Perhaps the hardest thing to comprehend, and accept, about sociopaths is just how different they are from the rest of us.
I’ve spoken to hundreds of people who have tangled with sociopaths. Even when the mask has not only slipped, but shattered, even when they know the truth about what the sociopath has been doing all along, they still ask,
“But how could he do it?”
“He kept telling me how much he loved me; how could he cheat like that?”
“He said we were soul mates; how can he just up and leave?”
“How can he be so cold and calculating?”
“How can he look me right in the eye and lie?”
(Substitute “she” for “he” as necessary.)
Then, the people I talk to start making statements like the following:
“I would never think of taking someone’s money.”
“I would never intentionally hurt someone.”
“If I said something like that, I couldn’t sleep at night.”
“I would never tell someone that I loved them if I didn’t mean it.”
So here is the most important lesson to learn about sociopaths: You cannot interpret their behavior in the same way you interpret your own behavior.
Sociopaths are fundamentally different from the rest of us. They have a personality disorder, and this disorder reaches to the core of their beings. Here’s what this means:
- Sociopaths cannot feel empathetic connections with other people.
- Sociopaths do not have the ability to love.
- Sociopaths are interested only in power, control and sex.
- Sociopaths’ main motivation is to win.
- Anything that comes out of a sociopath’s mouth could be a lie.
- Sociopaths have no conscience.
You could think of them as aliens. I’m not saying that they literally are aliens (although there are people who believe that). But sociopaths are missing the characteristics, traits and abilities that make us truly human.
For most of us, this realization is a shock to the system. They look just like the rest of us. They appear to be so normal, talented, fun and exciting. They keep proclaiming their love. It’s so hard to believe that they are simply acting. It’s all a charade, a mirage.
What do you do with this information? You accept it. Sociopaths are what they are, and once they are adults, there is nothing you or anyone else can do about it. So far, there is no therapy, no magic pill, that will give them the ability to feel care and concern for others, or internalize a sense of right and wrong.
All we can do is know that they exist, learn the warning signs, and when we see them, run as fast as we can.
Thank you Donna for another great article and to all who posted for providing me with a much needed reality check following a day of great emotional struggle.
Be well
~New
I lost a decade of my life attempting to live as if one of these types of people was normal.
I treated her as if she was telling the truth.
I treated her as if she had a conscience.
I treated her as if she was trustworthy — as if she had a sense of right and wrong.
Didn’t work.
The hardest part, for me, was the lack of any kind of feelings about atrocious behavior. She could intentionally deceive with eyes wide open while professing “love” and literally sleep like a baby.
It was so confusing attempting to rationally comprehend that type of personality, that sort of “thinking.”
Then I realized she wasn’t human in the normal sense. And every time I forgot that and attempted to treat her like a normal human being, she chewed me to pieces again — and slept like a baby again.
I do not plan to ever speak to her again. And I now know very well the signs of such a creature and shall avoid them like the plague they are.
AMEN 10YearSurvivor!
I lost ten years myself and almost my life on more than one ocassion. AMEN!
Run far and fast…fast as you can lest the demon devour you…
Dupey
I have lost 6 years of my life to a sociopath. And I will be tied to this alien through a child we have together. Frustrating because I can not just walk away. I will get to catch a break when he goes to federal prison for a few years for fraud. Oh, I wish I could run far and fast! Small breaks are good!
Dupey, very well said in your 7/16 post. It is what it is.
I’m seeking out therapy again as my adult son still lives with his Dad and occasionally has female friends sleep over only doors away from this person who has very little impulse control. Definitely need input from a professional on this one – just don’t know what to do and I doubt being direct with my son would have any impact. He hasn’t seen (or consciously acknowledged) what lives beneath his father’s mask yet.
Be well.
~New
Fabulous summary of understanding! When my oldest daughter’s mother was four months pregnant I came to a realization. I had only known her for 7 months but a shift occurred in me and I have not been the same since. I went to her and said ” You know C( ), ” No Basis”. I had realized that all along that I had a basis for conversation that was unconsciously based in thinking she was rational. I must say that my failure to properly interpret the behavoir of a person, expecially to those to whom I was attracted, was a result of having had two parents who were of the same affect. My father went to his grave hating me because I gained recovery and stopped being his victim. He had been the pentultimate sociopath as is my oldest daughter’s mother.
10yearsuvivor,
I lost a decade to one also. How I want those ten years back. I fell in love with her and like you treated her like a human being, what a wasted gift. I wish I knew about psychopaths 15 years ago. I am grateful that I refused to marry her and I refused her access to my finances. She did enough damage to my emotions. However, her daughter is a good person being terrible exploited by her mother. I had said on more than one occassion how can you treat your daughter like this. I now understand how she could do it. I want to reach out to the daughter to let her know about psycopaths without telling her I think her mother is one. Should I do this?
Hi New Beginning: congrats on going to counseling. It helps keep me ‘grounded’. I was held prisoner by this demon for the past five years and every single kindness or caring I had was used and abused and manipulated. It is what it is. There is no amount of anything that is going to change it. It just IS what it is and “I” am what “I” am. FINISHED with the roadshow. Completely.
I am sorry for your ‘touchy’ situation.
I hope you will be able to resolve it in counseling.
I will remember you in my thoughts and prayers.
This is all just an ‘enigma’ to me but that is or was the intent. To take and to destroy. Leave no witnesses.
Yep, well, guess what? THERE IS ONE, or two, or three, et al…
I told “IT” one time, that he better hope that he doesn’t end up with his face on a milk carton someday or brought to one of those ‘dysfunctional bring it out in the open’ shows you see on television. EIGHT WOMEN all together, confronting “IT”, live and on national television. “IT’s” response was: “I can’t think of anything more exciting…to have all those women talking about ME at the same time. If we went on Oprah, I could probably sweet talk HER into bed too before the show started.”
A piece of garbage and it deserves NO sympathy.
It is a PREDATOR. Just like a lion foraging in the jungle. Just like the shark, swimming in tranquil shore waters…
Nothing changes that. NOTHING.
You just don’t walk where the lions do and you stop swimming in the shore waters.
Dupey
Shanamarie: Why can’t you relocate to a different part of the country just after your ex starts serving time in prison? Generally, a judge would be inclined to allow a geographic move if the other spouse is in prison and paying no support and the move would be a “step up” financially for you and the child.
I’ve been rationalizing the sociopaths and pedofiles I’ve known this way for some time now. Some people just don’t have it. Moving forward, I’m defintely looking for people who have enough empathy to “romantically pair bond”. I’ve been talking to a shrink. I finally just asked her if it works like this…
Psychopaht -> sociopath… Pedofiles, Narcasists, Sex Addicts…. Then you hit the normal part of the bell curve… Somewhere in there you reach an empathic threshold, at that point you get the capactiy to pair bond, then romantically pair bond or “fall in love”. From there thing deepen as you go to the other end of the bell curve.
My therapist said basically that’s how it goes.
Fill your life with people with empathy and babies and puppies. They’re safe and will help you heal from the sociopath.
The thing about sociopathy is that it IS a spectrum disorder. Many other monsters have sociopathic “traits” A pure sociopath is a wirling dervish. The other ones are a lot trickier to spot.
A side note. The guy that played the android in the recent movie “Prometheus” PERFECT sociopath. The android doesn’t have emotions … or does he? He has some simple ones. Just like a sociopath.