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.
Travis,
are you saying that you don’t resent what your father did to you? How do you feel about what he did to you and how he tried to make you complicit in his crimes? I’m asking not how you feel about your dad, but how you feel about what he did.
I have completely forgiven my father and have no regrets. I do not resent him. Today, I understand that if my dad was incapable of love then how could I resent him for what he could NOT give me.
I do, however, disagree with many on this site as it relates to the sociopath’s crimes. Please understand that this is ONLY my experience and I am not asking anyone to believe what I believe. Sometimes what I say is interpreted as defending the sociopath, but that is not accurate.
As for a sociopath knowing right from wrong, I believe that technically they may know the difference, but they do not believe it or agree with it. Let me explain as it relates to my dad.
He knew right from wrong as it related to “rules’, but they did not make sense to him. The rules did not apply to him because he “knew” better. He thought “we” were stupid for following these rules and he was “smarter” than us because he did not have to. He believed that killing someone was OK if he got away with it. He placed no value on human life (including his own).
My dad talked to me about the murders and what I saw was a man that believed he knew more than others. He “thought” he was right and we were wrong. Understanding there are rules and right from wrong does not mean they believe in them. This is where I differ from many here.
Socrates said all men can ONLY choose what they believe to be good. (His quote…not mine!)
As a result, I do not resent what my father did. Besides, in the end, it is not in spite of my experience that I found my freedom and peace, but because of it! For that, I am grateful. I cannot separate the murder from the miracles in my life. My experience is God uses everything to our benefit when we invite him in. It is all a little beyond my understanding, so I accept it and with that acceptance comes peace.
Well said, Travis!!!! The sincerity of your beliefs comes across loud and clear and very well spoken. Thank you so much for sharing this.
While I might agree (somewhat) with what Socrates says about men doing ONLY what they think is good….I also realize that I have done things that I did NOT think were good, I KNEW WERE NOT GOOD, but I chose to do them anyway…
There’s an old story about some statistics experts on a train ride through scotland. One looked out the window of the train and saw some WHITE sheep. He said “ALL the sheep in Scotland are WHITE.”
The next guy said, “well that statement can’t be true ALL the time, there might be a black sheep sometimes, we just didn’t see it. So let’s say SOME of the sheep in Scotland are white.”
The third guy said, “Hummmm, well this is Thursday so how about if we say “SOME THE SHEEP IN SCOTLAND ON THURSDAYS ARE WHITE.”
The fourth guys said, “well your statement is still not completely true ALL the time, how about SOME OF THE SHEEP IN SCOTLAND ARE WHITE ON THURSDAYS ***(are you ready?)***ON ONE SIDE!!!! LOL ROTFLMAO
Ox Drover – this is what that quote (Socrates) means to me.
I too have made many wrong choices in my life knowing they were wrong, but in a warped sort of way, I think I believed at the time that there was some benefit to doing wrong instead of right. It appeared to be the “right” choice in that sense.
In those terms it makes perfect sense to me. In fact, how could I ever chose anything that I do not feel “at the time” will somehow serve my best interest…even if I know it is the wrong thing to do. I am not sure that, after weighing the risks, I am capable of knowingly choosing something that I truly believe will harm me.
Now that I have thoroughly confused myself, I am off to dinner. Love you guys! Peace.
There is a clarity coming with each day which is overwhelming. Mentally and physically exhausted. My hair has thinned, lost 15lbs (was 115lbs) skin rash (was silky before) blinding headaches, flashing lights in front of my eyes, my whole immune system is down. Direct result of my spath sister’s behaviour and our enabler brother. During legal due process, she emailed our solicitor and instructed him on my behalf and without my knowlege! We were both executors but she self-appoints herself to speak for others! When I challenged her about this she changed the subject (I fell into that trap). I know better now! She cut contact with me and used my brother who phoned me for info then relayed it back to her every week. I did not find this out until much later.
Anam Cara,
They use others against us all the time, that is SOP, standard operating procedure.
Don’t fully trust anyone who is in contact with them not to purposefully or accidentally give information to them that will be an injury to you. Keep your cards close to your chest….trust no one until proven other wise.
Even if someone doesn’t mean to convey information that is harmful to you, they might not understand that they are doing so.
Take care and Keep on reading and learning. Knowledge is power. Now that you know what she is, be careful around her,, she is like a poison snake.
Travis, life is a school for us I think, a place for us to learn and grow. The lesson comes when we need it and the teacher as well, I think. I don’t think that God promises us a smooth sail, just a safe landing. Sometimes He calms the storm and sometimes he calms the child…but if we trust, we will get through things pretty well.
