Editor’s note: This is the first post by Lovefraud’s newest blog author, Kathleen Hawk. She previously posted many thoughtful comments under the screen name “khatalyst.”
Last year, 2008, was a year in which we faced the cost of sociopathy in our economy. Huge financial firms were destroyed or deeply damaged by their own corporate cultures. Their employees were encouraged to pursue personal gain, without concern about the messes they left behind or the damage they did to other people’s lives. The results are loss and suffering, even for people who had nothing to do with these companies.
It sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Sociopathy taken to a grand scale. But there are people and institutions that didn’t buy into the subprime mortgage debacle. There are people who turned down the opportunity to invest with Bernard Madoff. Likewise, there are people who don’t get involved with sociopaths. They don’t attract them, or if they do, they get rid of them before any damage is done.
This article is about my suggestions for New Years resolutions that will help make us like those people.
About 20 years ago, I was fortunate to attend a week-long training at Brain Technologies, a consulting firm founded by the authors of Strategy of the Dolphin.* This book — written for business managers but also useful for people wanting to better manage their own lives — divides the world into sharks and carps. Both act out their addictions. Sharks are addicted to winning. Carps are addicted to being loved.
There was a third type of character in the “pool.” That was the dolphin. The dolphin learned in action, adapting its behavior to what was required at any given moment. If threatened, it might act like a shark. At more comfortable times, it might act like a carp. One of my favorite dolphin strategies described in the book is “tit for tat.” That is, if a shark takes a bite out of a dolphin, the dolphin takes an equivalent bite out of the shark. Not to escalate the fight, but just let the shark know that it was not dealing with a carp.
You’ll notice the dolphin doesn’t cringe and say, “Please don’t bite me.” It doesn’t pat the shark on the head and say, “You must have had a difficult childhood and you clearly need more love.” It absolutely doesn’t lie down and say, “I can see you’re hungry, and I can spare a part or two.” What it does is communicate in concrete terms that a dolphin lunch is going to be very, very expensive for the shark.
Which brings me to the New Year’s resolutions we might consider to makes ourselves sociopath-proof.
1. Eliminate pity.
This may sound very strange to those of us who were taught that we are responsible to help the less fortunate. But pity is not what we were supposed to learn. Pity is an emotion that places us in a one-up position to someone we view as less than us. It is also dangerously linked to feeling sorry for ourselves. In acting on pity, we get into emotionally tangled situations of entitlement and debt, which leave us feeling unappreciated and resentful.
Empathy and compassion are much more functional and respectful emotions. Empathy is extending ourselves to understand another’s circumstances. (“That must be difficult for you.”) Compassion is extending ourselves to understand how they feel. (“That must be painful for you.”) Both of them can lead to bonding experiences. Neither of them requires us to take action to help. In fact, “dispassionate compassion” is the respectful recognition that other people are following their own paths, which have nothing to do with us. This doesn’t mean that we won’t help, but it keeps things in perspective.
As most people who have been involved with sociopaths know, the ability to elicit pity and then take advantage of our knee-jerk inclination to help is one of their greatest manipulative tools. It can be particularly seductive, because they seem so strong and confident, except for this one little weakness. If we practice offering empathy or compassion without offering to help, we can short-circuit the pity play, and gain control over where we place our helping efforts.
2. Demand reciprocity.
“Demand” doesn’t mean trying to make people do what is unnatural to them. It means making choices to pursue relationships in which reciprocity clearly exists. If we are generous to someone who seems to have an unlimited appetite for our generosity, but little inclination to give back, we cut that person out of our life.
In demanding reciprocity, we become clear about what we’re giving and what we want back. For example, if we are open about our feelings, then we may want the same in return. If we are willing to provide emotional support, we may want that back. If we are providing financial or material support, we may want something material or financial in return for it. (If we’re paying money for emotional support, this is a professional relationship, not a personal one.)
Reciprocity exists in real time. This is not like being good all our life, so that after we die, we go to heaven. This is being good and getting good back. Here and now. People act out of their characters and also out of their real objectives. If the other person’s real objectives don’t include being fair to us right now, then we are in an unfair situation. This is the year we abandon unfairness in our lives.
