As we think about sociopaths, let’s remember that they can make diverse presentations, which can make it hard to know if (and when) you’re dealing with one.
Although sociopathy is a personality disorder, it’s complicated by the fact that sociopaths have widely diverse personalities.
There are smart sociopaths and dumb sociopaths; gregarious sociopaths and more withdrawn sociopaths; engaging sociopaths and paranoid sociopaths; calculating sociopaths and more impulsive sociopaths; socially skilled, and socially unskilled sociopaths.
There are charismatic sociopaths and sociopaths with dull personalities. There are sociopaths who may leave you feeling remarkably comfortable, and sociopaths who may leave you feeling extremely creeped-out.
Some sociopaths are physically violent personalities, while others are no more prone to violence than you or I.
Given this diversity among them, what, then, do sociopaths have in common?
I take a stab, below, at answering this question, which itself isn’t so cut and dried. But what follow are some qualities that I believe all sociopaths have in common.
All sociopaths are emotionally shallow.
While sociopaths don’t have a patent on emotional shallowness (nonsociopaths can be emotionally shallow), they do have this terrain thoroughly covered. All sociopaths, without exception, are emotionally shallow.
It’s not that sociopaths don’t have and feel emotions. They are human beings, inclined as they are to transgress others. They want things. They feel their discomforts, pleasures, cravings.
But what sociopaths lack, fundamentally, is emotional interest in others. They may be interested in what others have [for them]; that is, what others have [for them] may evoke, and even stimulate, their emotions. However, they are not interested, genuinely, in who others are.
The sociopath, for instance, may recognize, and even pay very close attention, to your mood. But his interest in your mood will hinge on how your mood affects his agenda.
He is like the amoral child who, watching his mother and shrewdly detecting her vigilant energy, decides it’s not a good time to lift the five-dollar bill off the kitchen counter. He has read her carefully, and perhaps accurately. But his interest in her state of mind, and emotions, is limited to the advancement of his agenda.
All sociopaths are disloyal individuals.
I see this as a truism about sociopaths. Sociopaths may seem and even act loyal, but only so long as they calculate that the cost of their loyalty hasn’t yet exceeded its benefit [to them].
As soon as the sociopath discerns that the cost of his loyalty exceeds the advantage, he betrays those to whom he’d apparently been “loyal.”
His self-interest, in other words, is paramount, and supercedes his capacity for self-sacrifice.
All sociopaths are habitual transgressors (without meaningful remorse) of others’ boundaries.
Whether calculating or more impulse-driven, sociopaths are habitual boundary violators, without genuine remorse for their hurtful effect on others. Some (not all) sociopaths “get off” on their exploitation—meaning that, for them, the process of exploiting is the motive force that drives their exploitation.
Sociopaths may be childishly fascinated by the exercising of their power to “push the envelope,” to “pull off” capers and dodge accountability.
Their lack of remorse—lack, indeed, of any form of genuine accountability—is one of the perplexing aspects of this personality disorder. And there’s probaby not a single explanation for this.
All sociopaths grossly lack compassion.
A lack of empathy is commonly ascribed to sociopaths, but I sometimes wonder if the sociopath’s lack of compassion isn’t a more germane descriptor.
Part of the problem with empathy is that people view it differently—arguably, there are different “types” of empathy that elude a single, unifying definition.
You will sometimes hear people say about sociopaths that, rather than lacking empathy, they actually use their empathy exploitively. I don’t see it that way. I view a mindset of empathy as the antithesis of the exploitive mindset—thus, someone feeling empathic (by my definition of empathy) could not use his empathy to exploit. That would be logically impossible.
But I think we escape this definitional confusion altogether when we consider sociopaths and the issue of compassion. In this regard, I assert that all sociopaths lack genuine compassion for others.
I’m suggesting that, even more than his empathic deficiency, the sociopath’s gross lack of compassion enables his infamous abuse of others’ dignity and space.
(See an upcoming post, Sociopathy: A Disorder of Compassion, for an elaboration of this idea.)
All sociopaths lack appropriate shame.
Sociopaths’ deficient levels of shame support their exploitive tendencies. Shame gives us pause, and sociopaths do very little “pausing.” Most of us contemplate the factor of shame, or prospective shame, in the decisions we make.
