So, what happens when you suddenly discover that the person who has been sharing your life is actually a stranger? Worse than that, they turn out to be a person who has deliberately deceived and manipulated you with surgeon-like precision. Wrapping you in a web of deceit — delivered so skillfully and carefully that you’ve welcomed the silken threads as they tighten around you. Freely allowing yourself to be wrapped in the cocoon being made by your soul mate. It’s only once you have morphed in to an emotional mush of confusion and fear that you realize you are trapped. And by then, of course, it’s too late — and your mate is off to the next willing victim.
I know, of course, that so many of you will identify with this experience. After only one week as part of the Lovefraud team, I have been amazed by the responses I have been receiving. I can feel the support that resonates among the community here, and I am delighted to be a part of it. I am not happy, of course, that so many of us are joined together here because we have suffered at the hands of another — but I know that together we can heal… no, I know that we are healing. After all, we’re here aren’t we?
If you’re anything like me, you won’t have come in to contact with the terminology ”˜sociopath’ until it happened to you. For my part, I had never even heard the word. It created an earth-shattering jolt in my consciousness when a dear friend of mine shared her opinion that the man I had called my soul mate was in fact a sociopath.
So for my second post I thought I’d share what happened to me when the truth suddenly dawned on me, because that moment marked the beginning of my healing.
It was nearing midnight on Thursday 9th July 2009. It was a typically warm summer’s night that found me in my bed at home in France, distractedly checking through my emails on the iPhone for the umpteenth time. Anything to try and quieten my mind and bring me back to normality. I was mentally and physically exhausted but my tortured mind and aching soul refused to let me sleep. No matter how much I tried to rationalize the past ten weeks, or how much I attempted to make sense of the situation, I simply couldn’t find any answers. Peace seemed a very distant memory as I continued to search for clues. What had happened? Where had I gone so wrong? What had prompted my beloved husband of 10 years to lie to me for so long? Why did he need to create so many other lives? What had I done to make him stop loving me? How had I missed the signs? What could I have done differently? The questions circled, round and round my head like the mythological embittered Harpies — snatching at my rising fears, cackling at my confusion, their cruel wings fanning the flames of despair that threatened to engulf my soul.
I am a motivational coach and leadership trainer, known for my ability to quickly get to the heart of the issue. I am employed for my skills in reading and understanding people, so how had I been so blind to my husband? We were a team, we worked together, lived together, loved together and had spent nearly every day and night in each other’s company since the day we met — and I loved him totally; heart, body and soul. Only the year before we had celebrated our ten-year anniversary together, and just a few weeks before Christmas we’d spent his 40th birthday together on the beaches of a beautiful Caribbean health spa. Our life together, as I thought, was perfect!
And yet now, here I was, alone with my son in the beautiful French farmhouse we had lovingly restored over the past 6 years, betrayed and deserted by the person I truly believed was my soul mate, left alone to deal with the enormity of the emotional and financial wreckage caused by my husband’s double life. It had all happened so suddenly — the chance email just three months earlier that led me on a trail of discovery to uncover the horrifying truth that I was married to a stranger. Cold, hard, black and white proof that my idyllic life was in fact a total sham — and the equally cold hard fact that my husband had simply vanished out of our lives the second he knew he’d been rumbled, leaving my son and I to deal with the fall-out. Disappeared without a trace just as quickly as he’d arrived in our lives more than ten years earlier.
Around and around the questions turned in my head. The Harpies I had named “Who” “What” “Where” “When” and “How” mocking my stupidity, berating my gullibility, and piercing ever more deeply in to my already broken heart.
And then I saw it. It was an email out of the blue from an old friend Mandy, which naturally pricked my interest. It was a kind and thoughtful message of support, the contents of which seemed harmless — the very same email that had me shaking to the core just a short while later as I explored the following words:
“”¦Interestingly, you may or may not know that I am doing my masters degree in forensic psychology at the moment, and recently have done loads of work on sociopaths. Lets put it this way – he shows all the signs – in retrospect of course! So in fairness, he was highly skilled at fooling everyone. In fact, not just skilled – it was natural to him. Therefore, who would have known? He has no conscience. And before long, he will find another place for himself, and will never feel any remorse, because he doesn’t know how to”¦”
Sociopath was a term I had not come across before and so, after a quick scan for more information on the internet, I discovered that a sociopath is also known as a psychopath. My brows furrowed as disbelief and comprehension entered my head at the same time. So I asked the question out loud to see if it made a difference: “You mean to tell me that my husband is actually a PSYCHOPATH?” Chills ran through my body, my mouth went dry, and the Harpies were suddenly very still and very quiet.
