Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail from a reader who we’ll call “Lillian.”
Yes. It happened to me. It took him six years but he left. He left me holding two mortgages in both our names. He left me once I ran out of cash. He left me when I got laid off. I am almost 50 years old and I have nothing. I haven’t heard from him in over a year. He encouraged me to buy a bigger, more expensive house than I would have on my own and came up with half the down. He moved in. Wouldn’t pay anything. Got us a joint account and credit card. I worked. He didn’t even buy groceries. He bought himself a boat after three years of hell as I got angrier and angrier because he just lay on the couch. Then he sailed to Mexico and didn’t come back. His rich widow of a prominent heart surgeon called me one day. He had told her he owned property up here and that he had ended a relationship—which he hadn’t. He got really angry then and cleaned out the joint account of my funds, of course, since there was never any joint about it. He lives in Mexico on his boat and has a house in Oakland. She feels like Cinderella right now and thinks I am the evil stepsister.
I had $400K in cash. No revolving debt. Two retirement accounts and supported my husband and kids. Well fast forward. I have no cash. No retirement accounts. $70K in revolving debt and no job. I am ruined. I am so traumatized and messed up that I can’t function. I just cry. I reach out and no one is there. I am extremely isolated. I want to die. He is living in Mexico and suing me for half the house. He isn’t done with me yet. And I am just two months away from living in a tent. No one cares. No one understands. Everyone thinks that somehow I either deserve this and or it’s my fault. I am done for. I don’t know that I can be helped even if I knew someone who could help me. That’s the story. Sad but true. I wish I were dead.
After a devastating encounter with a sociopath, the most important thing we have to do is stay alive.
We may have lost our money, our homes, our jobs, our health, our self-esteem, our hopes and our dreams, but we cannot lose our selves.
This is basic, but crucial. We cannot die.
Not everyone succeeds at this essential task. Not everyone is able to continue living in the face of monstrous personal betrayal. In these cases, the sociopath truly wins. Dr. Leedom calls it “murder by suicide.”
There is an old adage, “Where there’s life, there’s hope.” When dealing with the aftermath of a sociopath, this is the truth. A sociopath’s goal is always to win, and sometimes to destroy us in the process. When we stay alive, we deny the sociopath’s victory.
We can also start a process that, over time, will enable us to claim victory for ourselves.
It doesn’t seem that way in the blackness of despair as we survey the wreckage of our lives. But as many of us have learned, amid the wreckage we may discover that our broken ideas and beliefs actually needed to be broken and thrown away. We were operating under false conceptions of ourselves, conceptions that made us vulnerable to the predators.
We learn that if we stay alive, we can begin to rebuild our lives, and when we do, we will be living our own truth.
So how do we do it? We keep putting one foot in front of the other. We cry when we need to, then we pick ourselves up and push on. We keep going forward, even though we don’t believe we can.
The road to recovery takes time and patience. It takes recognizing that we may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PSTD). It takes caring about ourselves and being kind to ourselves.
The first step is staying alive.
Please, Lillian, we know your situation is very, very bad. But don’t let him win.
speck
Welcome!
My children for me was and are my saving grace. I really don’t know how all of this would have turned out for me without them. I like to believe I would have survived it…
“Losing weight“. Same here
“strong and confident man“ happen to me as well. I felt like a shell of the man that I was.
“I have no self-esteem and the indignity and the shame of the betrayal is far more than I would have ever have agreed or been willing to bear“, yes, been there and know how it feels.
But this will end over time and through healing and understanding what happen. It’s been 3 years for me and I “still have my bad days”. But at least it doesn’t happen as often and not as bad. Hang in there and know that many of us too have been where you are at today. Thank God for our children for indeed they are our saving grace! Please read other members stories. They helped me understand that I am not alone and without support. Support and understanding is what you will find here at LoveFraud.com
Speck: Many of us have found the courage to keep going because we have others who count on us. You have your daughter, and she is a blessing to you.
It doesn’t matter whether we are male or female, if we’ve been blindsided by a pathological liar who had an agenda of destruction, we are still trying to figure out what happened — and the first thing we “responsible” people do is “eat our own selves alive.”
Keep posting, and reading, and stay open to the kindness and awareness that you can find here.
Most of us were “strong and confident” before we were derailed by someone who is mentally disordered. And our first (responsible) reaction is to blame ourselves.
Hang in there, and learn to celebrate each beautiful moment of your day. Each moment is a brick with which you can rebuild your life.
Thank you all for the kind comments and the hugs. I guess misery loves company because you have made me feel better.
My wife mapped out and planned the next 18 years of my life with plans to leave me and start a new life with a rich man once our children were grown. She lied to me, oh how she to me and used me. She fooled me and I thought that she really loved me. I promise, when I get stronger I will tell this full story (and it’s a whopper-and a real tear jerker- just like so many others in here) one day in here.
Thanks again. It is nice to have a place where there are people that can understand what I am going through. I don’t feel so alone…
Speck,
I don’t know that I agree that “THEY” are mentally disordered, but I DO know that there is healing and hope here. I was involved with the Psychopath in my life for 42 years, and the perspective I now hold is phenomenol! Please stay here and allow us to companion you through this maze. There are those you will meet all along the way, some before you, some beside you, and some behind you. You are never alone. God Bless
!