I believe that God could have kept king Saul from trying to kill the future king David…but I also believe that there was a lesson for David in hiding in the wilderness….I found a lesson myself when I had to flee my own home. I didn’t realize it at the time, but later I saw the lesson for me. I put too much trust in material things to provide for my needs. In fact, I learned that I need VERY little in the way of material things to be happy and secure.
I learned that my comfortable home can be taken from me in a flash, and like Viktor Frankl I can lose it all, but Even with nothing, I can be complete.
Dear Travis,
My son is also the favored son, of a possible sociopath (definitely narcissist). He has a hard time believing that his father is anything but a loving, caring, dad. I know my son has a tough road ahead because he will have to realize this sooner or later and it will be very painful. My son thinks he’s his dads best buddy, he doesn’t know that dad is incapable of love.
My question to you is, do you have any thoughts about telling son about the things his father has done? My son is 16 years old, he has a hard time believing his sister when she shared that dad was sexually inappropriate with her. He just puts it out of his mind because it doesn’t fit his image of his wonderful father.
Our garage door broke yesterday and I couldn’t get it repaired until today, so I had to leave it open all night. I asked son to please don’t tell dad that the garage door was broken, (I didn’t want dear old dad to do damage to our vehicles, like he has before). Son said to me, “I don’t want to insult your intelligence mom, but I think you’re wrong about dad”. He then had tears in his eyes.
I’m not sure what made him sad, the fact that I don’t trust his dad or that he is confused about his dad.
I set the alarm and left the outside lights on. My daughter was going to put a note on our cars saying, “Hey, douch bag, if you touch our cars I’m calling the cops”. She’s got some spirit!
Any adivice you have for how to deal with this issue with my son, would be appreciated. p.s. I want to tell my son everything, but I’m afraid that it will be too much for him. Even with proof of dad’s evil ways, son may not believe me.
Travis,
I understand what you are saying. You have gained so much wisdom from your trials and you have grown spiritually, so you don’t resent what you went through. Most of the time, I feel the same way about my spath. I’m grateful for the lessons and what I call my “vaccination” against other spaths. I’m not blind anymore and although I miss my innocence and joie de vivre, I’m glad that I’m not so vulnerable anymore.
There is something about forgiveness though, that just doesn’t “fit” right when applied to what the spaths do. Maybe it is your assertion that he was doing what he thought was best for him at the time.
When I left my spath, I went and talked to a married couple who are good friends of his. The woman said, “yes, we’ve always known that Spath abused you. He’s the most selfish person I’ve ever known.” My brain fell out. WTF?
Selfish? You call someone who poisoned me for 20 years, plotted to kill me but not until he had destroyed every ounce of dignity and desire to live, someone who has killed many others SPECIFICALLY THROUGH BETRAYAL, someone who plots and plans for decades to ensnare others to do evil, to commit rape and to commit murder… You call that SELFISH?
That’s not the word I would use. but since then I’ve come to understand that this woman is a spath herself, albeit a “fence sitting” type, who was seeded with envy toward me and actually was waiting for my demise just for the satisfaction. I don’t think she would have been as envious as she was if spath hadn’t planted that seed 25 years ago, but the point is, she was targeted for that specific seed because the Spath could see that her heart was fertile soil for it. Spath can size up peoples’ weaknesses, rather quickly.
So, when you say he was doing what he thought was most beneficial for him at the time, it seems as if you are painting him as selfish. But he was NOT selfish. He would gladly give up anything just to see you suffer more. He did not hope to benefit, he only hoped to bring others down with him.
As Oxy pointed out to Anam Cara, they delight in using others against us. It isn’t just a power trip, they want to slime others with guilt. They get immense satisfaction in seeing one person hurt another. I believe they enjoy that more than doing it themselves. Your father was grooming you to become a murderer. That was his ultimate goal and he was leading you down the slippery slope.
Jesus didn’t just say “Father forgive them.” He added, “for they know not what they do.” Leaving that out, I believe, is taking his words out of context.
Spaths DO know what they are doing and they aren’t just being selfish. Their malice is the intent to destroy human souls.
Dear hope4joy,
I know you addressed this to Travis, but I didn’t believe the things that were said about my P sperm donor either….and I’d heard them mostly from his father…I was too immature to realize what responsible parenting was, all I saw was the glamorous adventurous life he was holding out before me….and I was all starry eyed. I imagine your son is too immature to realize what you are saying is valid…..just give him time is my suggestion. Travis may have other advice from a male point of view.