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.
Kathleen Hawk: I hear you! The majority of the people who helped in destroying my career were helped by me over and over again throughout the years. Instead of them changing their situations for the better, they actually use the “poor, poor, pitiful me” routine to manipulate others.
I’ve learned over the years, I will open my mouth to you at least twice, if you don’t decide to take the advise, you never will. Twice … because I am giving the person the benefit of the doubt that they didn’t hear me the first time.
Besides, most people know what to do, they’re too lazy and choose not to. It’s sad and it’s sick, but they are comfortable with their miserable lives … so much, that they want everyone to join them in the mire than being courageous to change their lives for the better.
It was actually said where I worked, get rid of Wini and we get rid of the problem of all the others complaining about her. Get rid of me because I functioned and the ones who complained … had lives that long ago spun out of control by cheating on their spouses, abusing their children, doing drugs, drinking to excess, splitting up their families, playing their children as pawns, bancruptcies, selling drugs, spousal abuse, not coming into the office yet lying on their time sheets and getting paid, not doing work by sitting in the bars all day (this is called going to a meeting). I can go on and on and on, but you get the point.
Peace.
Wini,
You seem to have eliminated all those people with all those problems from your life. Great! Must have left a very big void. What have you filled it with? Hopefully not with the same. There seems to be a small window of opportunity to make a good choices with all that space to fill. We are so relieved to to have it, but feel empty and too quickly fill the void with the very same. Just because it is familiar.
Mysticmud: I don’t know if you ever read Tolle’s book “A New Earth”! A must read for everyone. Tolle explains the human condition of the EGO. Everyone has one, it’s just on a scale from 1-10, 10 being the highest of having the biggest EGO, where do the people in your life (work, family, friends, etc.) fit on this scale?
I found the way he describes the EGO, very enlightening. I also enjoyed how he explains to silence your mind, go in to the “now” this minute, right now is all you have. It was the best book for helping you heal … from any pain in your life.
Oprah.com has his 10 tapes on line for FREE. You can log on to her site, give yourself a password and either download the tapes for your headphones or listen to them on line. Incredible, incredible, incredible.
I learned that if someone can’t give you their ear to hear what you have to say, they are stuck in one gear … themselves! Some day they will learn … but do you (or any of us) have the time to wait a life time for them to finally take that one step forward for themselves. I wished we all had a magic wand that we could wave over folks to help them heal themselves, but as we all know so well from this site, one …. you have to admit you have a problem first … then make a conscious decision to change yourself, three … then know it takes conscious work to go through the pain and heal.
No quick fixes for anyone.
Peace. Hang in with us on this site, we all help each other get through the pain to be the best that we can be.
Lamp Unto My Feet: Fill the void of dysfunctional people? No thank you. I’ve had enough!
My co-workers always caused me pain … for over 24 years the majority of it was pain, pain, pain, while their out of control lives didn’t make them blink. I purposely removed myself out of their space back in 1998, never to return or look back. In work I was always professional with them, but never let them into my personal life again.
I enjoy loving, kind, spiritual individuals … which I surround myself with. A few angry people sprinkled in here or there (some family, some childhood friends) … but, hey, what can I say … c’est la vie!
Lamp Unto My Feet: Correction. I meant to write that I removed myself from their personal lives (after working hours) in 1988, not 1998.
Kathleen Hawk……………..
I read your last post above and wondered if you know about the Books by Julia Cameron beginning with the first of her triology, “THE ARTIST’S WAY? I highly recommend this book and the other two in the trilogy. They are wonderful guides for reconnecting with the center of ourselves and for creating our lives from a healthy perspective based more on our own terms. I have referred to them for years for guidance and wisdom when things get off track. When we are open to creativity we nurture possibility and we become architects of change even in the smallest ways that can build a momentum.
Here is the table of contents for The Artist’s Way……………..
1. Recovering a Sense of Safety
2. Recovering a Sense of identity
3. Recovering a Sense of Power
4. Recovering a Sense of Integrity
5. Recovering a Sense of Possibility
6. Recovering a Sense of Abundance
7. Recovering a Sense of Connection
8. Recovering a Sense of Strength
9. Recovering a Sense of Compassion
10. Recovering a Sense of Self-protection
11. Recovering a Sense of Autonomy
12. Recovering a Sense of Faith
“They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.” Andy Warhol
EyeoftheStorm, thanks. And that’s for typing in that whole table of contents. I think I actually have it on the shelf, and haven’t read it yet. It looks like exactly the right thing to be reading now.
I’ve been on a run of Asia-based mystery novels, which all have Buddhist detectives. This morning I finished “Beautiful Ghosts” by Eliot Pattison, one of a series of deep and literate books set in Tibet. These books help me learn Buddhism as it operates on the ground, rather than in abstractions.
And though it might not be immediately obvious, there is a lot of relevance to this work we’re doing. Especially in Pattison’s books, which detail the plight of Tibet under Chinese rule, which is both predatory and cruel. The community connections and spiritual training of the Tibetan people make them so authentic in their reactions, but also so resilient. Not infinitely so. They’re human. But I find them a lot less brittle than us.
If you’re a fiction reader, I highly recommend Pattison.
