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.
sky: “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.”
Bingo on that one too! True, true, true!
P’s listen and pretend to be a friend to all people they want to someday use. They woo and win their friendships with all sorts of humanitarian efforts of ‘kindness’. Whatever it takes to get these people to bond and confess things they have done. Then the P’s will ‘cash in’ when need be. The covert understanding will be put forth to the ones they are using…say they had an affair with one [like my X hub did with my older daughter], that silent pressure is there if these people side with you, they run the risk of exposing their own evil deeds. So, the ‘random acts of kindness’ the P has done for these people plus the potential blackmail element keeps these people on the P’s side, should they ever get angry at the P or ‘rebel’ against the power hold. {only reason they would ever side with us, anyway} Nice little black racket, huh?
I tell you something else: they recognize one another instantly! And they LOVE to be around people-that’s why they don’t mind large cities/large community living in close contact etc-solitude is death to them. They have to be in the thick of people to work their ‘magic’ and collect lives like charms on a bracelet. Busy as termites doing about as much damage-only using human lives as their ‘food’. Living out here in my wooded refuge was pure hell to my X. He HATED it! No people to watch, corrupt, puppet, use, destroy. *they usually have their ‘dens’, they crawl back into when the light gets too bright and/or they are tired or suffered narcissistic injury. We are the staff of that ‘den’. We tend, soothe and assure the NP they are always a STAR and perfect as they really think they are. That’s our job/what they broke/groomed us for. If we see thru that and begin to look to break free—all hell will break loose for us. That’s why we must remain quiet when we are plotting our escape.
Alina,
ONE of the big reasons I didn’t leave sooner was that I didn’t want to prove him right. He had spun the definition of me to anyone who would listen to his pity ploy.
When I finally did leave, that was not even in my thoughts anymore. Survival was. I had to leave or die.
My marriage had devolved to subconscious thought, no longer fighting at all for what was right or moral, not standing up for myself, not for dignity, or respect. In the end, I was marked to die and while I didn’t want to live anymore, I had promised my daughter I would not die and leave her alone in the world. In hindsight, when I left, I did it in a very childish immature way, but that’s what I had allowed myself to be reduced to, a ridiculous mess.
Good morning all, and Happy foruth!
Need some support today. I want so bad to expose my ex-spath terrible. Since our split with him in Jan 2011 he continues to work out of town and is enjoying his new spath life with his new 27 year old prey. Remember he is 47 years old This just happens to be the woman whom works as a bartender at the local bar in town where he has been working out of town for the past two years, while I stayed home taking care of his daughter so he did not lose custody of her. I have had no contact with him since our break, but its hard not hearing through the grapevine all the fun he is having with his new prey. Especially, since he is splashing photos of the both of them enjoying all these fun vacations together. You see, nobody knows him where he works out of town, they just know he is guy who brings business to the local town because the company he works for is working in their town bringing business to the small community. IT KILLS ME that he is getting all this positive attention, yet nobody knows who this monster is, and what damage he has done to people’s lifes back home. The worse part about it is he finally flew his daughter up there for a vacation and now he has her involved with this new prey, and I wonder his daughter feels about being around this new prey when the past 5 1/2 years she has been like my little sidekick. Does she think about me? How do spaths never reap what they sow? They just move on and continue to enjoy life, while the victims of their path struggle trying to understand reality. It certainly makes me question if there is truely a God?????? If there is then why does he (ex-spath) EVER lose anything? While all his victims lose everything! Need some serious support today LF friends, because I am really starting to doubt the reap what you sow crap, which makes me want to stop being the kind, compassionate soul cause it gets you NOTHING!
I am starting to believe that he will change especially because he has a much younger woman and it will satisfy his ego to hold tight to his new prey? I am guessing its been atleast 8-9 months with this new one, and I have yet heard any bad crap yet, so maybe this one will work for him. Anyways thanks for letting me vent just having one of those days!
Thanks for any support!
Much love to you all!
Twice Betrayed,
SOME spaths might love cities. Not mine. He didn’t have control there. Control was very important to my husband.
