By Ox Drover
I’m sure we have all heard the old saying, “I cried because I had no shoes until I saw a man who had no feet.” This “old saying” is true, though I think it is made up to inspire some guilt in us for complaining about the small things we lack and make us aware that we are fortunate to have the many blessings that we do have, which many others are not fortunate enough to have.
Another one I remember is, “Eat your vegetables; there are children starving in China.” I always wondered why I couldn’t just send the hated vegetables there instead of eating them. It would solve two problems: I wouldn’t have to eat them, and the kids in China would be grateful for them. My son D has turned this phrase around to joke, “Drink your beer, there are sober children in China.”
All jokes and platitudes aside, however, the feeling of gratitude for what blessings we do have is, I think, an important concept for our healing. The encounters with sociopaths, sometimes for decades, have given us a feeling of destitution and emotional poverty. The thing that we prized and valued most—the love that we thought was shared between us and the sociopath—turned out to be an illusion. We have lost this vision of the relationship we thought was so important.
When my kids were very little, if one had a birthday, we would get the other one a “consolation present.” It was never as big as the birthday boy’s present, but it was a token to show that the non-birthday boy was not forgotten. One year when they were about four and three, we forgot to get the non-birthday boy something, and so my mother wrapped up a nice new shirt in a package, since the non-birthday boy did like clothes very much. When it came his turn to open his package he was all smiles, expecting some sort of toy I am sure. When he saw that his expectations were dashed and he had clothing, however, his little face fell. He had not gotten what he had expected. I was gratified, though, that he looked up, almost ready to cry I think, and said the most pitiful “thank you” that I have ever seen a child force from his lips.
Our expectations of our relationship many times turn out to be like my son’s expectations of what was in his package, very disappointing. Sometimes even devastation follows the exposure of the one-sidedness of the true relationship, with emotional, physical and/or financial abuse as well.
Walking down the street and seeing another couple holding hands, we may start to have a feeling that only we are alone, only we don’t have someone who wants to hold our hand. This feeling of “poverty,” of “not having” what others have, I think, fuels our feelings of worthlessness, abandonment and sadness, and the loneliness of wishing we had the relationship we thought we had. We feel deprived of what we deserve by someone else, or feel that maybe we don’t deserve more, or that we got what we deserved and if we had only worked harder, we might have managed to make it come true.
I think those feelings of deprivation, those feelings of poverty of spirit and soul, tend to drag us down further into the abyss of failure—a failure that keeps us from appreciating what we do have. A failure to appreciate just how important we are, and also a failure to appreciate that we have escaped the clutches of a bad relationship, even if that escape was painful.
The appreciation of ourselves, of our unique value and worth, is important to healing. To appreciate ourselves, I think we need to look at ourselves on this (U.S.) holiday of Thanksgiving and to enumerate and validate the many things about ourselves we do have to be thankful for. We need to count our blessings, and assess the many valuable characteristics that make us who we are.
Even if we have lost our “shoes” we still have our “feet” and while we may feel that we don’t have “as much as” someone else, we still have something that cannot be taken away from us, and that is the unique spirit that is ours and ours alone. The unique spirit that can be grateful and give thanks to the universe for new opportunities to expand that spirit in new ways we’ve never before explored.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
HEY MATT:
If the S never collected his golf clubs and cookbooks and a jet ski awarded him in the divorce (may 2009)…..do I need to send a 14 day letter of intent to dispose of personal property?
He’s made no attempt to collect items…
The jet ski is titled ‘and/or’, so I can conveniently transfer title over.
I know for a rental unit, any personal property left has to be stored for 30 days then certified letter of intent to dispose in 14 days. If not collected then I can dispose of legally.
I want to do it by the book, but I can’t find anything referencing personal property after a divorce in my state…..
I want to shut down any avenue for excuses to ‘come over’…..
He knows he has to be accompanied by a police officer and he has warrants……so I beleieve he will wait unitl the EOP is expired…..
What do you think?
thanks ox, spirit, style, star …
i think he mostly sees them as property. he ‘loves’ his daughter because she’s ‘gorgeous’ … ‘loves’ his son because he’s a little ‘thug’ just like he is …
it’s all about how things appear.
i think i read that the s/p/n’s major objective is to perfect how they come off to other people.
sometimes i just can’t fathom just how gross this all is.
sometimes i still think it was all a bad dream.
and i guess it was!
TOWANDA!
LIG Your x spaths children are possesions, like a car stereo..Spaths have children to LOOK normal, to fit in..They dont have them because they want to love them, they are collected like other family members, just possesions, they also like to control YOU with their children, and of course control and manipulate the children. I was told ‘M’ had two grown kids, this was after he had left here, but I dont believe it, no one can have kids and not ever mention them to someone they say they want to spend the rest of their lives with. But of course I also thot he was gay, but that was a lie also..who knows
The thing that makes them so different from narcissists is that they genuinely appear to be caring and loving. The act would fool anyone. It really takes a little time to see through it. I think the reason so many people here were conned out of money is because they were already so invested in the relationship first. S’s are on their best behavior for about a month until they get you “hooked”. Once you are at this point, you are very vulnerable to their con because you are not anticipated a con.
Glad you’re feeling a bit better LIG – I am on the other side of the world from your continent! Wish I was a bit closer – I think the idea of a LF camp is awesome 🙂 Imagine how healing that would be!
