Therapists aren’t immune to the charms of sociopathic clients, including this therapist. Far from it. This is especially true in a couples dynamic where the client, as I’ve noted before, can disguise his sociopathic tendencies sometimes more effectively than when in individual therapy.
But even when the disguise is off, and I know transparently that I’m dealing with a sociopathic individual, that still doesn’t necessarily innoculate me from enjoying him possibly as a very engaging, friendly, even if superficial and manipulative, individual.
This can, though, make for more difficulty, and thus more urgency, to be especially watchful not to succumb to his engaging side at the expense of evaluating and confronting the reality that must be addressed.
In situations where I find a sociopathic client to be quite likeable I must be extra watchful for his efforts to position himself as the victim in the relationship; as the misunderstood, if self-admittedly sometimes wayward (but ultimately sensitive, devoted) partner; when, in fact, what he ultimately, fundamentally is, beyond what may be his high level of likeability, is manipulative, abusive, probably devious; someone who operates covertly—and, if audatious enough, overtly—in wielding, if not flaunting, his double-standards in an often degrading fashion.
Double standards he’s likely to try to “gaslight” his partner into believing he’s either not deploying; or, due to the oppressive conditions he will claim to have suffered, double standards he will rationalize as acceptable, and which he manipulatively asserts she should somehow tacitly accept as his rational response to the untenable conditions he’s lived under (thanks to her).
In any case, he will position himself as, if not the whole victim in the relationship (his generous concession towards balance) then, at the very least, as the principal victim.
Now let me be very clear here: he may state that he owns fifty-fifty of the problem in the relationship, and that he even fully owns many of his violating behaviors. He may state these things with seeming sincerity, and this may sound very promising and good.
But he really doesn’t believe this, and you can be quite sure that his failure to apply his ostensible self-awareness will affirm his underlying insincerity and his poor prospects for meaningful change.
What he really believes, at bottom, is that his partner (as I’ve noted) is the principal problem; it is she who obstructs the attainment of his gratifications and fulfillment; and because he feels entitled to gratification and fulfillment at all times, he can thus rationalize his pursuit of it—and how he pursues it—anytime he likes.
And so, sometimes I find myself sitting across from someone like this who, as destructive a person as I recognize he is, nevertheless in the limited confines of my involvement with him, I may experience as extremely engaging and likeable. After all, he may be showing me his “best” sides—his most charming, respectful, pleasant, humorous, “sensitive” sides.
He may be someone who leaves me feel very challenged not to lose my own grip on the reality I’ve discerned through my own eyes—and through his disarming engagability in my office.
In these cases, I have to remind myself that, while my job is to be objective, it is not necessarily to be “neutral.”
Sometimes my “objectivity” must lead me to the conclusion that I’m working with a couple in which one partner, however “likeable” may, in fact, be the primary, if not sole, perpetrator of abuse against his partner (perhaps serious abuse, for a long time); that, however persuasive he may be with regard to his own alleged suffering in the relationship, still it is he (not she) who is the truly destructive party in the relationship, even if she can also sometimes be destructive (but often, in such cases, as a function of her having been worn down into states of desperate rage).
Sometimes I have to recognize this dynamic, however unpleasant it may be to have to recognize. I may have to confront my own capacity for denial and minimization, to be sure that, from my avoidance, I’m not abandoning the client who needs my validation and support.
I may be in a very nonconfrontational mood and feel highly averse to confronting anyone, let alone an abusive sociopath; and yet the situation may call for just that—an effective confrontation of the reality.
Because these are not instances or opportunities one can afford to waste. Too much is at stake. And so confrontation may become necessary. The client needs, in a very serious way, to be “called out.”
But with one caveat: I must be confident that, in “calling him out,” I’m not placing his partner at heightened risk to be punished more abusively than normally after, or in-between, the therapy sessions!
It is both easier and harder to confront, or in this case, “call out” a sociopathic client whom I may find likeable. Easier from the standpoint that, however superficial the connection between us really is (particularly his with me), there is at least the comfort in hoping that an accumulation of goodwill may have developed between us arising from his experience of feeling respected and liked in the sessions; goodwill, I hope, which may leave him reacting less defensively to my impending feedback.
