If it’s easy getting into a relationship with an exploiter, getting out isn’t always so simple. What makes the getting out so difficult?
In retrospect (if we’re lucky enough to say “in retrospect”) it seems like it should have been a no-brainer. In truth there are many reasons it can be hard to leave a destructive relationship and destructive person. I’ve addressed several of them in previous posts, and the LoveFraud community in general has addressed this theme comprehensively.
But here I’d like to consider a less-appreciated factor.
I regard it as the factor of habituation. Optimally the best time to end a relationship with an exploiter is the very first signal you get that something is amiss. The next best time to leave the relationship would the second signal that something is amiss.
When we don’t act on these early signals, increasingly we are less likely to act on subsequent ones. One of many reasons for this is the process of habituation.
Habituation is basically how, through repeated exposure to something initially uncomfortable, even highly disturbing, we adjust to it. We are built, it seems, to habituate to unsettling situations and experiences.
And the key to successful habituation is exposure. Sustained exposure to almost anything increases our tolerance of, and comfort with, it.
Consider what happens when we’re willing to endure the initial shock of cold water in a lake, or pool. Our sustained exposure (non-flight) gradually results in our bodies’ adjusting, or habituating, to the cold water, which begins to feel less cold, maybe even warm.
This is great news for someone with a social phobia. We just have to be willing to intentionally expose ourselves, repeatedly and sustainedly, to disturbing social situations, and quite likely we’ll experience a gradual reduction of anxiety.
Unfortunately the same thing can be said of abusive, exploitative relationships. The longer you expose yourself to, and repeatedly tolerate, the abuse, the more habituated you become to it.
Alarming behaviors that initially signaled our self-protective response (like flight) gradually lose their activating properties as we habituate to them. The avoidance-flight signal particularly—in the face of repeated, sustained exposure—dulls and/or we become less responsive to it.
Heeding the avoidant-flight response, in other words, can be critical to our safety and self-interest. It is great to confront and conquer avoidance when the avoidance hinders our personal growth; but it is dangerous to do so in the face of real, violating circumstances.
When I work with partners of sociopaths and other abusers, I find that habituation to the exploiter’s abuse often has occurred over time and contributes to the inertia that keeps the exploited partner in the relationship.
Of course there are often many other (and sometimes more compelling) reasons that one stays in a relationship with an exploitative partner.
But habituation to the abuse, I believe, is not only real, but sometimes helps explain why an otherwise dignified individual would tolerate behaviors that, from the outside—that is, from the unhabituated’s perspective—should be (or should have been) no-brainer deal-breakers.
When relevant I encourage clients to examine this factor in their analysis of the indignities they’ve sustained sometimes for years in relationships with disturbed, violating partners.
Paradoxically (and precisely to my point) their suffering was often highest early in the relationship before, through habituation, they grew slowly more numb and inured to—more tolerant of—the abuse, and thereby less motivated to do what was advisable at the outset—flee.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
james….in regard to your experience w/courts, i can agree and RELATE….been there and still trying. and as far has the title topic “getting in easy out hard” i will forever be in “FLIGHT OR FIGHT”MODE , which i accept, due to my own experience and what lies ahead for me. brenda
Hi StarG. What a great idea! I need a beauty day too. That picture is over a year and a half old. I’m 48 now and my hair got longer. I’m going to get my hair cut this week. At least I’m not fat anymore. I used to purposely overeat when I was with the ex because he accused me of not eating enough to be attractive to other men. I’m telling you. I stopped caring about me when I was with him because all my energy went into him. I found that I lost interest in my hobbies too. I was going to music school 1x a week when we met for guitar. I’d been going for 3 years. I invited him to a recital. I thought he’d get a kick over it. It was going to be on local cable. The recital was at a church. Well, he had a flip-out right in the church and walked out. He said, “if you play, it’s over between us.” Could you imagine? I was so embarassed. I had to leave. He ruined everything. Right after that, his jealously cost me my job. I couldn’t afford the music lessons anymore and quit. I’m playing a little now but it’s tough. He changed me in everyway.
Stargazer: I know, I feel the same feeling.. some days I feel down on myself that I’m getting older, frumpy and not interesting to anyone…. BUT then I look around and frankly I dont see any man that remotely interests me. But then with none of them are really interested either.. I take it personal and then the worst, I run back to the Sociopath cuz he acts like I’m so loved and so important in his life. Its a tough vicious circle to beat.
I just watched a movie about a woman who keeps going back to her abusive ex. What are the chances? I just pulled it off the shelf at the library. In the beginning, there was a love scene, and I started crying and couldn’t stop. It made me think of the last man I had feelings for, which was the pathological liar. But I am also crying for many loves past. I had some really kind boyfriends when I was younger. They really loved me, but I was not capable of loving them deeply. It was my narcissism and inability to love. It is very painful. I abandoned a few men in my younger years. And in the last several years, I have been the one abandoned. This is the karma I’ve created I suppose.
