Editor’s note: The Lovefraud reader who posts as “Shocknawe” posted information in a comment about the physical condition of adrenal fatigue. I invited him to write a full blog post on the topic. Please remember that Lovefraud is not a medical resource, and if you are suffering from symptoms like those discussed below you should consult a doctor.
How to recover from adrenal fatigue
By Shocknawe
As victims of psycho/sociopaths, we know all too well the damage inflicted upon us. But I discovered that the toll taken has an additional component one that, left untreated, can set our progress towards recovery back by months and even years. The good news, however, is that we can take some simple steps to speed our recovery and take control of our lives again.
First, some background on my situation. I married a sociopath. It hurts even to write those words. Among her many deceits, one was that she was an expert on holistic health specifically diet. Since I’d revealed early on that I was into an organic lifestyle, she created her “expertise” on the spot and sold me as an authority on the subject. Her form of gas-lighting took the form of convincing me that everything I thought I knew about the body was wrong and that she and only she was capable of bringing about a state of perfect health.
So no surprise that by the time she was done with me, my health had already suffered to a visible extent (friends were commenting on how ghastly I looked). The shock of discovery triggered in me a cascading series of health-related problems that incapacitated me for some time.
The following list of symptoms of victims of sociopathic predation is not mine, but rather an outline of behaviors generally regarded as common:
- Emotional paralysis
- PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder)
- Suicidal thoughts or actions
- Loss of interest in life
- Loss of energy
- Insomnia
- Dizziness
- Anxiety
- Depression or severe depression
- Numbing of feelings
- Disinterest in having a relationship (platonic or sexual)
- Panic attacks
- Irritability
- Increased anxiety from being alone
- Increased anxiety from being in crowds
- Mood swings
I experienced all the above symptoms. I ate one half teaspoon of peanut butter, and barely kept that down. I drank copious amounts of water and hardly slept for five weeks. That led to a collapse of my immune system and I was hospitalized for pneumonia, had three surgeries on my eye for a fully detached retina brought on, the doctors said, by stress. I lost 25 pounds and I was lean to begin with. I was prescribed antidepressants.
Once I started climbing out of the acute depression stage I set about trying to diagnose my symptoms and begin building my strength back. My first stop was to my old Chinese acupuncturist, whom I’d stopped seeing when I put myself in the sure hands of my ”˜loving’ wife. After examination he said, “You need to go immediately to the grocery store and buy a steak; you’re in the first stages of renal failure and could experience a heart attack at any hour.”
Renal failure, or kidney failure, is defined as a medical condition in which the kidneys fail to adequately filter toxins and waste products from the blood. I had become anemic (low red blood cell count) in large part because I hadn’t touched red meat in three years and had entrusted my dietary regimen to the ”˜expert’ over my better judgment.
Now I had something productive to focus on and I began looking into both Western and Eastern approaches to the morphology of kidney disease and “disharmony.” I soon discovered that many of the symptoms I experienced were a result of the huge amounts of cortisol and adrenaline I’d expended in the first weeks of my “shock and awe.”
Meanwhile, as I was reading up on PTSD, depression, and of course, sociopathy, I found that I’d begun craving pasta and sweets of all sorts. Given my depressed state, I gave in to anything that provided even a temporary respite from my pain, and I’d indulged my cravings as often as I cared to which became daily. I don’t drink or take drugs, but I’ve always had a sweet tooth, so I figured, “What’s the harm?” I soon found out.
