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.
Cassandra, I feel for you, I can relate so much, I have been away for about a year from the ex, I am scared to death to even think about dating, I am still putting all the pieces of my life together, my ex, was just the topping on the cake as far as abusive people my entire life, no love, affection, attention from mother or father, I just didn’t have then resources to go out into the world and “be normal” I think if I had know about Lovefraud before it would definitely have changed my actions, all the stories I hear I would have been able to relate to very early on in the relationship!!! Stay strong, be independant and try to hold off on the sex…..I KNOW God/The Universe has a plan for each and everyone of us, the holidays are coming up and it’s hard to go “solo” but we all have to be strong and support each other!! This site has saved my sanity!!!!
as far as warning the new “victim” we can plant the seeds of doubt, most people are curious by nature and will check it out, we can open the door but they have to walk thru it!!
Reading this broke my heart because I know how Cassandra feels. I finally got rid of my spath over the summer after 4 years of off and on heartbreak. His 17 year old son called me this weekend wanting to know the truth about his Dad because bill collectors are calling his house because his crazy dad listed his ex-wife as a personal reference on his car loan, and me too, without our knowledge of course. I didn’t know what to do….I told him what I knew but didn’t lie to him either. His Mom knows I talked to him and she was good with it. Anyway, not about me, this is about Cassandra, I know how you feel. I have my own business and I feel like I have a lot to offer someone, but I feel like men don’t want to seem to get to know me for ME, only what they can get from me, and sometimes I think my paranoia is extreme because of everything I have been through. Like Donna said, try to look at it at a healing experience because until you are right with yourself, you won’t be able to love or trust another man, and when you aren’t looking the right one will come along. I know I am not there yet which is why I stay home alone. Good luck to you, doll.
Kimmy1974,
You are right,, getting into a new relationship BEFORE your healing is “pretty complete” is a recipe for DISASTER because we are still vulnerable and our “picker is broke.” WE are easy prey for a psychopath at that point in our healing. I found that out the hard way.
Plus there are few men out there in my age range that are 1) single 2) that I would have under any circumstances—even say baked, on a tray with an apple in its mouth! LOL
hope52:
Talking about it is futile. I have given up on talking about the no sex thing. Very frustrating.
FROM Louise: “Stay out of bed.”
Normally, I never post negative comments. We have enough negativity in our situations not to add flip little one liners to an already painful post from the website that for some of us is the only place we find any consolation.
AND she DID stay out of bed. For THREE years. There was nothing wrong with her looking for some comfort and closeness from a member of the opposite sex and in the long run, it may have given her what she needed for a while so that now she can work on her internal issues.
Cassandra: Remember when they hold up the mirror, it’s really ourselves we are looking at. You liked what you saw, nothing wrong with that. You’ve worked hard to become that wonderful person. We all have to get to a place where we can recognize our own goodness, without having to have someone else show it to us. We all need to love ourselves and not those evil jerks who are hiding behind the mirror reflecting us.
I know it hurts and for whatever it’s worth, I know that I feel the same way as you do. I am worried that I will either A) live the rest of my life by myself or B) end up hooking up with another sociopath, since they are everywhere and the odds of me choosing another one are greater since my last relationship! My service manager where I used to work, asked me what was bothering me one day. I was having relationship problems and I told him a little about what was happening. I said, “R, why is he acting this way?” And he replied, “N, all men are a**holes!” Well, this was certainly news to me! So I did an office survey, and to a man, every single one of them admitted they were a**holes. And this was BEFORE I met the spath! WTH!
With hindsight, I understand what he was trying to tell me. Even the normal ones are not like us. Sigh! But would we really want them to be? That’s what makes them interesting, desirable and special. (I’m talking about the normal ones). You were NOT STUPID! You were lonely and were ready. So make a new decision based on new information. Pull back a little, thank your lucky stars you escaped from the nutcase (Again, yeah, good for you! You were so smart to see it so quickly!) Whatever negative thing you say to yourself, immediately find the polar opposite and argue your case against it. Also, what Donna says about gratitude is a guaranteed mood-lifter. Be grateful for everything, the flush of your toilet, your heat, your car, your home, the food you eat, EVERYTHING! Totally changes how you feel.
