By Linda Hartoonian Almas, M.S. Ed
To psychopaths, life is often like a series of stage plays. They are like the play actors and they tend to keep themselves very busy, working in a variety of different productions. When they exhaust the audience pool in one venue, they move to the next. It is important to note that they may work many productions at the same time, as well.
Unlike other actors, psychopaths do not worry about being type-cast. They may play evil villains on one stage and sweet, loving, misunderstood victims on the next. However, we must realize that they are just acting.
In the theatres of life, psychopaths may showcase a variety of personas.
What is a persona?
A persona is like a mask. It is a role that actors play. In psychology, it is the appearance people display, or the expression of personality that individuals present to those around them. Psychopaths’ personas may change significantly depending on where they are and who they are with. How they present themselves to us depends upon how they wish to be perceived. They may portray themselves very differently to each of us, depending on our utility. However, ultimately, they reveal themselves.
How do they reveal themselves?
Psychopaths frequently pretend to be what they are not. If they were honest about their true intentions and personalities, who would have anything to do with them, at least initially? They must manage how we view them by manipulating our experiences and interactions. They do this through the use of varied personas.
Their actual personalities do not change. They simply alter how they behave in order to portray the image they wish to create; they act. For example, if they front loving personas, they may tell us how much they care about or love us.
They may express concern with their words because they know what they are supposed to say. For a time, they may even be able to “deliver” on their words and act in manners which support their words. To some degree, they may even believe that they feel some form of “love.” What they experience, and what it means to them is far different than non-disordered individuals, however. As a result, they never get it quite right, leaving serious gaps between their behaviors and appropriate behaviors. Their words and their actions also fail to remain consistent. Why?
The answer is that they tend to only know the basics. They are ill equipped. Asking for much more would be like asking a pre-med student to perform surgery or a private pilot to fly the space shuttle. Often, they watch and learn what to do or say from non-psychopaths around them. They may even “rehearse” their parts, literally, especially regarding affective displays. What comes naturally to us, simply does not to them.
However, before long, they begin “missing their cues.” They are unable to sustain the feigned expressions of love, caring, or concern because they don’t really feel them as non-psychopaths do or understand how truly concerned and connected individuals behave. They can only perform the behaviors they know from observation or very basic understandings of societal norms. Nothing is genuine. As a result, they leave out numerous, important details.
Additionally, they occasionally allow their real personalities show through. Although we are confused when this happens, unsure of why they are behaving “oddly,” over time, we begin to see these episodes as disturbing. These points, coupled with the fact that their charades can be labor intensive, especially as they begin to grow bored or lose interest, ultimately, lead to their reveals. When we begin to see their true personalities, we see that the display was nothing more than a facade. Nothing was real about them. It was just one of their personas.
Don’t we all “change” to look good?
To a degree, controlled presentation is not exclusive to psychopathy. However, the extent is. The motivations and methods are also different. There is a difference between employing polishing touches or putting our best faces forward and concealing our personalities with lies.
Imagine you are on a job interview. Unless you are specifically asked to address your weaknesses, you probably don’t. Under the circumstances, you want to show that you are worthy of the position. As most of us would do, you manage or control what you allow others to see. However, other than enlisting the services of a few polishing touches, who you are remains the same.
Continuing the scenario, when you leave the job interview, you meet a friend for lunch. Although you may be more relaxed and comfortable, your behaviors are similar and your friend sees the same person the interviewer saw earlier. That “you” is also the same one your family will see later in the day. The package and the contents remain the same, even as the surroundings differ.
Our persona, or our presentation to the outside world, is fairly constant. Although we may adjust our behaviors or make minor alterations for the certain circumstances, we don’t change. Each person we interact with sees our actual personality. Thus, the difference.
How do they fool us?
Simply put, they are often not who they appear to be, but are skilled at making us believe otherwise. They are able to “become” what they think we want them to be, morphing into the “person” we are looking for.
How did they know what we wanted? We told them! As we shared what we were looking for in the “perfect” mates, colleagues, or friends, or discussing character traits that are important to us, they were taking notes, so to speak. We had no idea that we were teaching them how to dupe us. Directly, or indirectly, we let them know what we wanted or did not want in our relationships. We taught them how to perform in their efforts to take from us and harm us.
We cannot fault ourselves for this. With no experience, we could not have known that our honest sharing would be misused.
They may maintain their personas for weeks, months, or even years. They continue for whatever period of time they choose to keep us “on the hook.” However, there are cues along the way that something is amiss.
So many personas, so little time…
Sometimes, they act in too many plays, playing too many roles at once. This can cause an “overload,” of sorts. They may actually forget what role they are playing or who we are to them. Since little of what they portray to anyone is real, it can be hard for them to keep things straight. They have to search. It is as if they literally have to inventory their mental record keeping systems, searching for the correct file to pull.