My research revealed that my adrenal glands, which sit atop our kidneys, were exhausted, and had undoubtedly been struggling for years under the (unconscious) stress of living with a sociopath. Adrenal fatigue, or Non-Addison’s hypoadrenia, is caused by prolonged or severe stress or trauma. The adrenal glands produce the glucocorticoid hormones cortisone, cortisol, aldosterone, androstenedione, adrenaline, norepinephrine and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA). Adrenaline, DHEA, cortisol and norepinephrine are the body’s four major stress hormones. Imbalances in their production can cause or worsen carbohydrate intolerance. Repeated stresses, no matter what their cause, make a person more prone to adrenal fatigue. The effects of stress are cumulative, even when the stressors are quite different. Here are some of the examples of life events that can lead to adrenal fatigue:
- Unrelieved pressure or frequent crises at work and/ or home
- Any severe emotional trauma
- Death of a close friend or family member
- Major surgery with incomplete recovery or subsequent persistent fatigue
- Prolonged or repeated respiratory infections
- Serious burns including severe sunburn
- Prolonged lack of sleep
- Head trauma
- Job loss
- Sudden change in financial status
- Relocation without support of friends or family
- Repeated or overwhelming chemical exposure (including alcohol and drug abuse)
In addition to the emotional and physical traumas that can produce hypoadrenia, there are chronic conditions or lifestyles that continually drain the adrenals or prevent them from recuperating properly after a trauma. One of the most common chronic factors is poor diet. For example, 62% of North Americans don’t eat even one vegetable per day. Fast foods don’t have the necessary nutrients we need, and if you’re eating mostly processed foods you can be sure your adrenal glands are not getting the nutrients they need to function optimally under normal circumstances, never mind responding sufficiently in a crisis. Adrenal fatigue is becoming much more common as our society assumes long work hours and high stress levels as a normal part of life. Over-eating carbohydrates, especially simple sugars and refined starches, is itself a cause of adrenal stress and fatigue and can only exacerbate the condition.
Since I was anemic and needed to eat red meat, I chose to start with the Atkins diet. The Atkins diet begins with a radical departure from the normal balanced meal: total elimination of all carbohydrates for two weeks — including even complex carbs like vegetables. This gives the adrenals a ”˜breather’, taking pressure off them so they can begin the process of recovery. I also recommend Adrenal Fatigue The 21st Century Stress Syndrome, by James L. Wilson, ND, DC, PhD., which outlines the causes, types and symptoms of adrenal fatigue and offers comprehensive approaches to functional restoration.
An adrenal fatigue diet of lower carbs and the elimination of all other stimulants is critical in order to allow the adrenal glands to rest and recover. The extreme demands placed on the body during times of stress require nothing less than total dedication to healthy nutrition. The following is a list of recommended nutrients to assist in adrenal support and recovery:
- High quality (preferably a whole food) multivitamin/ mineral complex
- Vitamin B Complex — 100 mg with additional Pantothenic acid (B5) twice daily
- Vitamin C — 4,000 – 10,000 mg daily
- Raw liver extract
- Coenzyme A
- Coenzyme Q10
- Magnesium — at bedtime
- L-Tyrosine — at bedtime
- Vitamin B12 — sublingual at bedtime
- Zinc lozenges
- Astragalus — if taking tincture, use a non-alcohol base brand
- Aswaganda — if taking tincture, use a non-alcohol base brand
- Milk thistle
- Siberian ginseng
Here are more tips:
- Get adequate protein in your diet. If possible, red meat should be grass fed, antibiotic and hormone-free your adrenals don’t need to be battling those substances while trying to regain their health. Fried foods should be avoided. Consume plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables especially leafy greens.
- Stay away from sweets, alcohol and tobacco, which put tremendous stress on the adrenals and are addictive. Avoid coffee even decaffeinated coffee as it’s toxic to the adrenal glands.
- If your blood pressure is low, increase your intake of salt Himalayan or sea salt is best.
- Exercise as much as possible, in whatever form will get you active the most.
- And finally, remove as many stressful people and situations from your life as you can; yoga and meditation can greatly help mitigate the stresses you are forced to cope with and add to your peace of mind.
As the body goes, so goes the mind; or: garbage in, garbage out. If you want to give yourself the best chance of recovery from the awful ravages of sociopathic abuse, you owe it to yourself to restore your adrenals and nurture your health as best you can.
