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.
I thought this was an appropriate place to post this.
I have been strong, and I don’t think things have been easy, but now they are getting worse since I took spath to court for violating the agreement. Unfortunately he is using this open door to try for increased parenting time. The good thing is they are getting rid of first refusal, so he can’t take Jr. out of daycare just because I am working.
Today in the journal he wrote the following (my comments in parentheses) and I need to know how best to respond.
Journal 2/7/12
Very congested, runny nose, coughing
Jr. seems to be getting worse, I think we need to get him into the Dr.s again (he was in the ER 2/1 and the Dr. 2/3)
Maybe the specialist (ENT), but what we are doing is not working.
(Jr. has a cold, there is no way to prevent it or eliminate all symptoms)
Did you schedule his appt. for the EEG? (at the last DR. appt. 2/3, we BOTH agreed to wait since the Dr. thought it was a near fainting, rather than a seizures. If we decided to get the EEG, wouldn’t the Dr. have given us the information to get one?)
Jr. informed me that you are telling him to say that he doesn’t want to be with me. What is this about? This is all of the sudden happening. Please explain.
(I have never even said such a thing in front of him, i certainly would never attempt to brainwash him. I want my son to be happy not confused.
I know a lot of this is just to keep me off balance, and that is exactly what it does. At times I feel so helpless. I crave to be free, from these games. I just don’t know how to free myself from the condemnation he tries to bring upon me.
FAD: I hope this turns out well for you. I really do.
Just keep all the exchanges in your log/journal. It is difficult to make sense of the ‘nonsensical’. I can see where he is headed with this….don’t play the game. You have taken Jr. to the dr. and the doctor is treating him, (I assume you are scheduled to return for check up or if he worsens?), just keep being the wonderful Mother I just know you are, or you wouldn’t be here, nor so fretful, and seeking answers like all the rest of us. THAT RIGHT THERE proves ‘whom’ the ‘strange’ one is; hm?
You just stay strong and you flick that pigeon crap right off your shoulder, like if you were walking down a street in Detroit and the pigeons were flying off – ever have that happen to you?
You need to find yourself a state of ‘indifference’ which is something I have found and it serves me very well. I do not play drama games; I only say what I mean and never say anything I don’t mean, except perhaps for a curse word or two…used to have a quarter jar but ended up spending the money – probably on something sinful, I am sure. hehehe
Hang in there FAD: KNOW WHO YOU ARE and YOUR VALUE and YOUR WORTH. Don’t lose sight of that. I would keep my talking with this “THING” down to a bare minimum. I would try to lock him out of my child’s life as much as I could – as much as humanly possible. Too much influence. I know that is harsh, but in the long run…growing up like “I” did, with it in my face, all the time, only made it harder for me, later in life.
When you live in such an environment, always around chaos and drama, you end up having two choices: one, being like it or another, being different. I chose to be different and to make my own life away from the insanity and madness and it took a lot of bond breaking to attain my own little spot in life, free from the personality disorders. Some of the choices were really hard and difficult ones but I am not sorry one bit I made all the choices I have. NOT ONE LITTLE BIT and TRUST ME: I protected my children from ALL DYSFUNCTION as they were growing up, except for the dysfunction “I” gave them. hahaha
They are my best friends in this life and they turned out more wonderful than any parent could ever ask or hope for. They aren’t little children anymore but adults who are contributing to the mainstream of ‘good’ in our world!!!!
You will be okay, FAD: remember who you are.
Love ~ Dupey
Son of sociopath:
I agree that sociopaths are evil. I agree that they need to be exposed. I agree that people need to be educated that these predators exist, and if they realize that a sociopath has come into their lives, to get the person out. Sending them all to the moon would be a wonderful solution, unfortunately, it is not practical, at least not yet.
The problem seems to be with what exactly is meant by the word “forgiveness.”
The way I look at it, and I think Travis and Joyce (Ox Drover) would agree, forgiveness means letting go of whatever happened. It does not mean that we let the individual back into our lives. It does not mean that we pretend nothing ever happened. It does not mean that we trust the individual.
It means that we know what the individual is, we accept what the individual is, we accept that we will never change the individual, and we let it all go.
