My sociopathic ex-husband, James Montgomery, considered himself to be an entrepreneur, the equal of any man who ever built a commercial empire. As he was seducing me, painting a glimmering picture of how successful and rich we would become, he proclaimed that he would be “the next Walt Disney.”
When Montgomery went to business meetings, he wore a jacket, trousers, and a polo shirt. He refused to wear ties, but he always had a silk square in his jacket pocket. He told me that even when he was young, he always dressed up in jackets and cravats, eschewing the psychedelic fashions of the 60s.
So you can imagine my surprise when I heard that he’d been spotted at a train station in Katoomba, Australia, in a totally different look:
He was wearing: red/orange pants, hippie sandles, caftan like long top to ankles in multiple colours, big round glasses with pink lenses, long scarf draped around his neck and over his shoulder nearly touching the ground and a hat which looked like a beanie. A long white beard probably about 12/15inches long and I would say weighing about 150 to 175 kilos or more. Imagine a man 6ft 2ins tall 175 kgs and wearing that get up!!!
James had tried to hook up with the woman who provided this description, while he was still dressing like an entrepreneur. She escaped. So when she saw Montgomery, her only thought was to avoid him. She later wished that she had taken his picture with her iPhone. So do I.
Changing his look
When Montgomery was spotted in the clown outfit, he was approximately 70 years old and 330 to 385 pounds. So why would a man who sneered about exotic wardrobes all his life, who never mentioned any connection with the peace-and-love ideals of the counterculture, suddenly dress like an overweight flower child?
Well, it turns out that Katoomba is known for its “artsy, hippie” lifestyle. One of the highlights of the year is the Katoomba Winter Magic Festival (see the wild photos here).
I assure you, Montgomery had no interest that type of event when I knew him. In fact, shortly after we became engaged, I went to the Philadelphia Folk Festival, which I’d attended for 20 years with a large group of friends. Although quite a few potheads in tie-died shirts roamed the campground, it was nothing like the Katoomba festival. Still, Montgomery refused to go.
So what has changed? Why is he now wearing round glasses with pink lenses? Necessity.
There are several hippie communes around Katoomba. I assume they are cheap places to live, and Montgomery who promised me that we’d be living “in the lap of luxury” is now surviving on a paltry pension. He’s probably living in one of the communes because it’s all he can afford.
If James Montgomery were going to live in Katoomba, he needed to blend in. So he reinvented himself as a hippie.
Devalue and discard
How is this possible? How to you change from a globetrotting entrepreneur to a hippie in a flowing caftan? For a sociopath, it’s as simple as changing clothes. Why? Because they are empty inside.
Sociopaths do not have character. They do not have deeply held convictions or beliefs. They do not have roots in their communities or ties with their families. They are shells of human beings, with no substance.
This is why they can walk away from any relationship, even marriages of 20 or 30 years, without a backward glance. Their only concern is what they can get from a person in the present moment. If their partner is no longer a useful sources of supply of money, support, connections, or whatever they see no reason to hang around. It’s the “devalue and discard” routine.
You may have observed the incredible lack of response when someone close to the sociopath, or close to you, dies. A sociopath may appear to be grief-stricken, but it’s an act, all for show. Or, the sociopath may not even bother, saying something like, “They’re gone. Get over it.”
No core
Sociopaths do not have the ability to form deep connections with any person, place or ideal outside of themselves. There is no core.
Instead, sociopaths live from exploit to exploit. When their circumstances change, they adapt. If one business idea fails, they blame someone else and come up with a new one. If one romantic partner dumps them, they already have another lined up. Sometimes they’re not even fazed by getting busted and going to prison it’s just a new place to run their con games.
We may have seen them proclaim head-over-heels love for us and then quickly do something to intentionally hurt us. Or, they may cry and grovel when we kick them out, and the minute we let them back, act as if nothing had happened.
They can do this because there is noting inside them. They are empty.
For those of us who can love, who can make lasting connections, it may be difficult to imagine the shallowness of this existence. So let me give you a visual. Just think of them as life-sized cardboard cut-outs of human beings. That’s really all they are.
This reminded me of the time when we were married and I got a call from my ex’s daughter who told me that his father had died unexpectedly. They had found him in his living room, “asleep” in his chair. She then came over to our house to break the news to my ex in person. He got up for about 3 minutes, muttered something and then went back to sleep. Now he and his father has supposedly been very close (so he said) and I wondered how in the world could he be so unresponsive and totally unmoved. I never saw his cry a tear for him. He was like that ALL the time though. He explained it away that he was totally trusting in God for everything and that he was able to do that because of his “great faith” in God. I fell for it for years in wonder that he trust God that much. Now I realize that he felt nothing. The “cardboard cutout” describes him perfectly.
Wow–perfect description! My spath ex has been exposed as an embezzler–but still continues to play tennis at the club I that–I strongly believe–he embezzled from! I believe he is unable to reinvent himself right now, so just keeps trying to find people who still see him the way he used to portray himself. There are fewer and fewer of those!
To be honest, I wish he were living in a hippie commune somewhere. I am tired of seeing him playing his old role–however absurd it is.
Cardboard cutout–yes!
Tell me about it LL! I took wish I didn’t have to wonder all the time if mine is going to pop up at much church or church gathering or at the nearest convenient store. I did find out he has a new “quest” now, a girl he bragged about “rescuing” to his family. She is evidently from an abusive marriage and at least 30 years, maybe more, younger than him. My step-daughter said she also looks pregnant. Now I want rid of him but not to anyone else’s expense. It’s so sad to see him ruining the next woman’s life.
