Lovefraud received the following letter from a reader:
I was not in a disastrous relationship with my S. Our relationship was less than three years, our marriage less than two when he openly cheated and decided to leave me, then played games of false reconciliation, which in hindsight were so he could have two sex partners.
The short end of my question is ”¦ How do you reconcile the basically happy marriage, the illusion of a man you married with the horrible monster he has become in trying to create turmoil in your life and use your greatest love (your child) to hurt you?
Range of behavior
One reason why it’s so difficult to spot sociopaths is because they are not all the same. Sociopathy is a trait that varies from person to person. You could compare it to a trait like intelligence—not all intelligent people are intelligent in the same way. Some people are smart in academics, some people have mechanical skills, some people are artistically brilliant. They are all intelligent, but intelligent in different areas of life.
Sociopathy manifests differently in different people—I like to say the disorder ranges from sleazy to serial killer. Some, therefore, are violent—but many, probably even most, are not. Some sociopaths are low-level criminals; others have successful careers in business, government, medicine, the military, education, the clergy—every possible field of endeavor.
The point is, sociopaths exhibit a range of behavior, so behavior by itself is not always a reliable way of spotting the disorder.
The mask
Sociopaths often wear a mask—until they decide that they can no longer be bothered keeping up appearances. I think that’s what happened in the case of this Lovefraud reader. The sociopath she was with played the part of the committed husband—until he had enough of that game and wanted a change. Oh, he kept it going for awhile with the false reconciliation. But when he was well and truly tired of the marriage, he became the monster.
The reader didn’t say how he was using the child to hurt her, but based on what I’ve heard from other parents, I can take a few guesses. The sociopath considers the child to be his property, and he wants to own it. Or, the sociopath thinks the child will be useful to his image—he’ll be able to play the doting dad, so that he can snag another victim. Or, the sociopath simply wants to win whatever battle their custody situation has become, and win convincingly, so that our reader never has the temerity to challenge him again.
The illusion
So how does our reader reconcile the “happy marriage” with the “monster”? She has to understand that the happy marriage never existed. It was an illusion, carefully crafted by the sociopath to reel her in and get what he wanted. Once he changed his mind about what he wanted, the marriage was no longer useful to him, so he dumped it.
This is what sociopaths have in common: They are social predators. They are users. They have no heart, no conscience and no remorse. You cannot interpret them through the way you live your life. You simply have to accept the fact that they are staggeringly different from us. We feel empathy for other people. They do not.
Regardless of how it manifests, the common denominator is that these people are empty shells pretending to be human. When you look carefully inside them, you’ll see nothing.
Silver , you remind me of the time my XH got on his knees clutching my son in the parking lot behind my store. THIS IS NOT YOUR FAULT SILVER! was crying saying “pack your bags, come live with me. remember we talked about mommy is sick…we need to break the cycle”
While SOME of that might be true…what kind of monster shares that , in that manner with a 10 year old???
This was after my employee had tried to protect my son by allowing him to hold up in the bathroom of my store until I arrived from an out of town buying trip. I was 15″ late.
I stepped out back to say D you are causing more distress than me being late here….only to be met with profanity and a quick exit…
the dog went to meet his owner every day at the train station when he came home from work. After the owner dies (at work) the dog went to the train station EVERY day for a decade to “wait” for his owner. In Japan they have bronze statue of the dog at the train station.
Oh. I was thinking of the Disney cartoon that was based on a true story of the dog that led a team to get medicine for a dying little girl in Alaska.
I haven’t heard about your story, but we are so blessed with our loving pets….unconditional love.
Make the sweater Kim!!!! Figure out a way to post pictures too!!!lol
I HAVE SEEN the movie u r talking about wit it is so sad, that is one thing that bothers me the most – what will happen to my weiners if i kick the bucket? they are spoiled rotten and they love me so much, nobody else would be as good to them as I am.
You know that is what is so amazing about animals. They are not judgemental and love unconditionaly.
Oh, Witty, That is soooo sad. It hurts my heart.
hens,
I think about that to. If something happened to me no one would provide the dog with his own wingback chair…LOL.
Or let him pluck morsels out of the sink drainer.
kim,
It is amazing. the dog was at the station until the day the dog died. Almost ten years. The little businesses around the station took up a collection and bought him dog food and the hot dog vendor fed him special treats. everyone loved him.
I bawled my eyes out.
I had heard the story on animal planet before the movie was ever made.
They even get sucked into the spath…even when he threatens to kill them under the animals radar….my dog tracked his trail through my property in the last two weeks…I had to start tying her up again…I didn’t want her on the road …which is where I found her last week after travelling across properties….she is still an amazing dog as is my Jupe…pets are a blessing manifested by true spirits…