As I work with partners and other victims of sociopaths, I see regularly the persistence of certain myths about these destructive individuals.
These myths can retard the process by which partners fully recognize the sociopath for who he is. They can protect him by supporting his “mask” or, at the very least, supporting the “rationalizations” his partners and victims sometimes use to “cut him the slack” he surely doesn’t deserve.
For instance, commonly I hear the position, “Well, he’s not always like this. He doesn’t always act like this.” This supports the notion that sociopaths are continuously flaunting their disorder. But this just isn’t the case.
To begin with, we know that many sociopaths are very skilled at “masking” their particular psychopathology. So it’s perfectly “normal” for them to appear, well, generally “normal.” Yet I can’t tell you how many people I work with who want desperately to see the sociopath’s seeming capacity to behave normally as “contra-indicative” of his sociopathy.
But let’s remember that even hardcore alcoholics aren’t drinking 24/7. The worst domestic abusers aren’t abusing 24/7. There are few individuals who are making 24/7 blatant displays of their psychopathology. Everyone goes “underground” for periods of time with the more florid symptoms of their disturbances, during which it’s tempting to wish, to believe, that perhaps the “underground individual” is the “real individual.”
And so the sociopath will not continually be making a display of his personality disturbance. He is more likely to “expose” himself from time to time, if not regularly. Finally, it is much more the capacity, than frequency, with which he can be so baldly, blithely transgressive of others’ boundaries that characterizes the essence of his disorder. In a word, he will not always be “acting sociopathic.”
There is also the somewhat persisting notion that sociopaths are violent, whereas many aren’t. True, they are always “violent” insofar as, inevitably, they will violate others’ dignity, but many sociopaths aren’t physically violent, and others aren’t even necessarily blatantly emotionally abusive.
Many sociopaths are just inherently dishonest, deceptive individuals who can lie through their teeth without compunction as they scheme to take what they want from others. I’ve discussed this before—the essence of the sociopath’s orientation as lying in the bizarre, creepy comfort he feels taking what he wants from others, however unentitled he is to it, and with shocking heedlessness of the damage his “taking” will cause those whom he’s transgressing.
So don’t be fooled, necessarily, by the absence of blatant displays of violence, or even conventional exhibitions of emotional abusiveness, although sociopaths are often highly prone to exhibiting these and other forms of abuse. But not all do, and certainly not all the time, facts which in no way disqualify their sociopathy.
I sometimes see still, and quite often, an individual’s difficulty reconciling her partner’s high intellectual capacity with his sociopathy. Although it’s a fallacy that most sociopaths are especially bright, or brighter than non-sociopaths, yet many find it almost inconceivable that their “bright,” even intellectually “brilliant” partners can, in fact, be truly sociopathic.
Yet we know that sociopathy isn’t an “intellectual disorder.”
We know, in fact, that to be a diagnosed sociopath the intellect must really be somewhat established, for we would suspect that an intellectually deficient individual might plausibly explain his antisocial behaviors on his intellectual deficiencies. Sociopaths, then, must be intellectually sound to be considered sociopaths.
Yet the prevailing myth goes something like this: if one is intelligent, as the sociopath may be, then he ought to be intelligent enough to realize that his sociopathy is outrageous and unacceptable; and thus, rationally speaking, he should want (and be willing) to retire his sociopathic shenanigans.
The danger here, which I see often, is that partners of sociopaths hold to the prayer that, in the end, their partners will, in fact, be “smart” enough to see how “stupidly” and destructively they are acting. Their intellects, the non-sociopathic partner desperately hopes, will (and should) eventually supercede their sociopathy. Not going to happen. Ever.
I see another prevailing myth that takes the form of this ongoing bafflement and protest from the sociopath’s partner: “It makes no sense. His behavior makes no sense. He can be so delightful and reasonable one day, and then there’s this ”˜other side’ to him.”
The idea here relates to the first myth: if he can be normal sometimes, he should be capable of being “normal” all the time. But it’s the “it makes no sense” reaction that dangerously keeps so many partners tethered to their sociopathic partners.
