Lovefraud recently heard from Janine in Florida. Here is what she wrote:
In May it will be two years since I realized my ex-husband was a sociopath and every day I deal with the psychological nightmare that he has given me. I try so hard not to think about the destruction he has done to me…but every day it is there. Destroyed period.
How can one put this behind them?? Yes I have moved on with my life but every day in my mind what he did to me is there and will be in my brain forever. I have been told to forgive him and I do in a way because I realize how sick he is but it is still there!
Taken, abused, used, destroyed as a woman, as a human being and of course him shoving everything down my throat. Defaming my character, slandering me and doing his best to destroy my life. That is the hardest part, the man I helped the most in my life to live his dreams became my nightmare…I will carry this with me until my dying day.
Sociopaths charm their way into our lives, destroy us, and then leave. They go on their merry ways, and we are left with emotional train wrecks. Anger, shock, betrayal, disbelief, disappointment, sadness, shame, fear, grief, hatred, rage—all adding up to incredible pain. What are we to do with it?
I believe we must allow ourselves to feel it.
Facing the Fire
In 1993, I attended a workshop given by John Lee, author of Facing the Fire: Experiencing and Expressing Anger Appropriately. Lee talks about anger as a physical sensation that gets stuck in the body. Many of us walk around carrying decades of anger—childhood anger at our parents, anger from adolescent taunts, anger from previous husbands or wives. Unless we do something about it, the anger of the past stays there, affecting our present.
Anger builds into rage. Rage builds into numbness.
John Lee’s book offers techniques for dealing with our anger. Many of us try to intellectualize our anger away. This doesn’t work. Anger is a physical emotion that needs to be physically released. The idea is to do it without hurting other people or domestic animals. Lee suggests pounding pillows, twisting towels, stomping on the ground and breaking old cups and saucers into trash cans. We have to keep doing it until we experience a release.
To learn more on these ideas, read an interview with John Lee.
Experiencing the pain
When I finally learned that my ex-husband was a con man, that he had fathered a child with another woman during our marriage, that the $227,000 he took from me was gone, I had extreme anger—and all of those other negative emotions—adding up to incredible pain.
Luckily, I had employed John Lee’s techniques before—I tried them all, and found that punching pillows worked best for me. I also had a therapist who guided me in experiencing my pain. Because that is what needed to happen.
The pain had to come out, and the way to do it was physically. This meant punching pillows until I collapsed. It meant crying—deep, loud wails. It meant telling my ex-husband, emphatically, exactly how I felt—even though he wasn’t there to hear it.
Make no mistake, this is not pretty. It is best done in privacy, or with a skilled therapist. And it takes a long time, because there are layers and layers of pain—you dig one out, and another one surfaces.
But it works. I can honestly say that the pain is gone—not only the pain of the sociopath, but the pain I was carrying around beforehand that enabled me to fall for his lies.
I have recovered. I am happily remarried to a wonderful man. And I am peaceful.
BTW, as far as people who know him, I have only told his mother and 2 friends of his. In the case of his mom, she suspected. In the case of his friends, I think they wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt, but I had VOICE RECORDINGS! They got to listen to Mr. Hyde.
I’m not sure what everyone thinks exactly, but I can tell you that I’m educating as many people as I can. I tell them to read, “Why is it always about you?” and “The sociopath next door”. I also have linked them to Anna Valerious’s blog where she posts a precise yet comprehensive description of what we are up against.
http://narcissists-suck.blogspot.com/2009/03/malignant-narcissism-brief-overview.html
Interesting, I just read Donna’s link to her article and that is exactly what I’ve been doing.
Just wait, be patient and learn because your understanding will continue to grow as you read and read and read. Then, when you are further along in your path of knowledge, it will serve you in your path of healing as well as your ability to communicate the facts to others.
You know what has been the most difficult? talking to cops. They are by far the most stupid people on the planet. I truly believe most of them are narcissists. The job is perfect for a narcissist. They usurp power that isn’t really theirs because they are given authority that they don’t deserve. They don’t have to work very hard at all until they are called into action and then they get exactly what they and all narcissists want: attention, adrenalin, excitement, authority.
Read “People of the Lie” by M. Scott Peck. There is an entire chapter about cops and soldiers. Interestingly, Dr. Peck wrote it in 1984 and predicted the war in Iraq because of narcissism. Read that book, it is really good.
