Editor’s note: The following article refers to spiritual concepts. Please read Lovefraud’s statement on Spiritual Recovery.
As I was wondering what to write about for my blog article this week, Southernman429 did me a favor and provided a topic. He posted the following on Dr. Leedom’s most recent article:
I’d like to pose a question to Donna, M.L., and Dr. Leedom”¦
Is it normal to go on with your life”¦ develop new relationships”¦ have new goals and new ideals”¦ years go by”¦ basically move on from the sociopathic experience”¦ but yet”¦ still feel a emptiness in a part of your heart, or a tugging at your soul”¦ a sort of grieving”¦ maybe partly for them, or about them, but also about yourself”¦ even though in hindsight, you have gained so much because of this experience and have used it as a springboard to a new life with a new mindset”¦?
Donna, I know that you have since re-married after your sociopath experience”¦ Does that bad relationship ever come up in your thoughts, affect your emotions or thinking”¦ even though you are happily married?”¦ At what point does this “go away—¦ or does it ever?
My experience with a sociopath
Let me answer the question by providing some background. I met my sociopathic ex-husband, James Montgomery, in July 1996, married him in October 1996, and left him in February 1999. In a short two and a half years, he cost me about $300,000, put me in serious debt, had affairs with six women that I know of, and had a child with one of those women. Ten days after I left him, he married the mother of that child. It was the second time he committed bigamy. I suspect he married her to get health insurance, because he had diabetes and I sure wasn’t going to be carrying him on my insurance any more.
I was divorced in February 2000. The judge awarded me all the money that was taken from me, plus $1 million in punitive damages, plus attorney fees. For the next year I conducted an international asset search for his money so I could get back on my feet financially. I never found it, and in May 2001, I had to bite the bullet and declare bankruptcy.
Those five years were the most emotionally tumultuous of my life. Fear, anger, betrayal, dismay, hopelessness, doubt, rage, numbness—I was wracked by every negative emotion under the sun. My stomach was always knotted. I couldn’t sleep. My face, arms, back and chest were covered with zits. Yet I had to hold myself together to deal with the divorce, get my business going again, keep my few clients happy. Frequently it all became too much and I collapsed into a puddle of tears.
I begged God to help me; I yelled at God for letting my ex get away with his crimes; I prayed to God to take away the pain.
The larger purpose
God didn’t take away the pain—at least not right away. I worked my way through it. Luckily, I had a wonderful therapist, a woman who I refer to as an energy worker. She helped me process the pain and see the spiritual reason for the journey.
I haven’t written this on the Lovefraud Blog (although others have), but I believe there is larger purpose for our encounters with the sociopaths. These traumas are opportunities for deep, profound healing. When our hearts and souls are ripped open by the sociopath, not only are we given a chance to release and forgive the betrayal of the predator, but we are given a chance to release and forgive the buried pain within us that made us susceptible to the sociopath in the first place.
But it requires work. The only way past the pain is through it. We must allow ourselves to feel, in all the gory agony, the traumas of our past that were brought to the surface by the deceit and betrayal of the sociopath.
It is a physical experience. It isn’t pretty. I spent many hours in the privacy of my meditation room, crying, raging, and finally collapsing when a piece of the burden was released.
In time, however, the pain within me dissipated. What replaced it? Love and joy.
Starting new chapters
To directly answer Southernman429’s question, in the past two years, there has only been one set of circumstances that triggered the old pain. It came each time I started a new chapter in the book I’m writing about my experience.
To draw up an outline for each chapter, I’d review my files, with all those massive credit card statements. I’d look at old e-mails, in which I tried to find solutions to my problems. I’d re-read my journal, where I wrote with raw emotion of the moment. Reviewing the materials brought back the knots in my stomach, and the incredulity that I let my ex-husband con me. But as I got going on each chapter, the knots relaxed.
