By Ox Drover
What’s the most important thing the sociopath took from you? Money? Love? Your home? Your self-esteem? Sex? Or, is it something else, which in my opinion may be even more important than just about anything?
The most important thing I think I lost from every sociopath I ever dealt with was my own confidence in myself to make assessments about people and then, reasonable choices about those people, based on those accurate assessments.
Many former victims have said that they just have trouble “trusting others” again after being totally hoodwinked and ripped off for so many important things in their lives by the sociopath. Is it others that they don’t trust, though, or are they unable to trust themselves to make accurate assessments of others they may meet in the future? I think it isn’t so much others we don’t trust, as it is ourselves we don’t trust to make good judgments of the intentions and sincerity of others.
Dr. Abraham Maslow’s “hierarchy of needs” says that the first thing we are concerned with in our lives is out biological needs for oxygen, water, food and relatively constant body temperature. These are the strongest needs we have, about in that order, because if we don’t have these things not much else matters.
The next need we have, according to Maslow, when the physiological needs are satisfied and are no longer controlling out thoughts and behaviors, is the need for safety and security. We (adults) don’t usually think about “safety” until we feel threatened. Of course after we have been injured by a sociopath, we really don’t feel safe at all. Our world of safety is upside down.
The next highest need of mankind, according to Maslow, is the need for love, affection and belongingness. We seek to overcome feelings of alienation and loneliness by both giving and receiving affection.
If our need for “safety” is not satisfied, it is very difficult for us to seek affection, because we feel threatened.
However, because we had difficulty “seeing” from the looks or behaviors of past encounters with sociopaths that these people were “dangerous” to us, we become “paranoid” of others, especially new others. We want the affection of others, but because we have failed in the past to correctly assess the dangerousness of previous people we felt affection for, we are afraid to get too close to others. It is not so much the others that we don’t trust, as we don’t trust ourselves to make good choices.
Not feeling safe makes it very difficult for us to advance on to the “higher needs” such as affection and connectedness with others when we fear that we may make another poor assessment of another’s sincerity and motives with will lead to more pain and injury.
Rather than working on trying to trust others, I suggest we should work on learning to trust ourselves and our ability to make valid and correct assessments of others. This may seem that it is the same thing, but I actually don’t think it is at all.
How do we learn to trust ourselves again? How do we put our past mistakes in assessment of others we have sought to have mutual affection with behind us?
I think we do it slowly by forming new friendships, first of all, rather than looking for a lifetime mate. We meet new people in our environment, or go out and seek to interact with new people. We keep our distance at first from these new people, and we look at them, watching their behavior, and watching for the red flags of deception in their words and actions.
We educate ourselves on what we believe makes a good friend, and we accept nothing less in those that we allow to become closer friends.
We look at people who are already in our “circle” and assess them by what we know about their past and current behavior. Does this person now, or have they in the past, shown less than stellar respect for us? What are the benefits versus the liabilities of having this person in our lives? Maybe we decide that this person doesn’t fit well within our circle of people we think we can trust and we distance ourselves from them.
Just as a child slowly learns whom they can trust by observation, or just as an animal learns that certain people are liable to hurt them, or that certain people will reward them for approaching, we need to reeducate ourselves slowly and carefully, and learn to trust ourselves. If we trust ourselves, it will be much easier to trust ourselves to keep us safe when we venture into “unknown” territory, because we will know that we will keep ourselves safe by our valid and good observations.
We will also know that caution with others is a good thing to have. We will validate that we respect ourselves and love ourselves enough to keep ourselves safe without depriving ourselves of the opportunity to have the love, affection and connectedness that we, as humans, need and want.
Hi witsend,
You will be surprised when i tell you what I was able to accomplish when I was still with the P. Back in 2005, I kicked him out of the house. i didn’t break up with him, I just told him to go live in the helicopter hangar so I could finish remodeling the bedroom upstairs – he did. I googled everything I needed to know about drywall and mudding and taping and flooring and underlayment. I bought tools like circular saws and used tons of coupons to purchase materials and taught myself how to do construction. I designed and built triangular storage drawers that would fit in the rafters of my A-frame cabin, taught myself how to make dove-tail corners for stronger drawers. He would show up once in a while and I made him do the electrical wiring. He was shocked, but accepted it thinking that he would end up with the house. All this I did because of the internet. But also because I was still in his secure little fantasy land.
You can do your own repairs too, witsend.
I know a Mexican guy who needs work and will work for really cheap. Maybe you can find a Mexican guy who can TEACH YOU and guide you to do this stuff yourself. It just takes energy and stamina and mental fortitude. It took me about 6 months. My xP could have done it in 4 weeks max.
It’s not that I can’t do anything. I just don’t feel that omnipotence anymore, since I left the P.
Wow, Sky, you definitely have Skillz, girl! I know it doesn’t seem like it, but that power you felt with the P you still have. Once you’ve broken the addiction to him, you will tap into it again, and it will feel great.
thanks Star, I was even using shady coupons at home depot and lowes.
They were 40% off! LOL!
Seriously, I’m like the master penny pincher. I never pay full price for anything and often don’t pay at all with rebates and coupons.
It’s my jewish heritage showing. My whole family is that way, but I just have more skilz.
Star,
Yes it does help to be able to relate to people that are going through it or have gotten to the other side of it. This place is a life saver.
I read that you said you can’t wait to be past the survival mode of this. I can sooo relate to that. At some point I would love to actually participate in life and not just survive it.
If I could feel like that, I wouldn’t care about my financial state or any other state……Participating in my own life would be GRAND!
Skylar,
Have you thought about maybe doing something with your computer skills?? (to make $$)
I sell on a website. And I don’t know anything about computers. I am as dumb as a box of rocks when it comes to them. The thing about a website is that they are useless unless you can get people to actually look at what you have. So I sold on Ebay first to get a following. Then I saved all my customers in my contact list and when I have an update I email them. It took awile to get a following but it is the key.
What would I sell Witsend?
Skylar,
YOU can do it! So if you can survive him, and you can remodel a house, a one gal wrecking crew, you are….THEN all you need is to figure out how to break that addiction.
You can do that to….That is your goal. The most important goal in your life. Once you are free from him you can do anything…..ANYTHING.
I laid a floor once. A wood floor. But I was bad at making the correct cuts. It was only a hallway but I finished it! Lol.
My problem is money. When my son moves out I will have even less. We get S.S survivors benifit. The money I make suppliments that. When the SS is gone I will be lucky to pay the taxes on this place. I also have medical bills and I have NO insurance. (he has medicaid)
skylar,
Well that is a good question to ponder? I sell country antique smalls. Only because that is what I know.
But I swear people sell everything on Ebay. They go to pawn shops and resale shops and auctions and even sell used clothing?
skylar,
You could also do a website that would be more of a local thing to advertise something you could do for hire. Such as what was that “thing a ma jig” you bought recently on craigs list. Is that for photography?
Witsend, Oh, that would be a problem if he gets emancipated. Does he know your situation? Maybe that is why he keeps threatening to run away? They all like to spread fear. Don’t let him know anything about your finances if you can help it. If he already knows, its time to spread dis-information.
I purchased a tripod to start doing some video work. I just need to actually work on it. I think I could do well, but it will take time and effort. AND DEDICATION. I actually interact very well with people. I’m pretty much liked by most good people so I shouldn’t have any problem – it’s just fear.
If you come to Denver, you can make a video of my snakes. In fact I would insist on it!