Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail. In it, I felt like I was reading a rerun of my experience.
I was involved with one of those 1 to 4% sociopaths/scammers you’ve outlined in your website.
I lost everything — Long story — you already know it — he was so charming — the love of my life — kind generous, giving, very sexy in and out of bed —
Anyways, it’s been just over 3 yrs (I was only with him 2 + yrs with a 3-month breakup period. Yep I took him back — Call me a LOSER now and hit the delete button — Wait, please don’t.) and I’m living in a mobile home park. Not any of the three properties I had on a golf course. Sold two of them and the third is heading for foreclosure. Put all the money 250K+ into a condo in Mexico and took loans out on my condo that I had paid off while I was selling new homes from ’95 -’05) the year I met him to pay for “our dream” — live in Mexico. I had an offer letter to work for the Four Seasons (selling luxury time shares — the interviews were long and the background check very extensive — I passed) and that would help pay the mortgage on the 3,000 sq. ft. beachfront condo WE bought — none of his money till he made some payments. And my job would hopefully cover his expenses of running his dream job of being a charter captain on a boat that we would lease from the person we bought the condo from — OMG — Thanks for listening. I need a support group to go to but I’d rather just be one-on-one and I’ve been to the therapists — they all (so far) just watch the clock and tell me stuff I already know.
Been extremely depressed — always suffered depression but was able to work and acquire my homes. Then, all of his promises and “deals” shot all my $$ and savings out the window — at a very high speed mind you.
How long does it take to get on with life?
My friends, which are fewer nowadays, say get over it and move on. But, I considered myself to be somewhat “street smart”. And so I continue to beat myself up for the horrific financial things I did and the mess I’m in. I know I need to accept some of the blame — but — he had the plan. I didn’t know his plan and went along with the Love sick person inside of me — finally, my ugh, prince had come — yada, yada, yada.
At the end (two weeks before our big move to start our new “fabulous” lives together I finally confronted him about his 150K in credit card debt. I have no idea why I didn’t run his credit before that close to our move — other than he was always paying for everything, including ALWAYS having to upgrade our flights to first class, etc — I thought he was just spoiling me — as he told me time and again — I deserved to be treated like a lady and he was going to be the one to do that — and claiming to pay off his cards monthly with his construction job.
By the way, yes he allowed me to run his credit one night when he was having one of his daily 6 Bud Lights. I’d gone to bed early — he came home beyond plastered, woke me up from a sound sleep and poured beer all over me — threw me to the ground and threatened to kill me (“Do you want me to kill you now?”) I responded two-fold. “Why are you wasting a beer?” and “No, I’d like to make it to my 43rd b-day.”
I called the police after he got up from holding me by my neck to the ground of our bedroom floor. I called a cab, as I’d already sold my sports car (as it wouldn’t have been too practical in Mexico) stayed in a motel for 2 weeks — next day called some movers and moved all my stuff to a storage — then after two weeks in “hiding” because I was afraid he’d go to my girlfriends homes looking for me. I stayed with a girlfriend until the tenants in my condo found a new place to move.
Sorry for rambling on — to repeat it’s been just over 3 yrs and I can remember everything like it was yesterday.
How long till I regain my life? I’m sure the answer is in ME — maybe a lobotomy? Please advise or let me know that I still have a life that’s worth living. I’ll be 46 in Feb. He’ll be turning 60 next yr.
Insidious tactic
This reader described in living color probably the most insidious tactic in the sociopathic arsenal: They target our dreams.
What better way to draw us in than to promise to make our deepest desires come true? How can we resist someone who wants what we want, and seemingly has the capacity to achieve it?
And how do the sociopaths know what we want? They ask us, and we tell them.
It happens early in the relationship, under the guise of “getting to know each other.” It goes something like this:
“So,” the sociopath asks, with pitch-perfect sincerity, “what do you really want in life?”
“I want a family before I get too old,” we reply. (Or, “I want to live on the beach on a tropical island.” Or, “I want to send my kids to a top college.” Or, “I want to retire while I’m still young enough to enjoy it.”)
“That’s what I want,” the sociopath replies, with a touch of feigned surprise. “We have so much in common. We must be meant for each other.”
Painful betrayal
Dreams explain one reason why the betrayal of the sociopath is so painful. Not only have they manipulated us, deceived us and stolen from us, but they used our own most treasured dreams to do it.
We have lost not only our love, money, time, home, and whatever else they have taken. We’ve lost our dreams. And that hurts.
Then, of course, comes the self-criticism. Why did we believe the sociopath? Why did we wait so long to check them out? Why didn’t we listen to people who warned us? Why didn’t we listen to ourselves?