Twice Betrayed,
I am off today to pick up my children (from a visit they’re having with one of my relatives). I think that the conversation that you had with your older daughter is wonderful, being uplifting to you, having promise. What you have experienced in your past has been difficult, majorly disappointing at times. You have persevered, being a stable, solid, positive influence to your grown children (they know it too, confirmed by what your older daughter said). They are lucky to have you for a mother. I hope all goes well (improved ties) with your family members, that each child would recognize and make improvements (to themselves) along the way. You’ve done your best – what more can you ask from anyone? I think it’s smart to be hopeful, but also careful while we go through life.
Yes! They have traits we seek and admire because they are in us. I believe in my case that mirroring was a result of having a blank canvas – he surely had a void inside him as big as the Grand Canyon – and his inate ability to “suck” another’s personality from them in a attempt to make it his own. In that way he could claim that my traits were his and use my own weaknesses against me. OMG it was so subtle, so quirky, so endearing at first, but at the end it was like I was playing checkers and he chess. There was no leg up, no beating him at this sick game. I had never been given the rules and he made them up as we went along. Complete and utter frustration. The more I dug in (holding onto my own reality base), the more distant he became. I realized he knew the gig was up long before I did. He knew I was on to him like countless others and he was going to ride it out for everything he could get. Once it was over it was my fault, of course, for breaking the mirror, ruining the illusion. I can still hear him saying his favorite thing, “It’s all smoke and mirrors, baby!” whenever he talked about his ability to be so good at so many things. And he was good at them, it was part of the manipulation. When someone has no substance, they have to replace it with something useful or quickly they realize they have no common ground with which to effectively manipulate.
I could go on for days but I want to say this, the most important thing for me in this whole experience. I would not have been strong enough to pull away from his sick orbit were it not for my faith, for it surely saw me through and I thank God every day for His presence in my life. Spath thought that, too, was all smoke and mirrors.
Happy Saturday, all!
Star what you said about your mother and her REFUSAL to sit down and have a talk about it, to clear the air…reminds me so much of my own egg donor, whose response to me saying “we need to talk” was….”I only want to talk about uplifting things. That’s in the past, let’s just PRETEND NONE OF THIS HAPPENED AND START OVER.”
Well, that was NO LONGER GOING TO GET IT WITH ME. That’s what we had done in the past EVERY TIME she had betrayed me, I fell for that “let’s don’t fight about the past” crap…but then it would be REPEATED and when I wanted to talk about it and go over what had happened it was the same CARP—“Let’s pretend it never happened.”
Well, if someone accidentally spills their milk we CAN pretend it never happened, but if someone THROWS their MILK IN YOUR FACE or spits in your face., YOU MUST ADDRESS IT for it to EVER be healed, for you to EVER trust them again. I was 62 years old before I figured that out! LOL She is 82 now and still hasn’t figured out that I am not going to cave (after 3 years) and “pretend none of this happened.” She has SPIT IN MY FACE (not literally) way too many times…she has stabbed me in the back and LIED too many times, and I am not, cannot TRUST that she has my best interest at heart. There are just SOME things that you can’t ignore and PLAY LET’S PRETEND.
Even AFTER a “heart to heart talk” there are trust issues.
I think about the story of Joseph of the “coat of manyy colors” in the Bible. He was SOLD into slavery by his brothers (who at first had decided to kill him because they were jealous) then 20-30-40 years later, he is essentially “king” over Egypt and they are starving and come to him for food. He recognizes them, but they don’t recognize him. He has long ago, “forgiven” them (gotten the bitterness out of his heart toward them) but he did NOT trust them until he had TESTED the heck out of them to see what kind of men they had become in those decades apart.
After some SERIOUS testing, he finds that they have matured,, that they would now sacrifice their own lives to save their youngest brother because they knew just how much suffering they had put their father through when they had convinced him that Joseph had been killed by a lion—they had covered his coat in sheep’s blood and told the old man they found it in the field and that Joseph must have been killed by a lion.
ONLY AFTER he saw that they had CHANGED in how they thought and HOW THEY BEHAVED did he even let them know who he was.
