Editor’s note: The following article was written by the Lovefraud reader “Adelade.”
When I was trying to process the facts about my eldest son, I sought counseling therapy. This was on the heels of having been stalked and harassed by a would-be business partner. At that time, I was what is termed today as a “hot mess.” I was attempting to run a commercial art business and was in such a state of hypervigilance and fear-based anxiety that I was unable to function.
The counselor was cursory with my issues and ended my treatment after the insurance-allotted number of sessions. I didn’t feel that I had accomplished any work with her, though she did allow me to rant and rave about my experiences. This was about the same time that I found LoveFraud after typing into the Google search, “my son is a sociopath.” I clicked on the first link that came up and it took me to Donna’s site with a number of responses from OxDrover. Finally, at long last, I was reading common sense about a subject (one of many) that was tearing me apart.
Visiting this site for almost 2 years prepared me for the nastiest discovery of my life and my subsequent divorce. Without the information that I learned on this site, I would not have had the courage, knowledge, and fortitude to end a nearly 13 year marriage to a financial predator.
Violent rage
Immediately after the exspath left the marital home, I sought counseling therapy by calling my local domestic violence hotline. I had attacked the exspath in a violent rage after confronting him with hard proof that he had been engaging in violent and extremely deviant extramarital sexual activities, and was most likely going with his extramarital partner to expensive BDSM event gatherings in Philadelphia.
It was his final denial of what he truly is that sent me into a rage that I had never known possible for myself. “It’s just mind games! Mind games!” was his shrill and frantic explanation of the email that I had discovered, earlier that morning. In those scant seconds, my entire marriage to this individual was brought to a pinpoint of excruciating clarity: the whole marriage had been a series of “mind games.” A curtain of red fell over my eyes, and I lost my mind.
Seeking counseling
The next morning, I contacted my local domestic violence hotline and begged for a list of counselors, nearby. The person who had attacked the exspath was out of character with whom I believed myself to be. I needed to know how and why I had dissolved into a raging animal and how to prevent such an event from ever happening, again.
The intake volunteer was very patient, kind, and calm as I bawled out the events of the previous day. She gave me a list of names, and I called my insurance provider to see if any of the names were on their list of approved service providers. I made an appointment with the first person on the list, and spent the next week in a sort of desperate and tearful waking nightmare it had to be a nightmare and I just wanted someone to wake me up.
Once I began my sessions, I learned a number of new terms that helped me to identify my own personal issues, what the exspath was, and a very safe, secure, and encouraging place to begin my recovery. Without previous exposure to this site and the help of an incredibly astute professional therapist, I honestly believe that I would have ended my own life, especially after I discovered the depths of the financial fraud that the exspath had perpetrated, right beneath my nose.
Uncomfortable questions
Straight away, my counselor began to ask hard and uncomfortable questions specifically, about my childhood experiences. I wanted to lie, I really did. I didn’t want to tell the brutal truths about my childhood, but I knew (intuitively and cognizently) that I would only be lying to myself if I chose not to be brutally truthful and honest. I needed help, and I was not going to find any help unless I spoke truthfully.
Since that fateful day in September of 2011 when I discovered that the exspath had entertained the most disturbing and violent sexual interests imaginable, I’ve been on a journey of recovery. I’ve had many horrific experiences since that time and lost many, many things that I will never recover. But I recovered my “Self,” and there is no price that can be placed upon the value of my soul.
Unprepared
The point of this recollection is that nothing under the sun prepares a human being for the carnages of a sociopathic entanglement. I’ve written this in countless responses, but I feel that this point needs reiteration again, and again, and again, ad infinitum. Human beings are not equipped to process the experiences of a sociopathic entanglements. We simply aren’t.
We are equipped to process and recover from a host of human tragedies and natural disasters, from the loss of an infant to SIDS, to picking through the rubble of our homes in the wake of a Category 3 hurricane. We can point to a physician’s report and tell others, “See that? That’s why my baby passed away in his sleep.” At that point, we will typically experience compassion, sympathy, and understanding from other human beings. We can point to a tree that has crushed our dwelling and say, “See that? That destroyed my home.” We will likely experience an outpouring of support and help from friends and neighbors.  We can point at a police report and say, “See that? This person committed a random act of violence against me and will spend years in prison.” Upon this, we will most likely experience sympathetic outrage and compassion.
