes.
Although this is legitimate, the only place where we truly live is right now, in the present moment. We can only take action now. So much like recovering from an addiction, we have to take our lives one day at a time.
It’s not easy. We want to know that we’ll be okay. We want to know how everything will work out. But I learned that if we give up our expectations of what ought to be, life can bring us wonderful solutions that we didn’t even think of.
This is one of the big themes in my book, Love Fraud—How My Marriage to a Sociopath Fulfilled My Spiritual Plan, which will be published in the spring.
Suggestions for Sally
So what should Sally do? From her letter, it sounds like she is suffering from depression. This is no surprise. We all know that the devastation wrought by sociopaths, and the callous response of the legal and financial systems, can leave us depressed.
Maybe Sally is strong enough to cope with the depression on her own. But if she feels like she needs assistance, that’s one step that she can take right now, today—seeking treatment for depression.
It would be a step towards her healing. For Sally to continue to move forward, I lovingly suggest the approach that I outline here—accepting what has happened, and focusing on one day at a time.
It’s not easy. Accepting what has happened leads us to grief over what we have lost. The grief needs to be processed, and it’s not fun. Actually, that may be where Sally is right now. There’s no way to avoid the pain; we have no choice but to move through it. But it does come to an end.
The process is much more manageable if we only deal with this day, or perhaps this hour. For Sally to try to sort out the rest of her life right now would be impossible, and probably counterproductive.
Sally has dreams. She wants to sing and dance and ride bareback through the fields, listening to the silence. Sally should hold on to her dreams, even though, at this point, she does not know how they will be realized.
Right now she’s moving through the rough patch. But each day moves her one day closer to the possible fulfillment of her dreams. All she has to do is hold on, and gradually, her ability to accomplish will return.
Who will she be? An even better version of who she was.
Dear Sally & Alicia
I am also new to Lovefraud and understand 100% how you both are feeling, i am still trying to get my sociopath out of my life (he just wont’t leave me alone-he is like a yoyo) and am just taking one day at a time, Donna has helped me so much to understand the behaviour of sociopaths and my own feelings as i felt so alone when he left without any warning and then came back then left came back. It has been a very hard and lonely path as noboby seem to understand what i was feeling and going through. It felt to me that everyone around me thought i was the obsessive one as i would predict what would happen and he did things in such a way that he could never be linked to things or when i was alone so it was always my word against his.
I am currently fighting through each day not to repeat my pattern of taking him back just to start over again,he is trying very hard to get back into my life and it is a battle but with Donna’s help i am feeling stronger and stronger with each day. Its a long road but what helped me to get back on the wagon of life was accepting that what he did was not my fault and i did nothing wrong to push him away.
It is still hard for me to believe that the man i loved so dearly and with all my heart doesn’t have one but i have accepted it and with all the information i have now my eyes have been opened.
I believe that if it was not for the support of Donna and Lovefraud i would still be stuck on that rollercoaster.
With time and acceptance of the situation you will get through this and come out a stronger person than you were before.
Good morning everyone here at LF!
For those of you that remember me know that much like all of you I was reeling from my interaction with my ex girlfriend who I think is a sociopath. You all know the story because you’ve lived it yourselves. Personally, a brief refresher, she talked marriage and kids and moving here to be with me blah blah bah and then she vanished into thin air. Never uttered a single negative word to me, no provocation, no explanation, no goodbye, just gone.
I tried to get in touch by sending one email a month for 3 months trying to get in touch with her and I got no response. I stopped posting here because my mind was becoming jaded with my intentions to reach her instead of realizing the reality of what she has done.
I still read articles here regularly but I didn’t want to take space in the forums away from people who really needed it because my situation hadn’t changed. After 4 months of NC on my part, after realizing that I’d never hear form her again, and beginning the process of getting over the absolute love of my life, she has resurfaced. I really, truly don’t know how to handle it. All I know is this human being meant more to me than anything and touched me in a way no one ever has. I was never happier in my life until the day she totally sold me out.
She wrote me a brief letter apologizing for everything, said there was no excuse for her to treat me that way and that she is truly sorry. she went on to wish the best for me and my two pets and hoped that I was doing very well. she signed it love and then her name. She didn’t ask any questions or ask for a response but the act of her resurfacing to apologize is meaningful to me.
here is the important part to me, I don’t know if she is just trying to clear her conscience (which I thought sociopaths didn’t have) or if there is a bigger purpose behind her reaching out to me after all this time has passed. She wrote me a week ago, I’m yet to respond.
I have no intentions of clogging these forums up, there are people who need more urgent care then me. I’m still recovering from the tornado that is my ex gf but I miss her to death. My family and friends would probably write me off if I accepted her back into my life but I don’t even know if that’s what she wants nor do I know if it’s what I want. I just know she meant the world to me and I just know that she pretty much destroyed me. I appreciate all insight and if no one responds then I’ll understand that there are more pressing matters than this. I just figured there was no better place to come for a little advice then to the wonderful, well intentioned people here at LF. Thanks in advance. Onward and upward…
I’ll just add that I’ve pulled myself out of the rut I was in. I’ve been living it up, traveling all over, reconnecting with old, good friends, and everything has been going very well. But there isn’t a day, maybe not even an hour that passes where I don’t think about this person and what she meant to me and how much I miss her. Not sure how to feel, what to do, etc
I, too, find myself questioning who I am. I have spent a decade dealing with a sociopath, a child of a sociopath and the family court system. My son’s father married a bipolar woman with three daughters and the ex husband is where I was when my son was a toddler. He does not have the confidence nor tenacity to take on the court system and the drama that goes with dealing with sociopathic behaviours. And he will lose his children because of it….not in the legal sense but in the moral sense. They will be brainwashed and resentful towards him and he will miss out on the most precious gift of all.
