This week I have been reading Jon Ronson’s book The Psychopath Test. It’s been on my list of ”˜must reads’ since it came out earlier this year, and just a couple of days ago I downloaded it on to my Kindle. I finished it within 24hours.
Jon Ronson is a British journalist who, among many other things, wrote the film Men Who Stare At Goats, which was made in to a movie starring George Clooney and Ewan McGregor. Jon interviewed my friend Mary Turner Thomson (author of “The Bigamist” detailing her marriage to the sociopath Will Jordan) and became fascinated with the subject of psychopaths. He subsequently attended Dr Robert Hare’s training programme to understand the PCL-R checklist that many of us on this site are only too familiar with. Ronson’s book explores the diagnostic methods for identifying personality disorders and details his own experiences interviewing people who scored highly on Dr Hare’s checklist scale. It’s a fascinating read — no surprises for those of us who have been there and seen it — and I am just glad that he has provided us with another resource that can be added to the list of useful educational tools.
I am delighted to tell you that I will be attending that very same course next week. I am hugely excited about the prospect and am very much looking forward to meeting Dr Hare himself so that I can thank him for helping me in my personal journey to reclaim my life while (just!) keeping my sanity. This is why I have once again been devouring further material on the subject. And this is how, on Dr Hare’s website, I came across a fascinating new film that explores psychopathy. It was released on 11th September this year and is called Fishead.
Fishead — The Movie
There is an ancient Chinese saying that says a fish rots and stinks from the head, which is how the makers of this movie settled on the name. It relates to the heads of industry, as well as to the human brain – which is arguably rotten in the case of psychopaths. The film explores the idea that our society is being progressively more controlled by sociopaths, as well as the suggestion that our increased use of medications such as anti-depressants is contributing to a manufactured set of psychopathic traits. Decreased empathy and reduction of emotional responses are, of course, side-effects of drugs that are designed to numb emotional pain — although I must say I had never thought about it in the way that the film portrays. If you are interested in exploring the movie and its makers, you’ll find all the details at www. www.fisheadmovie.com The film is free to watch, you just send off to them for a password.
So, anyway, all this additional material has been sparking new thoughts and prodding at old ones as well. And I am reminded of the expression “walking the talk”. Yes, it may be said that it’s now a well-worn cliché, and, for me it is still a short accurate description of authenticity. I myself know full well when I am walking my talk — and over recent years, it has been that approach that has pulled me through some of the darkest periods of my life!
As I am now re-exploring the workings of antisocioal personality disorders, it struck me that the sociopath can only ever talk the walk. They can never, I repeat never, walk the talk in the way that you and I can. I’ve heard other phrases like “they know the words and not the music” and the idea that “they can only dream in black and white” — but to me, now, when I think of “talking the walk” it describes my own experiences absolutely to a tee.
Authenticity
Just last week I met up with a client I am now proud to call my friend. This lady came to the conclusion that she could no longer thrive in the company where I met and have been working with her. Describing the place as “somewhere that seeks out and silences of gets rid of people who care” she has now moved on to another company that communicates authenticity at a human soul level. Not through some well thought out set of words that purport to describe the company values. Not through a carefully crafted website. Not through flashy promises of a golden career. Not even through white-teethed hand-shakes and a swanky dinner to seal the deal.
No, this company has actually been walking the talk. My client (I’ll call her Sarah) has already experienced the heartache and frustration of working within an organization that says one thing and does another. She knows first hand what it feels like to be encouraged to stand up and stand out, and then be shot down for having an opinion. She knows the debilitating confusion of being undermined, undervalued and pushed to the limit — for me, it’s just a shame that she had to experience that in order to fully appreciate the difference. The good thing is, though, that from now on she will settle for nothing less than an environment where she is valued and can make a difference. Never again will she allow herself to be belittled or underestimated. I absolutely believe her, and I’m glad.
“Do you know what Mel?” she grinned after telling me a particularly shocking account of a senior director’s inability to demonstrate compassion for his team “this new bunch wanted to know my birthday just so that it could be marked off as a holiday — on top of the usual holiday allowances!”
It doesn’t take much to help a person feel motivated. It takes a whole heap more to knock a person down. And it can take a huge amount more until we are prepared to move on and walk away.
People like you and me, you see, will automatically judge other people by the same set of values and behaviours that are naturally to us. Like us, people by nature tend to be forgiving “Oh, that’s ok, it’s just the way s/he is sometimes. It’s no big deal!” we might say when somebody does something that is upsetting to us or to others. “S/he’ll get over it, let’s just give them a chance!” And this is how the deliberate manipulator continues to win their games. This is how they keep on going, parasitically sucking the lifeblood from people (and organizations) just to fuel their personal whim — whatever that may be at the time. And because we naturally judge others by how we are ourselves, we cannot begin to comprehend that somebody else is playing by a whole different set of rules.
