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.)
Stargazer:
You Rock!
I need to spice up my career, too.
Stargazer, Must be good cosmic energy today as I too have chosen less pity more party attitude instead of tears from here on. Many wishes for good fortune from your new venture.
Newlife, Yes! Yes! Yes! if only for today. We must take our victories when we can in what ever manner they manifest themselves.
Thank you JOY !!!
I wanted to share so others can feel that the effort is worth it to fight. At least I know he cannot sell the house and take the money – it’s all we have that is liquid. At 53 it will be hard enough to start over with my kids.
Isn’t it a shame I have to feel victorious over getting what is rightfully my legals rights ????? – at least for the moment.
I know he will retaliate – but it’s OK.
I hope this is a sign of better outcomes ahead
Newlife,
“HOWEVER – we did get a small victory today!!!!
Judge ordered the realtor contract on the shore property to be INVALIDATED no later than tomorrow!!!
He has only a few days to respond and SHOW CAUSE as to why he should be able to sell it.
So far now – FOR ONCE – he is being held accountable!”
That’s awesome. I’m glad you’ve got a judge who’s thinking things through. (I bet he was as offended as you are by the scumbag lawyer’s request.)
Newlife: Since you asked . . . I now know that the man I married when I was 18 was a sociopath. I believe that sometimes our bodies know the truth, even when our heads are unaware. I remember that when we turned to face the congregation and be introduced for the first time as “Mr. & Mrs. ___” that tears spontaneously started rolling down my face. Within a month I knew I had made a big mistake — several instances of control games, including pulling a gun on me. But that was long ago, and the prevailing thought in society was that “if he was angry, I must have done something to provoke him,” and “if he hit me, I must have deserved it.” I was in a fundamentalist, God-fearing society, and I didn’t see any way out. He was emotionally distant, controlling, . . . and a regular churchgoer, becoming a deacon in the church and enjoying that whole social circle. He was almost 6 years older than me, so — at 18 — I was vulnerable to any “authority” game he wanted to play. He scared me so badly, so early on, that I just adopted an attitude of doing what I was told, for the most part. As his family would say, when I might complain about something that seemed a bit over the top, “Oh, you know how D is. You don’t want to make him mad.”
Yes, I had two children. When I finally decided to leave the man, I was in daily fear for my life, and he had pulled a series of financial “stunts” that were so bizarre, expensive, and pointless, that I could not imagine how things could get worse. I went to a cousin of his, explained the behavior, and the cousin gave me the name of a lawyer to call. “You need a divorce,” he said. At 24, I was getting divorced in a society where people just didn’t “go back on their marriage vows” and where no one had a clue what kind of insanity I was living with. Heck, I didn’t even know that there was a psychological term for his kind of crazy.
He pulled all manner of stunts, both during the divorce process, and after. He never followed through on any court orders, any child support, any visitation, . . . anything. It was emotionally bloody, and not even my own parents understood what was going on. “Why can’t you and D just get along?”
Twenty years after the divorce, my son called me one evening in alarm. I was visiting friends in another state, but my son knew how to reach me. He was worried for me because he had heard from his father that he was “going to get a shotgun and blow her away.” Twenty years after the divorce.
Most of my life has been tainted, poisoned, devastated by one S/P or another. I didn’t understand the psychological underpinnings of their behavior until the past several years, when I have been on a full-bore mission to learn all I can. One of the most comforting books I was able to find is “Women Who Love Psychopaths.” I had long suspected that these people knew how to pick out kind, compassionate, loyal, trustworthy folks and exploit them. That book explained what I had suspected, and far more.
I guess my greatest challenge is to forgive myself for having been used and conned and abused, for having fallen for the lies, and . . . at this point to try to make some meaning out of all this mess.
The one thing a psychopath knows how to create in abundance is heartache. It ripples through the lives around them, affecting generations, poisoning lives, even of the unborn.
Because I have “been there,” I do what I can to help those in pain right now. And I also hope to be able to encourage wider awareness of this issue, so that victims don’t face the stone wall of disbelief when they go into court, or ask for legal protection, or try to reclaim their sanity after years of emotional abuse and gaslighting.
If I could be granted one wish, I would ask for a cure for where this all starts — in the twisted mind of the sociopath. If chemical, surgical, or brain-training techniques could re-wire them into responsible, empathetic, conscience-driven members of humanity, this willful wreckage would stop at the source. Until that time, I hope that we can find ways to limit the extent of their damage, and to raise social awareness so that this behavior of arrogance, entitlement, and “might over right” is NEVER glamourized, and that more of society will recognize those red flags when they’re waving and know them for what they are: Danger signs, not party banners!
