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.)
What a great article Steve, thank you so much. This really helps me understand what a hall of mirrors I lived in.
I too have a highly pseudo-sensitive/pseudo-insightful ex. For the most part he was cheerful, bought me gifts, told everyone how wonderful I was, etc. He was also very persuasive (is a certified hypnotherapist) so when it came to his sexual creepiness he had logical-sounding reasons why that was somehow a more “advanced” way of living than the monogamy practiced by all the average people below him. I was young and naive about men and I bought it hook, line and sinker. Saw later that he used the same schtick with every woman he tried to seduce, even used the same words.
After I left I got a lot of bs like “I am so clear about myself, I know myself so well, I’m so emotionally in tune and spiritually aligned, what the hell is your problem you emotional midget?” That was mixed in with ping-pong between sappy, often drunken sentimentality–forwarding old emails I sent with his comments added in, sending “meaningful” songs or song lyrics from 15 years ago, telling me how he’ll always love me and that I’m the greatest thing to walk the planet–and sneering contempt, rage and blame. The flip could happen within the same email.
How could I have left such a sensitive man?? 😛
I’m as NC as I can be, still in the extrication process but no personal or phone contact and I don’t see email until it’s laundered by a friend (he cannot shut up, and gawd is he tedious and repetitive). All I see are business-related questions. He has no idea that I don’t read all his drivel. Seriously, how does he find time for all this writing/song lyric searching/reviewing 10+ years of old emails?
My friend and I marvel at the fact that he’s still able to maintain a relationship with me, completely without my participation! A nice reminder that it was never about me anyway.
I’m only a couple months away from being free and clear and I can’t wait for that beautiful day.
Sarah999,
I think you and I might have some very interesting conversation about this if we knew each other in real life. And could sit down and have an open discussion and throw some of our thoughts back and forth.
I am not in complete N/C with my son. But since he is no longer living under my roof, there is definately less daily stress in my life. So although it is “awful” as you say to not have them in you life, it is by FAR the less of the two evils.
I do think there is alot to be learned of this disorder though by seeing it from the ground up. And how it “grows” or progresses from adolescence through adulthood.
And I believe that at the adolescence stage the “reality” that they live in really is what they believe to be the TRUTH.
At this stage the “hard wiring” of the disorder has really preceeded their level of intelligence.
So they really DO believe their own lies and perception of the truth. And much of the normal development that would normally take place is arrested.
And this disorder just continues to progress as they enter into adulthood. They begin to learn how to live in their own skin. And that power and control and “winning” and all of these things that you see initially, these just get grander on the scale. As do the lies.
Learning to live in their own skin is to an S/P/N all about self serving lifestyle. As that is how they are wired.
I see more often recently my son learning to tell “regular” lies, when it serves his purpose. He is learning of course that lies do serve his purpose well.
But those lies are much different to deal with than his living in his lack of reality. The lies that ARE his truth. There is a definate difference. Between the lies he uses to “work” people and the lies that create his fantasy he lives in. It was the lies he percieved as truth, though that showed first at 15. It was that lack of living in reality, and the strong MINDSET that the rules don’t apply to him. Just like this complete stranger that turned up here one day, in place of the young boy he was.
There is a progression. I can’t articulate it well. But I see it.
Dear Witsend,
I think you articulate it VERY WELL! Those fantasies that they dream will come true, they BELIEVE they can do it, against all evidence or reason that it CAN’T be accomplisshed they are so egocentric they think, honestly think it can be done.
Because they THINK and BELIEVE that their fantasy of being a “rock star” AND ” rich and famous” is going to come true, they don’t need to work in school or make a “plan B” because they KNOW that “Plan A” is a SURE THING.
An adult brain would consider some of the “negative” evidence that only 1 out of 30 million kids who wants to be a rock star and the odds are against them, but the morphing-teenaged psychopath knows those odds (rules) don’t apply to HIM. He is SPECIAL, the world centers around him. This is sort of like a “normal teenager” on STEROIDS and SPEED. That was what made it so difficult for me to believe he wouldn’t “grow out” of this and all I had to do was keep him from screwing up his life with crime until he “wised up” and then he would be okay.
Well, here I am, he will turn 40 in 2011, and he is still 15 years old emotionally, but on “steroids and speed and roid-rage” and hate and vengence, entitlement, grandiosity, lack of impulse control, and poor judgment, consideriing himself a SUCCESS, no less, because he can sometimes put one over on the guards and the wardens and convince his grandmother to send him money and “provide for his needs” after she is dead.
“My Child is an Honor Student in the State Penal System”
Oxy,
Morphing…A good word to somewhat describe what I was trying to describe.
Sometimes I am at a loss for words….I see this “vision” of my son growing into this disorder. Becoming ONE with it. I can’t seperate him (the wonderful boy he was) and the disorder (the evil disorder) as much as I used to be able to do. It seems as it progresses this becomes harder and harder to do. (the seperation)
I hate this. Because it does make it seem more and more hopless as time goes on.
