Lovefraud received the following letter from a woman who was married to a sociopath for 16 years.
I was a stay-at-home mom until my son entered kindergarten, then I got a job. This was the end of any peace I would have for 10 years. The worst possible thing happened to my husband—the woman he could make fun of for being stupid or having no goals (whatever he would say to hurt my self-esteem) became a huge success. In fact, I made three times as much as Mr. Wonderful. The abuse escalated. He was so obsessed with destroying me that even on a business trip where I was getting an award for being the top sales rep in my company, he was pulling my boss aside and insinuating I was committing fraud and that was why I was #1.
For the last year of my marriage, he had convinced me to hand over all extra money so he could invest for “our” future. I did it thinking it was his ego that was hurt from my success. I didn’t know what he was then.
He spent a year hiding every dime, transferring every debt into my name, making up horrible stories about me to my friends and family. He would go talk to them in tears and say I was stealing all of our money and cheating on him. He would say how much he loved me and ask for advice, then have them swear not to say anything to me because he wanted our marriage to work. He even went so far to pull cousins, aunts and uncles aside during my grandmother’s funeral to say these things.
At the end of the year, while I was packing for a very large business meeting that was to announce a promotion for me, he told me he had cancer.
I believed him. Who besides a sociopath would say such a lie to their wife? That whole evening was spent crying and upset that my husband had cancer. Then I asked him a simple question, “Who is your doctor?” He couldn’t answer. Who would forget their cancer doctor? Then I realized, if he had been going to the doctor for such a serious illness, where were all the insurance bills? I have been to the doctor for a cold and gotten a bill from a lab, the doctor, then a follow-up from the insurance company to pay more, etc. I kicked him out.
I went to my business meeting and the onslaught of horrible screaming calls to the receptionist began from him. An entire week of this, while I was supposed to be there receiving a promotion. I left without the promotion and was basically fired”¦ “maybe you need to take some time to attend to personal problems.”
When I came home, I filed for divorce, cried for weeks and then looked around to find our money to pay bills. It was hidden; not a trace of paperwork was left. Every bill was in my name only. My friends, my family, my neighbors, even customers, no longer spoke to me. I deserved this, in their eyes.
Three years later, I still have nobody who fully believes me. I have one friend. My parents and I speak, but I don’t trust them not talk to my husband. If he has any information on me, he does whatever he can to destroy me. He abandoned our son, moved to another state to live with the next victim. My own sister sends him cards and letters and won’t speak to me.
The smear campaign
This woman was subjected to a smear campaign from her husband, the sociopath.
Abusers often use this tactic to cover up their own behavior and convince others that they are the ones being victimized. In fact, abusers frequently start the campaign as a pre-emptive strike, long before the relationship with the true victim collapses.
That’s what happened to the woman who wrote the letter. As the sociopath was getting ready to move on—he probably had his next victim already lined up—he laid the groundwork to destroy his wife. With his tears and skill as a liar, he convinced the woman’s friends and family of his story. They became unwitting co-conspirators.
What can you do?
Fighting the smear campaign is difficult. Most honest people can’t imagine that someone would be lying when making the outrageous charges that the sociopath claims, so they believe the lies. When the true victim finds out what has been said, everyone has already turned against her.
MSN Psychopath, a forum for victims, has a page about the smear campaign with suggestions on how to handle it. For example:
If anyone tries to talk to you about him, hold up your hand (like a stop sign) and say something like, “I don’t want to hear anything about him. He’s lying.” Say no more. If it continues, say, “My lawyer recommends I warn people they will have to testify where they heard that, should this turn into a libel or slander lawsuit.” Watch them scatter quickly when hearing this. This can cause people to stop cold and have another look at what they’ve been told.
Some more ideas: Say nothing but burst out with raucous laughter, slap your knee and laugh like crazy. “You should have heard what he said about his ex-girlfriend (ex-wife, you, his sister).” You get the idea.
Your own pre-emptive action
Once your relationship falls apart and you realize you’re dealing with a sociopath, or once you start to hear the lies, you may want to take your own pre-emptive action. Warn your family, friends, co-workers and the Human Resources Department at your job that the sociopath may start saying terrible things about you. This may work if their perceptions haven’t already been poisoned by the sociopath.
