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.
so, in light of the fears she is likely facing, does anyone dare suggest how i might best morally support her. maybe be quiet till she opens up and then try to always be calm? im really intense about this. i’m learning to tone it down but it’s difficult. and i’m not good at pretending.
Use “not invented here”? just sit quietly and listen? I know when she has had a hard day at work she just wants me to sit and listen.
RJC, This is a good web-site with tons of information about infidelity. Give it a look see, and see if it can answer some of your questions.
http://peterfox.com.au/fidelity.html
rgc112063, I had to laugh, but also feel really sad about your comment about the men of the community would take the one who clearly was out of line and “put the line back in ’em.”
you know what? THATS THE POINT. This is as much a SOCIETAL issue as a personal one.
In doing some research on narcissists, sociopaths, etc, trying to get SOME sanity back, one thing I read is clinicians doing the new and little research thats being done say this is a relatively non-rehabilitative developmental issue, meaning ie, developmental brain damage. Their only suggestion to those in relationships with people like this is to LEAVE THEM. I contend this has as much to do with society than the person.
I am a Christian and a spiritual healer and I can tell you, whenever I tried to talk to my ex-spath about going to God, to Jesus, this demon would rage out of his eyes and one time he actually physically attacked me and dislocated my finger in response.
Do not kid ourselves, people. Satan is alive and well and moving through humanity. My personal feeling is that this is a demonic illness of society. And we are in the season, as revelations says. Bu the outcome is a good one, but we have to go through it to get to it.
I like the “take ’em out back” approach personally. But what if society itself is so sick it can’t remember right from wrong anymore?
Peace and Love~
theresaann: I so agree with you.
My ex demon would foam at the mouth and shout: “What has YOUR GOD done for me and my life? Hm? I follow the true leader of this life and that is MYSELF.” He would scoff and I saw everything just like in poltergeist, except for ITS head spinning around and it probably did that when he was alone in the bathroom. He actually believed that HE was the one who could make it rain and/or stop. I am absolutely SERIOUS. VERY SCAREY PERSON. In the end, anyways…the first five years of the ten I knew him was wonderful….NOW I KNOW WHY. He was after trying to use me up and take what I had, including my life and my soul. “IT” stalks me to this day, although I never respond and never intend to. This is a very dangerous person and all of the warnings I have issued to various people, all of the pleading I have done to get someone to listen to me…it hasn’t made much difference, except I am safe now. And “IT” is in hiding, except for the intrusions he can now only barge into my life in the cyber world and that to me is CHILDS PLAY.
You are right about the ‘brain damage’ but it’s very difficult leaving them. You can leave them but they always find you and still persist. Years and years and years on down the road. I know this. I have been stalked by a ppath for the past ten years and locked into a form of Stockholm Syndrome. He almost devoured me and to me, it was nothing BUT pure evilness.
Society has turned sick, theresaann, and I do believe these beings are manifestation of the lessening of virtues in our lives. All of those ‘goodness’ things we have come to cling to that distinguishes us from the demons have went too far away on the way side and people are forgetting and becoming more selfish and self centered.
I was told by a prominent criminal psychologist that these people ARE brain damaged. They are genetic misprints.
They are not put together like us at all. That they are dangerous and the best thing we can do for ourselves is to get far away from them.
I found your post very startling because one time I gave it a silver cross as a gift and when “IT” touched it, it threw it back at me like it was garbage and if it had burned to the touch, along with rabid ranting. I thought that was kind of ‘coincidental’ and I have been through dancing with the devil itself. The experience was filled with way too many ‘coincidences’ and I especially notice that all of these ‘beings’ seem to have studied from the same manual. All of the stories all sound so similar, when they are being described; have you noticed that?
RUN: GET AWAY:
STAY AWAY no matter how much it hurts.
My demon almost sucked my very life from me.
NO MORE.
I wish you peace and safety and blessings around you and yours, theresaann: stand firm on what you KNOW is right.
You will be alright as long as you follow the ‘light’.
I shall send blessings to you…
above all else, you stay safe.
Stay true to you and remember your value and worth.
Remember who YOU are.
Dupey
Rgc, what do you think you should do? And, I am not asking what you think you should do to help HER. I’m asking you what you think you should do to help YOU.
IMHO, the therapist was spot-on, and she is NOT going to “get it” in any set time-frame, IF she ever gets it, at all.
Remaining patient, calm, etc…..all very nice, in theory, but you have every right to express YOUR feelings about this whole nasty betrayal – and, that’s what it was: BETRAYAL.
And, so she runs back to you when her affair turns out to be made more of ashes than gold doesn’t sit well with me. If she’s realized that she’s made an enormous error in judgement, is willing to work out her personal issues so that she doesn’t make poor choices, and is standing 100% accountable for HER actions, that’s a “good thang.” But, avoiding counseling because it might be more painful? Too bad – healing IS painful. It isn’t warm and fuzzy. It isn’t easy. It isn’t instant. And, it isn’t always pleasant.
But, true healing IS empowering, once we get down in the faces of a couple of our core issues. I don’t much like my healing processes, AT ALL. But, I have choices to either address my issues, or be the next spath’s doormat.
YOU…..RGC…….YOU are the sole focus of your energies, right now. How can you morally support your wife? By being truthful, even when being truthful isn’t all hugs, kisses, unicorns, and glitter.
Brightest blessings to you
theresaann,
the ex-spath was the opposite… not at the start, but at some point he started to talk about God a lot, and how he believed, and wanted me to watch the Passion of Christ with him. Originally I thought he started to display unprecedented Christian faith, because he had just moved to a new country, new life (with me)… like a kind of familiar thing to hold on to in a new living environment. Now, I think he suddenly showed himself a Christian believer, because he had found out that I’m an atheist… Just like he made sure that he cooked almost every day for me, and made sure there was meat, chicken or fish on my plate while I was a vegetarian.
While at first spaths tend to present the ideal match, at some point they make sure to go against your beliefs, ideals and values and see whether they can make you change your mind. He only succeeded in making me eat dead animals again, and I told him to watch the Passion of Christ while I was out to work.
RGC, this is a fantastic article about triangles, ie, infidelity. It starts out about triangles in families of origen, then moves into romantic and sexual triangles. It talks a lot about the three roles involved and stresses the importance of looking at the role we played in the situation. Finally, it looks at the triangle as an archatyple opportunity for growth. Really good stuff.
http://peterfox.com.au/family_triangles.htm
Thanks for the link, Kim.
I read like half of it and now it’s time for zzzz…..
Interesting stuff.
Dupey
Louise says:
“BBE:
You said it PERFECTLY!! Thank you”that is exactly what it was and how I now feel.”
Anytime my mind drifts and I even remotely think of the x-spath as have any good in him, I remind myself of specific incidents that no good person, no matter what their personal situation, would have caused.
Even in the short period I knew him, he provided more moments of drama, more Jekyll and Hyde, than anyone I have ever met. I also remind myself of his online profiles that are so immature, juvenile and full of lies, I am embarrasses to have known him.