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.
This is such an awesome, supportive group that I want to reach out to see if any of you would be interested in helping to advise a woman who is now breaking out of a nightmare dating experience. I’ve pointed her to this website, but she’s not sure that her ex is a sociopath and doesn’t feel comfortable posting here yet. She’s given me permission to share her story on my blog and she’s desperate to hear from women who can relate to what she’s been through. She was nearly raped by her ex-boyfriend’s best friend and yet her ex didn’t seem to care. Her story is at http://orderofprotectionsurvivor.blogspot.com.
Right on, Oxy! I have NO friend s like that in this country, but I have 2 in Scotland who love, understand, and appreciate me, and who I can “spill my guts to if I have to.
Thats why Ive been going to Scotland every 2 years,but I dont think Ill go again.Dont feel I have to any more.
Really only friends on LF understand what life with a spath{and living your life without a spath in it} is like.
I have “sort of” friends here in Oz, but I WOULD NOT spill my guts to them. Im sure they wouldnt understand.
When Ive attempted to tell them about my spath daughters, you can almost hear them thinking,
“But what did she do to them, to make them turn against her?’
So, Ive learned to keep “STUM”.
My husband has “heard it all before” and cant stand eithe r of my daughters, hes been badly burned by them, and has NO wish to see them again.he is grateful to LF for letting him off the hook, as he claims he suffered from “compassion fatigue,” with me endlessly going on about my girls.They are not his kids, so luckily he doesnt have that blood bond with them.And Im grateful that he has no kids!Love to everyone, hang in there, were all doing great.mama Gem.XX
Today is my 46th B-Day! It’s 3AM and I’m sitting here at a motel with the sound of the interstate outside my window. We met in March of 2009. July 2nd I awoke, and she was gone. I picked up 27 years of belongings and dropped it off at the storage unit down the street not even a month later. I am not going to sit here and paint the ugly portrait..her, me…”US”…..the sickness……the pain…. She came back into my life just recently.
I watched my late wife of 19 years suffer from cervical cancer, radiation…chemo….the smell of her favorite food…the reality of knowing her mother was going to continue living a life in a world without her only daughter…in a world without her first son who left his baby sister so many years ago.
It’s my birthday and my gift is accepting her for who she is, and the only way I can, is to give her my unconditional love, knowing I can’t fix something that is not there. I’m 46 years old today. When I was 45, I would have told you, “Unconditional love”…it’s something said that’s not true.
I have $45 dollars in my wallet and there’s no money in the bank. It’s my birthday and I feel like I’m going to be OK.
Dear Kureyus,
I hear your pain, I wish there was some way to reach out and put a salve on the worst of the raw flesh, but only time and the slow healing of a deep burn will accomplish that…but in spite of how you may feel now, you are right, you WILL be okay.
I hope you will feel comforted and welcome here among others who have encountered pain of similar circumstances of intensity and loss. Welcome to the club no one wants to join, but there are definitely benefits of membership if you do need to join. God bless.
Ox Drover, thanks for reaching out to the woman whose story is on my blog. I’m sure it will help her to know that there are others who can relate!!
You’re right, this is a club that no one wants to join, but there are some really great people here and at least we’re not alone in this!
The sociopaths you are describing fill the rosters of entertainment celebrities many living in trailer parks admire, from Madonna to Lindsay, they are crafted as idols for the weak minded to embrace, and hold up to themselves as perfection. And why not? They appear beautiful, rich, powerful, elegant, talented, intelligent, and adored, everything evil people desire for themselves, and exactly what their victims crave from them.
Victims, ask yourselves, if it is so unfair to judge a book by it’s cover, they why can’t you get past the gift wrapping?
Jimmy Soul sang, “If you want to be happy for the rest of your life, never make a pretty woman (man) your wife.”
Evil people, commonly known as marketeers in the entertainment and advertising industries, create celebrities to take advantage of consumers like you. Collectively, they will bleed your wallets, mess with your values, and ridicule you for letting them.
