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 Oxy, I want my son to wake up now but I realize I can’t force it. I had dinner with a friend of mine whose father is a sociopath of the worst order! She said she wished she knew about her dad when she was younger. So I thought about telling some things to my son so in the future, he won’t question why I didn’t tell him.
My friend who has the spath dad is trying to get him arrested because he was bringing in underage girls from out of state, for prostitution. He is the grand pooba when it comes to spathy deeds. Bilking grandkids out of their inheritance, many wives, sex addiction, threatening suicide if he can’t see grandkids, sexual harassment charges, beaten up by prostitutes, (he’s an old man), hiding money offshore, etc. He also makes like he’s the victim.
It’s good to have a friend who gets it! Really gets it! Anyway, she wished her mom would have told her about her dad. Unfortunately her mom was an alcoholic and it seemed like she was the unhealthy one. My friends dad was so horrible to her mom, so abusive, but had the kids convinced that the mom was awful. Sound familiar? It’s the usual way spaths operate.
Hope4joy,
wow, it’s severe denial. How to get through it, is the question of the century. I’m reading “Gift of Fear” right now. It does address denial. Maybe he could read that book and others. Maybe reading about DENIAL itself will change how he looks at everything.
I can tell you that my reading “People of the Lie” when I was 17 did NO good. I went straight into denial for 2 reasons:
1. The spath seemed sooo nice.
2. the truth was toooo horrible.
Maybe by understanding that these 2 points are the MODUS OPERANDIS of the spath, we can escape the black hole of denial?
My escape only came from seeing that my spath was NOT so nice, and in fact was faking being nice.
If you could set up a scenario where the spath exposes his own evil in front of your son, the scales would fall from his eyes..
Edit:
we posted over each other.
I hadn’t ever thought of spaths doing it that way: marrying an alcoholic so that they look like the good guy. My spath slandered me by telling everyone that I was a pill popping alcoholic so I just assumed all spaths lie. But actually marrying an alcoholic for the purpose of having a built in scapegoat… that takes the cake!
sky –
1. The spath seemed sooo nice.
2. the truth was toooo horrible’
This is this paradigm that we pinball around in it, and when we are deeply bruised, we stop. and we get out.
Hi one joy,
yes, for some of us die-hards who don’t mind a few bruises, it is only when we see our lives flash before our eyes that we understand. Just because the truth is too horrible, doesn’t mean it’s not the truth.
It is so difficult for a child to see the parent for what they really are….either good or bad. I didn’t really appreciate how good my step father was, nor now uncaring my egg donor is until way WAY late in the game. Neither did I get how bad my P sperm donor was until he hurt me so badly it was get out or die. Even once I did realize how evil he was, I still was too immature to know how to handle it, and too wounded to figure it out. Again, it took me years and decades to get it.
Hope4 I hope your son can get it before his father wounds him deeply, but we each have to “get it” in our own time, no one can convince us or rush us, until WE are ready.
Skylar,
Darn those scales! The two reasons you went into denial are exactly right. Spath wears the mask very well, he is the best manipulator I have ever met, almost made me belive I was nuts. The truth is too horrible. It took me along time to believe, my son will have to go through a process too.
My therapist said that my son will blame himself first, before he sees the other side to spath. I have had to let go my trapping spath because he is so slippery. I would love to get him on tape doing damage to my property!
Spath owes me a pretty good sum of money and has until Feb. 16th to pay it. I have a lien on his house until he does. It will absolutely kill him to write me out that check! Too bad, so sad. I do think if he wants to retaliate it would be now. I’m not going to live in fear though, just call the cops if he does anything. Calmly.
Yep Oxy,
I’m sure you remember that it took me 2 years before I could bring myself to see my parents for what they are. And I was TRYING to see it. But the pain is horrific and I cried and cried each time I attempted to face it. I think hypnotherapy helped.
Oxy,
My son will be deeply wounded. I know it will happen because he is bonded to spath dad. My daughter has it so much easier because she called daddy dearest on his crap and got him out of her life.
Things come out after we have left, complaints about the spath. He coached hockey, apparently another coach complained to the head coach about his inappropriate behavior. I wish I knew the nature of what he did, he coached boys hockey. Writing to about this to you now, I know I need to go to that head coach and ask him if it was directed toward the boys. Damn.
Thank-you Oxy. Your wisdom and good council is so healing and very much appreciated.
Hopeforjoy – I will try to share my experience as best I can, but please understand I try not to give “advice”. This is a tricky thing because there is so much about another’s situation that I do not know.
First, the sociopath is counting on us NOT to tell. One of the biggest problems with all this, as I see it, is that the victims often times actually protect the victimizer’s secrets. We are afraid that they will not be believed, or that learning about them will harm the person. The truth is that keeping the secrets IS harming them. Although it maybe hard in the beginning, that old saying about “The Truth will Set You Free” is TRUE.
I had a successful experience with a young man that was where I was at 18 (before my dad started killing people). I was asked to help by his family.
I shared my story with him. Specifically I focused on the behaviors that the sociopath uses to “suck us in”. How the sociopath will always tell you what you want to hear…but for their benefit. What happens when we do not go along and how they always have some personal gain in what they say and do (extraordinary sense of entitlement – extremely self-centered and selfish). There is much more, of course, but hopefully you get the idea.
I shared what my dad did to “me” WITHOUT trying to convince him of anything about his own father. All I was hoping to do was plant some seeds, educate and make it difficult for him NOT to see the patterns of behavior.
In this particular case, a few months later I heard from his Grandmother that at first it seemed to be a pointless conversation, but over time he began to test his father and saw all of the characteristics described. The young man made a decision NOT to help his dad after he got out of prison.
As a young man myself, I would not have been able to “hear” any direct references to my dad being a sociopath and “bad” person. Had I known all the things he did to my mom (like trying to have her raped to help with the divorce) and others…I believe it would have been different. They kept the secrets and that helped enable me to stay in the dark.
Hope this helps. Peace