When my son C “apologized” to me, said all the things I wanted to hear so badly, “Mom you are wonderful, I am sooooo sorry” I pounded on that “apology” like a duck on a june bug–which at the moment I think was sincere—but HE HAD NOT REALLY CHANGED, because when he was no longer devastated by how the Ps had almost killed him, literally, when he felt safe again, he started lying to me again, breaking promises….in other words, he was STILL the same as he was BEFORE the apology and I could not TRUST him.
Looking back at the betrayals he had done to me, the lies he had told, the betrayals of others he had done, well, I realized that this was a LIFE LONG PATTERN of lies and betrayal. He isn’t a psychopath, because he does feel remorse eventually when he gets his tail in a crack because of his betrayals, and he makes a “vow” to himself and to me to do better, but he is never able to pull it off for long before he again BETRAYS and LIES. He has empathy, and a moral compass, just not the strength to abide by it for long….but “sorry” doesn’t cut it in restoring trust…..the hundred and first time even if I allowed it to restore trust the first 100 times he betrayed me. I love him, but I do NOT trust him, and I can’t allow myself to have UN-trustworthy people in my life. It is my loss, but it is more his loss because I only lost someone I could NOT trust. He lost someone who would have died for him.
souljourner:
Great post! You know…now I am realizing maybe WHY my X spath was so charming…he was taking emotions from EVERYONE…mirroring EVERYONE…geez, I would be charming, too if I was a chameleon and just took on the personality of whoever I was with at the time! More and more everyday is making sense to me and my eyes are getting bigger and bigger…wide open.
I am reading “People of the Lie” and I am learning so much. I am not sure who else here has read this book, but the most important thing I am learning so far is that evil is everywhere. All the scenarios that the author described I would have NEVER seen as evil before I read this book. I would have only seen it as people being clueless, insensitive, or mentally ill (in an innocent way). So I have a question…for those of you who have read the book, do you agree with the author? Do you agree that the behaviors of the people in this book are evil?
Louise,
it’s been a while since I’ve read the book and I’ve read it twice. Though I don’t remember too much of it, I remember that I really liked it though.
I liked “Why is it always about you? The seven deadly sins of narcissism.” the most.
What I’ve learned since my eyes have opened is that they ARE EVERYWHERE. And they disguise themselves with a mirror. They seem to be so great because they mirror us and we like that. It’s said that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. That may be true in some cases, but I think mostly it’s a sign of the spath. People who lack originality tend to imitate others and that’s usually a sign of being infantile.
stargazer: you make a valid point and I have checked into what prompted my X into a serious tail spin when I left him and later found out about this affair. Let me shed a little light on this and you will be more informed. I was only turning 33 when my daughter was 15 going on 16. I married and had her right out of high school. Then my son two years later. So, this is established. My X was younger than me, I later found out, so he was a young good looking male who my daughter targeted from the moment he walked into the house to meet my kids. I had never seen this side of her before [I never even dated] and was shocked to see her pull off her jogging pants to reveal her short cheerleading shorts right in front of him! It made him blush and me squirm with confused embarrassment. The affair during her teens, I later found out happened BEFORE we married. When I found out he was younger than me, I TRIED to terminate the relationship. He and she apparently teamed up during that break????? Being a P on the road to major P-dom, the rejection triggered his P and he literally stalked me down with charm, money for my kids’ for many luxury items [we had plenty of nice things, but he was from a money making family and had LUXURY items]. He bought my daughter her junior prom dress and paid over a thousand dollars for it, because it was designer. So, she liked him a lot. He was knock your socks off handsome!!!!! So, I must admit I was smitten, even though I felt many red flags, which he proceeded to calm one by one with the P charm and spin. My son liked him and to this day, still does. My X would do ANYTHING right now for all my kids, if they called and needed ANYTHING and always did. In many ways my X has been a very giving, helpful and seemingly kind person BUT he has had the P flip side-which progressed worse and worse as the years went by and peaked in his midlife crisis- and can get very vindictive…but it was