It means that we get to the point that the actions of the sociopath no longer have a grip on us, no longer cause us emotional turmoil. They no longer have their hooks in our hearts.
Of course, many people interpret the word forgiveness the way it appears you have, in that it means kiss and make up. In fact, you are right – that appears to be what many preachers say. There are certainly “clergy” and “believers” who misuse passages from the Bible advocate exactly what you described – using it as a weapon of control. My guess is that these people are sociopaths themselves.
There was a time when I hated my ex-husband, the sociopath. But hatred is a toxic emotion, and the only person it hurts is the person who hates. My hatred didn’t affect the sociopath at all. But it was chewing me up.
Forgiveness is about getting to the point in our healing where the sociopath simply doesn’t matter to us any more. We do not forget what happened – in fact, hopefully we’ve acquired some wisdom from the experience. But we do not spend any more of our energy on that person and what he or she did to us.
Thanks Duped,
I am concerned there is some Munchhausens bi-proxy here.
Maybe I could call the dr. so I could say I called the Dr. and offer some releif for the cold. We are due back to the ent for the fluid behind the ear on 2/22.
What about the false accusations about me telling Jr. how to feel or what to say?
FAD
ignore it and don’t do it and you will be fine.
(not saying you are, but cautioning against it cause I don’t know you….) I never said a bad word to the kids about their father, I only kept their time together down as much as I could. But these are just MY experiences, FAD: in the end, you ultimately have to make the decisions. I believe you will make all the right ones. Just don’t lose yourself.
Hope this helps, FAD.
Yes, call the doctor and at least have it on record…
he might need something more than what they gave him.
Treasure
If it was me you were referring to…then I am so sorry I have offended you with my concepts of what helped me to heal and that you don’t share them. I hope you find what will help you heal.
I am sorry that you feel that way, because there is so much healing here and SHARING our different points of view is what gives us more ways to see things I think….BTW Dr. Viktor Frankl who spent 3-4 years in a Nazi slave/death camp, FOUND MEANING from his experience under the most horrific conditions by the most terrible psychopaths I can even imagine. His book “Man’s search for meaning” was what helped me to see that I didn’t have to hold on to the BITTERNESS that I could have held on to with plenty of “reason” to be bitter, just as he had plenty of reasons to be bitter.
Sir Laurens van der Post, whose daughter I know, spent 4 years in a Japanese prisoner of war camp in Java and he forgave not only the Japanese as a nation, but the INDIVIDUALS who beat and starved him by letting go of the bitterness, and after the war voluntarily spending 4 years there helping the captured Japanese who were being tried and executed. I’m not sure I’m that “holy” but there are people who manage that kind of forgiveness, even people who are not Christian.
I call letting go of that bitterness “forgiveness” and like Travis, I don’t think that gives them absolution of any kind….or makes me want to have a relationship with them. The letting go of the bitterness here is for ME, not for them. I don’t want to spend my time and my energy feeling bitter and angry for the rest of my life.
Peace go with you.
Donna: so beautifully and eloquently said.
We could turn off the lights and go home on that one.
🙂
FAD, Glad to see you back sweetie. Sorry you are having problems with jerkface….I swear that man is a real piece of work! I am not sure your Munchen’s is too far off, but I would call it more “drama rama” I think, but using Junior as a club to beat you with, to prove you “wrong” etc. starting with the shaved head hair cuts and so on. Whatever upsets you is what he wants to do and LIES! UGH! I wish I could give you an answer that would fix it, but I’m not sure there is one. I shake my head and say “what can you do about this? How can you anticipate what he will do next?” and my answer is “I don’t have a clue.” ((((hugs)))
I think people get ‘confused’ using the terminology ‘forgiveness’ in this instance because certainly the actions and behaviors of these people is not acceptable and it is very difficult to forgive them.
But, I think a better term would be ‘indifference’ and it was YOU Ox who coined that word, for me…in my experience.
I think if we look at the word ‘forgiveness’ in another perspective, and that being ‘indifference’, we will strive more for that ‘indifference’ than the ‘forgiveness’. It isn’t necessary to ‘forgive’ them, per se, but it IS necessary to find that spot of ‘indifference’ and that could be understood as a form of ‘forgiveness’. I think it’s all pretty much semantics.
Just my two cents….
Hope everyone is having an A OK day….