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.
I have a question for everyone. Did any of you feel like you didnt leave because you didnt want to lose? I know we lose if we stay but I always struggled with the “I am not giving so and so the satisfaction…blah blah blah… just curious.
*It’s especially bad when it turns out to be your kids that enjoy the evil done to you and become accomplices. They wouldn’t even be alive and cared for, had it not been for us. This brings serious shudders thru our entire being.
I couldn’t watch the film The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon. About 1/3 thru it, I told my friend; “This isn’t anything..I’ve lived this stuff.” It’s a political sci-fi but much like living and dealing with P’s. Matt is a candidate who gets in a spin control by aliens. Crazy, but kinda Twilight Zone….much like being caught in a P’s psychotic spin.
On a separate note, I was just remembering an incident with the Spath, we were arguing and he managed to take my car keys and phone from me… hours later and by me following the specific instructions on how to apologize blah blah blah… he expalined to me that “he was just looking out for me and that is why he had taken my car keys since he didnt want me to leave upset and get into an accident, he said the took the phone away because in the state of mind I was in I could have call the cops and get him in trouble…duh! — anyhow, he twisted the whole incident and blamed my insanity. He said I should be grateful he was in my life and taking care of me…BS.
Alina, that is what is called “gaslighting” and twisting the truth of he was HOLDING YOU HOSTAGE into “I was protecting” you.
They are good at doing that sort of thing. He wasn’t protecting you, he was protecting you from calling the cops on him! LOL
Yep, standard manipulation right out of the “Psychopath’s play booK”
Alina: regarding not wanting to lose; that’s addressed in the book: Women Who Love Psychopaths. So, yes, some people do feel that way.
Also: My X has done the very same thing to me regarding keys/phone, money. The last five years, I slept with an extra set of keys to both vehicles, keys to the house/PO box key [where I received my mail], bank lock box key [where I had copies of all documents stashed], my wallet with cash I had stashed back, along with my DL, CC’s and phone. I took all this every night-stuffed it all into the bottom of my pillow case and slept on it. ALL times I had cash along with extra keys stuffed down the front of my blouse or in my pockets, so that I had keys and cash on me at all times not visible to him, [NOT in my purse, he could take that-]should I be abandoned or worse. We went to Branson-Silver Dollar City and I had a thousand dollars stuffed in my bra and in my short’s pockets car key/house key, DL and one CC. I never let myself be w/o funds/keys and phone. He might abandon me anyplace or any time. He abandoned my daughter and me at Disney World, once when she was little. Then did the same thing at Branson.
Thanks ladies for responding. I will get the book tomorrow.
Dearest Patti,
I have been thinking of your story all day, and I can’t stop picturing your disgusting husband leaving you at that football game. I realize that that isn’t even close to the “worst” thing he’s done, but somehow that especially irritates me – and makes me want to go after him with a two-by-four! (Speaking of becoming “transient sociopaths” ourselves!)
Really, I just can’t believe that – what an utter PR**K!
Just for the record, it will literally make my week if you come back on here sometime in the near future and say, “Well, guys, I did it – I’m out of there for good!” Yes, Patti – go ahead and win one for the good guys! You really can do this.
Alina:
I could see having that not wanting to lose mentality. Or by leaving you are feeling like you are giving him what he wants.
I totally agree with the deal about the accomplices. Entourage.
I had previously thought that my spath was the only one who was so diabolical that he got accomplices. As it turns out, this is typical. They like an audience to their evil plots, they like someone they can blame, they like distractions so that you don’t notice what they’re doing since everyone else is doing it too.
The sick part about my spath is that he uses cops as his accomplices. This helps him slither away and not get caught. He loves to use people in positions of authority or with money, because it makes him feel powerful that these people are his minions.
There is one thing that spaths are good for: they separate the wheat from the chaff. Those who follow them show their true colors and you can finally identify the waste of humanity in your life.