By: Linda Hartoonian Almas, M.S. Ed
Last year, I re-connected via social media, with a childhood friend who I had not seen in years. As mothers with children of similar ages, we had a lot to catch up on. As we did, I learned that she has two children who are suffering from a misunderstood and often misdiagnosed disorder.
She is a wonderfully positive person, who freely discusses her children’s struggles, in hopes of educating others about the issue. She advocates fiercely for them, yet seems to successfully strike a balance between speaking on their behalf and encouraging their independence.
The same, only different
Over time, as I learned more, I found that I identified with her emotions regarding her family’s concerns. Her situation is riddled with various highs and lows. Some days bring serious hurdles to jump, along with grave disappointments, while others bring great pride and immense joy. She and her family see many great successes, but these successes are punctuated with frequent challenges.
While psychopathy is not on her radar and we are dealing with two very different issues, it occurred to me that we share some very similar feelings regarding the paths we are on. One day, while beaming with pride regarding her children’s recent achievements, she pointed out how they rose above their health concerns, accomplishing things that many other parents would simply take for granted.
She said that her children were thriving, in spite of the large number of days that their particular illness had “stolen” from them. I noted that this was not the first time that she had used such terminology. She realizes that no matter how well things go, she cannot change that her children have been “robbed” of certain normal life experiences.
My revelation
Her simple statement brought about a “light bulb moment” for me and really got me thinking. Isn’t that how most of us feel about our experiences with psychopathy or the individuals with psychopathic traits who have touched our lives?
They may have literally stolen many things from us, but most importantly, they did, effectively, “steal” portions of our lives. When we attach a unit of measure to what we endured, even if only in terms of thievery, it helps quantify our experiences.
It allows us to make sense of our lost time and gives us something tangible to take away from our experiences. It also gives us a reference point from which we are able to spring forward.
Prior to her statement, I had not thought in such terms. However, she was right. Again, I identified with what she was saying.
Wasted time
How many days, weeks, months, or years did we spend trying to work with the individuals in our lives with psychopathic features? The chances are good that now that we know what we were up against, our responses would be, “too many.” No actions on our parts could have increased our odds.
What I feel I lost from my brush with psychopathy is almost immeasurable. Yet, at the same time, so is what I gained.
Stolen time
In terms of stolen time, what exactly gets taken from us, as these relationships run their course? While there are numerous constants, some specifics may depend on the types of relationships we experienced.
A psychopathic parent will affect us differently than a psychopathic romantic partner. Nonetheless, the behaviors may be similar and just as abusive and devastating. Also, each carry the potential for long term harm. However, we tend to lose different pieces of our innocence, depending on the natures of our associations.
Regardless, we must accept that, while some forms of these relationships did exist, they were not the ones we thought we were having. Our involvements were based on love, caring, and genuine emotion. Little, if any, of that actually occurred on their ends, even if it appeared to for a time. For them, the associations were lies. Because of this, we were unable to take any meaningful actions. Nothing was real. Stolen time.
What about significant life events that we were shortchanged on in our experiences with psychopaths? In life, we encounter many emotionally charged moments, such as the births of children or the deaths of loved ones. We tend to experience a variety of feelings when something special or significant occurs.
Psychopathic individuals, however, do not experience these emotions in the same ways that we do. Therefore, their reactions tend to be quite different from ours. We may feel great joy or pain, they may feel next to nothing out of the ordinary. We may have tried to share our feelings, victories, or defeats, hoping that they could “feel” along with us. They could not. Rather, anger and rage at our attempts ensued.
In spite of our desires, we were forced to walk the emotional experiences alone. Their muted or non-existent affects left us feeling empty and disappointed. Their rages left us upset and confused. Stolen emotions. Stolen relationships.
Worse yet, often, the experiences we have with these individuals are so damaging that we try to eliminate them from our memories completely. Unfortunately, along with forgetting the bad they inflicted, we sometimes lose portions of the good we encountered with others who surrounded us. Stolen memories.
There are numerous other ways they violate us and take from us, as well. The above are only a few examples.
Truths acknowledged
Unfortunately, if we were involved with psychopathic individuals, the truth is that portions of our lives may have been stolen by the disorder. While we may be able to recover the financial or material losses psychopaths create, some of our losses are not tangible items that we can take back. To some extent, we may always have to live with the trappings of these experiences.
As a result, it is important to own the losses. No one likes feeling robbed of special or irreplaceable pieces of our lives. We deserved more than mechanical and insincere responses, if we got any at all.
However, again, our knowledge and understanding can set us free. We must acknowledge any pain, so that we can leave it behind. It is not worth hanging on to.
Rising and conquering
That is not to say that we can or should try to erase what we lived. We should, however, work to thrive. We can do this, not only in spite of our experiences, but because of them. Sometimes, I feel like it took such an experience for me to reach my potential. I know what I learned has caused me to push myself to attempt and achieve things I never otherwise would have.
We can find goodness amongst the setbacks, by using the wisdom that our experiences gave us.
We can surround ourselves with loving people, who truly share our values and treat us well, rather than embrace disordered imposters. In fact, we may come to the point of being able to thank our imposters for showing us what it was like to live “half alive.” Without that education, we may not have been able to recognize “full-on” living. We can come to know calm, regarldess of what they may do.
After taking hits and having pieces of our lives “stolen,” we can recover and have and be more than we ever imagined.
Like my friend, who will never be able to alter the realities surrounding her children’s challenges, we cannot change what was. We can, however, conquer what will be; each of us, in our own ways.