Powerful Experiences
The sociopath may be an expert at mimicking and manipulation, but s/he will never ever have the same richness of experiences that we can enjoy on a daily basis. They will never know what it feels like, what it really feels like to fall in love for example. To feel genuine friendship and connection with another human being. To experience joy, fear, sadness, peace, excitement and the myriad of other emotions that are at our disposal.
They may well think they are clever. I’m sure they think that they have one over on us because they can talk the walk to such a professional degree that they continue to control their willing targets. But you know what? Once we know what we’re dealing with, once we recognize the subtle gaps in their shows of emotion and understanding, then they have lost their power.
Yes, it’s a living nightmare working through the pain and confusion that is the aftermath of a sociopath’s influences. But you know what? So far as I’m concerned, I’d walk my talk a million times over rather than be doomed to the sociopath’s empty existence of gray numbness. And the more people who experience that void — through work, relationships, family, friends, or the growing educational resources — the more of us can join together and make a stand against these empty souls.
I don’t doubt there’s a battle ahead. And at the same time I am filled with confidence that together we can make a difference. I’m ready, and looking forward to exploring opportunities to increase our army. I’ll let you know how I get on with Dr Hare”¦
Crazee1,
Thanks for your words of support. I’m in the enviable position of no kids (with him) and no divorce. Lucky for me.
I have two grown up children with a previous. He was/is dependent on alcohol and so I had to fight to get way from him also. I didn’t really see the pattern. I think I was in denial about the part I played in these relationshits ……however, instead of being a bigger stick to beat myself with it strengthens me in a lot of ways. I’m more prepared to be on my own even though I would love to have that someone. It hasn’t worked out for me and instead of thinking I must find someone to love for the first time in my life I’m saying whoa ….be on your own girl. To be honest my fingers are burned. Off! But I’m a sucker for these types. The spath. I think I have believed that I could be the one ….the one he would change for. Derr ..it’s been ( im still in the process!) a huge wake up call to see that was futile, foolish and ever so slightly arrogant. Of me! I do know now that I ignored the signs, the red flags. I saw what I wanted.
I’m getting there slowly. It’s like a muscle that’s been weakened by lack of use. My inner strength “muscle”…..I’m exercising it every day.
That’s a great quote Sky!!! Thanks for that. Sums up a lot of information about psychopaths and their victims as well as why normal people are duped by their Outward displays.
Star – we have to be reminded/ remind ourselves of the tools we do have. there is a quote that I really like: ‘remind yourself of the obvious so that it doesn’t become invisible.’
The things about buddhist meditation for me was that it took a few years but it cut at the roots of depression. IN DWB we do the ‘ngondro’ (known as ‘foundational’ practices) to begin with (after completing the refuge meditation)- it’s a set of 4 practices focused on the changing things in our systems. We do over 100,000 recitations of each mantra with each practice.
The first practice is prostrations (which combines a formal refuge mantra and physical prostrations) to clear the physical energy channels in the body, remove obscurations to practice and connect oneself to the lineage. Next is Dorje Sempa (or Diamond Mind), a sitting meditation that clears out anger and resentment (and therefore cuts the root of depression), purifies our speech and mind (heart) and develops merit.
The practices can take a short time or a long time to complete – they are very time consuming, but their effect is incredibly positive. xo one joy
Thank you one joy. I have never done this type of practice. The other things I do seem to be helping. For me, depression is anger plus a shutting down that I have done since I was little. As strange as it is, I am just trying to watch when I start to shut down and to deliberately do things to reconnect. And lately, there is an added element of loneliness. At my age, the people I meet whom I really like are very busy with their families. I am the odd single person at 51 with no family. But I still manage to find enjoyment in life. I goof around at work and get out enough to be around other people.
Since my Spanish classes have ended, I decided to read Gabriel Garcia Marquez’ “Una Vida”. This would be a fun project, except I’m reading it in Spanish. This is a bit of a challenge for me. So I have enlisted the help of a guy I met over the summer who is from Chile and is bilingual. He is going to help me get through the book and teach me more Spanish is exchange for a few home cooked meals. I’m really excited about this. It is not a date – there is a project and a purpose to our friendship. This takes the pressure off that I feel when dating.
Sorry to have rambled on as I have.
Star – i just have this feeling that you would connect well with the sangha of DWB. of course all of the sanghas have a different feel to them, but overall i think they might really be interesting to you.
my connection has changed and not for the good – and there are a number of reasons for that. but truly it was the most effective thing i have ever ever done.
You know, one joy, I do plan to check it out, maybe sooner than later – if there’s one in Denver.
