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.
DW, we’ll all wade through this together.
one is right, the grief won’t kill you…
but you have to let it out, it’s ok to cry,
it relieves a lot of tension (Lord knows I do it enough).
I still feel fear about being alone right now,
but, ya know, things just seem to work out ok!
We have to learn how to comfort ourselves,
to be there for ourselves, because we spent all our time
taking care of others. I’d like to learn how to be
my own best friend!
Warrior –
the only hair that smells bad is the hair that is stuck to a shit – sorry, I meant a spath – no, sorry, wrong again, they are the same thing, right?
Warrior:
Stickwithit…….decide what the REAL value is……ELIMINATING the emotional crap.
The divorce is ONLY the business end of ending a business.
Deal with the emotions at a later time……..and place……
Separate your emotions out……and THEN make your decisions….based on what is BEST for you and YOUR future….and what the LAW will allow.
NO EMOTIONS!!!!!
Warrior – I have been in the in between space you are in now. My ex dragged it out for over two years for the legalities and property split. I wanted a quick divorce so he did everything in his power to stall and argue and be awkward. He flip flopped back and forth, and I in effort to be conciliatory would bend to his every whim in effort to placate his anger and try to make the split a ‘good one’.
I realise now that was never going to be possible. A cold split was the only way and I sometimes wonder what I gained in standing my ground over those two years in fighting back and trying to negotiate with him. I sometimes wish I had just cut my losses and got out quicker but of course that’s not possible and hindsight is twenty twenty. Yes women need to have assets, but the greatest asset is the freedom to live your life free from the shadow of oppression that a psychopath brings whether physically in your life or not. Time cannot be bought back. I have wrinkles now that I didn’t have back then and my thoughts have changed. I am older. I can’t get those two years back. Those years of intense upset and stress and him doing his worst manipulations.
Like you, I looked back on writing from eight years ago and was shocked to see exactly the same themes. Nothing changed. Except my identity disappeared and my psyche was severely harmed. It has taken many years to get back to some semblance of normality, but I doubt I will ever experience life in the same way after the psychopath.
We grieve the years we lost in the trance. We grieve each birthday that passed in desolation, tears and sorrow. We grieve the pointlessness of the intense frustration and upset – the inability to get through. And we reflect on all the effort we personally put in to ‘save them’ – sometimes from themselves. And it was all for nothing. That’s so hard to accept. It didn’t matter. Who I was didn’t matter. It could have been any person on the street who filled his need for supply and adoration. But it wasn’t just anyone – it was me with all my hopes and dreams and intensity and lust for life.
I am a year out now since he left and we severed contact. So I am now a year of no contact personally though our lawyers negotiated on our behalf. It feels strange to reflect on the last year and all the subtle changes that have taken place.
They have all culminated in a person I am quite getting to like 🙂 I’d be friends with her. Life has taken off and the joy of trying new things is biting me daily. I can’t explain the exquisite joy of being completely free of the P. Life regains some sweetness. Hope starts to bloom. And despair fades. Life can be enjoyed in the moment and soon the moments stretch to whole afternoons of lazy enjoyment of something fantastic. Like watching a movie and deconstructing it passionately over a wine with a friend at three am on a sunday morning after a delicious meal, lovely music and wine tinted conversation over the wooden dining table.
I remember being in the phase you are in now. It wasn’t so long ago for me. I found the whole process so upsetting – every appointment and phone call and paper to sign brought the reminder
“You are getting divorced. And the reason you’re getting divorced is he’s a psychopath. And there’s no hope for this – you’ve been here seven years and it didn’t work out – he’s been consistently bad.”
And then after the appointment I’d go home and drink tea and cry about it. I busied myself sorting through everything in the house and garage to purge anything that belonged to him. I boxed it all neatly and he arranged pick up from my relative. I cried a lot about it all.
And then I’d analyse my feeling so upset about it as a sign that I shouldn’t be divorcing him. I’d look for all the reasons to just get back together with him and call off all the action. But in my heart I knew I couldn’t. Even though it took every ounce of my strength to get through that long process of divorce, it was definitely the right thing to do. Life is infinitely sweeter far from the shadow of the psychopath.
