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.)
Oxy
you are far from dense.
i was reading through so many heartbreaking posts and it’s amazing how many stories are pouring in. i even got into it with someone about how Awareness and education is vital and made the error of saying that i feel sociopathy is costing society A LOT more than autism is.
Which i really feel it is, if you break it down, because if one takes into account how much billions are cheated from the people, how much are in power abusing their authority, how many families are being destroyed, how our prisons are full to the rim, how many lives have been destroyed as well as how many lives TAKEN, how many children molested, it just goes on and on and tell me that that isn’t costing society more than autism ever can.
i’m not saying autism research and awareness isn’t important but driving today along with my autism ribbon magneted to my car there were three other vehicles with autism awareness ribbons.. so even though there’s a lot we still need to do in that aspect we’re halfway there already. the awareness aspect is at least there unless somone’s lived in a closet the past several decades..
i think the costs to society are too great that we continue to ignore a situation destroying the entire fabric of society.
autism is traumatic and difficult to live with but i don’t know how you or Witsend do it. i’de rather parent 20 autistic children than parent one sociopath.
the emotional devastation of sociopathy is just so extreme.
my child is non verbal, mostly unresponsive, will probably need assistance all her life, but she doesn’t break my heart. most folks are worried about their autistic child surviving in this world because it’s too cruel and unsafe for them… WHY? because the world is full of sociopaths… the average everyday person will shelter a disabled individual more and are mostly very protective towards them… it’s the animals out there that will hurt our kids, and everyone else.. why is it taboo to talk about it as if it isn’t a problem that is affecting everyone?
autism isn’t striking everyone or making as much of an impact to society on all levels as sociopathy is. i’ve come to feel- reading headlines, and listening to the news and clipping out information that there is not such a thing as a person who isn’t in some way or form either directly or indirectly a victim of sociopathy.
and just catching up to posts and reading stories it just seems like more needs to be done and people need to talk about it, not just here. so why would it seem inappropriate to have a sociopath awareness booth in a autism conference? like aren’t autistics affected by sociopaths? bullied by them, robbed by them, abused by them? isn’t that what folks mean when they say things like “i can accept that my child is autistic and will be for life, it’s my autistic child in the world with cruel people that i’m worried about..” and the concern is not so much of the care they would need but many times how they would be abused by folks ‘out there’. anyhow maybe it was a stupid idea to have informational flyers about.. even though the numbers are that disabled individuals are 90% being abused or will be abused. so who is doing the abusing? let’s just ask who would single out the most vulnerbale and start talking about “it” sociopathy and all it’s variations is all i’m asking other folks okay so it was an autistic forum, it just affects everyone ‘including’ the autistic community. now i’m digressing from what i was originally talking about and just venting a bit.
is there a ASPD awareness ribbon out there yet? if not we need to desisgn one.
oh yeah so i was reading posts (even if i didn’t have time to post). but Mike’s post was a bit of a speed bump to me as I was like Huh? and i guess folks didn’t know what he was saying either so i felt a need to get back to it.
Mike
Witty, I posted a comment and lost it! I wanted to say that, yes, I remeber her saying, to her teacher,”I feel like I’M HERE” that is no mistake…Alice Walker inthe color pourple did the same thing….That was Ceely’s great awakening
…she was able to tell Mr., I”M here. In Blues music, the only music that has its roots in Amirica, it’s considered a homagr to the one who went before to quote them, but not quite, to use it, but twist it, and I’m sure that is what happened. You are so right on, yes, her healing started then…but it continued, too, ….
Thanks, Autistic souls,
You make a VERY VALID POINT. Autistic children/adults don’t go out and get elected to public office so they can abuse the public trust now do they? They don’t wind up in prison for murder or robbery or beating up little old ladies. You are RIGHT ON, and the “awareness” part is SURE a big ROAD BUMP because the professionals who diagnose and “treat” (that’s a joke) this problem with psychopaths can’t AGREE on what the symptoms are. Or the NAME FOR IT! That is one big reason this new DSM V is such a BIG DEAL! Hopefully the AWARENESS at least among professionals will increase.
