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.
Hey everyone, I have a few minutes amidst getting ready to leave town and taking a much needed break to share with me something that happened today.
I had a regular massage client over getting a deep tissue massage. I was working in the area of one of the hip flexors that lies underneath the abdominals. While I could feel the muscle releasing its tightness and stress, she became very emotional and started crying. I was very fortunate that she trusted me enough to share with me what she was going through. The pressure in that area actually accessed an old memory from a few years ago of a man she was in love with. They broke up a year ago, and it was very painful for her. He is not a spath, but he was not deeply committed to her like she was to him, and she was very affected by the breakup. Most of her visits to me a year ago involved her processing a lot of feelings over that relationship while she was getting a massage. Then things got better. A year after they broke up, she has been dating several guys, and one that is like a primary relationship. She believed to have moved on. And yet she had this deep emotion stored in her body. I was just amazed at watching her have enough trust to just go through it. She could have easily just shut down and suffered out the massage.
I wanted to bring this up to demonstrate just how deep grieving can go and how it can be held in the body. I am just in awe of the wisdom the body holds.
Star, is there any significance to where the body holds on to trauma? Is it ever symbolic? Just curious.
I am seeing a doctor that does Neuro-set Emotional CPR…he has a lot of great technology in his office and when he has narrowed it down to certain areas, (there is tenderness or pain) he tells me the range dates of the trauma happening and it is unbelievable how accurate it is! He then has me repeat a new belief and then treats it doing kinesiology and supplements if necessary…I had months and months of severe bicep tendonitis. I tried everything!! He treated me and it was gone a couple days after his 2nd treatment!! 🙂 I’m sold:)
Interesting post.
In my own experiences with a woman I believe to have been a sociopath, I noticed this “crack” in personalities several times, in some strange ways.
Very brief background: This woman was almost too good to be true. She was beautiful, sweet, polite, kind. She was also playing many people against the other, trading sex for money, appliances, school assignments, etc. Each person she dealt with thought they were special in her eyes, when they (including me) was just another worker in her assembly line.
As for the cracks, sometimes she would be talking, and then all of a sudden she would begin referring to herself in the third person, as if she was talking about someone else. She didn’t seem to realize this. It was almost as if she was aware at that moment that her persona was a uniquely crafted entity.
She could also become extraordinarily rude, lashing out at a given instance. Sometimes she told me “How much longer do I have to spend with you?” or, when I helped her with something on her computer and asked how it was, she snapped, “I told you once it was good, how many times do I have to tell you?” (I was just checking in a day later to see if the thing I made still worked.)
She was uncanny in how she picked up on others’ interests and soft spots as well. She would repeat things I said to her, and she did this with others.
It’s scary when I think how her whole personality is really crafted around others’ personalities, sensitive to their tastes and mannerisms and even senses of humor, and there is nothing really there behind that. Sad, as well.
lebo,
that sounds creepy but accurate for a sociopath. I’m sorry you experienced it.
It’s hard to say whether they choose to be “mirrors” or whether it happens naturally.
My spath brother told me, when he was about 14 or 15, that he felt his face “becoming” the face of a person he was looking at. He said it was very discomforting and unbearable so he began wearing dark sunglasses all the time. He had a therapist who tried to help him by taking a video of his face while they interacted. This was supposed to show him that his face had not actually “become” the other person’s face, but he couldn’t shake the feeling.
In hindsight, it sounds to me like he was mirroring and he couldn’t control it. Of course that doesn’t excuse his evil behavior.
Unrelated, but, i found this online and like it.
jealousy.
Jealousy says “I want what you have.”
Envy says “I want what you have and I want you to lose what you have.”
I like that, too, Athena.
I experienced this change of personas as a chameleon affect, shapeshifting. When we were in the company of other people, I became invisible to her, as she put all her energy into mesmerising the others. It was quite eerie, her eyes turned black and she was unblinking. Everyone wanted to be in this spell though.
There was an energy coming from her that drew people in, captivated people, and she was aware of it. In her words ‘it’s just something i can do’. I have wondered if it is a gift that is just too much, given the power-driven nature of our capitalist driven world. Imagine what good it could do in the right hands.
Re: jealousy and envy, bullies envy their targets. They seek to destroy that which they want but cannot have. Targets can be driven to suicide. Imagine a psychological serial killer, someone who is able to mentally push people to kill themselves, and then help him/herselves to their ‘assets’. Or, just for the thrill of it….. who says serial killers have to be physically slaughtering people.
