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.
Mine was” Lose your wish bone and grow a backbone!”
Love, GemXX
I feel like I know you all and read as much as I can. It has been incredibly helpful. I wanted to share my experience with the spath I came close to marrying but didn’t because something in this discussion touched on a subject I have since become very interested in – are they born or developed?
The man I was with for almost four years seemed like everything I had ever wanted in a mate. I was taken in like a fly in a spider web. Over the course of time, mostly since the
time I decided to flee and then left three weeks before the wedding, I had come to know more and more about his past. He had been adopted by his birth mother’s brother and his wife, meaning the aunt and uncle raised him since he was about 6 months old. Birth mom was diagnosed (not at the time but since then) as paranoid schizophrenic. He had been severely neglected in his first six months of life. I work in the early childhood education field and know the effects of attachment disorder so basically he had three strikes against him as a six month old – born to a mentally ill mother, attachment disorder and adoption (I am not knocking adoption, just saying it was a factor in this situation). As he grew, he learned at the earliest ages how to manipulate. He had been rescued by adoring aunt and uncle and was the apple of their eye. They were determined to give him the best life since the poor darling had had such humble beginnings. Little could they know it was a recipe for disaster. The combination of adoptive parents giving him his hearts desires while turning a blind eye to outrageous (telling) behavior insured that he would never feel anything but self-centered and entitled. I believe that the genetic mental illness didn’t set in until his later years – as it had with bio mom. In effect, he was born destined to be troubled in some way and his environment had allowed the darkest part of him to flourish.
When I finally untangled myself from him, I realized with the help of his adoptive siblings (the family was very supportive and helped me figure out the shock and awe of what happened) that he was about a seven layer mess of the darkest, coldest, most unfeeling person I had ever met. He was a chameleon in every sense of the word. The seven layers were genetic mental illness, attachment disorder, adoption, narcissism, sociopath, borderline personality and anti-social personality disorder. As the shock wore away – and this took nearly three years – I came to realize that he really hated himself and that is what drove most of the behaviors. On top of all that, I realized that he was likely gay and in deep denial. What a mess!
I guess what I wanted to share with all of you is that I didn’t pay much attention at the beginning to his past. He was just a nice looking divorced guy that was struggling to get over it and get back into dating after a five year absence. If I had listened to those little clues as I learned his story, took the time to figure out what they meant, I might have saved myself a whole lot of heartache. The sad thing to me is, although I still have residual feelings about what happened like anger, confusion, why me, etc., there is still a part of me that loves him because he held it together for a long time – the playacting that he was ‘normal’. His family told me that he kept it together while he was with me for longer than he ever had in his life and they didn’t tell me about him because they were so stunned at the change in his behaviors when I came along. We had a pretty good relationship for almost three years. The last one was a doozy. But the point I want to make is that I didn’t really find myself able to fully recover until I came to accept that there is a little part of me that will always love him even though he can’t be in my life any longer. Once I accepted that, I had turned a corner in my own recovery. Even though I know he had the worst of intentions, I was not wrong for feeling how I felt. You might love the wrong person but loving someone is never wrong.
Ox: It was wonderful to hear my daughter say these things and I hold them dear to my heart. I also sat down and had a crying jag trying to reconcile her past behavior and possible future flip side with the now. I still do not feel totally trusting with my heart. I know she loves me and I could tell she was/is sincere. So, it’s hard to understand….she blocks a lot of feelings and turns them into anger. Confusing. But, she has mellowed greatly and we do get along ok now. But, I’m still reeling over the past. Thank you for your kindness, encouragement and wise words of caution. I am listening and I do proceed carefully.
sky: thank you. I hope so.
KatyDid: I thank you, understand and wish you the best with your daughter. It’s difficult thru those years.
Louise: thank you!
geminigirl: I relate! I don’t kid myself. I pray constantly! Best wishes to you, girl! I really don’t know how all this will go or even how it went……confusing.
MAMA GEM i STILL HAVE MY WISH BONE, IT IS RIGHT NEXT TO MY FUNNY BONE…
souljourner:
So lovely put. Thank you for that. Some things you said have me feeling better in this early morning hour.
souljourner – Thank you for sharing.. There is something about my x that I will always love and cherish, and nobody can take that away, not even me as much as I have tried,,,like I have said before, It didnt matter if he was the love of my life, he had to go…It’s better to have loved and lost than to live with a physco the rest of your life…
TB Be careful. NO she does NOT love you, how can she? She doesnt even love herself.
Weve all cruised down that famous Egyptian river,” de Nile”.but PLEASE remember, SHE DOES NOT LOVE YOU its all an act.
Be wary of her, she is a snake in the grass. who has an affair with their Mums ex husband? Answer, a spath does.
