I’ve spoken to many people who have had their lives shredded by sociopaths. They are traumatized about their physical, emotional and financial injuries. They can’t understand how someone can cause them so much pain, and be so callous about it.
A statement I hear frequently is, “I didn’t know such evil existed.”
Why don’t we know about sociopaths? I think there are several reasons:
1. Mental health professionals can’t agree on terminology and diagnostic criteria.
These disordered individuals are referred to as sociopaths, psychopaths or people with antisocial personality disorder. Which is the right term? It depends on whom you ask.
Dr. Robert Hare, the guru of the disorder, uses the term “psychopath,” which he applies to people who meet the criteria of his Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R).
The American Psychiatric Association uses the term “antisocial personality disorder,” and the definition is vague, unwieldy, and open to interpretation. This professional body has no diagnostic criteria for a psychopath.
For more on the different terminology, see Psychopath or Sociopath? on Lovefraud.com.
The point is that the professionals are in disagreement and disarray. So where does that leave the rest of us? How are we supposed to figure this out when the professionals can’t come to an agreement? More importantly, how are we supposed to educate others when the basic facts—what to call the disorder and how to identify it—are so cloudy?
Here on Lovefraud, many of you refer to these predators as P/S/N psychopath-sociopath-narcissist. It works among those of us who know what they look like. But people who have not had the experience of being defrauded, devalued and discarded don’t get what we’re talking about. The awkward terminology makes trying to explain our experience even more confusing.
2. The media won’t write about sociopaths.
When it comes to sociopaths, most journalists don’t get it. I am comfortable making that statement, because I was once a journalist who didn’t get it. And it seems that journalists don’t even want to get it.
Many people have told me that information about sociopaths should be in women’s magazines. I agree. In fact, I’ve tried to get their attention.
I am a magazine journalist. I was the original editor of Atlantic City Magazine, and I’ve written for other publications. I know how the business works. To pitch a story to a magazine, you first study the publication to determine how it serves its audience. Then you craft a story idea to match the publication’s approach. Then you send a query letter to pitch your story idea. Then, when the magazine accepts your idea, you write the article.
Since 2005, I’ve sent 18 query letters to magazines such as More, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, Ladies Home Journal, New Woman, Self, Health and Psychology Today. I tried a range of approaches to bring attention to the problem of sociopaths.
Every single query was rejected.
Personally, I think the magazines are afraid of touching anything that sounds “nasty.” But publications face another problem—defamation lawsuits.
Media lawyers don’t want the publications or broadcasters they represent to publish anything that may lead to a lawsuit. Here’s what they tell their media clients:
- Don’t accuse someone of a crime unless he has confessed or been convicted.
- Don’t say someone has a physical or mental disease unless you have proof.
- Don’t accuse someone of being incompetent or dishonest in his occupation.
- Don’t say someone is unchaste, especially if it is a woman.
Sociopaths commit crime, are portrayed as having a mental illness (although it is actually a personality disorder), are dishonest at their jobs and are downright promiscuous. Saying any of it could cause legal problems.
This is apparent in the case study on Lovefraud.com about Ed Hicks. The victim in the case, Sandra Phipps, received a lot of media attention, because her ex was married seven times, and committed bigamy four times. Every time she was interviewed, she said, “In my opinion, Ed Hicks is a sociopath.” Usually the newspapers wouldn’t print her quote.
Sandra was even on the Dr. Phil Show about her case. When the show was taped, Dr. Phil himself said Ed Hicks was a sociopath. The lawyers cut it out.
See Call Ed Hicks a bigamist, but not a sociopath.
3. Hollywood sensationalizes the disorder.
Most people believe psychopaths are serial killers. Deranged, diabolical murderers. I think this is a direct result of how they are portrayed in movies and on television shows.
The classic, of course, is Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, which had nothing to do with a psychopath. More recently, the TV show Dexter is about a serial killer who channels his violent impulses to only kill people who deserve it. Many describe the Dexter character as a psychopath or sociopath. I don’t know what Dexter is, but he wouldn’t be diagnosed as either.
Read Psycho movies add to the confusion.
The cultural image of psychopaths and sociopaths makes education even more difficult. Yes, some of these disordered people are bloodthirsty killers. But only a tiny fraction of them, at the highest end of the PCL-R, match the profile. Far more run-of-the-mill sociopaths exploit, abuse, cheat and defraud, but stop way short of killing.
So educating people about sociopaths is an uphill battle. First we have to overcome their currently skewed image, delivered by Hollywood. Then we have to overcome the confusion in terminology and diagnosis in the mental health field. Then we have to convince the media to deal with the disorder, and the people who have it, accurately.
Sigh. This will take awhile.
aussiegirl – are you familiar with the documentary, ‘I, pyschopath’?
It’s on youtube in 4 or 5 pieces. Take a look at it.
AMEN!!! AUssie gir! Amen to that!
