(This article is copyrighted (c) 2012 by Steve Becker, LCSW. The use of male gender pronouns is strictly for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
“Loyalty” and “the sociopath” are incompatible terms. We’ve discussed many traits of the exploitive personality, but let’s not minimize a very vital one: deficient loyalty. Clearly, deficient loyalty is a sociopathic characteristic.
A deficiency of loyalty can be disguised very well by clever, self-serving rationalizations. But you will not find the case of a true sociopath about whom you will ever be able to say: he (or she) was really, through and through, truly loyal.
Loyal? What does “loyal” mean? It’s actually pretty simple to define: when you are loyal, you “have the backs” of those who’ve “had your back.”
You “have their backs” because you want to “have their backs.” You are glad, if not grateful, for the chance to “have the backs” of those who’ve had yours. This is loyalty. It’s application feels good, and it feels consonant with the loyal individual’s “value system.”
Now, in some cases “loyalty” can lead to corruption. For instance, look at law enforcement: cops, corrections officers, will often “have each others’ backs—”they will often “go down” protecting their own even in scandals where, intellectually, they are well aware that laws were broken (by colleagues and friends), and the public’s trust violated. But they “have each others’ backs,” sometimes stubbornly and illegally. Their loyalty to each other may, in a rather complex way, sometimes contravenes other “values” they may have, such as ethical ones.
In a person of conscience, this may produce real conflict and stress. In someone with a weaker conscience, this may not be the case.
In some cases, the “whistle-blower,” who might “look” more honest and courageous than his seemingly more ethically-challenged colleagues, might be more sociopathic than his “corrupt” counterparts who, in snubbing authority and the law, maintain “the backs” of those who had his (or hers).
I am not judging this phenomenon in any way at all, just pointing out its sometimes complexity.
So “loyalty—”its demonstrations (and abdications)—can encompass serious moral complexity.
This is a case where, of course, not all evidence of disloyalty is a hot red flag of sociopathy, but “disloyalty” is absolutely a feature of the sociopathic personality.
And this is especially true: when “loyalty” becomes inconvenient, now we have something to evaluate. When it’s “inconvenient” to be loyal, watch the disloyal individual (and sociopaths) shed their capacity to “seem” loyal with a variety of disturbing rationalizations, and sometimes without even the need to explain. Watch them, in any case, emerge in their truer colors.
If there is a single quality, in fact—a single, true trait—whose presence alone virtually “rules out” sociopathy, it is arguably “loyalty.”
You simply cannot be “loyal” to those in your life who have been loyal to you—that is, be truly loyal to them even when it’s no longer expedient to be so—and be truly sociopathic.
As I said, true loyalty and true sociopathy are simply incompatible concepts, and will never describe the same individual.
Truthspeak,
I might have to admit, I may be the plunger……. eeewww. But really I am pushin that shiat through those pipes with all my might….. It’s sad. Septic Snake sounds like a better name than they’re coming up with in the DSM-5. I’ll apply to take up one of those open seats on the “committee” that are empty!! LOL Could you imagine???!! LOL Come in with a tool box. lol…… and LOVEFRAUD SHIRT!
plumber’s snake
chainsaw
i could go on…
kind of fond of toilet plunger….
something we could use on their brains…
😛
Chainsaw is destructive!! Very good!!
Maybe they’re just a screw.
(screwball)
I vote for dildoe because they use sex to manipulate.
o my!
LOL!! The name is just so catchy…..too. I guess I could one in my toolbox………LOL
My mom was an “N” and was super jealous of me. She also projected on to me. She slept with many men besides my father, yet (when I was 13…) called me a “hussy” because my mascara was on too thick for her taste.
She has introduced me as her “successful” daughter.
Give me a break. Who does that?
She bought herself a gift for thousands of dollars.
Then she told me she had a surprise for me.
It turns out that the surprise she had for me was that she bought herself a gift.
Somehow I wasn’t surprised.
I can’t undo the damage she did. I can only be aware of it.
Athena
pearlsbeforeswine
YOU WROTE:
he ONLY loyalty I owe is to my own integrity, and suddenly the confusion ceased and everything became clear. Perhaps this is selfish, but I believe in the quote that “loyalty is a currency best spent on yourself”. If a friendship or relationship ended it was probably not due to a lack of loyalty on my part, but rather because I was perserving my own need for well being and preceived priorities. That is not SELFISH, but rather a universal trait.
AMEN, SISTER!!! RIGHT ON!!! TOWANDA!!!!
skylar:
They do use sex to manipulate and my eyes are wide open to that now. I thought that sex was so important to him, but I have thought wrong. Now I know why it was only three seconds long. He would rather do himself than bother with sex really. But he totally used sex to manipulate or the anticipation of sex and then withheld. Sick, sick man.
Truthspeak,
Keep us laughing so we do not cry all of the time. Don’t stop, please.