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.”
Dear Sebbo,
The relationshit you had with her was the same one as a parasite and host.
You need her like you need another hole in your head. Be glad she is gone. LOL
I know that when we are lonely we tend to overlook some of the flaws in our companions, but we learn to fill our own needs and not depend on others to fill our spirits. We can wish for companionship and love, but we don’t have to have someone else supply our happiness, we supply our own and when we find someone else who is happy to share it with then we can be happy together. No one else can make us happy.
Sebbo,
You’ve clearly been through a horrific situation. You never have to be in another situation like that again. None of us do.
As I see it, your job (and mine) is to heal from the damage these SPaths cause. She sounds like she put you through a lot of humiliation and you have to get past that. I’m curious, what are the ramifications of the restraining order (aside from the fact you are to have no contact), if any? I know that must feel horrible, but it will force no contact on you which will move you (hopefully if you can get past the anger) to healing.
I would try to just process the pain and read a lot on this site. Each day should get a little easier. Take care of you.
Sebbo,
if she is really a spath, this is not the last of her. She’ll be back.
That’s why it’s so important for you to take advantage of this time away from her to get past your addiction and learn how to resist her. Think of her as heroin. You’re free for now, will you be able to resist the next temptation?
It matters because she is the one who went NC with you. She took control. That makes it difficult to resist if she comes back.
But you MUST resist. Take back your power. Know that you will NEVER GET CLOSURE. That’s what spaths do, they leave you feeling like you’re hanging. The only closure you can get, is the decision you make to free yourself from this evil. That’s it.
I’d like to add that if she does come back, it could be a set up. Don’t forget that restraining order. I can just see an SPath initiating contact (in a way they cannot be caught) and then leaving you holding the bag should you contact her back. Don’t fall for it.
Kathy:
I think maybe it’s caused by rage that has no outlet. The source, the cause of my rage is my spath. Just so much anger and frustration with no way to physically express it. Even if he were here, sitting in front of me right now I would keep it all tightly wrapped inside…sometimes it just has to come out and so I hurt someone who won’t fight back. The anxiety has been building because it has been 5 days since his last contact – the longest in the 2-1/2 months since he moved out. I know it’s coming and each day he waits the more anxious I become.
OMG! It started when I was a child! I don’t think my father was an spath but he sure did a great job of conditioning me for the men who later came into my life. The short temper, the unpredictability, the nonsensical, disproportionate punishments, the broken promises – all of which I had to silently endure or face more of the same. Oh, and he never worked. It’s said that you look for a replacement for your father. My earliest male role model WAS a spath.
And Skylar: What you say about closure is so on the mark. It’s so hard to know that closure will never come, but at some point I know I will have to accept that. I know it now, but I just can’t accept it.
Random weird question: Does anyone else put off going to bed? I don’t have trouble sleeping anymore – that actually went with him when he moved out. I just don’t want to get in bed, turn out the light and close my eyes.Told you it was weird…
JustBree:
OMG…the sleep question, that’s me! No kidding! So no, you are not weird or I am weird, too!!
I wonder what that means?? I have been pondering it for a long while. Maybe it’s because we know we will be left in the quiet with nothing but our thoughts? I don’t know…
Dear Kathy, Ox and Skylar
You guys have got such a level headed response
to my otherwize horrible confused situation.
I am so glad I am talking to survivors of sociopaths.
I thought nobody understood but you guys do so thank you.
I have read all of Donna’s criteria on how to define a sociopath. And I can say with 100% truth that my girlfriend
exhibited about 75% of these behavioural traits.
She had no empathy. She often humilated me. When the money ran out after 2 months of continuous hotel vacations
she said to me “finding you was like finding fools gold”.
It was absolutely terrible. And yes, just as mentioned on
these lists she was highly promiscuos and always flirting
with and seeking the attention of male company in a sexually
overt way. She also networked extensively within my family
and friends hoping to form new connections. Thankfully no
phone numbers were exchanged as I made a big effort to
keep her away from my family. She often said that she was like a “fox in a chicken coup” when it came to group situations as she totally ignored me while chatting with every man in sight. Yes, she was a whore, and yes I was incredibly stupid
to date her. We are both in our 30s. I am 34 and she is 32.
What more can I say? She acted like a 16 year old. It was so
heart wrenching to watch her schmooze up to other men hoping to get into their pockets of money and other things which she targeted from her “SUBJECTS”. She dug her claws deep into me in the start asking me to propose, selecting a wedding ring, even going to the extent of buying wedding gifts in anticipation of our marriage. But I wasnt fooled and tole her the marriage was off after realizing her agenda.
Then all hell broke loose. She threw a chair at me, she threw a belt at me. Accused me of being uncommited and said that
I had no calibre. Told me that I “played with her family like toys” (when really her family were normal and couldnt care less). She was upset that I got along so well with her family and as part of the threat of restraining order she ordered me to have “no correspondence through her family”. Another way of cutting me off and having no closure at all. Yes you are all right. I have no closure. But that closure must now come from within throgh No contact. Unfortunately I did write one last email to her but that email did not beg for her back. Instead I wished her well (under duress) and told her that I would be moving on with my life. I never got a reply and I dont expect one. She obviously has the upper hand and I am sure she will not contact me now but despite this I still feel powerless and a victim of her sociopathic emotional abuse. Every day is a struggle but with people like you, all I can say is a big THANK YOU and that I also wish for you all the best in ridding the POISON that these misguided sociopaths inflict on poor hapless souls like us. Its just disgusting. It is obscene. These people are HORRIBLE and they know that they are commiting murder in the first degree through there total disreguard of people and their emotions. To leave without a trace is akin to shooting somebody and leaving them for nothing. Its the same as telling someone to “walk the plank” never to be seen again, lost in an ocean of misery. I am so apalled at her behaviour towards me but really what is the alternative? There is no going back now. All I have is myself and so I need to rebuild my life, one inch of a brick at a time. Best wishes to you Ox, Kathy and Skylar.
