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.)
eb,
Well, no need to tell me where you’re going, but have a great time LOL! Lf is always around!
LL
Yea, been on a sleep apnea machine for about 10 years….and am a DEVOTED and compliant user…I feel like pounded donkey carp if I don’t have my machine. Even when I was camping rustic style I had a solar charger and a deep cycle marine battery to run it at night….it started seriously malfunctioning when I was at my cousin’s house and got a partial fix there, but came home and wasn’t working at all….so I was essentially smothering at night over the weekend til monday came along and I could get to the store to get a replacement while mine is in being fixed. I literally feel like I have Fibromyalgia X 1000% plus am drunk, brain won’t function right and ache all over….so slept 12 hours last night and that helped, but I am still punch drunk and achy….the masks and machines are difficult to get used to but for those that need them, they are a life saver REALLY…are outrageously expensive (sleep test alone is $4500 and machine about $3500 and replacement masks $100+ each or more) Back when I didn’t have insurance I nursed one mask for nearly 3 years and they should be changed monthly, or at least the face pads changed…I can’t do without mine without SUFFERING dearly, so I am a devoted user!
BTW I have my sodium intake down to between 500 and 750 mg which is IDEAL for an old lady whose feet swell if she eats more salt than that! Back to being a good girl on the calories though, so hoping the weight will start to come back down, I have been stuck here for a couple of months and not losing weight. So got to be very attentive to the number of calories I am eating.
Well, you guys have a good evening. I’m going to go eat supper and watch America’s got talent! Then go to BED EARLY!
Oxy,
You just proved my belief that without sleep you are NADA! I have two friends who sleep with the machines and have also been through the sleep studies. By the time they got the machines they were SO GRATEFUL FOR SLEEP that it didn’t matter what had to be on their faces or what contraptions and noises were necessary LOL! So I do understand that.
Thanks for sharing what’s going on. Good on you with the sodium! I hope your son is helping you out well with the farm while you’re out of commission, as well as when you were helping your cousin!
I understand how expensive all of that crap is. I wish our healthcare system would change some so what is necessary for our health would become much more available to those who need it. I about fell over when you said how much your sleep study was. Holy crap!
How are the duckies ox?
I hope you take the time to take care of yourself and that you’re back in commission fully soon!
My son wants to try out for America’s got talent. LOL….American Idol auditions are here in our state in July. He’s going to try out for that too. I told him he’ll never make it without a haircut 🙂
Hang in there oxy!
LL
Oxy, I know this has NOTHING to do with sociopathy, but since you mentioned above that your feet swell…..for about 2 decades I’ve had the most awful swollen ankles and feet. I’ve had many tests done, they never find anything…..I haven’t worn a dress in 15 years because I always get comments..are some people just more sensitive to too much sodium? No doctor has ever mentioned that to me. Did you have to just track your intake to figure out what your personal limit was? I have taken water pills, but they do nothing, but make me dizzy. I know you have a medical background….any suggestions? I am overweight now, but they were bad even when I wasn’t. This GA heat does not help either and the fact that I have a “sit at the computer” job. Hope you are doing well. My aunt swears by her sleep apnea machine too….she takes it everywhere…
Hi all,
Gotta add a bit of my story, so as to contribute to the primary motivations of a spath.
My experience is that each let down with a spath is cyclical, and that at some POINT in the cycle their being able to observe the damage that was done to me was KEY.
It seems to me now that in the end, whether the end of a cycle, or the end of an all out relationship, seeing the damage was absolutely essential to him. Made him feel powerful, desirable (because why would anyone feel so horrible, if not because they were losing the MOST amazing man, ever?!).
I have been in short relationships with a ‘variety’ of spaths/narcie’s. An angry anti-social activist. A high-minded reformer, who always knows what’s best for everyone. A counter culture spiritualist dancer, who sought fame and follower’s. A full out drug dealer. All of these men had a few things in common. One of them being that they all found the pain buttons, and pushed them. Each of them used the infliction of pain to produce a negative attachment, or a trauma bond.
