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.
stormee this is online google Aftermath:Surviving Psycopathy
I recently joined there.
If anyone is interested I am keeping my Myspace blog up to date, and if anything in ther helps then anybody then please let me know. Here is the link for it.
http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.ListAll&friendID=13338410
BIGDUDE
Read Forgining Yoursef For Being Human?
Tue.9 sept 2008 OxDrover.
Forgivness does’nt mean they(PSY/SOC/NAR/???) are not held Accountable and Responcable ! This is what Healed me! LOVE jere
Jere, I agree with you 100% about accountability. They SHOULD be held accountable for their actions but unlees they actually break any laws there realy is nothing that can be done.
I wish that there were something, I truly do. But in reality there is nothing for us to do but forgive them and go on. Avoid them, yes. Trust them? Never. But my point was that you cant move forward carrying hatred in your heart. They are sick in the truest sense of the word, and thier illness can never be cured. There is no “magic pill” that will make them people. They will never seek treatment, they see themselves as above moral codes. But until they actually break a law there is nothing that you or I or any of us can really do about them. We can warn others about them but then we ourselves become victims of their smear campaigns. That is the beauty in a sense of thier illness. They can do ANYTHING they want. WE have moral codes that prevent us from dong that. It frightens me when I think that a woman i loved for years is that unstable, but I can do nothing about her. She can say what she chooses to whomever will listen.
SO I have forgiven and I am going to heal. Slowly. But I am going to live my life better without her than I ever could have with her. That, ultimately, is the best punishment for them.
I have a question that I have been mulling over having to do with accountability…
My ex and is family have been involved in some illegal activities…this is one of the reasons I believe they wanted me out of the picture. What do you do in such a case? Turn them in? Some people have said that I should not so that I don’t provoke them because they can be dangerous…At the same time I feel both morally obligated to and/or would like to see them held accountable on a certain level for their lawless behavior. However, I don’t want to put myself and my daughters in danger…Any suggestions?
Thank God my ex-S left town, otherwise I’m sure that there would have been a smear campaign against me. He smeared *every* woman he was ever involved with in a really bad way. The one before me, he told me that she was responsible for the Internet/mail fraud issues that were facing him down.
What people who get involved with sociopaths find out eventually is that they lie about everyone and everything. It took me two years to find out that he’d smeared his ex … but if I’m honest with myself, it was about a few months into it that I started to think to myself, “This isn’t making sense.” When someone smears someone that badly, usually there are two sides of the story, and you’re not getting the other.
Time is the best healer to the smear campaign. The people who know and care about you will see the light and no longer be blinded. And eventually, the sociopath will lie, lie, lie to too many people and will finally acquire the label of “liar” and “fake.”
Just wait it out … I’m sure that I could be getting smeared right now as I write this! 😀
Maniatissa, only advice i can give you is to do what you know is right. Look inside yourself for that. If you decide to report them make sure the authorities understand your fears. Ensure that your children are protected.
For those of you that have been reading it I have updated my blog. I hope there issomething in there you can use.
http://www.myspace.com/bigdude
bigdude,
Thanks for sharing your story. That was really intense to read. I can feel your pain, confusion, and brokeness. I was glad to hear about your steps to forgiveness. However, this is something that I am really struggling with. I still have to have contact with my ex, and many times when I start to feel like she may be different, the scab gets yanked off again. My pastor at church that counseled both of us at one point, tells me to be aware of the seduction that happens with her and not let myself get sucked in. I still have feelings for that lost dream of a family, but also realize that it was never going to be with her. I think the hardest thing to come to terms with is the fact that most of relationship with her was just for her to get her needs met and then when she used me up, she turned to her other life that she already had, while I was in pain, confused, drinking to hide the pain, would have fits of anger because I couldn’t understand what was going on. I knew on some level that something wasn’t right, but I would go to therapy to fix myself because I understood it to be all my fault. I still carry around a lot of guilt and shame because of my own behavior. I wish I had bucked up a long time ago, walked away when I had the chance, taken those job opportunities in a different state. But I stayed in hopes that I could fix everything, I could save my little family. I tried everything to please her. She loved it a first when I joined a special group with the Army and she could go around and tell people what I was doing, but when it came time for me to go to training she would call me and accuse me of running around, that she hated being left to care for the kids (She has two kids from a previous marriage. That is another good story.), she thought this Army crap sucked. At the same time, she was telling everyone how much she supported me and how proud she was that I was doing what I loved. Well we know how that ended.
Anyway, I may have gotten off topic here a bit. I feel the need to take action again in my life, but honestly I struggle. I am in major debt from fighting her in court, my lawyer bill is totaling over 60,000 dollars right now. I am so grateful for my parents that love and support us. Most of what my son and I have is from the goodness of their hearts and their true desire to be rid of her. I am in dire need of finding a decent job to help pay off my debt to them and I have had to drop my classes for school because I can not afford to incur anymore debt at this time. I feel lost right now. I hang on to the love of my few friends (but true loving friends), the love of my son is everything to me, my faith in God and God’s faith in me has been growing stronger. I am not ashamed to love, it is what I have always done, and loving myself is what is paramount at this time.
I am in search of that true love with myself, with God, with family, and with true friends. The truth is, even in the darkness, I find it. I can not explain the joy I feel when my son talks about his granddad, and how he follows him around the yard or the garage, just puttsin’ around with granddad. It makes me smile and laugh. I can feel it in my chest and then it rises up to an all encompassing warmth. He is one of my sons heroes. It helps me to have hope in the future of things to come, and the freedom we can all feel if we allow ourselves to continue loving.
Thanks for listening.
Bigdude and Fatherof1: Any time you find yourself waffling due to your EXs, of course write to us on the blogg and we’ll write back … in the meantime, read all you can on this site, plus remember this quote:
“Behold, I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves; so be shrewd as serpents and innocent as doves”
To understand the difference between us (givers) and them (takers) read this site:
http://www.abusefacts.com/articles/Givers-Takers.php
Peace to your heart and souls as you heal from the likes of “them”.