There comes a time when nurture becomes nature.
This is the time when nurture and nature become inextricable, inseparable.
I suspect nobody knows precisely when this point arrives in the development of a given individual, but the immediate ramification is this: When you are involved specifically with a sociopath, or any exploitative personality, it is imperative that you stop asking how this person became who he is?
Sure, he likely endured—and was shaped by—some form of neglect or abuse growing up, and if this wasn’t obvious in the history, it was still likely there.
But here’s the point: it doesn’t matter. Not one bit.
Instead, you must relinquish your empathy, compassion and curiosity—in short, every emotion that supports your obsession to understand the genesis and evolution of your exploiter’s pathology—and confront the reality that you are dealing with (as I propose) a case of nurture becoming nature, about which there’s not a damned thing, at this point, to be done.
The damage, in other words, was baked into his character a long time ago. There is no ameliorating it now. Not all the love in the world—nothing that you have, or think you have, or thought you had to give him—will dent the petrification of his psychopathology.
His diseased personality disease is immutable, as good as etched in his DNA. Case closed.
And so what you do is this: You run for the hills, just as you’d run from a rabid dog that perhaps once was innocent and gentle. Now the dog is rabid: it no longer matters how it became rabid. And so you run, fast, and you don’t look back, because every second you allow false hope to delay you increases your risk of grievous harm.
You may have loved that dog; maybe loved it before it became rabid, or maybe it was rabid all along and you just didn’t know it. And maybe you even still love that rabid dog, or the persisting fantasy of it as unrabid.
But the dog is rabid, and a rabid dog doesn’t love you, and it was probably rabid going way back and never really loved you as you once imagined, but again”¦it makes no difference.
There are rabid animals, and there are rabid people, and neither loves you.
And so the time for analysis, of him, is up.
To be clear: I appreciate the need to make sense of trauma. But at some point, the analysis of exploiters can assume an obsessive desperation that subverts, rather than supports, the processing of trauma.
I speak here from the position of having worked with many victims of exploitive personalities who are very much like stunned deer caught, and as if suspended indefinitely, in the headlights.
One of the vital tasks is to unstun them.
And sometimes the dogged determination to “make sense” of, to “analyze” the exploitive traumatizer can be a disguised obsession with discovering something in the history (his or yours) that you insist on imagining would have made a difference”¦would have made him different?
We can search this angle interminably. And unless we call off the search, we will.
And it’s a search we’re wise to call off because it can effectively bring us to a standstill, forever.
(My use of “he” in this article was a convenience, not meant to imply that women aren’t capable of the behaviors and attitudes discussed. This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Steve,
THE BEST ARTICLE ON LF—GETS THE PLATINUM SKILLET AWARD FROM ME!!!!
I think every victim in some way, manner, or time has been obscessed with the “why” s/he is like they are (destructive) and hopes to “fix” them, and as we go through the grief of the separation we try to “bargain” with God or the Universe to find some way to “fix” them. I know I sure did—for decades with my P son—
I used to have a sign in my office that said “I feel so much better sinice I gave up HOPE” and I thought the sign was funny at the time, but now, I know it is GREAT WISDOM. As long as we hang on to the toxic hope that we can somehow fix the toxic individual, we will suffer.
Your use of the RABID DOG to represent the psychopaths and the toxic people is GREAT!!! RIGHT ON!!!
Back in the 1930s there was an outbreak of rabies in our area, and my grandfather’s dog was licking his hands which had some cuts on them from the farm work he did. He really loved that dog, too. When the dog started showing signs of the rabies, my grandfather shot it, but he had to take the 30 shots which at that time were given to people who had been exposed to rabies, all administered in the stomach.
Today it is only about five shots, and they are given in the muscles like any other shot, but still not pleasant.
The reason I am giving this example is that sometimes even expressions of AFFECTION, from a rabid dog can be TOXIC and dangerous and cause grave consequences. And you can’t always tell that they are rabid by looking. Just like a P though, eventually you can tell they are toxic/rabid though.
Your advice at the first sign of someone being “rabid” is correct, RUN BAMBI RUN!!!!!
And then we agonise over the discard when It is the best thing that could ever Happen to us!
A Monkey will push the bar for the reward of Cocain untill it is dead!
To persist to Figure him out or (Help) Him is the same thing!
Oxy, thanks so much. Always glad and reassured, when I get your positive feedback, as I respect your knowledge and wisdom. Thanks again!!
Steve
Steve,
A very powerful piece. I agree with Oxy – the analogy of the rabid dog is excellent.
Thank you for this terrific insight.
Steve,
Always right on time – you are astonishing ….my never ending resource for insight, reality and validation……spoken with tenderness AND the assuredness we need to hear ……that it could never have been any different and the WHY’s don’t matter ………………
Tuesday would have been our 19th wedding anniversary. I wasn’t sure how I would feel – if I would spend the day crying or if it even mattered.
