Do psychopaths know what they are? Do they know that they are different from the rest of us? I believe the answer to both of these questions may be yes. As neuropsychiatry makes progress, science offers various thoughts and opinions on the matter. But while medicine is working hard to unlock the mind’s secrets, we may be able to draw valuable discussion from our own experiences.
Since psychopaths are not a particularly introspective group, I am not suggesting that they possess great insight regarding their pathology. However, I believe they do have some level of awareness. They may realize that they do not experience appropriate emotions and that they live their lives and view their worlds with the emotional mute buttons on.
“I figured it out…I know what you are”
When I realized that I had been touched by psychopathy, it took me quite some time to digest all that revelation brought with it. I knew I was not dealing with “normal,” but what was I dealing with?
Behaviors and solutions that would typically work under normal circumstances set us back when dealing with this population. Adjusting to the concept takes time. While I was still learning, I was still saying too much and also allowing the manipulations to bother me. I was in the process of trying to make sense of the nonsense and working to rectify issues that could never be solved. I tried, but trial and error prevailed and sometimes, I got it wrong. With my understanding too fresh to accurately process what was occurring, I allowed myself to become frustrated and exhausted from the underhanded tactics. On one occasion, when I could no longer take it, I emphatically blurted, “I figured it out…I know what you are.”
I am not sure what I expected might occur when I announced that “I knew,” but I was completely unprepared for what came next. The individual had been walking away from me, but then stopped dead in his tracks. He stood still with his back toward me for a moment. Then, turned and advanced toward me. His eyes met mine and I was on the receiving end of a deliberate, piercing stare. The eyes that could double as daggers were poised to intimidate. Glaring and angry, he replied, “I know you did. I know you know.”
What? The investigator in me wanted to continue the conversation very badly. I wanted to know what he knew about himself. I considered the possibility that he may not have heard me correctly. How did he know what I meant? But he did know. Chills quickly replaced my curiosity. I turned away and left. If he knew what he was, all the wrongs, all the evil were, without question, intentional. Pain, suffering, abuse, unhappiness, and shear destruction had been purposely inflicted with full awareness and for or with some degree pleasure.
Interestingly, I never said the word. Sociopath, psychopath, narcissist never crossed my lips. Shortly after this encounter, this individual ramped up the attacks and staunchly advertised his “normality,” while threatening and belittling me. Suddenly, I was “disturbed” and a “PhD,” in an attempt to discredit me and my assertions.
Previously, he merely blamed me for his actions, claiming that the behaviors were the consequences for my “insanity.” But this was different. I uncovered something he never thought I would. First hand, I witnessed the “I’ll get you before you get me” mentality – the smear campaign. Sticks and stones…for now I was armed with understanding.
Gray or color?
What must it be like not to feel genuine emotions or to feel them so completely differently than non-psychopaths? What must it be like to view the surroundings so differently than others? How must it be to know life in black and white, when we see color?
They may have great disdain for us as a result of the warmth in our souls, something they will never know or feel. They want revenge for our existence and throw temper tantrums mirroring those of toddlers if they do not succeed in their destructive and controlling efforts. But even when they do get their ways, they are often insatiable, looking for more. As a result, they can be dangerous to us.
When they claim to feel hurt, pain or other normal emotions we experience, their words may merely mask ulterior motives. They are able to behave ruthlessly without second thoughts, often hiding their agendas behind righteous causes. But the anger, jealousy, and rage that they direct toward us shows through as raw and primal. Knowing they know makes the behaviors easier to understand, but no more acceptable.
They are envious of our genuine connections and abilities to love, even if they laugh at us in their next breaths for being “weak” enough to feel. How would they be able to hold such contempt for us, if they had no awareness of our differences? It must be horrible living half alive. Wait…we already know. It was how we lived before we understood. The beauty is that we can recover.
Dear Scrubjay:
Thank you for your post. It reminded me of something Mya Angelou once said: When a person tells you who they are believe them the first time.
Dear thedoorisclosed,
That is one of my FAVORITE sayings from Maya Angelou, her wisdom is very broad!
Great article, comments…HAPPY TO HAVE MY COMPUTER BACK!
Clinical Hypnotherapist program update:
Thanks all for your very wise and comforting words before I left for this class to resume. My panic was beyond anything I have felt for a long, long time. I knew that first instructor was a sociopath and picked certain ‘supply’ in the class to do all of her toxic bidding. Anyway, won’t go back into it but suffice to say I did tell the director on the first day back how I felt about the environment when she (the director) was not there.
She said she would be conducting the rest of the program, and she did an age regression hypnosis session with me and I found the very first time I felt worthless, powerless, unwanted, rejected…and once I found that very beginning time, she helped me reframe it (in hypnosis) and make the negative things (my mother, mostly) small and tiny…she helped me produce more images to make the story of my life bearable, and fun!
I am now 80% to being a clinical hypnotherapist – I obtained 92% on my written exam and this upcoming week is all about practise…YEE HAW! I can see my future unfolding.
