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, “This is not going well!” You may ask yourself, how can I make this better? How can I be better? How can I get through to him/her?
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, “Jedi mind tricks” 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 “vulnerability”? People in intimate relationships are supposed to be vulnerable! What if we accepted our own “weakness”? 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, “I should have done it sooner, I shouldn’t have been a fool, etc.”, 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.
Good article. Seems to help pin down the signs, methods and hallmarks of the sociopath.
dorothy2 wrote:
“I honestly think the biggest un heeded red flag, right from the beginning, was him always making something I was feeling or thinking about him.”
Can identify with this. The shepath ex-gf was consistently providing her medical diagnosis of my ‘problems’. You name it – according to her, I have it. And – how often I heard: “You’re thinking….”
From the article:
“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, “Jedi mind tricks” from the sociopath. Our selves get repressed and get lost.”
This was always the case with the shepath. She was always transferring blame onto me. Constant PROJECTION. Everything was my fault. In her eyes I was always conspiring against her – she had her car dismantled to check for tracking devices that she said I put into it. She suggested that I was doing something to her food. She would never get over me putting a kitchen utensil in the wrong slot or in the wrong drawer. According to her, I was always ‘rearranging ‘ her apartment and, somebody was regularly entering her apartment. I could go on and on.
She demanded that I attend counselling regularly. I see how this reinforced her effort to transfer and project her issues onto me. I was the one that had the ‘problems’ – not her. She would not seek counselling. All of the incidents that she told me of rapes, physical and emotional abuse, a string of dysfunctional relationships and so many other incidents of humiliation and disappointment and all of the other ‘wrongs’ forced upon her apparently had no effect on her. Amazing.
I asked her to come counselling sessions and she did, ONCE. But said she wouldn’t do it again and labelled the counsellor a ‘kook.’ Not surprisingly, she looked very bad in front of the counsellor. When the counsellor asked her to explain herself or describe the basis for her negative feelings- she stuttered and stammered and came up blank. she had no answer.
When the ‘relationship’ ended the shepath wrote: ‘At least five times I tried to get you to attend couneselling with me.’ A TOTAL and COMPLETE FABRICATION.
After we broke up she invited me to attend ‘couples counselling.’
This was an obvious ploy to insult and accuse me of all sorts of garbage in the presence of a ‘Third Party’ and, to demand that I accept FULL responsibility for the break down of the relationship. Her words were that she wanted me to “own it.’ That ‘counsellor, a ‘Phd’ didn’t even ask her to explain herself or the basis for her feelings. Instead, that ‘counsellor’ in effect helped to hold me down in order to allow the shepath to pummel me.
I refuse to be ashamed that I fell in love with a spath-hole. Thank you once again for confirming that I am not the villiage idiot.
Instead, I will do EFT….
“Even though I fell in love with a man who told me he was a womanizing prick, and had the shriveled wanger and predator stare to prove it…
I deeply and profoundly love and respect myself.”
No, I did not sleep well last night. I will take a nappy this afternoon out of self love and care. Hugs to all,
Blue
More EFT from the twilight zone.
“Even though it took me 30 years to find a man mean enough to shred the “little boundary-less girl” inside of me, so she could heal her inner child issues,develop solid boundaries and grow up….
I deeply and profoundly love myself.”
Boy, nappy time today will be like heaven.
Blue
Mary Ann, this is great: ”This obsession with blaming ourselves, going round with, “I should have done it sooner, I shouldn’t have been a fool, etc.”, 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!”
My focus for the past few days has been to stop making it about my abuser. He wants my life to be all about him. I don’t want my life to be all about him. So I’m working towards emotional distance. Distancing myself from what was becoming a morbid fascination with his sordid behaviour /disorder. At a certain point, I know enough about personality disorders. I am not a mental health professional or a counselor. I do not need more information that I already have on psychopathy after all the reading I have done since November. I know what the red flags are now. At some point it has to stop being him, him, him.
TeaLight, that comes in due time – the shift from what “they did” to addressing who “we are.” It comes in bits and pieces. This is the honest truth – a year ago, it was about the exspath, the betrayals, the horrors, the losses, the fears, the hearings, etc……Today, it’s about me. That’s not to say that there aren’t “those days” when my thinking ruminates about what a scum-bucket he is, but that type of rumination has lessened over time.
Brightest blessings! 😀
Truthy, you are such a ray of sunshine. So looking forward to being a year or two down the line and looking over my shoulder so to speak and him / it/ that thing being a speck in the distant past. I want to be BORED by him, do you know what I mean? Because he is , actually, not deserving of the level of my attention I have given him, with and without his awareness. He does not merit the amount of time I spend thinking about him. There are great novels to read fer gawd’s sake!! Interesting people to meet and talk to!! and so on. Love to you, you are always a shot in the arm. 🙂 x
skylar:
I’ve been meaning to post to you about the MPD post. Wow. What a way to look at it…so true. The truth. So hard to accept. That is what is holding me back at this point. The acceptance. It truly is the last step in the healing process that we all jump around on…1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 2, 3, 1, 4, 1, 3,…on and on and finally 5 for good…ACCEPTANCE FOR GOOD and no going back. It’s tough, but I will get there. Thanks for your insight on this. HUGS.
Mincheff Joyce, That was a powerful poem~!
Louise,
I’m glad that it made sense to you. Denial, like shame, is a difficult topic. Remember we were talking about the hysteroidal cycle? I think what causes it IS denial.
When something is repressed it tries to POP UP. I experienced this when I was with the spath. A part of me KNEW the truth and every once in a while, I’d have a Freudian slip or I would develop a phobia, of sleeping and of high places (spath liked to drug his rape victims and send people plummeting to their deaths).
These problems and many others, were the result of repressing the truth. Our bodies have cycles so it’s not surprising that repressed issues resurface in cycles.
In the video, the MPD victim had one persona that was trying to kill her. That persona would slash at her wrists, go into rages and destroy things. She kept saying, “I’ll kill her before you do!!” Apparently, she had been told by her abuser that if she told, she would be killed.
It’s an emmy award winning film and it’s an hour long.
here’s the link if you are interested in watching.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0LNyXsErb8
skylar:
I am going to watch this tonight.
Denying something only makes us want it more. It seems only like common sense to me that anytime we try to suppress something, we want it more. It’s like dieting and avoiding the chocolate cake…it keeps calling our name. We want that cake more than anything. I’ve seen Scousepath go through these cycles. That’s why to me it seemed like he would “try” to be good, but he can’t. Someone said he isn’t really a spath if he was “trying” to be good. The reason I don’t agree with that is a serial killer can stop killing for periods of time, but he’s still a serial killer. They are who they are.