Sebbo,
Yes, you will have to seek the closure from within. That actually will make you immensely stronger. If you can find closure within yourself through no contact and relying on yourself to know the truth of things from a spath, then this makes you a self-reliant independent person who’ll never need anybody else anymore to give you closure.
My biggest issue with people was always letting them go. I’m a very loyal person and letting people go even when I know they’re not the best person to be with anymore is incredibly hard for me. I stayed at least oe year too long in my first long term relationship. The guy was normal, not a bad person, but just a bad match. We were not fundamentally compatible, and in order to stay together I had to forego certain needs for my own self-development, when I was still in my early 20s, and a student. Eventually he was the one who broke up with me, and only months later once I started to do the things I had always craved of trying (which he would stop me from doing out of fear I might endanger myself) did I realize how much we truly differred. It’s been like that with every other guy; even the short affairs where I knew the guy probably was not my cup of tea. After half a year with the spath I wavered between getting out and marryng from day to day. It dragged on for 1.5 year longer until he had found a suitable replacement to buy his tickets to her home country and simply discarded me. The way he did that was so childish and callously that I had my answer then and there. He maintained no contact himself with me for a year, until he needed me to undo a warning profile I had created about him. It was very clear that he would never return, but most importantly for myself I would never want him back either. But that contact also made clear how he tried to blame me for the detoriating relationshit; as if he had been the good guy who loved me and never wanted to hurt me but saw me suffer and wanted to set me free. Which is total crap from all the things he did behind my back and in my face. I guess he thought I still wanted closure from him, for him to explain his actions… he was wrong. I didn’t need anything from him anymore whatsoever. He was the one wanting something from me, and if he wanted it I simply demanded he’d ask me politely, not by sending others at me in the hope to guilt-trip and manipulate me, nor threaten me.
It has become far easier for me now to find closure by trusting my judgement based on observations in people’s behaviour: who talk the talk, but don’t walk it. I don’t feel guilty or disloyal anymore by stopping contact with people with red flags. I don’t even feel the urge anymore to explain myself to them.
Anyway, finding closure by yourself will make you stronger in the long run, and less prone to be dependent on whether someone else is willing to give it to you or not.
Sebbo….some sociopths will DISCARD a former victim (which your x has obviously done to you) when they realize they can’t get any more of whatever “supply” they are seeking (money, marriage, sex, whatever it is) but other psychopaths STALK the victim, refusing to let go.
In fact, you ar FORTUNATE you got a “discarder” instead of a STALER, so that you are freed of the idea to go back.
When we DISCARD them with NO CONTACT and they are the stalker type, it throws them for a LOOP, sort of like your x discarding you threw you for a loop.
NO CONTACT is painful to those who want to continue contact.
Closure is only the end….and you may feel that you haven’t had closure but you really have had, it is ENDED. Maybe you don’t understand “why” (though I think the WHY is that she saw you as a SUPPLY of money, position, etc and when you said “No, I won’t marry you” she flew into a RAGE because you weren’t giving her what she wanted and when she saw you weren’t going to marry her and let her have free rein to everything you had, she bolted. As much as you think it hurts, right now, it is a blessing and you CAN move on with your life and your healing and learn the RED FLAGS so you will never get involved again with a woman like her.
Ox, your comments on SPaths who stalk interest me. Even though I MOVED out of my home of eight years, the SPaths followed me here. I know this is going to sound out of the twilight zone, but the day I pulled the plug on my CCTV system it was like an insane train wreck. I could literally see his wife saying “it will be ok.” That was their vehicle, their avenue of stalking me and when I took the cameras down they were devastated. I have five or six days left of footage I know I should back up, but I simply do not want to view that stuff.
Just to make sure I wasn’t going crazy or seeing things, I even had my therapist come over and view footage with me. Well, I wasn’t seeing things. In fact, she said once I pointed things out she saw it clearly. Only one who has been stalked in such a bizarre way can zero in in an instant on the stalkers. The police want a physical person looking at your house. They can’t deal with bizarre imagery that no camera can produce on its own. I even had the video surveillance company guy who installed the cameras look at footage. I said “see that there? Ok, walk outside and you won’t see it.” Sure enough, he didn’t see it with his eyes. Somehow these people were able to use my system in some high tech way to terrorize me. I never “got” that the answer was to simply pull the plug until I could not take it for one more day. Sure, I may still be being stalked, but out of sight out of mind. It’s sad, because one of the reasons I moved here was for a pond with a fountain that lights up at night. I don’t feel safe going and sitting there but maybe someday I will.
Anyway, I am glad that my NS just chose to move on to another victim or maybe many victims. I am blessed he views me as too flawed for his time. Sure, it hurts and I still feel rage, but where he was taking me was just down, down, down. I truly believe with all my heart that he would have destroyed me if I did not have the “flaws” I do. I said NO to his requests for money. This isn’t to say I didn’t spent a bit on him, but I said NO to his truck loan, NO to his boat. He was such a creep that I’d given him an expensive gold ring and he PAWNED it for $80 to “get the money I owed him” for mowing my lawn! OMG, I slaved over a stove for years and he thought mowing my lawn once was a big deal. I would have preferred he return the ring and I would have given him his $80. One thing that really helped is I had a very CHEAP NS to deal with. He was the type who would give me worthless jewelry he got from donations where he worked. Yet it never stopped him from asking me for diamonds and rubies and sapphires. Well, the one ring I gave him was enough. For all know he still has it and only said he pawned it off. Well, good riddance to cheap NSs.