Unfortunately clinicians and researchers often tend to interact with a specific segment of our society and to develop their own ways of describing the problems of the people they work with. For example, there are professionals who work with clients who have “personality disorders”, there are professionals who work with criminals in the justice system and there are professionals who work with perpetrators of domestic abuse/violence.
Each of these three groups of professionals has their own lingo for describing very similar people with very similar patterns of behavior. Each group also has a different “theoretical orientation” or view of the problems of humanity.
Because those who work with family abusers often lack experience with sociopaths in other settings they do not know that family abusers are sociopaths.
Where does that leave you, a victim or family member of a disordered, abusive individual?
To spare you the task of sorting through these three distinct ways of looking at the person who created havoc in your life, with the help of The Abusive Personality, I will present here more on the work of Dr. Dutton a psychologist who understand the personality profile of abusers.
First of all, I can say with confidence that individuals who abuse and victimize lovers, friends and family members are personality disordered. As Dr. Dutton points out on page 8 of The Abusive Personality, “Because IPV (intimate partner violence) occurs in a minority of relationships it cannot be explained by social norms. In fact, normative acceptance of IPV is low in North American populations. .. When people act in a chronically dysfunctional manner that violates the norms of their culture, their behavior is attributable to a personality disorder.”
Dr. Dutton makes a compelling argument that the “abusive personality” stems from what is known as borderline personality organization. According to psychoanalyst Otto Kernberg, adult and adolescent patients with antisocial personality possess an underlying borderline personality organization. Attachment theorists also suggests an association between borderline personality disorder and antisocial behavior or even antisocial personality disorder. Dr. Dutton acknowledges that many perpetrators are violent and antisocial outside the family and many appear to completely lack empathy and remorse. All chronic perpetrators have an extreme inability to empathize with their victims and seem to only express remorse as a means of maintaining the relationship. These emotional deficits are considered to be diagnostic of sociopathy.
According to Dr. Dutton, both male and female abusers experience cyclical changes in personality that relate to abuse perpetration. These cycles, have interfered with understanding the personality of abusers. The cycles happen because abusers experience a great deal of negative emotion and they blame this negative emotion on those closest to them. After they “blow off steam” by abusing loved ones, they experience a temporary relief from these negative emotions. During the time they “feel better” they may seem like model spouses and parents.
In my opinion, there are four other characteristics of men and women who perpetrate partner/family abuse that have interfered with our understanding that these abusers are psychopathic and are truly sociopaths. These are:
1. The degree to which they cling to those whom they abuse.
2. Their high level of anxiety and other negative emotions.
3. Lack of abuse of strangers and non-family members.
4. Lack of criminal arrest for other offenses.
I want to address each of these characteristics by asking then answering the related questions people have asked me over the years.
Question #1 Does the fact that my ______________ keeps calling and doesn’t want to lose me mean that deep down he/she really loves me?
Answer#1 NO! Although sociopaths are not capable of love they are very social and most often want to count themselves in as part of a family, extended family and friendship network. If they are alone how will they be able to do what they do best which is abuse and control people? Also if they are alone, how can they use people to get the other things they want. Especially as sociopaths get older and their ability to charm others declines they tend to want to stick with those they have taken advantage of in the past.
Question #2 My poor _________ is just depressed/anxious/angry about being mistreated and abused as a child. Won’t my love and reassurance help him/her get over it?
Answer #2 NO! If your______ has a long standing pattern of abusing you and/or other family members it means something very important so listen. It means he or she equates abuse with being in a relationship, just like you equate love and caring with being in a relationship. Since that is true, your love will only make the person more abusive.
Question#3 My ___________ only abuses me and no one else so it must be my fault. Right?
Answer #3 NO! Your __________ would abuse others if he/she thought he/she could get away with it and will abuse anyone else he/she feels close ties with. An intimate relationship brings out abusive behavior in people who have a borderline personality organization.
Question#4 My _____________ has never been arrested can he/she still be a sociopath?
