Many people describe a long-term relationship with a sociopath as “soul-destroying?” Mine was. But, why? How does this happen. I’m still searching for all the answers, but here are some thoughts.
Insidious Erosion
Perhaps some, but not all, of the answer is erosion.
Increasingly, he doesn’t come home for dinner; she’s chronically late for commitments with you; he flirts with other women in front of you, then denies it, attributing your concern to your insecurity; instead of engaging you over brunch, she’s constantly checking her phone. Sometimes, she just ignores you. He contemptuously rolls his eyes as you voice your opinion, but denies it. He says he wants to take you to dinner and wants you to pick the place. As you are leaving to go, he subtly criticizes you (“Gosh, I thought you’d want to get more dressed up. Too bad there’s not enough time to change”¦we’ll be late.” or “Why are you wearing a dress and heels, wouldn’t jeans have been better? I just want you to be comfortable.) Of course, you haven’t caught on yet, that no matter what you wear it will trigger a dismissive comment. Once seated, he undermines your restaurant choice. (“I hope my meal’s better than when I came here for business last week.”)
Embedded in each of these is the message you are inferior, unworthy, nothing.
The Erosion’s Source
The source of the erosion magnifies its impact, as it is delivered by a person you love and respect, perhaps above all others. You don’t leave the relationship, as each comment is either so small that it flies under your defensive radar screen or it flags your defenses, but, when you talk about it (as communication is part of a healthy relationship), you are told you are too sensitive, too emotionally immature, too needy (more criticism). To prove to yourself and to the person you love that you are strong not weak; mature, not immature; independent, not needy; you soldier on. Scrape, scrape, scrape, the erosion continues.
Confusion
Gaslighting is crazy making and the source of the gaslighting makes it all the more insidious—a person you think has your back and wants the best for you. This is the person who you are sure agreed to pick up wine for a dinner party you are hosting, yet arrives empty handed. He states with unwavering confidence that you never asked him to bring home wine. If you had, of course he would have, and gosh, you can be sooooo disorganized and forgetful. This doesn’t match your memory, but his confidence makes you assume you misremembered. He then discounts the need to have wine for your guests. By doing so, if you still feel it’s necessary to serve wine, you must run out at the last minute to get it. Will he thank you? No, because he’s already deemed it unnecessary. He may even mention that you can be so controlling to insist on things being your way. He’ll be relaxed and gracious when your guests arrive. You’ll be rushed and harried, “Relax, Babe,” he’ll say, “you’re sooooo tense.” He’ll shake his head to communicate to your guests, “See what I put up with?”
Scrape, scrape, scrape your confidence wanes.
Who Am I?
Over time, you hardly recognize yourself. You ask, “How did it come to this?” “Who am I?”
As corrosive as these things are, I feel that if this is all that had happened to me, I would have rebounded faster. As evidence for this, during my toxic marriage, when I’d be away from “Paul,” for a week or so, I’d feel a resurgence of confidence and strength. I was like a wilted flower that just needed sunlight and water—I was weak, but still intact.
Self-Concept
The idea of a self-concept is central to the personality theory of the famous psychologist Carl Rogers. He defined it as “the organized, consistent set of perceptions and beliefs about oneself.”
This “organized,”internally consistent theory of who I am and what I believe makes me me. It is my essence—my identity. Perhaps this is my soul (speaking nonreligiously). This is what Paul nearly destroyed during our separation, divorce and post-divorce aftershocks.
I can infer what some of the foundations of my belief system must have been:
- I am smart and competent
- I am safe
- If I work hard enough, I can tackle life’s problems
- Life has predictability
- Most people are fundamentally good
- The legal system makes sense, generally justice will prevail
- I am honest
- ”¦
The brutal realization that Paul is probably a sociopath, that I’d wasted 20 years of my life on a man who’d never loved me, and being subjected to his fury and rage and constant emotional and financial attacks set in motion a cascade of events that eventually shattered most of my basic beliefs about myself and the world and strained other beliefs close to breaking.
My Self-Concept Is Undone
My self-concept—my identity—my soul—was decimated. It was no longer organized and consistent, in fact, it hardly existed at all. So many of the pieces which once comprised it had been invalidated. The wilted flower didn’t just need water and sunlight, it was as if it had been uprooted and shredded—leaves torn from stems, petals ripped and crushed. In this situation, putting the pieces back together was not possible—they no longer fit—they no longer worked. I was no longer an integrated whole.
