We’ve discussed many of the sociopath’s traits, such as his missing empathy and compassion; his tendency to remorseless interpersonal exploitation; and proclivity to audacious acts of lying, deception and sundry other violating behaviors.
Now, I’m tempted to add to the mix what I call the sociopath’s tendency to “irrational optimism.”
By “irrational optimism,” I mean the sociopath’s irrationally optimistic belief, if not conviction, that he’ll either evade or, somehow, otherwise prevail over, the real, probable consequences of his actions.
Consider this brief, hypothetical interaction between a sociopath and his partner, who learns with certainty that he, the sociopath, has been cheating on her with three different women simultaneously:
Partner: How could you do that?
Sociopath: Do what?
Partner: Sleep with three different women behind my back. Are you f*cking demented?
Sociopath: First of all, that’s abusive. So stop right there and don’t abuse me. Second, I didn’t sleep with f*cking anybody. Not that I haven’t been tempted, given how lame our sex life is.
Partner: Why are you lying? I know who these women are, and I can prove you’ve been sleeping with them. Do you think I’m that f*cking stupid?
Sociopath: Let me ask you something. Why the hell would I sleep with three women and risk getting some f*cking STD? Think about it. You know me”¦or maybe you don’t? Does that make any sense?
The sociopath here is (or was) irrationally optimistic on two levels—first, that he’d be able to perpetrate this caper, undetected, indefinitely; and second that, once busted (as, now, he is) he’ll be able to squirm his way out of accountability.
We could address many aspects of this interaction, but I’d like to emphasize his last argument: “Let me ask you something. Why the hell would I sleep with three women and risk getting some f*cking STD? Think about it. You know me”¦or do you? Does that make any sense?”
This argument captures, I think, the sociopath’s “irrational optimism” beautifully. In offering the glibly insulting invitation to “think about it,” he makes a spectacle of his audacity and contempt: he really expects, and believes his partner should, accept his invitation [to think about it].
But even more than expecting her to “think about it,” which is outrageous enough, he expects her, in his irrational optimism, actually to be persuaded by his argument. In his irrational optimism, he is hopeful, if not confident, that she’ll choose to disbelieve the evidence she holds indisputably in her hands in favor of accepting his insulting logic.
How classically sociopathic is this?
More importantly, what contributes to the sociopath’s irrational optimism?
We might begin with his malignant sense of entitlement—that is, the sociopath’s belief that he is entitled to obtain the gratifications he wants. One of the most dangerous aspects of the attitude of entitlement is how it renders impotent—denudes of power—rule, limits and laws.
When you feel entitled to something, if it’s not accomodatingly forthcoming, you feel entitled to take it. You’ve laid, in your entitlement, a kind of psychic possession of what it is you want, so that now it becomes, in your mind, yours—specifically, your right to have.
And so if someone (or something) obstructs your seizing what now, in your mind, is your right to possess, then you are free to take it—to take, in fact, whatever is yours—by any means necessary.
Conferring this entitled status upon oneself encourages the irrationally optimistic view that, one way or another, accomodation looms”¦it must!
Closely related to this is the sociopath’s grandiosity: he believes he can and should succeed at his high-wire machinations because he’s that good, that clever and—it can’t be stressed enough—that entitled.
His grandiosity may take the form of thoughts like, “Sure, normal guys couldn’t pull this shit off, but I’m not your normal guy.”
And so, when you feel like you can do things that others can’t—especially things unsupported by “reality—”this is grandiosity. And grandiosity feeds, I believe, very directly, the sociopath’s tendency to irrational optimism.
Then there is the sociopath’s contempt, so inseparable from his grandiosity. As we discussed, the sociopath, in the example above, expects his insulting argument to succeed, either because he’s convinced he’s smart, clever and persuasive enough to be found so convincing, or else he’s convinced that his partner is dumb, naïve and/or desperate enough to believe him. (Or both!)
As a consequence, the sociopath’s contempt leaves him at constant risk of underestimating others, and overestimating himself. In his irrational optimism, fed by his contempt, he fails to appreciate how close he is always is—perhaps just one more reckless risk away—from being busted.
What else feeds the sociopath’s irrational optimism? How about his stupidity?
This may sound provocative, but let me explain. I suggest that blind faith supports a perspective of irrational optimism, and the sociopath operates with a kind of blind faith. That is, he operates in the blind faith that, somehow or other, he’ll escape accountability for his latest transgression.
Where does his blind faith come from? Two good sources, I’d suggest, are his grandiosity and arrogance—they blind him, I contend, to certain realities, effectively making him stupid on some level.
And his stupidity reinforces his irrational optimism.
Quite obviously, I’m not talking I.Q. stupidity, but rather judgement-level stupidity. The sociopath’s personality pathology mars his capacity to make wise, intelligent judgements in many circumstances.
(My use of “he” in this article is a convenience, not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed. This article is copyrighted © 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW).
http://www.amazon.com/Why-Does-He-That-Controlling/dp/0425191656/ref=sr_1_1?ie=utf8mb4&s=books&qid=1257562872&sr=1-1
I hit paydirt when I posted on a chat site about sociopaths.
lots of people are still talking about it.
one person just posted about the above book. Read the first review by “groovy vegan”. It sounds like a really good book.
Has anyone read it?
Why does he do that? by Lundy Bancroft.