Answer #4 YES! Antisocial behavior is behavior that hurts other people. When this hurtful behavior is perpetrated by someone who lacks empathy or remorse it reflects psychopathy/sociopathy.
In summary, I recommend that all mental health professionals who work with the victims and family members of sociopaths read Dr. Dutton’s book The Abusive Personality. I also recommend another of Dr. Dutton’s books, The Batterer a Psychological Profile for victims of domestic violence. Order it through Amazon today with these links:
The Abusive Personality
The Batterer a Psychological Profile
Does anyone want me to try to explain what “borderline personality organization” is?
Is there anyone who still has trouble accepting that partner abusers are sociopaths?
Dear Dude,
Since she is ACTING like a psychopath, I think you can assume she will continue to ACT like a psychopath and that is the kind of thing that a psychopath WOULD do.
Your friend is probably right.
However, since you are in the situation you are in, I suggest that you DISTANCE YOURSELF from her (do not speak to her, do not live with her, just NO CONTACT, and that means NONE. Let her go her way and you go yours. I know that might be difficult and you may feel used (and I think you probably were) for her to get a visa and residency in your country.
There are hundreds (thousands?) of Russian women escaping Russia by becoming “mail order brides” to men all over the US and so far, out of the several dozen I know of NOT ONE has “worked out”—-but if Russia is in the shape I hear it is, I can’t say I might not want out of there myself.
Don’t think “she” is the only one in the world you can “get”—find a woman who likes you for you—not for a visa or whatever she can get out of you.
I’m a 62 year old widow (5 yrs) and I too was lonely and felt like no one would ever want me, I ended up being targeted by a Psychopath who wanted another “respectable” wife to cheat on. Broke my heart, but now, I realize being alone isn’t the same as “lonely” and I will NOT settle for less than the best if I ever do again have another relationship.
As long as I felt “lonely” and miserable, I was vulnerable to the first guy to come along looking for a victim. NO MORE!!! I realize I can set my standards low enough and be married by tomorrow, but I do not intend to do that, I just raised them HIGHER! I deserve the best, and so do you!!!!
Hey Dude:
Welcome and congratulations on trying to find answers.
I’ve been reading your posts and my heart feels for you.
A bit of my 2Cents.
It doesn’t really matter ‘what’ she is…..The behavior is there!
See it, feel it and recognize it…..then DO SOMETHING.
You do have choices. You can choose to remain and wonder and look for further ‘signs’ and take the ‘beating’…..OR, you can go NO CONTACT….and protect yourself, your emotions and your feelings along with any property/things etc….
We all have a story to tell, we all come from somewhere……NONE of our stories require us to be mean or abusive to anyone else. We may all be able to ‘explain away’ abuse or traits…….but at the end of the day….it’s still abuse/neglect/manipulations that we endure.
The advice you have recieved here is great….you have had a lot of support.
The times ahead are going to be tough. Don’t allow yourself to be victimized any further. Stand up, take control and see the ‘writing on the wall’. It’s in black!
When we must turn situations in our heads, there is no end to doing that…..we can disguise anything that comes our way with some excuse or another.
Listen to your friends, follow the law and keep finding strength wherever you can.
The tradegedy of thinking you can’t ‘get’ anyone else is……..
YOU DON”T NEED ANYONE ELSE!!!! You shouldn’t be thinking about that far down the line…….
Once you allow yourself to be free, happy and clear in your thinking……you will attract someone perfect for YOU!
When the TIME is right…..ONLY!
This is a blessing…..hold on to it.
Life has a way of teaching us….we can ignore the lessons being taught …BUT….they will come back around to get your attention……and your not in control of when!
So…..get it……..learn them, and look further into yourself to see ‘what’ you contributed to your situation at hand. (I’m in no way blaming you……but we all play a roll)
I encourage you to be NO CONTACT….it’s tough…..but necessary. If you ‘fall off the wagon’, there are lessons there to learn too.
Stay strong, and stay in control of YOU!
Good luck, take care of the ‘dude’.
