The sociopath’s imperturbability has been widely noted. However, this is a generalization, not true of all sociopaths in all situations.
A sociopath around whom the net is closing, who recognizes that he’s played his last card and finds, alas, that the game is ending and that he faces inescapable consequences—sociopaths in this circumstance may feel forms of perturbability, like anxiety and worry.
But in situations where he perceives his security (however unrealistically) to be relatively unthreatened—especially where his grandiosity and sense of omnipotence remain relatively intact—the sociopath can be curiously imperturbable.
Imperturbable, that is, in the commission of his violating acts, as well as in the subsequent striking sangfroid with which he’ll brazenly perpetuate his deceit even when confronted with his flat guilt.
How do we explain this?
First, I pose a question: Have you ever played a really cruel practical joke or, if not, witnessed one (with enjoyment), that left its victim torturously duped, perhaps even mildly traumatized?
I’d suggest that the mindset involved in conceiving and executing such a prank, even the mindset (as a witness) involved in merely enjoying it, is temporarily rather sociopathic in several ways.
I stress temporarily because nonsociopaths will inhabit this state of mind only briefly and experimentally, and then, on the assumption that any suffering the prank causes its victim will be experienced as relatively fleeting and superficial.
But I use a “practical joke” analogy because I think it describes somewhat accurately the sociopath’s basic perspective in the world. Life, for the sociopath, is something like a big stage on which to perpetrate forms of ongoing deceit to suit his shifting agenda for comfort, convenience, tension discharge, and other gratifications.
After all, at the motivational heart of the “practical joker” is the driving question, Can I pull this off? This is a question, among others—a kind of perpetual carrot, if you will—that compels sociopathically-oriented personalities.
And the socopath’s response to this implicitly posed question is felt, if not implicitly answered, as, “Of course I can pull this off! I can pretty much pull anything off! Watch me do it! Watch me get away with this!”
In other words, the sociopath’s cocky faith in his powers of chicanery nicely captures his inflated grandiosity and sense of omnipotence. To put it even more basically, the sociopath thinks he is good, really good. And in inverse proportion to how smart he thinks he is, he thinks that you are just as stupid.
This is the sociopath’s signature contempt, and let us not underestimate it: You are as stupid as he is smart.
In the end, the sociopath ultimately takes neither you, nor anyone, seriously. And it’s not that he chooses not to respect people. It’s not that he’s unwilling to take others seriously. It’s that he can’t. And make no mistake: his inability to take people seriously, in an authentic way, is a core aspect of his disorder.
Does the nonpsychotic sociopath, intellectually, know right from wrong? This is a frequently posed question, to which the answer is yes. Intellectually, the nonpsychotic sociopath is usually well aware that his behaviors are exploitive and violate legal and interpersonal laws and boundaries.
But the point is, he just doesn’t care. The sociopath just doesn’t take these laws and interpersonal boundaries seriously, because he doesn’t take you, or others, seriously.
And so this is where his imperturbability enters. When you don’t take others seriously; when, on some level, others are a joke to you; when a malignant contempt pervades your view of others, then you can have your way with them, you can use them for whatever purposes suit your immediate agenda. Moreover, you can cause them pain and outrage as you seek your own ends unburdened by normal feelings of responsibility, accountability and guilt, because you don’t just don’t take them seriously.
So you’re caught in a lie? So you’ve been busted? Big deal. So your denials are preposterous? Big deal. Let’s remember, you are slick and smart enough to convince any stupid person to disbelieve the indisputable evidence of your guilt!
And even if you can’t persuade them to give you a pass this time; even if they’ve busted you cold this time, and your normally reliable glibness doesn’t spring you from the present trap, so what? After all, there’s no shame or embarrassment to be busted by someone you don’t take seriously.
And so the sociopath’s imperturbability, in this light, can be seen as a natural byproduct of his malignant disrespect of, and contempt towards, others. It is a pathological imperturbability, not an admirable, enviable one. His is not the imperturbability of a “cool cat,” or an enviably placid temperament, or the imperturbability that can derive from a certain hard-earned wisdom, confidence and perspective.
