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.)
GOD, they are all the same person…amazing… over and out, good night all
OMG..laughing my ass off…his wife (soon to be ex, I think) supported him and payed for the batle with me..her taxes were garnished as well….but she had told me before how she had found cards from me when I didnt even know he was married…said he was seperated…and then again this time when he was going throught the divorce ( I met the attorney) after the custody hearing and he saw his wife…she sent hima anniversary card too…lol..lol…such creeps…stpries all the same!!
Reading this thread, all I can think about is the amount of personal betrayal we’ve all had to deal with. And how strong and determined everyone in this thread is to getting their lives back.
Anyone who tells us that our expectations are too high or that we need to forget it, IMO, is telling us to continue the betrayal by doing it to ourselves. We have a right to our outrage. What happened to us is wrong. People who hurt us, who treat us with disrespect, who use us for their own purposes are not our equals. Not ethically. Not in their ability to feel and care about other people. They don’t belong in our world.
There was some discussion earlier about whether it’s worth it to unearth old traumas, whether it just perpetuates the pain. It’s only worth it, if we think that old traumas are still affecting our lives. If somehow they’re setting us up to be victims again, or keeping us from getting over the new traumas.
In my case, I figured out that abuse when I was a child left me with some wrong assumptions about myself and the world. It added up to a lot of buried insecurity and old anger that I had to heal, because I had a pattern of seeking rescuers in my life who turned out to be users and control freaks. People whose emotional problems were worse, and more destructive than mine were. So I went to work on sorting out the old stuff, while I was getting over the sociopath. Sort of a two-for-one deal, but I wanted to make sure that I wasn’t going to do this again. I couldn’t fix the sociopath, but I could damned sure do something about myself.
I posted an article yesterday on forgiving. And I know I’m probably going to attract some flack because of it. People who are still living with hand-to-hand combat over recovering control of their own lives — whether it’s about kids or money or just stopping the harassment — are not going to to be in the mood to think about forgiving. And I want to make something clear. Forgiving is something we do when we have the time and head space to finish wiping out their influence on our lives. People in a war zone need to take care of that business first. Get better at using the weapons we have and learning to take care of ourselves.
endthepain asked about fear and anger. Here’s the answer. Fear is under the anger. But while we’re in the war zone, we don’t need to be looking at the fear. The anger gives us the strength and focus to deal with these circumstances. Later, when things calm down, we can go back and comfort ourselves through our fear, regain our sense of safety. If we’re under attack right now, the way to survive is identifying the enemy and doing something about it to make ourselves safe. We do the “soft” work later, when we’re ready to put all this behind us, transform our painful experiences into positive learning, and use the lessons to rebuild a better life.
But in the meantime, we know when we need to be warriors. Even if we’d never run into the sociopath, every life has its moments when we need to stand up for ourselves and fight off threats to our wellbeing. Feeling that, pulling ourselves together to do what needs to be done, is just a normal, healthy response to threats to our survival and that of our kids. It’s not the time for a lot of introspection or wondering how we got into this. First, we take care of business. Then, later, when we have time to think about, we extract the lessons so we’re better, stronger, smarter people in the future.
Namaste.
Kathy
End:
Documenting is all about keeping records of what he has said, done, promised, texted, your exchange with him etc…
You do not need to document ‘with’ him, or keep him abreast of your documentation.
His relationship with your son is just that….HIS! You can already show you were open to him having contact with his son. He makes his choices…..it’s just up to you to document thos choices.
Again, you do not need to be in contact with him when he fails to ‘come through’ for the child.
Just expect that he will do as he does.
BUT…..you will be there with all your records in the courtroom to show his promises and neglect to follow through and the damage is causes your child.
Here is the letter I would like to give my ex p. I copied it off Oxy and added a line or two. I am not allowed to contact him so I can’t give it to him. But the fact that I want to give it to him still means I have a long way to go on most levels.
I havn’t written a letter to him OR sent him any since we split up last Nov. So I am posting it here to help ME heal, (it beats going round there with a shotgun) :
hisname:
I DON’T WANT TO TALK TO YOU OR I WOULD TALK TO YOU. I THINK YOU ARE A DISGUSTING PATHETIC EVIL EXCUSE FOR A HUMAN BEING AND I AM GLAD TO BE RID OF YOU. I DON’T WANT ANY REMINDERS OF YOU AND I DON’T GIVE A RAT’S ASS WHAT YOU THINK.
DON’T BOTHER CALLING, WRITING, OR THINKING ABOUT ME. I HAVE MOVED ON TO ANOTHER PERSON. YOU ARE NOT WHAT I WANT.
F#K OFF AND DIE.
“Friends, Yes, this site is definately a place to synthesize it , figure it out, then forget about it so you can live your best life. There are evil people in the world and it is our misfourtune that our personal lives were affected by them”. but only as along as we let them.”
Sorry but some of this I disagree with. To “forget” about it might or would allow someone to be victimized yet again. Also to “forget” about it and then go on with our life might and would allow yet another victim to be abused. Only through education to the public do we have a chance to make a different. Forgetting about it can be dangerous because that’s exactly what they want so they can move around more freely extracting yet more supply from unknown and uneducated people.
Let the pain and damage go? Yes! That we need to do but to forget what we all have learned is an injustice to ourselves and will cause us the possibility to learn it all over again in another person place or thing..
Thanks Erin..thats what I am doing and I needed some clarification..Im a bit pissed off as he has requested acourt date for this week on the 17th…unfortunately it wasnt done correctly so I never got my papaerwork and neither did child support services so he went thru the courthouse directly without proper protocol..so to speak…..so NOW..I have to wait for another hearing which he will request..in the meantime hye is living in another state in a house which will be foreclosed on soon…collecting unemployment knowing full well he will be moving back to this state but is not looking for work and in the meantime setting up his pity play…as an eye injury…( he workd outside doing landscaping) and it hurts his eye in the sun and believes he needs surgery but it will never be fully cured again…..and again not suprisingly hasnt paid a dime to me..and Im struglling beyond belief..I want to nail his ass so mbad I camnt even stand it!! Can’t I file papers for contempt???
excuse my *typos..I just get so damn mad!!!
Thinking out loud – Three years ago my X and I went to Co. was a business trip for me and he came along. I had planned a special ‘will you be mine’ with a ring, when we went to the top of Pikes Peak. On the drive up he get’s an anonymous cell phone call from some dude that had found his number on a wall. Well i tossed the ring out the window and couldnt wait to get back to OK so I could just get him out of my life. But he promised me the moon and I wanted to believe him, so i forgave him one more time. Well I am in CO today by myself and I drove up to the top of Pikes Peak. Today is his birthday and I am wondering if someone did something nice for him? Am wondering if he is still lying and cheating or has he found what he always manipulated me into believing he wanted with me? I feel very alone but not lonely. I remember the chaos and drama and stress of that trip three years ago. I am living in the moment more these days and not so much in the past and feeling optomistic that i just might have alot to live for. I am not so humiliated and embarrased that I fell for his con, he’s a messed up manchild that i will never see again…..and he really opened my eyes to the fact I needed to change…and learn about me….happy birthday sugar booger….glad you are gone happy or not….
henry: “Thinking out loud”… it’s like you’re reading my mind (except for the sugar booger part, LOL). The wondering (they are still lying cheating ba*tards), the alone but not lonely, the con, all of it, I’m right there.