Sky’s comment and this article has me pondering about mirroring.
In general, everyone mirrors subconscously. With that I mean – people synch body postures and movements unconsciously whenever they are interested in what the other has to say. Any typical everyday magazine will every once in a while publish an article about body language between two people being romantically interested will be mirroring each other in body language subconsciously. When you’re assessing a group situation like a meeting, or a job interview, or some other group session bodylanguage mirroring is what you’ll be watching for. At tourleader selection weekends I watch body language a lot, and to be sure the group of people being assessed are comfortable with what is going on, I’ll watch their legs for example… say that I cross my legs while I’m talking, I’ll see that during the explanation the listeners will end up sitting with their legs crossed. And if I’m doing a more personal interview, and notice stress or tension, I’ll be consciously mirror the seating posture, which often is all that is needed to make a person relax about the “interview” situation.
Why am I saying this? Because we all mirror in social situations at a subconscious level to some extent and it has a powerful impact that it makes us feel at ease and gives us the subconscious signal that someone is paying attention to us.
Ok, so we all know mirroring as far as body language goes in social circumstances and we know it’s effective. Does the mirroring within normal people goes further than body language? I think we all have gone through a mirroring stage that goes a bit beyond the body language… most likely when we were teens: clothing and fashion of a pop idol or a friend we looked up to… and perhaps even a crush. I wasn’t so much into idols, but I had a crush on a guy for a few HS years and it would influence my clothing taste: not to impress him and look hot, but I actually wanted a similar coat as he had, or similar sneakers and such. That I would classify as “mirroring” too out of severe interest to someone you wish to synch with. And with the sevre crush I focused on him so much that I’d even feel as if I’d be mimicking his facial features (not in the mirror… it just felt like it). And I do think most people may have experienced something similar while having a crush in their teens.
Of course I did this subconsciously at an age where I was still developing and finding my own likes, dislikes and personality. By the time I was an adult my personality was developed enough to be authentic, and natural mirroring hasn’t extended to the social body language thing.
A spath’s mirroring reminds me of that teen-crush like mirroring, which is a direct sign they are not authentic and do not have a developed personality. I am able to believe they do it partly subconscously, as a result of their focus. And there’s no doubt they’re hyperfocused when trying to reel in a victim. The difference is that they’re not teens with an innocent crush, but they have a similar hyperfocus. I think they do it in order to try and get in the target’s head: what are they thinking, their tastes, lifestyle… Perhaps there might be a small hope component in it: maybe they hope that this time they’ll come across tastes and lifestyle that will help them grow their own underdeveloped personality. Of course, soon after they realize it doesn’t do that at all.
I also compare it to our normal bodylanguage mirroring in social situations, but since spaths have no authenticity and no boundaries their social mirroring goes beyond the normal and extends even that of the teen-crush level.
It also is one of the foremost reasons we end up feeling under such a spell and feel relaxed when a spath lovebombs us: they’re so hyperfocused on us, and we are aware of it (and it’s flattering) and our subconscious registers the mirroring. We can only relate that mirroring to our own experience of having a crush on a cognitive level. So that is what we think they feel. But ost importantly our subconscous is manipulated into “relax, we’re in synch.” Even if a part of us (our intuition) knows there’s something off and weird and not ok, the mirroring overrides this feeling in the spath’s company… because that is exactly what mirroring is supposed to do to us in social settings: make us feel at ease and relax.
darwinsmom,
yes mirroring is a huge aspect of this in another way too.
It is thought that a baby needs to be mirrored by his mother, in order to form the attachment bond. He needs to know that he is understood and cared for.
A baby who is not mirrored or cannot perceive the mirroring (perhaps brain damage or ADD) will not form the attachment.
Rene Girard talks about mimesis, and he says that we mimic/mirror each other’s likes and dislikes (our desires). I know that spaths really WANT what we want. My spath couldn’t see me eat something without taking it and eating it. They are envious to the core. Envy is a form of mirroring, wanting to BE you. It is flattering until you realize that they want you to be THEM. ick.
I know I mirror my BF when we are talking and vice versa. I’m so aware of it now but I can’t help it. When he scratches his head, my head really does itch! And vice versa.
I think that with spaths they just stayed at the level of infant mirroring. They never grew any identity of their own.