A Lovefraud reader asked me what I thought of advice offered on a website called “Womensdivorce.com.” In a post about relationships after divorce, the website says women should start dating as soon as possible. It also seems to advocate that women engage in brief sexual affairs, and find a transitional partner who can help a woman heal, but whom she shouldn’t marry.
Read Your first relationship after divorce, on Womensdivorce.com.
My reaction is that this advice may be okay for someone involved in one of those amicable divorces, where the partners simply grew apart, are still on speaking terms or even friends, and want what is best for their children. The advice is terrible for someone who has been heavily damaged by marriage to a sociopath.
People who have endured marriage to a sociopath need time—perhaps a lot of time—to rebuild themselves. Healing may have two distinct dimensions.
Recovering from the sociopathic relationship
First, you need to recover from the sociopathic relationship. The difficulty of the recovery depends on the psychological damage done.
I now know that I was relatively lucky in the type of predator that found me, although it sure didn’t seem that way at the time. My ex-husband, James Montgomery, only wanted my money. He lied to me, he used me, he betrayed me—but he didn’t try to destroy me. When my money was gone, he just abandoned me.
Many Lovefraud readers had experiences that were far worse than mine. Some of you endured physical and sexual violence, gaslighting, threats and brainwashing. Some of you continue to suffer because you have children with the sociopath, and your ex purposely tries to use the children to hurt you.
If you are raw from one of these extremely damaging relationships, the last thing you should do is try to find a new partner. Instead, you need to focus on personal healing.
The first step is to take care of yourself physically—eat well, find time for exercise, avoid drugs and alcohol, get enough sleep. You also need to rebuild emotionally. There are two different paths of emotional recovery. One is allowing yourself to grieve, and feel the anger and pain. The other is finding ways to bring joy into your life, however small. Nourishing encounters with friends and family whom you can trust will help.
You’ll find many articles to assist you in this section of the Lovefraud Blog: Healing from a sociopath.
People often ask, how long should it take to recover? There is no standard answer to this question. Recovery takes as long as it takes. But until you are feeling stronger and healthier, it is best not to get involved in another romance.
Here’s an important reason why: Sociopaths target vulnerable people. If you are not yet healed, you are vulnerable, and a prime target for another sociopath.
Recovering from deeper injury
Many Lovefraud readers, as you make your way through recovery, have realized that the marriage to a sociopath was not the first damaging relationship in your life. There was an older, deeper injury that made you susceptible to the sociopath in the first place.
Some of you recognize that a previous romantic relationship was exploitative. Some of you realize that one or both of your parents were disordered. For you, the games sociopaths play may have seemed normal, because that’s what you grew up with.
The pain caused by the most recent partner may cause you to realize that you have a long history of mistreatment. In fact, sometimes recognizing trauma in your past helps clear up one of the big mysteries of involvement with a sociopath. It answers the question, “Why did I allow this predator into my life?”
There may even be spiritual reasons for the dangerous encounter, which I talk about in my book, Love Fraud—How marriage to a sociopath fulfilled my spiritual plan. So before looking for love again, you need to recover from the sociopath, and you need to recover from any deeper traumas as well. Thankfully, you can do both at once. The process is the same as described above—slow physical and emotional healing.
So as you walk the road to recovery, be careful about listening to advice from others. As we well know, most people have no clue about what it’s like to be involved with a sociopath. They have not walked in your shoes, so however well meant, their suggestions may not be helpful or healthy for you.
TB – I really understand what this sort of uncertainty and illness is like. I brought myself back from fibromyalgia, and now I have to do it with the enviro. toxins, and the damn spath. Please don’t feel isolated, I so understand the day to day of living with such uncertainty and limitation; how scarey and frustrating it is.
I am extremely sensitive to pharmaceuticals. I have to be very careful. I am very careful with the supps also, which is why i use the lendon smith protocol. some people might think it is whacky or silly, but i have seen huge results within the group of people i know who are using it. I worked for many months to supp my system so that my body could handle the detox that would come with the saunas. I know of some folk who cannot use them – they are too overwhelming for their systems. I went at it very cautiously and slowly. And for me it has helped SO much. I would not be where i am now if I hadn’t been going regularly the past few months. my thinking is clearer, my agitation lessened, my focus is better, my brain is working better, and of course i am less anxious.
last year when i tried to start yoga again, an easy 15 minutes of gentle stretching put me in bed for days in the fetal position – all my nerves firing, my skin twitching, my mind and body completely overloaded. i was so sad and scared. fast forward to this year and i have actually done a few yoga classes! i have some mechanical problems, so have had to slow down AGAIN, but i have made some gains in what I can do.
I have always been extremely active; i know how hard it is to slow down and let myself heal. it’s not like i can plan something and carry it through – it’s always ‘try’ and more often than not, it’s ‘can’t’. BUT i am making progress, it’s just really slow. i have had enough progress though, that i feel more hope. this is the hardest thing – the battering to my sense of hope and possibility – not only for healing, but life.
So, we have to find the right help, and get it in our hearts that it will be slow. but so much is possible. keep your chin up. if you want to connect with Diane on that website, do. She is amazing. She got herself out of bed, after decades of ill health.
Chelsea,
I have given Donna permission to give my e-mail addy to you. Hope we can connect that way soon, and talk.
luff to you,
Zim
Chelsea,
I know that when I lived with my ex (SPATH!), I bought heaps of books about step parenting. I wanted to be the best there was..spent oodles of $ on those books. Most of them confirmed that, if I was mentoring and helping to rear a child, even if it was only every other weekend, for all those years, that I did, indeed, fit into the “hat” of a stepparent, even if I was only his de facto common law wife. Very sad. Truly, I can understand what you went through with your ex (SPATH!)
