Editor’s note: Resource Perspectives features articles written by members of Lovefraud’s Professional Resources Guide.
Sarah Strudwick, based in the UK, is author of Dark Souls—Healing and recovering from toxic relationships. She has also created a wonderful animation that describes the antics of a sociopath, called Exposing the Mask of Insanity. View the animation here.
Getting your head out of the washing machine
By Sarah Strudwick
Sarah Strudwick profile in the Lovefraud Professional Resources Guide
I often receive emails from people asking me to talk about different subjects. One recent subject was the mind-bogglingly creative ways in which a sociopath will literally mess with your head. A client came up with the perfect analogy and said she felt like her head had been in a washing machine.
The sociopath will use many different techniques—gaslighting, emotional blackmail, manipulation, creating confusion, lying and creating fear.
Gaslighting, for example, is the type of abuse whereby an abuser uses an increasing frequency of systematically withholding factual information from the victim, and/or providing false information. This has the gradual effect of making victims anxious, confused, and less able to trust their own memory and perception. When it’s done for a long enough period, you will literally start losing your mind and feel like your head has been in a washing machine for most of the time you have been in relationship.
It could come in the form of verbal gaslighting, whereby the sociopath manipulates by lying to control information. They may also do it to keep you off balance psychologically. The classic example of gaslighting is to change things in a person’s environment without their knowledge, and to explain that you “must be imagining things” when you challenge these changes.
Let’s say they wanted you to think you were forgetful. You lose your car keys then they help you find them. Whilst they have been very “helpful” searching for the keys with you, the keys suddenly appear in the ignition of your dashboard. You’re thinking, “I am sure I didn’t put them there.” They say, “Oh silly you, see you are so careless, you need to be more careful otherwise someone could have stolen our car!” The reality is they are the ones that moved them there in the first place.
One very sneaky trick a sociopath I knew used on me was to hack into my hotmail account, not change the password but selectively delete some of the incoming messages so I would see them one minute and the next they were gone.
More tactics
Sociopaths appear to have selective amnesia. They may say things like, “I don’t ever remember saying that I think you have you’re wires crossed,” or “Did I really say that?”
They are experts at creating unpredictability. The victim feels on edge because they never know where they stand and the goalposts are constantly shifting. Victims always remain hyper-vigilant, wondering when the abuser is likely to have an outburst or change of mood. As a result, the victim may start to feel frightened and unsettled.
Other tactics might include keeping the victim unaware of what is going on and what changes are taking place. For example, they may make plans for you and then cancel them, or talk about you behind your back, with the intention of isolating you from others. This type of abuse is done with the intention of keeping the victim in a constant state of anxiety and confusion.
There are a number of other mind blasting techniques that do not fit into any of the other types of verbal abuse categories, such as putting you down, being verbally abusive, using the silent treatment and so on. These tactics can also apply the narcissistic type personality.
The silent treatment is a favourite weapon of both personality types, and is particularly effective because it renders you unable to communicate anything to them. This is the most powerful weapon in their arsenal of sneaky abuse tactics.
Crazymaking comments
Other tactic includes conversations or actions that divert from the original argument or put blame back on the victim, but often they are very ambiguous. These comments are meant to make you feel crazy, confused, off guard and unable to respond. For example:
“I think the fact that you are really angry is stopping you from seeing things clearly. Let’s talk about this another time.”
“That’s the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard. Why would I do such a thing? I wasn’t going to tell you, but only yesterday, I went out and bought you that present you wanted.”
“Look, if you are going to cry every time we have a conversation, how can I answer you? You’re not really in a fit state. Here, have a tissue and let’s talk about something else instead.”
“I really don’t see any point in discussing this further until you have all your facts straight.”
“It’s all your imagination. Isn’t it about time you went back on the antidepressants darling? Here let me make you a cup of tea.”
The mist clears
If you are left feeling confused and crazy by their gaslighting behaviour, their verbal assaults and emotional demands and strange conversations, stop!
This is exactly how they want you to feel. The minute you become aware of what they are doing, and the fact that they are actually manipulating you, sometime miracles happen.
