What is the single most powerful signifier of sociopathy?
How about, lack of empathy?
I don’t think so.
As an isolated factor, I don’t think lack of empathy best nails the sociopath.
Many millions of people, after all, lack empathy and aren’t sociopaths. Also, exactly what constitutes empathy is a subject of some disagreement. Some LoveFraud members, in fact, question whether sociopaths even lack empathy (some asserting, to the contrary, that the sociopaths they’ve known have used their capacity for empathy to exploit them).
But the biggest problem with lack of empathy is its weakeness in explaining the single, truly best signifier of sociopathy—the characterological exploitiveness of the sociopath.
It is a high level of exploitiveness that most singularly exposes the sociopath.
Now exploitiveness is also associated with the narcissistic personality. For this reason extremely destructive (“malignant”) narcissists can be hard to distinguish from sociopaths. Still, a high level of exploitiveness is rarely the single best signifier of narcissistic personality disorder, whereas it is, I suggest, the best single indicator of sociopathy.
Why does lack of empathy fail to explain the sociopath’s exploitiveness? It fails because most people who lack empathy are not exploitive. Just consider the autistic spectrum disorders: Lack of empathy is commonly associated with these disorders, but exploitive behavior is not.
Now it is true that empathic individuals will generally be nonexploitive. Why? Because their empathy will prove a deterrent against exploitative impulses or ideas. Empathy, in other words, surely is a powerful deterrent against exploitation.
But in someone nonexploitative (someone, say, with Asperger’s Syndrome), empathy will not be needed for its deterrent effect. However, in someone inclined to exploitation, lack of empathy will be a missing deterrent in a situation where deterrence is urgent.
Effectively, the sociopath’s exploitive nature is undeterred by empathy, which is missing, thus liberating him to exploit. And it is the sociopath’s tendency, or compulsion, to exploit, I propose, that best characterizes his sociopathy.
I’d be remiss not to clarify my working definition of empathy. Empathy, as I use it, is an experience, or appreciation, of another’s experience that, depending on the situation, elicits a thoughtful, respectful, perhaps nurturing, but never exploitive, response.
While some sociopaths may possess an evolved capacity to read others’ vulnerabilities, this doesn’t make them empathic.
It is the particular response to someone’s vulnerability that indicates the presence of empathy, or exploitation. It is the particular response, or pattern of responses, to someone’s vulnerability that separates the empathic individual from the predator.
In this respect, I regard the sociopath as seriously, and given his exploitive personality, dangerously deficient in empathy.
What about his remorselessness? Certainly the sociopath’s remorselessness is quite notable and diagnostically significant. However, I would argue that the sociopath’s remorselessness is a byproduct not of his lack of empathy, but of his exploitive personality.
Many people who lack empathy are remorseful, for instance when informed that an action they took, or something they said, left someone else feeling damaged. They may struggle to relate emotionally (or even intellectually) to the effect their behavior had on the wounded party (their deficient empathy); but they are upset to learn that their action caused damage.
In other words, they feel remorseful even though their empathy is deficient.
However, exploitation and remorselessness go hand in hand. The essence of exploitation is the intentional violation of another’s vulnerability. The exploiter knows, on some level, that his behavior is exploitive.
By definition, the exploiter is grossly indifferent to the damaging effect of his behavior on his victim. All that matters is his perceived gain, his demanded, greedy satisfaction. There is indifference to the loss and damage to others resulting from his self-centered, aggressive behaviors.
This sounds a lot like callousness; and we recognize callousness as another of the sociopath’s telling qualities. But I would suggest, again, that the sociopath’s callousness derives not from his defective empathy, but rather from his characterological exploitiveness. Most people with deficits in empathy are not callous. On the other hand, the exploitive mentality will engender a callous perspective.
I discussed in a prior post the audacity of the sociopath. I suggested a correspondence between audacity and sociopathy. But here, too, we want to get the causality correct: audacity doesn’t make for sociopathy; but the exploitive mentality will make for staggering audacity.
