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There are smart sociopaths and dumb sociopaths; gregarious sociopaths and more withdrawn sociopaths; engaging sociopaths and paranoid sociopaths; calculating sociopaths and more impulsive sociopaths; socially skilled, and socially unskilled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)
The P I was involved with is one that is almost idolized in our culture… the Thomas Crown character. Thomas Crown (in the second version) is truly a P….in that he withhold information, to purposefully make his “girlfriend” suffer, even at the end watches her cry before revealing his presence (at which she is playfully angry but SO happy…ugh!) And before the end, he knows she is suspecting an affair, but again he withholds information to sort of test her while hiding behind loyalty. PLUS he his whole criminal act is just for the thrill of pulling one over on people. He is ALL about power for the sake of power, (and sex) and yet the audience adores his accomplishments, his daring exploits, his wealth, even his coldness…and overlooks the tiny fact that he is a common thief, cold, arrogant, autocratic, and presenting a false front. He is meant to be a likable character, otherwise the movie doesn’t “work”, but I think for many of us on LF, we would find him repulsive. I hope so!
In real life, after she runs off with him, he will devalue her and discard her, especially as she becomes loving and therefore “boring” as the cat and mouse game is over. The power plays are over, and her love will feel like demands and exploitation to him. And he will be gone and she will be left wondering what happened to her. Emotional rape! But the movie ends before all that. 🙂
And like Thomas Crown appears to think, I think some of these types of “white collar P’s” actually THINK they are in love, and then ooopsss…..no, turns out real intimacy feels like they are being controlled and they can’t have that!
Yes. It is an emotional rape.. He told me that I was going to love him.. he did everything a woman could want to have done or to hear in the beginning.. He was like Mr. Perfect. He was suffocating and even in the beginning I was suspecious. His talk about his ‘big deals’ that we would move to Jamacia … on and on.. he worked hard and seemed so intense to be a success and to take care of me.. yeah.. while in reality I took care of myself.. He saw a vision where he would buy me a Jag.. Well..I bought my own Jag. He drove his mother’s toyota.. he was such a facade of success and abundance.. I asked him later why not just be who you are and where you are..? Just be a man? But then I realized that would make his existance to normal.. he needed to think that he was some spiritual guru and on the brink of being some great financial success.. so that he could be the hero of everyone…. It got so tiring listening to him yak and yak and yak… and lecture.. as credit card applications came with a decline. He had bad credit and lived paycheck to paycheck.. and all he talked about is one of his big deals making.. while I cooked him gourmet meals and in lived in a bed that I paid for. WHat a fool I was… but now it’s behind me… YEAH!!!!!
All he is and was is charm… oh, he works hard and does the best that he can.. but his Spin and illusions and dreams are how he stays able to survive and he sucks the woman into his delusions with him.. He couldn’ support me.. he had no business being with a woman like me.. he was all pretend.. all con .. all delusions….
and still occasionally it fleetingly pops into my mind that he will make a deal and come get me.. then I will know that he loves me for me and not what I can give him…LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
THEY ARE NEVER GOING TO CHANGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
GOOD NEWS GOOD NEWS!!!!!
I just got a notice from the courts!!!!
The ruling is FINAL!
After the Sociopath ordeal was final…..I came into contact with Sociopath #2 through business……
HE SUED ME! I wrote about it last week……..
Well the summary judgement was finalized this week, and I just got a notice from the courts……
I knew I had followed the law, got advice and went accordingly.
Soc#2 lied and lied in court, was chastised by the judge, acted irrationally, dodged questions yadayada….
I GOT HIM BY THE BALLS…..and he don’t like it!
Ha farker!!!! I got something IMPORTANT he wants……and I ain’t gonna give it up! OR……PAY ME!
He owes me over 10K……unpaid debt….reality says I won’t ever see my money…..so…….this is a consolation!
AND THE JUDGE THOUGHT SO TOO!
I won’t be intimidated, I won’t be bullied…….what he doesn’t realize is I have walked this path prior to him….JUST PRIOR to him…..so I am primed and ripe for battle with a SOCIOPATH!!!!
I was able to serve him a suit during our hearing last week…..this latest, pretty much assures that he won’t show up, I will receive a judgement and turn it over to collections……but HA…..I can now alert ALL the other folks of his whereabouts that he owes money too and child support, warrants and non paid court fines…….
I can alert the immigration folks since his wife is not legal…..and to apply for citizenship you can’t have any outstanding legal issues or write bad checks…….this may be a bummer……
Ohhhhh, how it would have been much easier for him to pay me as our contract stated!!!!
I AM HIS WORST NIGHTMARE!
WHOOOOHHOOOOOO ERIN!!
congrats on your VICTORY!
EB, justice is so sweet, isn’t it? Congratulations!!!! Some of these sociopaths are so focused on playing games, they can’t see the forest for the trees. Mine was like that, too. He wanted to play games with me. But he messed with the wrong person. He ended up getting charged with fraud and adultery and found guilty. Thanks to me. LOL
TOWANDA, sister!
