I’ve just travelled back from the UK today, and during my journey I read an article that made me sit up and take notice. It’s the story about a teenage girl, Gemma Barker, who created three separate male aliases in order to dupe her female friends in to sexual relationships with her. She had made enormous efforts to develop and maintain these aliases. She succeeded so well, in fact, that not only the victims but also their families were fooled in to believing that Gemma was a boy. Whilst it’s claimed that she suffers from autism spectrum disorder and ADHD, the judge still called her “Cunning and deceptive” and the report states that she showed no remorse when handed her sentence. Ring any bells?
The thing that really struck me, though, was a quote from one of her victims who was 15 or 16 at the time. Gemma was 18, so legally an adult. Saying that she felt “repulsed and dirty” after learning that the boy she loved was actually her female friend, the victim goes on to say
“Nobody understands what it’s like to be told that the person you love and want to spend the rest of your life with isn’t real. It’s like you have disappeared. I just want to stop hurting” She also asks the poignant rhetorical question I know many of us will have asked ourselves: “What did I ever do wrong to you?”
It’s heart-breaking isn’t it? The shame of deception runs deep. Left untreated it can grow, multiplying like a cancer in the soul of those whose only crime was to love someone else. People who trusted what they were being shown, and treated the other person with care and compassion — while the other person just looked on and laughed. While in some cases there may not be any physical scars, the emotional and spiritual damage hits hard in every case. It is far more damaging — and can last so much longer.
I would have hoped that in this day and age, perhaps there might be a little more understanding and compassion for people who have been duped. After all, there are plenty of stories. Accounts from people who have been deliberately deceived and misled. People who, like us, gave all we had to people we believed and loved with all our heart.
You know what, though? Reading through some of the comments that have appeared online after the article, I am disheartened that so many still seem more focused on blaming the ”˜stupidity’ of the victims, or urging us to ”˜take pity’ on the person who deceived the girls. For many people, I know it may seem hard, almost impossible to believe that someone can get away with such a deception. But for those of us who’ve been there, once we work through the pain and shame, we know we were not to blame! We know we were not stupid, gullible, needy, blind or any of the other stinging veiled questions that stab at our soul as we try to make sense of what has happened.
It’s not just deception in romantic love that causes the pain. The hurt of betrayal can hit just as hard when it’s about relationships of trust between friends and family, or perhaps misguided loyalty to bosses or colleagues. Whatever the connection, when hit with the cold hard truth, the horror can be almost overwhelming.
And”¦ in the same way that I had absolutely no comprehension of these sorts of behaviors before it happened to me, I guess the question is how on earth can we reasonably expect other people who haven’t ”˜been there themselves’ to have any level of understanding? Well? It’s a reasonable question”¦. But then, in recent times I”˜ve realized that our natural propensity to be reasonable and understanding is just another of the ways people are exploited while predators continue to thrive. It’s by thinking “Oh, they’re just under pressure!” “Well, you know, we all make mistakes!” or “It’s ok, I know they didn’t really mean it — I won’t say anything it’s not that important” that the abuse is allowed to continue, right under the noses of ”˜reasonable’ people who just can’t begin to comprehend that the attacks are deliberate!
It’s the same reasonable, caring approach by ”˜normal’ people that keeps these heartless creatures free to continue what they are doing. It’s also the thing that hurts the victim time and time and time again — because there is no reason behind why these predators do the things they do. There is no explanation. They’re just like that — and they’re darned skilled at what they do. And that’s all there is to it.
So, these days I’m becoming stronger and more determined in what I am now beginning to see as a crusade to educate and help others. Yes, the numerous judgments and barbed comments from people who don’t know what they’re talking about can grate and often rattle me. But you know what? I’ve also decided that there is little or no point in getting frustrated at those people. It’s fair to say that we don’t know what we don’t know”¦. It’s also fair to say that I now have an unreasonable passion to do something about it whenever I come across a situation where people are being hurt and the perpetrators are getting away with it. I’m determined to help people remove their blinkers and recognize that yes, there is such a thing as ”˜bad people’ who live among us. It’s tough. Because it means inviting people to consider that they have been conned. That they, too, have been taken in by someone who tells lies as easily and effortlessly as you and I breathe.
The more I get to understand this subject, the more I believe that the self-righteous outpouring from people who have never been in that situation, stems from fear. The fear that perhaps, in the same shoes, they may not be quite so streetwise as they’d like to think. Perhaps they are not as invincible to the surgically accurate deceptions of a person who does not have the same emotional wiring as we do. A bit like children hiding under the covers when they’re afraid, it’s a good short-term fix but it doesn’t get rid of the bogeyman!
The thing is, though, hiding away or going in to denial will never get rid of the bogeymen — or women. All of us here know that from our own experiences. I’m determined to do all I can to ensure that ”˜first hand experience’ does not remain the only way to be certain that the person who is causing the harm is usually a harmful person. I know there’s a long road ahead — I also know it’s a road that’s well worth travelling.
I agree, STJ – I used to think that even though we had dissimilar interests, our respective outlooks on life – which were so very alike – would see me and my then husband through any marital difficulties we had. Hah! I was in love with a reflection of my own ideals and beliefs about how to live well. Behind the mirrored surface there was a shark.
Happy mother’s day to all of you mums out there including Darwin.
STJ
xxx
Mrs Grimm
A shark looking for food. Me.
Keep well
STJ
xxx
Yep. But we are still here! XX
Yes we are suvivors aiming to be thrivers.
STJ
xxx
Mrs Grimm ~ As a grandmother, raising a grandson who has been diagnosed on the autism spectrum, I so agree with you.