(My use of “he” in this post is for convenience’s sake, not to suggest that men have a patent on sociopathy. This article is copyrighted (c) 2008 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Their Motovation is self!
Dear Henry,
You wrote: “I feel like I am the crazy one and he had every reason to leave me in the end because I am so f ed up”.”
Yes, they can make us act crazy or appear to act crazy but we are not. They are.
Remember the post a while back about “the crazies”? Someone posted it because you had said you wondered if you had devalued and discarded your ex…but it totaly applies here too. Back then, I paraphrased it a bit (added my children). Then I made a sign out of if and hung it in my bathroom. Here it is…
My behavior was a normal reaction to an incredibly abnormal situation.
Nothing more. Nothing less.
I DID NOT devalue and discard them. I simply was brought to a place regardless of the good times, the hot sex, the intense loving/hating where I knew I had to save myself and my children ” a place where I finally GOT that it was not okay to be abused.
I DIDN’T DEVALUE THEM I simply valued myself a teeny tiny bit.
I DIDN’T DISCARD THEM they brought me to a place of realization that I was close to DEATH.
They brought me with their mind-f#&king and shape-shifting ”“to the place where my very survival was truly ” truly at stake.
What I experienced, and accepted, was nothing less than God-given survival instinct.
I did NOTHING to them. I simply SAVED MYSELF AND MY CHILDREN.
Peace, Healing and Hugs,
*escaped*
Escaped _ Yes I remember when you told me that long ago – and thank you I needed to hear it again. I think it has been his recent visit to intimadate me and the knowledge that he is doing some fraudulant with my identity that has me on heightened reflex mode. I also remember me saying how abnormal he looked when he slept – he looked abnormal because he is abnormal and just getting him out of my home and life has saved my life. I continue to improve with time and comment’s from my lovefraud cyber friends – thanks to you escaped and everybody here in LoveFraud Land……..henry
Your welcome Henry. We all help each other save ourselves. That is the beauty of it at Love Fraud!
I’m sorry you are having such a bad time right now. Hang in there.
L.L.G (Live, Learn and Grow)
Peace, Healing and Hugs,
*escaped*
escaped:
yes, yes, yes. i was nearly dead too, and all i could think about (for a little while) was how i let HIM down. how could i have abandoned him? now i realize that, truly, my very survival was at stake. and i HAD to value myself to the point where i couldn’t look back … even after 25 years of loving that s/p/n.
he devastated me and still — after four months of NC — there are difficult times.
as you say, we did NOTHING to them. what still gives me a very hard time is that his last impression of me was of a broken, weak, pathetic woman, which is what he created. i want him to know that i’m still the strong, beautiful, spirited woman whose light and love he sucked so dry I almost died.
but what he said to me was that i had, ”lost my swag”; that i had ‘aged’ and that i wasn’t the ‘beautiful woman he fell in love with.” this was his excuse for cheating on me and getting some young hot thing pregnant.
how do they get away with this? i was turned into a raging lunatic, and then it was my fault. i don’t know how to process this yet.
now i’m crying. i HATE him!!!
STARGAZER, you note that Stout suggests that a pattern of lies is what to really beware of: I’d say that a pattern of lies qualifies as exploitation…so if you are recognizing lies in a partner, you are recognizing exploitation…
JUSTABOUTHEALED, thank you for your feedback, and I’m so glad it was useful!
Hi lostingrief
Your post touched me because I remember only too well all those feelings of confusion, bewilderment, shock, hurt and anger at how someone can get away with what they do, and so callously.
They destroy your self esteem. They pick away at it. That’s how you become the emotional mess that you do, and it’s how you are then vulnerable enough to start to doubt your own thinking, values, beliefs. Your own boundaries become blurred because you trusted them and unwittingly gave them access to your belief system which they cleverly exploit. I think they do this naturally, it’s not something they plan. They are naturally gifted in this like some are natural linguists. They have a radar that enables them to read people and adapt accordingly until they have you in their power and then they set to work.
