Lovefraud recently received the following letter from a reader whom we’ll call “Cassandra.” My reply follows the letter.
I don’t even know where to begin but I’ll try and make it short. Won’t be sweet though.
I am a long time advocate of Lovefraud. I was a victim of a psychopath over 7 years ago. I was with him for 5 years, we had a house together, dogs, like a married couple. Finally a girl confronted me and told me he was living a double life, as well as having sex with both men and women. And I was not shocked. Just angry at myself for not facing the truth for so long. I ended the relationship. He tried to get me back. I got a restraining order. To this day he still tries to email and call me every few months. I’ve accepted that I will have to deal with that for the rest of my life.
Fast forward to now. It has been 3 years since I have even considered dating, or even touching a man. I am a brilliant career woman. I am successful, make decent money ”¦ and live totally alone. I am scared of men, afraid to date, but am getting tired of not having any male companionship. So, for the first time in 3 years since I was with the psychopath, I went out on a date. First time.
It was an incredible date. Gorgeous guy, even though he looked like a computer nerd. Glasses, Jewish, intellectual, shy, artistic and unfortunately the kind of man I crave. Incredible connection, incredible sex, and I was the one in fact telling him that we needed to take this slower. Except ”¦ he knew exactly what to do. Constant texts, wanting to see me immediately the next day, insisting that he wanted a relationship with me and then changing his tune an hour later saying he wasn’t sure, etc.
At first, I was disgusted and knew I didn’t need any of this crap. I called him on the bluff and told him let’s just back off. 24 hours later, I was the one wondering what he was doing and where he was. He would say “I’m going to see you this afternoon,” and then he wouldn’t show. I would get a text at 10 pm saying his brother was in the hospital and perhaps I am available “tomorrow?” I would fret and stress, wondering if my own paranoia was keeping me trusting this individual, and that this certainly couldn’t happen to me two times in a row that I would date a psychopath. So I gave him the benefit of the doubt and said sure. The next day he did not show. He texted again saying something came up but he’d love to see me that night. With false hope, I agreed but didn’t bet on it.
That night, I was more anxious and worried than ever before. I sat there on my couch, the house all cleaned, the fire going, a perfect romantic atmosphere. I sat there, and 9 pm came and went. I called and texted “Are you on your way?” No response. At 10 pm I turned off the music, the lights, and found myself just staring at the fireplace. I was in what I call a shock of realization.
I turned off the lights, went to bed, lay there until 2 am. At some point I just broke and cried.
Donna, I wasn’t even looking for this. I was not even looking for someone to suddenly “love” me. I just wanted to meet someone who would appreciate who I was on the inside, without being impressed by my career. I just wanted a night just one night of being with a man and having good conversation, good talk, and affection. And that one person that I reached out to after years and years of not dating due to being with a psychopath ”¦ turned out to be another one.
I woke up this morning with my eyes hurting from crying and just drained, as if I have been up for weeks without any sleep. I got up, did coffee, lay on the couch and suddenly broke down and sobbed again. And I can’t help but sob to myself, even though I know I shouldn’t ”¦ that “I’m so stupid.” I am so stupid. I am so stupid. I absolutely hate myself right now, and I hate that I am talented. I hate that I am successful. I hate that I am pretty. I hate that I am a target. I hate that I can’t relate to anyone with the lonely road I take with work. I hate that I am not understood. And most especially, I hate that a psychopath got me the minute I snuck out of my hole after three years.
Now I’m back in the hole. Feeling stupid. Feeling more alone than before. And more hopeless than before. And that I gave all my built up talent and energy to a stranger that got drunk off it, and is doing god knows what with it right now to someone else.
I hope to get over this again as well, but I can’t stop crying and I can’t stop staring at the floor and just whispering, I’m so stupid.
Am I destined to be alone? Working career woman, never being appreciated for who she is on the inside and only being admired on the outside? That means nothing to me. And the minute that I show my true self ”¦ it’s a psychopath that eats it up. Why am I here on this planet if this is always going to be the case?
Dear Cassandra,
I am so very sorry that, on the very first time you looked for companionship again, you ran into another psychopath. It is so painful. I know exactly how you feel, because I’ve been there, or at least someplace similar. It really hurts.
You demand of yourself, the universe or whatever higher power you believe in, “Why me? What did I do wrong? Why did this happen again? How long will this go on? Haven’t I paid enough? Am I destined to remain alone and unloved for the rest of my life? Why can’t I catch a break? When will it be over?
I’d like to offer a different perspective of your most recent experience: I think you’re making progress.
Here is what has happened: You were ready to take the next step in your healing. And that step was to access, and excavate, the residual pain still buried within you from your first psychopathic ex. Or, perhaps there was an incident of betrayal the even predates that first relationship maybe something from your family of origin, or a relationship from your youth. Whatever it was, you were still walking around with negative energy within you, and it was time for the energy to come out.