It is just awesome!
It’s like being able to put my SOHK university degree to use! (School of hard knocks)
It’s freeing and validating and confirming……
We just gotta remember what we learned and knock em out with it!
Your so right….they are focused on the games….not the prize…..they are so convinced from their day to day interactions that they are soooooo convincing and good at the play……I love laying under that rock and striking hard, only when I know I will be successful!!!
Nothing like watching a sociopath be deflated……
Its like watching an 85 lb woman beat the shit out of a 6’5 350lb wrestler that tried to rape her!
THATS RIGHT>>>>THEY MESS WITH THE WRONG WOMEN!!!
SURVIVORS UNITE!!!
CONGRATS EB!!! That’s amazing!! I too feel like my ex S messed with the wrong person, and I would LOVE to even the score with him and I know I have the power. But so many people tell me not to. Everyone tells me that, “he’ll get what’s coming to him.” Has anyone ever thought that maybe I’m the one that’s supposed to give him what he’s got coming??!?!?! He is a ramp manager at LAX for a major airline…let’s just say, going high to work is a big no no!! Sometimes I just want to let that airline know that their passengers aren’t safe because he’s operating under the influence. His job would be gone in a heart beat. And he’s been living here on a green card for 20 years. Maybe if he was facing criminal drug charges they would deport his ass back to England?!?! Ohhhhh I can’t tell you how that would make my day. Can you tell that I’ve put some thought into this? LOL! I just want him to hurt as much as I have. But so many people tell me that I would be stooping to his level. I don’t know, sometimes I feel that I’m entitled to ruin his life. Why should I care?!?! He didn’t give a S#!% about me?!?! Anybody feel free to jump in on this one. I’m just so sick of him getting away with ruining people’s lives.
P.S. I have a date next week!! I’m scared to death..but excited..yikes!! It’s been a looooong time since I’ve felt ready to even attempt to get to know someone new.
Hooray, Erin! That is such good news.
This makes me think about something I’m not sure how to articulate. But I’m curious what you think about it.
Do you think that there’s a major difference between being afraid of them and having a healthy respect for the damage they can do? In observing you, I’m always struck by the fact that you that you’re concerned about the potential damage — and you do whatever you can to win these encounters — but you’re not overly impressed by the sociopaths you deal with.
Me neither. The more I think about them, the more I think they’re weenies with very impressive fronts. Very plausible, very attached to all the badges of power, very “well dressed” in a shallow but shiny sort of way. But if you can penetrate the front, or if they get distracted from keeping it seamless, you see the chaos and the childish emotional system behind it.
If we’re dependent on them in some way — like being married to them or having children with them — this is very bad news. We’re not dealing with the personalities we thought we could trust.
But if were in battle with them, especially in legal situations, it can provide some definite advantages. Like they really have a hard time dealing with facts that illuminate how disorganized and chaotic their versions of truth are. And when stressed, they often respond by making their fronts more and more grandiose, until it becomes apparent that they have no real grip on reality.
The fact that your judge saw through him is something that we might see as a matter of luck, if we’re overly impressed with the ability of sociopaths to bluff their way through anything. But I’m not sure that’s so. I think that a good number of people do see through them, and particularly when given an opportunity to see how they respond to challenges, especially factual ones.
Which is why your advice to keep records of everything is so good. You are basically approaching the legal arbiters and saying, “Okay you’ve seen him and his front and his emotional arguments. Now here’s me and my front and my facts. What looks correct to you?”
Because I think that’s one of the odd things about them. Their arguments tend to be emotional. Either their own emotions or attributing emotions or emotional motivations to other people. We find it so outrageously disrespectful when they describe us to other and to ourselves as having base or manipulative or childish motivations. But if you consider that they really can’t deal with the facts — because they are lying and manipulating all the time and the facts are not their friends — it sort of looks different, doesn’t it? They don’t look quite so impressive.
I’ll never forget the evening when I was telling someone about my story with my ex, and he just shrugged and said, “Oh well, you got involved with a user.” As though it was a well-known type. I live in the country, and he was a country man. And I wondered at the time if that was just the kind of common sense that comes from being country-bred.
But then, I also know that virtually everyone around me recognized my ex for what he was. When I moved to new locations, and he followed me, he consistently managed to alienate everyone I had befriended. Not in trying to get them out of my life, but just all on his own. When he worked for me, the one client I ever gave him to manage, refered to him as the troglodyte.
Obviously, this isn’t universally true. We all have our stories of being involved with popular guys who turned out to have another personality at home. But I think that maybe there are a whole lot more people than we know that actually do recognize these people, maybe not at first sight, but very quickly if given a little personal exposure.
And that maybe if we weren’t so impressed by their demonic ability to hypnotize people into doing their bidding (namely us), we might go into battle with them with a little more confidence and the kind of ammunition that you take with you.
Long-winded as usual. Sorry. But what do you think, Erin? Does any of this resonate with you?
Kathy