Rosa,
That Karma Karma Chameleon was perfect.. Mine was a complete Chameleon.. and blamed everything in his life on Karma. He lived in an altenate universe where he thinks that he is so above everyone else in the world.. although his life is a complete mess. He thinks that he knows better than anyone else about almost everything. And he thinks of himself as this major businessman although, has only has had ordinary successes then failed at them all to become now, a consultant for a company that sends him all over the country and are in complete control of his life and they pay him little compared to what he does. He is broke, but talks about having millions. He has no home but talks all the time about the two houses that he is going to have ‘someday’.. one on the ocean and one in the mountains.. while now, he lives in an empty apt and he is approaching 60.. so like someone else wrote, he is losing his looks and charm with still having two children under the age of 15 to support, but he still lives in his alternate universe of him being some kind of King in a past life.. looking for his Queen…. He is pathetic. He is a serial marrying man.. he asks a woman to marry him in the first three weeks..that is his lure ‘marriage’ Yeah,, marrige to a man with debt, little income and tons of responsibilty .. he wants someone to share his burdens.. He is a nightmare.. and SKylar.. Stop interacting with your guy…
THe longer I go without any interaction the better that I feel..
Looks like our problem is a lack of ICE!
From an article at Scientific American:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=what-psychopath-means
In a 1976 study anthropologist Jane M. Murphy, then at Harvard University, found that an isolated group of Yupik-speaking Inuits near the Bering Strait had a term (kunlangeta) they used to describe “a man who ” repeatedly lies and cheats and steals things and ” takes sexual advantage of many women—someone who does not pay attention to reprimands and who is always being brought to the elders for punishment.” When Murphy asked an Inuit what the group would typically do with a kunlangeta, he replied, “Somebody would have pushed him off the ice when nobody else was looking.”
Oh yes, Style1, you are right on. They are brilliant chameleons.
And, once you know what you are dealing with, and you DISENGAGE, it actually becomes very entertaining.
Watching them go from abuse, to pity, to flattery, to intelligent conversationalist, to charm, and back to abuse.
It always comes back to abuse, though.
As subtle as it may be, abuse is still abuse!
I think the one constant in their life may be their pathological lies.
~I miss Culture Club.
Rosa,
Mine once he realized that I wasn’t out of the fog that he spun around me.. turned verbally angry and accusatory.. When he could see that I wasn’t buying what he was selling he plotted his course out behind my back… then sprung it on me as fast as he entered my life was as fast as he left.. and even though I wanted him out, the way that he did it caused me to react in shock and want him back for awhile.. he withdrew his attention, once he realized the sale was not happening.. because he wanted to close the sale. One time, in the end he told me on the phone that he will tell me what he wanted me to know.. He started revealing himself in an obvious way. He couldn’t maintain his slick facade. His walls were cracking..
And I do recall in the beginning how he tried to tell me what I was ‘supposed’ to feel. He made me feel sick. Had I not been preoccupied with my move, I never would’ve been in his gig.. Not an excuse, I take responsiblity but he really went all out to pull me in…
He doesn’t contact me or hasn’t in a long while.. and towards the end I was contacting him.. the tables had turned.. he knew that he couldn’t con me and I was just feeling the void.. He told me that every woman wanted him backand this is why.. he yanks her in.. then leaves fast.. I am sure that this feeds his fragile ego… So, SKYLAR … that is when I decided NO MORE CONTACT… It is just the void he left that I am dealing with, not really missing him.. and the longer I stay in any kind of contact, the more it hampers my ability to clearly and cleanly move on.
I meant to write that I was out of the fog that he spun.. he turned verbally angry and accusatory..
Yes, Style1, they can turn very ugly when they realize the gig is up and the con is over.
And that can be dangerous, especially if you have one with poor impulse control.
That’s why I would never confront a sociopath in my everyday life.
And I would encourage others NOT to engage, as well.
Get yourself & your children to a safe place first.
Then confront the sociopath, ONLY if you have to, WITH the authorities or someone with you.
Otherwise, it’s NO CONTACT all the way!!!
There are articles on this website (like Kelsi Miller’s story) about women who did NOT make it to safety.
Anyway, you are a very smart woman, and it is great that you are free from him.
I’m glad you are here and that you are safe.
yes, they can get out of control because so many have poor impulse control. when the s/p/n of my past realized i was totally on to him, he happily moved in with the OW and has left me alone for the most part — even though we were together for 25 years.
our safety, and that of children involved, is paramount. you just never know which way these non-humans will go.
kunlangeta……
Okay…now it’s clear why he wouldn’t take that arctic cruise with me…..he knew of my Inuit ancestry…….
🙂
Saw the nutbag walking down the street, near my house. I was driving by….what I wouldn’t have done for a little seal hole. I like the Inuit solution!
Steve, I know I do flatter and go on, when ever you post. But jeepers, you KNOW how to do it. Thanks for another ispiring and clarifying/validating article. Glad you are on the planet.
Kim, I read alot, but post little. But I wanted you to know that I also, like many others here, was raised by someone mean/abusive/negligent/ignorant and narcissistic. It is quite a process, and has been a loooooong one for me, to get to ‘neutral’ and take the reins of my own life in hand. I spent 15 or so years being angry/sad at my mother, and my stepfather who worshipped her butt. Some of those years I spent drinking and carousing to dull the anger and depression. Spent nearly 20 years in therapy. I don’t know what my point is….other than to say that perhaps I can relate to the frustration of wanting to move the f*** on and having it be such a process.
You are definitely NOT alone in this. Big cyber support to you Kim, in your process……