Sociopaths who posture as insightful and self-aware are some of the most dangerous predators around.
When I use the terms pseudo insightful and pseudo sensitive, I’m referring to the sociopath’s manipulative efforts to seem some combination of vulnerable, self-aware, sensitive and compassionate.
For some sociopaths this deception is conscious, while for others it is so seamlessly woven into their modus operandi as to feel (for them), at least in the moment, almost authentic.
Even the normal individual, low in sociopathic traits, may struggle to distinguish his deception from authenticity when finding himself “performing” in a mode in which he feels masterfully confident and comfortable—for instance, pitching a sale; or making a presentation, or speech.
But what factors make the sociopath’s “insight” and “sensitivity” pseudo versus authentic?
There is, first of all, the manipulative function of the sociopath’s pseudo sensitivity. Authentically insightful individuals use their insight and self-awareness not merely to better protect themselves and their interests, but also to better understand themselves and others.
Sociopaths, however, always wanting something from others, oriented as they are to wanting to take something from others, use their “pseudo” insight and self-awareness for exploitive purposes.
For instance, the sociopath’s interest isn’t to get to know and understand you better for purposes of increasing his depth of connection with you; rather, his interest to establish unobstructed access to you is about positioning himself to take something from you that he wants—whether you’re ready to offer it or not, and whether it’s in your best interest to offer it or not.
In other words, the sociopath is never interested in you; he is always, and only, interested in what he can take from you.
This applies also to the sociopath’s invitation to appreciate his pseudo display of vulnerability. This may take the form of his “startling sensitivity” and self-awareness. If he reads you correctly—as someone, say, who values vulnerability and substance—then he may regale you with “apparent” evidence of his capacity to be wounded; to manifest sensitive emotions; to position himself as someone who’s “in touch” with his feelings.
As always, how much he believes his performance in the moment (versus consciously recognizing it as bogus or manipulative) varies from sociopath to sociopath and from circumstance to circumstance.
Paradoxically, a more “self-aware” sociopath will recognize his fraudulence better than a less self-aware sociopath, who may be more prone to denial, self-delusion, and the belief that, at least temporarily, he really is the role he’s playing.
Regardless, sociopaths play the “self-aware,” “vulnerable” card (consciously or not) ultimately for grooming purposes—specifically, for purposes of softening your defenses and encouraging, coaxing out, your vulnerability.
This is because the less guarded, the more disarmed you are—in a word, the more vulnerable you are—the greater (the sociopath calculates) are his chances of taking from you what he wants.
Now let me apply some of these ideas to a hypothetical, real-life scenario: Let us say you are on a blind date with a very charismatic, charming sociopath. There is seemingly very intense chemistry. He watches you in a very flattering, lusting way, feasting his eyes on you all night. He tells you how attractive he finds you, that he’s mesmerized by you.
Now he isn’t necessarily lying. He could be lying, we know that, in which case his manipulation is that much more blatantly and manifestly sociopathic. But it’s also possible that he isn’t lying—that is, that he feels, in the moment, that what he’s telling you he feels is true; or, that he’s convinced himself that everything he’s telling you is true.
And so his sociopathy can’t necessarily be traced to his lying, because in this instance he may not perceive himself as lying, and, in a certain sense, he may not be lying. His sociopathy, rather, can more accurately be identified in his underlying, preexisting agenda which, in our hypothetical scenario, come hell or high water, is to “nail” you.
He made this his mission the moment he laid eyes on you and found you sexually attractive enough to make this his intention. He feels quite thrilled—perhaps even a little giddy and delighted—that you’ve proven attractive enough (in a sense, cooperative enough) to elicit his lust, which now enables him to pursue his agenda with you.
I don’t mean to suggest that this is the only agenda our hypothetical sociopath could be pursuing with you. It’s possible that he (or another sociopath) might play things differently, by approaching his interests with more or less patience; more or less calculated, disguised subterfuge.
And it’s possible that our sociopath, or a different sociopath, on this same first, blind date, might have an entirely different set of intentions, warranting a very different approach to meeting them. For instance, he or she may be a golddigging sociopath—a financial predator—less than a sexual exploiter.
However, this is what my hypothetical sociopath wants in this particular situation; accordingly, he’s going to pull out all the stops to land you in the “sack” or, one way or another, land himself in your pants.
Because all that matters—and in essence, what it always and only boils down to—is what he wants.
And so our sociopath, on meeting you and establishing his sexual interest, feels glad, elated, even excited that you bring something he wants. He may feel, beyond that, primitive gratitude that you haven’t disappointed him in this respect. Nothing, after all, could be more depresssing, more boring and less tolerable than, on his having met you, his discovering that, alas, you have nothing to give him that he wants.