Because it really does “make sense;” it just doesn’t “make the sense” you want it to make. It makes sense because this is what sociopaths are. This is what they do. This is how they act. This is how they think. You want to believe otherwise. You want their aberrant behaviors and attitudes explained in such a way that it would “make so much sense” that YOU could personally relate to it.
But it will NEVER “make sense” on this level. You are not a sociopath. And so it will never “make sense” on the level you want it to. But you must stop insisting it make sense on this level, or you risk using this as a rationalization to stay with the sociopath until it “makes sense.”
I stress: everything your sociopathic partner does makes absolute sense, but only when you are willing to recognize he’s a sociopath.
It only fails to “make sense” when you fight what he is, when you resist calling him what he is—a sociopath.
More to come soon on this, and other, subjects.
(This article is copyrighted © 2012 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is strictly for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the attitudes and behaviors discussed.)
Hi Steve,
I appreciate your article. However… I’m sure everyone on here knows what I’m going to say before I say it.
I really would appreciate it if you would stop exclusively using the male gender when you’re referring to sociopaths, psychopaths, and other disordered individuals. Your disclaimer:
is at the end of the fine print. Only geeks like me ever get to it I’m sure.
That means that you are contributing to the erroneous, and needlessly divisive, belief that psychopathy and sociopathy are largely male disorders. Many stories here prove that nothing could be further from the truth. However, writing this way – and I read many blogs from survivors that are similarly written – empowers disordered people on both sides of the gendered divide. It improperly models to women that they can talk about ‘men’, or ‘all males’ casually as if they’re all budding sociopaths. And the online conversations that result have the effect of discouraging men, and women who’ve been victimized primarily by women, from speaking up because they have to battle this perception before they can ever wade in to talk about their own experiences. The one-sided ‘conversation’, and sometimes rants, that result provide fuel to the male bigots against women, and appear to prove their diatribes and assertions that it’s ALL women, not just disordered women, who are like that.
So really, would it hurt to throw in the odd “she” when describing the disordered person once in a while? It’s not so hard to do, and you have lots of options available: “she” alternating with “he”; “he or she”; “she or he”; s/he. See? Not so hard.
IMO, one of the biggest prevailing myths about sociopaths we need to refute is that they’re exclusively, or even predominately, men.
Steve,
what an absolutely right on article.
What you said, may seem like it is obvious from a clinical standpoint, but when you are in a relationshit with the spaths, your cog/dis kicks in and its difficult to stay with the idea that this person does not have the same wiring that you do. So it is really important to keep reminding ourselves.
Annie is right, about the gender reference, although I’m guilty of the same thing you did. Just goes to show that it takes enormous mental discipline to even discuss them.
Steve this is one of THE BEST articles you or anyone else has written here on LoveFraud….those MYTHS persist.
I laugh sometimes when I think of TED BUNDY and how CHARMING he was–well, when he was not torturing, raping and killing women that is.
Look at another more recent man Ii would consider totally a psychopath–Jerry Sandusky. Look at all the GOOD and KIND things he did for kids…yea so he could get close to the chosen few he raped. Yea, Old Jerry is a GREAT GUY. I am glad that he got what will amount to a “life sentence” for him. I feel very sorry for his wife and his family as well as his victims.
There are those like my son Patrick who are “super intelligent” and have IQs up there in the 99th percentile, yet they have NO conscience and really I think in the case of some of them like Patrick, they are SO narcissistic that they can’t maintain a mask for long enough to stay out of prison for long. Prison is where they need to be because they ARE violent.
It is NOT a myth that psychopaths spoil the lives of those closest to them…as well as others. When Patrick murdered that young woman, he destroyed her family, and he destroyed his own family.
Debunking the MYTHS about sociopaths, psychopaths, Anti-social personality disorder, etc whatever you want to call the SYNDROME is difficult. Partly because I think the experts can’t agree on what to call it!~ How can the lay person “get it” when the professionals can’t agree?
