We tend to speak of sociopaths versus non-sociopaths in pretty much either-or terms, despite recognizing that we fall along a spectrum of behaviors and attitudes that range from extremely unself-centered (even to self-sabotaging levels, reflecting poor self-esteem and weak self-protective defenses); to levels we would describe as dangerously exploitive (moving into the range of full-blown sociopathic personality, characterized by a troubling indifference to, and disregard of, others as separate human beings whose dignity deserves to be respected).
At bottom, as I have elsewhere written and stressed, the sociopath is a remorseless, chronic boundary violator; his regard for others’ dignity is minimal and shallow, if not missing. The function of his violating behaviors is to acquire something he wants with little, certainly no deep, regard for the damage he inflicts on others in his taking of it.
The sociopath knows that his behavior is “wrong” according to law and conventional standards of decency and, unless intellectually impaired, he knows “why” it is wrong from the same code of laws and standards.
He may be able to say, for instance, “It was wrong, or I know why it’s considered wrong, to have robbed that individual,” but he will rob him anyway, because he wanted the money and credit cards, and what he “wants” supersedes all codes of respect toward others.
Thus the damage he inflicts on others in taking what he wants is, at most, a secondary, non-ethical based consideration.
Just as importantly, if not more importantly, the sociopath’s understanding (intellectually) of the suffering he’s caused will leave him, unlike the non-sociopathic person, peculiarly (and tellingly) untroubled.
The sociopath, I can’t stress enough, is concerned with his gain, not others’ pain.
Now let me return to the point of this article. There are individuals with whom I work, not infrequently, whom I’d describe as, in some sense, “fall between the crack” personalities. These individuals have sociopathic tendencies. They are almost always chronically abusive one way or another.
Although they may not precisely meet every criterion of the textbook sociopath, still they exhibit, often (and historically) enough, the kinds of sociopathic abuses (and rationalizations of their abuses) that make them sociopathic enough to be avoided as assiduously as the full-blown sociopath.
Interestingly, these individuals can pose worse dangers than pure, unequivocal sociopaths for the very reason that it’s possible to find features of their personality that do not conform exactly to the textbook sociopath’s, leaving one dangerously more optimistic that her partner may be capable of the change and personal growth worth the wait, and suffering.
However, much more often than not, these individuals will lack this capability just as much as the clearcut sociopath lacks it. Yet their partners can find this especially hard to accept—that is, the virtual certainty that their sociopathically-inclined partner is as unlikely to make the kinds of critical reforms as the clearcut sociopath—because, in some respects, these “partial” sociopaths evidence certain capacities of sensitivity that encourage a seductive (but ultimately misguided) basis of hope?
Of whom am I speaking? I am speaking, for instance, of the individual willing to come to therapy. But you are much more likely to see this individual in a couples therapy situation than individual therapy (voluntarily). This is because in couples therapy he can more easily, craftily disavow his responsibility for the abuse he perpetrates than in individual therapy.
When you seek individual therapy, voluntarily, you are basically conceding that you are coming with some of your own issues to address that can’t so easily, entirely be pawned off on your partner. Certainly it’s possible for an individual to present himself in individual therapy, even voluntarily, on a purely manipulative basis, but this individual usually won’t stay in the therapy for more than several sessions and, moreover, he will quickly reveal signs of his flaky, dubious investment in the process.
So it’s quite rare to find a significantly sociopathically-impaired individual seeking individual therapy, sincerely, on his own. But I repeat: it’s quite common to meet these individuals in couples therapy, where they may also enjoy, on some level, the tension of the dynamic in the room—the challenge, in a sense, to compete for the vindication of their image and comparative innocence; to persuade the therapist of their partners’ craziness, or histrionics.
In short, the couples therapy environment can satisfy the sociopath’s tendency to gamesmanship, competition and manipulation. He can verbally flaunt his quickness, glibness, logic, gaslighting tendencies and, if he has them, his impressive analytic and persuasive powers; he can rise to the challenge of convincing the therapist who the really “whacked” party in the relationship is?
