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.)
henry:
I could have written what you did word for word — the missing teeth and head scar notwithstanding.
My S’s family, like your S’s family had written him off — bare contact as necessary. My S operated in secrecy — I now see to keep all the people he conned, burned and screwed over from finding out where he lived. His claims to the contrary, his friends were minimal and new. His looks are shot — his days as a cute boy-toy are behind him. Now, he’s just a very overweight, middle-aged man who has no money and is almost out on the street. I’d say the odds of his hooking somebody like me was was willing to support him style are pretty slim. Between his high blood pressure, drug addiction, drinking and all the people who would like a piece of him, I’d say he will die far earlier than a non-sociopath.
Yesterday I learned that S is being sued yet again by yet another credit card he has defaulted on. This will make 16 default judgments stretching back to 1991. Twenty years of burning creditors of every stripe — credit cards, car finance companies, student loans, lfederal and state tax authorities, andlords, busineses, friends and employers. When I look at that list, I realize he can’t blame his problems on his drug addiction — he has been hardwired since birth to be a conman. When I learned of his latest lawsuit, all I could think was “what an exhausting way to live.”
henry:
“If I lived my life like a sociopath I would always be scared that someone that I conned is just waiting for the right opportunity to get even.”
Yessiree, that’s me. And I’ve got him just where I want him now. Only, I don’t have to lay a hand on him to do it.
Steve,
I had every confidence you would. And will continue to do so…
Your gifts are many: compassionate, dynamic writer and speaker, so relaxed- yet exuding a vibrance for life and a deep understanding of the pain those of us here have endured.
Your writings draw us into your sphere of understanding and experience and help us put words to feelings that have long existed without identity – we find validation where there was none.
Then the next step – you draw us out of ourselves, help us face the pain, recognize the behaviors and common ground of what we have been through.
That you offer your expertise to those whose journey led them here – I learned in my 12 years of Catholic school that God sends us Angels in many forms in our darkest times of need – I count you as one we are lucky enough to have along the way.
God Bless – travel safely.
EndthePain:
If you go No Contact on a sociopath, one of 2 things is likely to happen.
First, they will simply move on. No skin off of their back. They never cared about you anyway. Onto the next victim.
Second, and more dangerous, they will become very angry.
When I finally went NC on my sociopath boyfriend, I was already afraid of him. And going No Contact only justified my worst fears.
You see, he “was not through with me”. For whatever reason , he still saw me as a great source of supply.
When I went NC, it only increased the smear campaign he already had going on me. He damaged my property, he would come over to my house and start firing shotguns outside at late hours (he thought he was Rambo), all the wierd stuff that they do.
I called the police on him at least once. And then he started getting the picture that I meant business. He went away eventually. But, he did not go quietly.
Rosa n o
Not only have I gone NC but before I did I let him know I was aware of everyhting ALSO that his wife and I had spoken and she let him know she was aware of all the lies as well..Im afraid of the backlash now..he drove by on monday and tried to contact me..I know he is back trying with the wife now…Im not going to quiver in fear but the things Im finding out are blowing me away
Matt:
You are “living the dream”, getting him back legally, slowly but surely. Mixing the stew! I am jealous! lol!
Henry:
You should have sent your ex psychopath to my ex psychopath alcoholic dentist when he had his teeth knocked out! It would have been interesting to see the result…not only for the painful visit to the dentist and the unhygienic and bad result on his teeth, but to see what happened when you ex p didn’t pay my ex p …haha!
When his mother said to me, “You can’t believe a word that comes out of his mouth, just don’t believe him”, I thought she was mean!!
She was giving me hints!
All my ex p’s friends were alcoholics and/or using him for money (which he got fraudulently). Every single one. I was the only one who actually fell for his act. Every one else in the scenario had been around a long time and were all using him, in return they gave him narcissitic supply and enabled him. Just agreed with whatever he said. So naturally, I was the one who had to go! Thank God for that!!
P.S. I love your rambling…
Not one of his “friends” or “family” warned me about him. They all knew what he was like and were jealous I might be stopping them from getting something..anything! They were all just like him! They treated me like the transient object in the corner of the room, or like I was the pot plant about to be thrown out after I wilted.
Not only did I not wilt (this time), but I found LF and a whole new world!!! TOWANDA!!
“When I learned of his latest lawsuit, all I could think was “what an exhausting way to live.”
That along Matt says so much about these people. Are there
paybacks?
will they get theirs?
will there be a day for them to pay the check?
I believe the answer to be yes but it will take time and if we have patience and even if we get this information, yes someday there will be a time to pay the full balance because we all do that in the end. We all reap what we sow that is just life and the way it’s always been and will always be….
EndthePain:
“He drove by on Monday, and tried to contact me.”
If you stay in No Contact, you will begin to see how much he is willing to escalate the harrassing behavior.
The Smear Campaign (if he is running one) will be just as brutal as anything physical that he can do to you.
The lies will be vicious, and people will actually believe them.
Mine used to always say, “Perception is reality”. I thought that was crazy in the beginning. But, by the end of the relationship, I understood exactly what he meant.
If yours is anything like mine was, he sees you as a possession.