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.
Callista – i am glad your weekend how some ‘space’ and warmth in it. keep focusing on yourself and taking care of yourself.
i find i have to keep the ‘fence’ in my mind firmly errected. on one side ‘everything’, on the other, ‘the spath’. i don’t let her out of her corral, and i try not to step in the shit around it. it’s really important to segregate their internal influence (sort of like an ebolla outbreak) until we can dismantle it.
take care.
one step
I am having vision’s of Kathy Bates in ‘Mysery’..
oh hens, ya made me laugh.
i don’t know what will come of me in all of this.
Dear Callista,
GOOD FOR YOU! Yea, I hate being on a “revised calorie intake program” (anything except the word “diet!”) but I am filling up with lettuce and sugar free jello and gum and WATER!!! I know it is necessary for my health, just like quitting smoking was necessary for my health (DO YOU HEAR ME HENRY!!! LOL) so I will MAKE myself do what I have to do–but nothing will make me LIKE it! LOL
Just finished watching the Rodney Acala 48 hours mystery, they have now ADDED 4 MORE MURDERS to his credit from those photos that they published a few months ago (one of which was our Dr. Liane Leedom) She was photographed between two of his 4 murder cases in LA that he was later (march of this year) convicted of almost 30 years after the fact!
Acala acted as his own attorney, and he IS smart, there is no doubt about that, but his “defense” of himself was pitiful really in it’s lack of good sense, he even got on the stand! Can we say DUMB thing for a defendant to do? But they are SO ARROGANT.
On top of everything else though, he played part of Arlo Gutheries Alice’s Restatuant lyrics about “kill kill kill”—and it was like he thought that would make the jury not give him the death penalty because he said “It would take 25 years” before it would be actually done. Oh, well, at least he will spend those 25 years ON DEATH ROW—which is highly guarded, and highly boring, and he will have very little “reinforcement’ of his grandiose self image!
What an evil piece of DNA that man is. The young girl he almost murdered who did barely survive came back to testify at his sentencing hearing (she had been 8 years old and had almost bled to death from his rape and attempted murder) She said she refused to be a victim, but that if the law had kept him locked up like it should have after he hurt her, he would not have killed these other young women.
Part of that problem though is her parents were so traumatized that they took her and left the country so that the DA had to make a plea agreement with Acala instead of a trial. I don’t blame her parents for doing that, and I am glad that she has recovered and has become a survivor not a victim! Glad she could see him put away for the rest of his life though!
Maybe Kathy Bate’s in Fried Green Tomatoes? I hope something positive happens with you Onestepper’s…sometime’s we are our own worse enemy..I am stepping out on a limb here but perhaps when we are forced too look inward at ourselves we dont like what we see, things about us that needed to change long before the spath encounter…..the ugly truth will set us free? speaking about myself here – dont want to offend you again.. but mean people suck..
mean people Do suck. 🙂 i don’t know if you are suggesting i am becoming mean or not, but i don’t know if trying to get some sleep qualifies me…maybe so.
i liked myself much more before the spath hens. much much more. the spath and the chemical sensitivities came at the same time and it’s all changed me.
i lay in bed last night and listed the things that i find so frightening about where i am inside myself – the things i don’t feel i can change. of course i can, but it sure doesn’t feel like it. i feel trapped and pretty ugly.
bad news – bo upstairs isn’t gay. uh huh…sure…. 😉
(and yes, I asked him…asked him if his friend was his boyfriend…hehe…)
..and kathy RAMMED A CAR in fried green tomatoes…and we cheer for her.
the boxer upstairs banging the thin walls with a guy isnt gay? oh my. well well..Onesteppers I would say if you liked yourself much much better and felt better before the spath then what you are dealing with is a form of PTSD/ILLNESS associated with the spathisode and with time you will become better – honestly I am almost three years away from it , forever changed but putting the fragments of my reality right out in front of me – it’s live or die and like you I am gonna live – it’s up to me if I enjoy it or not and sometimes it’s a moment by moment struggle to keep from drowing.. i get on here and be my witty self and try to get a giggle out of somebody but nobody but me knows my reality, sometimes it is very bleak very very bleak – i know struggle on a daily basis – I feel as if I will die before I am ready so mite as well make the most of it now..even if its bleak i can always count my blessing..
Calista:
“The great thing about the Emotional Wreck program is that the DESIRE to eat compulsively is just GONE. ”
WOW…..My body missed THAT ONE completely!
Trauma….is NOT a good diet for me! 🙂
Congratulations on your weight loss!
This thread is suckily slow…..
I’m getting blank screens and the no typing show up gig……