When is history predictive of future behavior? Who can change? Who will change? Can sociopaths change? What is meaningful versus unmeaningful change?
I would argue that history is most predictive of future behavior when the mindset of the individual—especially the motivational mindset of the individual—remains static. By this I mean that short of a radicalized mindset, one can assume that the individual’s historical behaviors and attitudes will not change, at least not meaningfully.
So motivation goes directly to the question who is likely, or unlikely, to make changes in historical behavior patterns. One must ask, what is the individual’s motivation to change previous behavior?
This isn’t always easy to answer for several reasons—one, we can disguise our motives; also, we can want to believe that someone’s stated motive is their true motive, when it isn’t (sometimes against our better judgement). Plus, as change-intenders, we can also deceive ourselves about our own motives, further complicating the task of ascertaining the true motive(s) behind an intended change.
In the case of the sociopath, we can be quite sure of this: His motives will be self-serving (which alone isn’t necessarily a fatal problem). What makes the problem “fatal” is that the sociopath’s motives will be exclusively self-serving. Sure, he may be motivated to please you, but it will be, exclusively, to benefit himself (from his pleasing you).
This means the sociopath won’t be looking genuinely to benefit you with his change, but rather, principally (if not entirely) himself.
And so sociopaths, if motivated enough, can make changes. But one can’t stress enough that their motives to change will be shallow. Now it may not look like this on the surface—that is, a slick sociopath can seem to want to change with convincing, genuine intent. But eventually, often much too late for his partner, the underlying, dominating self-centeredness of his agenda will surface.
This is a fancy way of reminding ourselves that the sociopath is manifestly out for himself; thus any changes he endeavors will be pursued with the aim to protect and advance his interests, his gratifications; not yours.
Let’s consider the case of the abusive personality—more specifically, someone with a significant history as a serial emotional, if not physical, abuser. Can this individual change? And, if so, under what circumstances?
If he’s a sociopath, we have our answer—no. The sociopathic abuser is a flat-out hopeless case; he will never stop his abuse in a permanent, reliable way. The reason why is that he’s lacking an essential motivation: to want, genuinely, to cease his role as a cause of his partner’s suffering.
In the sociopath’s case, he lacks this motivation permanently because, basically, he lacks love and empathy for his partner. This is the sociopath’s essential defect—his incapacity to love and empathize maturely. He is primitively, functionally deficient in this respect. Consequently, he has no intrinsic incentives to sacrifice himself meaningfully (including to make meaningful changes), especially in the long-term, for others.
Can the sociopath cease his abuse temporarily? Yes, if the short-term incentives are strong enough. The sociopathic abuser can sometimes suspend his abuse just long enough to recapture what he wants (like renewed sexual attentions), or just long enough to avoid losing what he’s unprepared to lose (like a doting partner who makes his life convenient in many ways).
But bear in mind the shelf-life for his changes will be temporary; also, i think it bears repeating, these changes will be driven to improve his, not your, sense of security and comfort.
Conversely, where you have an abusive individual who is capable of feeling love and empathy for his partner, it is possible that he may reach a point of recognition that he no longer wants to be a cause, through his abuse, of his partner’s suffering. This is where the kernel of hope lies and where the work begins–from the recognition that one can no longer justify, or rationalize, being a source of suffering to another. However this requires a capacity to empathize; and where one feels love, as well as empathy, for one’s victims, then one has a chance to begin to work through one’s abusiveness.
Unfortunately chronic abusiveness is often associated with, and supported by, a highly narcissistic mindset, in which capacities for mature love and empathy are limited. This explains why it is often very difficult to treat successfully chronic relationship abusers.
(This article is copyrighted © 2010 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is strictly for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the attitudes and behaviors discussed.)
MamaGem,
You described it perfectly:
“The anger and rage and sadness is overwhelming at times,
it comes over me in huge waves, a bit like waves of the sea breaking over my head, but I know I have to ride out the storm and keep moving, and keep learning! And forgive myself for my ignorance, and for being HUMAN!”