No, the sociopath’s imperturbability is that of an emotionally, interpersonally sick individual who, at bottom, has no true emotional stake in others.
And so finally, in his relationships with others, what he stands to lose, through his exploitation, is felt to be as superficial, and dismissable, as anything he stands to gain.
(My use of male gender pronouns in this article is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest females aren’t capable of the behaviors discussed. This article is copyrighted © 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Witsend–Totally agree with the post above.
The predator I was involved with has a new gig. Now he has set himself up as a high end portrait photograph with a discreet little studio. How perfect for him! He has an excuse to be alone with beautiful women, to “establish a rapport”, talk them into a little more cleavage showing, and if that goes well, he’ll see how much more he can get them to take off….just for the power of it, not for what he’ll see. Makes me sick.
Mike said
“Lieing, betrayal, disrespect that’s not things people that love you do” – Agreed. But it made me think further…
Is that something that people who DONT love themselves do? Is it something within people who havent learned to love themselves AND who havent bonded, connected with others choose to do? Is there something that these people DONT have in them that enables them to do it? Like we DONT have in us to do what they do? Is it so cut and dry that these people are intentionally dishonest, disloyal and disrespectful?
Im in no way APATHETIC to this souls, and I am in no way looking for excuses for them- Im strictly wondering, the formation of them – we just say the reasons they do what they do is because they can — thats not enough for me … so I ask and ask and ask…once I get past the shock and pain and hurt and disgust — is it something people do who dont love themselves? And therefore have absolutely no problem doing it to others
Anitasee:
You wrote: “My bully is about to win….So, I am going to lose.”
I think you may be answering your own question here.
If I were in your shoes, and I already knew (or believed) that I was going to lose, I would NOT pursue the case any further. I would absolutely sign on the dotted line and let him ride off.
It’s called cutting your losses, and people do it in the business world every day.
Besides, it sounds like you will finally be free of him.
That’s a victory right there.
Maybe not the kind you were hoping for.
But, nonetheless, a victory.
If you DO decide to pursue this case, then you need to change your mentality from a defeatist to a WARRIOR… “My bully is NEVER going to win…..I will fight this to the bitter end.”
I would suggest that you take your pride and emotions out of this situation, and take a step back to look at it objectively.
Then make your final decision, without all of the emotions.
Because, at the end of the day, pride, vengeance, justice or whatever you are fighting for here, is not going to pay your bills.
Rosie –
Welcome to LF. Im glad you found it too!
Your post reminded me of something we really all need to focus on..
Giving second chances, third chances… after already have been put thru hell and back….we go back…
We ALL have…
We have to understand this as it being part of our responsibility – it becomes OUR CHOICE once we are aware we are with a BAD MAN — we dont seem to really process it – beyond the facts of what we went through and share it all – we then say — then I went back, or then I gave him another chance, or I just couldnt stay away – they start to charm us again and profess they are sorry and they are changed and will do better — we dont seem to be able to draw the line. And we get sucker punched worse than ever before. Each and every time.
There are some situations in life where if someone is truly sorry, they will say and act and repent and change. But when its things like lying to 3 women, or stealing, or abusing or any number of the horrific things they do and we rationalize, or internally deny — just like the things I experienced — and like Rosie and so many of us have — we just kept giving chances. WHATS THAT ABOUT? There are prob people that deserved real and valid 2nd chances with me – and I had no problem saying No and walking away == but I gave them to a Sociopath.
Rosie, thank you for sharing your story. For reminding me and others to think about why in the world we would ever give these people 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc…. CHANCES. When the reality is we are just not wanting to face the truth – the reality of who they really are and how we let them treat us. We should be giving ourselves the chance to get away –
Dear Anitasee,
“Winning” and “losing” is not cut and dried. There is a thread here about it, and encouraging to ocontinue to fight, I wrote one in opposition to it, that WINNING is sometimes just walking away from the fight UPRIGHT with all your teeth still intact. (you can search on this site for OxDrover to see my articles)
There is an old country and westernn song called “the winner” and is a story about an old beaten up and broken bar fighter talking to a younger man about “being a winner” and though this old man “won” the fights he was in, in each case he PAID A HIGH PRICE OF HIS OWN FOR THAT “WIN.” Teeth knocked out, eyes gouged out, but he “WON.” Sometimes beating the other person up at a hhigh cost to yourself is not WINNING in my opinion.
