A syndrome called post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can affect victims of sociopaths. The trauma of losing love, friends, family, possessions and of enduring psychological/physical abuse is the cause of this disorder. To fight the symptoms of PTSD, it is helpful to understand the symptoms and how they relate to loss and trauma.
As I read through the current literature on PTSD, I quickly discovered that there is a fair amount of controversy regarding this disorder. We can actually learn about the disorder by listening to the arguments. The first question on which there is much disagreement is, “What trauma is severe enough to cause PTSD?” There were several editorials by experts disparaging the fact that everything from giving birth to a healthy baby to a boss yelling at an employee is now said to cause PTSD. Most experts are in favor of reserving this diagnosis for people who have suffered truly unusual life experiences, like kidnapping, rape, war, 911, etc.
The problem is that many people do experience severe stress reactions to difficult life circumstances. It remains to be determined what we should call these reactions.
Those of us healing from our relationship with a sociopath often vacillate between accepting the trauma and minimizing it. Thus, the argument about what kinds of trauma are severe enough to cause PTSD has a direct effect on us. The argument can leave us feeling weak, like we should be able to get over this. After all it wasn’t as bad as 911, Iraq or Katrina—or was it?
The second question is “what symptoms constitute PTSD?” The following table shows the most common symptoms seen in a group of 103 British men and women diagnosed by psychiatrists with PTSD (Current Medical Research Opinion, 2003):
Symptom | Frequency (n=103) |
Insomnia | 98 (95%) |
Anxiety at reminder cues | 96 (93%) |
Intrusive thoughts, images, sounds, sensations | 94 (91%) |
Irritability | 93 (91%) |
Poor concentration | 93 (91%) |
Diminished interest in significant activities | 88 (85%) |
Recurrent dreams of trauma | 86 (83%) |
Avoidance of activities or places associated with the trauma | 85 (83%) |
Foreshortening of expectations about the future | 80 (78%) |
Detachment from others | 78 (76%) |
Avoidance of thinking or conversing about the trauma | 75 (73%) |
Poor appetite | 69 (67%) |
Hypervigilance | 55 (53%) |
Startle reactions | 46 (45%) |
Acting or feeling as if the event was recurring | 37 (31%) |
Inability to recall parts of trauma (amnesia) | 19 (18%) |
I put up this table because I thought that a number of you would also endorse these symptoms. Notice that “acting or feeling as if the event was recurring” was really not that common. But similar symptoms, like “Intrusive thoughts, images sounds and sensations,” were very common. Amnesia was also uncommon. Startle reactions were only seen in half of the subjects.
A feeling of a foreshortened future is a particularly debilitating symptom because it impairs a person’s ability to plan for the future and leads to a sense of hopelessness. I will expand on this further, but I strongly believe this feeling of a foreshortened future has to do less with our thoughts about our past, and more with our thoughts about our present.
As I look at this list of symptoms, I am struck by the fact that many, many of those writing into Lovefraud complain of these symptoms, particularly nightmares. There is something special about having had emotional involvement with an aggressor that seems to produce nightmares. Since so many have all of the most common symptoms, I think it has to be that the trauma of life with a sociopath is severe enough to cause this disorder in many people.
Here’s where defining exactly what trauma is gets sticky. Rachael Yehuda, Ph.D., said in a recent article published on MedScape, “One of the things that biology has taught us is that PTSD represents a type of a response to trauma, but not the only type of response. It is a response that seems to be about the failure to consolidate a memory in such a way as to be able to be recalled without distress.” Well, this is precisely the definition that is too broad. I personally have a lot of memories that I experience or re-experience with distress. Yet these memories are not accompanied by the list of symptoms in the table above.
For me what made the experience traumatic was the truly life course-changing nature of the trauma. The answer to the question, “Will I ever be the same?” for me defines trauma significant enough to cause PTSD. The trauma that causes this disorder redefines us in a way that is different from other emotionally significant experiences. This trauma strikes at the core of our identity.