The universe has a funny way of helping us release our pain: It gives us more pain. It presents us with an opportunity to get our hopes up, believe magic will come, and then it all comes crashing down. With that, the thin dam that was holding back the residual pain bursts, and all we can do is cry.
That’s exactly what you did. You broke down and sobbed.
If you were to look at this incident from a “rational” standpoint, you’d wonder why you reacted so badly. After all, you didn’t spend much time with the guy. He was a jerk pretty much from the beginning, so it’s not like you had a lot invested.
So why did it hurt so badly? Because of all your old pain, the disappointment from the past that you’re still carrying around. Because you so wanted a change.
Here’s my advice: Roll with it. Allow yourself to feel the pain, disappointment and betrayal. Honor the experience. You’re cleaning out the old wounds—and once you do, you’ll be in a much better place to attract a new relationship.
As the negative emotions dissipate, replace them with joy. Notice joy wherever you can perhaps in a lovely view, the affection of a pet, a checkout clerk who’s nice to you. Then, feel gratitude for the moment of joy.
Eventually, if you keep going, the balance will shift. You’ll feel less pain and more joy. And then you’ll be ready for a wonderful new relationship.
I promise you, this is not a setback. It is a step in your healing.
Cassasndra,
Thanks for sharing your story of being “scammed again”—if you’ll look at my last article it is about guess what??? GETTING SCAMMED AGAIN, FALLING FOR A LOVE BOMB! It happens because we want to believe it when someone says nice things to us, in business or love, doesn’t matter which.
So do what Donna suggested, look at the good things in the situation. You learned another valuable lesson. You are also ABLE TO FEEL which is a good thing and even feeling the OLD PAIN is a good thing, because it will help you heal from the old pain/injury from the past so that in the future you won’t be as likely to get really SOLIDLY HOOKED BY A PSYCHOPATH.
You “got off light” this time, you weren’t married to the jerk, or didn’t have a kid together or buy a house together—
The lessons come when we need them and I’m glad that you are feeling the lesson….but it is progress! So hang in there! (((hugs)))
Stay out of bed.
Cassandra,
first off congratulations on being a brilliant career woman. You have one goal down, now you just need to work on the other goal: becoming who you need to be to attract the right man.
Donna’s advice is right on. We do keep repeating the same patterns over and over because there is still something for us to learn about OURSELVES.
I was talking to a friend who had been involved with a spath and she said that she still hurts so much that he couldn’t love her. We compared notes about our involvement with spaths and we both realized that this pain of not having our love reciprocated, originates from the first time it happened when our MOTHERS couldn’t love us. We tried so hard to make our mothers love us but we ultimately failed. Then we went out and found men who also couldn’t love us, so that we could try again. and we failed again.
None of this was done consciously. Somehow, our subconscious picks up on little clues about people, something FAMILIAR, (from the root word for family) something that reminds us of the first person who couldn’t love us. But all this is going on under our own radar.
You are a smart woman, you will find a way to peel back the layers of how you came to be in this situation. You are NOT stupid, just a bit lopsided right now. You’re going to succeed and be happy.
Edit:
Louise, we posted past each other. Your advice is excellent and succinct. 🙂
Cassandra, I totally agree with Skylar. I was very angry when I was first told that the pain I was feeling from my ex-spath wasn’t really all from him. I was like, “Um, yes it was and how dare you suggest otherwise.” I was stuck thinking that if I didn’t attribute all my pain to him that somehow my experience with him wasn’t as bad as it was.
The truth as I see it now is that my ex-spath slowly opened the window to me seeing the truth about my family of origin and the extreme pain I endured but was never allowed to express. That in no way invalidates what a tremendous a-hole my ex-spath was to me and all of the emotional abuse I endured because of him. He was bad news for me and I am still healing from that. But I am now able to see that the pain goes beyond him and includes the pain of all the rejections before him.
I don’t want to say that I am happy that I experienced such devastation from my ex-spath, but I am relieved to finally see things for what they are. You see, by being educated about my ex-spath and all the disorderedness that he is, I was able to finally understand all of the other influential disordered people in my past. Especially my parents.
A whole new healing started to take place along with the healing from that one relationship. All of it is helping me understand who I am, what I have endured, and what I want for my life going forward.
It’s hard to see any lesson when you’re in the midst of deep despair and pain. But I truly believe the lessons are there just waiting for you to discover them. Be patient and gentle with yourself. I’m confident you’re at the beginning of a beautiful journey.
Blessings and peace to you.
Hi Cassandra,
You don’t deserve this and you did nothing wrong and Donna knows how to explain it best while the others above chime in who have years of experience watching this and learning hard lessons and then applying them to their lives. That’s the part where being successful in your career helps you know you too CAN do this.
I am a bit concerned about Skylars lesson above about not getting our mothers to love us! YIKES, I very clearly in my mind gave myself ONE SHOT to accomplish this and it scares me that I know I thought that long ago. I held on to #1 for many, too many years for that reason. I hope I didn’t really set myself up for just ONE SHOT cause I blew that!