XXOO
Oxy, I loved “As long as I felt “lonely” and miserable, I was vulnerable to the first guy to come along looking for a victim. NO MORE!!! I realize I can set my standards low enough and be married by tomorrow, but I do not intend to do that, I just raised them HIGHER! I deserve the best, and so do you!!!!
I’m going to copy and paste that into my journal! Thanks!
Wow, Dude
I think it is official. You have been played, and it seems like the situation is always more complicated when dealing with these types of individuals.
Start backing away from this woman immediately. This is NOT a good situation for you to be in. Just let her go.
Get a divorce, get the marraige annulled, whatever you need to do to get out of your current situation.
“And tragically I am stuck thinking I can’t get anyone else…”
I am not sure what you mean by this line. Are you saying that you don’t think you could find someone else to love?
I find that very hard to believe. You are a good Christian man with a very good heart. I don’t know why you would say this, unless this woman has chiseled away at your self esteem, and manipulated you to the point of believing this about yourself?? I don’t believe it, and I don’t even know you.
Your first priority should be to develop an exit plan to get your wife out of your life.
Things will get better, Dude. You are in a tough situation right now, but things will get better.
Dear Chic,
Glad you liked my little comment, and I have finally come to realize how TRUE it is. I could go down to the local wino-refuge/mission and bring me one of my very own home tonight—but WHAT would I have? MORE PROBLEMS? Of Course I would have more problems, and the Good Lord knows I don’t need any more problems.
I DESERVE The very best—and sure, I was devestated by the loss of my husband and felt old, fat, ugly and “who would want me?” But I have come to realize that I am not just looking for a “warm body” if I ever have another loving relationship it will be a GOOD one, I know what it is like to have a bad one adn I sure don’t want another one. I was fortunate to have a good one for twenty years, but if I never find another one, that’s okay….the best relationship I have now is with ME!!! I don’t need a “man” or any other person to make me complete. ONE IS A WHILE NUMBER, NOT JUST HALF OF TWO.
Dude, None of us should be telling you how to behave and what life choices to make based on what you’ve shared. I think those you trust and those who are in the professional field will help you sort things out. There are a lot of things you shared that make me think there is much more than meets the eye. For one, don’t underestimate the power of cultural differences.
I have to log off now.
Thankyou to everyone for welcoming me and trying so hard to help me, and I dfon’t even know anyone here. Your advice does sound very similiar to the advice from my close friends, but like PInow says, there is much more than meets the eye.
I had issues before meeting her, and tended to be a -ve person, and haven’t had much relationship experience….I notice when I am +ve and optimistic with her she is a different animal…course she can still be pig headed at times but she seems a whole healthier then.
When we have problems she stays up reading late into the night and reads a lot on relationship counseling type stuff, not really the sort of stuff someone who was totally sociopathic would read.
Her friends have told her not to contact me, and that I am toxic to her, and that if she stays with me it will destroy her nervous system…..
I sense we both have issues.
Another strange thing, we have a strong psychic connection with each other ie. she will phone me the second I go to phone her, etc. etc. I tend to think maybe the universe put us together to help each other through our issues, as painful as it is for both of us…and I don’t think all her suffering is crocodile tears, as when I told her once I didn’t think she loved me she pushed me away and run outside and I found her hidden somewhere and crying…..I really think she is a victim of abuse and is acting it out with me and every other partner she ever meets, her history strongly suggests this to me…her strategies have not made her successful or happy in this life, hardly a successful sociopath…
?
I’m glad I found this site. It’s been very therapeutic reading the the excellent posts from people who understand what it is like enduring the craziness of being with a psychopath.
I can tell you strait up that it would be alot easier posting if there was a spell checker.
I’ve been slowly waking up out of a long deliberate denial, and am completely disgusted at not only him but myself.
I need a therapist, but how am I to find one who is trained and sensitive to these issues?
If any of you have a suggestion, I’m all eyes.
DUDE!
(I love your name!) KEEP COMING BACK Whether you stay with her or not…WE NEED YOU!!