Yea, they can be Mr/s Nice Person when they want to be, and think it is to their advantage, but they are willing to stab you in the back if you get in their way…either figuratively or literally.
GREAT ARTICLE steve and Hope to see more from you. I don’t think you can exhaust this subject of the “myths.”
I wanted to ask about the passive-aggressive person. Is passive-aggression typical of psychopaths or are they more inclined to be active (as opposed to passive) because that is how they get their kicks? Aggression is a form a violence.
How often is passive-aggressive behavior linked with psychopaths? Would it be even be considered? In other words, if I walked in describing a lot of passive-aggressive behavior on the part of someone, how likely would the possibility of a psychopath be considered?
I liked your point that abusers do not abuse 24/7, drunks don’t drink 24/7 etc. That is something that Al-Anon emphasizes, i.e., that the alcoholic is nice some of the time and is not drunk all of the time either. You can even be an alcoholic without ingesting alcoholic (dry drunk.) You cannot point to separate things if you want to recover; you need to take the complete picture into consideration.
Regarding Annie’s comments about gender, Hare and Babiak discuss in “Snakes in Suits” how females psychopaths exploit the gender expectations/assumptions of females to do their deeds.
I agree that work is needed to expose that females are just as capable of being psychopaths as males (I have two of them in my family of origin.)
I bristle over statements like, “What mother DOESN’T love her child?” (have you got a couple of days) and “We’re sisters!” just because you both happen to be females. Isn’t that the same sort of thing as declaring somebody your soul mate because you’re both of the opposite sex?
There are so many shows on cable these days about women insulting women, screaming and swearing at them, plotting revenge etc. How many of these are psychopaths? (For the record, I can’t stand these shows. They are so demeaning to females.)
Male Ps are often portrayed as going after females, unless it is something to do with business when people can accept that there are male Ps destroying careers and siphoning off money. That always strikes me as more gender-neutral as opposed to male Ps going after males.
In other words, pretty much Ps are typically portrayed as heterosexual males going after heterosexual females and nothing could be further from the truth. It is a myth that needs to be exposed for the lie that it is and removed from the public’s mind.
The sexual stereotypes do nobody any favors.
Women, after all, are expected to be all loving, forgiving, and keeping the family together, right?
Homosexuals of either sex can do to their partners or family members everything that heterosexual Ps can do to theirs.
In certain quarters, women are not only expected to be nice and compliant, that is considered an ideal. So who is going to deduce that there are female Ps who will take what they want because they feel entitled to it despite how unentitled they may be to whatever?
Speaking of Ps in both genders and providing examples of what the respective genders can do as Ps would help in getting rid of the predominant myths.
I don’t see using only the male gender as a thing of convenience. It isn’t a he-she thing. Those monsters come in both sexes and will adapt to our expectations of normal, nice behavior to ruin us.
Just some food for thought.
Steve, thank you for this outstanding article.
Are the myths simply embedded beliefs? I was raised to believe in the “goodness of humanity” and that everyone deserves the “benefit of the doubt.” I also was raised with an extremely pronounced shame-core, so my interpretation of those beliefs were always very skewed.
But, I wonder why it’s such a challenge for most of us to process the fact that spaths are devoid of conscience or remorse. I mean, it’s a fact. But, the fact is overridden by my erroneous beliefs….
At any rate, thank you very, very much for this oustanding article.
Brightest blessings
As an aside, whether it’s “HE,’ “SHE,” or “IT,” it all applies. Only the methods are altered by gender, NOT the pathology.
Dear Steve
Thank you for this article. I believe you are RIGHT ON.
I had another encounter with my spath. He mentioned a number of things that I know were true – news in the world, things I know he was doing in his free time, various facts – and then he threw in another comment that was based on his emotion. The comment could have been interpreted any which way. Which was exactly the point.
When you do pilates or yoga you’re taught to strengthen your CORE, so when you lean this way, or do that, you have a strong foundation from which to bend and move.