Lillian I have three pieces of advice for you. My first BIG advice is to not look ahead down the road to far. Initially take one day at a time for as long as it takes then take a couple days at a time. And I do recommend counselling ”“ someone you can trust and who will validate you as a person. Also journal, journal, journal about your feelings and emotions everyday. Then after a couple of months go back and read the beginning, knowing that you have come even a tiny step forward will empower you.
When I discovered the guy I was dating was a true psychopath I made a choice to walk away from the money he had taken from me because I knew my life would have been next. He had even over conversations had set up the entire scene in my mind. And yes it too involved Mexico. I was totally devastated and walked around like a zombie for weeks. I had to go to work so I put on a front only to collapse when I got home. Most days I was a danger on the roads because I honestly could not remember how I drove from work to home.
One of my colleagues and friends said “Do not let him win. Concentrate on your healing then make an even better life without him.“ Part of my healing and my urge to give back was to write a book about my experience but most of all the healing process. Step by step guidelines and exercises to work through. I am still in the process of writing the book ”“ my final section will be international stories from other women.
It has been over a year now and yes I have come a long way from the person on the bed in the fetal position and I still have flashbacks on occasion. Believe me and all those that have written Lillian, you will beat this person and not let him take your life ”“ the essence of who you are.
“He who laughs last, laughs the loudest” – hang in there.
Tilly–I wish you the very best, and I want to thank you for one nugget of information: your S, a dentist, works two days a week. Phew!! Mine works four. At least I’m not giving your S any of MY MONEY!!!
Keep the faith–your reputation is safe on this site!
Hello all: It is me Lillian again. It has been a while. I am still not working but was able to be a full time mom for my kids this summer. They are back in school now. I have made little progress in general since I last wrote. The house is still tied up in legal limbo while I slowly go bankrupt. I am feeling a little better more often but am beginning to move toward panic mode every now and again as the legal wheels move like stone grinders pushed by me and me alone. I can see a little bit of me now and again. Someone familiar at least. But remain scared. Scared of so many things. Of growing old alone and unloved. Not being able to love again. Missing the PPath???!!! What is that. I am so afraid that I think I would go back to that life because it is what I knew. I know nothing now. I am trying to look a day ahead (such great advice) and no farther because if I do it looks like nothing is out there. Love to all of you out there. I read everything. I do. I hope we all heal and I love your spirit and yes even the glimpses of humor. Lillian
Dear Lillian,
GLAD YOU POSTED!!! I’m so sorry that things are moving so slowly for you and that you are still in such pain and anxiety! ((((hugs)))) When you are in pain, time dragggggggs so slowly along and I know it feels like it will NEVER END.
I am glad you are still reading, Lillian, and hope that if you feel like it at all you will vent or whatever you need to do here. We are all here for each other and I know it has helped me just to write it out–the good and the bad—to share with others who can validate my feelings and fears.
Hang on, and take one minute at a time if you must and BE GOOD TO YOURSELF FIRST OF ALL.
I too felt FEAR of growing old “alone” after my husband died and that got me hooked up with a P—now, finally after 5 years since my husband died, I am no longer feeling needy or scared of “growing old alone, unwanted etc.” and being by myself if FINE and actually I am enjoying it, then for the first time in 4 yrs I get asked out on a date—had a lunch date Sunday and one tomorrow. Nice feeling, but not that desperate needy feeling this time. Will be slow and cautious because I got along well before him and if it turns out he isn’t a good guy, then I will get alone fine without him when I kick him to the curb. No expectations out of the relationship, just getting to know him and see what (if anyting) happens.
You will not always be in this state, Lillian. TELLYOURSELF THAT—it will get better!!!! Keep strong and take care of yourself. Glad you are back (HUgs) and my prayers.
Lillian, welcome back. I’m sorry that I don’t remember much of your story but if you are on LF your experiences must be similar to the rest of us. ALL very similar, just different people who live in different places.
I feel inclined to try to give you some hope about your future. But, since I’ve already been in your current place, I echo the advice of others not to think too far into the future YET.
I just remember when I was in your current place a few years ago, I couldn’t even imagine a future of any kind. I think it was because I was struggling with the current battles of survival and healing.
But, about a year ago, it happened all of a sudden one day. Two things happened. 1) I got back memories of the good times in my life (mostly pre-EX but also some during the ordeal) and 2) I got back the idea that a “future” was possible. (Hard to describe)
At present, the future I began to envision has grown somewhat dim even as I have rediscovered “me” again. because I, too, am having financial challenges that seem almost unmanageable all by myself.
There was a twinkle of light as I decided to ask someone to help me make decisions that I didn’t have the knowledge to make myself. The loan officer came to my house yesterday and gave me hope that she could guide me to the right decisions to save what assets I had left.
Aha, the “future” seems attainable again.
Hang in there, Lillian (that’s my middle name!)
Blessings and encouragement to you with genuine caring,
Lily
Welcom eHome, NewLily! Im so glad that your sisters funeral went off well, and that there werent too many family dramas. You sound so much better, and more confident!! Im so happy for you! You should get the package v. soon. Hope you like it!
Love and {{{HUGS!} geminigirl