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.
siblinghell!
I like the term TOX! They are toxic to our minds, bodies and souls!
soimnotthecrazee1!
Dear siblinghell,
I hope that with the newer DSM-V coming out sometime in the near future, that the TERM will go back to something that makes some sense…it isn’t going to be over night for sure, and it takes the professionals agreeing on First, WHAT THE NAME IS and secondly what the diagnosis is, what the factors are that MAKE A DIAGNOSIS in the first place.
The general “public” at large has a very poor concept of what many mental “illnesses” are or what “crazy” is or what the difference between mentally “ill” and personality disordered are. Many people seem to think if someone is “crazy” or “mentally ill” it means they are not responsible for what they do…wrong. Or they think if someone is abusive or mean it is because they were abused as a child, or that having a “hard childhood” excuses what someone does as an adult…or that there is “good in everyone if you can just get down deep” or that “anyone can be fixed” or “everyone should be given another chance” etc.
“Yes, Virginia, there IS A SATAN and his name is “psychopath.” And No, Virginia, there is not a Santa Claus and there is NOT good down deep in everyone, and it does not take two to fight, and there are NOT two valid sides to every story…and yes, there is EVIL in this world.
IS ANYONE ABLE TO USE THE SEARCH FUNCTION??? I am still getting results backdated 3 weeks!
ps The term “Tox” or “toxic” or “evil” or any other name is just another descriptive term we use to describe them, but the problem is that there is no professionally accepted term that the public can learn and know the definition of. Just as people are starting to learn the signs and symptoms of “depression” or “bi-polar” or some other mental diseases, hopefully, at some point the public will start to learn the term that WE describe as socio/psycho-pathic
We can also just call them s-path-holes (Henry coined that term I think!) LOL
One, haven’t tried. Was not able to log on at all til just a little while ago.
One_step, search function works for me.
yah, today was a no lf day.
i haven’t been able to use the search function successfully for weeks. told Donna a few days ago. Would you try it Oxy and see if it works for you?
posted over each other 😉
is it giving you your up to date posts oxy?
I didn’t pay any attention to the CURRENT or not current search, just that it was working to find MY posts.
OK I tried it again and the posts it searched up were all older posts, no current ones. Not sure why. It brought up OLDER articles I had written and then older posts…separately. Sorry.
Happy Thanksgiving all! How do you do the “search” you are speaking of? PS. What is d&d?
notcrze1!