Editor’s note: Resource Perspectives features articles written by members of Lovefraud’s Professional Resources Guide.
Gary Cundiff is a marriage and family therapist based in San Diego, California
Through deception and mirroring, the sociopath exerts control
By Gary Cundiff, MFT
Gary Cundiff profile in the Lovefraud Professional Resources Guide
Having fallen victim to the very thing I had dedicated my life to protecting others from is my reason for writing. To warn others and feasibly aid some. The inevitable harm from interacting with a sociopath is definitive. For some, years have been spent recovering.
I am a mental health professional with years of experience and education, and yet I still was deceived. This encounter came close to ending my career, my life, my friendships and my marriage. However, God has been faithful in his grace, love and protection. The duration of the encounter was less than a year, from first attack to conclusion. Yet even very limited exposure to the pathological can cause serious damage. I hope to relate what I have learned regarding the sociopath’s and Satan’s schemes and to expose their mode of operation.
Why do some and not others fall prey to these predatory beings? My study of psychology led to a belief that sociopathy and other character disorders were developed primarily from childhood abuse and maltreatment. I do not intend to prove or disprove this theory. My intent is to describe my experience with evil, and how it functioned and found access to my life, the damage it did, and the effort it takes to repair.
Five phases
The sociopathic relationship involves five phases: Deception, dread, dependency, degradation, and discard. These steps might not encompass all the complex dynamics in the pathological encounter, but they serve as a basis for the victim.
The sociopath selects a target based on the victim’s best and most admirable qualities, with an explicit intent to exploit. Understanding that it was my best attributes that left me vulnerable helped enormously in the healing process.
If someone should judge you, you will know it. If someone tempts, criticizes or verbally attacks you, you will know it. But if someone deceives you, you will not know it, because the very nature of deception is to conceal. Many myths and stigmas are attached to being victimized, such as weakness, naïvete, mental dullness, or rebellion. These axioms are not, however, consistent with the census.
Targeting the best qualities
My personal experience in client/therapist relationships with hundreds of victims of the pathological encounters, over a course of 25 years, has shown me that the very qualities that made them vulnerable are the very qualities commonly held with the highest regard. The common characteristics of the victims I have known include: trust, compassion, forgiveness and generosity—the very attributes that Satan hates—making them natural targets for the sociopathic predator. People fall victim to the deceiver not because of weakness, but as a result of their strengths. Compassion is not a weakness; it is strength. The desire to love and to be loved is a natural human drive.
Whatever the precursors of victimization, the damage inflicted is the fault and responsibility of the one doing the deceiving and plundering.
Everyone becomes vulnerable at some moment in life, possibly as a result of sustained losses, or some crisis. There are many scenarios that may lead to vulnerability. Sociopaths do not discriminate regarding their prey: young, old, race, gender, rich or poor, with one possible exception—the hard-hearted, who are much less likely to show compassion or trust. There is no universal profile of a typical victim. There is only one distinction: the more sensitive and conscientious the victim is, the higher the probability of success. The abuser is always at fault; no one chooses to be harmed.
Exerting control
Sociopaths know if they can get you to accept a single lie, they then can exert some measure of control over you. No one lies better than the sociopaths. There was nothing about Satan’s approach that caused Eve to be suspicious or be seriously alarmed. His approach seemed innocuous, “Let’s have a conversation. I am spiritual too. I am like you.” Satan seldom comes as a dark angel. He doesn’t show up as a coiled snake. Temptation is never ugly, painful or bloody. He may very well come and say, “Let’s have a religious discussion, let’s talk theology. I know God too.”
Everything about the sociopath invites us in, says join me—the voice tone, smile, hypnotic stare—making them the most dangerous predator of all. All the posturing is done to create a false belief of interest and concern. The more pathological, the more rapid and intense the bonding.
Building the disguise
The disguise begins with studying you: your values, interests, beliefs, vision, goals, concerns, and any other information they can glean. From the trivial to the most significant, all is stored away for future use—testing and noting what pushes your buttons, what moves or excites you. Sociopaths are ardent students of human behavior, having spent much of their lives investigating the difference between themselves and the rest of the population.
Using each piece of information, they create the disguise—a mask carefully constructed to look like their prospective target. Flawlessly, they weave a canvas picture of their mark, a tapestry precisely reflecting the brightest, most honorable aspects of your personality, sewing in the most desirable and wanted details, literally stealing your persona, mirroring this image back, without the defects of character, flaws and shortcomings.