You realise much of what they say and do makes no sense at all. You take yourself out of the washing machine. Your head stops spinning and suddenly the mist clears. You realise you are not crazy, but they are.
After the relationship many victims of sociopaths have literally felt like their head had been in a spin cycle. They are left emotionally, spiritually and financially drained. On an energetic level you have literally been sucked dry and brainwashed until you have no idea what is real or imagined anymore.
My advice is to start writing down what the sociopath says to you and you will soon find yourself wanting to take your head out of the washing machine— hopefully long before the spin dry and they have completely taken you to the cleaners.
Kim,
you HAD to ask? No, it isn’t my ex SPATH. it’s an N. Actually, a couple of N’s, I know are this way.
🙂
I hesitate to post about this because people here are soooo uptight about NC. Truth is, I interact with some toxic people as a way of vaccinating myself against spaths. It helps keep me immune if I watch their behavior with emotional detachment. It’s great practice.
I agree with you, Sky. We don’t ALWAYS have to excercise NC with EVERYONE…it just depends. Sometimes emotional detachment with the slightly toxic, or even moderately toxic goes a long way, and actually indicates that we have found emotional balance within ourselves.
There are some, though that must be NC’d, me thinks.
Hi Guys!
Just popping into say hello.xxx Its been a while!
i wanted to quickly talk about NC and share where I am up to with you all.x Its been around two years now since the Spath and around a year NC with my narc Mother and things are clearer for me than they ever have been before. I am not ‘all better’ and living the life of riley but I look back at the person I was before my relationsht and during my relationshit with the spath and I have changed so much. At the begining of my ‘recovery’ post D&D I desperately wanted to ‘get back’ to me who i ‘used to be’, but I dont now. Life was dismantled and there is no going back but there is going forward and re-building, mindfully, without the things that are poison for me, with me at the controls. I have become far less emotional, far more pragmatic and far more honest and accepting of myself. and rather than morn the dippy romantic fantasist I was and I welcome my growth. its been a scary often lonely road so far but I am getting somewhere.x
I dont think about the Spath as I used to or very often and if I do I see the disgusting whole of him and there is no sense of loss anymore. With my mother I still miss a mother figure but I believe MYSELF about her now where as before there was self doubt.. I see the whole of her too. I lost nothing.
Anyway. I will keep on trucking, enjoying the calm ( that’s the inner variety my son makes the outer variety a fun song and dance!), and focussing on enjoying the days without fear of the past or future.x
Hi blueskies! It’s me… shabbychic! It is wonderful to hear from you!
I am so happy to hear you are feeling better! I am right behind you…
taking one step at a time on the “healing path” we’re all on together.
Thank you for stopping by and giving us an update… it helps to hear
how you are dealing with morphing into a new stronger person. xoxo
blueskies, Hey girl. Long time no see!! I have often thought about you and wondered how you are. It’s nice to hear how balanced and peacful you have become. TOWANDA to you.
Thanks, so much for checking in. I hope you will do it more often.
hi kim, we must have hit the “post” button at exactly the same second!!
Hi chic. You doin” okay?
Hi Kim xxx Hi Chic! Nice to see see you are Super and not Shabby now!!xx I will check in every now and then and always willxx Hope you guys are doing well. I cant thank LF and everyone here enough for the support I have had – which was pretty much 24 7 not so long ago!! Big loves to everyone here. xxxxxxxx
NO CONTACT WITH TOXIC NASTIES ROCKS!xxxxxxxxxxx
Hi kim, I’m hanging in there. I am working full time now,
really needed the medical benefits, but it turns out I don’t
like the job… but grateful I have one! 😀
Hope you are ok, I have read some of your posts and try to
keep up with what’s happening with everyone! xoxo
Hi guys- I’m new to this and new to the world after being involved with a sociopath. Just broke up with what I thought was my soulmat, the love of my life, best friend from high school. He cheated, conned, used, abused — you name it (all of the classic symptoms). My heart is broken and i’m past the disbelief stage, in what i consider to be the grieving stage. I have developed a strong friendship with one of his exes and find strength in the common ground we have walked. So, thought that this might be a good outlet for me because NOBODY that i love seems to understand why I can’t just run as far away from him as possible….