The other thing they had in common was each of them tried to take me to a really high place of elation, before the pain. Like hiking up to a REALLY high cliff, before throwing me off the side. That, to me, seemed like a set up to make the ‘splat’ more dramatic and enjoyable for them to watch. And, in the end, it was ALWAYS the SPLAT, the bloody crunch of my bones at the bottom of the cliff, that they ultimately enjoyed.
Maybe this is an evolving manipulation for spaths. What I mean, and this is TOTAL wondering on my part, is that maybe they are SUCH failures in their young years at the ‘normal’ stuff (like connecting with others’, and love, and feelings, etc….) that over time they begin to ‘naturally’ evolve the thing they are truly ‘gifted’ at: hurting other people. Then they find the ways that they are even more uniquely gifted in delivering pain.
Like the handsome one’s collect and destroy lovers. The intellectually gifted steal others’ money and destroy students, etc…..They may look like sex addicts, powerful politicians, party boys, super models, spiritual guides, or men of ‘righteousness’. But all of them, in the end of any con/cycle of abuse/relationship, will always pull out the stops and try to inflict the MAXimum amount of pain they are capable of.
Whether this is because their primary motivation is to inflict pain, be in control, dominate the environment, win at all costs, satisfy their selfish impulses, or convince themselves of their superiority, I don’t know. I don’t have the ability to tease it all out.
I don’t know if the motivator describes the personality disorder. And that only those with the primary motivation of causing pain are the sociopaths, and all the others’ are borderline or narcissists.
But I do know that all the men and women I knew, who I KNOW are disordered, ULTIMATELY cause PAIN. And lots of it.
For me even those who have mild to moderate levels of a sociopathic tendency, I let ’em go. Means I don’t have a big circle of ‘friends’. But I sleep at night.
Slimone
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
DO YOU REALIZE HOW TOTALLY RIGHT ON YOU ARE ABOUT Spaths???
That is IT in a NUTSHELL.
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!! WOOT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I think Sky has mentioned this before here at LF. They bring you to the HIGHEST cliff only to WATCH YOU FALL and that is the thrill of it for them. To get you there, then to see you HURT!!!!!!!!!!!!
EXCELLENT OBSERVATION SLIMONE!
And you’re right. That’s the reason for the challenge of the lure/honeymoon stage.
And that’s the stage we get stuck in, also precisely the reason the spath uses it. Suck us in, devalue and then trauma bonding us the rest of the way.
Good for you, Slimone!
that was an EXCELLENT post!
LL
LL,
Well, guess being right on about spaths is better than missing the point about most everything. Hee hee. Though I still, on some level, wish I never needed to understand any of this. That none of us did.
That said. I think understanding personality disorders opens a world up to me, to all of us, that is SO much more real, and then so much more full of ACTUAL possibility and opportunity. We can find love and connection that is real. Knowing what is false helps us know what is real. Wow, that rocks!
ssssslim – ‘I think understanding personality disorders opens a world up to me, to all of us, that is SO much more real, and then so much more full of ACTUAL possibility and opportunity. We can find love and connection that is real.’ let’s flaming well hope so… 🙂 great posts!
I vote for LL as the best lf hugger!
Creampuff,
The American Heart Association recommends that 1500 mg of sodium is the TOP limit for most Americans, and the average is about 3-5,000 and I bet I was eating 10,000 mg.
READ LABELS and you will find that there is sodium in almost all prepared foods, so….I recommend that you go on a low sodium diet of less than 1500 mg and a lower calorie diet…check with your doctor before you do though. Get a check up. I use a web site called http://www.fatsecret.com which calculates your sodium intake and calories as well as exercise calories burned and helps with diet and exercise. I love it. Keeps me “honest” in my diet and I don’t have to write stuff down. You can be “buddies” on there and I am ox drover there too.
Son D is gone for the summer off working at Boy Scout Camp, so I’m holding down the farm by myself, but he’s only 12 or so miles away so in emergency he or one of his buddies would be here in a flash.