As a result, they occasionally slip up and experience difficulty “getting into character.” Have you ever caught anyone in a momentary “lapse of persona,” where he or she did not remember who to be? The psychopaths have to try to recall the correct persona to use, but can’t.
I have witnessed this occurrence on a few occasions. However, there is one instance, in particular, that replays in my mind. The incident was so bizarre that I stopped what I was saying and asked this individual if he knew who he was speaking to. He indicated that he did.
I was incredibly confused by the tone and content of the conversation. Both were inappropriate, given the circumstances. Once queried, there was a significant pause in the conversation, while this person “found” who he needed to be. At that point, the “personality” switch was instant. I witnessed two completely different personas. He knew who he was speaking to all along, it just took him a moment to remember who I was to him.
Like an actor rushing off stage for a quick change, two very different “people,” or personas within the blink of an eye.
What happens next?
This is usually not obvious to us at first. In fact, most people have trouble recognizing what is occurring. Those closer to these individuals, who have greater access to observations for extended periods of time, are mainly the ones who come to see and recognize this. Other, less involved relationships, tend to terminate prior to the reveals or remain very superficial.
This is very often why when the neighbors or co-workers of killers or domestic abusers are interviewed, many indicate that the perpetrators were “such nice guys.” The reality is that the “nice guy” personas were the ones they knew.
However, when psychopaths or those with such features wear masks, those masks eventually crack. It is then that we meet people we never knew. We are left looking at the same physical beings we thought we were close to, but in reality, those people, or their personas, I should say, are gone. It takes time to comprehend that the people and the personalities we thought we were close to never really existed.
Eventually, we realize the truth. We need time to mourn this loss, as we would any other. It’s necessary to take it. With the understanding being half the battle, we can recover and mover forward from there.
Thank you Linda…..he would mess up a lot and I would know it, but would brush it under the rug remaining to feel uncomfortable and confused.(he had many victims that he was acting for simultaneously) .Reading post on LF help bring order and understanding to the mess that was created by the “P”. It also helps me to forgive myself for my part, like minimizing the obvious…
I’m off to start my day now…I plan to use today for all the good that comes out of it!!
Clearly and succinctly expressed, very helpful. That another informed voice speaks this truth helps to dispell my self doubts concerning whether I perceive accurately what she was about. Post relationship of course. It does help somewhat that I consciously observed the slips and inconsistencies – and stopped explaining them away. What an erie feeling, when a much harder edged, void of good feeling true person would make an unexpected appearance. I’m not easily put off but at those moments I couldn’t shake the idea “… Something evil this way comes.”
Linda – this is fabulous. Thank you so much for your clear explanation of the masks they wear, and how the masks slip.
Its very interesting to read about the ‘letting slip & forgetting who to be’ part – my P made some shocking ‘reveals’ very early on in our relationship – observing them left me completely chilled -yet, because he was still in the super – nice ‘reeling me in’ stage, they weren’t directed at me, but at others (taxi drivers, waitresses, eventually, my four year old daughter) I took them to be evidence that he didn’t suffer fools gladly, tiredness, stress,bad day at work; anything to explain why ‘the other half of my soul’ could act so coldly and callously towards others. Later on in the relationship, when I was fully trapped and terrorised, I always wondered why I had continued with him when these episodes so clearly happened early on, when I had seen the nice guy persona drop and the true nature of the man revealed. I think it was because he didn’t forget to ‘perform’ for me, which further emphasised the ‘you’ve won a prize’ feeling I was being fed by him. Obviously I was the priority audience, and he was putting so much effort into convincing me that he hadn’t enough energy or concentration left to cater to the minor audience – ie everyone else.
Hindsight is now a wonderful thing and actually being able to identify, name and learn about all these different aspects of the whole hideous ordeal, thanks to Lovefraud, is the best thing that has happened to me in 15 years. This is the first time i’ve posted, although I’ve been reading the blog now for 6 weeks. In that 6 weeks I’ve found the confidence to want to share, ask and discuss, so thanks to everyone who contributes to this site. I’m now able to name the beast and the experience, I’ve even managed to use the P word in conversation with a trusted friend, and i no longer feel like a leper among all my friends with ‘normal’ relationships and breakups. Finding Lovefraud has coincided with a period of intense threat from the ex-p, which would normally have turned me into an anxious mess, but reading others similar stories and advice made those couple of weeks bearable (just!). Thank You Donna and everyone.
Great ARticle, Linda, and I think it is the crux and the totality of what psychopaths are in this life….