Dear Witsend,
Unfortunately, it IS HOPELESS—and giving up that hope is definitely difficult because we have been trained to NOT give up “hope” on our children. To keep on TRYING with them. To keep on HOPING with them.
The bottom line though, with any other person in the world is that we CANNOT MAKE THEM DO ANYTHING—you can point a gun at my head and say, get on your knees or I will shoot your brains out, and if I decide the punhment is not enough to make me comply with your demands, you can do it. You can kill me, but only I DECIDE IF I WANT TO GET ON MY KNEES or DIE.
Or you can say, If you get on your knees, I will give you ONE MILLION DOLLARS—but if I decide and remember I DECIDE that the reward is not enough to motivate me, I will just stand there and you can keep your million dollars.
The psychopaths and enablers and would be enablers use both punishment and rewards to get what they want from others, every parent does with every child, but the psychopaths are not afraid of the punishment and don’t care squat about the rewards offered.
Soi there is no reward big enough to motivate them and no punishment sccary enough to motivate them, so they are UNMOVED by either fear or desire to please.
The scariest time I ever felt with my P son was when he was 11 and had run away from hoome after being spanked for lying about stealing and was being taken back home and he looked me in the eye and said, with the P look (which I didn’t know what was then) and said “You can’t watch me 24 hours a day, I will DO IT AGAIN”
I knew he was RIGHT, I couldn’t watch him 24/7, but I did find a THREAT of punishment that would anchor him down and keep him from running and I used it. I had never been a parent who threatened a consequence and not carried through, so I knew he would beleive me without question and he did for years believe me, and it bought me time. I was able to trump his ace on that one. Not that in the long run it did any good, because as he morphed into a psychopath 4 years later at puberty, he knew and I knew that I could NOT CONTROL him, and he used that to do what he wanted to.
At 17 when I coludn’t control him and I called the COPS who COULD control him (to some extent) i.e. TRUMPED HIS ACE again, it threw him into such a rage that he still wants to kill me for doing it. I honestly think he was KILLING ME BY PROXY when he shot that 17 year old girl for RATTING him out to the cops.
I guess maybe it is a dog-fight between the two of us about who is or was “top dog” and he is so turned toward dominance behavior that he still won’t give up the fight after all these years. I’d actually be glad to walk away and let him get out on parole and live his life (for a while) out of porison however he wants to, if he didn’t have the desire to “get even” with me for “trumping his aces” so long ago in an attempt to keep him safe. He is like a BULL DOG though, he has his jaws clamped around the nose of this bull and no matter how the bull bashes him to the ground or what happens, he is NOT GOING TO LET GO!
Midlife crisis
Mine did the crocodile tears too. You know how someone cries so hard that their shoulders bounce? Well he did that, but I’m sure he was forcing his shoulders to bounce, and there were no actual tears coming out. LOL
Oxy,
It is that inability to find when they are young that there is NOTHING as a parent that you might have as “currency”.
There is nothing positive that you might do as “reward” system that they don’t think they are entitled to.
And there is no consequence that if it is a negative one for bad behavior, that will work on a consistant basis. Because consequences for bad behavior just make them ANGRY. And because they don’t see any of THEIR behavior as unacceptable, they have their own PERCEPTION of unacceptable behavior (it is always others behaviors and not their own) it really is just a VICIOUS circle.
I believe that part of this, is their total “lack of investment” in the parental/child relationship that contributes to this. And the biggest contributor is their distorted perceptions of EVERYTHING.
Even never meeting your son…..I would bet on it, that to this day that your son sits in jail BELIEVING he was wrongly convicted. That he doesn’t DESERVE to be there. Makes no difference that a girls life was taken. His perception IS what it IS. And a dead body isn’t EVEN GOING TO CHANGE THAT perception.
I know that is how my son would percieve it, if he were in jail for a crime.
And that is ALSO that unwavering perception, THEIR BELIEF in their distorted reality when they are younger and this is BLOOMING and escalating inside of them, that makes this an impossible situation as a parent. Their perception is unwavering. Nothing you can give or say to them “soaks” in.
Its like taking the hose to concrete. The water just trickles off. Nothing soaks in.
Oh and another thing, his ex gf of 5 years who I spoke to, told me she’d never known a man to cry so much!
Witty – in your post to sarah you said: ‘I see more often recently my son learning to tell “regular” lies, when it serves his purpose. He is learning of course that lies do serve his purpose well.
But those lies are much different to deal with than his living in his lack of reality. The lies that ARE his truth. There is a definate difference. Between the lies he uses to “work” people and the lies that create his fantasy he lives in.’
beautifully articulate and amazingly heart wrenching. i am so sorry.
love,
one step
Silvermoon, that is why I will no longer use dating sites, no matter how ‘reputable’ they seem and no matter how lonely I am. If I ever meet someone in the romantic sense again, it will have to be through some shared mutual interest.
Those woman who are offering themselves on a plate, they are clearly in a very desperate place.