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.
Horrible advice. All women need time to themselves after a break up and or divorce. Those quick affairs may result in a sociopathic relationship. Seems to me like thats how it usually begins. Mr pick me up is always seeking fresh meat and what better victim than the gal who has been dumped. Yeah right! We should learn how to be alone and enjoy our own company. Sociopaths love rushed relationships and sex.
After reading the article, I sit crying, because it really hit home. I had a few good days. Last night, I heard a song and tears started to roll down my face. “We could have had it all” that is how the lyrics went. But, I know now that we never even came close… because it was all a lie.
I started to date right after my break up with my spath and I actually cried on one of those dates…. how embarassing. I realized that I was not ready. I need to heal, to grieve… to love myself. The relationship with as spath has opened my eyes to how I have let men treat me in the past. I have been used by so many men. My first sexual experience was when I was 17 and a boy that I knew, would not take “no” for an answer. He raped me and I thought it was my fault. I realize now that when that happened and I did not tell anyone, is when I opened myself up to a lifetime of self hatered and allowed other men to mistreat me. I have only confided this with one person, and that was only about 2 months ago.
I realize that I have alot of healing to do.
I can’t remember the last date I was on. It has been several months. I have no plans on going on any date anytime soon. I am concentrating on myself, like it or not…. I realize now that I do need to grieve.. to heal. I am crawling today.
It is almost a month from my last spath siteing, but I can’t help but wonder when will he show up again. Will he show again… is he watching me from a distance… I catch myself looking to see if he is out in front of my house.. is out in the parking lot of the restaurant I own. He knows where I am, pretty much all of the time.
Thanks, Donna for posting this article. It helps to know that I am not going crazy, that a breakup from a sociopath has been the hardest experience of my life…. it also may very well be a life saver for me.
Sadme:
Know that you can recover. Give yourself time, be patient with yourself, allow the wounds – all of them – to heal. You can do it.
farwronged:
Boy, do they ever love rushed relationships. It’s so they can be done with us quickly and move on to the next victim. Always on the prowl.
sadme:
That song by Adele, “Rolling in the Deep” is my anthem. I posted the video to that song on here about a month ago. Funny that I feel the exact same way as you…we could have had it all and then I realize, NO!! There was never anything to have! It wasn’t real even though he made me think it was. Even after he came back into my life again, he made me “feel” like we had such a connection. I know they are sociopaths and I know they are extremely damaged individuals, but sometimes I wonder if it’s because they are empty vessels if they are TRYING to feel something. They can’t feel, but they might be desperately trying and that’s when they TRY to make these connections to us and then we feel like they care about us. But then they realize they are still empty and it’s just not there. So they disappear again and start chasing the next one to see if they will find “it” there in the next one. It’s very, very tragic.
Dear Sadme,
Listen to Donna, you WILL heal but it will TAKE TIME and focusing on YOUR needs….and your healing. Grief is a process, healing is a process and we can’t short circuit it and get the “fast version” cause it does NOT work. The article cited in the above article is BAD ADVICE for anyone I think, but especially for people coming out of a relationship with a psychopath where they have been severely wounded. But I don’t think that it is ever good advice to tell someone to have several SUPERFICIAL sexual relationships. DUH? What was the dummy that wrote that article thinking? Unfortunately too many people seem to think that is the answer….but the longer, harder way of focusing on healing ourselves is the ONLY way to truly heal and recover.
Read READ READ!!!! There are so many wonderful articles here that Donna has collected and/or written….LEARN ABOUT THEM, AND LEARN ABOUT YOURSELF. It is well worth the effort and one day you will not be “sadme” but “glad me!” (((Hugs))) and God bless.
Oxy:
I love that…someday sadme with be gladme!! Cute and oh so true!!!
I’m back on LF, after a “sabbatical” .. I stopped reading LF for awhile, but started again because I found the advice and camaraderie on here therapeutic.
To Ox Drover and your advice to Chelsea:
“if you just don’t talk to his x about him or what he is doing to her and or her daughter. The thing is that you are “renting him space in your head” when you are talking about what he is up to [ ] In a way, when you listen to her stories of him, you are having ’back door contact’”
That advice is not always applicable/good in all situations. I believe there ARE exceptions to that “rule— Had I not finally spoken to my exspath’s FIRST wife (he had two failed marriages, before I lived with him), who told me that he had had sex with TWO of her GAY male friends, while either married or living with her, she would not have CONFIRMED my own experience, to give me more closure, about what I, too found out.
To Chelsea:
You wrote, “he took a job out of town so he needed me to care for his daughter. I did everything for her and he went forward and prospered in his career while I gave up mine to raise his daughter. In the end, while I was doing everything for him he was out of time screwing around with other woman while I stayed home raising his daughter [ ] “not only do I have to try and rebuild my life from everything I lost being with him, I also have to suffer the loss of losing my step-daughter who I have raised for almost 6 years now. I am basically grieving losing a daughter too”
I can empathize with you, totally. My ex SPATH’s daughter spent every other weekend, practically, with us, for almost a decade, so, I was (according to many step parenting books), her “stepmother”, even though we never married and were in a more or less “common law” marriage. He bolted after she was no longer a minor.
I can understand your deep grief. More so because I had difficulty having children of my own (I wanted them) before the SPATH usurped my life for all those years. He KNEW my vulnerability, and KNEW I was willing to be a mother. What is worse, all those years of his daughter and I having long/deep talks (like when someone at her school tried to beat her up and other things), ”all those years of us hugging/sharing, all those photos of happy smiles on her face while at my home.., all those presents we exchanged.., me helping her curl/do her hair for a high school dance—”all those good memories now seem corrupted, because, I do not think he prepared her for the fact he was going to leave me. I just never saw her again. I did right her a letter, wishing her good luck with her life, expressing hopes that she would go to college and succeed, but I also thought that she was old enough to hear about her father’s porn/sex addiction. I included in it that he had a “stash” of porn that he kept behind books, in our book shelves. I told her about his bi-curious proclivities (really, I think he has a CONFUSED sexual identity! And he had a serial sickness for going after MARRIED women while he was in consecutive, supposedly “committed” relationships with women, living with each, consecutively.) You know what she did? She wrote me a HATE letter back..the LAST thing I expected from her. She wrote that she thought his being “bi” was “normal” (to me it wasn’t..not after he told me that he had had oral sex with his gay male cousin when he was age 12 and his cousin was 15..that to me, is INCEST!) She wrote that I was a “worthless piece of skin” .. Obviously, he had poisoned her mind to me, finally, after I had helped pay for the roof over her head, all those years of weekends.
Yep. I can verily empathize with you. And if Donna knows if or not you live in my area/state, I encourage her to share my e-mail addy with you, as we could form a support group, if so. I think that would help, since our issues are similar, in many respects.
Zim
So true it happened to me I thought the second one was helping me through a loss and a good person. I was fooled by someone just as bad in a different way. It has been 7 years from the first one’s suicide, I am just feeling better from that. The second one was a conman I am still not healed from that two plus years now.
I am with a good man now for eight months he is so much different from the p’s he helps me and is for nothing but doing good for my daughter and I. He helped me redo my one homes that was destroyed from renters,all for no money. He tells me anything for you, God has brought me a good man thank you.
May I ask are there any suggestions on what I can do about my confidence problem,I am much better than before.I am still struggling with this and it really eats me up sometimes.
Zim:
That is soooo sad. You gave your heart and life to that girl and she turned on you. Ooooh, it makes me so mad. But I guess it’s not really her fault that she was poisoned against you. So sorry you had to endure that. Hugs to you.