I’m glad you found what I said helpful, Kim.
Turn them over. Just keep working on you.
So glad that you were able to put things into perspective. You broke a rule. Period.
Done is done. You can’t change what you said. Let it go.
Rememeber that you’re powerless over people, places, and things.
Grace, you are so right, we are powerless over the behavior of others…and sometimes that is difficult for me to keep in mind, thanks for reminding me and the rest of us about that. Good advice.
Kim, G1S & OxD offered some really sound suggestions.
I believe that it would be a proactive effort to start looking elsewhere. I understand the current economic climate as far as finding a job goes – it’s tough, at the very least. But, one thing is an absolute certainty: there is ALWAYS a need for good waitresses. It sounds like a sweatshop where you work – doing the dishes, really? Waitresses typically do NOT have time to do that, and this place sounds like it’s cutting corners and playing favorites where rules are concerned.
There are some VERY good chain restaurants out there, and I don’t know whether you’re near any of them, or not. But, they’re always in need of good waitresses – always. And, it wouldn’t hurt to look into some of the more “gourmet” and upscale places, either. Yes, the drama in those positions can be challenging, but they wouldn’t be any more of a challenge than what you’re dealing with, now.
Smokes…..argh……I’m still a smoker, and it’s a really nasty monkey that I want to euthanize.
Hugs
Oh, and as an aside with regard to leaving a job and starting in a new position – ALWAYS provide 2-weeks’ notice whenever possible.
I worked very closely with Human Resources in a corporate job, and I always researched potential new-hires. There are many, many questions that I was not legally allowed to ask about candidates, but one question that WAS legal was asking if the candidate gave notice. It doesn’t look “good” if an employee just walks off the job, regardless of the reason. And, if I were contacted by another company who was considering a former employee, there was VERY little that I was legally allowed to respond to. But, no notice was one of the things that I could report about the former employee.
Kim, in your situation, if I were considering hiring you at my place, I could ask your current manager if you had ever been written up for violating a company policy, but I couldn’t ask what the violation was. Consequently, if the manager volunteered such details, he/she would be in violation of Federal Labor Law.
Wow, great article. I see after reading many of the comments that this struck a chord with many of us. The “stolen time” is something that has angered me even though I know that the time is gone and can never be regained. All we can do is live this moment forward and take all we can from these moments. And we must educate and immunize ourselves from another spath attack and be thankful that now we are (apparently) free. Most important though, is that we have to be here to support those who are still in spath relationships and/or are suffering the effects of having been in such a relationship.
I am in a much better place now than I was even a month ago due, largely, to your support. This site has done far more for me than any of the time I spent with my former therapist. However, last night I was reminded that I still have work to do. The route I took to visit a friend took me through the neighborhood where my spath currently lives. Even before I was consciously aware of it my stomach began to churn. I anxiously await the arrival of my Red Flags Workbook.
Actually they do feel one emotion. You said it yourself. Anger and rage, and jealousy. All one emotion bundled up. He is pissed off because you feel alive. Why should you feel alive when he is emotionally empty. He is so pissed off cause he sees you as beneath him, while you are everything he is NOT. He can’t stand it. He can’t stand tall next to you so he want’s to drag you down.
He’ll drag you down and drag your children down. Cause he sees your children as an extension of you. All surplus population to him. Surplus population for him to expose as garbage to the world.
It’s all because you are everything he is NOT.
Oh, I forgot to mention his other emotion is happiness if he can Get Even with you. But, that goes back to anger, rage and jealousy.
jeannie:
You bet! I see that so clearly now with the one or ones I was tangled with. Thank you for this.
To Louise, can’t kill him, so gotta deal with the aftermath, hey? We really need laws against people like him. It’s not right that we have to suffer in silence and post quietly on this website during the night.
jeannie812: thank you for your post.
I found it so aptly put.
“IT IS ALL BECAUSE YOU ARE EVERYTHING HE IS NOT.”
That truly hits the nail on the head; doesn’t it?
“Chilling” to think all this time I allowed a psychopath
so close to me and I almost let “IT” steal my life.
I escaped.
I am not ever going back to that any more.
Enough is enough.
“I” have a life that needs to be LIVED the way “I”
see it; the way “I” judge it and determine it to be.
I am not going to be manipulated by some monster
who doesn’t even know half the things “IT” says.
Let all the other minions have it.
Do what they wish.
The bond of loyalty that I actually believed existed…?
Well, that was fake too. All of it was and I see that now.
Oh, all those ‘red flags’ are oh so easy to see in hindsight;
once you muddle through all the initial SHOCK of the whole
situation. Sooner or later, though, whether you want it to,
or not, REALITY DOES take over the ‘driver’s seat’..
Sure, the pain and the sad memories; all of those emotions
tied to this experience, will always be there, living in the halls
of our memories but those memories – we can’t allow them to
define who we are.
That is the point to all this in the first place – isn’t it?
Their jealousy and hatred of us and our strengths.??
Oh yes: aptly when you said “Anger and rage and jealousy..
all one emotion divided up.” I completely understand you.
Thanks for validating me.
Welcome to Love Fraud, by the way…
You will find healing and soothing here,
amongst the posts.
I wish you well and will pray for you on your journey
and that it shall be kind to you.
Dupey
jeannie:
I agree. I still feel the sting of revenge in my blood. Not so much as I used to, but at times, I still feel like why should he get away with all he has done?? It’s just not right.