Editor’s note: The following article refers to spiritual concepts. Please read Lovefraud’s statement on Spiritual Recovery.
My father appeared to be a very successful business man. Our family lived in a home on Biscayne Bay, had money and was very well known. He served as a pilot in the Air Force, was very good looking and extremely charming. From the outside, our life looked almost perfect.
Like any young boy, I idolized my dad. When in his presence, I was almost hypnotized by him. I was extremely attracted to the way he approached life. I guess it’s normal for a boy to want to be just like his father. I wanted to believe everything that he told me. As best I could tell, he treated me pretty well. He took care of me, gave me money, taught me to hunt and spent time teaching me lessons about life.
Unfortunately, these lessons were coming from a different perspective on life than most children are exposed to, from that of a sociopath. For the most part, sociopaths treat their children like possessions, and I was my father’s favorite. He treated me special and I liked it. All of this only added to my confusion as a kid, because much of the time he seemed like a great dad. Still, something wasn’t right. There were conditions attached to his love, and I knew it. This underlying uneasiness was causing me problems, too.
From as far back as I can remember I would have terrifying recurring nightmares. I didn’t understand why and didn’t talk about it because I thought it was a sign of weakness. I would wake up in the middle of the night, gasping for breath and feel as if the weight of the world was crushing down on me. I couldn’t breathe, and would feel a serious and frightening threat that I didn’t understand. This threat was extremely elusive and I couldn’t identify what it was. I didn’t know where the threat was coming from, only that it was close. It was always close, surrounding me on all sides. The dreams felt real. I tried to dismiss them as just “kid stuff”, but I was really scared. I hated myself for this.
I always felt unsettled and frightened. Something just wasn’t right, and I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. It might have been just a small detail, but it felt really important. My mind would tell me that it just didn’t add up or make sense. With no point of reference, the only thing I knew to do was to let it go. Whatever the conflict, I was not able to reconcile the problem or rationalize what it meant to me. Consequently, I would bury it. What I was seeing was so frightening that I didn’t want to know the truth. A lie was more acceptable. I lived in this confusing space.
On the outside I probably appeared to be like any other kid my age. I made good grades, was fairly outgoing, had friends and tried my best to fit in. It helped that I always had nice things and could afford to do most anything that my friends did. My dad taught me to be respectful and to say yes sir and no sir when addressing adults. They liked that, and I was typically a favorite of my friends’ parents.
The problem was that while my father was teaching me some of the right ideas his behavior was offering a different point of view. This was my experience with my father, and it happened often. His behavior was raising questions that I could not answer. I can see them now, but at the time, I didn’t want to believe what I was seeing or feeling.
Being raised by a sociopath creates its’ own set of issues that must be dealt with in order to break free from the suffering caused by these experiences. Forgiveness is the ultimate goal, but awareness of my own altered view of life also needs to be recognized and addressed to really have any success with recovery.
The result is seeing the world through this distorted filter, virtually altering all of my relationships and life’s experiences. Simply blaming my dad was not going to set me free from the damage done. I needed to acknowledge how and why I behaved the way I behaved.
For me, as many of you know, The Process of Forgiving is what set me Free. But, I had to take responsibility for how I used this experience to harm myself and others before I could stop doing it.
If we continue to harm ourselves with the past, we are, in essence, repeating the behavior that we so despise. At least, that was my experience. As a result, I am very forgiving of myself, and others. I do not interact with sociopaths or harmful people, nor condone the behavior, but I do forgive it. When I do that, I feel peace, and I like that better than nightmares.
The funny part and most rewarding is that when I forgive and let live I stop attracting sociopaths and start attracting people who are kind, loving and forgiving. That, in itself, is a very valuable spiritual lesson. Now, that’s A Miracle!
Thanks for reading this. Hope you experience a Miracle today. Peace.
Thanks for sharing this Travis, but I would like a bit of clarification….you say “forgive and let live” and I’m not sure exactly what you mean by “let live”—I know that with your father, you got him to confess to the other murders he had committed, so you are not just “letting it pass” or “let living” as it were, you took action when there was evil, and I think that is a point that we should stress is that when there is EVIL going on or has gone on, we TAKE ACTION to stop it. If we know someone is abusing their child we don’t just “live and let live” in the sense that people think of it today, but we TAKE ACTION to protect those who cannot protect themselves. We call the cops, or we call CPS, we don’t just sit by while there is anything we can do to help the helpless.
You testified against your father and wore a wire to get him to confess to the other murders.
Donna fought to expose her abuser so that he would not be able to so easily abuse others.
Liane testified truthfully even though it hurt her so that her husband would go to prison.
I’m working hard to keep my murderous son in prison, both for my own sake, but for the sake of others, because he will kill again if he gets the chance. I worked hard to get the convicted child molester out of our living history group.