The pathological relationship is a one-dimensional interaction. You fall in love with yourself as presented by this reflecting object. The attraction is irresistible. People are attracted to those who are similar to themselves. By transforming themselves into a reflection of their prospective prey, the sociopath becomes the most alluring figure imaginable, and the propensity to trust that person becomes compelling, promising to meet whatever need or want may exist: friend, advisor, mentor, brother, mother, father. This personification is deception at its most radical level. It is interesting to remember that Eve was deceived before she ever sinned.
Empty shells
Sociopathy is one of the most extreme of the pathological disorders. They are empty shells, possessing nothing of value, no guiding principles, no shame, and no righteous principles. Therefore, this emulation of others for sustained periods of time is effortless: no conflict with their own beliefs or interests. They haven’t any, apart from their ruthless, selfish desire for domination.
This one-dimensional mirroring blurs and confuses the boundaries. You lose touch with where you end and where they should begin, creating an enmeshment that quickly suppresses any sign of personal autonomy. However, it is nothing more than an illusion. You experience a sense of oneness like none other. At the emotional center of this connection is intensity never felt before, making the appeal and apprehension addictive. My sociopath bragged of the capacity to leave people feeling extremely loved, describing her energy as a warm blanket of water flowing around them embracing and holding, while locating deep wounds and hurts for future reference, having a clear awareness of what she was doing.
Behind the mirage
The sociopath uses deliberate and premeditated deception. Since Satan himself appears as an angel of light, is it any less imaginable that his emissaries who serve him would be capable of resembling their master? Imitation is the purest form of flattery and the sociopath is an expert. The effects are intoxicating, like finding an oasis in a dry land—the nurturing and understanding you have longed for. You wish to believe, you succumb, and you give in. What could be more seductive than having all of your best attributes reflected back and praised?
But what exists behind this illusion is a savage, a brute beast, the incubus. They hide behind the mirage, assessing and evaluating your every weakness and strength. The sociopath who possesses the blackest heart may appear to be a person of eminent goodness, but one never bothered by shame, full of greed and deceit.
Jeremiah 6:15 refers to God’s punishment of such people. “They dress the wounds of people as though it were not serious. Peace, peace they say when there is no peace. Are they ashamed of their loathsome conduct? No, they have no shame at all: they do not even know how to blush. So they will fall among the fallen. They will be brought down when I punish them, says the Lord.” This passage is self-explanatory.
Marcy,
I’m so sorry for what you’ve experienced.
My spath also lured me with his amazing mechanical aptitude. But what I didn’t realize is that he was sabotaging my cars so that I would continue to feel dependant on him. On the occasion when I took my car to another mechanic, he would sabotage it worse so that I would think that there were no other people I could count on other than him. It solidified, in my brain, the idea that ONLY he could be trusted to fix my car. Of course, he would only do that when he got around to it.
Marcy, I’m so glad that you posted about this because this strategy is SYMBOLIC of a much larger overall pattern. That pattern is : to create a problem and then supply the solution.
Even those of us who didn’t experience the mechanical sabotage, DID experience this same problem in other forms.
The trauma bond is one form. They get you addicted to their love and sex and then sabotage it by taking it away. They are the only ones who can “fix” the problem.
Creating dependance in any form, whether emotional, financial, drug induced, or whatever, is a spath trick and a HUGE RED FLAG.
Watch for it in your life from many sources, not just from your friendly neighborhood spath.
Marcy:
The more you read on here, the more you will see that there are many who have been through the same types of things you have. It helps so much, especially when you may have never had an actual, face-to-face person who both believes you and really understands what you’ve experienced.
You had so much physical abuse to deal with: pulling hair and suffocation and torn muscles! Oh my goodness! I’m so glad you’re out of that now.
The thing you said about your ex attributing his issues to you is also familiar to me. If he got caught lying, I was the liar. If he was cheating, I was the one cheating. It made no sense, especially when there was absolutely no basis for it but to deflect what he was doing. I started realizing that if I got accused of something out of the blue, it was probably something he was doing.
I think the manipulation of the kids is the hardest of all. My daughter with my ex is 13. In the last year he has started a campaign of manipulation with her and through her. It is very painful to see this baby that I birthed and would give my own life for believing him and working with him against me.
So glad you’re here!