Random images of famous psychopaths came flooding in to my head — Norman Bates from Psycho, Peter Sutcliffe the Yorkshire Ripper, America’s Ted Bundy and Heath Ledger as The Joker — the absurdity of the idea prompting nervous laughter to erupt from deep within me. And then silence again as I truly began to consider the enormity of this new information. The room was still. My mind was quiet. My heart started thumping loudly in my chest. Holding the iPhone in my left hand, and hugging myself with my right arm, I read yet another ”˜checklist’ for sociopathy and realized with absolute clarity that my ex’s behaviours actually ticked each and every one of the boxes — to a tee. I shuddered, forcing myself to breathe, and blinking wildly, hoping that I had somehow misinterpreted the information.
And that was the precise moment when the archetypal psychopath, Dr Hannibal Lecter made his sudden and unwelcome appearance in my mind — crystal clear and standing just a few feet away from me in the corner of my bedroom. Sucking air through his teeth and smacking his lips, he held me hypnotized with his ice-cold beguiling stare, clearly enjoying my confusion as I quietly considered the overwhelming evidence that my estranged husband, the man I had loved with all my heart and soul, was in fact a text-book psychopath.
“But surely I’d know if I was in the company of someone like that?” I reasoned to myself, the dank smell of Hannibal’s cell now beginning to permeate my senses, his chains rattling my imagination. “I’m an executive business coach! I’ve been working in the field of personal development for over 13 years! I’m wise to the ways of different personalities and what makes people tick!” I tried to rationalise, becoming more aware that my bewilderment was arousing the curiosity of my uninvited guest.
I was hooked. And as I read further, uncovering facts, examples of typical traits, and stories from other victims of a sociopathic relationship, I was gradually coming to the horrifying comprehension that my friend’s prognosis was correct. In equal measures of horror and relief, I also began to understand that I was not alone. That there were literally thousands of women with stories just like mine — many of which I found on this very site. Intelligent, professional, and successful women who had willingly succumbed, fallen in love, followed their dreams and been thwarted by the malevolent charms of the skilled and charismatic sociopath.
As we all now know, these people are predominantly men. Charming, witty and attentive — the life and soul of the party. Men who can sweep you off your feet, make you believe that you are the most precious person in the world. Men who let you dare to dream that all your dreams have come true and convince you that you’ve found your true soul mate. Men who make you feel that anything is possible, and encourage you to live life to the full. Men who slowly and deliberately bleed you dry, suck out your soul and leave you for dead, without even a backwards glance — but by the time you realize this, of course, it’s too late. Much too late.
Suddenly I began to see things from a different angle. Suddenly things started to make sense. Dr Lecter faded safely back in to the darkness of my imagination, as I began to replace his image with strangely comforting feelings of relief. Because it was finally dawning on me that the experience I was living, my own personal living nightmare, was not something I could have foretold. So I was not to blame for what had happened — there was nothing more I could have done. In fact, I’d had a lucky escape.
This marked the beginning of my journey towards understanding what had happened to me. How I’d found myself in such a horrific and unimaginable mess. After three long months, April’s hurricane of discovery that had all but broken me in its relentless force to destroy all that I had believed in, gradually started to loosen its grip in light of this new information.
At the same time I also realized, with frightening clarity, that in order to truly comprehend what had happened, to come to terms with how I had come to find myself in such a horrendous situation, I was going to have to embark on a journey of self-discovery. I would need to find out more about what had happened to other people. Understand the true meaning behind the word sociopath, or psychopath. Recognise the traits within myself that allowed me to be the perfect target — dig deeply in to my own psyche and explore my own choices in life. Examine how I’d got here, what I’d believed about myself and others and my own deeply held personal values. And, most importantly, to find my strength and finally to heal.
My years of experience in personal development told me it was not going to be an easy journey. Some of the deeply buried feelings and experiences of my past would need to be re-examined. I would need to dredge through parts of my life I thought I’d already dealt with. Old scars I thought I’d healed would need to be re-opened and treated anew. It would be painful. It would mean re-visiting old chapters of my life. Re-living the hurts of the past in order to truly understand what was going on.
And I would also need to venture in to the depths of this murky world that I was just beginning to discover. I would likely need to stand in the shoes of these soulless people I now knew existed for real, and who live and work among us. Because unless I could comprehend the workings of a sociopath, I would neither be able to heal nor protect myself in the future.