I saw an episode tonight on Public Channel of Wisconsin Tv. It was about Hitler. It was about a war strategy to figure out his mind through psychology.
They said he had a messiaic something.
I looked it up and this is what I found on Wikipedia: The sub topic is Narcissism.
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Acquired situational · Aggressive · Amorous · Closet · Collective · Compensatory · Conversational · Corporate · Cross-cultural · Cultural · Destructive · Egomania · Elitist · Exhibitionist · Fanatical · Gender · Group · Healthy · Inverted · Malignant · Medical · Megalomania · Pathological · Personality disorder · Phallic · Primary · Primordial · Secondary · Sexual · Spiritual · Unhealthy · Unprincipled
Characteristics
Arrogance · Bad boundaries · Betrayal · Boasting · Bravado · Conceit · Criticism (intolerance of) · Egocentrism · Egotism · Empathy (lack of) · Entitlement (exaggerated) · Envy · Exploitative · Fantasy · Grandiosity · Grandstanding · Greed · Haughtiness · Hidden agenda · Hubris · Magical thinking · Manipulative · Narcissistic abuse · Narcissistic elation · Narcissistic injury · Narcissistic mortification · Narcissistic rage · Narcissistic supply · Narcissistic withdrawal · Omnipotence · Opportunism · Perfectionism · Self-absorbed · Self-esteem · Self-righteousness · Selfishness · Shamelessness · Superficial charm · Superiority complex · Tantrum · True self and false self · Vanity
Defences
Denial · Devaluation · Distortion · Idealization · Splitting · Projection
Cultural types
Control freak · Dandy · Diva · Don Juanism · Dorian Gray syndrome · Drama queen · Fantasist · Metrosexual · Prima donna · Queen bee · Snob · Status symbol · Trophy wife · Valley girl
Related articles
Codependency · Cronyism · Ego ideal · Egomania (UK TV documentary) · Elitism · Empire building · Generation Y · God complex · History of narcissism · Messiah complex · Micromanagement · Narcissism of small differences · Narcissistic leadership · Narcissistic parents · Narcissistic Personality Inventory · Narcissus (mythology) · Nepotism · On Narcissism (Freud essay) · Sam Vaknin · Self-love · Spoiled child · The Culture of Narcissism (Lasch book) · Victory disease · Workplace bullying
Jeannie, I’ve been reading a good biography of Hitler, but have to read only a little bit and then put it down for a while, but there is no doubt in my mind that he was highly narcissistic and psychopathic as well. Later, delusional. The book is very well done from a psychological point of view and though it does not call him a sociopath or psychopath, there is no doubt he had ALL the qualities demonstrated from an early age.
The fact that people like this CAN worm their way into power is scary, and I look at many dictators and people in high political office and I see that THEY CAN DO THAT! They can manipulate and mask their real motives….and when they do, people suffer and/or die. Whole countries suffer and/or die.
OXy
I have a hard time with the Hitler biographies. Like I had a hard time with reading The Art of Seduction. People trapped, snared like rabbits, innocent and at the mercy of predators… just difficult to read. Unlike my husband, I can’t stand to look at car accidents either. Helplessness of victims renders me feeling impotent and anxious. But I did cardiac interventional medicined for 15 years and I was fine so it’s not the blood and guts, it’s the evil that I can’t bear.
Which is why I read about evil from a side entrance. I highlight a booklovers tour ending with a stay at Christ Church College and the Oxford Literary Festival. Last April, one of the lectures was by Martin Davidson. He wrote a book about his grandfather, “The Perfect Nazi”. His grandfather was an SS officer but GF made it VERY clear that he had nothing to do with what happened to the Jews. And like all spaths, such a statement was a technicality. As I sat there listening to Martin talk about the characteristics of his grandfather, it was VERY clear to me that GF was hardcore P. Yet even though the grandson described it, agreed to the meaning of it, he could NOT would NOT SAY THE WORD “psychopath or sociopath as an adjective describing his grandfather.
The book described how the Nazi philosophy was the perfect vehicle for his grandfather and the only reason he didn’t personally gas the Jews was b/c he was such a complete control freak and that section of the Nazi machine was completely regimented and dictated. If GF could have been given carte blanc over the death of the Jews, he would have put Mengele to shame. Good Book to read, easier to digest than Hitler, and outlines how such evil was given the power to rise. And of course, told from the grandson’s point of view of discovering who his grandfather really was and what that discovery did to his own identity as a human being.
Katy, I had trouble reading the “48 Laws of Power” as well….just too much to take in and swallow all at once. That book sounds interesting….but I bet I would be like you and have to take it in small bites. The Hitler biography is like that, I have to take it in a few pages at a time.