You are not alone in coming away ravaged and yet feeling responsible. That seems to be the legacy of being involved with one of these personalities. Their ability to behave abominably and yet somehow it is never of their doing, it is always someone else’s fault. You don’t, of course, have to accept that from him. You can reject it. It takes time to practice, but practic it you must. It. Was. Not. Your. Fault.
You did not make this happen.
You are not responsible for his bad behaviour.
The last impressions my ex will have of me are also of a weakened, emotionally worn out, paranoid pathetic woman. Not the intelligent, funny, strong, independent woman I was and have become again. For a long time, as you say, I wanted him to see me as the woman I am, not the woman I became with him.
What is the point? They DONT CARE. They took what they needed from you, sucked you dry, spat you out, moved on. It is about them, and how they are, and what they do to anyone, not just you. It is NOT about you.
Concentrate on healing yourself and giving yourself the love you need. Keep around supportive and loving positive people. You need time and support to get over it as it hurts so much, I know that. Your belief in who you are and what you stand for has been sorely tested. Don’t beat yourself up. Be gentle with yourself and take it one day at a time. The best help I have had is from an online counselor who understood NPD and socipathic behaviours. She has helped me enormously to come to terms and internalise what he was and what he did, and that I am lucky to have had enough strength left to get the hell away, even though healing has been a long journey.
Reading whatever you can about recovering from abusive situations, taking care of yourself has helped me too. To understand you have been through a trauma and may never entirely understand it because how can we understand what makes people tick this way? It is beyond comprehension. It must be or there wouldn’t be such a need for all the writing we see on here trying to help people like us to come to terms with it.
Treat yourself with love and care, you deserve it.
LJ
henry, my ex moved to Missouri from Washington in October of 2007. If charged w/rape, he will be brought back here. I do believe I would have a lot of support if there is a trial – but I’m not sure about having adequate protection.
Anyway, I know you have been through so much. I appreciated hearing your thoughts – and OxDrover, yours as well. Thank you!
Dear Lostingrief,
I was so angry over that very same thing at one time. It’s not fair, they should pay, they should see and recognize what they have done. This is one of the worst things we go through, I think, after they are gone. It’s one of the things that drives us the most insane and makes us act that way as well…because we are fighting a loosing battle there.
Right after I separated from the ex, I discussed with my Dr. some of what had happened and my ex’s drinking problem, the Dr. suggested Alanon (For families of Alcoholics). One of the most important things I learned there was that only I am in control of me…no one else. I cannot change anyone but me. I learned to recognize what was in my realm of responsibility and capability…and what was not. I also learned to accept this very same thing and not to make myself crazy trying to do the impossible.
I think women especially are taught they can change things and are responsible for making everything right in general, (just look at all the Fairy Tales we learn as children. Is it any wonder it causes us extreme stress when we run into one of these people. Perhaps this is why there are so many women on this site and fewer men…we tend to keep trying to “fix” it longer. No disrespect meant to the men here who have been every bit as “damaged”, perhaps you also learned to “care take” too much. It just seems that although there are supposed to be reletively equal number of men and women with these disorders there are a disproportionate number of women here.
Alanon and the serenity prayer saved my sanity. It set me free from banging my head against the brick wall that is the S/P/N’s and so much else in my life. It helped me move forward.
Let go and Let God…(or the Universe) if that’s your thing. Karma exists and even if we don’t see it work, it does just the same.
I’ve decided the best way I can prove I am not that destroyed and devoured, spit out mess that I was when he and I parted is to take care of myself and follow my own path back to the me I once was, (only better, smarter for my experience and an even kinder person because I know how it feels to be hurt.) And, to make my own success of going on WITHOUT him and be happy again. It can even be the best revenge…because they hate being unimportant, unacknowleged, and no longer in control.
Take care of you…because he doesn’t matter and isn’t worth the emotional energy wasted in hating him.
Peace, Be Well and Hugs,
*escaped*
When I told my Psyco What he was , At that time it was Sociopath their was no denial! no nothing , Like so What!
When I told him I was through with him , He says So you feel beter about your self now?
YES I Most Certainly DO ! Enjoy your self-induced-miserable-life! Sorry about your luck! Merry Christmass!:)~