Harder in the sense that it’s awkward to risk, or test, that goodwill? Is the goodwill all illusory? Will the client seriously, maybe even explosively “go south” on me (and worse, “go south” on his partner)? Am I overestimating his goodwill and tolerance to hear the feedback I’m about to deliver? Is my timing going to be right, or wrong? Will I go too far, or not far enough, in my feedback, and in the tone of my feedback? Will I be too strong or too aggressive in my tone, or just as problematically, too passive and weak?
And, importantly, who will benefit from this feedback?
Probably not the client, because he’s sociopathic. But even if he’s a sociopath, so long as I can be pretty sure that my feedback won’t result in the subsequent escalation of his abuse of his partner, then it’s possible that my feedback will benefit her, which becomes the sole purpose of my delivering the feedback.
It is really for her, not him.
And this may be feedback I repeat over a number of sessions, which can reinforce its impact (especially for her); and, because I offer it in the couples sessions, I can reinforce and elaborate it in subsequent individual sessions with her without violating his confidentiality. By this I mean that the feedback will have already been stated to him, in front of her, so that I can discuss it with her later, alone, in a private session.
Does the delivery of such confrontations of the unignorable reality risk alienating the sociopathic partner? Absolutely. It often spells the end of the couples sessions. But what’s really been lost? A superficially engaging connection with a client who will make no progress anyway in therapy, or as a worthy partner? Sure, this tenuous connection is seriously risked. And yet its preservation, at some point, itself becomes a form of destructive enabling and pretense.
In the end, the abused client has a chance for the freedom she deserves and perhaps can be convinced she is ready to seize.
(This article is copyrighted © 2011 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of male gender pronouns is for convenience’s sake and not to suggest that females aren’t capable of the attitudes and behaviors discussed.)
Good points, Steve. I think Robert Hare said the way he can tell who is the psychopath in a group of patients is that they all ask him for money and the psychopath is the ONE HE GAVE IT TO. LOL So even the great Bob Hare can be conned by the likable Psychopath!
Steve
Wow, a complex job this is for a therapist. I had never thought about how difficult something like this would be.
My spath is going to a therapist now-he had a personal crisis – and took it upon himself to go in. He says he has been feeling like he wants to do strange things as well. He’s an amazing liar, he will tell you it’s raining outside when it’s sunny and you’ll believe him….i wonder how the therapist can tell, or IF he can tell that he’s a spath. I can’t imagine my spath would say, “oh, I want to do these strange things, and I lie to eveybody all the time, and I cheated on my girlfriend and then I married somebody else and I cheat on her too.”.
I don’t think so.
?
SK
I don’t think my exspath actually thought I was the problem. that’s not how he thinks. He knows he starts fights, he knows he wants to kill me. It’s not a matter of who is the problem, it’s only a matter of what he wants. He does also believe that I DESERVE punishment because I’m “weak”. But that isn’t a problem for him, since he would enjoy punishing me.
It’s like the old joke, “I don’t have a drinking problem, I drink, I get drunk, I fall down. No problem”
In my spath’s case, it’s, “I don’t have a spath problem, I’m a spath, I victimize others, they die, I get away with it, no problem.”
My spath daughter went to a therapist weekly. She manipulated her therapist to such extremes. She had her believing some of the wildest stories. The stories always involved her being a victim in some form or fashion. Her therapists finally confronted us with her accusations of mistreatment towards her. Try convincing a therapist that they are being manipulated by a spath, let alone a 14 year old. We had a very difficult time convincing the therapist her stories were not true. I think my daughter enjoyed the experience. I would assume there is a lot of satisfaction to a spath in manipulating a professional.
Dear Steve,
I could go on and on about the therapist who falls for the spaths charming facade. I still debate with myself if I should contact the licensing board about the phd’s treatment of me. Spath had more reason to mess with my head when we would get home from therapy. “It’s just your anxiety or angst, listen to the doctor, he knows what he’s talking about.” “It’s your childhood, that’s what wrong with you, your childhood messed you up.”
