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.
I do searches on Yahoo or Google to figure out everything. Or I go to microsoft.com and do searches. Sometimes if I’m really stuck I call my daughter, her husband is a computer geek.
Witty, I’m glad you’re getting a little peace of mind, tonight. I can’t imagine the hell you must be going though.
I’ve been through hell with husbands and lovers, but I think, when it’s your own child, it must be sooo much more complicated. The absolute ambivalaince, and helplessness must be horrible.
I know I don’t really have anything to say that can help you, but I FEEL for you. God bless.
kim,
A loong time ago, seems like it was a lifetime ago when I was married to my oldest sons father we went to a suburb of Denver. It was awesome… The mountains.
We even went to look at homes we were that impressed. This was before I had any kids. I wonder how my life might have been different if it unfolded in Colorado, instead of coming back home? We found a house we wanted to buy and everything…. (but didn’t)
Ever think of stuff like that? If you made one different choice in your life what would be different now?
I’m really doing pretty good to just be able to post something, and to be able to google. I have only just learned how to cut and paste.
I’ve only had a cell phone for the last two years. In short, I’m a dinasour and proud of it. I never thought I’d be that way, but change is scarey, and it requires effort.
Shabby, I don’t think I told you how much I admired your wit with Mr. Buffaloechips. Funny, but then I probably shouldn’t encourage you, or me or any of us…………..;)
Oh yes, Wit, but it’s complicated for me. I got pregnant and married at 17, had another chilld at 20, and had three by the time I was 25. I set myself up to be dependant. I felt I had no options except to kiss ass in order to take care of my children. I had never developed any sense of my own self reliance, and it was too late to strike out on my own to learn how to do it. Making minimum wage, at a fast food resterraunt probably wasn’t gonna cut it. I felt guilty because my second husband married me when I was 23, my girls were 4 and 2 and a half, my X never sent any child support…so after 13 years with him, ( a total N who had not only supported my children, but totally cut me down, made me feel like I was slime, when I left, I left alone. I left everything, and never looked back.
I still have nothing.
But I do have my children. My older daughter has been the biggest blessing of my life.
For the 7 years that I was with the last peice of work, I became somewhat alienate from my family, not because we were mad at each other, but because I was too caught up with him, obsessed, and I was cut off from my family because they couldn’t understand the craziness.
One of the biggest blessings, something that baffles me, is my children seem to be pretty normel, happy and successful.
Well, I didn’t set out to tell my life story, but I think I have.
I probably didn’t stress enough, that every one of these men were abrasive, nasty, mean critical, and ugly. They would treat me like scum, and ask for sex.
I have made this commitment to myself: I will never have sex again, as long as I live with anyone that I don’t want to have sex with.
Wow. I said a lot. Didn’t intend to, but I know it’s part of my healing.
thanks for hearing it………………………….(((()))))
Not sure I’m posting at the right place, but wanted to blog about my experience. I lost my husband of 25 years, it will be five years friday and my new sociopathic husband of two years is amazing. the slightest thing sets him off. why wasn’t I talking during the TV show, and then it begins, the list of all the things that are wrong with me, and then he tops it all off with what is wrong with me is my grief. it’s not him. it’s me. doesn’t matter what he’s said to me, about me or done to me, it’s my fault. i have been on this roller coaster with this man since we were married, exactly 1 month after, and i can’t get away. the cycle is so obvious to me and yet, i can’t break in. i own a business that is slowly deteriorating. I have made more made financial decisions than anytime in my life, with him encouraging me to do so, and me always left to pick up the pieces. i know none of this makes sense. i’ve been in therapy, i’ve been hospitalized after his last verbal attack, tried to kill myself. he promised me if i would get “fixed” we would have a good life. went through ten weeks of intensive outpatient. a week after getting out, it starts all over again. i feel like such a fool. i kick him out. he starts stalking, calling, texting, emailing, it doesn’t stop. then he wears me down, i let him back (into my house because he has no money) and here I am again. can somebody give me some advice to take the first successful step of getting away?
i need to add that i have nobody to turn to because my family, my kids (grown), my friends are sick, sick, sick of this. I am an educated woman that is living a life that you see on Jerry Springer and I can’t get out.
Kim,
Yes well it is always complicated to think about the order of things in our past historys…And its not like you can say, gee well I wish I didn’t marry this man when you had a child with them. Because that is like saying that you wish you didn’t have the child.
I am in my 50’s and I don’t have any skills. I have no college education and have to work minimum wage jobs to survive to this day. We do get survivor SS because my husband died but if my son leaves or quits school whatever comes first that ends right then.
I sell on a website now and do a few shows and that is what suppliments the SS so I can pay the bills but once that is my only income, I am screwed. With the economy the way it is my sales can’t be depended on as much as I used to depend on them.
kim, well you know the old saying… “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”… so if your kids are normal and happy that is a testament to you! Somehow you gave them what you were not getting yourself. We may have to examine why we made the choices we did, but with your kids, you did a good job! You were so young, in the situation you were in… you did the best you knew how. Now we know better, our eyes have been opened.
I was obsessed with the N I was with for 14 years. My mother and sister must have felt like screaming “why are you doing this?” They must have been sick of hearing about it. I gave him attention I should have given my daughter, one of my life regrets.
I often think of what my life would be like if I had made different choices, it is hard for me to live with the choices I made, I have to forgive myself someday, make a new life, but I feel so tired. I need a job!
I like your commitment to yourself!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
exhausted,
The only way you can get away and stay away is by being firm with the N/C (no contact)
when he is in your life he will have you in a “fog” and you can’t see the forest through the trees.
when you are away from him for awile he will lure you back if you talk to him. As you explained, it starta all over again.
No emails, no texting, no phone calls. total no contact.
Its the only way if you want him out of your life.
Read all the articles here. they will give you alot of examples of people who have been through what your going through right now.