(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.
Re Mothers…
Being the victim/survivor of a psychopath can do many things to a mother’s mental health and ability to parent. I sure as hell gave it all I had and then some more trying to do right by my children in spite of being an abused child and giving them a spath father. I know because I am now the accused. I was told, “You were a wonderful mother when I was growing up but you have changed.” Yes, I changed when she forced it back into my life and I stopped protecting her from the truth. NC from my daughter. for going on 6 months. Grandchildren forced into NC too against their will. Everything leading up to this turned me into a literal BITCH snarling to protect her litter from the evil. She was acting like him and justifying his behavior to me. She is in a trance and therapy must be blaming me too. Be careful you do not blame the victim. The spath is counting on you to do that for him. I took responsibility for my faults so she stopped telling me what they are. It is now just NC, She does not want to take sides. Ironic but not funny! She wants to believe both of us; she wants oil and water to mix; she wants empath and spath to get along. And God help me, I did for 30 years and if I could continue without selling my soul I would do it now.
oh betsybugs, you have been through it. 🙁
I am not sure where to post this question, and I don’t know how to start a new thread (or, even if it’s possible), but something happened today.
We are all now sadly aware of what happened ….. CappuccinoQueen’s son passed away. What a terrible, terrible, unimaginable loss.
By coincidence, I spoke to a relative of mine. He works for the court as a mediator. This is unpaid work, he is a citizen volunteer and has done this for decades. He has had some training about how to mediate, but not on personality disorders.
In any case, he mentioned to me that he mediated a case where the father just got out of prison, and wanted to have visitation with his young child. The mother had sole custody. He also told me why the man was in prison.
I flew into a panic. I mentioned CapQueen’s story. I told him that people like that ex-con are not like him, and are not like me, and they do not have a conscience or empathy. I blabbed on. But I realize that words do NOT make a person understand. I mean, truly understand. At least, I don’t think my words did. He was listening, but I don’t think he really GOT it.
What works?
What helps somebody really get it?
A while ago I was asking on this site if anybody could draft a letter that we could give to a girlfriend or a unwitting victim. In a similar vein, I wonder what I can give this relative.
a) Order a copy of “Without a Conscience””?
b) Rent the movie “The Talented Mr. Ripley”? Or “Rebecca”?
I am really at a loss. I think it’s important that this message get across in a simple way, and I don’t know how to do that.
Athena
callmeathena,
I can think of only one thing that would work, but it is unethical. You would have to traumatize/abuse the mediators (deliberately, as part of their training). They would have to have the wool pulled completely over their eyes, then experience self doubt, anxiety, and then be blamed for having consented to the training and told that they can’t back out or they will get a bad job reference. The trainees would experience anger and be powerless to do anything about it because they need the job. Worse yet, they will see their abusers getting off scot free. Anyone they try to tell about the experience will not believe them. They have to have their sense of reality turned upside down. Get a huge hole blown through their existing paradigm. Learn that they, too, can be fooled by a smooth-talking snake.
I just don’t think there is any substitute for living this.
I mean this seriously. I read “People of the Lie” many years ago and was fascinated by it, yet I still didn’t get it, still didn’t see the red flags when MY spath appeared in my life. It all seemed too farfetched to me.
The best I think you can do is warn your relative and maybe direct him here.
I don’t follow this post daily, but who the heck is CappuccinoQueen? I have learned that the best thing to do, whether in court, or in conveying your story, is to tell your truth, from the start. It will take some time on your part, getting all the facts written, then editing and condensing. You want to convey your feelings, from your side. Take all the major facts, without unnecessary babbling, anything that will create a sympathetic reaction from the reader. This has never failed me, whether it was to unemployment telling about a spathic employer, or otherwise. It is what lawyers do, state the facts, get sympathy. Remember to keep it brief while stating all the collective facts, otherwise you will lose the attention of the listening party, and lose credibility.
I did not know what I was dealing with until I saw the movie, Sleeping with the Enemy. It was the story of my life but I did not get the happy ending. I do not know how to get anyone to understand until they have lived it. Even therapists who have not lived it do to really get it.
20 years,
I read People of the Lie as I was trying to understand why my spath lied so much. But as you said, “it was too farfetched.”
Betsybugs,
I saw “Sleeping with the Enemy” sitting next to my spath. Again, I just thought, “crazy movie, who does that?”
LOL. There I was, living with a poltergeist and never knew it.
I guess the smell should have cued me. lol.
I agree with you Truthspeak, only the experience can convey what we have encountered. And you know, it makes sense because I believe that the spaths do what they do, because it is the ONLY way for them to communicate what they are feeling inside. They want us to feel what they feel and it can only be done by sliming us. They want us to feel their shame, which they stopped feeling years ago, but yet it still is eating them alive, in the form of envy.
Skylar, You thought, “People of the Lie” was far-fetched? Really? I thought it was profound.
Kim,
I was 17 when I read it and he kept talking about evil. Everybody knows only the devil is evil right?
He talked about demons, possession and exorcism. But I didn’t see any horns or pitchforks or tails, so I thought it was about something that had nothing to do with me.
I read a quote on another web-site….I think it was Casseopia, but not sure, and I am paraphrasing:
The smartest thing the devil ever did, was convince you that the devil doesn’t exist. Now that’s something.