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RESOURCES PERSPECTIVES: Dealing with betrayal bonds

You are here: Home / Recovery from a sociopath / RESOURCES PERSPECTIVES: Dealing with betrayal bonds

October 15, 2011 //  by Lovefraud Reader//  154 Comments

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Editor’s note: Resource Perspectives features articles written by members of Lovefraud’s Professional Resources Guide.

Rebecca Potter works as a licensed mental health counselor in West Palm Beach, Florida. She can be reached at: tlc211@gmail.com.

Surviving betrayal and trauma

By Rebecca Potter

Rebecca Potter profile in the Lovefraud Professional Resources Guide

I recently attended a workshop by Dr. Patrick Carnes, Ph.D., author of The Betrayal Bond. I was shocked by the denial of the psychological community regarding the trauma experienced by survivors of emotional and sexual trauma. I took my worn and used copy of The Betrayal Bond to Dr. Carnes for his signature. He signed my copy and asked, “Why used?”

Dr. Carnes’ work has helped me surface from the web of pain and confusion developed while trying to safely escape an emotionally, verbally, financially abusive husband. When I left, I was further damaged by my exposure to the legal system and Family Court. There was no place that I could go to receive treatment, attorneys took advantage of me, insurance companies lied and hid fraud that they had committed with my former mate. Need Dr. Carnes ask why my copy was used and battered, somewhat like me?

Just get over it and move on

This was the attitude I faced when I tried to find professional legal help. The pain in my body was so real, yet invisible to anyone else. I couldn’t explain the terror that I felt when I had to sit in the same room with my former husband: The intense emotion I felt when he told the courtroom lies and the court believed those lies without evidence. The permission that the Court gave to him, which allowed him to further abuse me and how I was ignored and told, “Just get over it and move on.”

The impact of sexual addiction induced trauma

The field of treatment and intervention for disorders related to compulsive sexual behavior and sexual addiction is a new emerging field. Research has focused on the sexual addict, creating models for diagnosis and treatment, while the partners of sex addicts have been neglected and ignored.

Current clinical treatment models prefer to address the partner of a sex addict as a codependent or co-addict, which basically implies that the partner has their own disease termed: co-addiction or codependency. Codependency is in a category of a process addiction—an addiction to certain mood-altering behaviors, such as a tendency to behave in overly passive or excessively care-taking ways that negatively impact one’s relationships and quality of life. Other process addictions include: gambling, food, shopping, spending and hoarding.

The clinical needs of partners of sexual addicts continue to be ignored, minimized, obscured and gravely misunderstood. Partners actually often experience clinically significant sex addiction induced trauma. These traumatic symptoms are a result from the direct impact of sex addiction:

  • chronic patterns of sexual acting out
  • relational perpetration
  • emotional abuse
  • deception
  • betrayal
  • psychological manipulation

Traditional therapists continue to ignore the symptoms of trauma. These partners often present with symptoms that match rape trauma syndrome and post traumatic stress disorder. Sex addiction-induced trauma is a highly specific type of trauma that involves symptoms of fear and panic of potential disease and contamination, fear of child safety and potential of child molestation, social isolation, embarrassment, shame, guilt and intense relational rupture and attachment injuries.

Neglecting the treatment of trauma and focusing instead on co-addiction and codependency are inadequate and clinically contra-indicated, wrought with moral and ethical challenges. Partners and spouses of sex addicts are a profoundly and clinically traumatized population requiring informed care and ethical treatment.

Recovery

I know, because I experienced similar trauma. Recovery has been a long road. I still experience flashbacks and have adrenal fatigue when my symptoms are triggered. I have started women’s and men’s relationship recovery groups. We meet each week to support each other with the withdrawal of leaving a chaotic relationship and help each other process the deep brain injuries from the exploitation and trauma.

I also suggest that survivors participate in online support groups if they are not able to find a trauma therapist in their area. One online group : www.adultchildrenofalcholics.org. There are phone meetings daily. The websites will list the phone meetings. The pain that you are experiencing is real and must be processed with those who understand trauma.

I look at my marriage as an educational process that I needed to experience to assist others in healing. Yes, my ex will marry others and commit the same abuse. There will be many women and children harmed by his manipulation.

Category: Recovery from a sociopath

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. MoonDancer

    October 16, 2011 at 9:44 pm

    His final words ” You will never meet anybody like me again ” no truer word did he ever speak….

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  2. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 9:49 pm

    i know i am under a lot of pressure – really kicked off by what is going on with mom. today i typed a word completely backwards. so i have moved on from inversion of letters and my new trouble with homonyms to full on dyslexia. the brain is an interesting thing.

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  3. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 9:50 pm

    Hens:
    “You will never meet anybody like me again ”

    I bloody well hope not!

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  4. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 9:55 pm

    Hens, I was on the bus last night and 2 uni students got on. they had painted their bodies a bright blue (don’t ask). one of them had also used blue nail [polish to protect his nails from the dye.

    student 1 said, ‘dude, you didn’t paint your fingernails!? that’s gay!
    student 2 said: ‘Well, tomorrow my nails will be clean and yours will be blue.’
    one joy said to student 1: ‘well, that makes him smart and you stupid.’

    student 1 got very serious, apologized and said it was a joke. and i said, ‘not really.’

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  5. MoonDancer

    October 16, 2011 at 9:58 pm

    lol – smurf’s?

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  6. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 10:01 pm

    no – taller and more educated. and possibly more stupid.

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  7. MoonDancer

    October 16, 2011 at 10:03 pm

    football fanatic’s?

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  8. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 10:06 pm

    yup. 🙂

    but, they do it for frosh also. hate to think what the dye is.

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  9. one/joy_step_at_a_time

    October 16, 2011 at 10:12 pm

    okay – am off home (am in a coffee shop). have my first counseling session at 9 am. then heavy day. i have a big event on Friday – so, it’s going to ‘be a week.’

    i went to see mom last night, but not today. too tired and out of sorts. she is more alert and looks a lot better. she is more lucid – but she is sure she should be nursing the woman in the bed next to her – and she has pulled her IV out again.

    i did manage to get her to take one of her meds after many tries…after she told me: ‘mind your own business.’ earned points with the nursing staff for that one.

    some days i just need to not be around that.

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  10. skylar

    October 16, 2011 at 10:13 pm

    Hens, my exspath said the same thing, almost verbatim.
    “I’m something that, I’m SOMEONE that you will never hope to meet again.”

    He corrected himself from something to someone, but he was trying to tell the truth in the form of a lie.

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