When I finally realized that my husband, James Montgomery, had lied to me, cheated on me, and targeted me just to take my money, I was angry.
Furious.
Outraged.
With each lie I discovered, my internal upheaval grew. Yes, he was cheating with multiple women, and taking money from them as well. No, he was not a Hollywood screenwriter, although he pretended to be. No, he had never served in the Australian military, even though he claimed to have won its highest honor.
I felt the anger deep within me. I had a hard time concentrating on what I needed to do to extricate myself from the mess. I couldn’t sleep.
Perhaps you know what I mean.
Anger management
Dealing with anger was the topic of the most recent lesson in an audio course that I’m taking on cognitive behavioral therapy.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on modifying dysfunctional emotions, thoughts and behaviors. The objective of CBT is to solve particular life problems. The idea is that thoughts, emotions and behavior all affect each other. Patients are asked to examine thoughts, assess if they are accurate, and if not, overcome them. Some mental health professionals believe that CBT is the only type of psychotherapy that is effective.
In my audio course, the instructor asked a patient to consider an incident that had made him angry, and discuss whether his reaction was proportionate to what had happened. Now, in my mind, the client had every right to be angry over the incident. But the instructor talked about ways to reduce anger, such as becoming aware of tension, deep breathing and mindfulness. Essentially, he was teaching anger management.
The basic message was that anger was bad and should be avoided. Not once did the instructor consider the idea that some anger is justified.
Anger as a protective emotion
Anger is rooted in a primitive part of the brain known as the limbic system. The job of the limbic system is to keep us alive. It is home of our body’s fight-flight-freeze response.
Anger is meant to protect us. It is meant to give us the emotional strength and fortitude to fight when necessary.
Yes, anger can get out of hand, and some people can seem to be perpetually angry. Too much anger can lead to health issues, such as heart problems. But still, there are times when anger is totally justified.
What not to do about anger at the sociopath
Even though anger at a sociopath may be appropriate, expressing your anger to the sociopath often does more harm than good.
First of all, it may send the sociopath into a narcissistic rage, with potentially dangerous consequences. Many sociopaths are violent, and provoking them — even when they deserve it — could be harmful to you.
Secondly, sociopaths thrive on your emotional reactions. If you are so upset and enraged by what they have done, they consider this to be proof of their control over you. They will then continue to do things that anger you, just so they can enjoy your outrage.
The best way to shut the sociopath down is to not react at all. Even though you may be seething, don’t let him or her see it.
Anger at the sociopath — Facing the fire
So what do you do with your justified anger?
Here’s an important truth: Knowing why you are angry doesn’t make it go away. Anger is a physical sensation. It needs to be dealt with physically.
Many years ago, I went to a workshop presented by John Lee, author of Facing the Fire — Experiencing and Expressing Anger Appropriately. Lee talked about his own experience with anger — he had grown up with an abusive parent, and was angry about it. (Gee, anger due to child abuse seems perfectly reasonable to me.)
Lee’s advice is to do something physical to release the anger that does not cause harm to other people or animals. Working out with punching bags, stomping feet, twisting towels, breaking old cups and saucers into trashcans, are some of his suggestions. The idea is to keep up the activity until you feel a physical release.
I can say that it works. When I was consumed by anger over my husband’s betrayal, I remembered the workshop with John Lee. I tried many of his suggestions. The most effective release mechanism for me was envisioning James Montgomery’s face on a pillow and beating it until I collapsed.
I did this every time I felt the pulsing anger — usually when I discovered another new lie or betrayal. In time, the anger dissipated.
Remember, you anger at the sociopath hurts you, but not the sociopath. You need to get it out of your system. Try different methods until you discover the most effective method for you. Then let it rip.
Eventually you will feel much better.
For more strategies on recovering from anger at a sociopath, check out Lovefraud’s webinars:
Oh so true Donna. Before I knew who/what I was dealing with I would pour my emotions out, including anger. And he just ATE IT UP. He would pretend to understan, and say things that sounded like a good response. But then, knowing what upset me, he would do something similar, only even more intense, to get another (also more intense) reaction from me. This cycle continued until I BROKE IT.
And I broke it by stopping myself from having any reaction whatsoever. I just put on a stone face and quietly listened while he tried his best to manipulate me with his hurtful verbalizations, exhausting self-promotion, and outright lies. I started WATCHING HIM. Really seeing him do his thing, instead of getting overly wrapped up in my feelings. Not that I didn’t have them, I did. But I took a step back and applied some self control. This allowed me to see him for what he was/is.
Pretty soon he was bored. Then his abuse really ratcheted up, and he set me up for the final betrayal. I have to say, though it was INCREDIBLY painful and horrible it was also enlightening to watch him do what everyone here on Lovefraud told me he would do. It was like everything I was struggling to accept (that he was disordered, that he was always lying, that he was abusive) became perfectly clear.
