Scientists now believe that the set of personality traits that cause sociopathy develops in people with genetic risk. But research also shows that genetics alone cannot account for the presence of sociopathy in our society. Sociopathy is caused by an interaction between genes and environment. In my opinion, many kids are twice cursed by genetics. The same genes that put them at risk also give them at least one unfit parent. This unfit parent creates an environment where the genes that produce sociopathy can become manifest.
In part 1 of this series, I listed several parenting behaviors that foster the development of sociopathy. This week we will discuss the trait anger and hostility that characterizes sociopathy. Nowhere are gene-environment interactions more apparent than in the development of an angry, hostile, suspicious style of relating to others.
Numerous studies have demonstrated that children at risk for sociopathy tend to adopt a suspicious approach during social interactions with both peers and adults. They are quick to interpret the behavior of others as hostile, angry or otherwise malevolent. They are also more likely to propose aggressive solutions to situations that involve conflict. When at risk kids respond in kind to perceived hostility, other children reject them. This rejection serves to confirm to the child that others are indeed malevolent–a classic self-fulfilling prophesy.
I am convinced that this suspicious, hostile stance we see in at risk children is due to their focus on dominance and power. At risk children tend to focus on competition and power as opposed to affection in relationships. If your child is focused on dominance, she/he will appear to you to be strong willed and will not respond well to correction. Many parents respond to dominant children by trying to put them in their place. They thus model aggressive behavior. Engaging in dominance struggles only further activates the dominance drive in at risk children. Dealing with a child’s dominance behavior, is perhaps the biggest challenge parents of at risk children face.
The only tool we have to reduce dominance behavior in at risk children and teens is affection. Affectionate interactions are incompatible with dominance behavior, so, if you want your child to be easier to live with, you have to teach him/her to be affectionate. You have to do everything in your power to give your child the ability to love. When strong dominance motivation is appropriately balanced with empathy and affection, the result is a great leader. Our kids who are born dominant are born leaders if we are able to guide them to have this balance.
I believe the dominance behavior at risk children show is inborn. My son was born with this dominant temperament and I work daily to teach him to love. He is now nearly 5 and does show a great deal of empathy and affection, however, he also shows the dominance behavior I am discussing. For example, there are times when we are shopping and someone gets close to our cart. My son becomes very territorial and says to adults, “This is our cart, don’t touch our stuff!” I promise he did not learn this from me. When we are in public I make it a point to smile, greet people and wish them a good day. Notice, too, that my son is not afraid to confront adults he doesn’t know. Just a few weeks ago, we drove to a local bike trail with our bikes on the bike rack of the van. As I was unloading the bikes, a woman approached me to ask about the trail. Her tone was a little anxious and her expression somewhat dry. My son interpreted her body language and expressions as hostile and said, “Don’t be mean to my mom!”
When these issues come up, I reassure my son and encourage him to give people the benefit of the doubt. “That nice lady only wanted to know about the trail.” I relate these experiences here because I want you to consider what would happen to my son if there was an adult male in his life who modeled the same competitive, suspicious behavior he is predisposed to. I have no doubt what would happen; these traits would become greatly magnified!
Studies have confirmed that nurture magnifies nature to produce antisocial behavior in at risk children. Two of the primary predictors of sociopathy in the children of sociopaths are a hostile style on the part of the sociopathic parent and hostile parenting. Interestingly, sibling to sibling spread of antisocial behavior also occurs via this hostility factor. Last week we received a letter from a mother whose former husband and now adult son are both sociopaths. She expressed guilt over not fighting harder when her son asked to live with his father. She didn’t fight because she also had two other children in the home who were suffering at the hands of their sibling, who was developing sociopathic personality traits. I believe that this mother’s decision, to focus her energy on the children she believed could be helped, likely saved the other two children. In the real world, people who have had children with sociopaths often have to make very difficult, gut-wrenching decisions.
Sociopaths not only model a suspicious/hostile attitude toward others, they can also be hostile toward family members, including children. For children who are not dominant, hostility directed toward them from a sociopathic parent creates anxiety and depression. When dominant children are the recipients of hostility, they simply throw it back or displace it on others. Either way, a home that is not a source of peace is bad for child well-being. In order to learn to love, children must learn to enjoy affection. In homes where anger abounds, children come to enjoy food, various forms of video entertainment, and other escapes, as opposed to really enjoying loved ones. This creates a problem with the pleasure balance that sets these children up to develop alcoholism and addiction later on. When love does not abound in our lives we seek to fill the void”¦and the result can be disastrous.
FAD,
cool! your son is a model!
Ok, gray rock works when you need them to go away, but it’s too late because he already knows you and knows what gets to you. Besides, you can’t get rid of him for 16 more years.
So you have to do what spaths do: create drama. but make it fake drama. And don’t go over the top and make yourself look crazy. Just distract him. will write more later.
Dear FAD, (((((Hugs)))) Darlling I have NO DOUBT that your therapist is right, and the continual, constant high drama that you have been in and the reactions to this UNREMITTING CARP is enough to push you over the edge.