3. Trust conditionally.
It’s a basic human need to trust and be trusted. Like love, we want it to be perfect and forever. Like love, maintaining trust often takes shared effort, and it can lead to disappointment. Some of us hope that we if treat people as though they were trustworthy, they will rise to the occasion.
As those of us who have been involved with sociopaths know, treating them as though they can be trusted is equivalent to asking a burglar to watch our jewelry box while we make a pot of coffee. What we got back for treating them as though they could be trusted is loss.
But this isn’t just about sociopaths. In day-to-day living, we are continually learning new things about the people we know. Sometimes, we learn good things that make us trust someone more. Sometimes we learn troubling things that make us trust someone less. When we trust them less, it means that we are more guarded in sharing ourselves and our resources. When we trust them more, we are more relaxed.
Diminished trust is not the end of the world. There are ways that we can work with another person to rebuild trust, if that person is worthy of trust. And there are ways to deal with untrustworthy people if we can’t get rid of them, as in a work situation. However it plays out, the important thing is to be honest with ourselves about how trusting we really feel. It has everything to do with our survival and well-being.
4. Value what we have.
Other than pity, the sociopath’s best tool of manipulation is identifying our dissatisfactions with our own lives, magnifying them, and then claiming to have the solution. They set their hooks in the voids in our lives, the lacks that we worry over, dream over.
If we wonder what kind of person is invulnerable to sociopathic wiles, it is the kind who invests time and energy on what he or she has, rather than what’s missing. That doesn’t mean they aren’t working on improvements. But when they look at themselves and their lives, they see something they own, planned and built by they own efforts. It doesn’t mean they never made a mistake, but they survived it and learned from it.
That kind of attitude is fundamentally positive. It looks at what exists in the environment — internal and external — and says “What good thing can I do with this?” How can I use it to make me happier or my life more interesting? What can I do with it to make the world a better place for the people I care about?
For those of us who are still raw from a brutally exploitive relationship, it may be hard to focus on anything but what we’ve lost. We are wounded and we feel pain. But in healing, we learn that pain is one of our valued resources. It motivates us to learn. It can even keep us from learning the wrong thing. For example, deciding to never trust anyone again is a premature learning, and we feel pain whenever we go in that direction. Pain is one of the voices of our inner wisdom. It keeps us from settling for the wrong thing.
5. Self-validate.
In other words, care less about what other people think. Turn within for encouragement, approval, comfort, inspiration and kindness.
Sociopaths have been called “soul killers,” because they separate us from our inner wisdom. First they seduce us with our own dreams, then they cause us to question our ideas and our values, and finally they beat us down with disloyalty and denigration while telling us that we asked for it. The longer and deeper our involvement, the more we lose ourselves in self-questioning and ultimately self-hatred.
If there is one good thing about a relationship with a sociopath, it is the clarification that we are our own primary support. In dealing with someone who is dishonest, undependable, untrustworthy and viciously unkind, most of us discover that we know better. We know that we are not what they think of us. We are not even how we are behaving. There is something in us that knows better. Knows who we really are. Knows how we really want our life to be.
We also discover that no one else — not the sociopath, not our friends, not our advisors —knows us better than we do. It doesn’t mean that we know everything about the world. We still collect information. We still seek role models for things we don’t know how to do yet. We’re not proud or over-impressed with ourselves. We just know rationally that we’re our own best counsel, our only decider of what we think, feel, believe, want and choose to do.
When we learn how to self-validate, it changes our lives. For those of us who hear the denigrating voice of the sociopath in our thoughts, self-validating is a way to bypass it. To say, “Oh, shut up. You’re not me, you’re just a bad memory” while we move on to explore our thoughts and feelings. It takes practice to self-validate. We have to make a decision about wanting to be independent in creating our own lives. We have to train ourselves to find our inner wisdom and push aside anything that gets in the way of hearing it.
This year, 2009, is the year that all of us get better. Better friends with ourselves and others because we’re cultivating compassion and empathy. Better lovers because we’re learning to love out of choice, not need. Better partners of every sort, because we give and demand kindness and respect. Better members of our community because “dispassionate compassion” enables us to select our helpful efforts, rather than feeling forced into them.
Should a sociopath show up, we are learning the best way to be sociopath-proof. That is, to value ourselves and our lives. And to exercise our options — to be a ruthlessly determined shark or a sweetly generous carp — depending on what our circumstances require.