My husband was the prince in our small town. People literally fawning over how wonderful he is. In our small rural area, he is a BIG HUGE ENORMOUS fish. We lived on a ranch outside of town, PERFECT for him b/c he could do things without anyone seeing. The isolation allowed him to control without unforseen outside interference.
Dear Chelsea,
Darling, IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR THEM TO CHANGE.
In order to stop this misery you are putting yourself in (notice Ii said YOU are putting yourself in) you must stop thinking about how WONDERFUL his life is compared to yours.
His life ON THE SURFACE may seem wonderful….cute new young things, blah blah BLAH! But you must also consider that HE DOES NOT HAVE THE CAPACITY TO LOVE, he couldn’t love you, and he CAN’T love her, or his daughter or anything or anyone else.
As for his daughter, well you were a POSITIVE INFLUENCE in her life for 5 1/2 years and that may be the only positive influence this child will ever have in her life….it was NOT WASTED. And I am sure she cares for you, children do love those who were/are kind to them.
Is there a God? I truly believe yes, there is. The Bible promises that people will REAP WHAT THEY SOW…but just like with any SEED that is planted, you don’t IMMEDIATELY REAP what you sowed. I planted tomato seeds back in January and now I am just starting to get a few small ripe ones. It has been 7 months for tomato seeds to start to “reap what I sowed” so TIME is not always instant. I saw a news story the other day about a guy who was arrested and charged for a murder he committed 53 years ago. That’s a long time in human terms for someone to reap what they sowed. Also we may not SEE what the “crop” turns out to be, but I BELIEVE that people do reap what they sow even if we don’t know what the rotten crop turns out to be in the case of the psychopaths.
There is a passage in the Bible that says “ALL things work together for GOOD to those that love the LOrd.” I believe that, and sometimes I have had “bad” things happen to me, that looking back later I saw was a PREPARATION FOR BETTER THINGS TO COME in the future, and if that “bad” thing had not happened, the better thing couldn’t have happened.
So keep your faith, and quit focusing on him, focus on yourself and healing yourself. (((hugs))) and my prayers.
Chelsea,
Yes. Reap what you sow is CRAP. It’s a platitude that other angry people feed you b/c as justifiable as your anger is, revenge is a crappy life plan. Do not rely on such a false promise. It’s just one more false promise that hurts like all the other false promises of an spath life. We may WANT revenge but then what? What revenge would be satisfying enough? How much of humanity would we need to give up to get revenge?
What it comes down to is a choice, happiness or revenge. Hard to see when you are so fresh from being wounded. Your anger is great. You got used by a player. He is scum.
Your mission though, should you accept it, is to take control and create a life for yourself that makes him irrelevent and to never allow anyone into your inner circle ever again that does not honor who you are. Revenge may or may not happen. What matters in this world is not revenge but love. Love yourself enough to make him irrelevent. Then you will realize a kind of revenge after all, b/c he will be NOTHING to you. But you will have attained what truly matters, LOVE….. and that is something he will NEVER truly know.
KatyDid: Yeah, I can see that. I don’t know that mine preferred or loved large cities, but he didn’t mind living in them, which I HATED! Mine loved the challenges of large groups to control and did not like the same people worship. As soon as he conquered, he devalued and was bored with them. On to the next. Keeps him moving constantly.
But, my first PX is content in his college town where he’s a retired professor. He dumped his wife and kids [me and our kids] to get his father’s dream of professorship at this university. He didn’t support his kids or see them, one from birth. He sold his soul for this and he stays right in that town to receive his proper worship, ensuring his nagging soul that he made the right choice of this over his family. He’s in pure hell, booze has eaten his heart/mind and he still clings to this facade, for to leave it would mean reality, which he cannot face.
Chelsea; Ox’s post is so full of truth and wisdom! If the evil can use this false front to sway you from truth and goodness, he’s won. Think about it. Evil already has your X, it’s you he’s after.
[number one to remember about P’s: VERY few things are as they seem/look] –think of them as publicists. Spin, spin, spin.