Zim
Chelsea,
..too bad the daughter of my ex (SPATH!) did not understand..or maybe DID NOT WANT to understand my honest efforts and sacrifice, even though I clearly demonstrated my love, if more in ACTIONS than with words, for years and years. I even encouraged her musical endeavors..encouraged her to sing..even did so at parties I threw in my back yard, for my adult friends. Her father, at one point, bought her a black electric guitar. I doubt she even bothered to play it..Daddy’s little girl. I felt, quite often, that he wanted to APPEAR to be the stellar Daddy, due to his GUILT from breaking up his second marriage. Sad when she began dressing in goth-like fashion. I can’t remember now if she died her beautiful/natural corn silk blonde hair black, eggplant or bright red, but it had me thinking she had “image problems” ..inherited from her Dad or that onset due to his failure at establishing healthy boundaries, for her, and with many others..throughout his adult life.
Zim
Chelsea,
I even gave his son a free guitar (finger picking, Travis style) lesson in my home (I perform professionally..have since I was a teen), and encouraged his father’s playing guitars with him, whenever he was over visiting.
Zim
I can remember when I broke up with my spath I kept going it all over in my head: “the how and the Why” not realizing that I was the victim of a predator. I was a young girl, there was no internet to explain “sociopathy” and no love fraud to put it into
perspective. I didn’t know I was dealing with an inhuman beast and I was completely devasted.
I was working 2 jobs to support my kids with no medical insurance to go to counseling and no one was there to tell me
“YOU”VE BEEN VICTIMIZED BY A PREDATOR!”
I completely blamed myself and kept hashing over in my mind “what I did wrong.”
If only I had known then what I know now I would not have suffered so much mental anguish.
I wish I had known this guy was out to con me & use me.
I can remember when he filed for divorce so he could marry his next victim and I was in my lawyer’s office.
The lawyer asked me to relate to him what happened in my marriage and when I was telling him the story he said, “you were married to an animal and I don’t want you crying over this piece of useless shit.” Easier said then done. It took me two years to get my head straight. Then I went through a phase where I hated him. Now he’s just a distant memory or a void. I rarely thought about him for years.
Then the nightmares started recently. Nightmares that he’s trying to kidnap me from my current husband. Isn’t that weird? As I have mentioned in other posts I think I’m dealing with unresolved feelings that I failed to process long ago due to lack of treatment.
Joanie
Is it possible that you have encountered a new spath somewhere else in your life and your subconscious is trying to warn you? This new spath could be female or male. It will be the last person in your life you would suspect of being a spath because they are sooooo nice.
Not saying that this is necessarily the case, but my subconscious tried fruitlessly to warn me in my dreams and many freudian slips for years. I just never understood, because there was no education and no internet at that time.
Thank God for the internet.
Yea, Thank God for the internet. It wasn’t until I read up on the internet years later that I could put into perspective what I was dealing with and put a name to it.
On top of that I had the 2nd sociopath that tried to burn me alive in the house fire. I guess I’m dealing with a lot of mental anguish from things I never realized before. When I see parallel stories here from other folks who have been through a similar situation to mine it sets off a light bulb and I say, “AHA!!”
How many folks here have had that happened?
Reading up on others experiences and finally being able to connect the dots and put it altogether.
Oxy: I went thru all the testing before I left my X because I knew I would be w/o insurance. All came back ok. Course I’m sicker now that I’ve let down from all the stress and trying to get to normal. I no longer have medical insurance-part of the money take down I had to endure to leave/divorce him. He’s a big money maker and my living style is frugal now. I do work with several nutritionists that are friends of mine. I also talked with a vet friend [guess I’m part animal, anyway! LOL] that did some time in human medicine till he went into animal rehab/holistic vet. He said that it’s quiet common to crash after coming to a place of healing and letting down finally. He also said he had seen animals drop over dead after finally being brought into safe situations! Systems could not adapt after being stressed for too long. Scary, huh? Thank you for encouraging me to go to an internist, I really appreciate your love, help and concern! I hope you feel better after the spotted fever episode!!!!! Yeah, I’ve researched sleep apnea as my brother had it horribly. My dog keeps me awake a lot, that and I have a hiatal hernia which causes me to sometimes have acid reflux. That’s another stress induced situation. I sleep almost sitting straight up to try and keep it under control. If I wake up, I get to worrying about my daughter and my GD. I never know what she’s doing in their lives…..oh my!
one/joy_step_at_a_time: I am sensitive to everything! What I’ve studied on adrenal stress it’s called: sensitive body/sensitive mind. Because these P’s blew our nerves out and we used up too much of our stress hormones for survival. It’s basically what PTSD is about. Many veterans suffer from this also. Body/mind can’t cope without rest/rebuilding. I did hear the sauna was intense! Glad you are doing so well on your protocol. I will go to that website and learn. Yeah, I so relate, I’ve always been active and never a whiner and now I must take care of myself-I MUST, if I am to survive. I just have to remind myself that on a daily basis. I tend to try and give too much, still. My older daughter gets impatient with me taking so long and backing away from her bossiness. She wrote me a long letter telling me she missed going together shopping etc. But, she’s just so overbearing, I must take time to get away from her. I love her, don’t misunderstand me, but my girls are BOSSY! EVERYTHING has to be their way and their time. And I’m just too worn out to put up with their drama any longer.
Hugs to you and Oxy! ♥