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.
Jen2008 – my God, that’s awful! How incredibly jarring that would be to see his photo!
As for the family death – my ex S sucked me back it at four months by texting me that his stepbrother had died. Okay, I’ll be honest, I jumped all over it as a reason to justify seeing him. I was going to comfort him. Really I wast comforting myself..though REALLY I was prolonging the pain.
And, he didn’t really care. Apparently he cried once at the funeral, but it was for himself. It was clear (and I spent 4 subsequent nights with him) that he really didn’t care. I bet your guy doesn’t care…I don’t know if they can.
I admire your strength. You, go, Girl!
Jen,
Holy crap! That X psycho is a frikkin pest, isn’t he?
Man oh man, do I totally comprehend and empathize with the chit that just keeps on coming from the freako.
I was involved with a dude while in my 20s for a short period of time. He became more of an annoyance to me than a fun time. I told him to get lost and get lost fast!
That idiot stalked me for almost 2 years of my life. Every time I would move to a new residence, he would uncannily discover my new address and start again with the pounding on my door at all hours, staring at my windows from outside, just being a real pain in the a**!
He would not give up and go away. I called the police a number of times and he would split before they showed up, making me look like the boy who cried wolf for attention. Oh bother, did he drive me up the wall!
I actually started coldly and methodically planning his death.
Death Plan 1: Let’s see, I would sweetly beckon him into my humble abode and give him a cocktail laced with sleeping pills. Then when he was unconscious I would drag his lanky, little body down the stairs, and put him in my trunk.
I would jump in the driver’s seat and head to Southern Louisiana which is about 6 hours from Houston, Tx. As I’m driving through the unpopulated swampy areas, I spot me a nice cozy little bog. I can see the double bumps on the heads of the alligators as they curiously check me out. Then I throw the dude in with the fluffy, cute reptiles and high tail it back to Texas!
Luckily (for me), he was a bona fide idiot as well as a psychopath and ended up getting busted for drug possession (cocaine) with intent to sell and went merrily, merrily away to prison. YAY! I win!….haha.
Janesmith, Too bad I didn’t think of that when I actually lived fairly close to the Louisianna swamps prior to moving! 🙂 Your post had me laughing. You should think about becoming a novelist!
Henry,
Sorry it took all day for me to reply to thank you. I had a post started to you this morning, & my internet connection shut off. I had to leave for work, so I couldn’t rewrite it. I just wanted you to know I’m glad to hear that I am sounding better. I feel better, more in control of myself. I have been reading the books I see recommended here, & keeping up with all the posts. I am getting the meaning of Knowledge=power. This is the one place where I don’t feel invisible. What a great feeling!
Hey, folks, this is a really good and lively discussion.
I too used to joust with windmills, and tried to “right” all the wrongs in the world, but slowly learned that “picking your battles” is a good thing. Also learned that Justice DOES NOT always come out and “truth and right” do not always win. Sometimes the bad guys win. But, that’s life. So picking your battles so that you will “live to fight another day” is a good idea and one which I can now easily accept.
I’ve also leared that just because you are “nice” or “right” aned someone doesn’t like you, it may not be that there is anything wrong with YOU, there may be a problem with them. Not everyone is going to like you, no matter how “perfect” and nice or good you are. Look what they did to Jesus! Think about that one!
Just because people genuinely like you doesn’t mean you are right or that you are nice or good. I know some real stinkers that people really like. I know some good people that are very disliked.
I have made myself genuinely unpopular at times, once because I wanted a CONVICTED criminal with child sex issues out of our living history group which works with children. I raised a STINK to get him out and some of the men in our group dislike me to this day because of it. I am labeled an “uppity, trouble making woman” and that isn’t acceptable to them. Ya know what? I don’t give a rat’s behind what they think about me about that issue. One of those guys pointed a gun (a real one, though it was unloaded and was an antique) but I PROSECUTED HIM for this—they said I “can’t take a joke either.” (Turned out after some investigation the man had a criminal record, there to fore unknown in our group, AND he recently left the group and stole items belonging to the group) I have no problem with doing what I think is right, even if it renders me “unpopular” with some or even all of the group…but I have learned to pick my battles…
My problem was never with setting boundaries with people outside my “circle of trust and friendship/family.” It was only WITHIN the family I had problems. Now that I realize, finally, that nothing, not even a blood relationship, gives ANYONE the right to seriously abuse me…can I start setting boundaries within that group, and if someone doesn’t like me/love me, tough…
There are times when it IS best to just let them “think” they won. It isn’t worth the time, effort, etc to “teach them a lesson.” Besides, they wouldn’t learn it even if you did “teach” them…they are not programed to learn from their mistakes.
It is funny, if you shock a FLAT WORM with enough charges long enoough you can teach it to run a path. A FLAT WORM CAN LEARN, but apparently a psycopath doesn’t. Wonder what that says about them? LOL
Khatalyst:
And all Lovefraud bloggers — happy new year!
I just returned from vacation to a nightmare waiting for me at home — a smoke-damaged apartment. So, I spent the better part of the day dealing with insurance adjusters, schlepping clothes to the drycleaners (he smiled when the bill came to 1500 bucks), doing laundry, etc, etc, etc.
Long story short is I was forced to triage my closets — and in the process toss a lot of stuff connected with my S.
But, that act also forced me to start thinking about 2009. When I read your post, it really struck home.
“Eliminate Pity”
While I as on vacation I realized that I go a step beyond pity to romanticizing someone’s situation. Case in point — one of the group I went on vacation with, whom I did not know well. His story, in brief, was that he was working at his profession, working a second job as a bartender a couple of nights a week, and had finished chemo a month or so ago and was now trying to get off the painkillers.