And there’s nothing smart about living on the street.
Instead of crying wolf, perhaps you should look at where you fit in the big picture, and bow out gracefully. Turn off the TV, dismiss people who criticize you for doing so, read a good book, and work on your values.
You do have a decent family values, don’t you?
flaming grey rock.
Ox Drover, you always make me smile and thoughtfully ponder your words. Such a wise old soul…
To those wondering if one can ever get past a horrific experience with a sociopath… Yes, you can. It’s very hard, it’s very painful and it’s a deeply spiritual forgiveness of yourself and the choices we made.
I was with a monster for 26 years. I’ve had more broken bones then I can count, been tortured, beat, burned with cigarettes, not allowed friends, isolated, humilated and insulted on a daily basis for what amounts to half of my life. I turned 52 two days ago.
By the time I worked up the courage to leave 8 years ago, I couldn’t even look at myself in the mirror and was as timid as a mouse and afraid of my own shadow.
The healing was very slow the first six years. Socially awkward and not even knowing how to date, every single step was terrifying. I thought since I now knew that what I went thru was ‘domestic abuse’ that of course I wouldn’t pick the same type person… I did though. I married a man a few years ago who always called me ‘woman’, would tell me to shut the ‘f’ up, among other things. I was just grateful he didn’t physically hurt me… Sad, that that was enough for so long.
Last year, in one amazing moment I instantly understood all of the choices I had made in life and why… You see, when I was 11, my father, a police officer, was killed in an armed robbery. The day after he was killed I accidentally overheard that if it wasn’t for my doctor bills my Dad wouldn’t have been working that day and would still be alive… I never told anyone what I had heard that day, especially the person who said it.
Last year I finally told the person what I’d heard that day… It was then that I discovered I had literally been a martyr without a cause. It was immediately healing to have finally told, but as the months passed and all of these epiphanies of my life choices were happening, it was then that I finally truly understood. ‘I’ had given myself the life that I thought I deserved.
Since that moment I’ve been changing and healing at an amazing rate. Seven months ago I left my current husband and am now living on my own for the first time in my life. I’m so happy I could cry from the sheer joy of it!
I’ve spent the last year trying to learn and understand everything I could find on psychopaths, sociopaths, narcissists, paranoid personalities, bullies and much more. This was how I found Lovefraud and all of you great people.
I’ve learned that you MUST learn to love yourself AND like yourself. When you begin to do that, you literally raise the bar on what you’ll take from others. You also must forgive yourself and stop blaming yourself. This is just the ‘guilt dynamic’ that you’ve grown so accustomed to experiencing.
Instead, try to view it as a life lesson that helped you become a better person. Try not to be bitter. Try to love yourself. Forgive yourself. Life is supposed to be messy with mistakes. The key is learning from your mistakes.
I now recognize instantly the ‘bad’ people…the negative, life sucking manipulators who feed on your despair. These can be family, friends, coworkers. Learn to keep them at a distance. Surround yourself with positive people and go jump back into your life!
Finally, as an artist, I can look back and see that I did some of my best work during my darkest times. My art soothed my ravaged soul and still does to this day. Find what you like to do, or ever thought of doing and go for it. You’ll find a serenity and peace so deep that you will truly feel the beginning of hope.
I’m using my real name of ‘missourijewel’ because I just can’t hide who I am anymore. (http://www.missourijewel.com)
I am who I am…
Sending you all a big hug, and hopes that every day finds each of you smiling a little brighter.
Nancy Boevingloh
Welcome. Nancy.
Congratulations on your amazing break through .
It’s so cool to hear how those revelations allowed you to heal yourself and that you were able to create a new and better life from those ashes.
Thanks for sharing your story.
The spath fake loved the things i most like about myself, most feel i am at core (in terms of positive inherent talents and qualities; and the things i have worked to develop).
this devalued them. devalued me. i hold them at arms length – afraid, more than ever, to touch them/ live them. to even feel them.
this is my job. i have to reclaim them.