I just finished reading a book about one of the very few Amish serial killers, a young man named Eli Stutzman who eventually killed his wife, his son, a lover and several others was very good at presenting the different “personas” both inside and outside the Amish and the “English” worlds…the straight and the gay communities…to his friends and neighbors….but only because the various people he presented his “personas” to didn’t know each other. If any of them had “coordinated” their knowledge, Eli’s personas would have come crashing down.
I also notice that many professional actors seem to have high psychopathic traits in their private lives….coincidence?
Welcome to LoveFraud Simpleton, but I don’t think yo uare such a simpleton, I think your response showed great wisdom. Glad you found your way here. Many of us have found LF to be the salvation of our lives and our sanity. Again, welcome.
This is a really good article — thank you so much for writing it.
One part really resonated with me — and that is the part about the FACT that the masks are so good that they do effectively fool the intimate partner. I mean… in cases where there are children of sociopathic parents, those kids didn’t choose to be born into those families. In cases where it is workplace bullying by sociopaths, not that that isn’t awful (not minimizing it), but there is more freedom to leave, and I think the dynamic is different.
I’m having trouble expressing this… just zeroing in on the part about how in intimate partner relationships in particular (possibly friendships, too), the masks are firmly ON or the reveals so subtle that those of us who are hooked really do not catch on.
This has been one of the hardest parts… how could I have married him in the first place? People look at me like I was an incredible idiot. Well duh, I married someone else! And that person went away. After I was married, after I was pregnant.
So no — we are NOT stupid idiots. We just had the misfortune to give our hearts to a very good actor who pretended to be the love of our lives. Who does that?!? Now that I am aware of sociopaths, I know that they exist. But I didn’t, before.
I like your explanation, too, of the sudden “switching.” It really was weird how he could put on such a display of emotion, then instantly shut it off. I didn’t know how anyone could do that! When I get upset, it takes me awhile to let the hormones run through my body. I cannot shut it off instantly.
Also, the bizarre “rehearsing” different affects in front of the mirror… I cannot tell you how many times I caught him doing this… I never knew this was a spath thing until this article!
And — wait, there’s more — the mask slippage to be horridly abusive to waiters and yelling at other drivers of cars while driving — YES!!!! Then switching it off and being only loving and sweet to me. That is a reveal I should have listened to. I regret that I did not.
Articles like this are chilling to me because they so accurately describe my experience with the x-spath, not only explaining his odd and inappropriate behaviors but how he morphed himself into the person I was looking for by taking cues from what I told him about myself and what I was looking for in a partner.
Regarding how others perceived him, I think there were several levels. Co-workers and causal acquaintances find him charming, based upon my own observations and Facebook comments.
One close friend of his, whom I met, clearly has a “crush” on him but probably does not know about or is in denial about the real person. The x-spath certainly cultivates this “relationship” but I cannot understand why anyone would stay in an unrequited relationship for such a long time, as they know each other going on 10 years.
Another friend of his whom I met was his flat mate. This person probably “knows” the x-spath the best. One reason I say this is that their web presences track each other — every site the x-spath was active on, so was his flat mate. Given that the flat mate describes himself as a “hedonist,” he probably knows this side of the x-spath the best. When we met, this friend certainly seemed to goad the x-spath a bit (about his age, for example) and to this day I have the impression that this guy was on to the x-spath’s “game.”
It saddens me to think of how I settled for less than the crumbs on the floor that he would occasionally throw to me. I would think that I was not smart enough to be seeing things correctly..that whenever I challenged the slips, he had an answer even if still farfetched, I knew he would show me how I was wrong or how there is another perspective that is probably the correct one. I would see him go from extreme raging cruelty to immediately reassuring me of his love for me in a calm manner and stating that he accepted me as the flawed individual that I was and he was ok with it because he loved me…..This all saddens me and I have remorse for this loss of time and damage I allowed myself to undergo.
I find on LF, words that articulate what I could not, such as the wearing of a mask…I find great comfort knowing that nobody really knows what the unveiling or slipping of the mask is unless you have experienced it..Skylar said this to me yesterday and it put one of my fragments back to the work on regaining the whole me…
Wow, this is a really good post. This is what I just didn’t comprehend. Why did the words and emotions and actions not match?
Why did he say he loved me and not act like it?
I loved him and saw no reciprocity. I asked and asked, where is the truth? Do you love me or do you not? I never got an answer.
He couldn’t see the incongruity.
I saw it and couldn’t comprehend it. I cried! I denied!
Crazy making stuff.
I saw that he lied to other people about other stuff (he said he lived here when he really lived THERE…..or that he had THIS when he really had THAT…….) but I thought they were minor lies.
I didn’t realize that *HE* was a lie. A complete lie.
It was all fake.
This is the essense of a sociopath.
Athena