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.
Jello shot’s…..Oh Henry I can always count on you!!!
And BTW….HE”S HOT…..REALLY REALLY HOT…HOT…HOT and MORE HOT!!!!! 🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂 I don’t think it would take much for me to give up my morals for him…… in a NY minute!!! Just once…..would do me a lifetime!!! For starters he is 6’5……Tom Sellek like…….OH STOP ME!!!!
Okay Henry…those shots are getting me all riled up!
REMEBER EB…..Balance…..Balance…..
Shabby….same tactic used on the ex in court…..drove them nuts…..made them both lose it in front of the judge and lose track of what they were arguing about……all the lies…..dramatizations…..now, just because THEY can’t keep track, doesn’t mean the judge isnt!!! They forget….because in their minds….thier in control…. HA
At one point he also did the ……McCauly Culkin-home alone face rub/grab….you know both hands on each side of the face, jaw dropped rubbing up and down……with their insides screaming in silence…..OMG!
CLASSIC…..
You know you have been successful when you start to see the Home alone pose! Keep the heat on and knotch it up!
DIng DIng!
just once WOULD NOT do you a life time – where is my skillet? play safe………
Damn Hen….bring me down why don’t ya……
Okay…..ONCE……THEN A LIFETIME OF MR. Tall HOT, SEXY, TALL and HOTTER DRINK OF DOUBLE JELLO SHOT!
I am sure it’s all about a fantasy of MINE…..I’m good at those fantasies…..Lived one for 28 years ya know…..
My daughter was with friends and saw my car where we were….there was a group of us……She pulled me aside and said…..UH, MOM…….He’s HOT! THANK GOD she didn’t follow it up with….so howd ya get such a hot dude……I thought for sure that was coming next. Even the little girls were giddy! I had to skadadle them off……
I’m sure it’s just a Monday to Thursday romance….one I can alwasy hold dear in my fantasy bank…….I just want a ‘little- tinsy’ bite of cake……….
HOT….HENRY……HOT!!!!
well OK just dont do something stupid like FALL IN LOVE – a little LUST is OK
I always had a thing for Tom Selleck myself…yum
ok ok I will shut up and go to bed.
Matt,
THANK YOU for the affirmation. It’s a roller-coaster ride feeling empowered, determined, sure of what I’m doing, and elated with the evidence I find that exposes my ex as a liar. I even say, “Thank you” to him with each piece of evidence. Then, something happens in my head, and I begin to doubt what I’m doing. When I go into the state of doubt, it is like I hit a brick wall, and I become paralyzed. Maybe it’s just information overload. I don’t know.
With some of the documents I found, I had to search the web for verification. I was stuck. So I googled, “How to expose a Narcissist.” This is how I found LF. For two days, I did little else but read the articles, and cry. My tears were more about relief. I was in awe. Finally, a network of people who get it. Whenever I try to explain the complexities, even to my lawyer, it’s too much to absorb. Its too much for most to wrap their minds around. Just trying to summerize what’s happening, can make the “target” or “victim” sound like a loon. Certainly the phrase, “life is stranger then fiction” would apply. While I have loving supportive people in my life, now. Only a few get it – the psychologist, and two other victims of my ex. With the rest of my friends, I’ve learned to edit.
Back to my point… When I find myself frozen, or paralyzed and begin to doubt what I’m doing, I come here to read articles and so many stories that parallel my own with such accuracy, even to the point of similar words used to describe the behaviors, and the affects of such behavior. It helps me to stay focused.
Your encouraging words, and assurance that what I’m doing IS what will trump his lies in court, is exactly the boost I needed.
Thank you.
EB..
You are funny! Got a giggle out of me.
Henry..
Who doesn’t have a little thing for Tom Selleck? Hmmm… whew..
What the hell are double jello shots!?! love, gem.XX