Agree with all other posters that these monsters are incapable of love. Here is a quote from The Sociopath Next Door by Martha Stout …
“And sociopaths are noted especially for their shallowness of emotion, the hollow and transient nature of any affectionate feelings they may claim to have, a certain breathtaking callousness, They have no trace of empathy and no genuine interest in bonding emotionally with a mate. Once the surface charm is scraped off, their marriages are loveless, one sided affairs, and almost always short term (I DISAGREE WITH THIS PART!). If a marriage partner has any value to the sociopath, it is because the partner is viewed as a possession, one that the sociopath may feel angry to lose, but never sad or accountable.”
“For their own reasons, sociopaths sometimes marry, but they never marry for love. They cannot fall genuinely in love – not with their spouse, their children or even a pet. Clinicians and researchers have remarked that where the higher emotions are concerned, sociopaths can ‘know the words but not the music;. They must learn to appear emotional as you or I would learn a second language, which is to say, by observation, imitation and ppractice. And just as you or I , with practice might become fluent in another language, so the sociopath may become convincingly fluent in ‘conversational emotion’. Any person who can observe human actions, even superficially, or who can read novels and watch old movies can learn to act romantic or interested or softhearted. Virtually anyone can learn to say ‘I love you,’ or to appear smitten and say the words ‘Oh my! What a cute puppy!’. But not all human beings are capable of experiencing the emotion implied by the behaviour. Sociopaths never do.”
Eeeek – just makes my blood run cold reading about it – what monsters they are.
Mine read all the time… I mean all the time.. and he always remarked how fleixble that he is..
After the first rush of I love you, you are my soulmate, I will love you forever, I have been looking for you all my life..
I never felt … the feelings of love from him.. I heard them but did not feel them.. and why I think I was not sexually attracted to him.. it was all contrived.. like play acting..he would come in to see what I am wearing for the day.. jeans..he would wear jeans, too.. shorts.. he would wear shorts.. black top he would wear black.. light colored.. he would wear light colored.. he was a mimic….
Know the words not the music is a perfect way of putting it..
@hens
My relationship with my spath was on the web and via phone. I thought he was a boy. Was all a flutter at the idea my 49 year old lesbo self having been ‘turned’ toward a 29 year queer boy.
Snort! Turns out ‘he’ is a woman in her 50’s who has been scamming women as a guy FOR DECADES. fucked by the best.
and still a lesbian. 😉
@Maryjane
I read a bit of your description of this the other day. And there is something very familiar in it – because i didn’t know my spath in hardcopy i didn’t have that physical experience, but there was this feeling that she/he would say something and see if it ‘worked’ on me, and then it would be adjusted to work on me, or given up and a new tack taken.
I canna say how much I hate this person right now.
And I deeply want to know WHOSE pictures she sent me. HE was a beautiful boy.
one step at a time – You never know who or what your chatting with online and via telephone. I hope this ‘spammer’ didnt get any money from you. My X lives a gay lifestyle but he will screw a women in a heart beat, specially the ole hag across the street when I went to work. But her husband caught on to it before I did and started taking her to work with him -lol- true.. That is why I dont get involved with bi-sexuals – you never know what their in the mood for. Online we can be who ever and what ever we want to be – rich – poor – skinny – fat – beautiful. Did you never have intentions of meeting this 29 yr. old boy in person? I have completly stopped going into gay chatrooms, theres nothing there for me. I know a few guys that have had the same pictures on their profiles for 20 years. I asked this one guy on gay.con how is that you can stay 40 for twenty years and I keep gettin older? Anyway onestep – thanks for the reply.
“The Sociopath Next Door” by Martha Stout should be required reading in every high school across this country.
Kids should have to read the book, and write a paper on it.
And, there should be full discussion of the book, preferably with a psychiatrist/psychologist present to answer questions and provide detailed explanations.
I really believe kids should be educated early on personality disorders & addiction, so they will recognize it when they encounter it in the real world, or even in their own families.
In fact, junior high school or middle school might be a better age to start educating kids on these disorders.
My brother is married to “Doreen Littlefield” from “The Sociopath Next Door, a Covetous Psychopath.
Actually, she’s also got a touch of Barbara Graham in her from that same book, as well.
Part covetous psychopath, and part sadistic murderer (if she could get away with it).
And, my Mom is dating “Luke” from “The Sociopath Next Door”.
He sits on his dead ass at her house and watches sports on her Sony flat screen.
There is actually a permanent ass print on her couch from where he sits and watches TV, eating her food and drinking her beer.
He tells her he loves her 25 times per day, and sends her phony flowery cards that say, “I Love You.”
So, I am sure it’s Love.
If anyone actually believes it’s love, I’ve got ocean front property in Arizona I would like to sell you.
The huge irony of it all is that my mother can see what a loser my brother is married to. And, likewise, my brother can see that my mom is hooked up with a loser.
But, neither can look at their OWN situation and see the dysfunction that is there.
They each have this HUGE blind spot where their own situation is concerned.
It’s unbelievable to watch close up.
~Oh, and the icing on the cake….that guy that I was debating on whether to send a birthday present to a few months ago….he resurfaced two days before Thanksgiving.
Some of you will remember, because I was on here asking for advice about whether to send him a birthday present.
I decided to just forget it, and I did nothing. I blew it off.
Anyway, two days before Thanksgiving, he left a message on my cell phone, accusing me of “cheating” because he has not heard from me in so long.
He did it in a playful way, though. He was not serious.
To him, I am sure it was playful and not meant to be hurtful.
To me……sort of a red flag.
I did not respond to that, either.
I just have this sick feeling that if I give this man a chance, I will be the third piece of the “tri-fecta” that is going on between my brother’s wife, my mom’s boyfriend, and whatever this guy wants from me. 🙁
I will pass on that.
I just want a healthy, stable, monogamous, honest relationship with a good, kind, & loving man!!
Jesus!! Is that too much to ask?!?!?!?!?