One Building Block—Holding On
Even as I write this, I am having a bit of an “ah-ha” moment. In the midst of despair, fear, profound sleep deprivation and searing emotional pain; I remember clinging desperately to one of these pieces—that I am honest. In my spent, totally stressed-out state while Paul relentlessly attacked me during our separation and divorce, I clung to that premise like a shipwrecked sailor clinging to a piece of driftwood—no matter what Paul did, no matter how underhanded, dishonest, scary and even illegal his behavior I would not compromise my integrity. At first, I hardly had the strength to fight at all, but when capitulating to his demands only brought more exploitation, I fought back.
Yet, even when I fought back hard, I always fought clean. Full stop, end of story. Perhaps I had such clarity on that point because it was one thing I could control, and it was one piece of my former self I could choose to retain.
A Second Building Block
Yes, it was soul-destroying. The “me” that existed prior to Paul did not just evolve, as most people do as they grow and mature, she turned to ash. She almost ceased to exist. I feared that a gust of wind would scatter the ash and what was left of me would be gone forever. Yet, that did not happen. My son’s similar undoing pushed him close to suicide. His distress and the maternal drive to save him focused me. Regardless of any previous flawed parenting, being the best mother to him that I could be had to be at the core of the new me. Full stop, end of story. So now I had two building blocks—I am honest and I will be the best mother to my son I can possibly be. The rebuilding would need to continue from there.
Driven to Understand And Reintegrate
Is this why victims of sociopathic relationships are so driven to understand? Simply putting former pieces of oneself back together is not an option. For some, being newly remade is required. To do that I had to autopsy the experience in painstaking detail. I had to know what was real, not what I wanted to be real, and to review and analyze to understand what parts of my original self were intact, which needed to be thrown out, which needed to be modified and what aspects that were never there must be added.
Notes
My own cautionary tale of unwittingly investing almost twenty years of my life into a relationship with a sociopath and sometimes diverting from the best path, is chronicled in my book Husband, Liar, Sociopath: How He Lied, Why I Fell For It & The Painful Lessons Learned (available via Amazon.com, just click on title above). As I don’t get a “do over,” hopefully some of my painful lessons can help others impacted by these toxic people.
Identifying names, places, events, characteristics, etc. that I discuss here and in my book have been altered to protect the identity of everyone involved.
My goodness, what an excellent article.
Soul destroying for sure. That is a phrase that I use often, because that is exactly what happens when one is with a SP.
SPs are capable of destroying anyone’s soul, even their own parents’, as our son has done and still tries to do with and to us. Now that we have no contact, we have reclaimed our souls! It can be done.
Thank you, as always, for the post. Your posts are so insightful and resonate with all of us.
Brilliant. One of the best posts you’ve written.
It’s really strange, this huge desire and drive to understand. For me one day there was a subtle ‘slip’ in reality. Before that I’d realised that I wanted to change and I’d even posted (in a comment on another website) what direction I wanted to change in. Then a couple of weeks later I ‘changed’. I became lighter, stronger, more resilient. The obsessive thoughts abated. I integrated Ps into my new reality. And the reactions of other people too, thinking about it. I’m pretty close to the change that I wanted – I think the rest of it is going to happen slowly, naturally.
Very weird. But I do read about how Ps are catalysts for spiritual change.
Before I ever realized just what the sociopath was, I had figured out that he was systematically taking everything important in my life that wasn’t HIM and grinding it to dust beneath his heel.
Dear NoMoreWool,
thank you so much for your post above, that’s it in a nutshell for me, I have been going around and around in my head as to WHY things happened, partly me because of my up bring making me a perfect target, mostly him because its his thing and he has been this way since a child by all accounts.
I have had no contact with him since January when he stopped invading my space by coming to my house. I have still ignored his odd text messages and carried on with life.
I have thought about the why’s and how’s of the two years I spent wit him, and in a small statement you summed it up better than all my convoluted thought processes.
well done. I have felt myself thinking about him this week so came back to the blog because its all so plain on this site, like a breath of fresh air.
I have a long way to go as I realize that I- in dating him have touched upon old childhood hurts and injuries-trauma that I had thought I had dealt with-clearly its time to journey back to my past and pick up the broken pieces of my childhood heart and heal them.
time to put those pieces of my sweet little girl heart back where they belong and hold myself in far higher esteem that that dickhead ever did.
I can’t even imagine what it’s like to live with one of these slime buckets for 20 years. The 3-month relationship I had with one almost killed me. You must be incredibly strong. Perhaps your strength and resilience can be a third building block.
Hard to believe how quick time flies …with a socio never a dull moment mine used to say ,,,,& if u are reading yes its me & I surviced!!
and I am sure that during some of those years u thougth about leaving him & then only to be sweet talked back, the minute u think about leaving they up the sweetness and the dream delivery ,,just wait,,,,
I actually had physical withdrawal like symptoms he had his hooks in me so deep..& had me so conned,, why would I not believe the person I loved most in world?