I met my current husband, Terry Kelly, in 2001, about the time I finally decided to give up the financial battle and declare bankruptcy. I told Terry my sorry story on our first date—armed with the information that my ex was a sociopath. On our second date, Terry brought a copy of his tax return to prove that, unlike my ex-husband, he actually had an income.
We’ve been together seven years, and married for three. I have never been so happy. My life is full. There is an aliveness within me that I never experienced before. And it never would have happened if all the walls within me hadn’t been shattered.
The title of my book, by the way, is Cracked Open: How marriage to a sociopath led to spiritual healing.
I can actually sing so let’s do it!!!!! I’ll send clips and you can hear my voice. And Star plays an instrument.
Wini ? Anything for you? Oky?
Oh, GemF, we need to start a band. I sing too. In fact if you can do harmonies, we can do an Indigo Girls song, and that can be a tribute to Indigo!!! lol
Speaking of the lemonade club, I should be up to my ears in it the life I’ve had………
Yes I can do just about anything you like though I aspire to Ella Fitzgerald and Dinah Washington with a little Teena Marie and Sarah… um I can pronounce her name – last name with MC
Okay, I’m dreaming of a band now……….woohoo! Well, my internet addiction is back in full swing now. I forgot to eat dinner and change my snakeys’ water. I hope you all have restful sleep.
Peace out,
StarG
Peace! Have a good one!!!
If you’re on Star I was singing today and thinking of our band…. I was looking back over the posts and I have to say, thank you guys bc I think I’m slowly but surely getting there. Not to say I don’t have “crazy” thoughts- you only need to see my post from earlier, and I know I’ll have moments where I’m down but I’ve been feeling considerably better since we all last talked.
Gemini_Fairy: That is great news, great, great, great news. It takes time and you are getting there.
I’m proud of you getting over that hump. And it is a doosey isn’t it?
Just think of all the great things that will come into your life… from here on end.
You’ll have your waffle days … but, they’ll come and go more quickly … then eventually, no more waffling (yippee). Back on to solid ground and a new and better improved you!
Peace and hugs to you.
OK folks … no fair, I can’t sing a note… my ex used to tell me “what did you do with the money your parents gave you for singing lessons”??? He had a beautiful singing voice, too bad he didn’t put it to constructive use.
Peace. I’ll just have to sit in the audience and applause with the rest of us listeners.
I realize it’s going to take some time. I’m trying not to obsess (u saw the post from the other topic). I’m just so scared now. I feel foolsih for not having used anything and now I can’t stop thinking about it. I know what’s done is done. Just like the relationship itself you can’t change the past but it scares the hell out of me.
Other than that though – all is good. I have not been tempted to call him once or anyone associated with us to know what’s going on. My friend had a suggestion if he calls. Answer the phone with a of recording Snoopy’s laugh. I have actually been watching it on you tube and it makes me crack up.
GemF,
You are getting there, girl! Every time you sit in front of your computer and laugh at something silly someone has written, or share bonding moments (even online) with positive, caring people, you are one step closer in your healing! Whatever it takes! If you have to sit here and blog night after night, if it makes you feel better, do it!!! Do whatever will make you feel good. Because those moments do add up and bring you farther and farther away from the traumatic events you’ve been through. Laughing releases endorphins into your system and will help you deal with all the raw emotions.
I have to go to the reptile expo on the 8th to buy dead rats. (Whoever it was that posted about their neighbor throwing dead rats in their yard, why can’t my neighbors do that? I need dead rats for the snakeys.) Anyway, there is a chance my ex will be there. I’m hoping I can bring the really cool and good looking guy I met for coffee the other night. I don’t want to go alone. But I’ll certainly bring a camera, in case the army doesn’t have enough evidence. LOL
Gem, you are probably a much better singer than I. But I just love to do harmonies (can you tell I’m a Libra?). I wish you lived closer (actually, I’m not sure where you live). It would be so much fun to do music with someone.
Wini (still thinking of a hiphop name for you….), you don’t need to sing. Your presence is very soothing, and that is a gift in and of itself! You can be our band manager!