Namaste. The dolphin in me salutes the dolphin in you.
Kathy
* Strategy of the Dolphin, Dudley Lynch and Paul Kordis, 1989. Out of print, but available from sellers at Amazon. More information on additional books and personal assessment tests can be found at Brain Technologies.
I think it was just random, HH. But reading posts by all of you, I see how resilient the human spirit is. We will all get through it.
Hi All, Haven’t posted here in a long time, but just read this article and had to comment. You all have been so instrumental in my journey of healing after having been married to a P for 4 years. My new Years resolution to myself was to trust myself! Period! No questioning, no caring what someone else thought, just trust myself and my intuition and my feelings. So this article was just great! The pendulum may swing far right for awhile, but it will keep me safer. It swung far left most of my life when I trusted everybody, pitied anyone in trouble or need, and didn’t heed any of the red flags I saw, so now it is time for me. Recently I had practice in this. Someone whom I had just met proved to be undependable and then conveniently forgot about a statement he had made. I walked. My feelings were not good from the initial meeting, and when this happened, that cinched it. Once I would have “given the benefit of the doubt” to him, but now I give it to myself. I really don’t care what he or anyone else thought. I simply stated that there was no room in my life for undependable people. I feel good about it. Hopefully someday I can give more of a benefit of a doubt, but not right now. I have had NC with my P for one year now, and it has been the most difficult I have ever lived, but now I am better. Thanks to all of you for your wonderful stories and posts–days when I felt I couldn’t stand your words held me up, gave me comfort that I was not alone and that life would go on. I’ll leave you with something I thought of just the other day. I cannot phrase it exactly as Will Rogers did when he wrote it but it helped me then and now. Will sais something like this: If at first you don’t succeed, pick yourself up, dust yourself off and try again. If the second time you don’t succeed, pick yourself up and try again. But at the third try, give up, there’s no sense being a damn fool about anything. Well I let my P back in far more than three times, thinking it was all me and that I was the one deranged, but to anyone reading this, give it up; if he’s a P, you are being a damn fool to keep trying. It only gets worse and you suffer more for staying. You get so good at making abnormal behavior normal, you forget what normal really is and have to learn it over! Love to all here.
My S has until Wed at 5 pm to reply to our Dv papers !!! 30 days isn’t bad toget away from a S. 🙂 My atty set up the custody as me having SOLE custody of our 4 month old and HE (the S) having to pay for visitation through a service here in town! I am pretty sure that if he doesn’t even respond, the judge will grant this!! Besides the fact that we are praying that he will be in JAIL very soon!!! The world is crashing in on him and he STILL maintains…” I just don’t understand Y you are doing this to me…. I haven’t done anything” LOL!!!!! I do believe this is going to be a good year… even if I loose my car, my house and have to file bankruptcy… I have my son, my health, and the support of family and friends. Yes, LF Family, this is OUR YEAR!!
I LOVE the idea of putting them all on an island… I was acutally thinking of dropping a NUK on them instead of waiting for them to slide back into the ocean. 😉 Can you tell I am in that Strong Retaliation phase of recovery Or maybe it is just that whole RECIPROCITY thing!!! 🙂
Kerisee???? Are you musical???? I know a Keri Sees…
How’s that go?…
The definition of insanity is doing the same things over again and expecting different results?
Well, we did it once and learned.
They on the other hand, will continue to do the same things – lie, cheat, and destroy, and will always get the same results – craziness…poor darlings!
I kind of like the idea that my N is stuck “suffering” through a never ending line of what he calls “psychos” to deal with.
I feel for the victims, but you can’t warn those that don’t yet want to see. All we can do is be there for them when they need us.
Happy New year!
I think it’s going to be a good year too. I can’t explain it, but I do.
I’ve been listening to all the economic news, and my clients are all trying to figure out what it means to them. But all I can think is that a system that’s been broken for a long time has finally shown what’s wrong with it in ways that are totally clear to everyone.
I really hope that Obama gets over this idea that he has to shore up the financial industry (which has shown little indication of changing its values) and give puny little tax breaks to appease the conservatives. I want to see that money going into helping people save their homes, and supporting the real infrastructure of this country, the people through education and healthcare and jobs.
One thing this recovery process has made me believe in is reconstruction. No, that’s not the right word for it. Maybe someone else can come up with it.