ErinBrock fought hard to get her kidnapped children back from her drug dealing X, and to help the law bring him to justice and expose him publicly for the drug dealer that he was.
MANY other LF bloggers like MiLo here have spent their last dime to protect a child from an abusive parent, have met a psychopathic co parent in court to keep the child safe even at the HIGH emotional and financial cost that they must pay.
I agree that we must in our hearts get the bitterness out (forgiveness) so that it does not poison us, but we also, I think, must WORK to protect those who are helpless, and to do what we can to bring justice to the psychopaths if we can.
Then, we must SPEAK UP which we are doing here via LoveFraud to educate others, to support others, who have been victims, or are likely to become vicitms. TOWANDA TRAVIS!!!!!
Ox Drover – it is interesting how carefully the words used on this site are considered and I think that is a good thing (probably comes from our experience with sociopaths).
It would not be possible to cover every angle of how to deal with a sociopath in a short weekly blog, so I try not to qualify everything I say. Yes I did all of the things that you mentioned with my father. All of those actions were more about righting the wrongs of my past than taking responsibility for my father’s punishment.
I am not an authority on what others should do or not do when it comes to protecting others. That is very subjective in my opinion and I am not qualified to tell others what they should do. Yes, I agree with your comments about children, etc.
Finally, whenever I refer to forgiveness and “let live” I am really speaking in spiritual terms, which in my case, references a “state of mind” more than any physical action. That being said, I have probably created more questions with my answer than the original statement!
My suggestion to those that read my blog is that they seek the counsel of others with similar experiences and then follow their own hearts and conscience.
Travis, I wasn’t speaking so much as taking responsibility for your father’s punishment as for protection of others and of allowing closure for the families of those victims of his. He really isn’t being “punished’ more than he was before I think….I am thinking he will probably never actually be executed in actual fact (I may be wrong about that!) But you standing up to right wrongs is what I am talking about. You didn’t JUST “forgive” him and go on about your life, you took a STAND and that is what I am talking about.
Sometimes, though, “taking a stand” means to run away to safety, or maybe to stand and fight…it is different in different situations, but it is still “taking a stand” and “doing what is right” for the situation and the person, not just being a “fence straddler” or watching while someone else gets hurt and doing nothing.
I’m proud of your stand Travis…and I wish I had taken a stand more when I had the opportunities with my own sperm donor. In my case, getting away alive was the best I could do. At least with my son, I’ve kept him in prison for another 3 years and hope to keep him there for more.
I found out something in the local newspaper yesterday that I did not know. The Arkansas parole board does NOT have the authority to DENY parole except in the cases of RAPE and Murder….and they released a man on parole who was a sexual offender, but he had plead down to below “rape” so they could NOT keep him in prison though he was a minister that had molested many children over a several year period. The best they could do was to make him go out of state (if there was a state who would take him) wear a leg monitor GPS, forbid him from dating a woman with minor children or being around children, but could NOT deny him parole.
I went WTF??? when I read the article, and did not realize that the parole board in my own state had NO POWER TO KEEP SOMEONE OFF PAROLE unless they were convicted of murder or rape! I hope that is going to change! I am going to contact my representatives about that!@....... But it does answer a question for me about why the Trojan Horse Psychopath was granted parole the first time he came up…they did not have the power to stop it. The ONLY reason he was stopped was it was illegal to put him in a half way house as a sex offender, which I pointed out, but as soon as he got a “place to go” he was released.
I believe the ONLY person a victim should forgive is her/himself!
I don’t believe in this forgiveness B/S (for myself). .
On the other hand I believe if forgiving the psychopath makes the victim feel better, go for it.
In my case it would make me feel MUCH MUCH MUCH worse,
I don’t forgive EVIL!!!!!!!! EVER!
Travis, I don’t know your story. All I have seen is that your father was a murderer. He killed more than one person? Can you tell me where I can find the background of your experience?
Woundlicker,
Travis’ story is in his old articles on the Lovefraud Blog:
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/category/authors/travis-vining/
Read the stories from 2008.
Travis,
It seems to me that your need to forgive your father is tied up with your need to forgive yourself for your actions.
You have logically deduced that you are not entitled to special treatment, so if you deserve forgiveness for what you did, then your father does too. Am I right about that?
Catholics are taught that there is a difference between a fault and a sin. A fault is something like a failing in your personality that causes you to not meet your potential. That’s why Catholics , in the Catholic mass, ask forgiveness “for what we have done and what we have FAILED TO DO”.