I have those feelings every day…..just when I think I’m getting to safe shore, another giant swell comes in & drags me back down again, pounding me on the ocean floor….I fight to come back up, & when I do I’m choking for air, & feel just to EXhausted to keep moving, keep fighting the waves. [I surfed for 6 yrs on Kauai, so I know well that feeling of being caught in the white water & the terror of being held down.]
I started out having a bad day today, & I know just how you were feeling last night.
I’m visualizing myself reaching my hand out to you—-way—over—there, & just barely being able to touch your fingers, but just enough for you to be able to grab my hand…..and just with that touch, you & I can hold each other up, above the waves, & begin to move strongly toward the beach.
That’s as far as I can get us before the vision gets blurry….I’m trying to imagine us smiling, invigorated, & striding across the sand…..but that’s when my anxieties take over, & I suddenly realize that I don’t know which way to go. There’s a murky lagoon to the left & huge, ragged rocks to the right, & a high cliff in front….& I’m so afraid I don’t know how to navigate over & beyond the obstacles.
And I’m looking to you to keep ahold of my hand while we try to find direction….reaching out to the hands of the rest of the women here who’re recovering from the storm….believing with all my heart that we’ll be able to strengthen & help each other heal our wounds & move on along with our lives, stronger, smarter, more able than before.
That’s the vision I’m trying to hold in my mind right now.
Because the reality is that I’m still fighting the waves & fighting the feeling that I’d like to just give up & let the currents carry me out to sea to be drowned by my sorrow…
just so tired of fighting it all….
But I know I can’t give up, no matter how impossible it seems right now.
And neither can you, mamaGem, or you Imstillstanding, or chinagirl or Oxy or EB, or any of the rest of us……
And I need the help of God, & the strength of He who is Within me, & the support of loving friends to conquer this.
And that’s why we’re here, isn’t it? To remember that we Can do this.
Dear Whyme,
Yep, your post says it all! Thank you! Ride that wave gurlfriend!
Sometimes I would sit for hours over my computer when I was still living in hidingn at the lake in the RV and just WEEP and weep as I read here at lovefraud…it seemed like that pain would never ever end. Sometimes I still sit here and weep, but it isn’t the intensity of pain, and usually it is weeping in sympathy/empathy with one of the other posters here. That’s OK, it means that I care, that I can connect with other’s feelings.
Or sometimes I sentimentally weep (almost happy tears) when I think about some of the things my late husband and I did or the jokes we pulled! Simple every day things! But those memories are good, not painful now.
With my “departed” sons (even though they still both breathe) I can think of the good times when they were kids and HOW VERY MUCH I ENJOYED THEM—so bright and wonderful! One grewe into a psychopath I don’t know, and the other one is just a dysfunctional arsehole, but I don’t have to deal with either of those MEN, they are just “guys” but the little boys who are no more, they are my wonderful memories.
Nothing has CHANGED except it is how I LOOK AT THINGS. How I name things. How I feel about things. I can’t change reality, but I can change my responses to it. I am IN CONTROL of that much of this world.
I reach out to others who share this journey of healing—this rocky, pitted road of self discovery–and it eases my journey and I hope I ease theirs. It is called LIFE and LEARNING. We can still have JOY and PEACE and no one can destroy that unless we allow it!
Dear Caylin,
I just saw your post from yesterday and I want to welcome you to LF..sorry I kind of “posted around you”
This is a great site with lots of good information and support! Glad you are here and come back frequently and read and read the articles. The different subjects (look on the left) are divided out and authors, and the monthly ones go back only a year but the rest go back to the first ones years ago. All are great!
Again, welcome and hang around. KNOWLEDGE IS POWER! And we have to take back our power and coontrol! God Bless. Yes, prayer does work!
Hi Cayln! Welcome to LF! This site has helped me learn and heal. The people on here are REAL and very kind. It’s a wondeful place to vent as well.
Steve, my own personal feeling is that they don’t change.They might be motivated to ACT as though they have changed, but it’s only because they are trying to stay out of jail, not pay child support or have people they are scamming to know the truth. REAL change, as you’ve said takes enormous amounts of work and I just don’t see them doing that. In the case of my ex, he would have to feel as though he needed to change and I’ve never seen that with him.