The final controversy surrounds the treatment of PTSD. Interestingly, there is no question that medications (SSRIs, particularly Zoloft) are very helpful. The problem is though that when a person goes to a physician and receives a medication, he/she is by definition “sick.” Assumption of a “sick role” or “victim identity” is one of the many factors that slow recovery from PTSD.
Many therapists are of the belief that “debriefing” or retelling the story is necessary for recovery. One group of researchers reviewed the studies on debriefing and concluded that there is no scientific evidence that it prevents PTSD. Instead, the evidence points to post-trauma factors like social support and “additional life stress” being most important.
How can we put this all together? Considering last week’s post, those who experience trauma serious enough to have stress hormone overdose as manifested by dissociation, are likely to also develop PTSD. An examination of the symptoms of PTSD reveals that at the core of the disorder is the fact that the person really doesn’t believe in his/her heart that the trauma has ended. PTSD is about ONGOING, not past, trauma. For those of us whose lives were assaulted by a sociopath, there is ongoing stress. The stress is the social isolation, financial ruin, and threatened further losses long after the relationship has ended. Those who recover from this without PTSD work hard to put the trauma behind them in every way.
Putting the trauma behind you does not mean you can’t take medication to help with the process. It does mean facing those bills, former friends, and other personal issues you want to avoid. Remember AVOIDANCE STRENGTHENS FEAR.
Above all, stop the ongoing trauma by ending contact with the sociopath. Do not assume a sick role, instead, work to stay healthy. Fight to be the person you want to be. Don’t allow this single experience to define you. Make living for today the place you love to be. As Louise Gallagher says in her recent post, “This is, in many ways, the greatest challenge of recovery — to accept the past is simply the route I took to get to where I am today, a place I love to be. The past cannot be changed. It cannot be altered. It cannot be made ‘better.’ It can only be accepted so that it, and I, may rest in peace with what was, eager to accept what is true in my life today.”
Blue, Silver, Until I found LF and all you great people,I was the victim of severe “gaslighting ” from my ex, and by my 2 spath daughters for YEARS and YEARS. I didnt even know what gaslighting was, but boy, I do now! Like you, Blue, I tried and tried to confront them with their behaviour and actions to me, but it was all denied, and I was made to look like a crazy person. I was told I was a “Drama Queen,” my older spaths favourite description of me.I have begged for an apology and closure on all the horrible things they did, never happened, never WILL happen. Ive been treated with contempt, derision, sneering,horrible put downs, and before I met my second husband, i had no-one in my corner, and i started to believe I WAS the crazy one!Classic gaslighting!{BTW, the book, “The gaslight effect ” arrived today, cant wait to read it!} Love, gem.XXNow Im having to deal with all this squelched down ANGER, I have to get it out, and I cant let them make me bitter!Or theyve won again!
Gem,
I am looking for anger. Need some of that energy. These days I feel pretty blue not because I miss him but because I’m in this mess and its going to be very hard to get out of.
I did it. I acepted his stories and I didn’t run from the warning signs, Hell I didn’t know what half of them were!
And he said all the right things. Even though laced in side them were warnings and red flags. I didn’t get it.
And now things are the way they are and don’t think its going to be easy for a while. It would be good to get mad, but I’m just not there.
I envy your anger and its brilliant energy and determintaion.
Bluejay-
Its like this:
Trying to talk with a man
Out in this desert we are testing bombs,
that’s why we came here.
Sometimes I feel an underground river
forcing its way between deformed cliffs
an acute angle of understanding
moving itself like a locus of the sun
into this condemned scenery.
What we’ve had to give up to get here ”“
whole LP collections, films we starred in
playing in the neighborhoods, bakery windows
full of dry, chocolate-filled Jewish cookies,
the language of love-letters, of suicide notes,
afternoons on the riverbank
pretending to be children
Coming out to this desert
we meant to change the face of
driving among dull green succulents
walking at noon in the ghost town
surrounded by a silence
that sounds like the silence of the place
except that it came with us
and is familiar
and everything we were saying until now
was an effort to blot it out ”“
coming out here we are up against it
Out here I feel more helpless
with you than without you
You mention the danger
and list the equipment
we talk of people caring for each other
in emergencies – laceration, thirst –
but you look at me like an emergency
Your dry heat feels like power
your eyes are stars of a different magnitude
they reflect lights that spell out: EXIT
when you get up and pace the floor
talking of the danger
as if it were not ourselves
as if we were testing anything else.
