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?
Thanks Tilly, you seem very kind people here. Problem is, no-one can see everything I’ve seen, only hear what I tell them, and if she was writing on this post maybe people would say I was a sociopath?
All I know, life is complex, and wisdom does not come easily. Leaving someone is often too easy, hence the high divorce rate..If everyone who is in pain ditches the person causing them pain who will stop the pain growing?
I don’t know, but I tend to think our society makes sociopaths, both by the competition, people as commodities and status mentallity and then by the ‘if someone is a liability, ditch them’ way of thinking…
Maybe I’ll get screwed over cause of my compassion…don’t know,
Talked to my Russian immigration agent friend about her tonight, and he talked to her a long time after she left me, and he has seen all types of scammers and he said he believes she loves me, but that she felt I was controlling her with the visa, and now she is angry…He thought she genuinely came here to have a family with me..he also told me Russian women can be a pain in the a** but you have to learn how to handle them…
oh yeah, I do remember one significant time she felt empathy for me, after I had a bike accident she was nearly hysterical and feared I could die like her mum (she died in 2008 when my wife was in Australia with me) and took a lot of consoling….and yes, she IS high maintenance
Im sorry, but I feel that the only reason she freaked out over your bike accident was she might lose her meal-ticket. Sociopaths are EXPERT at faking any emotion, including Hysterics, grief, sadness, love,you name it.SHE took a lot of consoling, well, D,oh, shouldnt she have beenconsoling you?Save your compassion for yourself, and for genuine people, not fakes like her.If she is high maintenance now, she will only get worse! RUN RUN RUN away from her,-she is BAD NEWS! She does not love you,she only wants her visa, when she gets it,she will kick you to the curb if she meets and suckers in someone richer than you.geminigirl
Dude, you said you do not have a lot of “relationship experience”—-I also am assuming that you met this woman on the internet—-the internet “dating” market is FILLED with people looking for a way to scam others, and even if you were to meet a “nice” person on the internet, any “long distance” relationship where you don’t get time to spend with the person in many different situations and REALLY get to KNOW them before marriage/sex/relationship there is no way to really find out what they are like. For a week or month or even a year, a psychopath who is trying to “use you” (for a visa or whatever) can pretend to like/love you, but then the trouble starts.
Even if this woman is not a psychopath, it sounds like your relationship with her is NOT A GOOD ONE FOR YOU OR HER either. If she is a psychopath it is a waste of your time to try to fix it. If she is NOT a psychopath, it seems to me from what you have written that any trust she had for you is destroyed and that you really have no idea of how to have a good relationship with her in any case (cultural differences, you not having much relationship experience etc)
I suggest that maybe you might want to work on your own issues before embarking on another relationship (maybe some therapy) and that just letting this woman go her own way at this point (psychopath or not) and start over after you address your own issues.
All of us here have had our own issues and that is one reason we ended up with Psychopaths, or if we didn’t have issues before the psychopath we did afterwards, so either way, it starts off about them, but ends up being about fixing ourselves. You might start by reading some of the older articles in the archives. There is a good deal of information in there. Good luck.
felt sick reading this..know every bit of it is true..especially the sorry to retain the relationship..once his feet were back under my table and remorse or guilt or empathy was gone also…I feel utterly sick..
JAN:
Welcome…..Dont be disgusted, rejoice……rejoice at the fact you are seeking and getting answers to your (god knows how long) questions of “WHY’, is it me? Crazymaking behaviors.
It’s all in the way we choose to look at it…..your glass is NOW half full…..go ahead girl…..fill er up! Fill er up with knowledge…..education and awareness….empower yourself to do something about YOUR situation.
It does get better…..it’s a long arduous journey of pain and emotions……but let me tell you……THE RAINBOW AWAITS…..it’s just now the colors you imagined it would be…..
Finding a therapist is a trial and error process…..I happened to attain one who had seen my ex a handful of times…..and I PRESENTED the idea to him, based on what another psych had discussed with me……Every week for 2 years, I have educated HIM……and he tosses the info back at me……He is open to my ideas and exploring them. He gets it….now.
