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.
He mentioned that to me. It really is amazing. My massage therapists both do it at the end of their sessions but I’d never had a whole reiki treatment. The way it heats up from the energy is amazing. My friends think I’m a little weird but I tell them not to knock it till they try it.
I am going to need all of the help I can get. I’ve been in a much better place lately but with the holidays and everything I may have some issues. It gets a little tiny better everyday. I think I’m also dealing with the uncertainty of how I really feel about my new job.
The holidays usually suck for me because I have no family. I worked really hard on my attitude last year and didn’t go into a depression. I did really well. I also had to avoid shopping malls, Xmas music, and anything that would make me feel emotional. I usually get invited to friends’ homes, but it’s not the same as having a family.
What kind of job is your new job, if you don’t mind my asking?
Star
Where are you?
Want to come to Orlando ?
I am still growing tomatos and strawberrys and sitting out sid in my shorts , Tanning , nanananananaan ! :)~
You never know where I will end up. I am totally a warm weather person. The hurricanes kind of suck, though.
Ooooh, you mean for the holidays? I soooo wish I could afford to travel. There is a LF gathering in NY too for the holidays. I would love it if some folks came to Denver.
I’m orlando inland been there done that many many many times !
I have Ahuge family I once took a diamond back rattle snake i caught on the way to Thanks giving dinner ! ~~~~~
Hi everyone…just joined this weekend and have been having a particularly hard time…I have been trying to ‘move on’ the past couple of months from my S ex (we have a new baby together and he decided that I should leave our home when she was 10 days old), but there has been no contact from him, just through our lawyers…No interest in how his daughter is (we are on the other side of the country now at his insistence).
I do know him for what he is- lacking in absolutely no empathy, remorse or conscience. The problem about moving on is that we have a daughter together which is a constant reminder that he in fact does exist (event though he doesn’t deserve to!). I also find myself going back and forth, looking back at our marriage and trying to tell myself that there was something meaningful there. Asking myself, “if it was so meaningless to him, how could I not have seen that?” “How could I have felt connected to him when there was really nothing there for him or at least nothing more than shallow emotion?” I think one of the hardest things to understand is that one moment you think everything is fine and then they hit you with a ton of bricks out of the blue and act as if you are responsible.
I know that we got the ‘discard’ in a monumental way- me and my 3 daughters. Looking from the outside, as friends and family do (including most of his family outside his nuclear family) it is clear that he’s crazy. I mean, what kind of person kicks out his wife with a newborn? You might be wondering how they could do this but there was a lot of intimidation involved- he and his father had a lot of guns, we lived out in the middle of the woods, and my ex had a rageful temper…His aunt stayed with us until we could leave because she was afraid for our safety…
Right now I feel that thoughts of him permeate my mind and no matter how busy I am and try to focus on something else I can’t. I know a lot of it is mourning something that never would come to be…I can’t even understand, after how horribly he has treated me, why I even feel nostalgic about some of our time together. I think it is coming to the realization that he is not ever going to express any regret or sympathy to me…That we are essentially dead to him…
Any suggestions about moving on after such a situation would be great….
Dear Maniatissa,
Every emotion you are feeling is the “natural and normal” emotions that people feel when they have been victimized by a psychopath (sociopath/anti-social-personality disorder). It goes by many names including “grief.”
The wondering why you couldn’t see it, the being nostalgic about your time together, it is “standard operating procedure.”
The suggestion that I think helps more than anything is to realize that (A) YOU ARE NOT ALONE in this insanity (B) None of this is your fault (c) there is nothing you could have done to change the way he acted (D) he is incapable of love or caring and (E) be glad he “discarded” you and has no interest in you or the baby because you and the children will be better off without him.
KNOWLEDGE=POWER and this is the best place in the world to learn about psychopaths, what they are and how they act. Strangely enough, after you get to know about them, you can see that they are all very much alike. One may be a serial killer like Ted Bundy, or another like Bill Clinton, just having sleezy sexual trists one after another, but there is a sameness about their thinking. The MEMEMEMEME ME thing. It is all about them. You were just a piece of meat, something to use and then discard. But the problem wasn’t you, it was THEM.
He isn’t ‘crazy’–he is in touch with reality—his reality. He knows right from wrong, but he just doesn’t care.
You may not realize it now, but you are in a better position with him than you would be if he was stalking you and your children. Your X sounds like he could be dangerous, and many of them are physically dangerous, all are emotionally dangerous.
I am the mother of a psychopath who is in prison for murder. Even from his prison cell he stalks me, tries to have me killed.
it will take TIME and introspection to move on, and this is the best place i have found to talk about it. Others who have not had an experience with a psychopath willnot understand, it is difficult for them to understand just how traumatized you are, just how hurt, you may even find that they seem unfeeling and just tell you to “get over it and move on’—-but it is more difficult to do that than they can know. You WILL BE UNDERSTOOD AND SUPPORTED HERE, because WE DO KNOW, we’ve been there. We will help you when you fall, when you are down, confused, or just need a validating word.
Write it here over and over and over, no one will say ‘get over it” and we will understand how painful it is. It is like child birth each contraction seems like it goes on forever and will never stop, but eventually you will “give birth” to the NEW and STRONGER YOU! ((((hugs))))) and my prayers for you and your children!
Mania
Welcome , Come sit next to me and let me tell you a story about a Tiger in a cage !
We are all here for you now! You are now FREE ! You are going to be so HAPPY !
READ start anywhere here , Read an artical then the discussion blogs under it , you will find all of the stories are the same Just like yours ! And you will learn why !
I am so Happy your here !!** Oh and that Tiger in the cage? heres the story
That Tiger in the Cage looks like a great big kitty kat !
No No my sister that is a Tiger in a cage and if you put your hand in the cage you will get bit ! LOVE jere