1971
Adrienne RIch
Geminigirl,
Until I reached this site, I have felt alone, not being sure if my husband’s family members (eg. siblings) are on to him. I suspect that none of us fully knows what he is capable of. I remember telling my therapist (before I figured out that he’s a spath) that I was tired of being his conscience, trying to set the man straight. I have since realized that he knows what he is doing and he doesn’t want to change for the better. That is what’s so frustrating – being a low-level criminal is what he will remain.
Silver, Blue, Ive come to realise, it doesnt matter if they gave birth to us, or we gave birth to them. whether they were our lovers, wives, husbands, brothers, or sisters.THEY ARE ALL TOXIC! THEY ARE ALL SICKOS, AND BAD NEWS! False
GUILT kept me paralysed for years an d years,believe me, its very hard to go total NC with your own adult kids!
The french writer, Anais Nin, put it this way. “If you were on a raft ,in the ocean, and someone was in the water drowning, youd pull on their hand, trying to get them onto your raft, and to safety. But suddenly, they try to PULL YOU IN, AND DROWN YOU! At a certain point you have to let go of that hand, let them drown, and SAVE YOUR OWN LIFE!!
Silver, darling girl,your right, anger and PURE RAGE! is the rocket fuel that jt propells us forward, away from these toxic beings! Even Christ got angry, as OXy once pointed out, when He drove the money changers from the Temple with a whip of cords! its RIGHTEOUS anger, and its OK to feel it, and use it to propel us forward! Its when it festers inside of us that it turns into depression,{depression is really only anger we feel we arent allowed to feel}A good ROAR of anger would be so cleansing and freeing!FEEL the rage, FEEL the anger, get it out, Gal!{{HUGS!!}} and my prayers! Gem.XXThat pure anger will SAVE YOUR LIFE!!!Your allowed and entitled to feel it, and get it out!
Silvermoon,
If it’s any consolation, I’m in a mess too. It will take a while for both of us to get out of it. I believed the stories (lies) too, thinking that my husband wouldn’t deceive me. I’m paying the price of my stupidity, being naive. I get angry, but I am still stuck, not making much progress. Hopefully, things will be better for you ASAP.
Blue, your doing OK! Trust the process! Some days we feel like were spinning our wheels, and getting nowhere fast. But we are! Dont be mad at yourself. be mad at him!Truly, we are harder on ourselves than God is!
We beat ourselves up constantly. But at least were not spaths, we CAN feel, we CAN empathise,we have to forgive ourselves for being human!
Put your arms round yourself and give yourself a HUGE HUG!
And heres one from me{{{{{HUGGG!!!}}} and Love, mamaGem.XXXWERE ON OUR WAY, AND WERE DOIN OK!!
Geminigirl,
Yes, they are willing to pull us in, drowning us in the process, definitely not having “our back,” protecting us from harm.
Geminigirl,
Does your mind ever feel like it is weighted down, deluged with too much information? I personally wish that I had never encountered a spath, didn’t know what one was. My mind can feel numb, strained from all the negative information that I have to digest. Does this happen to other people? Am I making any sense? This is how my head feels most days.
When you said in an earlier post that no-one was in your corner (years ago), I thought how lonely that must have been, discouraging, but thankfully, you’re in a better place now. It was sad to think of you being alone, not having anyone to help you maneuver through the spath maze. We’ll be okay. Hugs to you too.
Bluejay,
Try Eckhardt Tolle’s The power of now- it helps a lot.
Keep reading, keep posting.
Yes, it happens.
Kathleen Hawk’s articles describe the process really well.
Go see where you are and themn where you are going to be in healing.
We are right here.