Now I can spot them when they try & hit on me & they still do
only now I can see the body language & the tactics, or the words they say & u know they now know I know !!! LOL
& before they knew I had less of an idea …
remember
some one will say who they are especially if its a man when they meet a woman within the first few sentences or the first few gestures ,,,what their core is
so watch & listen very carefully for those first ten minutes
when u first meet …I have heard incredible things ,,,
LISTEN ….do not interpret, don’t make perfectly logical excuses, do not assume, or project your values onto them,,,do not think about waht to say next just LISTEN
do not get so caught up in their flattery
or his desire to help u,,,
or his plans for your future that are exactly are what u want …
Listen …to the predator give himself away,,,,and they do
with what they say & in their facial expressions,,,,now that I know what to look for I see it…..
we are taught to cover and make excuses for our abusers at an early age ,,your mom or dad probably did same & you learned to gloss over , overlook, call it something else,,,,
instead of the abuse that is was,,,,
I would like to know how many people in these long term rel with a soico had parents that were socios, borderlines or narcissists
I bet 100 per cent….
its familiar & we down paly it ,,,taught to get along s kids & then we try as adults to do same at the expense of our very identity ,,
,,,,,May all come back as cockroaches in their next life and if u don’t believe in that maybe there is a special place in hell just for the sociopaths
so that might give u some peace of mind
peace to all of you & remember no one can take your core
only feels like it for a while ,,,,
“the day the music died ” will soon pass,,,,& you will be singing “I will survive” once again ..
u will I promise ,,,,,
& you will be so much wiser & stronger
….:)))
Every single word you wrote rang true.
So well put and to use your music metaphor, like an anthem!
And your certainly right about listening to them. As soon as I heard his voice behind me I was creeped out…..should’ve run right then and there. That was 25 years ago and I’m still listening to “Sympathy for the Devil” but “Time is On My Side”, not his.
Every single word you wrote rang true.
So well put and to use your music metaphor, like an anthem!
And your’e certainly right about listening to them. As soon as I heard his voice behind me I was creeped out…..should’ve run right then and there. That was 25 years ago and I’m still listening to “Sympathy for the Devil” but “Time is On My Side”, not his.
oops sorry for few spell errors in rush ,,,:)))
Kudos to the author! This is so spot-on and is written in a way that any victim can relate to and learn from it. I especially related to this statement:
“To do that I had to autopsy the experience in painstaking detail.”
After 13 years with my ex-spath, that’s exactly what I did for almost 3 years and I must say that the DETAILED autopsy I performed is what is most responsible for me being in the excellent place I find myself in now, 4 years after my world imploded. Thank you!
WOW what a nice article. You are very clear! I really appreciate and empathize with your analysis and conclusion.
After years of looking into a carnival mirror of ourselves (the ppaths reflection to us) its a wonder we can tell anything about reality at all. BUT you found the 2 most meaningful things to cling to: integrity and kids/motherhood. I also believe those are the 2 most basic drives for me and many other ppath victims.
I recently had an ah-ha moment about having to remember so much (i also had a 20+ year relationship) and having to piece back memories with new filters and understanding. PTSD for us is possibly NOT soley addictive, although Im sure some parts have addictive qualities. Our brains require that we correct mistakes and find solutions to mistakes so that we have better outcomes. When we delve down through the seven levels of HELL, in remembering and reintegrating our past with new knowledge, we have to almost completely dissolve ourselves to finally find ourselves. This is truly a traumatic experience! AND this experience causes PTSD/ PTSD similar brain processing.
So while we may have chosen to save our beloved ppath by decending into hell (dark night of the soul or dante’s inferno), I think in the end it is us that we have to deliver from hell. On a funnier note, we were searching for ourselves all along and we didn’t realize that his reflection of us was disordered and a mask.
I came across this book preview on Amazon called The Devil’s Toolkit
by H G Tudor (Author)
Wondering if anyone has read it.
The preview is written from the perspective of the spath and the tools they use to erode and abuse.
SITC
I’d stay away from this book. Just my opinion.
I Googled the above book and stumbled upon this..
WARNING- This can be triggering as there are posts from the author and a blow by blow account of the evil doings.
I am reading it because I NEED TO SEE THIS.
It is helping me to understand from the spath, EVIL, the Devil himself how they know exactly what they are doing.
For me it is giving ME power but as I stated I can imagine this may trigger some.
https://narcsite.wordpress.com/
SITC