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.
rgc112063 – yes, i think you have it right about the ‘gap’. it is the place WE are supposed to be. I have written about this – for me it’s not a ‘void’, but a space that grew into being when i was young and was covered by darkness. In my ‘gap’ their are many things. One of the things is extreme loneliness – a disconnect from self and others.
and i think you are right about them inserting themselves and manipulating from the inside. your vision of this is scary and speaks to my subconscious.
i have this ‘gap’ because there was drama and trauama in my early life. i can see it through the lens of one incident and the family response to it, that traumatized my family. as a result of the pain, fear, extreme lonliness and lack of support a number of things happened to my personality, and one of them is that certain aspects of it went underground, injured. it actually caused a sort of denial or amnesia when i was younger. i had no way to understand or make sense of this thing that happened or the fall out from it. Sound a lot like the spath experience? What i did as a child was go underground, and when i emerged, beat myself back down with drugs as i couldn’t handle my family life with my eyes open and clear.
There is a lovely pot of ‘things’ in that gap. sky thinks there must be something shiny in there that needed hiding – yup, ME. I shut down because i was overwhelmed and had not way to/ support to understand and cope with what happened, and my life had been stood on its ear. Sounds a lot like the spath experience, and my experience in the last 3 years of getting sick due to enviro. toxins.
the shock and awe phases of recover from spaths took a long time to move through (and as in all healing i still cycle back round to them); then i spent the last 3 years muddling through, and feel now that i am beginning to uncover what needs to be healed…what made it possible for her majesty to gain entry, the gold and pot of stewed emotions in the ‘gap’, and the loneliness that drives me and has punished me because of its hidden unacknowledged nature.
Darwinsmom, what a poignant response, and I can identify with what you said about attempting to solve issues, alone.
I agree 100% that therapists can only provide the tools and techniques, and it is up to ME how to facilitate my own healing. I used to force myself to pretend that I could handle ANYthing that came along, on my own. After all, I had been programmed to accept isolation and a pretense of strength and fortitude by the first exspath, right?
OneJoy, it is encouraging to read that you are moving forward and recognizing when you “cycle back.” I’ve been experiencing that, lately, and it’s a real challenge to NOT fall back into the painful comfort of past experiences. It’s very, very easy for me to fall back into the previous patterns, and recognizing that this IS a part of healing and that this IS going to happen is important for me to understand. Reading your posts (and, others’) reaffirms that this is, indeed, an ongoing and lifelong process.
Brightest blessings!
I have every intention of letting my *brush* with a psychopath define my life. As I shall never let those thirty years back, I have to make them count for something instead, and I shall spread the word about these parasites until my dying breath.
the reason I ask is that my wife of 23 years ran into one and had a really hard time pulling away. now our couples therapist has suggested, after recognizing that I was “trying to do her work for her” that she go back to her therapist and revisit this experience. I know that is how we gain clarity and heal, but she understandably feels that it will just be digging up the pain again. ??
Mrs Grimm, I’m sorry that you suffered spath experiences. You’re right that we can’t get those years (or, months) back, and ANY exposure to spath entanglements results in personal carnage.
For me, personally, the difference between getting the word out and allowing the exspaths’ actions “define” my life is that I acknowledge that these events took place and that I was targeted and harmed. I acknowledge the damages and try to sort them out through healing so that I won’t remain a viable target for another sociopath. I acknowledge the issues that caused me to BE vulnerable and “targetable” and work on those issues of boundaries and self-perceptions. But, I work on moving away from the experiences so that I define myself by who I am and my various stages of recovery.
In other words, I choose to recognize what’s been done, and I choose to recover and emerge, if that makes any sense.
Brightest blessings
Kim, I think you are right. a woman is a beautiful creature inside and real commitment and respect and openness and unconditional love in a man makes her show through (to him)whatever is on the outside. My father says they used to take some of these guys down to kansas or somewhere years ago and remove what was driving them. then they werent such a problem anymore. we had such an example in our community and in the years that followed, he wasnt such a problem anymore.
Rgc, my response is meant with the most sincere intentions of support – SHE is responsible for HER healing. Not “we,” not “us,” not anyone other than “her.”
Digging up pain? Maybe, just maybe, she’s symptomatic of socipathy, as well, or malignant narcissism? Typically, spaths and malignant narcissists do not fully engage in counseling therapy because they a) do not want to risk exposure, and b) they are incapable of connecting on a human level to be honest and truthful.
That’s not to say that convicted killers on death row won’t tell the prison counselors every detail of their crimes, because they love to recall their moments of control. But, I’m talking about the “garden variety” of sociopath and they typically WILL NOT and CANNOT engage in counseling and only do so under threat of divorce or criminal actions. “I won’t file for divorce if you go to counseling,” is a very, VERY common assertion for victims, and the spath attends the sessions, but does not ‘engage,” if that makes any sense.
Once again, your healing is about you, Rgc. Her healing is about her. I would gently suggest that “we” or “us” simply does not exist in this relationship, right now.
Hugs to you
Truthspeak,
i dont think she is either. the has routinely done for so many and never expects anything in return. more likely codependent. has likely built a shame core out of this? amazing to watch her with a chlild. she thinks she knows what they are feeling. funny thing, most of the time she’s right. was wrong with her spath boyfriend though. I saw some agony come out of her when it hit her like i have never seen before. it was like she lost a child or something. then, in a few months, we’re all ok.
Rgc, with all due respect, “we’re all ok” doesn’t apply. I’m not saying that your wife IS an spath, but outward appearances are veneers that cover over some really festering stuff.
The point that I’m trying to make is that I agree with the therapist that she has to fix herself and that you don’t have any part in that process other than moral support. Your healing is your business. Her healing is her business. But, the core truth here is that there is no “we” or “us,” right now.
Brightest blessings
But we’re not really ok are we? we like to tell ourselves we can just forget the intense bond. and the fantastic intimacy. I remember how years ago when we were first dating, intimacy was kinda regular, more casual, respectfull mind you. but with deep commitment and love it transformed into more of a giving thing. as a man i had no idea it could be so deep. had young woman try to show me that before but she scared me and i didnt pursue.(idiot) I imagine its very intense when you are looking at a reflection of yourself, i bet all the protective barriers just evaporate.
So do i take the therapists advise and be patient? let her figure it out? guess i gotta huh? argh!