Sugar, believe me when I tell you I KNOW WHAT IT IS TO WANT TO DEFEND YOURSELF FROM THESE LIES—but the problem is that defending yourself from them, ARGUING with JF is going to make you look crazy—but LET HIM MAKE HIMSELF LOOK CRAZY by being above it all and aloof! I know that is driving you crazy right now, but MOST OF HIS E MAILS and his whining and so on sound like he is crazy, but if you argue with him, it makes you look even carzier. There is no way you can stir chit and not get it on you.
Sooner or later the e mails and communication will go to court or a therapist and the thing is that you need to make sure that YOU don’t look crazy by YOUR OWN WRITING. His writing is NOT going to make you look crazy, it is only your own that can.
Don’t worry bout “defending” yourself from his slurs and his lies.
I also suggest that you forget about the “Junior as a model” stint, and I’ll tell you why. Right now you need as little STRESS as possible and trying to manage a career for Junior is MORE STRESS that you do not need. Just MHO! I can guarentee that JF is going to make ANYTHING you do along that line hell on earth for you and raise more problems. More problems is not something you need right now. I’ve seen photos of your junior and he is a doll but managing your own life, recover, healing and taking care of your son in spite of jerk face is more than a full time job! AGain, just MHO.
Keep on with the therapy and keep praying and give it some time. JF does love drama, but remember what Gavin DeBecker says “don’t respond because he will figure if you respond after 30 tries that is how many times he has to keep on” Yes, he will up the ante, but you must continue to NOT respond, eventually he will slack off when he has another kid with her or something else distracts him. Hang on darling and don’t give up. ((((hugs))) and my prayers for you always!
sorry FAD,
I only post when I’m alone so sometimes I have to log out really fast. It’s just part of not being able to trust anyone anymore.
I can only tell you from my own experience that the only time I ever won against the spath was by making him think I was doing/thinking one thing and then suddenly showing up doing another. They plot and plan, so you cannot reveal how you think or whats important to you. It’s why I shut down when my BF walks in the room. I trust NO ONE.
Sky,
Why are you with somebody you don’t trust? Wouldn’t it better to be alone?
SC1
No SC1,
this works for me. If he is good then great, if not then he is part of my study. I will keep my integrity and be honest.
FAD, they do up the ante when they don’t get a reaction. A reaction reinforces their behavior, and the most effective reinforcement is intermittant, which means he doesn’t always get a reaction, but if he keeps it up long enough, and tries hard enough he will. As Oxy reminded us, according to Gavin Debecker, if it takes thirty times to get a reaction, once, the next time he’ll be willing to exert his pressure 50 times, because you have intermittantly reinforced his behavior.
Any reaction gives him an in, and he sees it as a victory.
There are certain pat responses you can train yourself to make…but always with little to no emotion. You can shrug your shoulders and say, “suit yourself.” You can say,”I’m sorry you see it that way.” You can say, Do what you gotta do”. You can say, “I understand what you’re saying, but I’ve made up my mind.” “I’ve made myself clear, on that point.” etc.etc. etc.
There is a great deal to be gleaned from googling phrases like, “How to deal with manipulation,” or how to handle difficult people”. Lot’s of techniqual advise.
I know you feel that you aren’t being true to yourself, but you are. This is self-preservation. You want to eqtinguish his bad behavior, his drama and manipulation. You can not let it feed on your emotions. JM2C. I hope it helps a little.
Thanks, to all who advised on my GS’s melt downs. His parents give in to him a lot, and I told them I was at the end of my rope with the temper tantrums. They have begun the time-out tact, so that I am not the only one using it, and it seems to be helping. (Some days are better than others.) He is at this minute screaming because he can’t have a candy-cane. I told him, “after lunch” but he wants it now.
Our empathy can be exploited, even by a 2 year old.
I have been thinking about acting like the haircuts and modeling are a big deal. I don’t actually care that much about either one.
The hair cut issue makes jf look like an arse.
The modeling is just a distraction. if jf wants to drive to shoots and auditions he can.
Oxy’s right. I don’t need more responsibility right now.
Oxy wrote: “His writing is NOT going to make you look crazy, it is only your own that can.”
I am too short and simple with my responses.
I won’t make ME look crazy.
About the hair I wrote:
“I will get his hair trimmed next weekend.
Thank you for the opportunity.”
And to his concern about our son sleeping in (I think he was covering his arse for NOT putting Jr. down for a Nap)
I wrote:
“He went to sleep, only an hour later than his usual bedtime.
I don’t know why he would have slept so much.
And if he slept till 10:30 am I don’t know how he could have fallen asleep in the car on our way home.
This is also unusual.”
I felt better about voicing my concern about him not having a nap (without saying so) since I felt he was trying to blame me for Noah’s exhaustion. (IF he slept till 10:30 with or without a nap he should not have fallen asleep at 3:45 pm) BUT i then feared his response (since he HAS to win)
Dear FAD,
As long as you RESPOND to his nit picking he will keep picking nits, your writing didn’t sound (at least in that instance) crazy, it is just that as long as he is going to throw in all these nitty picky “details” and you respond, he has had his REWARD—NOTICE FROM YOU. This is not, I think, about the baby, but about YOU NOTICING JERK FACE, he must have your undivided attention, and he has the perfect hook to get it, the baby, and whatever he does he will rationalize it as “being a parent” PUKE!!!!!
Your Jerk face offends ME so much I want to go hurt him for you! LOL ((((hugs)))) He is sooooo typical and such a pain in the arse! LOL