ALWAYS directed at me and any perceived ‘disrespect or disloyalty’. When I found out about the affair YEARS later when I divorced him, I contacted my attorney about it and my older daughter indicated she would NOT discuss it and went crazed blown up angry at me for even touching on the subject. [She angrily told me my X had chosen me over her.] Then later said she would testify, if FORCED. My daughter by this X was VERY upset and begged me to let it go for her sake. I could not see FORCING my older daughter against her will to testify NOR did I want to torture my younger one with the whole scene against her father either. That’s why I did not pursue it. While I do not hold her totally responsible for her behavior at 15, I do some, because of what I saw the very first time he showed up. It is my firm belief from what I’ve seen and in other girls, [and boys] especially P/N’s they are sexually aware from very young ages and it can/does have nothing to do with molestation. I know my older sister and one of my other sisters had some of that type of behavior and we were ALL raised in a strict, clean, puritan upbringing. I’ve seen friend’s little girls four and five years old already sexualized and their mothers were freaking out trying to figure out how this could be. Some of this behavior is simply genetically hardwired. P’s are very aware at a very early age of everything. I have two grandsons raised in the same household. One is a pure, naive unaware, kind young man. The other kid was and is a very aware boy that started rubbing on his baby sitters’ tops when he was four/five years old. My son and DIL would cringe and others would ask them what they were teaching and exposing him to…which was very little and my son would always tell me, “Mom, he is just this way and always has been.” . They still try to keep him sheltered as any type of exposure can really fuel him. He is a smart boy, but noticed girls at the age of four and tried to ‘keep’ a little four year old girl for his own because ‘he loved her’. So, those of us who have raised these kids and been around many others know that NOTHING has to trigger these types of kids…they know more than we do! I always had to ask my younger daughter to translate my X’s behavior because she could do it, at five years old. I could not.
bluejay: your post was very uplifting, encouraging and positive. Thank you for it. I am saving it to read again and again, like I do many by ox,sky, gem, EB and others who have been such true encouragers with realistic expectations. I thank all of you who have walked with me thru much of this and given me sound input without projection and judgement. This is what this blog is all about.
skylar:
Thanks. I still wonder though if these people are truly evil? I guess it depends on what our definition is of evil. I’ll try to get that book you mentioned.
Twice Betrayed:
I would have to say after reading your post that yes, your daughter even at 15 knew what she was doing. She was very sexually charged at a young age. I can understand that though. I was somewhat like that, but I never targeted older, married men. I just dabbled with boys my own age, but I can relate to already having those feelings. I just didn’t act on it that much. So yep, I truly believe she played her own part in what happened. Very sad. Please keep posting.
TB, I had forgotten about your little budding P grandson (son of your son) and yes, it does seem from my observations that some Ps seem to “sexualize” early. My P son hit puberty quite early and I think was pretty sexually active early as well…at the time I was unaware though.
My friend’s P daughter was very sexual and manipulative at 12, and when he tried to stop her she looked him in the face and said, “If you don’t let me do what I want to I will tell the cops you molested me and you will go to jail.” She was right. Fortunately, he saw the hand writing on the wall and let her go and live with her P mother. I lost contact after that. I know he was heart broken.
He had had her in counseling, done everything he could, but the DNA of not only the girl’s mother, but his own mother as well, seemed to have won out. His son soon followed in his sister’s footsteps. The last I heard on him he was in jail as a teenager.
While in our society a person is not considered an “adult” until age 18, but under certain circumstances they can be TRIED in a court for a crime as young as 11 or 12. In many societies the age of “accountability” is much younger than for our Western Society, even though the brain itself is still maturing well into the mid to late 20s. The old Jewish law considered a child adult at 12/13. Today that age is considered for the most part as a “baby” or “young child” without much of a will of their own, or judgment. That also, I think, varies from child to child.
We also have plenty of “children” who are 25-35 and still not “responsible” and “adult.”