By Sarah Strudwick
Sarah Strudwick, based in the UK, is author of Dark Souls—Healing and recovering from toxic relationships.
First of all I want to thank everyone who commented on the posts that I’ve written over the last couple of years. Recently I did a post on How to speed date a sociopath. Whilst I make every effort to move on with my life after the psychopath, occasionally something will come up that causes me to think “Why do they do that?”
So the topic of this post is whether or not any of you have experienced the following:
In my book Dark Souls, I wrote about an occasion where my ex moved my cash card. A week later I found it hidden behind a bottle of sauce on the top of a very tall cupboard in the kitchen. At the time it went missing, I asked my ex if he may have picked it up by mistake, because he used the same. He commented that I was forgetful, and asked me whether I’d left it in the freezer.
This was a very strange comment. Later, I found a book written by a psychopath about how to manipulate people, putting the victim off guard so they question their own sanity. One of the suggestion was to ask victims if they left something that went missing in a freezer!
Being a complete idiot at the time, I looked in there, just to check I wasn’t losing the plot or going mad.
More items not returned
I also lent my ex some books and a heart-shaped crystal. At the time he was leaving his wife. He promised to keep it safe. When I asked for it to be returned, I got the excuse that he had let his children play with it, and one of his small children managed to drop it out of a two-story building and broke it. The story was preposterous—why would he let his kids play with something he didn’t want his wife to see?
I was also in a relationship with a man call Dan. I was doing acupuncture, and he as asked me if he could borrow my acupuncture books and also a book on Taoism. He also borrowed a cassette of a local radio interview I’d done when I was 19 about backpacking in India. When the relationship ended, I asked Dan to send me back the books and the interview cassette. He still has them to this day, and refused to give a reason for keeping them. Looking back, I think it was his way of keeping a little trophy of me.
Happening again
I was prompted to write this is because straight after I ended the speed date, I noticed something strange. Every day I wear a necklace, which I made myself out of resin and crystals. You could call it my “security blanket,” because I always feel happy when I am wearing it. When I bathe or shower I take it off and leave it in the bathroom as the string is made of leather. Lurch commented on the jewelry I make as he saw the resin and paraphernalia on the worktops in my kitchen.
A day or so after getting my head of the washing machine with all the mind games he played, I suddenly realised I wasn’t wearing the necklace. I searched the flat everywhere but couldn’t find it. I soon realised that a photograph of me was missing as well. It was an old photograph of me when I was about 16, dressed in fancy dress and looking reasonably young, fit and attractive. My son had seen it a few days before and commented on how young I looked. The photograph had been next to the computer, but was gone.
I like to think of myself as a rational person and don’t jump to conclusions before pointing the finger. In fact, I searched multiple times only to find nothing. Whilst I cannot prove that anyone took it, these were not items of value like money. But they had a lot of sentimental value, much like the cassette and the specialist acupuncture books, which, incidentally are irreplaceable.
Trophies
I’ve read before that the psychopath likes to closet their victims, and I’ve heard stories about serial killers keeping “bits” of them as trophies. Whilst we expect the sociopath to steal our hearts, money and valuable possessions, the difference is that all these items are irreplaceable. Which begs the question that they will intentionally go out of their way to take such things, because they know how upset we will be.
I am still searching for these items, just in case I haven’t lost my marbles. Whilst it’s easy to let them go because they have no real value, the whole experience points to the potentially sick and twisted nature of their personalities and has “creeped” me out. Even with such a good understanding of psychopaths/ sociopaths, it’s still beyond all my capacity to understand what motivates someone to do something like this.
It’s for this reason that I shared this experience. I wonder if anyone else had experience the same kind of “creepy” behaviour.
BBE:
OMG…
Truthspeak:
I know…it’s tough, but we WILL be OK!!! HUGS to you and hang in there…
Ox: I had thought the same thing…that perhaps he had another one of his SLIMEY ‘minions’ call me from prison. But, that’s neither here nor there anymore. The State made my phone number BLOCKED on their phone system. It’s protected by a password that only “I” know, should I ever wish to unlock it. Not likely that is going to happen.
It has been extremely quiet, though, which makes me think he IS in the ‘big house’. He is in a prison (if it is true, I can’t find any records) that is classified as a rehabilitation/short term facility. It is ‘medium security’. It doesn’t really matter to me anymore. All of that is so far away from me now.
It’s really kind of ‘interesting’ to note that the call from prison came through my home landline, which I had already changed. I knew it wouldn’t take long for it to hit records, even though EXTREME measures were taken to secure it.
Thanks again for all the suggestions you gave me on disappearing….I will be okay. If he continues to bother me, it is going to become very bad and very ugly for him. That is no joke. I have enough (and the last strike, I might add) to put him away for the rest of his life if I was interested in just taking revenge….I am not about revenge but I AM all about disappearing….
I have been very busy, sticking on the path to healing; going to counseling and taking care of my medical affairs…sorting through what’s left of my lifetime and making arrangements so that when I “go”, things will be all taken care of.