Our automatic, often unconscious review of how shameful we’re likely to feel following a chosen action allows us to think twice before executing it. It gives us room to cancel a plan whose execution we deem, on reflection and in anticipation, risks reigning shame down upon us.
Sociopaths lack shame to fear. Lacking shame to fear disinhibits them from pursuing destructive ideas that the rest of us, more often than not, will “pass” at.
Sociopaths are audacious personalties.
As I’ve indicated in several LoveFraud pieces, there is something audacious about the sociopath. He is prone to behaviors that leave the rest of us, whether as victims or witnesses, shaking one’s head. His levels of gall, hubrus are astonishing.
Where the nonsociopath, as just discussed, will find opportunities to scrap a bad plan, the sociopath is more likely to eschew prudent consideration (and reconsideration) and pursue the flawed plan, anyway.
His audacity—see my LoveFraud piece, The Audacity Of The Sociopath—is a curious and troubling aspect of his personality.
Sociopaths are liars and deceivers.
Lying and deceiving are close cousins, and sociopaths routinely do both. But this doesn’t make them necessary good at either (although they may be). A sociopath may assert, as if he really believes it, that he broke the world record in the mile, but this doesn’t make it a good lie.
The premise is preposterous; and so what’s most striking about the lie is its audacity, not its believability.
Sociopaths often, for instance, defend untenable positions from, it seems, sheer contempt for their audience. Consider this interaction:
Wife: I saw you with your secretary at Chile’s, today, at 12:15. You were kissing.
Sociopath: What are you talking about? I didn’t leave the office all day.
Wife: I saw you. Don’t bullshit me.
Sociopath: Yeah right. Ask Allen”¦we were in a meeting at 12:15. Go ahead. Why don’t you fucking call him and ask him?
Wife: I knew you’d say that. I already called the office. Allen’s in San Diego, and you know that.
Sociopath: You’re fucking crazy. You know what, stop fucking stalking me! That’s your problem. Maybe if you’d stop fucking stalking me you’d actually find something valid to accuse me of!
Wife: Don’t change the subject. You’re lying.
Sociopath: No”¦this is the subject. You’ve got a fucking stalking problem. So let’s not change that subject. You know what, honey? One of these days your fucking stalking’s gonna really drive me into someone else’s arms.
Wife: You were kissing her, John.
Sociopath: You know what? Fuck you. How ’bout that? Fuck you.
Rife with sociopathic machinations, this interaction starts with the assertion and insistence of a preposterous lie, then maneuvers quickly into deflection, gaslighting and other abusive strategies.
In upcoming posts, I’ll extend the list of traits that all sociopaths, I believe, share in common.
(My use of “he” in this article was for purposes of convenience, not to suggest that females aren’t capable of expressing the attitudes and behaviors discussed.)
(This article is copyrighted © 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW)
Great posts… yes, he wanted me to see him, imagine him in how he contrives and projections himself. He is a word master, uses foreign words and likes to use large words that most don’t use in usual talking. He likes to show how ‘intelligent’ that he is and he is such a boor. He will be talking then say a French word in French. IHis behavior is so affected that it is pathetic. He tries so hard to appear high class that he is low-class. And no boundaries. He butted into my life referring to my new house as ‘our’ house in the first three weeks that we began dating. He stated what it yours is mine and what is mine is yours. The difference being all he had is debt, no real assets. He was claiming what is mine as his. I felt it. I didn’t buy it. He gives the illusion of class, of money of spirituality or integrity and he is the exact opposite. I never was totally hooked but I stayed long enough to let him into my life. I bought part of his contrived illusions.
He sits in his head and observes. He says just enough.. but never reveals himself totally like to my father. I watched him with successful men and he plays the no information game well. His father was married five times and his mother three .. he had no real stability in his life.. My parents were married for 55 years and while not perfect, I had a nice family invironment.. at least, it was stable and my father does what he says. Which might be one of my issues with men. My father started with nothing, worked hard and became very successful. So,I tend to believe men when they say that this is what that they will do.. but they don’t. They are conning. My father was real.