The SPATH, by comparison, has no emotional core. So whatever he says is based on where the wind is blowing at any particular moment. To the left, to the right, whatever.
it blows in the wind.
If you try to understand it, the only think you CAN understand is that IT IS A LIE because HE IS A LIE.
Athena
This has been one of the most revealing articles from my point of view which I have read here. I was in a relationship with a spath (didn’t know anything about this personality type until I found this site about a year ago and what a revelation and relief it was). Everything in your observations I can personally relate to. My spath was very kind, never abusive, highly intelligent, looked after me in every way. He was quite controlling in a very subtle way and I found myself doing and agreeing to things which I would never have believed possible. He was very stable for about 6 years and then it all kicked off when one of his ‘lady friends’ turned up unannounced. He just sat there and let it all unravel without a word. Next day it was as if nothing had happened and I asked him to leave. From then on he was like a different person. When I was with him he spent time in prison for a large financial fraud which he assured me was really down to his business partner – this all happened before I met him. I believed him, I had no cause not to. Latterly I found an article on the internet about a man who had invested all his life savings in one of his schemes, and having lost all his money this poor man committed suicide. When I confronted him with this information he just shrugged his shoulders and never made a comment. I was shocked to say the least. He used to tell me he was highly strung like his mother and at an early age had made an effort to change this personality trait. I used to tell him latterly if he had enough self awareness to do this surely he could change other less pleasant aspects of his personality. He did not. Everyone liked him. He is very genial and plausible. Money is his driving force. I could not reconcile any aspects of his personality and behaviour just as you described. He has two sons whom he does not know and I kept telling him he should maintain contact and he always refused, saying they would be better off without him. This I now understand, although I could not at the time, and I think it confirms he knows exactly what he is. When we split I was so devastated I started keeping notebooks. On reading these now the recurring words are soul mates, no empathy, liar, cheat, alien, deceit and the like. Now I know what he is about I feel much better and that it was nothing to do with me. He will be whatever he needs to be as a means to an end. He owes me vast amounts of money which I will never see. Life with him certainly was an adventure. I do not feel sorry for him but do pity him. I think one day he will probably be murdered by a lover, a brother, a husband or a father. I have given up trying to explain to others what he is like – they would not believe me. But neither would I if someone had told me when I met him, Thank you for your article.
Hi Jinty I don’t know if you are new here on LF or what, but yeah, it sounds like you met a spath. I am sorry for what brought you here.
My experience is somewhat similar – my spath has a very polite demeanor and a professional approach – excellent grammar – he’s a polished banker – and is evil as all can be. He too knew he was a sociopath, and said, like yours did, that he fears being near his children, that they’re better off without him.
It took me a long time to really grasp it – connecting dots, finding this site, connecting more dots. No empathy, a liar, constant deceit.
I have not found any friend or relative who GETS what I am talking about except for my friends here on Lovefraud.
I did find that my neighbor “liked” LF on Facebook, and it turns out her ex-husband was a spath. But finding people who really get it are few and far between.
Hugs.
I am having a particularly hard day – my spath came back and now I am grieving again – not so much grieving that he’s gone, as grieving that he is what he is. So sad.
Athena
So weird. Mine also said his family would be better off without him. They know.
Louise, I dont think they “know” that they’re sociopaths. They just “know” that other human beings are disposable and that they are entitled. Such a statement as someone’s “family would be better off without” him was a PITY ploy. It’s spathspeak for, “Isn’t that sad?! Don’t you want to make ME feel as if I’m worthwhile?”
I’m very sensitive to the pity ploys, now. A lot of verbage that doesn’t “make sense” is a red flag, but when someone has a sob story, I respond with, “Aw, that’s so sad,” and watch to see if they take that “pity” and run with it.
I have put OxD’s observation into a personal mandate: watch people in their “natural” environment. Watch and listen. I don’t say much, anymore, outside of “shooting the breeze” with customers. But, I keep it quiet and observe.
Brightest blessings