No sympathy
When human beings extracate themselves from a sociopathic relationship or environment, what is there that we can point at to explain our spiral into depression, despair, anxiety, fear, and hypervigilance?
I could point at my checkbook and say, “See that? He forged my signature and stole over 75K, outright.” When I used this example as an explanation for what had been done to me, there was no compassion or understanding outside of other people who had experienced their own sociopathic entanglements. I was often met with the response of, “Well, why didn’t you know what he was doing?”  When I explained that I had discovered that my spouse had been living a sexually violent double-life, people would respond with, “Oh, that’s terrible. I’m going to order lunch. Did you want something, too?”
I needed compassion, understanding, and encouragement to help me heal and recover from my experiences, and none of those needs were met by people who were unfamiliar with what sociopaths are, what personality disorders are, or the types of damages that these people wreak upon their target victims.
We are not crazy
Engaging in counseling therapy with a professional that “gets it” about the ravages of sociopathy does not mean, under any circumstance, that we are crazy, insane, or disordered ourselves. Actively seeking the assistance of a trained, knowledgeable, and strong professional counselor means that we are taking control of our destinies we are making an active choice to heal ourselves and not allow the actions of a disordered person to define us for the rest of our lives. We are acknowledging that we do not have all of the answers, that we have lost control of our individual realities, and are courageous enough to seek the help of someone who has the tools and techniques to help us recover.
My counselor helped me to identify specific damage, core-issues, and faulty beliefs that left the door to my soul wide open for any human being to barge through. Some of these people were simply ignorant and toxic, while others were full-blown sociopaths and psychopaths. And, identifying these things led me to realize, accept, and process a number of personal issues that I have the choice to work on, or not, for the rest of my life, to protect myself and to keep reaching for a physical, emotional, and spiritual balance.
Emergence from denial
Strong counseling therapy is not a comfortable endeavor, by any stretch of the imagination. Truths, facts, and acceptance are typically painful and, for some, humiliating, until we can associate the truths and facts with a frame of reference that relieves us of shame, blame, and “unworthiness.” The research, disclosure, and hard work can be grueling and, on occasion, grievous.
But, here’s the upside to all of the discomfort and hard work: emergence from that crysalis of denial and false beliefs into a world of truth, fact, and emotional confidence. I’m no longer fearful that people won’t “like” me if I speak up about inappropriate behaviors, or simply cut toxic people out of my life. I am no longer a needy human being who is so depserate for approval that I will avoid the Tango of Truth. I can call a spade what it is without fear of rejection, dismissal, disapproval, abandonment, or humiliation, because I no longer require another person’s approval, even from my own children. Toxic is out across the boards.
I have a long, long way to go on this journey. Some days, my path is clear and easily trod, and other days, that path is obscured and I trip, stumble, and fall. But, I’m on this path, for good and for all. Without strong counseling therapy, I would not have found the courage to forgive myself for my own foibles and even take the first step on my Healing Path. Without this site and the help of my counselor, I would not have had the courage to shut down a bogus marriage, and realize, recognize, accept and celebrate the fact that I did not deserve what had been done to me, and that I never, ever need to settle for less that what I deserve from anyone.
Powerful choice
Not one of us, regardless of our training or our education, has all of the answers. Recovering from the carnage of a sociopath with the help of a trained and knowledgeable professional counseling therapist is one of the most powerful choices that I ever made during my entire lifetime.
The best way to find a counseling therapist that “gets it” is to contact  thehotline.org for a list of resources in your area. If you are living outside of the U.S., your own locality has a domestic violence hotline. Call the number and ask for a list of counselors. Make an appointment. And, leave the term of “sociopath” outside the door and let the therapist hear, listen, and observe.
Realize that there remains a tiny, flickering spark that the sociopath was unable to smother out of existence that spark will fan back into a brilliant light with courage, reslove, and a willingness to accept. The counselor will assist in processing the truths, facts, and tortured feelings so that boundaries, across the boards, will no longer be something to fear.