I was alerted to the sounds of Dr Lecter once again shuffling around in the back of my mind, his interest clearly intensified by my growing fear at what lay ahead. And I heard a barely perceptible laugh — or was it a cackle — coming from the darkest corners of my imagination. The unpalatable solution hit me like a steam train, and I understood at that moment that he would need to become an ally in my journey; for who better than the archetypal sociopath, Dr Hannibal Lecter himself to help me understand the twisted workings in the mind of a psychopath?
“If I help you, Melanie, it will be “turns” with us too. Quid pro quo. I tell you things, you tell me things. About yourself. Quid pro quo. Yes or no?”
His perfect and calculated logic slithered towards me, the words and the consequences of what I was about to do sending shivers through my body. I would need to let Hannibal Lecter inside my head if ever I was going to become free. It was the only way to regain my sanity and claim my life back. And, surely, this couldn’t be any worse than the real life experiences I had already survived?
So I nodded my silent agreement and the deal was done. I would allow the specter of Hannibal to steer me as I unravel the past and make sense of my pain. A smug sneer crept across Dr Lecter’s face, as he pulled himself upright and acknowledged my consent “Brave Melanie. You will tell me when those lambs stop screaming, won’t you?”
So this was the beginning of my recovery. I started preparing for my own personal voyage of soul-searching, education, self-questioning and personal discoveries right through to the eventual victory I knew was waiting for me. I’d have to return to the innocence I once knew, and in returning there I knew I’d have to face some ugly and painful memories. I’d have to rearrange them to make sense of what had happened, and to ensure that I would never again be taken in by anyone whose sole intention was to hurt me.
Hannibal fixed me with his steely stare, the rest of his face shrouded in shadows as he slowly wound his fingers around the bars in his cell.
“Clearly this new assignment is not your choice” he hissed “rather I suppose it is a part of the bargain but you accepted it Melanie. Your job is ultimately to craft my doom. So I am not sure how well I should wish you but I’m sure we’ll have a lot of fun. So let’s start at the beginning — tell me everything you know”
With that his image once again faded away, and I felt that I had just made a deal with the devil. But at the same time, I knew that my journey to freedom had begun.
ox dover I am just so shocked by reading this blog. my husband soon to be ex. is a spath. it is funny because I was abused as a child.. and at the age of 14 I didn’t let my dad abuse me anymore I left… I seek help for myself.. I was going to school.. it’s got to the.. point when I went to therapy… there was nothing more bad
for problems to talk about.. I felt wonderful.. then the spath came into my life. and the funny thing was.. I didn’t lol my dad to do it so what makes him so special… up until reading this blog… and doing the tests it was like a brick wall hit me in the face…. I had an answer… knowledge is power… he is the a typical spath.
uggg.looked up what u said I have..how horrible for me…this is a good day… knowledge is power…great a spath..and on top of that.. this condition I think I have..nope have…i must keep reading and reading.. this is just horrible… my whole life I’ve been a victim to something… I’m getting pretty upset I want to be a survivor… it just kills me that spaths,abusers, psychos.get thrills out of this..sick just sick… god for bid on judgement day these people… and it’s sad because the kind person I am will pray for their souls…messed up… and I will pray even harder for the women and men who are subject to there ways and find proper help. and knowledge…
Dear imlivingithelp,
Your dad abusing you as a child “set you up” for what you got from your husband….it happens. We go to therapy and “learn” but we don’t learn about what has happened to us that makes us VULNEARABLE to the next one.
I too was abused by my family or origin, didn’t realize we were not a “nice normal family” but we weren’t we were “secret keepers” and “keep the peace at any price” and I was programmed to think that everyone else’s happiness depended on me. That I had to suckk up the pain so the abuser wouldn’t hurt their knuckles when they hit me…(emotionally at least) so I was vulnerable.
My own son was my spath, then after my husband died, I picked one for a BF….from spath to spath to spath…until I fiinally realized the problem is not them, it is ME. I had to change ME to quit allowing people to use and abuse me.
That’s the sad part, and It was the hardest part as well. But now that I am UN-willing to have anyone treat me badly, because I don’t treat them badly, I have eliminated many of the people in my life. They weren’t all psychopaths, but they were dysfunctional and were all about playing games…taking favors but never repaying them.
I’ve gone NC, total NC with those who are not good, kind, HONEST people…I don’t need the others.
It is scary to do that, to set standards for those that you will be “intimate” with,, that you will allow into your “circle of intimacy” and spend time with. VERY SCARY! Because at first it is difficult to trust anyone. In the past I trusted others UNTIL they did something bad, now, I am careful in giving trust to others, and if they show they are dishonest, I pull back from trusting them. People must EARN trust from me now.