I was just reading a post from yesterday that talked about running into the ex at the grocery store with the new girlfriend and it has me wondering: is warning the new girlfriend (or boyfriend) the right thing to do? I wouldn’t wish this hell on anyone else and wish that the one before me had warned me. The other side of me realizes though that these S/P/N perpetual liars and deceivers will convince the new victim just as their last victim only to continue to trail of destruction.
Dear brokenhearted: Our EXs are masters at deceiving others they are with to not listen to their EXs (us)… that we are disgruntle over our breakups, couldn’t handle it, we’re the ones out of control … that’s why they had to leave etc.
I tried to warn my EXs latest victim, who is now his wife. He blocked all e-mails to her, and like he did to me, hovered over the incoming US mail, gave me what he wanted me to see and the rest was shoved under the carpet so to speak.
Control is their game and they are masters at it… Controlling the latest victim and her circle of family/friends …. as well as controlling his own family, the EX, their family and friends.
Unfortunately for the newest victims … they too, have to find their way to this site.
Peace.
Our “vanity” and our “insecurity about our looks” (thanks to the media) are one of the things the Ps use to make us desperate.
Let’s look at Eleanor Roosevelt, probably one of the most homely women in the universe, but she was GOOD inside, and people loved and respected her, and yes, some made fun of her looks but you know what…we need to choose our friends and lovers by their personality not looks, because IN THE END WE ALL LOOK LIKE YODA!
I was a beautiful girl, and I still felt insecure about my looks. I can look back now at the photographs and I was stunningly beautiful, but even then I felt “homely”—now I look in the mirror and I see my grandmother’s face and body, but you know what, I feel beautiful for the FIRST TIME IN MY LIFE.
My beauty comes from more self assurance and more LIKING MYSELF, and maturity. I got to thinking about some of the people in my life that I have loved (some still alive, some passed on) and none of them were “beautiful” in the media sense of the word beautiful, some were grossly obese, some very old and wrinkled, and you know what I PERCEIVED EACH OF THEM AS BEAUTIFUL NOT BECAUSE OF THEIR LOOKS BUT BECAUSE I LOVED THEM.
My late husband was anything but handsome, even when he was young and Buff he had a huge nose and wore glasses as thick as coke-bottle-bottoms but every woman he knew was attacted to him because he was so charming and made YOU FEEL BEAUTIFUL. The morning he died, as he got in the plane to leave he kissed me and looked at me with the most “lustful” look, like I was a playboy centerfold standing naked in front of him. I was 57 years old, in a baggy tee shirt and baggy work jeans and no make up and plenty of wrinkles and more than a few pounds over weight. But HE thought I was desirable, beautiful because he LOVED ME.
Looks don’t amount to much in the greater scheme of things. But the natural biological programming for men is to pick younger women and healthy women because of their better potential for child bearing. That attraction is inbred in the species, however, if a guy is choosing you because of your looks, there isn’t much substance there for a real relationship, so if sex and physical attraction is all that is there in the “relationship” there is nothing substantial to hold it together.
To me, the sex is good if the relationship is good, and each partner will think the other is attractive BECAUSE they love each other, not the reverse that they love each other because the sex is good and they are attractive.
Our societies preoccupation with “youth and beauty” and the media hype that goes along with being “thin” and “sexy” or “buff and sexy” makes everyone except the “most beautiful” seem “pitiful”—well we don’t have to buy into this crap anymore than we have to buy into the psychopath’s lies.
Imay no longer “turn heads” as I walk down the street, but I am happier, more secure and feel better about myself than I ever did when I “turned heads.”
dear OxDrover
I have waited my whole life for someone to look at me with love like you describe when I’m in a “natural” (no make up, no form fitting clothes) state. I will go forward with the expectation that having been the victim of someone who NEVER loved me I will genuinely appreciate and cherish the person who really does love me for what I am on the inside. At this point in time, it feels impossible- or at the very least in the very distant future. I find myself looking at “happy” couples and I wonder why I had to pick the sick one. I have learned that I was an easy target because of my big heart and compassion and unconditional love. I can’t wait to get to the place where you are!
PUTINtogethermy Heart
Welcome you are now Loved by others just like you !
When you come to the point of Forgiving yourself for being Human , you will see that yourself is who you need to love first. Then you will find that forgiving the most dreadfull person is easyer. The HAPPYness you seek is only as far away as your choice to be happy ! no person ,no amount of money, no material possesion ,no place, is ever going to make anyone happy! Sure these things make it easyer but Happyness is a choice ! Nothing you ever did for that person or feel for that person was wrong ! all those things are Qualities, they are saught after characteristics of a Good person ! None of this is your fault ! A victim is not at fault for being Raped no mater what. You will see ! Read ! and welcome to the club we are gald you are here just sorry your a member. This experience is going to make you a more beautifull person than you have ever Imagined! LOVE jere
OxD
Correct me if I am wrong but my experience has been the beter loking they are the more messed up they are in the brain . And I still have difficulty with this ! :)~