She is softening you up for some selfish reason of her own. You are setting yourself up for mORE PAIN. believe me, Ive fallen for this SO many times, and each and every time Ive been shattered, broken hearted, let down, and shes gone off, laughing & jeering at my stupidity.
They LOVE to see us hurt and broken, they GET OFF on it.
DONT TRUST HER. why does a scorpion sting? because thats what scorpions do.
Im telling you this because I care about you, and I dont want you to get crushed again.THEY ARE INCAPABLE OF LOVE.PERIOD.
Love,
Mama GemXX
souljourner,
Good post! When I met the ex-spath, he was newly divorced (his first wife had an affair, marrying the man she was involved with). I felt badly for him – he struck me as “normal,” being a humble, charming, friendly man. What was there not to like about him. During the time we dated and then married, I heard tidbits about his family background (all this information coming by way of a sister-in-law who is married to his younger brother). In time (especially while we were separated), my own search for information caused me to question his older sister, learning more about the spath’s upbringing (not all good). I personally think that the spath is psychologically damaged due to the parents that he had (plus the genetic component for sociopathy in his paternal bloodline). The family knew he was a liar and a lawbreaker, but didn’t clue me in at all. I was an emotional mess by the time I figured out what kind of person I was dealing with. I have seen the traits of this disorder played out firsthand – it’s unpleasant to witness how these people are. I’m still clearing my head from what I experienced due to my entanglement with a bona-fide spath.
TB, I remember your story and wanted to put my 2 cents in. I don’t know if your daughter was a spath at 15. But if your ex was having sex with her at 15, this is statutory rape, and he should have gone to prison for it, no matter how willing a partner she was. It is the job of a teenager to push limits, even sexually, and it is the job of a parent or parental figure (her stepfather) to set limits. If she was just a normal teenager and not a spath, this affair probably was very traumatic and confusing to her and affected her ability to have healthy relationships with men. I do not hold her accountable for what happened at 15. Children who are sexually abused will act out and be very seductive. I knew one adult child who used to wear bright underwear (thongs) under sheer clothes and always behaved seductively around men, sitting on their laps and putting out sexual vibes. This is the only way she knew how to relate to men and get their attention. None of this excuses her behavior as an adult but probably explains it.
I think loving parents like yourself get caught a lot in the dichotomy of “Was I a good mom or a bad mom?” I think this is a pointless question, and guilt is pointless, because it assigns blame, which is not helpful. A more helpful way of looking at it is “What happened, and how did this affect her. How did she interpret these events? And how does this affect our relationship?” This doesn’t mean there is any blame to be assigned, just an understanding of the development of a her behaviors. People are affected by things that their parents do that are not necessarily bad or mal-intended. I know a 40-year-old woman who had steller parents. They always told her how wonderful and perfect she was, in an attempt to build her self-esteem. But instead, she grew up feeling like she couldn’t live up to the “perfect” image, and became very neurotic. You NEVER know what you will do that will affect another person adversely. This is why I think it’s SO important just to be able to listen without beating yourself up over your imagined failures as a parent. I know so many times, I tried to explain to my mother how I was affected by her behaviors. She couldn’t listen – she would go into “I was a bad mother!” and then tried to get attention for HER hurt over that. To me, this is a sign of narcissism, that we couldn’t even have a simple conversation about what happened. It is not her failures as a parent that keep me in NC with her, but her inability to have a genuine conversation about it to clear the air, as you have so courageously done with your daughter.
I respect and admire you for being willing to sit down and talk to your daughter and listen to her. However, given her lifetime of hurtful behaviors toward you, if I were in your position, I’d probably be very guarded.
As you can see, I’m NOT one who is quick to call everyone a spath. But I agree with OXy that when people are behaving like spaths, NC is the only way to maintain your peace.
Hens, you said:’There is something about my x that I will always love and cherish…’
amen to that brother.
I think that when I can allow a bit of that for myself (i can close things down tight and hard when necessary – too bad there isn’t an Olympic medal for that, i’d be a contender.) i will know that i have healed at another level, because loving them, that’s about US, about our hearts having feeling for something. and in my case it was feeling for something that was a lot like me and what members of my tribe would be like if i had been given a tribe in this life (sky will now remind me of how we are all narcissistic ;). but what i saw and loved in him are the things i admire and some that i have and some that i aspired to. And being with someone who (supposedly) had those qualities made me feel at home for the first time in decades.
now, before anyone gets freaked out or concerned, this IS not about the spath – but the good in me and the good that I thought was in another person. A good i have waited for my whole life. unfortunately having experienced it doesn’t mean it can exist again -as this was a con. Having experienced it and having it torn out of my guts – well, that’s the healing work i am working on.
((((((((hens))))))))