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.
Kim, I had never considered the bond that the abuser/spath/whatever has with their victims, before, until you just posted it.
For me, it was the “addiction to the illusion” and “perceived love.” Once the illusion was shattered, the “love” that I felt turned into rage – serious rage. Everything else that followed was par with what everyone else experiences.
Like hens, I have caught myself looking back at the “salad days,” and wonder whether or not there was “love” there, even at that early stage. What I’ve discovered is that it doesn’t matter whether he ever felt anything nearing love for me, at all. It simply doesn’t matter. TODAY is what matters – today, he would prefer seeing me struck by a truck than have to go to Court. TODAY, he wishes me dead and gone. TODAY, all of my sacrificies, support, and encouragement add up to ZIP, nada, zero, zilch. That is the hard, cold truth, and it sucks, but it’s truth, nevertheless.
VERY good point, Kim. Thank you for that!
Absolutely LOVE Natalie Merchant.
Here’s MY anthem….seriously…..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uhpu2N4rQZM
Yay! It seems we all love Natalie Merchant…that’s good!
Here’s a great song…we are all wide awake NOW…
http://www.vevo.com/watch/katy-perry/wide-awake/USCA31200061?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=watch&utm_campaign=wp_katyperry_wideawake#/watch/katy-perry/wide-awake/USCA31200061?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=watch&utm_campaign=wp_katyperry_wideawake
hens:
It’s already been years…two years since we were intimate and a little over a year that we were still “talking.”
Again, same with me! Three months and it was great and then he disappeared and then I spent the next two years trying to recreate those first magical months and it’s never going to happen.
Ahhh yes. Annie Lennox. Another of my favs.
Here is the link to NM’s “Wonder”. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zpYFAzhAZY&feature=related
It reminds me of therapy, and the process of re-claiming myself, spirituality, and independance.
Kim and Truthspeak:
Good point, Kim! Of course the abuser is also trauma bonded…that is why it is so hard to get out of…they are just as entrenched as we are. We provide something they need…someone for them to abuse and when they feel they are losing that (when we try to leave), they are losing control…they hate that. They say that’s when most abusers will kill their mates is when they are trying to leave and they are losing control. It’s all about control. Mine 100% controled the relationship, but not in a violent way.
kim:
I love that wonder song by Natalie…it always has reminded me of my best friend’s little girl who was born profoundly retarded…she is 17 now and the doctors said she wouldn’t live past 2.
Ditto here TruthSpeak, I’ve been addicted to the illusion too…….and what a magnificant one he created. Likewise on your ex’s reactions now, mine has done the same. The spaths hate the court system. I forced our divorce settlement to go through mediation, thankfully my ex is a “pillar of the community” so I had the option since he had to protect his image. The facilitator who has been doing this for 25 years said he never experienced someone like my ex, while he did a physical demo of being pinned up against the wall. It certainly did provide validation for me.
Truthspeak:
Thanks for your post above to me. You are right…no other experience is like the experience with an spath. I have come to realize though as we all have that no one understands unless they have lived it. They just don’t get it so I try not to talk about it anymore to most people.
I have been trying to find a good answer here and through intense study I occasionally arrive as an “ah-ha” moment. in reading on lf, I continually see what is described as a gap or more commonly a void. an empty space. is this the result of the occupation of the area where WE are normally supposed be and not someone else. is this a psychological parallel to how they act physically. (showing up un-announced or un-invited or both. inserting themselves into our lives where they normally would be unwelcome? but for the mirror we would not let them in. we never should. nobody belongs in that space but who WE are. and with the mirror comes a trust that allows something quite unnatural to happen. then they begin tweaking buttons and switches and changing us from within and the first thing that goes is the moral compass? so in healing we attempt to find ourselves and re-insert us there and fill the void with what belongs there? US . I think in a normal relationship we allow those near to us to maybe visit once in a while and then we take our space back. and no normal person would want to stay inside us. its funny how one can see that how they act on the outside is just how they act when we let them in.