Matt, I just found your anger letter, and yes, yes, yes.
I didn’t even know I never really felt powerful, until my anger finally came loose after this guy. For the first time in my life, I didn’t try to quash it or rationalize it away or do that la-di-dah thing where I’m pretending I’m not really angry.
You sound so incredibly organized and functional. You’re doing all the right things. You didn’t mention talking to his ghost. I did that for a long time. “Go away. Don’t come back. I don’t want you here anymore.” In fact, I still find myself doing it occasionally, when something stresses me makes me anxious.
I also blamed him for everything, just everything, because the impact was all over my life. I still have difficulty with being struck by unwanted feelings, because so much of what I did for so long was about him. Short of burning my house down, finding a new profession and moving to Borneo, there just no way to avoid the little memory bombs.
But there was one great moment, maybe a year after he left. I was on a toll road on the way home from a business meeting 100 miles away. I stopped at a big discount mall to visit a store, and then started home again. I went through the toll plaza and down the entrance ramp to the highway, and found myself driving in the wrong direction.
I’d gotten confused, made a mistake. But as I drove down the road to the nearest exit 16 miles away, I realized that this mistake had nothing to do with him. It wasn’t because I was stressed or confused or trying to do something I couldn’t do or crying because of him. It had absolutely nothing to do with him. I hadn’t been thinking about him at all, and I’d made a mistake of my very own.
It was a great moment, a turning point. Who’d imagine someone would be happy about an extra 30 miles added onto drive home. But I was delighted. Whew.
Here is an excerpt about ANGER from The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron. It fits in with what KH and Matt are saying.
http://www.interluderetreat.com/meditate/anger2.htm
So often I read passages by professionals saying that anger is “unhealthy”; that we must let go of it! Once I read these wise words many years ago, I understood my anger and valued it from then on.
The same is true of fear. It’s a survival mechanism. I think it is Gavin de Becker in “The Gift of Fear” (a must read for women especially) who points out that we are the only animals that do not act immediately on what we know and perceive. When we sense danger in relationships, often we don’t get away ASAP. We call our friends, we discuss over an over what we think a certain behavior might mean, we give ourselves all kinds of reasons to ignore it…..other animals run! And we think we are smarter! How did we lose our survival skills?
I posted the contents of “The Artist’s Way” so everyone could see what it covers. It is not a resource just for artists. It is about recovering our “selves” and creating our lives though a passion that comes from within instead of battling with an N/S/P for what passes for a life.
Healing from these relationships and from victimization, which is not always a consequence of being hooked into loving the wrong person, eventually brings us back to finding ourselves and putting that “self” back together again.
These are gentle books for wounded people. The authors don’t have professional credentials; they write from the wisdom they gained through life experience which is what makes their message so valuable, accurate, and effective, IMO.
Thanks OxDrover for explaining my ex-friend to me, I dont suppose I will ever come across her again, but in her abusive texts it was clear that she felt bitter that I had many friends. (ie “if you have so many friends, why do you send me abusive texts…small mind… get a life etc etc)….(I had been very careful when replying to her abusive texts, so to not give her any bait!) Still thats the end of that, and hopefully, if I am lucky enough in the future to meet someone who would like to be a partner, I know what to look for and what to avoid (I’m not desparate!) It has been a great lesson in human psychology and personality, and has been fascinating – after dealing with the hurt thanks to you guys.
Thank you Wini for recommending that book, I will look on Amazon for it after I have done here.
OxDrover, you are a wise person to take on board problems we post about, and I value your comments, thank you – I will pop on from time to time, as I feel I know some of you a bit, although time does not usually allow me to come on here much.
The next problem I have is to somehow make my son (24) see that he is living with a person I consider to be histrionic, and completely controls him. He has moved to Hull, which is 200 miles away to live in the family house with his gf. On a couple of occasions he has phoned me pleading with me to tell him what to do, as she found a message from one of his exes on the internet to him, and had gone “ballistic” – wrist cutting etc , running away – I advised him to come home, and break free, but he said “no I will just go back and talk to her”, now its all “OK” again, until the next time something happens. Anything can start her off and he doesnt phone anymore and if I phone, she is always there and the converation is very stilted. She does not approve of him talking to his Mum so he doesnt do it – only when she sends him down the shop on his own. (Even bringing back the wrong crisps can start her off, apparently!) If I went there, I would not be able to see him on his own, he is completely sucked in and walks on egggshells all the time, so as not to upset her. If she thought he was about to leave, he reckons she would kill herself – he just cannot see that she would do no such thing and and its just to control him. What can I do? Anything? He doesnt have enough experience of what a good relationship can be, so I worry worry worry…. still not sure if she comes under the realm of this blog but she is definitley narcissistic….anyone got any ideas?
Like all of us on here, I just want to help and fix people, but you cant, my son is a caring lad, and that is why he is in the situation he is in – he says he loves her, so I just tear my hair out with worry. Sorry to go on guys, now…..EyeoftheStorm, yes I reckon he needs to find his own self like I am doing, dont you?
Kathleen, I can relate to you finding joy in driving the wrong way home, its something you did on your own, nothing to do with him. So this is all related, finding your own self, same thing – its what its all about…