OxD, Makes a good point that with this lesson you got out quickly and without too much damage. The move I made to ‘start dating’ after spath recovery, I was love bombed and saw red flags (used protectionm, use 2 kinds since you are successful:)) and bailed but found out I was pregnant! Later found out due to being successful, new spath made some decisions without me being informed. Holey condoms.
Welcome.
Hi, Cassandra–
I’ve been involved with two men I consider subclinical psychopaths. I still want the dream of marriage and children and a happy family, so I continue to work on myself and to date. I find that I’m attracted to the same kinds of men–the ones I might not be interested in at first, but who quickly win me over with that extra sparkle and charm. Last summer, I started to fall for a friend of a friend. After he treated me disrespectfully and then moved halfway across the country, the friend (a therapist) finally admitted to me that she thought he might be bi-polar. Sometimes it’s so difficult to put yourself out there and to trust anyone–including ourselves. But that’s just it–I’m getting so much better at trusting myself, at reading three or four sentences and seeing right through the charm, at knowing what I’m setting myself up for even if I’m still too stubborn to stop plodding along. It’s a long, slow learning process, but I’m learning. And so are you. Someone suggested once that I pick the most boring guy in the room and date him for a while. It might not be bad advice.
I’ve been in tears for days, as well. I’m trying to spend time with friends rather than focusing on dating, but I’m relatively new in the area and am still building a base of friendships. My friend X started dating a girl, A, six months ago, and A and I are friendly in the group setting. I learned through X that she is friends with Spath Nick’s fiancee. X had been telling A about his friends’ lives, and had shared with her my story about extricating myself from a psychopath. A had said, “Wait–I’ve heard this story before, from another perspective!” The perspective, of course, that I was crazy. I’ve long known that the only way to prove you aren’t crazy to consistently act not crazy–to just be myself. And in the interest of “no contact,” I never raised the subject with A. I was friendly to her when we were in a group, but left it at that. I’d almost gotten to the point where I no longer associated A with Nick or Nick’s fiancee. Until last night. A had a few too many drinks and said, “So, are we ever going to talk about how we really know of each other?” I tried to play it off. I laughed and said, “Why ruin a perfectly fun evening with something like that?” But she persisted. She said she and their other friends had tried to point out to the fiancee that there was something not quite right about this guy. That there was something fishy in his “sympathy story,” and he didn’t seem trustworthy. I had a few minutes alone with A before X and the others arrived, and I told her only that I’d contacted family of the real victim in his “sympathy story,” and that she’d been afraid of him. That he was dangerous. A told me that her friend is an heiress to a large fortune, that she’d been in love with a guy who worked at a gas station and couldn’t afford their rent prior to meeting Nick. Her parents hadn’t approved. But when she met Nick, who wore Gucci shoes and owned a sailboat, she jumped at the chance because he was everything she was supposed to have. I asked A how close her friendship is with this girl. She said they’re quite close, so I agreed to meet A in the near future so that I could give her details I thought might be helpful to her friend in the future, because her friend needs to protect her finances from this predator, although she’s clearly unable to protect her heart. Or the child he’s going to impregnate her with as soon as they’re married.
I couldn’t sleep afterward. I was shaking, long into the following day. I’ve been distracted, because now the story that I will have to tell at the end of the week is replaying itself over and over again in my head. But at the same time, there’s something about this that’s healing and cathartic for me, too. I’ve wished for months for an opportunity to do something–and now I can at least pass along information that may be helpful to her on a day his poor fiancee can’t yet see coming. It’ll be an uncomfortable few days, but I know I’ll feel better on the other side of this discussion.
hilary,
IMO, don’t bother meeting with the heiress, meet with her PARENTS.
A share – perhaps some fresh air…
Love ~ Dupey xxoo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXlm0vzXOUw&feature=em-unknown
Cassandra,
It’s not your fault that they exist in the first place. Also, while it took you 5 years with the ex, you now realized it after 1 date and two missed dates and lovebombing. That’s a HUGE learning curve.
It doesn’t say on people’s forehead that they are spaths. You need some time and mishaps with a person to see the red flags.
So, actually I would say TOWANDA to you!
Cassandra, I am so sorry that you had this experience, but I agree that the Universe has a way of helping us to sort out whatever our issues are. At least, opportunities are thrown out there in our paths for us to examine our vulnerabilities, our system of beliefs, and what our strengths are.
I agree with Donna that you’ve made progress – I am envious of this progress because I don’t believe that I’ll ever get to that point in my recovery. Experiencing the “lovebombing,” again, is just another opportunity for you to shore up your boundaries and disallow the lovebombing, again.
I’ll echo the TOWANDA!!!! Yeah, it wasn’t pleasant and your feelings were hurt, but you put the stops on that train-wreck LONG before it hit the bridge! GOOD FOR YOU!!!!
Brightest supportive blessings!