But let us not lose the thread of the article. We are speaking here not necessarily of the full-blown sociopath but the “partial” sociopath. And this, again, can complicate and, in some respects, worsen matters!
For the reason that, because he may not be a full-blown sociopath, he may be involved in the therapy with a “sort of—”perhaps a “partly genuine” wish—to salvage the relationship, and not necessarily for entirely selfish, manipulative reasons.
And so this can be especially confusing to his partner, if not the therapist. Who is this man? If he is showing up regularly for couples sessions, seems on some levels to love his partner, is capable of producing, seemingly, some sincere insights and some accountability for his destructive behaviors (at least in the sessions), doesn’t this suggest a candidate for some real, substantive change, if not transformation?
But the answer most often is, NO. To repeat, the individual of whom I speak is almost always, in the final analysis, no more capable of changing than the textbook sociopath, only his more human side creates the teasing prospect that he can, indeed, produce this change, when he won’t, and can’t.
Why? Why can’t he? Why won’t he?
Because he has too much of the sociopath in him. What is too much? This is hard to quantify. At what point along the spectrum is he too far gone to make meaningful, worthwhile, reliable changes, even though he may retain some genuinely humane qualities?
For the answer to this question, tune in to my next article.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2011 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed.)
Katy – I agree. Can’t beat happy ending or what I call a tear jerker. All spath ever wanted to watch was shooting/killing films. Maybe this is red flag. If I ever date again this is one thing I’m going to monitor!
The Full Monty was brilliant.
Katy,
Then by all means don’t watch An Education. You’ll be triggered and I will feel bad. The Oxford theme made me think of you 🙂 Love love love Waking Ned Devine!! Such a cute movie. Makes me long for Ireland.
Never saw the Full Monty. I’ll have to get it.
Gotta get my rear to the gym.. See ya later!
Dear Deb,
That sounded like a very “interesting” counselor—5 minutes ago is “in the past” we can’t talk about “the past”????? I guess you are expected to just “pretend none of this happened—in the past—-and start over today, right now? Nah, I don’t think that is gonna work for me….but it IS I IMAGINE just what the psychopaths would like us to do….and then when we are abused again, we just RINSE AND REPEAT, never going back to “the past” or the repeating of the PAST. LOL ROTFLMAO Yea, that might be good for them, but not really healthy for US (victims) LOL I’m done with ignoring the past….the BEST indicator of future behavior is past behavior. Tell that to the counselor. LOL
Oxy:
I just remembered…can you tell me more about compartmentalization when you have time? Thanks!
interesting discussion on previous page about pain or just collateral damage for the gain.
At first, when I accepted ex was a spath, I too thought pain was the collateral damage for his extreme egotistic living in the moment and his lack of empathy and deep feelings. I saw myself first as a means to an end: sex, money, traveling and social status.
But slowly it started to dawn on me that there were
a) several tells from very early on: showing off to me how he could pickpocket, having me not say anything when he conned a guy just for his cap, the condom wraps he pointed out at our door, showing off how he could get anyone to pay him a drink (even when the tourits wouldn’t do so for any other Nica). He loved the con, just because he knew he could. The cap he’d lose or forget a couple of days later without any regret or afterthought.
b) I discovered he kept simpultaneous love posts of me on his fb wall and his own declarations to the girl of January… It made me sick how intertwined they were in timing. Nobody would be able to see that unless they had both of us as friends (a friend of hers actually friend requested me in Feb as some sort of contact if I ever needed it) because of privacy settings. But he could see it, and once I actually saw it, it could only mean he had some pleasure out of it. And the fact he would delete my little love reminders to him when they didn’t suit him (new victim believing him to be single for example), shows he kept the other intertwined love reminders of mie intertwined with the evidence of his deceit on purpose.