Being in recovery has been hard, but I NEEDED to change a lot of things. I just don’t see that NEED in my ex. And from what I hear from those who know him now, he hasn’t changed at all. He has no motivation to do so. So, yes, the past is indeed the best predictor of the future. Great article!
geminigirl,
I hope that you are feeling better today, knowing what it’s like to have days when you are awash with grief, despair, anger, etc. Take care.
Cat,
What’s amazing is how these sociopaths resemble each other in SO MANY WAYS. Yeh, they won’t change for the better, an unfortunate fact of life. Take care.
Dear Gem, ((((Hugs)))) I will lit a candle for you tonight. In my fantasies you are now tearing out the sinks and sewers of the toilets you flushed all the evil coming from your “family”. It is just stinky, dirty, sticky, awful, nauseating. I am sure you will replace them with a wonderful new first class plumbing, and then you can enjoy life again. When you have managed THIS part, then the worst has been done.
It took me months and years to process that part of my soul, the very old layers with my earliest infant memories, I imagined it being the cellar of my soul-house, dark, stinky, moldy, dead; it was so painful.
Every once in a while I get stomach ache because of some injustice or transgressions from others; is it just a reminder to never forget where we have been and to honor the tremendous inner work we have accomplished? I hope so, and that I will never again endure this pain.
The candle is also a bit for me and all the LF-Community! I wish you peace of your mind, Gem (Gem = precious stone!).
Oxy,
“STARVING OLD LADY AT MY HOUSE!”
I’m feeling your pain, my dear ~ same here – what with my “freshman 10 (#) and sophomore 10 (#)” and the past 5 years’ worth of winter weight I put on, but neglected to take of each spring… grand total of 70 to lose. I DIE with a T with you; we can encourage one anothers’ efforts and successes!
*smiles*
~j~
Dear Jewels,
Well I think today is the 6th day of the new EATING PLAN! I really am not as hungry as I felt before, not feeling starved at least. Night before last when I went to the hospital for the test the scale showed I’d lost 4 pounds, and I know the first week goes faster with wt. loss….but I actually don’t feel so pregnant now, like maybe 7 months instead of 9 1/2. LOL
Yea, I have a MINIMUM OF 60 TO LOSE so we are close together there. Funny thing is I have advised others for years how to lose weight, how to manage diabetes and all that good stuff, including quitting smoking! LOL
Well, I did the ONE (quit smoking, unfortunately have some lung damage of course) and now I am working on the other two, because with my elevated wt. my sugar is up from where it should be so now I can say TYPE II DIABETES—but will be managed wihtout medication if I work at it.
So I am going to work really hard on taking care of myself. up to now, actually, I haven’t had any of the chronic diseases like high Blood pressure or diabetes, or cardiac problems, so got to get myself in gear!
We’ll work on it together. I am doing the 1200 cal diet x 2 weeks, then going to 1500 from them on. Working back up to walking at least 1/2 hour per day or more if the weather is good. Plus working around here. Eating 3 meals and 2 small snacks a day instead of eating it all at once, or continually eating day and night. Eating lots of fruits and veggies as well.
Lots of water, and being creative with the food so I don’t get bored, and after My food plan is more established (say in a month or so) I will declare a “food holiday” ONE day a month to eat out, or sort of go over my regular allotted calories with some of my favorite high calorie foods. So that means Christmas day, NOT the 30 days before Christmas and the 30 days after Christmas! LOL
We can call this the JEWELS AND OXY GET HEALTHY THREAD! TOWANDA FOR US!!!!!
Yes Ma’am! I know the power of the skillet, too. I have a sister in law who does the free-range grazing the first week of every month, then stricly adheres to her food plan for three weeks…it seems to work well for her.
I have to add the fresh fruits and veggies – we have them, just not as consistently as I need them.
I cannot turn vegetarian – I like my prime rib too much; and I am opposed to completely vegan lifestyle because I’ve never seen a healthy vegan, for all they profess to be in tip top shape. Not to start an inner-thread quarrel or anything – it’s just not for me.
So, yes, let’s check in once in awhile – I plan to walk with my hunny pi and the kidlet in the evenings, so we’ll see how far I can get with the 1 – 3 mile walk per day.
OFF, darn pounds!