Incidentally, this experience—his experience—of your uselessness elicits any number of possible reactions, including irritation, resentment, utter contempt, annoyance, and excruciating disappointment and boredom.
It is bad enough (for you) that you are only, and will never be more than, an object to the sociopath. However, for the sociopath, the fact that you are always only an object to him isn’t necessarily a problem; it is when your usefuleness as an object has run its course that the sociopath is most displeased and agitated, and when he is most likely to unmask himself as the cold, heartless person he is.
However, in our hypothetical scenario, as we’ve established, you do indeed have something he wants: he finds you gorgeous. And so in his relief, in his gladness, in his heady gratitude that you have something he wants—something that he can now can set about taking—a psychological transmutation occurs.
The sociopath’s gratitude, on discovering that you have something he wants, becomes primitively transmuted into a form of idealization—of you!
And in his primitive, corrupt idealization, the sociopath is prone to convincing himself, and you, of the sincerity of his ebulliant flattery and appreciation. So much so that when, as previously noted, he tells you he’s mesmerized by you, he may mean it, or think he means it, and he may seem and, indeed, be sincere when he says this.
But what mesmerizes him is you-the-object, not you-the-person. He is mesmerized not by the substantive you, but by his fantasy of what he imagines you will give him, or what he’ll soon coax from you or, if necessary, take from you.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake, not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors discussed.)
I guess it boils down to…..
It doesn’t matter what/who you are or what/who you like…..
Actions over words!
EVERY TIME!!!!
My X pretended to be a Christian and he was a counselor and started off by telling me that I could have him be my counselor for free. I had been through a rough marriage before meeting him and I was very vulnerable and he used what I told him to his advantage. I ended up having severe mood swings and depression and even had to go to the mental hospital once because he used behavioral modification techniques on me to get me to behave the way he wanted and to strip me of any sort of sense of self. He took everything I owned from me, even signed my house over to himself, which I have not been able to get back into my name and spent all my money and put me in lots of debt and then after I left him for the last time wrote a letter to my daughter saying I was not worthy of life and he knew where to find me. It has taken me a long time to get over his abuse and gain some self confidence and I still shake and tremble when I have to deal with the situation he has left me in.
I started seeing a guy 3 weeks ago, seemed nice even dropped a CD at my front door after our first date with “our song” he had burnt on it. But guess what Oxi ” HE QUACKED” after 3 weeks he tells me with some pathetic tale of woe and sorrow that he lives at the back of his ex wives house, has no job and has no licence as he has lost it for 2 years for drink driving, 2nd conviction. And quess what I did Oxi “ran” thank god the rador is up and truly listening as I most certainly never ever want another relationship with another S ever again. 5 years with one has certainly taught me a lot about people I would have ordinarally listened too. Not any more! Great article as even today there were times when I truly believed my ex S loved me. He couldn’t show me thou! and not even his daughter that he abandoned, the child he said he desperatley wanted as the other 2 women only got pregnant to him to trap him and he wanted a child that he could be involved in there life and show the child the love those other women made him miss out on and deprive him of with his other kids. blah blah lol the only thing that worked well with that guy was his mouth!
I am a single guy whose career and social ineptitude has made my personal life a disaster. If you need to hear it, some people like to hold court by taking opportunities to create a panic among their social circle, and a single guy whose personal life is a disaster is a good candidate to create panics over, from the low-risk to the court-holder.
Something I took from LoveFraud is that while not everyone who has been baffled is a victim of bullying, all bullies baffle someone. By social ineptitude, I mean I can’t tell from looking at anyone how to frame what I have to say so that they can comprehend it. To use as an example, there’s a comic book about how comics work called “Understanding Comics.” There’s an early scene in which the narrator is portrayed on a stage trying to establish his terms. There’s a heckler calling out insisting that if the comic doesn’t have Batman, it isn’t really a comic. REAL LIFE IS NOT THIS GENEROUS. By socially inept, I mean in real life, people hide their detached “it isn’t comics if it doesn’t have Batman”-like preconceptions, so when I overlook these invisible agendas, others make their own bafflement at my disregard the basis for creating a panic that I’m a predator.
Having taken LoveFraud’s lesson of all-bullies-baffle-someone but everyone-baffled-isn’t-a-victim, I’ve made peace with my own account of my misfortunes in that I have yet to have any incident pointed out where I refused to clarify anything anyone else found baffling. If I haven’t baffled anyone, if I’m resolved to allow others a good-faith access to my agendas, I can say in good-faith I’m fulfilling my resolve to be a decent person.