There is no shame in telling a car mechanic that you cannot replace the universal joint on your vehicle. Why are we so ashamed to reach out when we do not have the ability to process our experiences, on our own?
I’m grateful, today. More grateful that I’ve felt in a very long time. I still have my moments of fear, doubt, and shame, and those moments are “allowed.” But, I have learned enough to know that my heartbreak, despair, and horrific experiences are not enough to stop Mother Earth from spinning on her axis and that I am a worthy, love-able, and valued piece of the human puzzle. For me, it’s all about becoming an integral and healthy part of this Universe that matters, rather than “what he did to me.”
Adelade, this article is right on target! It has been almost two years since I was blindsided by being discarded by my abuser without a clue of what had happened…except his emails to me about what I had done to “push him away”. Since he had done his job so well, my first thought was to seek help for what he told me was my “borderline personality disorder” and when looking for books on Amazon to figure out how to “fix myself”, I found “Women who Love Psychopaths” and thank God I bought it. This book changed my life. Next I found a therapist who showed me that this was not my fault in any way and she saved my sanity. Between my therapist and Love Fraud, I know I am not alone, and I know none of this was my fault.
I am so grateful for his outrageous and abusive emails, since they pushed me immediately into no contact before I had ever heard of the term. I have never again had contact with him to this day, except through my attorney, despite his efforts to engage me (example: a letter in the mail telling me attorney’s are not necessary since he would never what to hurt or harm me…bwhaaaa!)
This sick abuser stole all he could from me, and he is continuing to try to do so, since we have a significant shared financial asset. He manipulated situations under the guise of “making our dreams come true” to get me to invest most of my money, walk away from my career, and abandon me in a place where I knew no one and had no source of income. I am an educated woman and I had a lot to lose, I had lived my life right and after years with this man thought I had put him through enough hoops to know I could trust him. All I had been in my life prior to him enabled me to find a way to keep going, and while I will never get the money I have lost back, I will (eventually) be financially on my feet again. Emotionally, it will take a much longer time, and I have many days when I think it will never happen.
Since he abandoned me, I have come to see that it was the best thing that could have happened, and I understand intellectually that there was nothing I could have done differently after he had me in his “spell”. His actions and manipulations were classic, he might have read the spath handbook. I see that now, and you are so right that no normal human being can know this is happening to them since it is so inhuman and incomprehensible. I have since found out some of the other things he was doing during our long relationship that resulted in a STD for me (of course I was punished severely for my past and exposing him to this when he clearly gave it to me), women losing their jobs because he used his position to demand sex and relationships from them and him firing them when they refused, and spending my money to wine and dine other women. It seems he has always stayed just this side of the law. The sexual deviancy, after the initial love bombing of the best and most loving sex of my life, makes me so sick to think about that I can’t imagine a time that I will even want to consider letting a man and the opportunity for healthy sex into my life.
Two of the greatest challenges I have are not blaming myself, and the loss of my “friends”. I know none of this is my fault, as my therapist reminds me often, I didn’t know because he didn’t want me to know. As I get farther away from the relationship, more memories come to mind that make me wonder over and over why I didn’t walk away at that this time and that time. I’ve read enough here to know we all go through this.
Every last one of my friends has said something to the effect of “why didn’t you know”? Of course THEY would have known and walked away right off the bat. I know better, but they do not, and it wasn’t healthy for me to continue to hear this, along with why don’t I just get over it. I tried to educate a few (and was accused of moving into Jerry Springer territory) but was told I was only looking for excuses for not accepting my responsibility for what had happened to me, and that I should stop the pity party. At a time when I needed support so desperately, I had to end contact with the ones who didn’t slam the door in my face. Thank God for one woman whose true friendship I ended because the spath demanded it…she came back into my life and I can count on her…she knew what was happening to me but she knew I couldn’t see it.
I’ve read here that many of us stop talking about it to others because they can’t understand and it is so true. That is why the support here is such a blessing. I’ve hesitated to post before this week because I have eyes in the back of my head, and I don’t trust the spath at all.
The education and support here at Love Fraud, along with my therapist, have given me hope and tools to once again be the person I was before this monster targeted me. It has been a very lonely road, and the way I see the world has changed. I miss the old happy me, the girl with light in her eyes and a spring in her step, and one day I hope to look in the mirror and see her again.
