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.
One of the worst manifestations of the shame of deceit comes when you finally start sharing with friends and loved ones the s-path’s true nature and some of the awful things he’s done and they give these “reasonable” explainations as to why he acted the way he did. or Im they say I am simply taking it too seriously and that I am lucky to have a man that shows such affection, but they wouldn’t believe me when I told them that it was just an act … He was so charming and engaging that our mutual friends mostly blame me for being insecure and clingy but I am so grateful that I can come to lovefraud and KNOW that you guys know the truth about what a sociopath is capable of. My heart was shredded and when people on the outside show sympathy and compassion for him it makes me feel ten times more lonely…
this is not to be a religious comment, but this is what I have to live by to make sure I stay no-contact.
“If you give the Devil a ride he will always want to drive.”
The last time I allowed the “Devil” to speak to me he begged to sit down in person so he could tell me all the things he was feeling and what he was willing to do to keep me this time… I met with him and was patiently waiting for his outpouring of emotion but he basically said he missed me and he loved me and tried to kiss me. I asked about the things he said he wanted say and he said “what? I said I miss you and I love you.” I stormed away without another word. I was crushed all over again at the display of apathy for the pain and frustration his lying, cheating, disrespect, controlling, and chauvanism had caused me. He will use any lie to get me in his presence and once Im there half his battle is over. Respect the enemy… THEY NEVER CHANGE
Smartyskirts,
GREAT POSTS and you are so right “If you give the Devil a ride he will ALWAYS want to DRIVE”!!!! Yes! So right! So true.
Yes, others will try to make excuses and to show you how your feelings and your experience are wrong….and it feels like being abused all over again to be devalued.
I had to laugh at the chauvanism of your X with the “let’s talk” LOL He did not get it, or care about your pain or his bad acts, it was all over for him when he said “I miss you, I love you (now let’s have sex and forget it)” WHAT GALL!
BTW that is why NC is so important because when they get you in a corner to “talk” their battle is half won. Good post.
“Would I warn him? Not at all.
She used to be my problem, now she’s his. Happy trails, fella! ”
sistersister,
I had the same thing with a relative. But, we also have to ask ourselves ‘what kind of a person would marry our relative?’ They can’t be emotionally healthy either. So, while I celebrate my freedom (since the SP is not longer my problem), I’m also aware that the new couple could team up against me. So, now I’m a very sweet gray rock to the new couple: I wish them the best, keep my distance & watch my back.
Thanks for adding that perspective. All I heard was that the guy was a “really nice guy” and that he was fresh off a first marriage that didn’t work out. Whether he’s the serial spath or the serial victim, he’s about to meet his match when Sis moves in. She’s a rather mild case, considering the stories I hear here, but still baffling. Her exes don’t say she’s a spath; they say, “What happened?”
I cherish all my photos of her as a cute little kid, a Weeble, as my mom says. But she’s not that anymore. She’s dangerously sweet and tempting now.
Her husband-to-be only got interested when she had breast cancer. He sent her flowers. I’m not sure if that’s a red flag (looking for someone vulnerable) or a reason to feel sorry for him.
Breast cancer has a link with anger, of a particularly female kind, by the way. When I see her, I see a pink ribbon with teeth.
The eyes see only what the mind knows.
Woundlicker,
that is so true.
In order to warn a victim, we have to know her heart. What does she value? Where are her boundaries?
In other words, we have to know what the spath knows. He has his hooks into these places and the surgeon has to know where to do the surgery.
Learning something new is all about connecting it to something you already know. New knowledge needs an anchor. That’s why analogies work so well.
If I walk up to a naive person and try to explain spaths, they’ll just look at me as if I just told them a Grimm Fairy Tale.
Until this topic becomes part of the public vernacular, making that connection is not easy.
So true, and why so many who have been privileged enough to not have encountered a spath don’t comprehend their danger.
Hi Folks, i come back here every now and then, when I think I’m going a little crazy. Some of you may recall me from a few years ago, when a relationship of mine blew up in my face, and I found myself in bed with something close to pure evil.
I’m doing ok, even did some EMDR, which was fabulous, and I’ve been involved with a new person who I really care for. He cries at the sappy movies with me, and we work in the garden and marvel at the song of birds together.
And I have found myself falling in love, only to, at my most happy times, feel this horrible block loom. It hasn’t gone away — that terrible fear that I’ll be deceived again. it’s like a wall, a horrible lonely wall that I built around myself, when I, like this young girl in the story, and like so many of you, discovered that the person I had given love to so selflessly, was a sham.
Unreal. Yes, I remember the seering pain of discovering that all that love, and the love he reflected back to me that I thought was sincere love for me, was a joke and a game.
I’m writing this here, because I’m trying to work through that wall, because I really believe this new person I’ve met is not lying, though I still have moments when I’m convinced he is. It takes everything inside of me to keep from questioning him.
But I don’t.
Yes this is the after-effects of having been duped by an Unreal Love. These people try to take away your own innocence, and your own ability to love — they try to turn your happiness into a misery equal to their own.
Right now, I still cower a little under the embarrassment and despair over the fact I was hurt that way; I am an educated, intelligent person who has a heart — and I just want to mend, but it’s hard to mend when the popular consciousness belittles the so-called “victim.” I firmly agree with Skylar, that this dialogue has to become part of the public discourse. We have to learn to talk openly and non-judgementally about people who hurt and have been hurt. And then, perhaps, we can find the healing that we seek.
Louise,
I’m happy that you’ve found happiness.
You know the red flags. Use them.
You know about boundaries, have them.
When Dr. Peck wrote, “People of the Lie” he said he was worried about writing about how to recognize spaths because he wondered if spaths would use his book as a guide for creating better masks. His was one of the first books, in 1983, to openly discuss malignant narcissists and how to spot them.
In truth, spaths can’t change. Yes, there are some with excellent masks. These are true spaths and usually have high intelligence. But even they MUST use the same 3 tricks that all N’s use to manipulate: charm, pity and rage.
Did your bf use over the top love bombing to reel you in? Did he test your boundaries? They all test boundaries. Does he make your emotions go up and down? Do you feel like you’re on a roller coaster? Are the highs really really high?
Thinking back to your old relationshit, you remember how you felt. Do you ever feel those things now?