I’ve purged and divested myself of all conscious inconsistencies and reconciled as close to everything I’ve ever said as anyone I know of. It takes a form of insight to do this, and only someone who’s done this can know how high a price I’ve paid to do this. It’s the only thing I really have. Without this, all I have to hold is air.
Now I’ve read an article here titled “The sociopath’s pseudo insightfulness and sensitivity” and from it I’m wondering if Steve even believes there can be such a thing as insightfulness that can be both authentic and purposeful. Someone please let me know if all I’m holding is air.
Hello Mike, I’m another Mike here who is married and also socially inept, I’m on break but will post more later. i read your post but for now it’s like a movie i’ll have to watch several times to understand what the director is saying.. when i figure it out i’ll bounce back around. Anyhow welcome aboard.
(TOM) The Other Mike
I am new to this site. I am pretty sure I married (now divorcing) a sociopath. If he is not a sociopath, he is definitely a con-artist.
This psuedo-insightfullness on the part of the S in my life just happened! I had filed for Divorce and kicked him out in November 2009. I was recovering very well by January. Then, early in February, he delcared his undying love, said he would wait for me to heal because he knew how badly he hurt me and told me all kinds of things about himself – his faults – that I had never heard him say before. And I thought he was actually gaining some insight into his selfishness and could change!! He said he was going to take the time to work on himself too so he didn’t repeat all those hurtful things he did. I told a few friends that he seemed to have some “insights” into himself and that maybe he can change. What a fool I was! Again! I know what he is. I just can’t seem to fathom it. I don’t want to believe I was taken – and then taken again. I did not let him back into my life, but I did let him back into my head and heart – until he turned around a month later and said “I’ve been thinking and I think there has just been too much…”. I cut him off and didn’t let him finish. I knew what was coming. And I knew what I had just let happen over the last month.
I believed his lies again – or maybe not even lies – I believe his “sales ptich”, his con again. I let him build me up again and this time with his pseudo-sensitivity just so he could end it on his terms. It is uncanny how he knows what will work to hook me on any given day! I just don’t get it. How does he know?
Even though he “dumpled” me in a way this time – which is hurting my pride, but I’ll deal with it – I keep remembering that it was I who filed for divorce and kicked him out of the house back in November 2009. And even though he sweet-talked me into thinking we could work on working things out, I still went ahead with filing the final papers for divorce and told him to get the rest of his stuff out of my shed by April 1. I did those things before he tried to tell me it wouldn’t work. I trusted my instincts this time and took the right action even though I didn’t want to. I know in my heart I can never trust him.
Never again. No Contact. I have blocked his number from both my cell phone and home phone. Email only and it must be business only (divorce, property settlement) and nothing personal. I know there’s a slim chance he’ll actually respect that for any length of time, but I can stick to it. It is amazing how much less anxiety I have now that I know I won’t see his number come up on my cell or my home phone!! I wish I had done this back in November. But, here is my “sickness” – I look for his car in my driveway and look for emails from him. Why is it so hard to disconnect? Why is it so hard to let go? Is there something speical or harder about letting go of a Sociopath? It should easier!! He wrecked my life emotionally, mentally and financially. He devasted my self-esteem. I got to the point where whenever we talked, I’d want to run for cover first. He was never physically abusive, but his words felt physical to me.
What more can I do to move on? I want to move out of state. I want to go away for at least a month – but I can’t. My kids need me and I wouldn’t be able to afford it anyway. He lives in the same town. I don’t go places I know he goes, but I have anxiety everytime I go out. I know I can’t handle him face to face. I can’t even handle a phone call – hearing is voice. It sucks me in. I lose my sanity. What is that? It is so frustrating! Will I ever be able to handle that? Or will I always be susceptible to a con from him?
This is all so overwhelming. I read the accounts and experiences of so many people here, who’s lives have been shattered by these monsters. I know this is a place I need to be, yet the thought of sharing my own experiences seems akin to chiseling Mt. Everest into rubble. 50 years of this bullshit. My life spent trying to understand why my oldest sister does the things she does, questioning my own sanity, my own memories, my own perspective of reality. The cruelty she inflicted during childhood…my depression, thoughts of suicide, anger, frustration. As I learn more about this sickness, and at last an explanation for a lifetime of the pain she’s inflicted on my family. It’s as though a Dam has broken. How do I deal with this? Where do I begin sharing, in hopes that it might help me to heal? How can I “rescue” my 5 other siblings and my elderly mother from her grasp? How does anyone recover from so many years of this?
I get the “pseudo insight/awareness/sensitivity” too… When he “reflected” over our past he said things like
“I was such an arrogant bastard.”
“I was such an ass – I toyed with your heart.”