LL:
I’m so glad that something I said helped! One of the amazing things about this site is that there are people in all stages of dealing with these issues. Even if I feel like I need help in a certain area, there may be another area where I’ve had an “aha” moment that helps someone else. It’s a great feeling.
Dear Donna Dixon,
Please excuse my CRS (can’t remember stuff) do you have minor children with him?
If not, then I would totally cut off all contact, NC NO CONTACT, NONE, ZIP, ZERO, ZILCH, which will give You the space you need to heal.
I’m not sure what your situation with the kids is and if you have to co-parent with him, share custody, etc. then you may have to have LIMITED CONTACT with him, but I would limit it….keep communication as much by E mail as you can….”Nice” but “neutral” and do not discuss anything except what you have to do so for the kids.
I have a son that I have to have limited contact with about his grandmother’s estate and his P-brother’s parole (the P son is in prison) but I limit it pretty much to e mail and ONLY those subjects. I have VERY LIMITED contact with my egg donor (mother) because we are both trustees on a trust and at times must communicate about that, otherwise I am NC with her as well. I communicate with her by e mail only, and ONLY about business. I broke that a while back and regretted it very much, I won’t break it again. I also do my best to keep all sources of information ABOUT ME from getting to them. The more they know about me the more ammunition they have. I actually live on the same farm with my mother, but far enough away she cant see my front door. A few years ago I actually left and went into hiding because one of my P son’s friends was stalking me and trying to kill me, and she was enabling him, and she didn’t know I was gone for 3 months until my stalkers went to jail, then I came home and she didn’t know I was home for 3 months. I got home at the first of the year and it was the end of March before she knew I was here. LOL She continues to enable and financially support my P-son who is in prison for murder, so neither of my other sons or I have spoken to her in about 3 years.
NO contact if at all legally possible is generally much more productive of healing than having to associate with Psychopaths, as each new encounter gives them a fresh chance to injure you, or rip a scab off and open an old wound.
I do understand your fear of him turning violent, but at the same time, I KNOW mine is violent, but I refuse to live in TERROR. I refuse to let him dictate my life. I live in caution, but not fear or terror. I am also armed 24/7.
Dear Ox Drover,
My children are in college but that doesn’t stop the ex from dragging them into things!
In the past when I have ignored his calls and emails he has then turned his wrath on them bombarding them with calls and emails. He is like a child ~ just can’t stand to be ignored and constantly throwing fits. His life is incomplete without chaos!
Your advice is great though! Other than just trying to make it easier on my kids and making sure my spousal support arrives on time are the only reasons for having any contact with him at all!
BTW ~ just want to mention how helpful this site is! I feel so fortunate to have stumbled upon it. No one can understand the mind games and manipulation these spaths do to us better than another victim who has survived it!
Dear Donna Dixon,
Well, at some point you and/or your kids will have to decide how much longer you/they are going to let him run your lives….but that is for each of us to decide for ourselves.
Yes, this site has saved my life and at least part of my sanity.
Oh, yep, they do like the drama rama….and when it is first cut off from them some times they go into a tail spin.
Hopefully yours will find another victim and leave you alone. For ones like him, “gray rock”— being boring, very boring, not reacting to anything he does—will sometimes work.
Hi Lousie,
I asked the same question again and again too, and still curiously read the advice given for the same question. He will deceive all the women and play with them all.
I also agree with one of the LF posters, I think it was superkid, that the OW was not trying to be mean or nasty to you. It was a little immature way of showing you how relieved she was when she saw that the jerk cheated one and all.
she actually meant good she did try to warn you at first, but like all of us she also thought he may change for you.
It never happens – as what the posters say here. It may appear as if he and the new woman are in paradise, actually for the new woman, it is actually entering the gates of hell camouflaged as paradise.
stay strong.
Hi to LL, Sky, Oxy, Candy, Katy – thanks so much for bringing me to this stage where I firmly believe I was taken for a ride.
petite
Hi Petite – good to see you.
HI Candy,
how are you. hope you have a nice weekend. check your email.
petite
((((((( Petitie! )))))))
How are you????
LL
Hi LL<
I am doing much better. do not back slide often and have been total NC and gray rock. I think he knows that I have seen him unmasked. and yes, the unmasked face was so so so ugly and evil. one we can never imagine.
getting stronger everyday.
read here nearly everyday even if I do not post often.
sky said you are also doing very well.
I am so happy for you.
petite