Many Lovefraud readers experience the phenomenon of “losing yourself” in the sociopathic relationship. Before meeting the sociopath, you may have been, for the most part, happy, confident, successful and financially stable. You had a network of people who cared about you. Yes, there was some kind of vulnerability—perhaps you were a bit lonely—and the sociopath used the vulnerability to infiltrate your life. But, for the most part, you were okay.
Then, either suddenly or slowly, your life disintegrated, and the problems you face are so immense, and so interconnected, and so overwhelming, that you don’t know where to begin unraveling them. You don’t have the energy to start. Rather than the happy and confident person you once were, you are anxious, depressed and fearful. You don’t know how you are going to survive.
And you don’t know how it all happened. Trying to figure it out, you describe the individual’s behavior to friends or a therapist, and someone mentions the word “sociopath.” Or you do a Google search—perhaps on “pathological lying”—and end up on Lovefraud.
You are in shock. The description fits, and you realize that the individual never cared about you, that you were targeted, and that you allowed yourself to be scammed, either financially or emotionally. You’ve lost money, or your home, or your job, or your support network—or all of it.
Blame game
As you realize the depths of the betrayal, the blame game starts. And whom do you blame? Yourself.
You are furious with yourself for not seeing it sooner. You didn’t listen to people who warned you, or to your own inner voice that was telling you something was amiss. Instead, you believed the silver-tongued liar, the crying and pleading actor, whose real intention was to drain from you everything he or she could.
Besides everything physical and financial that you lost, you are most upset because you no longer have your sense of self. You feel like you lost your soul.
Now what?
The sociopath is responsible
First of all, recognize that you are not responsible for the abuse you experienced.
The sociopath may have blamed you for his or her actions, saying, “You made him (her) do it.” Understand that statements like these were all part of the manipulation. The terrible words were spoken specifically to throw you off-balance and break you down, so that the sociopath could maintain control.
He or she is responsible for the hurtful words—and for all abusive actions.
Commit to recovery
Next, know that you can recover. The key to recovery is recognizing that the fraud and betrayal is NOT WHO YOU ARE. The devastation by the sociopath is something that happened to you. The betrayal was an incident, an experience. Do not allow it to define the rest of your life.
Make a decision, a commitment to yourself, that you are going to heal.
This means you need to allow yourself to experience the deep wells of pain, disappointment and grief that the experience caused. You have to get it out of your system, and the only way to do that is to allow yourself to process the pain, which means feeling it.
Finally, you need to let the experience go. How do you do this? You accept that it happened, and that there is nothing you can do to change the past. This does not mean you excuse what the sociopath did. But you do recognize that the betrayal was an INCIDENT IN YOUR LIFE, and NOT LET IT DEFINE THE REST OF YOUR LIFE.
It is true that you will never be the same after the experience with the sociopath, and you may have, in fact, lost yourself. But by facing the pain, processing it and letting it go, you can find a new “you,” one with a richer, deeper understanding of the human condition, and more capacity for love and compassion than you ever had before.
You can recover. You can grow. You can acquire wisdom. And you can move on and find happiness—perhaps sharing the wisdom you acquired to help prevent others from going through what you experienced.
Great article, Donna. Thank you.
No one understands the devastation except those who have experienced it. I’ve been divorced from my ex (presumed S/P/NG) for a year and a half now and though I know I am in a better place this summer than last, I still have a long way to go. Unfortunately my Mom died shortly after the divorce was finalized so I lost my support system for life events. My siblings who were not involved much with either me or my Mother feel I am being a drama queen if I try to explain. It’s not an easy road however I am determined to get back to who I used to be.
yes, great article.
I agree with New, Donna, GREAT ARTICLE!!!
New Beginning, it is unfortunate when we lose (or don’t have) a support system, and obviously you hoped that your sibs would be a support system and they aren’t. Many people who have never experienced the devastation of dealing with a psychopath and there for do not understand do think a victim of a psychopath is being a drama queen….and there’s not much you can do about that except recognoize that they do not understand what they have not experienced.
I watched the movie “Water for Elephants” last night and the character looked at the men who were without jobs and without homes and he said “I never saw men who were hungry before” and HE had been hungry when he crawled on to the circus train. He understood being hungry and he empathized with those men where he might not have if he had not so recently been hungry.
You will not only be your “old self” you will be a BETTER SELF because now you will have wisdom you did not have before! God bless.
For whatever reason, I keep losing posts….
Donna, this was a superb article because it speaks to our situations only being temporary – that we can CHOOSE to heal ourselves.
At this very moment – while I’m typing – I am in a near state of panic and that level of anxiety is the Pre-Exspath Me reacting.
The further I get away from the exspath, the further I am away from those experiences. It is true: I will never be the “same” person I was, but I certainly hope to be much wiser.
Donna, thank you for such an affirming article.