c) His latest victim overheard he seduced women in order to travel. That seems a material pursuit. However, I’ve had learned from the Jan girl how he “forgot” to arrange his Costa Rica visa. Didn’t tell her till they were at the border. They had to travel back to the big city an hour drive away with the cab, go to the visa office, pay it, and return to the border. And yet she noticed he knew perfectly well where to go in the city to get the visa and how much it would cost. And I told her that yes he knew, cause we did it as a preparation days before we did the crossing. He gains nothing material from women having to lose money on double trips, cause the payments aren’t done to him, and the women loses money otherwise spent on his drugs, drinking and other pleasure of the moment. Ok so perhaps it isn’t his fault I had to pay his coming plane ticket twice, and was unable to get a refund on his first plane ticket, when he was refused boarding the first time cause his visa didn’t last for 3 months. But there sure is reason to believe he missed the train connection for his return flight. I think he must have had more money than I had on my bank account in retrospect, but again without being able to get a refund for the first return ticket I had to buy a second ticket and give him money to ensure he’d get to Nicaragua. There are other stupid examples where I lost money by having to pay extra without him gaining anything out of it materially. I can only conclude he gets some type of satisfaction or thrill of seeing a woman pay double or twice because of his negligence, and in some cases the negligence must be purposeful.
d) Though it didn’t work, I know very well a few instances where he tried to get an access to emotionally abuse me (other than gaslighting). None of the angles worked, but he tried all the angles. Yes, abuse is about gaining control, but it’s also about wanting to inflict pain. The emotional pain coming from emotional abuse is not just collateral damage.
e) And I also recall his demeaning comments about other people: those of his town, tourists, his family, and women. Yes, part of it was used to play the victim, but a lot of it wasn’t. He had no friends, none whatsoever (and attested to this actually on the first night we got romantically together), and treated everyone as a tool he could con.
As the evidence mounts I now fully believe that my spath derives plaisure by inflicting pain, by fooling people, especially good people with ideals. He’s in it for the hurt and pain he causes, not the money, not the drugs, not the sex, not the traveling.
Eb, I think probably the easiest way to explain “compartmentalization” in psychology is to google compartmentalization psychology, and start with the wiki one and then read the rest of the ones that come up….but basically it is where people take things and make them “black or white” to use as a defense mechanism when they are having to cope with something that is painful.
People with borderline personality disorder tend to use this a lot and many times they think that someone is ALL EVIL or ALL GOOD and there is nothing in between…it is difficult for them to see any gray areas in anything.
Try that and read more about it and then we can discuss it further if you have any questions.
Sorry about putting you off but my sleep apnea machine carped out on me and I have not had a night’s sleep in over a week. Last night I got a replacement machine and slept 12 hours and I am still exhausted….not sure how long it will take me to catch up and get rested. I am moving in slow motion physically and my mind is still FOGGY from lack of sleep and lack of oxygen during the time I am in bed. I literally feel like I am half drunk or drugged. Oh, the joys of getting old! LOL
Oxy:
It’s OK…I understand. I will check it out and then come back if I have questions. Get some rest!! 🙂
eb,
I can’t explain compartmentalization in the descriptive, sterile form, but I can give you an example from experience.
With spath, it meant that I never knew what was going on with his “other” life. meaning his wife and kids and friends and church. I was deliberately kept from that and only told what he wanted me to know. This was part of his control of our situation. BUT he also did the same thing to his wife too. She didn’t know about me, she didn’t know about any other women he was with, what he did during the day, his work life was COMPARTMENTALIZED from her because this is when he was doing his “dirty deeds” with me or other women.
We are ALL kept from his “hidden” life.
I think that’s the best way to explain it. A part of themselves is hidden from you deliberately to keep you under control and in the dark to what he’s really doing and whom with.
LL
Ox???
I wasn’t aware you were on a machine at night?
Sleep apnea???
LL
LL:
I am going out for a bit for dinner with a girlfriend, but I will reply to your comment when I get back. Thanks! 🙂