Why? Because we wanted our dreams to come true.
It’s a brilliant tactic on the part of the predators. They use our dreams to hook us, and then because of our dreams, we don’t want to let go.
Recovery
So how, as this reader asks, do you move on in life? “I’m sure the answer is in me,” she writes.
She is right. A lobotomy is not necessary, but a “pain-ectomy” is. We have real, true, genuine pain because of what the sociopath did. In my opinion, we can’t analyze away the pain, or wish it away. Pain is emotional, and the only way to release it is emotional. We have to allow ourselves to experience it.
The only way out of the pain is through it.
This isn’t pretty. In my case, I spent a lot of time crying. To get out my anger, I imagined the con man’s face in a pillow, and beat it as hard as I could. Because our dreams were damaged, the pain goes deep, and releasing it is a process. We get rid of some, and more rises to take its place.
Eventually, however, we get to the point where we’ve cried all the tears and released all the anger. We get to the point of acceptance. Something awful happened, we had a part in it, but it’s time to move on.
Then we learn something about dreams. Dreams are linked to expectations, and expectations have a down side. Sometimes, if our expectations aren’t met, we feel like we’ve failed. Or, expectations blind us to other opportunities that may come our way. Because the new opportunities do not match our expectations, we don’t even see them.
Maybe we have to give up our original dreams. But that doesn’t mean there will never be dreams again. Perhaps something better, and more fulfilling, will come along, and because we are no longer looking to make a particular dream come true, we’ll see the new opportunity.
i am tired tonight, and maybe shouldn’t be posting. i read southernman’s post and felt immediately sad, and weepy….
this is all that the spath pretended to have endured, and to be………………….
“The most beautiful people we have known are those who have known defeat, known suffering, known struggle, known loss, and have found their way out of the depths. These people have an appreciation, a sensitivity and an understanding of life that fills them with compassion, gentleness, and a deep loving concern. Beautiful people do not just happen.”
Dear One, I felt weepy when I read it too, and I copied and pasted to my face book page as well…but “weepy” in a sentimental way, and in a way that makes me realize that the enlightenment we have taken from the trials and struggles is actually a positive thing and HAS GIVEN US AN APPRECIATION, and a sensitivity and an understanding that fills us with compassion, gentleness and a deep loving concern” WOW, that makes me feel beautiful too! (((hugs)))
Oxy… I know that you and I have a few things in common such as we both are widowed.. and then of course.. the sociopath connection…..both of those life experiences shaped me into the man that I am today…It has been a long, hard journey and I certainly would not want to venture through those fires again anytime soon.. but I am proud of myself for persevering through two painful events that occured in a span of just a few years apart….I recently read some old posts here in which I had written responses to way back in 2007…I could see and feel the anguish and despair in my words… remembering where I was in my journey of healing from the sociopath….it made me cringe a bit reading my heartbroken words… but at the same time.. it gave a me a good feeling and reminded me of just how far I have traveled… The above words was written by one of my favorite writers…
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross…from her book “On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages of Loss”.. she too was no stanger to adversity…
She had four miscarriages, finally having a son, Kenneth, and a daughter, Barbara, in the early 1960s…Her husband requested a divorce in 1979. In 1994, she lost her house and possessions to an arson fire that is suspected to have been set by opponents of her AIDS work. Kübler-Ross suffered a series of strokes in 1995 which left her partially paralyzed on her left side…She died in 2004.
Some other quotes by her…
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in their true beauty is revealed only if there is light from within.”
“Learn to get in touch with the silence within yourself and know that everything in this life has a purpose, there are no mistakes, no coincidences, all events are blessings given to us to learn from.”
“It’s only when we truly know and understand that we have a limited time on earth – and that we have no way of knowing when our time is up, we will then begin to live each day to the fullest, as if it was the only one we had.”
Dear Oxy:
Dear Oxy:
You seem like a woman that has survived so much. I feel sad about this.
I have been praying (in my probably non-capable way) that you would have relief and peace. You seem like the fiesty women that I met when I lived in the states — from the east coast to the west coast and back.
I want you to truly understand that as I followed the different articles here on Lovefraud, that I always read your posts and they resonated with me.
Please know that you are some kind of “gun toting kick your ass kind of woman” I kind of like that — although we up here in Canada are not allowed to own wepons — excpet for the psychopaths.
Cudos to Oxy — she is the mainstream in this thread and I would like to meet her for sure.
Dear Velveeta, you are making my head swell! LOL
Southernman, I love the work of Elizabeth K-R and read an article a few days ago on the net about her at the time of her own death approached and was written by one of her friends who was there with her at the time…can’t remember who the writer was, but the warmth of the article moved me.