It amazes me how a person who once professed to love you can become such a ruthless, cold-hearted demon once rejected. LOL. I have one ex who I get along with beautifully…then I also have an ex who is a narcissist . OMG! A narcissist will go out of their way to destroy you if you breakup with them. Lover beware 😉 Tigress Luv, the Breakup Guru … http://tigressluv.com
Dear Ember,
Welcome to Lovefraud my dear! NO, you are NOT alone, you are hurt and betrayed, but not alone. There is comfort here and many of us have found that the comfort of knowing that there are people who do understand the pain of a betrayal by a psychopath/sociopath…but you will recover, not over night, but you will recover and you will gain back your trust in humankind and your trust in yourself…but it will be with a new awareness that there ARE evil people out there and you will be attuned to watch for them, to notice the “red flags” and NOT deny them away.
Again welcome to Love FRaud, this is a good place to be. God bless.
Hi brokenember, I dont know if you are new herr. If so welcome! You are not alone, all of us here are hurting. Some of our stories worse than others however all feelings are pretty much the same. Please read as much as you can to understand this evil disorder. Im only a month out but I am seeing a lot more clear than I was at first. hugs….it hurts like hell, I know.
Dear Brokenember ~ you are definitely NOT ALONE.
I’m glad that you found LoveFraud. It is a great place to be to learn about sociopaths, and heal from the damage that they do.
Welcome!
H2H
I am writing this through tears. Today I picked my 5 year-old up from school, and he announced “Papa’s marrying ____, and she’s gonna be my new mom!’ Just like a sociopath – first to use my son to bring me this news (like every other time), and to do this right before Mother’s Day. I explained not very calmly that he only has ONE mother, and that’s ME. He said “But I love her!” Now I know he has enough love in his heart for the whole world and I should not discourage that, but what a dagger to the heart that was. Then he said, “Maybe when you get married you can be my mom!”. Ugh ugh ugh. I have been vigilant with NC… haven’t seen or spoken to him in a year and a half. He got 50/50 custody because I ran out of money to fight him, and he was able to just say “I didn’t do that” to every charge I made, and of course they believed him. In the eyes of the court, I was just a spurned mother who was mad because he cheated on me. The Family Court Evaluator even wrote that I was “codependent” for staying as long as I did if he was as abusive as I claimed. She further claimed that since I made more money than him, that obviously I stayed because I got something out of the relationship. Oh I’m still reeling from that one. I don’t know what to do with these thoughts. I feel sorry for this woman. She is obviously very nice since that’s the only kind he preys on, and inevitably she believes his line that I’m just “crazy” and “poor me having to raise my kid with this lunatic… please help me.” I know it won’t last. The second he moves in (oh yeah – she hasn’t even dealt with that nghtmare) and puts the ring on the finger (I see now why he hasn’t had money to reiburse me for childcare!), he will give her his wonderful “Your money is OUR money” and “You have to give me my freedom to go out while you watch the kid because if you don’t you will be controlling just like my crazy ex”. Over time she will get resentful, but won’t be able to express it because she doesn’t want to be like ME. He did the same thing with his ex-wife in our relationship. I never met her, and I have never met this woman. My question is how do I cope with this? How does someone MARRY a guy with two restraining orders against him and not even bother to get the story from the woman who put them there?? I feel like I should warn her somehow. I REALLY feel like telling her she has no right to call herself a “mother” when all she did was hook up with a con-artist she met on the internet. Do I just ignore all this? How do I talk to my kid about this? Does the ex have ANY right to make my child the messenger for this kind of news? Dear lord I don’t know what I did in life to deserve having to deal with this monster for the rest of my life. I just want him to disappear. Why can’t he take up base-jumping or free climbing or racing motorcycles without a helmet???
Oh my God, free mama Whata knife to the Heart!
Just remember he is a KID ,he doesnt undestand what hes saying. On top of this, his spath Dad probably coached him to say it. How hurtful!”Out of the mouths of babes” alright!
I would just keep on letting him know you are his ONLY Momma. The other lady is NOT his Momma, but a nice friend.As he gets older he will figure it all out, {unless he turns intoa spath like dad, pray it doesnt happen!}
My thoughts and prayers are with you!
Love,
Mama GemXX
freemama -= This is very hard for you. But you know what your x is.. If you half way respect this newmama victim and think she will be good to your kid, I would be thankful for that.. There is no easy solution to your nitemare, dont drag your little one into the drama, I feel sorry for your child and you, but what can you do? I think I would try to respect this newmama victim, she may become the answer to dealing with the x…meantime little kid’s with spath fathers need all the mama’s and love they can get..
This is beautiful, and it feels very healing to me. Thought I would share it with all of you, this morning.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTrR_twYtfM&feature=related
Peace,
Eden