A little thing I did through that period really did help me. I did a little retail therapy whenever I had an upsetting lawyer or finance appointment, I’d buy dresses and cheer myself up about how glamorous my new and improved life without him was going to be. I know it’s shallow, but any kind of pick me up through that period was most appreciated.
I’m sending you some good thoughts. You will get through this even though it’s a hard task right now. And life is so much brighter without them.
And it’s okay to separate from the world and withdraw every now and then. The body has been overtaxed by experience so rest and recovery are needed.
Hello to One Step and Erin and Oxy and Hens and Aussie and 2B 🙂 Hope all you wonderful folks are doing well. I am reading, but not posting so much lately as I don’t really have much to say. The debate and discussion here is of a high quality and points I would raise are often already present by the time I get to threads. Crazy period at work coming up shortly so won’t be online much at all.
Hope everyone is having a lovely spath free christmas 🙂
miss pollyannanomore!
glad to hear you are doing so well (just to let you know my email was hacked and i shut down my accounts. i did get another one of the spam/virus messages, though).
things are improving over here in small steps (of course :))
have a happy towanda and a spath free new year!
Howdy..Thought I would post a bit..Have been doing very well – house is decorated with christmas cheer – getting lot’s of things done now that I dont have puter at home. have been getting out more.. still the x has space in my head after 3 years no contact – but i am ready for someone real..it’s good that I dont want him to be my forever anymore – I have survived and am moving on..hope all is well with all the gang..
Good points Polly!!!!! TOWANDA
Henry, darling, glad to see you and know you are doing well! (((huggles to you)))))
Hi Hens, we all miss you so much! I should get rid of my computer,
I’m not getting much done, but hanging in there!!
I read all your replies with understanding and appreciation. Oxy, One, Shabby, Aussie, EB, PollyAnna–thank you for your warm listening and a shoulder to cry on. Your perspectives are very very helpful.
Pollyanna–I really appreciate your sharing your process of in-between. It’s a relief to know I’m not the only one and there isn’t something severely wrong with me in how long this is taking and how hard I am taking it at each legal turn.
This morning I went to the basement to discover a huge pool of water on the floor. The furnace pipe was leaking profusely and who knows for how long the flood was collecting as I hadn’t been in basement for a while. Good news I saw the source, bad news nasty puddle was soaking into sheetrock of walls.
And I had the deer-in-headlights look for a moment, feeling incompetent to manage a flood crisis. My kid was with me, supporting, assisting, managing. Such a sweet kid! We found the electric pump to suck up the water. I figured out how to assemble the hose, find extension cord to plug it in far from puddle, arrange buckets to exchange the hose while spilling the first bucket, got mops to deflect water away from walls, called the heating co. service–they were gonna come tomorrow for a cheaper rate, but seeing how fast the leak was going on and a bucket not holding a night’s worth of water, I said I must pay the extra charge as I want this fixed now. The guy replaced the valve or whatever, fixed another corroded thing. I got most of big puddle off floor, mopped like a madwoman, and turned on two dehumidifiers.
And now? No deer-in-headlights look. Water gone. Leak fixed. And I didn’t need a man to do this. MORE importantly I didn’t need the ex to fix this. My FIRST reaction was, god if only he was here, he’d know what to do, and he’d help me, and it was so easy when he was around and I never felt this kind of worry or helplessness. I really doubted my ability to handle this and worried I’d have a big issue–“the walls soaking up water, wood rotting, mold never being able to be removed, pipes bursting. AAAAAAAHHHHH!!!! Panic.”
And I asked the guy about how to protect against pipes freezing when temps get really low as ex had added heat to this uninsulated exernal porch that gets freezing in very cold weather, adn the pipes go out there to that room without being able to shut off the heat there. He told e to put a thermometer there and not let the room get under 50-45 degrees but turn up the heat to ensure pipes don’t freeze. Now I can sleep better at night not fearing I’ll have a huge burst pipes disaster.
God, it’s like learning how to walk–I NEVER worried about such basic things–very dependent.
Thank you all. Plugging along, one day at a time.
DW – I am running out the door, but i just wanted to say:
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