Having worked with many patients in my career who were dying, though I never worked for Hospice per se, I have worked in hospitals and other facilities where people were approaching the end of their time. The time I spent with my stepfather during his last 18 months was quality time with him that I will treasure among the most meaningful times of my life.
Elizabeth’s teachings were some of the first things I studied in nursing school, and I had many “ah ha” moments studying those as I looked back at previous grief and loss and realized how the denial, sadness, bargaining, and anger of those losses had effected me, and how I had come to acceptance of those losses finally. Her work explained my feelings even years later when I compared her work to my previous life. It turned on the “lights” to help me SEE those times in some perspective, even if it was in retrospect.
I have drawn great strength and solace from her work, and to me she is a shining light whose own life and losses made her work so much more authentic than it would have been if she had not also suffered losses herself.
Looking back through my own posts from 2-3 years ago also makes me realize just how far I have come, and how far others here have come as well. I have enjoyed and been blessed to watch as others here have grown and blossomed. Sometimes those people go away back into life without so much as a “see you later” and I think about them. Beverly and JaneSmith, janie came by the other day to say hi in case you didn’t see her post. She is doing well! Aloha is finishing up her masters degree in social work and still working with her adolescents–her own run in with the “bad man” has turned her life into a strong advocacy for other young women! Witsend is doing well and her son is to turn 18 in a couple of weeks and is out of her house, but her heart is still sad at the loss of her dreams for her child.
Life moves on, a step forward here, a step back there, but there are really so many more blessings than losses. I am at a point now that I can think about and talk about and laugh about my life and times with my late husband and enjoy all the good parts of our lives together, without weeping or feeling sad, and I no longer “miss” the associations I THOUGHT I had with the other “friends and family” members I realized are toxic to my well being. It seems more normal to NOT have them in my life, and to NOT worry about them, or concern myself with what they are doing today or tomorrow.
The emotional tail twisting I had to go through to get the parole papers ready is DONE and they are turned in, and win, lose or draw, I did the best I could so will deal with the consequences when they happen, and next time I won’t have to go through all that mess of letters etc again. I have learned to make a decision, take an action, and accept the outcome without beating myself up about it. No “what ifs” or “buts” or “ands” any more, just accept what IS.
Your strength and gentleness have meant a lot to me Southernman, thank you for your wisdom and compassion and your faith! I hope you won’t be offended by a cyber hug from an old woman who thinks you are just wonderful! (((Hugs)))) My prayers!
I think that you and southernman should meet and get together. Oxy it would be perfect!!
Let me know how I can facilitate that!!
Yeah — regardless of what anyone on here thinks — let’s help Oxy be happy — she deserves it — she is the workhorse on here
Cheers
p.s. someone has to take her spot — big shoes to fill — we can do it
Velveeta
Now I know why I love that song Sweet Dream or a Beautiful Nightmare…. They target our dreams and pick out our weaknessess then exploit us! F$^&*%^ers! hate’m all!
dear velveeta, darling I’m fine without a man, and I AM happy! Besides the fact Southernman is young enough to be my son! LOL Thanks for the thoughts, but I don’t need a match maker! ROTFLMAO Besides my late husband used to say (and I think he was right!) that there wasn’t another man west of the Atlantic that would have me (besides him) LOL
SPIRIT!!!
you could not have put in better words!!!!
They target our dreams and pick out our weaknessess then exploit us! F$^&*%^ers! hate’m all!
They do that to us…. they want to suck the life out of us! Mind, body and SPIRIT!!! They want to take away our confidence, discourage us and make us feel horrible! Boy.. do I have an spath radar NOW. Too bad I didn’t know about this mental sickness prior to xspath.
Hi notcrazee & spirit
I’m back in court Monday with spath, trying to have my expired restraining order against him renewed. He’s just been convicted again (4 weeks ago, in the same court) of breaching it but was supremely grandiose and unfortunately allowed by the presiding magistrate to carry on very badly. It threw me completely. I have been strong and confident and focused in the Family Court where the Property Settlement is being thrashed out, but I crumbled into a little weepy ball of panic attack in the local court for the other matter. I take comfort in the fact that we have a decent magistrate this time around, who isn’t fooled by spath anymore, but I’m really nervous and feel sick to my stomach about going in there and facing him again Monday.
That’s exactly what he did to me last time we were there – he took my confidence and made me feel so horrible that I could not even give my evidence properly – I could barely function. I don’t even know how he did it! I was surrounded by cops and security, 2 advocates and a court counselor plus my best friend – yet he still managed to get to me. I was soooooooooo rattled. It felt like all my hard work and progress this year had gone down the gurgler…just like that : (