I hope your ex’s new mark–I mean girlfriend!–wises up soon, Linette!
And re: “grieving”. The first words out of my exes mouth when his father died (and I had believed he loved his dad) were “Oh my god–now we’re going to have to take care of my mother.”
That said it all…
I feel the same way. I used to hate this other “girl” he moved on with, now I feel sorry for her. But she initiated the affair and of course he “had” to go along with it. So I guess she asked for it. I don’t think he will treat her any better. The saddest part is that he traded his family of 20 years for some young, sexy co worker without looking back once. I am wondering if he feels the pain of losing his only child? Can they even recognize what kind of damage they caused. I know they don’t look back. It is just so difficult for me to see how a person can function like him, emotionless, cold hearted and no remorse or compassion.
No, they can’t feel the pain of losing their child–at least not in any meaningful way. They might miss some attention they got–if their child was good at school, or sports or something along those lines. Or they might miss the adulation they got at one time from a young child–the reflection of the person they purported to be. But that’s it.
I think one of the hardest things about this is accepting the way they think. It is so hard for those of us with a heart to understand.
My husbands ex-wife is a sociopath. She has been in and out of prison for embezzlement, fraud, uttering and publishing and stealing someone’s licence and pretending to be her. Because of this I had to raise her daughter with my husband. And after my step-daughter became 18 she moved to her mothers and never wanted anything to do with us. Somehow the ex convinced her that we were “bad” and “troubled”. Never understood why my step-daughter believed her. Especially when she wanted nothing to do with her while she was busy being a felon. And yet, when she got out of prison she started up several businesses. When one would fail she would start yet another. She even got my step-daughter in business with her and then fired her. LOL! I’m still frustrated by the fact that most people don’t realize she is a sociopath. And the fact that her face has been all over the newspaper in the local town doesn’t bother her. She acts as though nothing is wrong with her behavior. In fact, she seems proud. And because my step-daughter thinks she’s mother of the year makes me wonder if perhaps she is a sociopath herself.
Hellandback,
OMG! Such a typical story! How do these spaths get away with it??!! I feel bad if I’m late returning a library book! And yes–I think your stepdaughter may have the gene. Sigh. I’m sorry for you and your husband…
What a great term “cardboard cut-out” that is exactly what my ex Spath is. His friends don’t know him anymore, his ideals have completely changed, his mannerisms have completely changed, nothing about him is the same except his name. He went from being totally against the idea of an interracial relationship to being in one in less than a month. Now he is telling his boss that I am saying he is going to kill me and my kids and I have not ever said that nor have I spoken to him since the night of the 24th. I have put everyone on notice that should something happen to me they know where to look but I have a feeling he is trying to “bait me” and “flush me out” so that I will contact him…which will never happen.
If he does happen to be brave or crazy enough to show up at my house I will protect my self, my children, and my home with lethal force if need be.
Today makes 6 days NC and I feel great about it. Even pictures of him make me sick because I now see him for who he really is…a cardboard cut-out!!!!
Katareaux
First of all congrats on your sixth day of no contact. Your story is so similar to mine it’s unbelievable. When my husband tried to get a restraining order against me he also stated the exact same things. I also told people if I don’t show up for work I might be dead. Please check him out. That was my honest fear and in return I had to pay $1400 to my attorney to represent me in this injunction court hearing. The same applies to the interracial relationship. Wow the similarities are so crazy . I think I am on day 81. Still waiting for the courts to set a date in my divorce. His newest way to aggravate me is taking all his money away. Everything is his now. I am not sure what is coming next but I am ready for it. My attorney said we have to be on the edge with him. He is so much abusing his law enforcement “powers” it’s sickening to me. Stay strong. When you are on day 81 I will be passed 100 . Good luck my friend
The description “cardboard cut-out” is great! I also like “chameleon”.As they crawl around,they change with their surroundings-blending in-it’s their protection.
Although My mother died nearly 3 yrs ago,the way my spath used her death to hurt me,is still very fresh in my memory.Only this past summer was I finally able to receive closure as I again got to see my family after many yrs.He knew how close my mother and I were,and the fact that her death came so unexpectedly,he showed no empathy.He kept me home with him;since I don’t drive,I missed my mother’s memorial service.:(
Chameleons, for sure. My ex-husband changes his mannerisms and speech depending on who he is communicating with. I can’t begin to describe how confusing it was to see this upper middle class white guy adopt some weird urban lingo when talking to a young black man. The black guy and I both looked at him like he was crazy, it was just that fake. It didn’t occur to me at the time that the ex was trying to get this guy to lower his guard and relate to him on an emotional level, i.e. “I’m just like you!”.
Regarding Montgomery and his adaptation to changing circumstances – It’s been my experience that sociopaths fail and have to adapt to much less than what they originally wanted. But they never admit it to themselves or anyone else. Somehow they convince themselves this is what they really wanted after all. The last psycho I dated in 2011 wanted very much to be a thriving businessman. When I left, he gave up on that because he couldn’t manage it without me there. So now he’s living in a shack in the woods that doesn’t even have clean running water, and he takes odd jobs and sells dope to survive. I’m sure he’s convinced himself that was exactly what he wanted.