Last night on LAW AND ORDER, CRIMINAL INTENT, I saw a show where a guy was “diagnosed” by the PCL-R score and was LABELED a psychopath on the show. He was a murderer but he was a “nice guy” and his GF was DUPED into lying to give him an alibi. Even after he was proven a P in court and proven a murderer she still clung to him as he was taken off to prison for life, crying.
There was a time I would have been that way with my P-son, convinced he was not a monster that the law KNEW HE WAS. It is hard to accept that your own flesh and blood is not only incapable of “living a normal life” (whatever that is!) but is incapable of ANYTHING RESEMBLING HUMANITY except looks.
I agree with you wholeheartedly, I would trade kids with you in a heart beat. There was a time when I would gladly have traded places with the woman whose child was murdered by mine. It was for SELFISH REASONS though because she (the mother of the murdered girl) had community support and so on, and I had nothing but my own grief and no community support. Only scorn and blame and shame, I felt, if others had known.
Now, I would still gladly trade places with her, but for a different set of reasons, I think. I hope that poor woman has been able to move on in her life after she lost her child to murder, and I hope she has come to some peace. I wish there was some way I could comfort her, and maybe if she hears that I have protested his parole that will give her some peace, to know that someone does care. I heard that she drove by the house where my son lived with his cousin before the murder, and screamed out the window of her car. I can’t even imagine how much pain she must have been in. Or how much she must have hated my son and/or his family.
You are right, Mike, that the damage, and I would say 99.9% of all the “bad things” in the world are done by psychopaths. All the pain and suffering from crime and emotional and physical abuse is from people who are either outright psychopaths or high in the traits. Without them crime would almost vanish, child abuse, sexual abuse, you name the pain, and without psychopaths it would be GONE. It would be HEAVEN ON EARTH! All we would have to cope with would be cancer, broken legs and flat tires. No wars, no starvation, no stealing, Gosh! Wouldn’t that be wonderful! Everyone would be kind to each other and helpful and caring! And the tooth fairy and the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus would all throw us a party! Thanks, Mike, ((((Big hugs)))))
what part of the movie moved you the most? I had several.
well, I think when she finally realized how fucked -up her life was, when she realized that not only had she been raped by her father, abandned by her mother, but infected by HIV, and she asked, “why me?’….but then went on to say, “nobody has ever loved me”….
I saw Precious a few months ago so my details may be a little fuzzy, but thought the same thing about the mother: classic spath. The scene in Mariah Carey’s office was so intense and I felt my spine stiffen as the mother essentially blamed her daughter when she said “who was gonna love me?” If I didn’t have the experience I’ve had with a n/s I might have viewed that with more compassion…maybe seen it as a breakthrough for the mother…but as is all I could think was, RUN!!! I’ve seen those crocodile tears too many times.
yeah, that was for sure a moment….another one that was disturbing to me was when the grandmother came over with her child so her mother could do her “performance” in front of the welfare woman….It really bothered me that her grandmother had enough awareness to take care of Precious’s child but LEAVE Precious there with her mother to fend for herself. Probably knowing who the FATHER of the child was as well.
Yes, BlackDeer…the sceen wa so well done, I started to empathize with the mother…but, that is why everyone should see this movie….
Oh I was soooooo angry at the mother when she said that….
Lol…Oxy even in your pain I can laugh with you!
The Tooth Fairy et al….wouldn’t it be nice to have gone through those phases so innocently. I gave my best efforts to preserve those “illusions” of goodness in the world with my kids.
I think, I know exactly what you mean by trading places with the Mom. HOWEVER, and I may be overstepping here, you said you wanted her to know someone cares. You already know she had people to care. I think more importantly, it will help her to know that YOU CARE!…
I apologize if you have already tried. It just sounded like you haven’t actually tried to do this directly.
It may be the catalyst you need even if she doesn’t respond in kind. It may be just what she needs to truly let go of a most horrific tragedy.
Again, Oxy, my apologies if I speak out of turn.
I have a great deal of respect for you!!! even though we have never met!!!
(((hugs))) and Prayers to YOU!!!
I have said more than a few times(and I don’t wish my children dead)that it would be easier to come to terms with their death than live this living hell.
You are an encouragement to ALL and I’m sorry you have this burden to bare!