It may help to be able to explain why a person would say such terrible things. The reason, of course, is that the person is a sociopath. But as we all know, very few people understand what that means. To help others comprehend what you are dealing with, send them a link to Lovefraud.
AMEN! Bigdude !
Mark my words ! Your going to recover ! And be happyer than you ever imagined ! LOVE jere
Smear campaigns suck.
I’ve been called an abusive stepmom because of a bruise that showed up on my stepson. I had NOTHING to do with that bruise.
I’ve been called a homewrecker (oh yeah! HOMEWRECKER! For any of you who knows my story, that is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard).
She went to my ex MIL and smeared me and “apologized” for what she did with my ex-husband.
She smeared me to my congregation elders.
She wrote a letter to every member of my now-husband’s family (some of them sent them back unopened, haha).
She smeared my husband to everybody she talked to.
On and on…
Dear Father of 1,
I am so glad that God directed your fingers to this website, because it is a healing place, one of knowledge, love and support. You are not only not alone (because God is with you) but you are not alone on this earth either, there are many many people here who have been victims of these “satanic” people. I say that in all seriousness because they have no conscience, they embrace EVIL, they enjoy evil, they crave evil and pain for others. It is food for them. Your pain is their pleasure.
Get as far away from this woman as you can. NO CONTACT is the only way to function. At first they will usually make more and harder attempts to smear you or to cause you trouble, but IF YOU NEVER REACT they will eventually move on to another victim. Each time you react, even negatively, they have received their reward and they will continue on. It is the “slot machine principle”—since a slot will “eventually” pay off and you never know when it will come, you keep poking in coins until it “rewards” you—it is that anticipatiion each time of that possible “reward” that keeps them coming back.
Early psychologists showed that it is an “intermittent” reward that is most addicting rather than one that rewards you every time.
If she is the mother of your son you may have some legal problems in keeping absolute no contact, but that can be effected through someone else doing the “visitation” hand offs so that she is NEVER able to speak to you or give you messages. They don’t care about children, they use them as clubs to hurt the other parent.
God bless you and learn all you can about these satanicly inclined people and KNOWLEDGE-POWER to take back our lives! (((hugs)))) for you and your son.
Hang tough fatherof1, hang tough. You know you have the inner strength to handle this, you have been in the Military. That teaches us a lot. Go back inside yourself. Once Military always Military, you know that. If you believe in God then use that too. Veterans are lucky in some ways, unlucky in others, but one of the things we have is an inner strength, and we will always have that. She cannot take that away from you, ever. Protect yourself and your son. He needs you as a whole person, and you can become that again.
Defend him with all the strength and valor that you defended us with. Protect him as you protected us, and I wish you all the best in this.
bigdude,
So glad you survived your horrendous ordeal… It definately was not
“the woman in her” that made her behave how she did, it was “the demon in her”(or whatever one calls it) that’s the same malignant spirit that’s in all of them… God bless… Even though it’s so hard to believe God is definately with you or you would have died…
Father of 1,
They steal your identity and your hobbies and interests because they are empty, hollow imitations of what they think a human being is .. When she finds her next victim she will do the same thing… (My X-S copied and adopted some of my interests also which was so bizarre because the only true interest he has is his sick and perverse SELF…) Just let it go because it is FAKE just like they are… Sorry for what you are going through…God Bless….
What is frightening is their total lack of remorse. They make a complete wreck out of someones life, and then just walk away as if nothing had happened. It is as if only their immediate gratification means anything to them.
Welcome to the Club ! Sorry your a member!
Now sit down shut up and wait your turn! Next !:)~
There is no doubt of your pain , You have been Emotionally RAPED! A rape crisis center is good councel!
LOVE jere
Indigo, that is a great way to describe the ordeal we all go through..It truly is an emotional rape!
Sometimes I feel like I literally need an exorcist to wipe him out of my head !
I pray and pray for God’s peace and love when unwanted thoughts of him (my X-S) torment and haunt me!!
Stormee Please Read Aftermath:Surviving Psycopathy Robert D. Hare It’s long but it just brings all of this chit together LOVE jere
Indigo,
Thanks for the tip on the book, I will definately find it and read it…I recently read ” The Sociopath Next Door” and “Snakes in Suits” (which Robert D Hare co-authored)…
Trying hard to heal and get my “chit” together!!! Seems like “one step forward and 2 steps back” at times…
God Bless…