One’s recommendation is a good one, watch the I psychopath movie about Sam Vaknin!
what are you doing up so late oxy?
oxy – don’t you ever worry that your p son or one of his associates will google your screen name?
Dear Oxy:
Now I do believe that you have swiss-cheese brain! This is why –
Onestep: I posted a few days ago about how I have my own copy of that doco. I watch it to remind myself never to forget what to look out for. I always have a cold feeling in the pit of my stomach when I watch it and I feel nervous and hypervigilant while viewing it as well. Wasn’t it you Oxy, who said that once was enough for you? (Or is it MY swiss-cheese brain kicking in this time? LOL)
And yes – get thee to bed you two! Don’t you have anything better to do at this time of night – like sleeping perhaps? (It’s Sunday afternoon here and I’m checking in and out of LF between other computer work I have to get done) (so I am not being a naughty girl like the two of you are…)
hi aussie – i did see that someone had said they had it – but i didn’t remember it was you. i watched it again the other day and when i read your above post, just thought to recommend it.
i am up because i have been in pretty bad pain all day. hard to sleep. but soon.
Poor chicken. x.
Lavender drops on your pillow, warm milk before bed, play nice music. Hope you get to sleep soon (and properly).
allergic, lactose intolerant and migraine…
just kidding. 😉 (‘cept about the milk)
sometimes that is what i am sure i sound like – i have a catalogue of afflictions. new ones cropping up weekly. fk.
that’s for the nice wishes….to sleep now.
Onsey,
Nah jreally I don’t worry about him or one of his buddies googling my screen name because my P son hasn’t lived in my house since he was 17 –21 years ago–and I don’t think he would think about my screen name which actually I started to use only after the attack on our famiy. My screen name is no where on the net connected to my own name..I’m not saying they CAN’T be connected but probably not…and if he did do it, and if he found everything I have written here on LF what’s he going to learn—
1) I have a gun at all times 2) I travel a lot 3)I’m seldom without an armed body guard as well and 4) I hired an attorney to fight his parole 5) my egg donor doesn’t like me and lies to me and breaks her promises to me—well, those are not anything new to him, I think he already knows all that. So actually, I don’t think there’s much on here that he and the egg donor don’t know.
Son C (the one I haven’t seen in nearly a year because I asked him to leave here because he LIED TO ME) reads here from time to time, and he may have read every word I wrote about him, and if he did THAT’s fine, none of it was a lie. He lied to me, it devastated me, I no longer trust him, and I can’t see that I could EVER trust him, because it wasn’t the ONE lie he told, it was the hundreds of other lies he had told in the past, that last one was just the frosting on the cake, and he’s off my Christmas list. I love my son and I have forgiven him (don’t feel bitterness toward him, only feel sadness that the son I love is a liar, that he doesn’t (by his treatment of me and behavior toward me) have much liking or respect for me…I wish we had a relationship, but he has chosen to be dishonest with me, break promises and lie about it….then tell his friends that I MISTREATED HIM was why he moved out. Oh, well, his loss more than mine. He lost a relationship with a mother and a brother who loved him, and trusted him and would have been there for him “through hell and high water.” Now he no longer has that relationship or trust from either of us and there’s no way that he can get it back—he’s betrayed it one too many times. I love my son C, I truly do, but I am very sad that I can’t have a relationship with someone I cant trust…but since HE very obviously doesn’t WANT a relationship with me, I guess we are both at this arms length situation, him because that is what he wants, and me, because I can’t tolerate the dishonest and liars. “Mexican standoff” I guess.
So who cares if they hack my LF postings or google them or find them. No lies here, just the facts.
they are very easily connected if you have a web presence outside of lf. my concern would be tipping them off to anything that you are planning. you know where this comes from for me, right? the evil techno spath that i deal with has pulled off some amazing shit in the last while – and it leaves me wondering how good she is. i have always been concerned about posting here – to be identified (which i have done hundreds of times over to this point), but also to expose information. there are so many things i wish i could say to you all, and i can’t, just in case. so many things i would like to share – a burdened halved and all that. not being as candid as i want twists me up a bit – and keeps my healing with one foot in spath realm.
i am lucky that i have made some friends here, and we talk a bit off-blog, and that helps. given recent events i have shut down all my email addresses used to correspond, and am loath to start new ones again – i need less time on the computer, so it’s snail mail and phone for now. I am on the cusp of some change in terms of my healing. you never know where help will come from, and something the IT guy said to me the other day was quite inspiring. (as he was dealing with my compute he was saying things like, ‘wow, i’ve never seen anything like this’, but, I digress..) his whole attitude was comforting, protective and accepting.
his wife works with spaths. the care i felt coming from this young man really shifted my perspective…felt much like the time i went to see a random doctor and he saw the cigarette pack in my pocket and talked to me about smoking. it was one of three things that created a tipping point, and I quit smoking.
i hate being hidden, but i know if i just go back to being who/ as i was before, the techno spath will probably blind-side me one day.