Editor’s note: At the request of readers, the Lovefraud member “Skylar” has contributed the following article.
When dealing with malignant narcissists, psychopaths, sociopaths, borderlines, drama queens, stalkers and other emotional vampires, it’s commonly advised that no response is the best response to unwanted attention. This is often true and No Contact (the avoidance of all communication) should be used whenever possible.
There are some situations however, when No Contact is not feasible, as in when you share child custody with a psychopath. As another example, if you are being stalked by an ex, a restraining order can infuriate the unwanted suitor, and refusing to respond to him or her is seen as an insult. They might become convinced that they can MAKE you respond and in that way satiate their need for power over you.
Furthermore, many of us have tried to end a relationship with a psychopath several times, only to take them back, each time. They turned on the pity ploy and the charm, and because we didn’t understand that this is what a psychopath does, we fell for their promises to change. They know all of our emotional hooks. For them, it’s easy and fun to lure us back by appealing to our emotions. But a psychopath can’t change. In fact, when you leave a psychopath, he becomes determined to punish you even more severely for thinking you could be autonomous.
Even if we don’t take them back, the most dangerous time for a person is when they first break up with a psychopath. The psychopath feels rage at being discarded. Losing control or power over a person is not just a narcissistic injury for them; they feel profoundly empty when their partner leaves them even if they had intended to kill their partner. The reason is because they have lost control. Psychopaths need to feel in control at all times.
For all these situations, we have Gray Rock.
What it is:
So, how do we escape this parasitical leech without triggering his vindictive rage? Gray Rock is primarily a way of encouraging a psychopath, a stalker or other emotionally unbalanced person, to lose interest in you. It differs from No Contact in that you don’t overtly try to avoid contact with these emotional vampires. Instead, you allow contact but only give boring, monotonous responses so that the parasite must go elsewhere for his supply of drama. When contact with you is consistently unsatisfying for the psychopath, his mind is re-trained to expect boredom rather than drama. Psychopaths are addicted to drama and they can’t stand to be bored. With time, he will find a new person to provide drama and he will find himself drawn to you less and less often. Eventually, they just slither away to greener pastures. Gray Rock is a way of training the psychopath to view you as an unsatisfying pursuit you bore him and he can’t stand boredom.
What it’s for:
Making a psychopath go away of his own volition is one application of Gray Rock. One might say that Gray Rock is a way of breaking up with a psychopath by using the old, “It’s not you, it’s me.” excuse, except that you act it out instead of saying it and the psychopath comes to that conclusion on his own.
Another reason to use Gray Rock is to avoid becoming a target in the first place. If you find yourself in the company of one or more narcissistic personalities perhaps you work with them or they are members of your family it’s important to avoid triggering their ENVY. By using Gray Rock, you fade into the background. It’s possible they won’t even remember having met you. If you have already inadvertently attracted their attention and they have already begun to focus in on you, you can still use Gray Rock. Tell them you are boring. Describe a boring life. Talk about the most mundane household chores you accomplished that day in detail. Some people are naturally lacking in dramatic flair. Find those people and try to hang around them when the psychopath is nearby.
If you must continue a relationship with a psychopath, Gray Rock can serve you as well. Parents sharing joint custody with a psychopathic ex-spouse can use Gray Rock when the ex-spouse tries to trigger their emotions. I acknowledge that any threat to the well-being of our children is overwhelmingly anxiety provoking. Here is where Gray Rock can be applied selectively to draw attention away from what really matters to you. In general, show no emotion to the offending behaviors or words. The psychopath will try different tactics to see which ones get a reaction. With Selective Gray Rock, you choose to respond to the tactic which matters least to you. This will focus the psychopath’s attention on that issue. Remember, the psychopath has no values, so he doesn’t understand what is valuable to us unless we show him. Selective Gray Rock shows him a decoy. When protecting our children, we can take a lesson from nature: Bird parents who have fledglings are known to feign a broken wing when a predator is in the vicinity. They fake a vulnerability to detract the cat’s attention from their real vulnerability, their babies. In this example, Selective Gray Rock fades all emotions into the background except the ones you want the predator to see.
Why it works:
A psychopath is easily bored. He or she needs constant stimulation to ward off boredom. It isn’t the type of boredom that normal people experience; it’s more like the French word, ennui, which refers to an oppressive boredom or listlessness. Drama is a psychopath’s remedy for boredom. For drama, they need an audience and some players. Once the drama begins, they feel complete and alive again. They are empowered when pulling the strings that elicit our emotions. Any kind of emotions will do, as long as it is a response to their actions.