My initial reaction? “How admirable. Unlike my S, who was a total deadbeat, this guy still managed to work 2 jobs while going through chemo.”
It was after a day or so that I realized that this guy was looking for pity. The actual story was that he was only working a day or two a week at his profession BECAUSE HE CHOSE TO. He was living at his mother’s house. His finances were a shambles because he couldn’t be bothered trying to get his money out of the house he shared with his ex.
When I thought about it I realized I had completely romanticized his situation.
And I realized I had done that with S — “Oh, he’s trying so hard after being sent to prison. And he’s getting taken advantage of by his boss and everyone else,” rather than looking at the facts objectively which were that (a) he stole from his employer and got sent to prison because he broke the law; (b) that he was milking his situation for all it was worth; (c) he should be grateful to his boss who held his position for him while he was in prison; and (d) that he was a total deadbeat who brought his problems on himself by not paying his bills.
And I realized that when I romanticize or feel pity, I end up getting burned.
“Demand Reciprocity.”
Boy, that’s a big one for me. By about day 3 of the vacation, this individual whom I discussed above was working my last nerve — being verbally abusive, incessantly checking his emails, etc.
I finally had enough and surprised myself when I said to him, point blank, “I can empathize with the pain you’re feeling from coming off the painkillers. I’ve been there. But I’m tired of being used as a verbal punching bag.” He said some passive-aggressive thing, which I shrugged off.
Later, at dinner, when he persisted in checking his email, and surfing the web, I finally told him that I couldn’t imagine what was so important that he had to do that and I considered it rude. Again, I surprised myself.
At that point I realized that this wasn’t a person I really wanted or needed in my life, and after that I basically cut him off, deciding there was nothing to be gained from any further interaction. Like me, don’t like me. I don’t care what this person thinks. All I know is I found opening my mouth empowering.
“Trust Conditionally.”
I have a history of trusting unconditionally. I think this is tied up with my romanticizing/pity for others. And I have paid dearly for trusting unconditionally, time and time again.
No more. Maybe it was the experience with the S. But, today a sibling of mine, who I truly believe has strong sociopathic tendencies called me. As I was listening to him, I was experiencing an increasing sense of disquiet the cause of which hit me like a bolt from the blue — I don’t trust him, I never have trusted him and I never will trust him.
I realized that I’ve got to shut down the tape of my N mother which is forever playing in my brain saying “Of course you trust him — he’s your brother.” Sorry, Mom. Not anymore.
“Value What We Have.”
At this moment I’m finding myself at a crossroads — I’m bored with my career, feeling lonely and depressed, and, in general, disatisfied with my life.
I realize that the S capitalized on all this. Of course, I didn’t focus on any of that when I was involved with S — I was completely focused on him and his wants and needs. I’ve started to get involved with some philanthropic work, but I’m still trying to figure out what is going to make me happy.
But, I realize it’s not the material things.
While I was tossing things out today, I was somewhat taken aback by how much junk was in my closets which I had forgotten about. I remember thinking about a former colleague who once said “If you’re not careful you end up defined by your possessions.” I also remember a friend of mine saying “If people are honest, they’ll admit that they really do only live in 3 rooms — the kitchen, the bedroom and the living room.
So, post-S and post-smoke damage I’ve decided to view this moment as an opportunity to simplify both my internal and external landscapes.
“Self Validate.”
For me that’s a new one. I’ve spent my whole life living by other’s standards and expectations. And I still have the never ending, denigrating, soul-destroying tapes playing which were installed by my parents, my siblings, S and others.
Somehow, even with all the negativity, I realize that I’m a generous, kind, smart man. So, along with exercising physically, need to start exercising mentally.
In closing, as I watched the fireworks exploding in the sky, I remember thinking “last new year’s eve S chose to start demolishing me. This year has not been good. This year is not ending on a great note. But I swear that 2009 will be better than 2008.” I think if I employ your 5 resolutions, it will be.
I think it’s a lively post because we all to be seeing/feeling something we’ve not had in way too long…HOPE.
We all are having are up days & down days, yet we all sound more optomistic. Now that, LF Family, makes me feel really good.
Kathleen Hawk & Libelle: One, I didn’t stand up and volunteer to file a lawsuit. I was forced in to filing due to NOT being given any other choice. These bosses and their cronies were re-writing history and they didn’t want anyone around that knew and could speak the truth. Period.
I personally didn’t appreciate anyone who played the kiss ass games with my bosses to save their own butts. Oh, excuse me “the present myself as an ally and supporter, because you are very goal oriented” routine or whatever you want to call saving yourselves at the expense of others is called today. Hey, as long as it is someone else being screwed and your life doesn’t get a ripple!
If “REAL” people spoke up and let the anti-social personalities know that they are doing wrong, when they do wrong ” then maybe, just maybe the air would be deflated out of their big egos and maybe they wouldn’t feel like they were above the law and untouchable.
But, hey, that’s only my opinion.
Hey Matt, Welcome back! It sounds like you’ve been doing a lot of thinking, reflecting, and pro-actively making changes. That’s great. I feel like I’m progressing some days and I think “I’m rounding a corner,” and then I get slammed back by something. SIGH, I guess that’s just the nature of the grieving process, and the growing process.
I wonder what the hell happened to your apartment…I assume its unrelated to the S or you would have mentioned it.
Libelle: They executed Davey Crockett at the Alamo.
But thanks for the thought.
All I’m saying is that it isn’t the correct thing to do, stroking an anti-social personality, when you know they are one and doing wrong. You don’t have to be blatant and stand up to them, but you don’t have to act like there is nothing wrong with their behavior either. Just telling them this or that is wrong and walking away would have been sufficient in most cases.