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.
exhausted, welcome to LF, sorry you have to be here, I hope you will read the articles here, they will help you learn about yourself and how to get stronger… and read the posts from all the people of this community, there is help here for you. It sounds like you need an attorney to make him stop stalking you, get him out! Then… NO CONTACT, you can learn a lot about all of this here at LF.
Dear Exhausted, It has nothing to do with how educated you are, how smart, how sucessful, it mimics addiction, and the best way to treat it is like an addiction. It is not possible to solve the problem and still dabble in it…. you have to go cold turkey. An alcoholic can not recover by thinking they can toy with alcohol. now and again. I know from your post that you want to be out altogether, so the question is how do you stay strong in the face of someone who is taunting you daily, when you are still trying to deal with your emotions regarding the issue.
I have had the same experience of maintaining my position through a barage of attention via, stalking ,E mail, phone calls, etc. I was still ambivalent about it, because, even though I wanted him to leave me alone, it felt good. It felt like I had finally convinced him that he fu–ed up, that he didn’t want to lose me, that I finally had control, that he would change, and all these thoughts were self sabatouging, and ultimately resulted in relapse.
It takes what it takes. You have to know, beyond a shadow of a doubt what he is, and where it is going. Come here and go to other sites about Narcisissists,Psychopaths, and sociopaths and learn all you can.
Admit to yourself that you can’t change him, and decide, honestly what you want for yourself. What are you willing to do? to lose?
We at LF will be here at those times you feel weak, confused, lost. We will be here to congratulate you when you resist… just keep coming back. It will get better.
kim, I admire YOU! And that is a great post you wrote above ^
Thanks, Shabby. It’s good to at least begin to understand what I meant to say………….Ha!
So how did the meeting go in Denver???
Wow, I’ve been so busy and preoccupied with my pending foreclosure, I forgot to mention it.
I met up with Justabouthealed last night. We went out to dinner with one of her friends and then hung out and talked for a few hours. We had a GREAT time. She is a great person–beautiful on the inside and out. She very graciously took us to dinner too, which I really appreciate. It was very exciting and to meet someone off one of my forums. It’s really an adventure!
Wow Star, I’m so happy for both of you. I wish I had money and could visit you. Maybe one day, when I learn to live in reality…
Sky,
Could you please explain what you mean by “when I learn to live in reality”? And how would this prohibit you from visiting forum friends? Inquiring minds want to know.
I’m probably more than a little distracted these days with the bomb that Citimortgage dropped on me. My negotiator disappeared off the face of the earth and I have not been reassigned a new one. The old negotiator offered me a 6-month moratorium on mortgage payments that ends on October 31. I was supposed to be reviewed for a loan modification before it ended. But I no longer have a contact person and no one there is doing anything with my case!
So in 2 weeks if I don’t turn around and pay back the 6 months of mortgage payments with late fees, I will automatically be in foreclosure and my credit will be ruined. I have called them every day and spoken with everyone I can talk to there. No one has any idea what’s going on.
I cannot tell you how much fun this has been. I really don’t know whether to just pay them back and try to preserve my credit, or just play chicken with them and walk away. I am so upside down on this condo that it’s a huge liability at this point. And my mortgage payments are way more than the market rents for the area. If I continue on, I will eventually be in foreclosure the next time I have an emergency.
I don’t know what to do. I feel like I made a deal with the devil. I have already contacted FHA and the senator’s office.
Any ideas? Matt?
Star, when I learn to live in reality, I’ll have money. I’m living on credit right now, paying credit with credit.
Yeah, so I can relate to your issues. The sh*t will eventually hit the fan. All I can think of is: what would a P do? I don’t live in reality or know how, so this is what I have to ask.
Ok, a P would start a new scam. I have the P’s scam equipment, which is a video camera and lots of other equipment. The P would probably shoot porn movies, not an option for me. LOL. I hate porn.
The P takes stock of all his abilties, equipment, and supplies and magnifies them to appear much larger. Then he goes out fearlessly to convince the world of his super powers. He lives by the motto: there’s a sucker born every minute. and he finds that sucker. That’s where I get stuck. I’m crippled by my morals. 🙂 Well actually, I got stuck at “fearlessly”. I’m afraid of failure.
I’m not sure if I’m making any sense today, Star. I’m feeling overwhelmed. I know I have the capability to do anything I put my mind to because I survived life with a P. I’m just afraid now. I’m feeling overwhelmed by reality.
I read a book (can’t remember the title) about how the mind deceives us. it said that most of us live in our own delusions in which we imagine our capabilities to be much greater than they really are. In other words, we are all overly optomistic and over estimate ourselves. The book also said that the only people who have an accurate estimation of themselves are chronically depressed. That’s me.