He even told me how he’d contacted people he’d hurt in the past to “make amends”…
I told HIM, in my compliant, nurturing, caretaking-at-the-expense-of-my-own-self-worth way: “We were both young, you didn’t mean to hurt me… blah blah blah”
I suspect he’s going through his list of old conquests and stirring up the same kind of trouble he did with me…though I hope for their sake they see him for what he is quickly – and retreat far and fast!
He even made a point of telling me when we met those four telltale days that he had told his wife he had “no idea how many women would show up saying they’d been pregnant or had his child.”
Has anyone put together times where they basically “confessed” to you as if you were a co-conspirator in their schemes and past “accomplishments”… it’s the strangest thing, because in those moments you see right inside – the mask is gone – and he’s almost looking for your approval – for you to “congratulate” him on his deceptions.
Ravenlesstower
This article is brilliant. It so precisely encapsulates the sweet vulnerable sociopath I work with,before I understood through Love Fraud, what his modem operandi was with regards to women. I have observed this snake for the past 4 years in relationship to multiple female targets and full blown affairs. I met this “sweet”, “kind”, “christian” man at work. He has everyone fooled. I have only shared my insights with other targets who he was in the grooming process with. They confirmed my insights. He has a very predictable pattern of behavior, but because he works to keep things on the downlow, it’s hard for someone who is not intimately involved to see the pattern. Once the mask cracks, falls to the floor and shatters, one is treated to seeing the cold, abusive, and shockingly emotionally cruel human he is. It was very disorienting. That’s when I started googling what I thought was the issue…that this guy is a sociopath, an emotional predator, and the information, particularly from Steven Becker, succinctily supported my intuition. This S plays at vulnerable very convincingly, has fantastic social skills, manners, is supposably from a well-to-do family. He flits around like a vampire butterfly, grooming every attractive female at work. He told me one time he is “calculating” in relation to how he does this. He is an emotional predator who uses his position and a pool of 350 employees (the majority of which are female), to establish an “in” with women who are vulnerable to his charms because of their need for his technological expertise. He offers them carte blance to contact him for help, and this is how he establishes his “in” while complimenting them profusely, and acting very enchanted. He touches slightly to see the reaction. Tells them (with dripping sincerity) they are “Beautiful” and “smart.” He discusses “spiritual” matters. He drops a story or two about his “family” to establish his place in the community. Begins to insinuate he is less then captivated with his wife. He gets the hooks in. He asks a thousand questions (so he can better construct his personality to fit what YOU need from him). He is a smooth operator, impeccable dresser, with the intense interest and lustful eyes, his specialty is women of a certain age (50+) because they are must susceptible to his charms as they are divorced, or their husbands no longer are captivated by them. These women are, for him, easy prey, or the ones who’ll give him the most play. He has serial affairs, romantic relationships and potential personal relationships going at the same time. Sometime taking months (even years) to groom them. When he loses (or dumps) one of his primaries, he gets beomes desperate and starts pursuing in earnest one of the lesser ranking females to move tham up in the new vacated position. He will practically fall on his knees and beg. I’ve had him in my office doing that now 3 times. It’s quite entertaining, as much as it is bewildering, now that I understand what is behind it. Later on he acts like nothing happened. i’ve spoken to one other female who has experienced it. The last time he was in my office salivating, begging, posturing, going through his whole litany of fake emotions and lies, all that was going through my head was “sociopath, sociopath, sociopath.” Had I succumb, it would have been only days (maybe even hours) before I’d get to go through the inevitable devalue and discard again. The initial time I went through that, I was devestated, and blamed myself. How could I have disappointed this “perfect” man? I was heartbroken. Then, I had a ringside seat at work and was able to observe him in another relationship with another female co-worker. That one ended up in court. I’d be seeing him on the phone in the hallways at work, talking to a target. He’s just so slimey. He always has to flaunt his prowess. As he told me once “people find me mysterious.” Vomit. I am truly grateful to Steven Becker’s articles and insights. They are life savers. If not for these articles, I am sure I would be very ensnared. Currently, I still find myself terribly terribly disgusted and angry. Better that than a victim, but forgive my caustic tone here. I was emotionally battered by him.
After reading the part about Self-Defense, I am wondering whether I should enforce our property settlement agreement by having him held in contempt (and put in jail) if he doesn’t pay according to the agreement. So far, he has paid, but I don’t think he’ll be able to keep it up. Also, his car reverts to me if he doesn’t re-finance it in his name only by 90 days after the final divorce decree. I would love to take the car from him. He would get enraged, and I don’t know if he would come after me in anger. He has never been physical with me before when angry. If anyone has any advice, I’d welcome it. Thanks.