But there ARE good and honest people in this world, people who are worth trusting, and are trust worthy.
I don’t live in terror any more, but I am cautious. Keep on learning and there is a lot to learn, but give yourself time, you have the rest of your life to learn the lessons you need to learn. This is a good place to learn a bunch of it. There are nearly 1,000 articles here to read…start reading them and I suggest for now, just read the articles in the archives….and each o ne that you read will have some tid bit of information you need when you need it. I’ve been here at LF since 2007, and I think I have read all the articles here and I got something out of each one of them. New ones come out nearly every day and there is almost always someone here to be of support if you need it.
So hang in there, I think you are already grasping the concepts you need to work on your own healing. Give yourself time, this isn’t going to be an over night thing. Good things never are done in a moment, they take time, so be patient with yourself.
I am still learning something new every day to apply to my own journey of healing. It is a JOURNEY, not a destination. That was what took me so long I think, when I “got over” the first psychopath, I thought “I’m all healed” but I hadn’t worked on ME so that I wasn’t vulnerable to the next one that came along.
Also, Donna’s book, RED FLAGS OF LOVE FRAUD is a great one to see just how psychopaths lure us in. Not just romantic psychopaths, but any kind, friend or family ones too. Hang on and keep on reading. You are gonna do fine! (((hugs))) and God bless. P.S. praying for their souls isn’t a bad thing to do either, it helps you get the bitterness out of your own heart for the heartless things they have done to you.
ox drover thank u so much for all the info. all day yesterday….all I did was read..read..read.. and the more I read..the more I realized that this abusive spath has screwed my thought of reality up. I broke down and cried for myself for once.. its ashame because im left with the damage..
that prick is off like nothing ever happened.. like he’s the victim.. it’s so funny because when he don’t know what’s going on in every aspect of my life .. he goes psyco.i must get out of this house and walk away.. my poor pets keep me here.. must get new homes for them. I wonder if I walk away will he move back into this house and try to save it.. pets and all. I was so sick yesterday throwing up … this morning a little better.. uggg he said last night that if it is OK to get the rest of his clothes.that HE purposely left here.. I said sure.your house your clothes whatever u want..i stuck everything in a bag. left it by the door. no need to see him. really no need to talk he makes me sick.. what little conrol I have right now is MINE not HIS.. but in time a short one I pray …all conrol will be mine..my life..my own space…my home…my dreams..my..happiness.. I gotta get on the ME wagon..for once in my life..and as far as trust and relationships..im too afraid to trust anything or anyone….in the future…i agree u must urn it…not giving myself up to the next spath I will not repeat this abuse again…if I can help it.. after all this how can someone possibly love again without the thought of this happining again…im damaged goods.. I rather be alone then deal with this crud ever again.. I think my biggest fear was to be alone and Homeless.. at this point I really don’t care I just want me back…i was such a happy live life person ..now im a depressed.cant trust no one person.. because of this spath person.and frankly why the heck should he win my feeling..they are mine.. im putting his crap on the curb.. let him pick it up there..dont wanna see his face..hear his voice… because right now the mind frame im in he better run..im angry and I should be..spath or not I will not back down to this mans crazyness anymore. everything out of his mouth is lies…and not to be trusted. this time if he puts his flippin hands on me I Will HAve HIM locked up..lets see if his spath charm works behind bars… his action are his problem not mine…should of had him locked up from the first hit… my falt in being week..and trusting…and thinking he LOVES me… and things will change… my bologna has a first name it my ex husband spath…lol..
finding this blog was. GOD telling me.and the stories and people on here are blessings… thank you..may everyone who is going though this or has been though this stay strong because we deserve it. we urned it. we are the good.. they are the damaged..how dare they put us in harms way.. mentally, physically, emotionally, and financially…may GOD protect and watch over all of us..
Imlivingithelp, you’re not going to give him the opportunity to ever touch you, again, because you HAVE been reading, learning, and realizing what you’re dealing with.
No Contact means blocking his cell/telephone number from yours, deleting or blocking online profiles (FaceBook), blocking HIS friends’/family cell and telephone numbers from yours, blocking his email address or changing your own, and avoiding the temptation of “checking up” on what he’s doing – does he have a new girlfriend, etc? Who cares? Should I warn her? It won’t make a difference if you tried and it would only make you look like a bitter, raving nut. No Contact also means not allowing people to tell you gossip about him, his family, or anything else about him.
