Imagine you can make yourself invisible (at will) and, thereby, effectively innoculate yourself against the consequences of your violating behaviors.
This playful scenario posits a power bordering on omnipotent. You can do what you want, when you want, to whom you want, secure in the knowledge that you can get away with it.
Your invisibility effectively liberates you from the normal rules and boundaries that regulate interpersonal conduct.
Now let’s be honest”¦with this power, how many of us would use it for our own amusement, and to our own advantage?
The true answer: most of us?
Remember, I said “let’s be honest.”
None of us, of course, so far as I know, possesses this power, thank goodness”¦and let me add that, while I suspect many of us would find some temptingly interesting ways to wield it, I am not suggesting that, endowed with such superpower, most of us would use it in cruel, hurtful ways.
As a matter of fact I think that, for many of us, possessing such a power would carry a burden. I imagine, for instance, a clash ensuing—a clash between opposing forces. That is, between a first force, call it our primitive thirst for self-gratification, and a second force (and the only force with the power to keep the first in check)—our conscience (our heeding of which enables us to sleep reasonably well at night).
So what am I getting at here?
Although I’m not suggesting that sociopaths operate with a belief in their literal invisibility, many of them, I am suggesting, operate with a metaphorically comparable mindset. I call it the immunity mindset.
The immunity mindset, as I’ve implied above, is a mentality characterized especially by the audacious belief and confidence that one can transgress others with, well, immunity.
It must be a heady feeling, indeed, to harbor the conviction that you can pull off sh*t most others would simply find too risky and, more importantly, too shameful to endeavor?
By way of example, imagine that you’re on a crowded subway and are seized with the lascivious impulse to grope an unsuspecting neighbor? The non-sociopath seized with such an impulse may consider it briefly, entertain and even enjoy the fantasy, but then retires it harmlessly.
He retires it for several reasons, chief among them his fear, first of all, of being caught, and just as deterrently, because he knows that the shame that would ensue from his action would supercede, probably greatly, the gratification to be enjoyed from his exploitive act.
Shame, we know, is a powerful deterrent against antisocial behavior. And so it follows that a lack of shame is a wonderful asset to carry into an exploitative endeavor.
Sociopaths, lacking and unencumbered by shame—specifically the anxiety, self-consciousness, negative self-judgement and nervousness that accompany shame—find themselves thus freely poised to engage in exploitative behaviors from which non-sociopaths will typically desist, and to do so, moreover, with the imperturbability of supremely composed individuals.
Their lack of shame, in other words, enables their composure.
In my subway example, the sociopath will grope his neighbor because, first of all, he wants to (and sociopaths, remember, do and take what they want); furthermore, because he lacks, as noted, the anticipatory shame that typically deters most of us from “acting-out” our violating impulses; and finally (and to the heart of this column), because he is as confident as if he were invisible that he will get away with his violation.
Let us imagine, for instance, that his victim whirls around and accuses the sociopath, publicly, of groping her. The non-sociopath would find such a public accusation mortifying. The sociopath, however, just as securely as though he’d been invisible, will calmly deny the charge, or else just as calmly finger the guy standing next to him as the guilty party.
He might say, with remarkable equanimity, “I don’t know what you’re talking about”¦you’ve got the wrong guy”¦.I wasn’t even standing here”¦so it couldn’t have been me. It was that guy.”
Now what kind of world is this in which the sociopath is living?
It is a world in which others are the ultimate objects with which to jerk around, toy, menace, and entertain himself: a world in which he, the sociopath, can imagine doing pretty much anything he wants to anyone, while enjoying, if not relishing, his perceived immunity from accountability.
This is another way of suggesting that many sociopaths aren’t just playing, in fantasy, the game of imagine if you were invisible, how would you exploit your power? Effectively, they are carrying this mentality, what I call the immunity mindset, into the real world.
It is a mindset steeped in a deep, grandiose sense of omnipotence; a mindset, I would add, that leaves the sociopath feeling empowered, and at liberty, to violate others sinisterly with his strange, striking, signature lack of worry, shame and constraint.
(My use of “he” in this, and other posts, is not to suggest that females are not capable of the behaviors described. This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
I am really shocked at how ineffective the S’s seem to be in court.
I have seen a few cases here on LF where the S looks like a complete idiot in court.
But, then again, they do not worry about future consequences, so I guess it adds up.
Dear Endthepain,
In my job as an advanced practice nurse I had to give drug tests (pee tests) to various people at our clinic. there ARE ways to beat it unless you do a HAIR TEST—hair tests give a result for the past and CANNOT BE BEATEN. So insist that he do a HAIR TEST. If there is no hair on the head (chest hair or public hair or under arm hair can be used.) It retains the drugs for the duration and is plucked from the head by the person certifying the test so they can’t give FAKED hair or hair belonging to some one else.
I knew a nurse once who would take urine out of a patient’s bladder (the patient was comatose) and insert it into her own bladder right before a test! Yep! UNBEEEELIEEEEVABLE! YUK!