Everytime I hear someone compare autism to psychopathy, in regards to lack of empathy, my blood boils. Difficulty in recognising social cues, such as distress in another person, is miles away from having a lack of empathy.
Here’s one!
Facebook ‘friend’ offer exposes man’s other wife
By MANUEL VALDES, Associated Press
Friday, March 9, 2012
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(03-09) 18:19 PST SEATTLE, (AP) —
Facebook’s automatic efforts to connect users through “friends” they may know recently led two Washington women to find out they were married to the same man, at the same time.
That led to the man, corrections officer Alan L. O’Neill, being slapped with bigamy charges.
According to charging documents filed Thursday, O’Neill married a woman in 2001, moved out in 2009, changed his name and remarried without divorcing her. The first wife first noticed O’Neill had moved on to another woman when Facebook suggested the friendship connection to wife No. 2 under the “People You May Know” feature.
“Wife No. 1 went to wife No. 2’s page and saw a picture of her and her husband with a wedding cake,” Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist told The Associated Press.
Wife No. 1 then called the defendant’s mother.
“An hour later the defendant arrived at (Wife No. 1’s) apartment, and she asked him several times if they were divorced,” court records show. “The defendant said, `No, we are still married.'”
Neither O’Neill nor his first wife had filed for divorce, according to charging documents. The name change came in December, and later that month he married his second wife.
O’Neill allegedly told wife No. 1 not to tell anybody about his dual marriages, that he would fix it, the documents state. But wife No. 1 alerted authorities.
“Facebook is now a place where people discover things about each other they end up reporting to law enforcement,” Lindquist said.
Athima Chansanchai, a freelance journalist who writes about social media, said Facebook over the years has played a role in both creating relationships and destroying them.
“It’s just the latest vessel by which people can stray if they want to,” she said.
O’Neill, 41, was previously known as Alan Fulk. He has worked as a Pierce County corrections officer for five years, sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said.
He was placed on administrative leave after prosecutors charged him Thursday. He could face up to a year in jail if convicted.
O’Neill and his first wife had issues that went back to 2009. In 2010, his first wife was arrested after an altercation with the woman who later became the second wife.
A Facebook message to wife No. 1 was not immediately returned. There was no immediate phone number available for O’Neill and his second wife.
Lindquist said it’s unclear why O’Neill and wife No. 1 didn’t go through the divorce.
“Every few years we see one of these (bigamy) cases,” he added.
O’Neill is free, but due in court later this month, which is standard procedure for non-violent crimes, Lindquist said.
“About the only danger he would pose is marrying a third woman,” he said.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2012/03/09/national/a074152S06.DTL#ixzz1pTwBiaox
I was reading over coffee, this morning, and came across this link to an exceptionally great article, I wanted to share with all of you:
http://wakingyouup.wordpress.com/2012/03/17/stalkers-trolls-monsters-and-imaginary-friends/
Please do take a moment to read it. It is very validating.
Dupey
Milo, Read Dr. Baron-cohen’s book on empathy (or lack of it) he demonstrates that first of all empathy is not an “either or” concept but is on a SCALE (called a bell curve) where there are at either ends people with too much or too little on a SCALE (like from 1-10) Autistics tend to be on the LOW END (down to zero but not all are zero) and psychopaths are on that low end as well. He calls the ones at the very bottom Zero-NEGATIVE (the psychopath) and Zero-POSITIVE (the autistic) because the psychopaths ENJOY hurting others where the autistic doesn’t get “duping delight” in hurting others and generally doesn’t try to hurt others except maybe in what they perceive as self defense. Does that make sense? It does to me, a LOT of sense.
I saw a young man on television on a new program they have where they put people on with some kind of “affliction” and he is Autistic but he has perfect memory for numbers and even memorized pi ( 20+ thousand numbers though it goes on to infinity, it took 5 hours to recite it) and can learn a language in 7 days. They sent him to ICELAND which has one of the hardest languages in the world and he learned it enough to converse in 7 days! He has written 3 books (the third one coming out soon) and is making a living working with others showing them that they can have good lives overcoming whatever odds they have to do to thrive.
They talked about how he doesn’t have much empathy or awareness of other people’s emotions or feelings but he is learning to emulate them and interact more appropriate socially. He is having to learn emotional responses like a psychopath does, but the differences are that he is not doing it in order to manipulate others, but to offend them less. BIG difference.
Oxy – that does make sense. I am just constantly trying to get a grasp on how to help grand find his way in social situations. He does not seem to be lacking in empathy, almost the opposite.
Things are coming out now that he never talked about before. He said yesterday that he could not wait to become an adult, because he gets along with adults, adults like him, but kids don’t. He is right.
He was crying that he has no friends. He showed me his calender where he had marked an X on January 26th. He said it was the last time anyone had picked him as a partner in class work. He is always the one left out, having to do things himself. Obviously he is GREATLY disturbed by this. I did not realize it was THAT serious. He said on Friday’s when it is “sit with your friend” day at lunch, no one sits with him.
This tells me a lot about his behavior in school. He has taken the blame for things that others do – to try to get them to like him. He does silly things to make kids laugh, thinking this will help. AND, he is getting in trouble (and should be) for this. I don’t know what to do.
I am trying to look at him objectively to try to figure out why kids do not like him. I think it may be that he is so smart and things he talks about and likes to do are actually above and beyond kids his age. I don’t know. He gets along fine with the neighbor Amish kids.
I think it is a vicious circle, they call him names and pick on him and he does more and more outrageous things to try to make friends and that turns the kids away from him.
I know he needs help and I don’t know where to start. I have told him kids can be “mean and don’t realize it”, I have validated his feelings. I have told him what a great kid he is and how special he is.
Just don’t know.