Adelade, thank you for this awesome article and for providing the link. I struggle to find a counselor who “gets it.” instead, I am often encouraged to think of positives about my ex… HELLO? Ive went through several well meaning but just dont get it counselors in the past two years. Its so coomon we are blamed. I had one woman who was posing to be a therapist (sick, sick woman) who earned my trust, got the story from me then spun on her heel and told me that I chose to be with him, that I was not a victim, etc. It was really hurtful. I didnt choose to be duped, used, or abused! And ultimately, I left him and the state to get away from his shenanigans and to protect my daughter from the ill effects of exposure to him. So I continue to try random counselors in hopes that they will be the one who “gets it” this time. Your link will hopefully assist me in narrowing my search! I could relate so,much to what u said about standing by your boundaries without the fears of rejection, dismissal, etc. Im not quite without fears yet, but I am learning to enforce these boundaries despite the anxiety I feel in the process. Its all practice right now! But as far as toxic people go, once I identify a toxic person, they are history. I struggle with completely going NC with my toxic parents, but their impact is minimal since it is only a phone relationship and I practice assertiveness skills and boundary setting with them all the time. Ive sort of numbed to their negative/defensive reactions to my taking care of myself and it becomes ever more clear to me how I was raised to be victimized as I listen to their convoluted take on life! Anyway, thank you for this article.
Great article and awesome post above. Sigh……this is the worst nightmare of my life which has been filled with nightmares, most of which have technically been self created. I wish more than anything I could say that I didn’t have any responsibility in this nightmare but I honestly can’t. I did see the red flags right from the get go but instead of running in the opposite direction, I said….. I like the color red! I’m ashamed to say that my own ego and desperate need for the attention and companionship Spath x provided in over abundance made me ripe for the picking. I knew that the fact that he was 46 and living in his mothers BASEMENT, had been married four times, was an alcoholic, called me no less than 10 times the day after I met him……so much more……I knew they were all red flags and I knew what red flags were.
What I didn’t know was that this attention in over abundance was a tactic and a precursor to what would follow. Nightmare.
The link in the article is taking me to some G Mail site. Not sure what the problem is.
Thank you Adelade for this article.
To Lovefraud readers: if any of you have found a counselor, lawyer or other professional who “gets it,” please refer the person to the Lovefraud Professional Resources Guide. I receive so many requests for referrals from all over the country (and the world). I’d love to have more names to offer people.
http://www.lovefraud.com/resourcesguide/Professional_Services_referral.html
Dorothy2, same thing happened when I clicked the link.
Try this link – I believe that the website address has changed: http://www.thehotline.org/
Donna…..I am desperate for a councilor who “gets it” where I live. I tried the recourse link and no luck at all. I don’t know what to do. I might have to do a phone counseling arrangement. Right now I’m seeing a DBT therapist but I’m in no place to even start actual DBT therapy. My gut feeling is that I need to process and expel this before I can start and real personal healing. I’m at a loss. I live in a really remote area, relatively speaking. Not quite the edge of the universe but close.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Dorothy
Truthy……I went through the DVH line a while back. They referred me to my state DV people who referred me to a more local facility who gave me a list of people but it didn’t really pan out. I am seeing someone right now, see above, but it’s just not the right situation…..I know it’s not. I really KNOW I need to speak with someone who gets it. I also KNOW I have multitudes of childhood issues that need addressed. I’ve known that for ever! A silver lining to the Spathcapade has been me seeing my own issues with a clarity like I’ve never had before. Thanks Spathtard.
So…..I’m not sure what to do at this juncture as far as finding someone more appropriate.
Truthy, the link you posted works. Thanks.
Dorothy2, if you haven’t been able to find a strong counselor through the DV hotline, try contacting the local “mental health” hotline and ask, specifically using this terminology, for someone who is an expert in domestic violence and abuse, PSTD, Stockholm Syndrome, and shame-core issues.
I don’t know where you are, but if you were in my former State, I would send you to the counselor that worked with me.
Yes, I would like to see MORE counselors listed on the Professional Resources page.