Certainly be grateful for your near-miss! LOL! Whew! That was a close one!
PS: Louise, maybe we teach what we need to learn.
Instead of getting upset, I just want to cry (no pity here, please). Because like I said above, it is futile and now I see very clearly how futile it really is. Defeating. People just cannot see it and that makes me very, very sad. Not upset, just plain old sad. 🙁
OK, on this subject, just like the other, I will now shut up. Nothing is any of my business anyway.
Cassandra,
I say hooray for you. You got it, quick. You are hurting. But there is NO reason to doubt yourself. He is a psychopath. He looks for targets. That’s just what he does. And you sound like a wonderful person, and have a brillant career. YOU are a catch, right?
I had the same experience. I dated a man a few years after my ‘awakening’ to psychopathy. I met him online (I know! sigh).
I had sex early on.
He love-bombed me.
I got it really fast and excommunicated him.
It still hurt like hell. And I felt totally stupid for having ‘fallen’ for it. But with a bit of time, just weeks really, I saw how far I had come, how quickly I realized my involvement, and how I hadn’t truly fallen for this person, and could count the brief involvement as another opportunity for my personal growth and advancement.
And it was really validating that then this guy started to stalk me, leave things on my porch, email me, send me ‘anonymous’ gifts, etc… Basically NOT leave me alone, despite my request to never contact me again.
It felt GOOD, then, to see how I had chosen to act on MY behalf, and that I was RIGHT. I didn’t go back to him over and over. I didn’t try to figure out what I had done wrong. I didn’t question it any further.
He was disordered. Period. I noticed it quickly. Period. I could move on…..
I do agree with Donna and other’s who say this pain is much deeper and more ‘fundamental’ to our own wounding, likely from very early in our lives…..it isn’t ‘just’ about this sick man, or even the one before.
This experience will help that wound heal. Give yourself a few days, and a few more, the fog will clear.
xo, Slim
Loise, I agree with you completely. It is very unwise to s;eep with someone you don’t know well. It is very unwise to sleep with someone when you haven’t completely dea;t with the past relationship(s). I think most of the posters would agree with you, so please don’t feel that you aren’t being heard. YOU ARE.
Cassandra. I am so sorry you encountered yet another Spath. I am still healing from my own experience of 18 months with an Spath. Thankfully I didn’t marry him although he demanded we sneak off and get married without our families knowing. He also monitored my menstrual cycle and tracked it on an App on his phone so he could impregnate me. He was trying to lock me down. He lived 130 miles away and lived a complete double life. I know I will never know the depth of his deceit but I know enough. I am back in the dating pool as well. And I think what happens to us women who have been “lovebombed” is we are disappointed when the men we date don’t pour on the attention. But as my therapist explains, it is because they are the ones who are “normal”. Lovebombing isn’t normal behavior. But because that is what we are used to the others guys come up short. And that is how a smart girl can fall into the hands of another Spath. The guys I date now don’t text me all day long. And you know why? Because they have jobs and outside interests. My Spath didn’t have a job. His full time job was preying on women on the internet and lovebombing, manipulating and controlling me!!!! So the guys I am dating now don’t do that and I am learning to appreciate it because it is normal behavior. I thought I meant the world to my Spath when in reality I meant nothing to him except an endless supply of money, travel, sex and attention. So don’t despair. You saw the red flags early on! And you walked away. So cry all you can. And then celebrate that you are done and move on. I know there is a guy out there for me and you who will love us the way we are supposed to be loved. I know first hand what the despair feels like. I wasn’t able to eat or sleep when my Spath discarded me. But every day I am thankful that I don’t have to feel frantic anymore – like a hamster on a wheel. That I can go where I want with whom I want and I don’t have to send pictures by text to prove it. I have freedom. And for every dime that he took for me, I still paid less of a price than most. For every woman he slept with and refuses to use protection – I celebrate that I didn’t get pregnant. That I didn’t marry him. That I didn’t move him into my home. That I don’t have to pay his gas money anymore for him to visit me. I try and celebrate all of these things. I agree with everyone else when I say you are making progress. Celebrate that!