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….(guffawing mightily)
I don’t got no slippers, I just got feets….
Are you ready slippers? Start walkin’.
Feets are good.
folks: i’m wondering if any of you found yourselves reluctant to go into therapy. did you feel like just trying to forget? was their a hump of sorts that you found that you needed to get over? or is this only while still clinging to the lie?
and furthermore, do any of you feel that one CAN heal without therapy?
Hi all,
How good to find a community talking about this. So few people in my life fully understand what living with the narcissitic/borderline/sociopathic cheater I was in relationship was like. They really don’t know the intense trauma this creates.
I left a relationship with a what I’ve learned is a “somatic narcissist”, someone who needs constant sexual validation they are desirable. They are extremely charming, lie without batting an eye, and continuously seek sexual conquests and validation. The cheating toward the end was breathtaking.
I know I have PTSD. I finally cut off all communication in March, but still can’t get over the cruelty of his behavior. I feel hopeful I will get over it eventually, and get some semblance of self esteem back.
What hurts the most right now is I am feeling totally unable of trusting any man. He was actually the second sexual sociopath I was in relationship with in my life. I am so shell shocked every man I see looks like a criminal, no matter how “nice” they seem on the surface. This alone makes me cry. This loss of any innocence I ever might have had. That and how unvaluable and unattractive I feel. (the sexual sociopath I was last with, and the one before that, told me they cheated on me because I was too old, fat, not what-ever enough-even though I’ve been a professional model in the past. Its hard not to believe them.)
I’m praying for deliverance from this and can’t really talk to anyone about it because, as you know, they just say, “get over it!”
Thanks for listening…Theresa
Rgc, indeed, reluctance to engage in therapy is common – we’re opening ourselves up to people that we don’t know and don’t know us.
Speaking truthfully with a therapist requires an enormous leap of faith, and it’s very diffiult to do, especially after such damages inflicted by spath. We often have to talk about aspects of ourselves that aren’t too nice and we may have to acknowledge things that we’ve done that don’t necessarily make us look like very nice people.
Just take a deep breath, and go for it. HUGS to you
Theresaann, welcome and I’m sorry that you’ve had your experiences.
It takes a lot of time and talk to get our feet onto our healing paths. A lot of reading and a lot of soul-searching. It’s not easy, and people who have not experienced similar events really don’t “get it.”
It may be helpful to start writing a journal to just pour out your anger, hurt, and everything else.
Brightest blessings
rjc, if you ar able to move on without therapy, then God speed. I think some of us can, and some can’t. Yes, it always feels like a huge bump….and we would all like to drive around it. The problem arises when we can’t…when we can no longer get around that bump….but even then, there are self-help groups like alanon and others….there are web-sites like this, LF…I guess it is just each person’s journey and each person’s process. It can be done..
therasanne, I’m sorry. My x spath diminished me in the same way. Sometimes, I think, that we place way too much importance on our sexual attractiveness,,,,and the spaths play into this, too; making us believe that that is all we have going for us, then they take that away from us in a blink of an eye. We need to learn to love ourselves. No man can ever do that for us. Our bodies need to become our bodies…to love, not some image for some pervert to jack off to…..or some fashion designer to dictate to….these are the buildings our souls live in, and anyone who doesn’t respect it, doesn’t get into it.
This time I had no qualms going to therapy at all. I made an appointment after a month. But this is because I already had a trusting client – therapist relationship, because she helped me through an identity crisis 12-13 years before the spath experience. I had been in therapy with her from my 24-26, including group therapy. And the second aid for me to contact her was that I had NOT gone to therapy when I had an existential life crisis a year afterwards when I was 27. There were so much shame feelings and I felt that it was an issue I could solve completely on my own, etc., that I did it on my own. I actually managed to solve that crisis all by myself (though some would conclude I had spiritual help and guidance if I describe the deepest crisis moments), but it was VERY lonely and dangerous, because it didn’t get better until I was pre-suicidal (aka starting to really consider it as the sole solution of the problem). I vowed afterwards that if I was in utter mental and emotional turmoil and conflict again, I would never allow myself to do that alone anymore.
I could have done last year’s healing of the spath trauma without therapy. Healing myself from the existential crisis all on my own has given me the fundamental self-belief that I have strength to overcome anything. But that knowledge also frees me from the need to prove that to myself again. I know I can… I just don’t want to heal only the lonely anymore. It is just too lonely.
If I can pass on something about therapy it’s this knowledge:
Therapy isn’t about someone else solving and healing you or even helping you. You will be solving, healing and helping yourself in therapy. The difference is that with a good therapist who has expertise in the matter you’re dealing with you have someone holding your hand with you, telling you that you can do it, and if needed can hold up a lantern to shed light on the paths and options before you that you weren’t aware of. But you’ll still have to do all the walking and deciding yourself.
Another positive about therapy is that at the end you walk away from the therapy as a person better mentally equipped to deal with future emotional and mental issues. Therapy can teach you lifelong coping insights.
That is what those 2 year identity crisis therapy did for me: I learned such fundamental stuff about how to regard my emotional issues back then that I was able to use that knowledge during last year’s healing. The coping tactics and insights taught in therapy cannot prevent you from being hurt, or being totally messed up after traumatic experiences… but at the very least it taught me how to deal with it in a way that I can direct my healing process more efficiently and constructively.
It’s little over a year ago that I was discarded and realized the ex was a spath. And while I’m not the same person anymore than I was before, and I have to challenge my brain (physically) in a gentle and kind way, I can say that I’m fully recovered from the last year of hell. I do not get triggered anymore. I have never had so much control over my feelings regarding situations and events (in a positive way… without trying) and it’s all due to having excellent boundaries. I am happy and like my life (even if it’s an ongoing work in progress) and myself (and am emotionally and mentally gentle to myself). And lastly I have actually very recently reached a point again where I dare to fall in love again, while fully accepting I cannot predict the outcome of it long term. The spath experience and the spath is now fully in the past for me, and I have never felt as much in peace with myself and my past, my present and my future as I have ever felt before in my life. And therapy and this forum helped me reach that point.