I just know that five years ago, I was ashes of who I used to be. My life and my head were so messed up, I couldn’t even try to get back to where I was before the relationship with the sociopath. Too many bridges were burned. Too much was just plain gone. I was reading a description of ML’s book on her website, and I knew exactly how she felt – dazed and despairing.
I just couldn’t see anything else to do but try to rebuild me, more or less from scratch. That sounds strange, or silly, considering that I still had my memories and my house and a lot of other things. But I knew I couldn’t go on as I was. And I didn’t want to go back to the way I used to be, because that woman had attracted, accepted, love that horrible man, and collaborated in her own destruction.
And here I am, five years later. I don’t even look like the same woman. I’ve lost that sappy “love me” expression I used to have. I’ve lost the stiff way I used to walk, as though I was trying too look like I knew what I was doing. I’ve lost the idea that my salvation might be around any corner, and my big job was to talk my way into it. Mostly, I’ve given up the whole idea of being a victim.
And maybe that’s going to happen in our world now too. A gradual evolution past the idea of victimhood, as more and more people start thinking for themselves, turning to themselves for answers because they trust their instincts, their own ethics, their own beliefs. And the whole structure of acquiescence to intolerable circumstances that’s kept us from questioning the most dysfunctional parts of our lives will start to crumble.
There is so much work to do to clean up this mess. We know the critical role of early childhood in shaping human character, and we keep on spending more money building jails than helping parents. We know that poverty creates all kinds of health and psychological issues, and we ignore the social impact of unemployment. We know — or should know — that wars not only psychologically and physically damage the soldiers but create generations of children growing up in war-ravaged families.
The news makes me crazy, because they never discuss the important things, like what’s happening to the people. Where did the people who’s house burned go? What happened to the families of the people caught in a bombing attack? What are the stories of the people who demonstrate on the streets? What happens to the people who go to jail? What are the experiences of people who try alternative health therapies? What’s going on with the people who lost their jobs to factories that moved overseas, and what’s going on overseas with the people who got those jobs? This is the kind of thing I want to know, not what kind of profits are being made, or who got arrested.
I think that our recovery process here on Lovefraud is just one of the many recovery processes that are going on. And that we in the middle of a great change. I don’t know if that’s true, or it only seems like it, because I’m watching us here growing out of humiliation and bitterness into a kind of personal power that’s new to all of us. But I think the presidential election was a message that people were ready to stop acquiescing to polls-driven BS, and support ideas that were compassionate and rational.
I’m ranting. It’s late. I’m still working on a huge project that just doesn’t want to be finished. But I keep checking in here, and reading. These posts give me hope. Hope is a thing that’s been in short supply for a while.
No matter where we are in our recovery – in denial, blaming, anger, vengeful thoughts, depression, reconsidering our roles, cleaning our mental houses, trying out our new muscles — hooray for us all! We’re all getting better. It makes me want to run outside and fix something.
Dear Kathy,
Enthusiasm is contageous just like depression and pessimisim are. Most days I have that enthusiasn, some days it is less enthusiastic, but not the “deep dark depression, excessive miserrrrr-e” La La dum dum da dum (that’s me singing the last line) LOL Yea, I know I am a bad singer, my friends pay me to NOT sing when we go out! (true!!)
Seriously though, we ALL (everyone) need to run our “lives” like we would a business…if something isn’t working and creating a “profit” (read: positive outcome) then we need to change tactics, cut our losses and move on. I’m trying very hard to do that, as well as “educate” myself in what is “good business” and what isn’t.
Your enthusiasm and article here (and your previous posts) have given me great uplifting feelings and I do apprieciate them very much.
I don’t have a great deal of “hope” about the new administration, “throwing money” at problems with little idea of what they will accomplish hasn’t worked before but the government seems to me to be doing that, and there are too many Ps in office as it is, “sucking off the government teat” plus the others who “milk the system” without feeling a need to “produce” something for their livelyhood.
I used to think (when I was a teenager) that Iknew all the problems of the world and how they could be solved. Now I know a few of the problems, but really don’t know how to solve any of them. So, will concentrate on my OWN healing, and take care of the parts that I can take care of, and the rest of the world will continue to go on, it went on before I came and will go on after I am gone—still a lot of the same problems since it started, and as Jesus said “the poor you will have always” so it will never be paradise here, but maybe it will get “better” at least for a while.