Read the articles, educate yourself, and go in empowered. Interview them, ask about experiences…..you will either click or not…..you should know right away.
There are also referrals through Donna here in a few areas and on the “high conflict institute’ website.
Otherwise……my experience has been a good one with LF therapy!!!!!
Stay strong….know you are NOT alone…..and read, read, read…..then plan an exit strategy if and when YOU are ready….
I wish you peace tonight..
XXOO
Dude,
I met my ex S at the Company where I was working overseas. We were together for two years and living in perfect harmony. I then decided to come to Australia (on a job transfer) and he came with me. I loved Australia so much and we decided to stay. Here we had our 2 children and he always wanting to marry me. I was very reluctant in getting married for no other reason than the fact that I am not a believer in marriage, but in mutual respect). After 7 years together, having 2 children together and living a perfect family life, I gave in and married him. That was my big mistake. I became his property then and all the abuses started. I endured another 13 years together and things only got worse, to bad, to terrible, to dangerous, to violent to craziness, to abuses, manipulation and all sort of things until the day I decided to put a stop on everything. No matter how many adjustments we make in life to please a S, we are never capable in pleasing them, nothing is never enough, nothing is ever right, nothing is ever fulfilling to them, no matter how much love and understanding you give them, it is never enough, you give your blood, you give your soul (not mentioning the bank account) and this is also not enough. They become a torment in our lifes and make us loose all sense of dignity, direction, goals, happiness, self-steem. If I only knew what I know now I would have saved at leat 10 of the 13 years of torment and anguish. Trying to making things working with a disturbed person is a waste of time. My exS also used those sort of argument to have my attention.. Self pit. Any responsible and mature adult knows better that life has many adversities and we do not need to make other people’s life a hell because of things that happened to us in the past. We all had past events in our lifes. Those should be reasons to try to achieve peace with whomever we decided to share a life together, not the other way around.
Dear Muldoon,
I am so glad, SO GLAD!! That you are back ehre reading and posting sweetie. Of course as soon as he got his feet back under your table he started back to being the “same old psychopath” and it will ALWAYS be that way as they do NOT CHANGE, they only fake “change” for a little while.
How is your health? I have been continually praying for you and you have been so much in my thoughts. How are your children? Please let us know know you are. ((((hugs)))) and my prayers for you. Oxy
Dude,
You are right, we don’t know everything about your situation. That is why it is good for you to read and read and see what applies and what does not.
Let me tell you a little about me, as a woman who was abused as a child, all that.
I have come to realize for myself that helping another to “heal” only happens in HAPPY and POSITIVE relationships. My husband helped me heal from abuse, etc. by being the strong mentally healthy person he is. And I did NOT cause pain and turmoil for him, most of the time, with a couple of notable exceptions, but even then, he quickly got his head on straight about my sh*t. He stayed because he LOVES me, not because he wanted to fix me. He loved me as I was, and was so secure in himself that he would just wait for me to get back to being pleasant to be around, but he NEVER tried to help me understand myself, he NEVER criticized me, he NEVER told me I need to change, etc. etc. I guess he just focused on what he loved and ignored the rest as though it was not his concern.
Healthy relationships are what promote healing. Being surrounded by people with good values, ethics, boundaries.
One of my core values used to be “helping”. It still is, but now I realize that mostly I help my just validating what someone is feeling, being a witness, and modeling healthy boundaries, which means I don’t take on the work the person needs to do themselves. My husband refused to do the work *I* needed to do. He did what he was supposed to do…..LOVE, ADMIRE, CHERISH who I was. He didn’t give a damn if I changed or not. He was HAPPY with me. He did not make MY business (growing up) his business.
I believe that if both parties are unhappy and in turmoil in a relationship, they can’t help each other grow. Instead, they reinforce bad relationship behaviors in each other, crossing boundaries, focusing on NEEDING each other instead of WANTING each other. If ONE is truly healthy and happy in the relationship, then healing can occur.
Best wishes to you.
I should say healing can occur if a true personality disorder is not involved. Those don’t heal.