RUNE:
You are so very right. Every time My daughter comes home and talks about a family ed class or sex ed – I cringe because our kids need an education in just what we have experienced – I even daydream that school would allow someone to come in and talk about PD”s and red flags . I KNOW FOR A FACT some of these teenage girls are already experiencing abuse and control in their dating relationships.
I understand now where your tender words come from when you write – from deep , deep wounds . God Bless that you are so very gracious and not bitter. I pray for that for myself.
I have never experienced the physical threats or abuse, but the withdrawal, cheating, financial deceit were and are still overwhemling at times.
I cannot believe he can be such a different creature than I thought.
i , too, wonder what life would have been like if I had faced this sooner – but like you said — who knew?
I thought I was experiencing “Marriage problems” and God would heal our relationship.
Tell me , if you don’t mind , how have your children come to handle all this in their lives.
I worry for my son and daughter.
Little D & Elizabeth Conley – thank you for your empathy & understanding. Many folks that have not experienced the court system (vis a vis Sociopaths & the personality disordered) just cannot and will not believe it. One example of the most common type of “criminal behaviors” that go unpunished in Missouri is the following:
If you are a woman whose relationship is on the rocks and you want your husband out of the house, you merely go to the judge and say the following words: “I fear for my life” or, “The children and I are scared” — and the male will be kicked out of the home (immediately), forced to pay the mortgage and all bills and (depending how long your psychopathic spouse stretches it out) will be stripped of everything until, “”the divorce is final and the court will settle all these matters at that time.” It does not matter whether it is true or not ”“ the judge will kick the male out of the house every single time; no exceptions. I know of over 100 incidents of this occurring here in Missouri.
BTW, if the man goes to court and tells the judge, “I am in fear for my life.” ”“ nothing will happen. Even when the male is really, really fearful for his life. I have witnessed this many, many, many times over the years. A very good friend is going through this right now. It has been 3 years since his wife lied to the judge and he has not been allowed on his property since. She has been living (in the marital home)with her boyfriend the entire time. Even though there is no proof that her husband ever did anything to her in the 23 year marriage. None. Zero. Nada.
Here in Missouri, divorce attorneys are well known for advising their (female) clients: “Would you like to get your husband out of the house? Would you like to have your husband pay for all of the bills while you and your boyfriend live in the home? Would you like to stop your husband from seeing the children for the 2 to 3 years that we will stretch this divorce case out? Then just claim that you are ’in fear for your life’” Even if not true ”“ they will advise female clients to say it. Not only have I personally experienced this, I have friends that are attorneys that, openly, admit to using this lie and advising their clients to use it also. They have learned it early in their careers and find it a wonderful tool! This is not some obscure, rare, anecdotal story from me alone; this is business as usual in Missouri.
And, apparently, it is common in other states too. That is disgusting.
Thanks to all.
Heres the thing…My last ex P dentist, (cuppla months ago) told the court he and his three adult children were in fear of his and their life and I was kicked out and cannot repossess ANY of my possessions including my dog. His daughter assaulted me, I never touched any of them ever (or for that matter I never verbally threatened them either). Same as the ex p solicitor (in 2001), only he took my entire house and had me jailed for a lot of things he made up entirely. I had no kids to either of them
I am a walking proof to the contrary.
Blindsided,
Thanks for the information on Missouri. Been there only once during my Basic Training in the service at Fort Leonard Wood. Thinking about leaving the Chicago area and moving to another state, I think I leave Missouri off the list plus I really didn’t like the state very much anyway. But like you stated most states have their own laws and/or view about man and woman concerning family and marriage. Here in Illinois if a man fathers a child but doesn’t marry the woman. If a custody come up here in Illinois custody defaults to the mother unless the father can prove she is unfit.
Strange (but now not really!) but my ex s/p lost custody of her two children to her ex husband back in 1989 something that doesn’t happen very often when the children are still in their tender years which these two were. Also she was given only “supervised visitation rights” only. But I did learn later that she was order to get psychological testing and didn’t do so well on these tests. I remember her telling me how the counselor who was in charge of the testing was “sleeping with her husband”. Another reason she told me for losing sole custody was because her husband’s parents had more money (which they did) then her parents. Still after learning about custody issues personally I did learn that the age of the child is a very important factor whenever awarding sole custody to any parent.
Boy, What a dumb ass I was to believe all her lies but in my defense I didn’t know about personality disorders or what a sociopath is. This alone should have been the BIGGEST red flag for me but did it? No, God sometimes I could just kick my butt from here to next week!!!
Oh, I didn’t know what a “red flag” was as well.. Okay now where the H*LL is my “biggest dumb ass” award????