The nurse eventually got caught!
I suggest that you research the different kinds of “hair” drug tests and the validity of it, and how urine tests are beaten and have that in your documentation when you ask the Judge for a HAIR TEST as proof positive of drug use or not.
Good luck! ((hugs)))
Thank you for all of the input and support…((hugs))
Honestly I feel so confused right now as I am trying to get as much info to stay one step ahead of this bastard…I dont know why I am feeling this way as all the other times we have gone to court he has lost…complete idiot..even with his wifes help….even so..its different this time as I know the truth about him FINALLY and the pain and anger I feel is RAW and still so close to the surface..his lies..his deceipt…his manipulation ALL OF IT..I want to see him pay however….I know he never truly will and the only way of winning id to keep him away completely..and MATT..yes that is what I want even thio I may seem scattered at the moment…Its hard as my son has met him now..so I feel the guiilt there as well…will he resent me as he grows older that I drove away his Dad..even tho he has never been a dad nor will he ever be one even if he is in his life…so Im stumbling along right now trying to stay strond and make the right choices FOR MYSELF and MY SON..not to memntion my other two children wo have been subjected to this insanity…
I dont know if you reas in a post from lastnight…my 10 yr old was talking about is Dad (my son from a previous marriage) and my 3 yr old looks at me and says…”Mommy I wish I had a nice daddy” how sad..it makes me cry even now as it speaks VOLUMES
Thank you James, and for your comment too, Rosa,
My S thought that he would have no problem getting away with everything. He is being sued by his first attorney, although according to him, he fired the attorney for taking his money. The second one wouldn’t work with him either. My guess is that they saw the case against him and the way he is and bowed out. The mediator said that he was a “cool liar” and that “she felt sorry for him for not having representation”.
The thing that is bothering me most, is that while I feel somewhat vindicated, I feel sad- that seems strange, knowing what I know about this man and the horrible things that he did to me and my family. I guess that I keep thinking about the way it was in the beginning, and how I thought that I was going to finally be happy. I was, but it was brief and wasn’t real and no matter what I tell myself, I can’t put the “fairy tale” and him out of my mind. How long does it take?
endthepain,
It hurts to have that guilt as a mother….And you are right there might be a time in your sons life that he will be angry for not having a relationship with his dad…
BUT the other side of that is him having a relationship with his dad and his dad “grooming” him to be a chip off the old block.
Or where he is constantly hurt by his dad during their interactions. Because you know your x is not going to put the childs feelings in front of his own. So chances are his relationship with his dad will be troubled at best.
He said he wished he had a “nice” daddy. Well you know for a fact his daddy is NOT nice.
Maybe you could get him a “big brother” through the big brother big sister organazation. My son had a “big brother” for a few years when he was younger after his dad died, and he looked forward to doing stuff with him.
jfog1:
It takes as long as it takes. I think it is different for everyone.
I honestly don’t think there is a concrete answer for that.
Jfog1 & Rosa: One day you’ll “get it.” You’ll realize that whatever you thought you had, it was all a fancy fabrication, a stage play, only you didn’t know it wasn’t real. Worst of all, underneath that fake exterior, there’s a highly disordered “screwball” who is severely disturbed. You can’t fix it, and pretending it’s a fixable situation only empowers the “screwball” to continue to deceive others.
Some people say that it takes twice as long to get over this as the time you spent involved with the person. I think that real healing starts about the time that we really, really GET IT that their minds are “messed up,” and their dangerous, hurtful, and destructive actions are just a product of their disordered minds. It’s not even about them trying to really “GET” us — we just happened along and they snagged us as victims.
When we can start to unemotionally disconnect from them, I think we are really stepping onto the serious path of healing.
Rune:
I am definitely disconnected!
But I had to feel my way through it all on my own, because there was no LoveFraud at that time. I did not even know about personality disorders back then.
Oh, Rosa, and we’re so quick to blame ourselves for NOT KNOWING about this! As if we were just supposed to know about personality disorders and what “crazy” looks like in real life.
Y’know, if it looked like drooling and obvious hallucinations, we’d have a better shot at detecting this kind of “crazy.” But it masquerades as “normal.” In fact, often “more normal than normal.” Until all of a sudden they’re not “normal” at all, and we’re wondering if we didn’t hear them correctly. If we just saw what we actually saw. And we’re busy questioning ourselves, because that’s what we do when something goes awry — we look to see how we contributed to the problem.
Well, no one I know of got a Ph.D. in psychology while still in high school and entering the dating arena. And a lot of the psych Ph.D.s I’ve met are clueless about personality disorders as well, so we have to let ourselves off the hook for not recognizing the pattern sooner.
Those of us who HAVE somehow felt our way through on our own are the rare ones. Isn’t it comforting to have a community where we can talk about this and realize that other people ALSO see these patterns, and — NO, we’re not making this up!
Rune:
Yes, it is definitely comforting.