Turns out – after much thought – I didn’t feel so bad ……..a little sad perhaps for all the lost time and investment – and how he is still so abusive.
When the day was not overwhelming at all -but spent uncelebrated as most of our anniversaries were when together – I realized that I have really given up the hope – of it ever being any different, of him getting better – of ever thinking of a past or future that could have been different.
My struggles have become so much more clear because of you ……
and I thank God for that – truly.
Three minutes to read what I have not been able to put together for myself – you are AMAZING !!!!!!
Steve:
“…many victims of exploitive personalities who are very much like stunned deer caught, and as if suspended indefinitely, in the headlights….One of the vital tasks is to unstun them. ”
And how do you do that? You turn off the lights.
The metaphor is perfect in the context of dealing with the aftermath of an S. Part of our recovery is to shine the light on these creatures — not only to get a grip on what they did and how they did it, but also to expose them. I believe it was Justice Brandeis who said “Sunshine is the best disenfectant.”
The problem is that it is so easy to move from the man turning the spotlight on the S, to the dear in the headlights, to ultimately developing “Kleig eyes” (an old Hollywood symptom which actors developed blindness from looking too long into the Kleig spotlights). The solution to Kleig eyes was turning off the lights and covering your eyes so they could heal and you could see again. Similarly, there is a point where the victim of an S has to give up understanding the cause of what happened to them and turn the focus on themselves.
Again, an excellent article.
Steve,
A more timely article, for me, cannot be found. I spent years trying to understand why this person was the way he was. I agonized over this. I am working more today on understand ME than him. My greatest eye opener, epiphany, whatever you might call it, was in seeing that he had never put that much energy into me, nor would he. He only learned as much as he needed to learn in order to get what he wanted. Years vs. minutes. Doesn’t add up and never will. HOW he got to be what he is will never be something I understand and today I thank God for that. I realized too, that if I ever DID understand him completely, then I would BE just as he is; cold, manipulative and heartless. I am sure I’m not alone when I say this cost me emotionally, mentally and financially as well. Indifference has become my best friend where this P is concerned.
Thank you for a wonderful article.
Cat
Perfect Steve. Your articles keep me coming back to LF. Even though the above lesson was drummed into my head by a psychiatrist at a children’s hospital regarding some foster children we tried to help…which was perhaps the saddest realization of my life…. I still had to learn the same lesson again with the bad man.
The more we are enticed by the dream of what would be if the bad man were normal, or by how enticing his false image is, of perhaps by how it flatters our opinion of ourselves, or by how awed we are by his position or power….the harder it is to accept the truth that this is a bad man. And it is harder yet to get that through our heads if everyone around us seems fooled by the Wizard of Oz performance. But usually we find out that others who have gotten close have learned the ugly truth too. That the show dog is rabid.
The analogy works too, in that it is SO easy to get infected by their sick world view. All the more reason to run. I felt compelled to shout “rabid dog, rabid dog!”, but I made sure I was safe first.
I think, too, that if we spend TOO much time going over our own history, analysis turns into self-abuse disguised as “healing”. At some point, we have to turn our attention to TODAY, living in the moment and making positive choices for ourselves, as Louise’s article on no contact beginning in our mind underscores. As did Donna’s recent post on her main points in her new book.
Can’t wait for your next article! I check every day!
I have been reflecting quite a bit lately with regard to neuroplasticity. Why is it that the relatively healthy people I know have been able to harness their capacity for change, and the disordered personalities I know have not?
Seriously – most successful people I know continue to change and evolve in all stages of their lives. They change – often radically.
Why don’t cluster Bs change?
I think cluster Bs don’t change because they don’t want to change. As unsuccessful as their lives may seem to the rest of us, they are pleased with what they see as accomplishments. We see broken relationships, they see successful scams. We see loneliness, and they see self-sufficiency. Their lives seem tragic to us, but not to them.
All the changes I’ve seen in healthy personalities have been volitional. More than that, they’ve been choices that required remarkable stamina and dogged determination in order to realize results.
So no matter how many crocodile tears are shed, we shouldn’t imagine that a cluster B is going to change. They are even less likely to change if we fall for their claims that they want to change. Our gullibility in this matter will simply be understood by the cluster B as one more incident where his/her dishonest behavior “worked” for him/her.
Just walk away.
This article couldn’t be more true. My ex S was a rabid dog in human form. Acceptance has been the hardest part for me. The acceptance to know that nothing will change him. I exhasusted myself trying to “fix” him and walking away was the hardest thing I ever did. And now I’m left with the “what ifs” and I “should haves.” I know I want answers. I want to know why…how…but continuing to obsess over him only does more damage. I have to accept that I may never know those answers. Letting go. Being free. Never looking back.
Thanks Steve.