He followed the script exactly and got rid of me as soon as I stopped giving him my emotions. As soon as it became clear to him that he would have to work VERY HARD to get more from me.
And so once I turned into a boring rock he really wanted to get rid of me. Of course he still wanted to keep me on the back burner, and ‘be friends’. Just in case he could reel me back in sometime in the future. But I completely cut him off. Never gave him one second of contact.
I also did what you did. I expended my anger in other rigorous activities. For me it was the gym. I would go to classes and just push myself. This helped work out some of that anger and anxiety. I also screamed into my pillow until I was sweaty and exhausted.
Slimone – thank you so much for sharing. They really do feed off of us being upset. One sociopath described our reactions to their provocations as “fuel.” Best to cut off the fuel.
Screaming into your pillow – what an excellent technique. Another possibility for Lovefraud readers.
I don’t like to show alot of emotion here because it can feed psychopath lurkers. Melanie talked about this.
Good to get anger out.
Good techniques.
Great ideas.
I can attest to the value of doing something physical to alleviate anger. Many years ago I was married to a man who chose liquor over me. In order not to have to talk with me, he would turn the TV on loud as soon as he woke up and as soon as he got home and it wold blare, him obliviously staring at it, drinking his beer, until he fell unconscious into bed. I never was able to have a serious conversation with the man. This, of course, frustrated me to no end. One morning he turned the blasted machine on and it went “fitz, puff, bang” and smoke came out of the vents. Secretly I thought ‘Hallelujah!’ Infuriated, he demanded I “get it fixed” that day. No matter that I was taking care of a colicky infant, had a house to clean and meals to make, had bills to pay, shopping to do and errands to run – it was MY job to “fix” the TV. After he left I fumed for an hour. Finally, I took the baby to the neighbors, borrowed her son’s little red wagon, loaded the TV into it, grabbed my husbands shotgun and took off up the hill into the woods, parked the wagon in a clearing, stepped back 10 paces and shot it. It exploded in a very satisfying way. So I shot it again (double barrels, you know) and loaded all the myriads bits and pieces back into the wagon, whistled my way back home and parked it in the yard. Then I continued on my day, feeling the best I had in years. When he got home first thing he asked was if I had fixed the TV. I said “Yep” and pointed to the wagon.
It was 3 years until he got another TV. By then my new-found ability to actually talk to him had resulted in our divorce. Best thing I ever did.
Emilie18 – Fabulous! Love it! Way to get your anger out! Good for you!
Gee, what FUN!
The darn thing was probably unfixable anyway, if the insides had caught fire. Nothing like giving it a good sendoff!
Physical is good.
Very good.
i wish i culd do these things to help my anger, its good advice.
but in my situation, having spent 20 yrs with my spath, going thru it all, then coming to realize my oldest daughter, from my first marriage, also to a spath, has been having an affair with him for at least 10 yrs of that time, and she too is a narrsissistic sociopat..
i live in a small town, and cant avoid running into him sumtimes, tho i walk away, and she still lets me kno she seeing him behind her husbands back
theres no way ill ever b able to get away from either of them
therefore my anger grows stronger every day.
he has enjoyed to no end making sure i kno what hes done to me, how hes used me, how they both have all this time ruined my reputation in this town (i of course was a horrible wife, cheated ect… NOT)
even wen i kept telling texting him i knew what he was n wanted him to show me, he was happy to do so, while i was driving n he was riding with me, he just sat up n showed me (the look)
i felt like i culd just shrivel up
he now has an older woman, hes 56, that hes using, and i feel so sorry for her, already telling lies about her
the only thing that wuld make my anger ny better wuld b if he lost his eye sight!!
thats his sole asset!!
lets see how long my daughter wuld want him then!!
if you kno what i mean??
spurl – I am so sorry for what you are enduring. No wonder you are angry.
Yes, you can use these techniques to deal with your anger. Find ways to vent your anger and rage — just not to your husband or daughter! That doesn’t work – it only gives them satisfaction to know they are getting under your skin.
So find a punching bag, scream in your car, smash bottles into trash cans — whatever works to release some of the emotional tension. You can do this — regardless of anything else that is going on.
The idea isn’t necessarily to solve the issue — it’s to make you feel better.
thank u. i kno your right. they enjoy seeing me suffer, even more if they can make me cry
but i refuse to stop seeing my two grandsons, so i do my best to cry n scream alone at night, and carry on during the day
thank you for responding and your advice, helpful to have others that understand
Be calm and businesslike with them.
I watch the fight scene on youtube from the movie Witness.
Many ways to deal with anger.
This is very important.
Do get it out.
SG
Fir sure.
Must be done.
Find a way to get it out.
really great blog