Oh, and I would like to caution you to avoid counting on the legal system to deal with abusive spaths. If you read the archived articles, stories, and remarks/responses, you’ll learn that the Legal System hardly ever “gets it” where sociopathy is concerned. I have sat in Domestic Violence Court, and I can tell you that is was simply a circus. One man who broke into a house where his ex-wife was living, broke down the door to her bedroom, and brandished a hunting knife before running out of the house and slashing all of the tires on her car was fined a whopping $600 and ordered to “stay away from her,” permanently. Really? Six hundred dollars and stay the hell away? Oh, yeah….that’ll scare the piss out of him! NOT.
So……keep reading, contact the http://www.ndvh.org website, look at all resources that are available in your local area, and take your life back from that miserable puke.
Brightest blessings
LIVING IT,
Setting his stuff to the curb so you don’t have to see him is a GREAT IDEA.
Do you have an attorney for the divorce yet? If so, then do not communicate wsith your husband ANY way except through the attorney in writing.
Get the attorney to send him a letter thhat says just that:
Dear Jerkface,
Your wife, the soon to be ex mrs. Jerk face would like too have all communications from you through my office. If you have an attorney, please contact him/her and have them communicate with me on your behalf.
If you will not willingly comply with this reasonable request, a motion for this will be filed with the court as well as a montion for a restraining order against you.
Sincrely,
yOUR ATTACK DOG, eSQ.
If you don’t have an attorney or can’t afford one yet, just write him the letter, keep a copy of it, and send it certified mail, with a return receipt, and ask that he send all communication WRITTEN. If he has a legitimate reason to meet with you, have a CALM COOL FRIEND and a TAPE RECORDER, meet at a restaturant and TAPE the meeting (preferably video tape) EVERY WORD so he can’t recant later what was said, plus you have a witness. And many other people around.
Make sure that you are calm, CALM and don’t talk personal stuff, just “I want a divorce” and details of the divorce, if he starts to get upset, let him, but don’t respond upset yourself, just say “I can see you are upset, John, my friend and I will leave now and give you time to calm down and we can talk again another time when you are in control of your emotions. Then get up and leave.
The thing about NO CONTACT is that it gives you time to calm down, gain strength and to recover some composure.
NO Contact is the best way if it is an option. If you have young children to co-parent that is another story but can be handled.
Hang in there, keep reading and learning, it will get easier as you learn more and the longer you are away from him.
Get the words “I can’t be rude” out of your dictionary….replace them withh I CAN BE FIRM. ((hugs))) and God bless.
haha great letter.. well unfortunately kept kicking it to the curb was not good enough.he came in my bedroom and didn’t give me space and got abusive. I called the cops. in the process when he got abusive he pulled a drawer open it and ripped my legg muscle. I just filed a report abuse with the detectives just got back.. because I wasn’t bloodied I couldn’t get a protection of abuse right away. I have to find a way to get down to get a pfa and thats if they give it to me. he called my son and ask him to ask me to not call the cops because of his doing.. would do anything if I didn’t call the cops..f him im the one limping.. no more I say no more… I just got back from the to police dep. and my daughter call Me and says how dare me……how dAre me….really… what a double whammy…
wow had a long texting conversation with my daughter.how im the bad person for calling the cops..i should of walked away..yea ok…lets get this right..im sick in bed for two day know and im in bed..dwars under bed..doors locked for bedroom..asked for my space.. no entry..he picks the lock takes control pulls my calf mussle.to where I hear a rip. and I should of walked away…what crawl away…lol…ok.. had to straighten that malarkey she was thinking…wow I said well mabye daddy should of walked away…i said dad or no dad no 1 has the right to do that to you… especially if they love u…. and then use your children against you…thAts just messed up….dont u agree…i told her if u cant accept your mother sticking up for herself…i have nothing more to say to u either…and also said,yea thanks for asking how I feel.how are u..are u ok…and I pray u never go though this in your adulthood… but if u ever do ill always be there…
Imlivingithelp, did you go to the emergency room after this attack? If not, I would strongly urge you to either go to the ER or get to a doctor, tomorrow – DOCUMENT THE ABUSE, and file a complaint for an order of protection. You don’t need an attorney to do this, but if you need an attorney, the Court will appoint one for you.
If the abuser still has access to you, get the hell OUT – contact your local domestic violence hotline and get an exit strategy in place. If he doesn’t have access to the house, get that order of protection, as soon as humanly possible.
This guy means to take you out, one way or another – either by his hand, or by proxy.
Brightest protective blessings