All conscientious people, when there’s a problem in a relationship, take a look inside eventually to see where their fault or responsibility lies. In a good couple relationship, you might have a fight over something, but then at some point, you talk about it and get a different understanding of where your partner was coming from, which can change your perspective. You might realize you reacted because it pushed some sort of button in you, perhaps some experience from your past, or you misinterpreted something. In this interchange, both people in a mutually caring relationship should eventually take responsibility for their part of the conflict. Through resolving the conflict you should end up growing closer, and this ultimately can lead to healing whatever old wounds or misperceptions you are over-reacting from.
Could it have been my fault?
Of course, this never happens with sociopaths. They are incapable of taking responsibility for their part in a conflict, or understanding you if it differs from their perspective. So, we who are responsible look to ourselves to figure out what’s not working. It’s what we’ve been taught.
If you’re still involved with one, you might be wracking your brain to think of some way, some approach, to get through to him/her. You might be feeling so frustrated because you can never make your partner understand you, or how their behavior affects you. And so you probably take on the responsibility, because it really has come down to you. You’re backed into a corner. You have committed your love to this person, made a life, a family. Somewhere inside a voice, perhaps a panicky voice, says, âThis is not going well!â You may ask yourself, how can I make this better? How can I be better? How can I get through to him/her?Â
Maybe you have already decided to leave or have left the sociopath. Even then, when it’s clear how this person you loved violated your trust, tricked and betrayed you, you somehow keep bringing fault back to yourself. What was I doing there in the first place? How could I have been so weak? Why did I stay so long? How could I have not protected our children and just left? From beginning to end, we could be torturing ourselves with these questions, and be consumed with feelings of shame and guilt.
Who’s to blame?
My question is, why do we find it so easy to blame ourselves? It may be partly a conflict between an empathetic nature and assigning blame. Blaming others goes against the grain. Our consciences have us take responsibility for our behavior when things are going wrong. Some of us were raised to take too much responsibility in our families, which just makes it familiar to do. And, if you had children with the sociopath, a parental guilt of a particularly hellish sort can make it nearly impossible to let go of the regret of not having protected them from the sociopath.
Let’s not forget that sociopaths, by their destructive victimizing behaviors toward us, are transferring their own shame (which they are not consciously aware of) onto us, and therefore blame onto us. We are left feeling stunned, confused and immobilized. We do not know what to do after we’ve experienced the manipulations, the anger, the control, the dismissing, the shaming and blaming and what I call, âJedi mind tricksâ from the sociopath. Our selves get repressed and get lost.
It’s a bit like being in a one-person cult. You’re initially love-bombed and subtly, methodically, brain-washed and broken down over time. It literally is that insidious. The healthiest individual would not have defenses against that, once taken in. It’s like a trap that you find yourself in, that you didn’t see coming, but now you’re hanging upside down in a net and it’s going to take time to figure out how to break free.
Accepting my vulnerability
What if we assigned blame where blame is due? What if we accepted our naivety that made us fall for someone who was devilishly artful at presenting him/herself as a wonderful person? What if we accepted our âvulnerabilityâ? People in intimate relationships are supposed to be vulnerable! What if we accepted our own âweaknessâ? If we consider loneliness or the longing for a partner a weakness, then the whole world is weak. To be loyal and committed, to fight to make a relationship work is the only thing a loving partner would do. Love trusts, love is open and vulnerable. Love never gives up. You did all that love should do, and can feel good about that. How dare your partner discard that love or use it to his own advantage! A normal caring person would have treasured that love.
What if we even accepted that some harm may have come to our children as a result of living with a sociopath? We can’t always protect our children from harm like we think we should. So many things are out of our control, including the behavior of another person. But we can focus on the love we gave our child, and the good intention of trying to keep the family together while we still had hope.
I did the best I knew how to at the time
What if we accepted that we made a choice we thought was fine at the time but turned out to be wrong? We are fallible humans who make mistakes, and hopefully grow from them. What we can and perhaps have done, which is very good, is to recognize we don’t want to live this way anymore. If you’ve gotten out, it is very good you have gathered the strength and resources to have done it. This obsession with blaming ourselves, going round with, âI should have done it sooner, I shouldn’t have been a fool, etc.â, is only an exercise in beating ourselves up. Let’s not carry on what the sociopath has been doing all this time! Let’s stop the beatings!
Maybe you did it at exactly the right time, the only time you could have, considering your circumstances and where you had to get psychologically to recognize who you were with. Now you do know what a sociopath is, and now it is appropriate for holding yourself responsible for not falling in with one again. And, now you can support others who have fallen prey to their carefully constructed webs.
Mary Ann, thank you so much for this insightful article. Shame and blame were core-issues that I had developed over my entire lifetime. Certainly, there had to be something that I did wrong to NOT know that the exspath was a fraudulent deviant!
Well………no. My vulnerabilities were (and, remain) my own and things that I really need to work on. The “blame” goes along the lines of having trusted someone who deliberately perpetrated a fraud. I’m only responsible for my own actions, choices, and decisions. I am not culpable for the actions, choices, or decisions of another human being.
I’m okay with my vulnerabilities, today. I’m okay with them because I’m “allowed” to be a flawed human being. It’s protecting those vulnerabilities that I’m working on.
Again, thank you for this article!
Brightest blessings
Wonderful article.