I am not buying into what will be. And I knew not to.. but this man was convincing and I think that his spiritual angle, I am so good, is what caught me off guard. And yes, he could cry at the drop of a hat. In fact, in the beginning of our relationship, he cried alot. He told me how his son died of a brain tumor. His past made me feel sorry for him. He has more trama in his life than I have ever heard of. Two children with brain tumors. That is almost unheard of. Several of my friends made the comment that he could bring in negative energies because he is always meditating and his eyes roll back into his head.. It is disgusting. It looks evil. I don’t know. Just something is really off about him and he tried to overtake my beliefs, my life, my property. He asked me to give him my bank account number and routing number so that he could deposit money in my account. When I spent money and he reimbursed me. I said NO! Another friend told me that he wanted my life. I prayed to God to protect me and to reveal things to me. I layed in MY BED, to a man I was engaged to praying for God to protect me.. how CRAZY is that and why did I allow this thing into my life? That is why I am on here reading to understand WHY???
STARLIGHT, i am so incredibly glad my posts are helpful to you, and thank you for the incredibly generous expression of your appreciation.
Awesome that you’re so committed to opposing the manipulative brainwashing…keep taking care of yourself, Starlight, using every useful resource you can find to support your commitment to your emotional safety and integrity.
And again, your appreciative words are music to my ears!
Steve Becker
i shuttered when i read “The sociopath, for instance, may recognize, and even pay very close attention, to your mood.”
I remember him saying that he watched me carefully…he could read me… because ‘he is a psych nurse’ (in his own mind…he’s an LPN)
The ‘interaction’ conversation is classic. How they turn the table. All of a sudden you’re the problem. He could be screwing someone right in front of me, and he would deny it. You could have pics, and he still would deny.
I can hear him talk to people now about me…i stalked him, i was crazy, he had to pay for everything, he never committed domestic violence, etc, etc. The b.s. goes on and on.
Also.. the condesending way that he lectured and spoke to me at times. Like I was so beneath his intellect. His tone of voice felt almost evil at those times.. and I recall in the beginning of the relationship asking him what one of his wife’s complaints were about him.. and he said his voice tone.. at that time, I couldn’t see it but Wow.. I saw it.. What she saw what I saw were the same then he denied that he ever told me that about his ex when I brought it up. Selective memory.. this man is a word master and like to play with minds.. he is in sales and he has admitted to me that the company that he works for rips clients off. It is a consulting firm and it is under investigation.
four months to the day, NC.
———————
Ask a P a question………..i will never forget these two responses from my xP!
i come home, wake him up for work, and ask him how his afternoon was…he had one or the other response:
1) ‘questions, questions, you know i don’t like questions,’ and
2) ‘i do the same thing every day. why do you have to ask the same question every day…’
Gotta add the tone of the voice, too.
It worked. I stopped talking, i stopped asking questions. i stopped caring..i even dreaded waking up the monster. WHY DIDN”T I KICK HIM OUT THEN!?!?!?>!#!
well, well…i write this blog at 12:49, and the xP tries to make contact…sends me an email at 1:36………
creepy
I had a real epiphany this weekend. Since I am not interested in “violent” movies – I never watched “No country for Old Men”…but, there is was – on some channel – late at night – and it changed the way I thought of my sociopathic ex-husband and son. I finally “got it”. (After 35 years, tons of books, long therapy sessions, and neverending hope – I got it.)
The main character was a man without conscience, compassion, remorse. He didn’t care about others, didn’t care about the money, didn’t even care about his own welfare. On some level – he realized that other human beings valued their life – no matter how dismal, greedy or loving – something that he found midly entertaining. This evil person was devoid of all human emotion.
What was so obvious in this movie is that this man was never going to change. He wasn’t going to wake up one day and honor life, himself or the law.
He just didn’t care.
Dear Petra,
You know, that is a pretty profound philosophy in your above post.
They are NOT ever going to change. I am sorry that you also have a P-offspring, that is a painful thing to have for a caring person. Accepting it is painful, but we can eventually ‘get there” once we grasp the concepts of your philosophy. It was difficult for me, and I assume it is also difficult for the parents of other psychopaths (who are NOT themselves also psychopaths).
I also got around to watching “No country for old men” and it was an interesting movie to me. there are others that also depict psychopaths well—and chillingly.
I’m glad you are here Petra, it is a healing place. God bless.
Petra, congrats on you epiphany. I’ve had a few since discovering the P’s and like you, fictional literature and character portrayals in movies have been a big part of understanding. It helps the subconscience put a human face to what would otherwise be just a list of P-traits.
I’ll put that movie on my list.