What I learned was that I can make any negative emotion powerless in me through positive suggestion to the subconscious mind, and age regression to find the root cause of the symptom (bad emotions).
When things got too close for comfort I was able to imagine the entire event from a distance, as an observer – and it still worked!
So, bottom line (sorry for rambling, just really excited now that I was able to push through a very trying time) is that by next Friday I can put up a shingle and get on with the rest of my life.
I am NO LONGER paniced by sociopaths…I know they will come again…but this time I am ready. And I trust myself more than ever!
God bless all of you. I read many of the posts today but can’t possibly respond. Great support and love is flowing through this room!
((((Hugs)))))
Although he knows he hurt his wife, Schwarzenegger said he’s not hung up on the failure of his marriage ”“ or anything else. “Dwelling on it, like some people do, you know, years later, say, ’Oh, yeah, I lost this, and I will never forget that. I’m still suffering.’ No, that’s not me,” he said. “I don’t suffer over anything that I’ve lost.”
guess…..
Uh, yeah…with comments like that, we know what he is.
I need to share with everyone on here that I just ran into my X sociopath boyfriend! I was on my out earlier leaving my house, and there he was right across the street walking down the road. We live on the same street, and I cut off all contact 7 months ago and there he was. I thought it was so strange that I hadn’t run into him sooner, but I guess got let it happen when he knew I could handle seeing him without being a mess. What I need to hear and remember is that he was and is a sociopath. These people do not always look deranged and he certainly does not. It’s easy to forget who they really are especially after such a long period of NC. I had never loved someone as much as I did him and never thought I’d ever stop crying. But I am here to tell you that all those hard minutes, hours, days and months of crying paid off because there were ZERO feeling left for hm. What a relief and blessing. honestly never thought I’d get over him. I have to remember to keep telling myself that this was not just an ordinary ex I saw today, but an X sociopath-huge difference. Use my story today as hope for anyone out there in dire pain of detaching from an x sociopath. All the pain and grieving pays off! Let my story be a beacon of hope that this stuff does end as long as we grieve and stay away. When he asked how I was it felt so good to say, I am leaving town, moving 4,000 miles away. He looked at me like huh? I said yeah, I cannot wait to go!! Thank you for reading and I hope my story can help someone else today who is in the suffering stages. There is an end to this as long as you do your recovery work and stay nc for life! Peace to all. We can go on and lead happy, healthy productive lives after the pain. I am going to be leaving the area to start the life of my dreams. Peace People. Peace.
thedoorisclosed: thank you so much for sharing
your experience with us. I can just imagine “HOW”
that felt. I am very proud for you of your strength
and determination.
Yes, all those hard minutes, hours, days, months
and years…all those years of crying and worrying
and looking over my shoulder = those are all gone.
The grieving eventually does ‘pay off’ and you find
yourself in wonderful complacency.
It is very difficult to ‘find anything left’ for people
who have tried to devour you so completely.
There is NO returning to anyone who threatens
to take your life from you for NO reason other than
control. “I” don’t allow myself to be ‘controlled’.
Not ever again. “IT” did an excellent job but I
HAVE made it to the other side of that ring of
fire and my burns are healing.
Thanks again for sharing with us.
I wish you mounds and mounds of happiness.
Keep looking forward and don’t look back.
Peace and blessings…
Dupey
I had a psychotic angry episode last night after talking to my granddaughter and learning something that affected me deeply.
Luckily it wouldn’t ‘register’ in here and even though I asked Donna to check to see why it wouldn’t register I’m so happy my brain fart DIDN’T register!
I’m quitting smoking (as a result of the clinical hypnotherapy program I’m in) and I think I lost all of my marbles last night.
I’m not use to feeling ANGER. It’s so new for me I don’t know how to cope with those feelings.
Sigh.
Something to work on in class tomorrow. Just glad to see my mess not all over this wonderful blog!!!
Thanks Donna!!
Dear speaking up, Anger when we have suppressed it can be overwhelming, but it is a GOOD thing and a NORMAL PART of the grieving process over the losses we have suffered.
Hang in there Speaking up…anger is OK so just don’t let it make you do something that you will regret later. FEELING anger is okay, DOING things because you are angry is another kettle of fish.
So just control the behavior but let the emotions flow, you will be okay! (((hugs))) and God bless.
Oh yes, angry psychotic outbursts.
I know all about those.
I have been pushed to a few ‘edges’…
Ppaths/Spaths most enjoy sparking those in us.
It quite amuses them, I have found.
YAY! Speaking_up-Congrats on nixing the cig’s.
That is a very difficult thing to do amidst the turmoil.
Anger is a strange brew.
While I believe it is quite necessary that we allow
ourselves to feel it, it can also devour us just as
bad as the ppath/spath ‘itself’, if we allow it to.
I think the greatest revenge in all of this
is to find that sweet complacency and to
push the nightmare aside and live as well
as we possibly can…
IN SPITE OF THEM.
Anger IS okay.
Just have to learn to control it.
It took me a long time learning.
((hugs)) & blessings Speaking-up…