The thing that is confusing for me and makes coming to terms with the end of my particular Spathcapade is that Spath x didn’t
” take ” anything from me. He just kind of latched on? He never stole from me, never borrowed money, etc. I came out unscathed THAT way. The damage was on a deep emotional level….and the sex, and the mind games, lies, false promises. He stole my trust, my love, a piece of my soul and sanity. My general sense of safety and well being.
Just like I told him one time…..” Why don’t you HIT me?” Then I could have proven he was determined to do me harm. I would have KNOWN! His response to that question was ” do you think I’m stupid?”
We broke up the first time and I had the locks changed on my house. When we got back together he was shocked that I had done that and said….” I would NEVER hurt you!” Of course at the time I thought that meant that he cared about me too much to hurt me and that I had been wrong to be afraid. Now I see that his statement just went back to him not being stupid enough to hit or physically hurt me because I would have sent his sorry ass to jail. After doing a background check……I now know that he learned this lesson in a previous relationship.
It’s so hard to explain to someone who has not had a full on Spath experience, and to ourselves, why we stayed. No one can fully understand the confusion, the cognitive dissonance, the Stockholm syndrome, etc.
no one seems to understand why this is something that seemingly takes forever to get through and over.
I’m so grateful for LF and the articles and blog posts and for 180 Rule……the validation is a lifesaver.
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!
Absolutely spot on Mary Ann! The blame game, foisting the blame fr what THEY do on to the victim’s willing conscience.
I can look back and see why I accepted that blame and shame, and I consciously no longer accept it, but wonder still if I will ever UNconsciously let that shame and blame go or if it is still inside me somewhere.
I too am so thankful for LF!! and all the poweful articles!!
One of the best sentences in this article is “A normal caring person would have treasured that love.” How true, how true! This was something I struggled with and couldn’t understand why he would just discard my love for him away. Well, of course, I have learned why for the past couple of months.
I am continuing to get stronger and so thankful for the support I received here. I too have had people tell me to “Just move on”, “Get over it”, etc.
Right now I have not been crying even though I still get a sick feeling in my stomach when things come to my mind. I have a hard time wanting to make it all right! Which of course, I can’t! When I was in the relationship, I spent soooo much energy trying to accomplish this. He would throw me a “treat” as if to say good try!! But it never was enough (to him). It became enough to me because I got sick of the game and decided to end it once and for all. As you know, it was one of the hardest things I’ve had to do in my life!!
Thanks again LF!
The Blame Game. Yes, a very deep one indeed! A difficult prospect to come to terms with. What has happened with me, is coming to terms with WHAT IS. What is, is the FACT that I dis-regarded my gut feelings, dis-regarded what I did sense 3 yrs. ago, but brushed it aside thinking I was being “paranoid”, when in FACT, red-flags were flapping in my head! WHAT IS, is the fact that I had no boundries etched in stone for my life and saftey. WHAT IS, is the fact that out of my ignorance, I was too trusting. WHAT IS, is the fact that just because I was honest with someone, DOES NOT MEAN THEY WILL BE HONEST IN RECIPROCITY! WHAT IS, is he fact that there is EVIL out there, and we have a duty to protect ourselves, and share our wisdom of what we have learned in this with our families to possibly protect them from these very dangerous “people”. REALLY? I don’t really “blame” the spath that infiltrated, infected, my life. I just can’t. HE IS WHAT HE IS…and I have accepted WHAT IS. Now it is my duty and responsibility to rise up, face up to what I have to do to re-assemble the scattered pieces of my life, into something far better than I ever was before this happened! Stronger, and far more wiser that I ever thought possible! and in that…I have to give credit to a sociopath! FACT! Best wishes to all! Radar_On.
Radar: Very well said!
Excellent article Mary!
I struggled with the “shame and blame” more than anything.Yes,it hurt terribly that spath husband never loved me and betrayed me and that so many years of my life had been devoted to trying to make the relationship work.But to forgive myself for the hurt I had caused my children,my family,and friends all those years-could I do that?!YES I CAN!Because I was truly doing the best I could,that I knew how to do during that time!I’m not wonderwoman,I have my own issues,as does everyone else.I once told my youngest daughter that I wasn’t the perfect mother BUT neither did I ever physically neglect them,we were close emotionally,I never exposed them to drugs or prostitution.
I look back now and see that I had several opportunities at the beginning to abandon ship. I was not naive to the red flags but I was hungry for love and companionship……..and in the beginning, a party pal. I wanted so badly to believe his WORDS were true that I ignored his actions and lack there of. It’s the hardest lesson I’ve ever experienced and I’m not letting him off the hook….EVER! I do see that now that I’m an adult, I do have a choice and that there is nothing wrong with saying no to something that doesn’t meet my needs and honor the person I am.
As someone said..people treat you exactly the way you let them. It’s all about actions, not words and promises. It’s about now, not some fantasy future. Close to the end I told him that I wouldn’t allow myself to stay in a FRIENDSHIP that didn’t feel good to me…….why would I stay in a relationship that makes me hurt and sad? He got that….and then tried even less. Pushing the limits….testing, testing…
Childish games.
ByeBye Spath
I think this article from Narcisists Suck is a must read.
http://narcissists-suck.blogspot.com/2007/08/can-you-love-narcissist.html
Dorothy,
wow! thanks, I hadn’t read that one.
I’m on a mission to get rid of my denial and stay focused on reality. I’m convinced that denial is the basis for all the long-term suffering we endure.
That article nudged me just a little closer to reality.
It really is a must read.