A psychopath is an addict. He is addicted to power. His power is acquired by gaining access to our emotions. He is keenly aware of this and needs to constantly test to make sure we are still under his control. He needs to know that we are still eager to do his bidding, make him happy and avoid his wrath. He needs to create drama so he can experience the power of manipulating our emotions. As with any addiction, it is exhilarating to the psychopath when he gets his supply of emotional responses. The more times he experiences a reward for his dramatic behavior, the more addicted he becomes. Conversely, when the reward stops coming, he becomes agitated. He experiences oppressive boredom and he will counter it by creating more drama. If we stay the course and show no emotions, the psychopath will eventually decide that his toy is broken. It doesn’t squirt emotions when he squeezes it anymore! Most likely, he will slither away to find a new toy.
The Gray Rock technique does come with a caveat: psychopaths are dangerous people, if you are in a relationship with one that has already decided to kill you, it will be difficult to change his mind. He may already be poisoning you or sabotaging your vehicle. Take all necessary precautions. In this case, Gray Rock can only hope to buy time until you can make your escape.
How it works:
Psychopaths are attracted to shiny, pretty things that move fast and to bright lights. These things, signal excitement and relieve the psychopath’s ever-present ennui. Your emotional responses are his food of choice, but they aren’t the only things he wants.
He envies everything pretty, shiny and sparkly that you have and he wants whatever you value. You must hide anything that he will notice and envy. If you happen to be very good looking, you need to change that during this time. Use makeup to add bags under your eyes. If you aren’t married to the psychopath, any money or assets he covets should disappear “in a bad investment decision” (consult with your attorney on this). Your shiny sports car has to go, get a beater. If you have a sparkling reputation, anticipate that he will or has already begun to slander you; therefore, don’t allow yourself to be put into any compromising position or pushed into erratic behavior. The reason he wants to take these things from you, is not necessarily because he wants them for himself, it’s because he wants to see the emotions on your face when you lose them. He wants the power trip associated with being the one who took them from you. By preemptively removing these things from his vision and not reacting with emotion at the losses, you continue to train him with the idea that you are the most boring person on earth, someone he would never want to be.
Origin of Gray Rock:
In 2009, I left my psychopathic partner after 25 years, but I didn’t understand what was wrong with him. I sat in a sushi bar, lost in confusion, when a tall, athletic man introduced himself. To my own surprise, I instinctively poured out my story to him. This complete stranger listened to my story and then he explained to me that I was dealing with a malignant narcissist. He advised me, “Be boring.” He told me that his girlfriend would come home each night, begin drinking and become abusive. They were both professionals who traveled in the same professional circles. He knew that she would stalk him if he broke up with her and he didn’t want to risk the slander and drama which could leak out and damage his professional reputation.
His solution was to be so boring that she would simply leave him. He declined to go out on evenings and weekends. He showed no emotional reaction about anything, no interest in anything and responded with no drama. When she asked if he wanted to go out for dinner, his reply was, “I don’t know.” After a few months of no drama, she simply moved out.
Why is it called Gray Rock?
I chose the words Gray Rock because I needed an object for us to channel when we are in an emotionally charged situation. You don’t just practice Gray Rock, you BECOME a Gray Rock. There are gray rocks and pebbles everywhere you go, but you never notice them. None of them attract your attention. You don’t remember any specific rock you saw today because they blend with the scenery. That is the type of boring that you want to channel when you are dealing with a psychopath. Your boring persona will camouflage you and the psychopath won’t even notice you were there. The stranger in the sushi bar showed great insight when he advised me to “be boring.” He struck at the heart of the psychopath’s motivation: to avoid boredom.
In nature, there are many plants and creatures that show us how to survive in a world of predators. Among others, birds feign injury to protect their babies and mice play dead until the cat loses interest. Both of these tactics can be useful and they can be channeled when applicable. Yet, it’s difficult to calculate each and every move that a psychopath will make and to determine the best course of action each time. Instead of trying to out-think him, channel the gray rock. This simple, humble object in nature has all the wisdom it needs to avoid being noticed, it’s boring.
Copyright © 2012 Skylar
Fixerupper,
agreed with Liz, she is messing with your emotions.
If you distill the situation down to the very basic structure, it is this: You saw a package from her, your emotions went up on an adrenalin high, then you opened it and saw old junk (coal in your stocking), which took you down to a lower low than before.
All spaths do this. My spath said, “when I want to destroy someone I like to take them up and get them really high before I bring them down.”
Just be assured, Fixer, that there was not a more beautiful time. It was all an illusion meant to get you high so that you could feel the lows when she left you.
I think that the way out of those feelings is to know and understand completely, the truth: she was a fake and so was the love she presented to you.
Thank you for reminding me that spaths tend to pop up again around Christmas time. ick. It’s good to be vigilant at this time of year.