Thank you so much, Oxy. 🙂
I agree that it is impossible to truly empathize with that which we have never experienced…..testimony to why this site is so important.
Interestingly enough, the past year has provided some valuable insight for me to the intense lonliness my Mom must have felt after my Dad died. My brothers were not there for her and though I called her at least every other day (every day for the first year) and saw her at least once a week, I was busy raising my son and running a business. I still had a life and all she’d ever known ceased to exist. I expect that I haven’t completely captured the full impact she experienced as I’m 25 yrs younger than she was and still able to rebuild a life. Experience is quite a teacher.
Initially I had a couple of friends I could rely on however they didn’t “get it”. One told me how after her divorce following a 5 year marriage she purchased a house and her father and siblings helped her remodel it…….so that’s what I should do too! She totally didn’t realize that was her support structure and my home projects would be done by me, myself and I. Not that it isn’t a good place to focus my energy but since I’m in my childhood home it creates emotional dilemmas about changing things.
These friendships are now back to being more like acquintances than friends. C’est le vie. I am finally arriving at the place where I know nothing that happened prior to today can be undone, except perhaps the tangles in my garden hose! Each day now I start with the thought “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change.” I know there are good things coming my way, I just have to clear through the muck.
The LF site has proven to be a valuable resource in my recovery. Each and every person here makes a difference. Thank you and blessings to all. 🙂
~New
A wonderful article posted at just the right moment for me. It has been less than a month ago that I realized that my boyfriend of 20 years was an spath. In realing from the pain I did not expect I began my search to find a reason, a cause, something I did or didn’t do that was causing my heartach. I didn’t love him any more and had broke up from him but when he cut off all contact I felt like I was drowing in a well.
My exploration first took me to a Yahoo article “Is your new sweethear a sociopath”. The reason I clicked on the link was because my girlfriend at the time had told me he was when I first started dating him. It was from this article that I found this wonderful site.
I am now reading your inspirational articles and blogs and trying to begin to find myself again. I too have no support group other than you lovely people.
In my search for understanding I have seen a medical doctor and have another apointment tomorrow at which time I will ask her for a referel to a mental health counselor. I don’t seem to be able to cope with all of the different emotions boiling around in my head. I truly feel I have lost my way.
My search for the path back to my life will not stop until I find the yellow brick road that will take me there. It might take longer than I like but I will not rest until I am whole again.
I will continue to try to understand what was there in me that allowed this SOB to steal my soul. It is mine and he can’t have it, only God and I can. I will go to the ends of the earth, if necessary, till I can fully comprehend what and why this has happened to me.
This site has been my salvation. Thanks again.
stormy:
Maybe you only thought you didn’t love him anymore. I’m not trying to be mean, but you could not be in this much pain if you didn’t have feelings for him. I know personally I wouldn’t be in pain at all if I didn’t love someone. Perhaps I shouldn’t speak for you and I apologize if I overstepped my boundaries, but it just seems if you didn’t care, you would be out partying and not be in so much pain. I know for myself, if I don’t love someone, I really don’t care at all…I don’t have pain if I don’t love (when it comes to a romantic partner).
Louise,
Yes and no. I don’t consider the ‘love’ I felt for the spath as love anymore, but addiction and bonding. I actually realized that almost two days after the discarding, especially when I compared it to another love in my life. Nor did the spath ‘break my heart’ when he discarded me; the other love had broken my heart big time once. And yet I was in pain for months after the discarding… that pain had everything to do with the cognitive dissonance, the trauma and relationshit.
It’s not that I hadn’t loved the spath for a while. I actually did. But that love was already gone before he discarded me. He had already destroyed the love that I had felt during his devaluation, and by the time he discarded me the sole thing that was left was the trauma bonding… nothing else.
darwinsmom:
Yeah, perhaps it’s that I’m not able to distinguish between trauma bonding and love…I don’t know. It either sure feels like love to me or it doesn’t. I either love someone or I don’t. I’m different I think, but also maybe just confused…who knows!
Donna,
This is a great article. Oh my, you described to a T how I felt. I still ruminate about it but I have healed, I am not the old me I so wanted to return to back then, I am a new me. Yes wiser and educated about personality disorder’s. I refer to my incident as my Life Lesson. In the begnning it was all about him and the truth of what he was, but because of the incident I had to take a long hard look at who I was and why. I will never be thankful to him for this Life Lesson, but I do believe people come into our live’s for a reason be it good or bad. I have survived more than one incident, more than one life lesson..I just keep gettin wiser all the time ~!
Louise,
of course you loved him, but that love was confused, manipulated to keep you confused, it was intense in the most unatural, unhealthy way. Emotions are funny, rejection by a spath is so mind f–king. You were trauma bonded, so was I. That does not go away, you just have to really see it for what it was and stop trying to make it more than it was. For many years I didnt want to believe that they were evil..plain and simple….the truth hurts