Unfortunately, too many people who (like me) don’t know the answers THINK they do, so there will always be mistakes, and if you factor in the Ps and the damage they do (BIG damage like wars and Bernie Madoff’s damage) just giving up the idea that I can “fix” it or even “should” fix it has taken a great weight off my shoulders. LOL
It isn’t all bad, there ARE many good and loving people in this world, and I want to concentrate on being one of them, but also in associating with those people, to the exclusion of the Ps and the other “bad actors.” At least MY life will be better.
((Hugs)))
I have SUCKER ! writen on my Forhead !
I’m still Reading , that we did something to attract the Preditor ?
Yes We Did ! It’s called being Prey ! Not a weekness in your Character from the past , but a NORMAL HUMAN ability to LOVE and Care and Forgive and FEEL !
It is these POWERFULL abilities that attracted the Perditor to US !
Because they don’t and can’t , have and grasp , These Powers!
Moth to the Flame !analogy
Next The Preditor becomes BORD with us or has used us up or destroyed The Flame ! Or is Discoverd!
OH the Sucker is me! If I have something I think share what you have! It always feels good to give! Even if I know the outcome! LOVE JJ
Brilliant and fascinating, Kathy. Include me in ‘everyone.’
So was my Mom an S/P? You know (and hate) her treatment of me. I have forgiven her through consideration and empathy of her painful childhood and her mid-life mental instability. I have spent 35 years in and out of therapy to find and define my sense of self, and to live life on terms other than hers. It has been a long, rewarding journey.
If you agree, what do you see lacking in my recovery, standing in the way of autonomy?
AnnieRie,
I’m going to talk about some of these things in future columns, but your post and Oxy’s reminded me of something.
We need to spend as much time in healing and getting our own houses in order as we need to. Only we know how long it takes (and it usually takes longer than we imagined it would).
But the “exit” from that self-healing preoccupation is when we realize that we can heal ourselves until the cows come home, but we’re not doing anything about the causative factors out in the world that created our problems in the first place.
How we define those causative factors is personal. But when you’re ready to move out of your head and start tinkering with the machinery out there, you go with all the new insightfulness and personal power you developed in your healing phase. You see what you couldn’t see before. You see chinks in the wall that you can exploit in fixing things. You see other people’s emotions and needs, and more easily identify potential allies. You also are less interested in your personal ambitions than you are in getting something done for the greater good. (Not that you don’t have personal ambitions, but they’re shaped by these larger issues that really motivate you to action.)
That’s the future. And you’ll get there when you’re ready.
And one more comment in response to Oxy’s comment about not trusting the P’s in government. There’s a lot of that kind paranoia (well deserved) on this site. And I’d like to respectfully suggest another position to take that might be more comfortable for you, and more useful in effecting change.
Expect things to be working well. Expect people to be honest and committed. Expect the processes to produce the right results.
When things don’t work as they should, be outraged. Complain. Get active about changing things, or light a fire under the people who can.
The problem with assuming that the government is infested with bad actors is that it’s also a form of submission, as though it were an unchangeable given. That’s only true if people don’t fight back, and demand better behavior.
Again, I recommend “The Starfish and the Spider.” If you want to see how people effect major changes, it’s the best book I’ve ever read. Change starts with one person’s vocal outrage about something concrete that isn’t working. And that starts a kind of magical process of attraction, coalescing of kindred spirits and a movement is born. It may be a small movement or a large one. It may exist for only as long as it takes to deal with the issue, or it may go on for generations. But it starts with one person talking about what’s important to him or her in terms of concrete change.
If we can learn to speak up about what we want, we can all be catalysts.
“The problem with assuming that the government is infested with bad actors is that it’s also a form of submission, as though it were an unchangeable given.”
Assuming? Paranoia?
http://www.citizen.org/congress/articles.cfm?ID=17803
I don’t think all those people listed above were elected because they were expected to commit wrongdoing! They were elected because people expected them to do the right thing!
Effectively confronting a problem and making appropriate personal choices to improve things requires an adequate understanding that the problem exists and what is realistically required to clean it up….mainly lots of time and money for prosecutions! We all know about expecting N/S/Ps to behave.