Sure, it pays a toll either way you go, if you drop the law suits and walk out you can perceive that they “won” or you can also perceive that “I walked away with my dignity and still standing and didn’t risk my entire financial future on a justice system that is skewed.”
Believe me, “justice” is not often in the court systems. If you don’t believe that Google ‘JUDGE GERALD GARSON” and realize that there ARE crooked judges and plenty of judges who DO NOT “Get it” about psychopaths. Or judges who ARE psychopaths.
I agree totally with Wits End.
Right now, I am fighting the parole of my own son, who is a psychopath, Delux version, and hope to keep him in prison for the rest of his natural life. He murdered a girl when he was 20, and a couple of years ago tried to have me killed by one of his friends (for an inherritence issue) and I can’t keep him from sending another person to try to kill me, but I can see that any inheritences he ends up getting will be spent at the prison store. Even this “mental contact” in preparing the documents for the attorney I hired to protest his parole is triggering me to some extent, but I DO know that I will be safer if he is incarcerated, and SOCIETY will be safer if he is incarcerated, because he is totally unrepententant and crimes are FUN to him. I actually have that in his own hand writing!
I’m paying a price in money, but also in emotion, to fight his parole and I know that I will have to refight this at least every five years and maybe more often…and if he ever does get out, I will have to pack up and go into hiding again as will my other two sons. In the meantime, my egg donor (the woman who gave birth to me) is sending the poor baby money and hiring him an attorney to argue for his parole release to her home which is located on the same farm as mine, knowing his background and still ENABLING him, regardless of the danger to anyone else or society.
What you do about your sitruation is for YOU to decide what the benefit vs the potential cost is worth.
Sometimes the victim wins “justice” and sometimes not, but each of us has to decide what the potential cost of winning or losing is. Good luck and God bless.
Hi, all:
Was also feeling totally blue because I realized that it was one year ago today that I got laid off. Then I started watching the blizzard here in NYC. I live on a very high floor, so it is sort of like living in a cloud. Believe it or not that started to make me feel better.
Anyhow, I went online to MSN.com and came across this article by Liz Pulliam Weston. http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SavingandDebt/ConsumerActionGuide/weston-4-reasons-we-get-ripped-off
If you can’t get it from this link, just got to MSN.com and go to the money section.
What makes this article fascinating is that FINALLY A JOURNALIST USES THE WORD SOCIOPATH. She discusses this in the context of how we get ripped off and she quotes from Martha Stout. A really good read.
Matt –
Wish there was a “likes this post” option here!! Glad you realized you are in the clouds today with a beautiful view!
Blizzard? we had a blizzard today here in blighty… I left the hospital.. and the sun went in and a sudden blizzard descended… horizontal snow fall, all whipped up and windy! I fought though the looong 2 minute walk to the bus stop, (my forehead froze and my ears nearly fell off, felt like miles!) the bus came I got on and walked up the aisle, children screamed, bus driver sniggered, I couldnt quite work it out… but when I looked in the window: I had a ‘drift’ of snow a-top of my head ( a snow fro!) and ‘kiss’ eye make up.xx
Blueskies – Hope you stuck your tongue out for the full effect!
Matt,
Good for you that you found a silver lining being high in the sky. From your vantage point maybe you can feel like a bird soaring in the sky above the grind and above all the sociopaths.
I feel your pain, I’ve just past the 6 month mark since being laid off myself…..and no real relilef in sight. In my vulnerability, I fell prey again to the S in my life again, big mistake….hope you dont fall into that trap too.
The sun, jobs and healthy love will shine again on all of us. Tomorrow will be a better day.