Sins are different from faults. They are choices. These choices are direct acts of disobedience against God. In other words it is when we decide that our will is more important than God’s will, that we commit a sin. It is not the act, but the reasoning behind the act, which is sinful. We place ourselves above God, “because I can”. Even if you don’t believe in God, you can take a page from “People of the Lie” where Dr. Scott explains that spaths usurp even the authority of REALITY when they lie. They refuse to bow even to the truth. So in essence a sin is a disconnect from God or from reality. A sin is basically rooted in pride or hubris that your will usurps reality.
So, my point is that when we ask for forgiveness, because we are truly sorry, we come back to God, (or reality) and we recognize our true place in the universe is NOT the center. To ask for forgiveness is humility and it AUTOMATICALLY grounds us. So we are automatically forgiven or reconnected to God and reality.
A spath is never sorry. So a spath cannot be forgiven. Forgiveness can only be granted to those who repent.
When Jesus said, “Father forgive them for they know not what they do.” He was saying, “these people have not chosen this sin, they just don’t understand what they are doing is wrong.
Rene Girard has a lot to say about that but I won’t go into it here. It was 500 plus pages in “Violence and the Sacred”.
Sky and Travis, I think that the SPIRITUAL aspect of what we view as “forgiveness” is important to each of us as we INTERPRET what “forgiveness” means to us.
Some people think if they “forgive” someone for something when that person is not sorry that they are showing weakness or that they are granting ABSOLUTION to that person for what they did.
I personally do not believe that “forgiveness” is the same as granting absolution, I think it is simply getting the bitterness toward that person out of MY heart for MY benefit, not that the person is not still responsible for what they ahve done, or that I want to have a relationship with that person.
For my whole life my egg donor DEMANDED that I “forgive” (grant absolution) to Uncle Monster and others who did horrible things, while she, herself, held on to every grudge she ever had against me or anyone else.
One time when I was in California when I was 19, in Los Angeles I actually ran into a guy who was from our little “town” of 300 and I was amazed that would happen, and when I called her to tell her this amazement, her first words were (REALLY!) “WELL! His first cousin had an illegitimate baby in the same room with me the day you were born!” (so that DAMNED him and his whole family! LOL
I KNEW that Uncle Monster was not repentant and that he would continue to drink and abuse women but egg donor DEMANDED that I pretend he was Uncle Sweetie and that our Christmas party was “a nice nor4mal family” and if I was not willing to PRETEND that then I was DAMNED to hell forever by this nasty God of hers.
YOu know by the time I was 5-7 maybe (at least very early) I was scared to death of this mind reading hateful old god that was just looking for a chance to damn me to hell in a hand basket. I could not see how a “loving” God could be that demanding of me…but now I see that FORGIVENESS does NOT have to include absolution or a relationship with that unrepentant person. It just takes the bitterness out of my soul and allows me to be at peace.
I understand that not everyone will share my spiritual journey, or Travis’s or Skylars, or John Doe’s but by sharing our healing and our spiritual journeys maybe we can help each other heal even if we don’t always hare the exact same path. ((((hugs))) and God bless you all.
Donna, thank you for the link. Now I can better understand what Travis has had to deal with.
Skylar, I agree with you. Why should I forgive someone who doesn’t think they need it, hasn’t asked for it and in no way believes they have done anything wrong to require forgiveness? I think the word ‘forgiveness’ takes on many definitions depending on the user.
For me, forgiveness of someone who couldn’t care less if I forgave them for hurting me (and doesn’t care if they did) is about ME and moving on past the pain and getting that person completely out of my mind, heart, and soul. Forgiving someone who wronged me but is truly sorry and repentant is about THEM and keeping them in my life because we were mutually hurt and want to mend things. To me, that is true forgiveness, when the wrongful want forgiveness and are sorry.
I honestly don’t know what the proper term could be for ‘forgiving’ someone who wronged you but is not sorry nor asks for forgiveness. I know better what it’s not- pity, acceptance…? No, those terms don’t fit either. When someone is unredeemable, I see that as the same as unforgivable. Maybe it’s just semantics, but one word can be extremely powerful. Forgiveness.
Woundlicker – you can also find much of my story on my website at http://www.victorythroughpeace.com.
I forgive because it is what brings me peace. I am unable to “really” forgive without God’s help, so by seeking Him for help and understanding of forgiveness I am given the gift of experiencing His love in The Process.
Lack of forgiveness causes the one who holds on to the resentment pain, and physical and emotional illnesses. Forgiveness is a state of mind. The idea that if I hold on to to something (unforgiveness) in my mind that it will somehow change them or the situation only harms me. This is a fact. It is like drinking poison and hoping the other person dies. “Letting go” of the resentment frees ME from continued suffering. It in no way condones the behavior or establishes trust.
As for Jesus, I take Him at His word and believe that He demonstrated forgiveness on The Cross to show us that through forgiveness we are reborn. Our Freedom is on the other side of Forgiveness. It was an extraordinary demonstration and He went to great lengths to show us the importance of Forgiveness.