Skylar-that was my whole relationship with the N who brought me here. I’m sure he was so entertained by bringing up to the top of a mountain and throwing me down into a hole in the ground-perfect description of them. Actually the one before him did the same thing. Every single prior relationship I’ve had until now had really strong parallels. This is the first time I feel like things are normal, and as you’ve told me before, I was conditioned for the drama and it was normal to me and expected. Now I’m just sitting around thinking “wow, this is what normal feels like-to feel good with someone without feeling like I’m on a train going down hill and the brakes went out.”
EB, Sky, Fixerupper,
Spaths are masters in planting the idea of hope: hope that they’ll straighten up their life, that they’ll stay at home that night and spend their time with you, that they’ll return home sooner than the ever always much too late, that they’ll be always as sweet and loving from now on, that they’ll find a job for once, that they contribute in the household for once with their paycheck, that they won’t lie anymore… a constant air castle of hope that never gets to be fulfilled.
Oh my Darwin, How well you describe that hope we hung on to and the lie’s we wanted to believe.
Moondancer,
In retrospect it was just one big blur of a rollercoaster of despair and clinging hope. That’s one of the few general emotions I still can and want to remember of that period… enough to remind myself if necessary to never go through that again.
‘skylar’ wrote:
“Fixerupper,
agreed with Liz, she is messing with your emotions.
If you distill the situation down to the very basic structure, it is this: You saw a package from her, your emotions went up on an adrenalin high, then you opened it and saw old junk (coal in your stocking), which took you down to a lower low than before.
All spaths do this. My spath said, “when I want to destroy someone I like to take them up and get them really high before I bring them down.”
Just be assured, Fixer, that there was not a more beautiful time. It was all an illusion meant to get you high so that you could feel the lows when she left you.
I think that the way out of those feelings is to know and understand completely, the truth: she was a fake and so was the love she presented to you.
Thank you for reminding me that spaths tend to pop up again around Christmas time. ick. It’s good to be vigilant at this time of year.”
skylar-
What you describe as the ‘basic structure’ is just what it feels like has happened.
She invoked a reaction alright – but I have not tried to contact her.
Actually, there were many times in our relationship when it happened that she would tear me down while I was anticipating something nice or, just after something had been accomplished.
One summer evening, we layed on the beach and watched the full moon rise. Lots of kissing and hugging. We got up and walked back to my house – where she informed me she needed a ‘break’ until I could produce some kind of proof that I was ‘stable.’
Another break came on the eve of going to a Groban concert.
It happened so many times that I expected to get torn down whenever I was anticipating or suggesting doing something nice together or after accomplishing something.
This kind of thing made me insecure and hesitant – which she could then attack and criticize as a ‘lack of confidence.’
I would then offer to leave – to ‘break up’ – but she would pull me back.
I am not at the stage where I can fully accept that the love was fake. I wonder if she moved in and out of those feelings -sort of like someone ‘cycling’ through moods or stages of Bipolar disorder.
Thanks to you, ElizB and darwins.
Fixerupper,
Is the feeling of love a mood or something constant for you? Even ‘being in love’ was that something that ever came and went again with you? Or is it something that lessened very gradually over time, a little bit by little bit? And even if that in love feeling was gone, was also the love feeling gone?
When you describe a love as a mood, then you are describing a very superficial love, a fancy, nto love at all.
Fixerupper, I agree with Elizabeth and Skylar – she’s got an agenda, and it doesn’t matter WHAT it is.
Why are you still in contact with this woman, anyway? If it’s been months, you can bet that she’s moved on to the next source target, whether it’s male, female, animal, vegetable, or mineral. “No Contact” is not a technique to punish THEM. It is “The Primary Rule Number One” of recovery from sociopaths. ANY contact is painful and results in self-damage, once we’ve identified someone that means to harm us.
“Love” is not a mood that ebbs and flows like a tide. It is an emotional tie that binds, whether it’s a love for a person, music, or pet. It is a binding emotion that doesn’t wax and wane.
For whatever it’s worth, it may be a good option to go “No Contact” with a vengeance, Fixerupper. And, making that choice would be strictly for your own protection and recovery, and NOT to punish her, in any way. And, that would mean returning ANYTHING that you receive from her in the mail with a “Return To Sender” clearly marked on the package or envelope. You don’t want what she’s sending, even if it’s a solid gold ring.
Brightest blessings
Truthspeak:
Animal, vegetable or mineral!! Haha, what a hoot!!! Thanks for the laugh!
Louise, glad that you’re laughing, m’dear! 😀
Today, as cold as it is and as broke as I am, I’m in a very good humor, and I’m not going to question it! 😀
BRIGHTEST blessings