It would never stop and I’m surprised I didn’t go absolutely insane dealing with that madness.
The phd backpeddled about his treatment after other people validated my experience (his peers and people he respects) and I sent him the proof of all spaths lies. Here this moron told my therapist that it would be a travisty if we were to separate. Really? Just another example of poor human nature when said phd can’t even appologize or admit that he made a mistake. VERY damaging to an already damaged person (me) from the years of abuse.
Now my son’s therapist won’t return my phone calls and I think charming spath has used his manipulation on him. I seem like an anxiety ridden person when I discuss the situation because I’m worried my son may be abused. Who wouldn’t be filled with anxiety.
It makes me so sick to my stomach that the spaths can turn these supposed professionals against me.
When you talked about the spath playing the victim, oh boy, you have that right! Mine would say that he cared soooo much about me and just wants me to be better. He was so sensitive. Gawd, it’s mind boggling that they can work the system to their advantage while the true victims are victimized all over again.
Dear Hope4,
I WOULD take ACTION if the son’s therapist won’t return your calls.
I also think you had a legitimate problem with the first therapist that your X conned that you were the “problem”—the thing is though, like the old joke about doctors “What do you call the doctor who finished LAST IN HIS MEDICAL SCHOOL CLASS????? Well, DUH??? DOCTOR! Same thing with the PhDs in psychology and social work. I’ve seen my share of IDIJUTS who had a PhD in psychology (or______ fill in the blank) and didn’t know their arse from second base. Some times PhD means PILED HIGHER AND DEEPER….but the thing is a good, smart psychopath can con just about anyone, even someone who knows what they are.
Or as Abraham Lincoln said “you can fool all of the people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time, but you can’t fool All of the people all of the time….” but a few psychopaths can fool a LOT OF PEOPLE MUCH OF THE TIME.
Dear Rush,
Welcome to my world! I also have a P offspring that when he was 15-16 had therapists, relatives and others fooled into thinking he was the poooorr abused child….he is now iin prison since age 20 for MURDER, but he is STILL Fooling my egg donor and a few others into feeling sorry for the poor baby. I no longer feel sorry for him, I have freed the umbilical cord from my brain and am no longer attached to the malignant “Rosemary’s baby” that I gave birth to. It was a struggle, because when you give birth to a child you love them, but when they mature into Rosemary’s Baby it is difficult to see that they are no longer what you loved and cared for, they are STRANGERS.
Welcome….and God bless.
Dear Oxy,
I informed my attorney today about son’s therapist and we’ll see what happens. This therapist called me back before but spath was pretty comfortable in the office last visit so I think the two of them had a nice little chat. Spath shook the therpists hand and thanked him up and down. Spath obviously thought that he had the advantage. He didn’t want son to go to therapy so it was odd that he was so at ease the last session.
The fact that spaths fool the supposed professionals irks me but I was fooled for a long time too. I call the phd a ‘poop head degree’ with this particular idijut.
Son has been on his best behavior, I wonder why?! I’ll know soon enough!
Well, Hope4Joy,
I don’t know if the therapy will do any “good” or not, but I am glad that you at least tried….the problem seems to be that X has conned the therapist and has told the son to be on his “best behavior” so that very soon here the therapy can be declared a “success” and STOP….I think I can “see” Daddy-o telling junior, “look if you will just cool it for a little while and be a good boy for your crazy mama, then we can get this therapist to say YOU and I are not the problems and we can quit the therapy.” DOES THAT SOUND LIKE WHAT YOU THINK HAPPENED? LOL ROTFLMAO
Dear Oxy,
We actually finished therapy because son didn’t really open up and the therapist said that he did not want to make it a bad experience by forcing son to go, so we stopped after 3 sessions.
The therapist said that son could come back anytime, that door would stay open. Just heard from my attorney telling me that I should write him a letter letting him know that I want to schedule a meeting with him to talk about son.