I used to wonder if I did something to incur all this and what kind of parent was I that I would bring a child into this? But I know now, I am a survivor.
I have sole custody of my son now and his father no longer contacts either of us going on 18 months) since I set the rules now. My son no longer has value to his sociopathic father as money and custodial and visitation rights are no longer his battle to fight.
My son obsessed for a while that he had his father’s DNA and that he would be the same…quite frankly I used to worry the same way. But he has something his father never did, a conscience and a heart.
But I can tell you that environment and reassurance can change that. I know now that the purpose his father served in our lives was to make us both strong, confidant people who know right from wrong and can make the most out of life.
My son is in the Big Brother program now and has shared experiences and met some really wonderful people that he would not have had his father been any different. That is his father’s legacy.
My financial state is in ruins, but I appreciate all the little things in life. My son and I share experiences together that would not have happened if I had to share his time with his father or if my financial state was where I projected it to be.
So yes the person I am is because of the person he is but in many ways I am grateful for that. Good always outweighs the bad if you want it to be…..
good grief,
It is VERY common what she is doing. Dropping out of your life (w/o a trace) and then resurfacing is very common behavior for these people.
N/C, N/C, N/C……If you were sending her an email a month then you were not maintaining no contact. SHE was doing N/C on you by not responding. Do what SHE did. Do not respond.
If you contact her EVEN once, you will be back into her “game”. Make no mistake it is a GAME.
You said yourself that you just pulled out of the rut you were in. Don’t underestimate this. You will be miserable again in NO TIME if you allow her back into your life.
Good Grief,
I remember your posts from before. I assure you, her letter is nothing but another attempt at manipulation.
Sociopaths frequently return to previous victims just to see if they can bleed them some more. I’ve heard of sociopaths groveling on their hands and knees, begging to be forgiven and taken back into the victim’s life. It’s a stunt. Don’t fall for it.
I’m sure many people here at Lovefraud can echo this statement.
You should not respond. You should not even acknowledge that you received the communication. If it was email, you should block her. If it was postal mail, and you get another letter, you should refuse it. Return to sender.
But how do you cope with your feelings? You must treat this relationship like an addiction, because in reality, that is how your brain perceives it.
Please read the following article from our archives: Why you can be addicted to a sociopath.
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2007/04/13/motivation-needing-wanting-and-liking/
If you have contact with her, you’ll be back at square one in trying to break your addiction.
Does it not seem as though they almost have a built in radar that KNOWS when we are feeling extra vulnerable or lonely? I know my ex P seems to know when to pounce.
I’m new here as well and still getting this person out of my life. I have found, however, that he can cry at the drop of a hat. He has literally been on his hands and knees begging for whatever he wanted at the time. I no longer respond to this and I’ve been called cold hearted for that. And I don’t respond to that either. I honestly do not love this person, nor do I have any respect for him. It’s a place of total indifference that I am reaching and I like it! He HATES it. Oh well. I take care of me, myself and I to the best of my ability.
It IS an addiction and I read the article on this. It was very enlightening and I can see how I did a lot of those behaviors based on what I perceived at the time.
I feel for everyone who is dealing with this regardless of where you are in the process.
Hugs,
Cat
good grief:
I remember you. The letter is a manipulation, pure and simple. I can guarantee you that she has probably exhausted her current source of supply, knows that he’s about to toss her, and she is casting around for a new source of supply. As you’re discovering, NC starts on the physical front and follows on the emotional front. Stick with it. Your life will ultimately be much better for it.
Cat:
Mine was the same way — cry on command, begging on his hands and knees. Funny thing was, by the end, all I remember is watching the performances and noticing how little emotion was going on beneath the surface. Indifference is the best place to be. Keep up the NC.
good grief and Cat and everyone who fears being sucked back in or misses their sociopath:
I have one little piece of advice. Get a small recording device and record all conversations with them. In some states you are better off using a video cam or your cell phone vid cam for legal purposes. These recordings serve soooo many purposes, the least of which is to REMIND you of why you left him/her. Time has a way of blurring the awful reality which never really sinks in to begin with. The fact that such HORRIBLE EVIL EXISTS AND WALKS AMONG US, is almost too much for the mind to accept. We justify and water it down a bit so we can deal with it, but that leaves our defenses weakened. We need to have visual and audio reminders of the evil words and deeds so we stay vigilent. For those who are NC, write in a journal, the horror you experienced so you can refer to it in the future.
For me, the recordings have also served to prove the truth of my statements to my friends and the P’s friends. The recordings of him speaking to me are 180 degrees the opposite of what he told everyone else. With these recordings, I have proven myself. Hopefully, in the future they will serve a purpose in the court of law.
Because of these recordings other people have provided me with small amounts of information about the P that I didn’t have. Last of all they confirm my sanity, to myself when I experience doubt and to others who (understandably) can’t believe the unbelievable truth of what the “nice, kind, gentle, animal-loving, intelligent, genious, man” really is.
Hi Good Grief:
I believe the advice today is the same as it was the last time you were here…..NO CONTACT.
This girl is like a drug to you, very addictive. We established this the last time.
You do not want to go back for another hit off “the drug”.
It sounds like you are doing just fine on your own without her.
Besides, the feelings you have for this girl are not being reciprocated in a healthy way.
Her feelings for you are fragmented, at best.
Unless she’s been fighting over in Iraq for the last few months, there really is no excuse for her behavior of going MIA on YOU, and most relationships can’t function with huge chunks of time missing in them, anyway.
My advice is to stay in No Contact, and get on with your life, which you are already doing.