I am also in the process of apartment searching. How exciting is that?! I am going to find an apartment with ONE BEDROOM and I am going to get myself a dog. 🙂 Then ALL THE REST OF THE WORLD CAN JUST LEAVE ME BE. I will be behind security gating and each visitor will have to make it through the guard shack. 🙂
I WANT PEACE in my life.
I AM GOING TO FIND IT.
DESPITE “IT”.
((Hugs)) Hope things are going alright with you.
I have been just really really busy trying to turn my world around and it’s coming along very nicely….
Think of you ALL, all the time…
Big hugs, prayers and smooches…..
Dupey
xxoo
Glad you are doing well and focusing on yourself dupey….a gated community is a great idea if you can find and afford one.
The spath that I know has stolen things from me, jewelry, address book (I got this back, having found it in his collection of paper products that his family “stored’ in my garage when the spath went on the run from the law, coming from a storage unit that they closed), money, etc. What I discovered about him is that he is a hoarder, paying for a storage unit (which he reclaimed, rented, upon his release from jail) to store boxes and containers full of opened and unopened mail. Strange, bizarre thing to do.
bluejay, I know several People that are hoarders who are also psychopaths, but other hoarders who are not Ps, but are victims of Ps…big time hoarding is a complex problem. What they hoard and how much of it doesn’t make any “sense” to anyone else.
Ox;
I have a similar experience. None of those with Antisocial Personality Disorder whom I ever knew were hoarders. If anything, I see a link to hoarding and Autism Spectrum Disorder, particularly among those with what was formerly called Aspergers Disorder and this is supported by studies.
However, many with Autism Spectrum Disorder could easy be mistaken as having Antisocial Personality Disorder.
Do Borderlines hoard? They too, could easy be mistaken as having Antisocial Personality Disorder.
My mother who I suspect has BPD (she hasn’t been diagnosed with this disorder) always had clutter around her, having tables, counter-tops, covered with papers. Apparently, the disordered people that I know have a fascination with paper.
BBE, hoarding is more I think an OCD problem than anything, or an anxiety disorder…but it is across a broad spectrum of disorders, it is a SYMPTOM that can become a big problem. People have actually been crushed to death when their hoarded goods fell on them. (yea no lie!) There was a famous case of two brothers I think in NY that happened to. Can’t remember the details of that now.
My X best friend has become a HOARDER of massive proportions now in the last few years since her abusive husband has retired and no longer travels for a living. There are now only “pathways” in her house, and literally no place to sit, and still she brings in more and more things. She was always to some extent a poor house keeper and had more things in her house than she “needed” –but not to the extent you can’t get in the door, and that has happened over the past few years. It went from a BIT of “clutter” to being unable to walk in the house. I see the correlation between her being abused more and the hoarding. She isn’t a psychopath, but she has anxiety issues and depression and that is how she is handling it. She is also very ashamed of how her house is now as well. I’m a pretty good housekeeper, and don’t have much in the way of clutter and when Ii went to visit her last time (at her request BTW) she was embarrassed at the shape her house was in I could tell, and then her husband went off on me verbally and I stood up to him and decided to leave…she had also been snarky to me as well. It hurts and I’m sorry the friendship of 30+ years ended but I am no longer allowing anyone to be rude and hateful to me for any reason. I have empathy for her, she’s in a tough spot financially and emotionally, but she isn’t handling it well and allowing her to be hateful to me is not going to help either her or myself. I didn’t go down there to judge or condemn her home or her hoarding but she ASSUMED I was and so her own embarrassment caused her to strike out verbally. I had set a boundary several years before about that kind of behavior and it had stopped for several years, but started again, so I had to enforce the boundary. “I will NOT allow you to speak to me in that manner” Period. I walked away, got on the train and came home. I haven’t heard from her since. She knows where I live, she knows my phone number, she knows my address and e mail. Haven’t heard a word. Don’t expect to. If she sincerely apologized I would accept it, but I don’t expect that either.
Most here will find this article very interesting:
http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/457152
I like the term “Affective Temperament” because it is simply focused upon mood with a disorder labeling. I am Cyclothymic but when I employ all my cognitive wellness skills, I tend to be slightly Hyperthymic.
However, I am not bipolar and reject any treatment as such, one reason being that I know several bipolar persons and I am not like them.
From this article’s discussion, one can clearly see how Cyclothymic individuals are easy targets for love fraud:
“Since our original study going back to 1977, we have found that “falling in and out of love” was a major characteristic of these individuals. This is obviously of great ethological significance, because ultimately Darwinian evolution works through sexual behavior in transmitting desirable traits. We have hypothesized that the flamboyant and restless pursuit of romantic opportunities in cyclothymia subserves such a mechanism. Their creative bent in poetry, music, painting, or fashion design, too, may have evolved to subserve such a primordial sexual function.”
Nothing I ever read describes my emotional state better than the above paragraph, particularly “the flamboyant and restless pursuit of romantic opportunities”.