By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
God, grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change,
the courage to change the things I can,
and the wisdom to know the difference.
Reinhold Niebuhr
The definition of wisdom
Almost everyone is familiar with the above “serenity prayer,” which is used as part of its program by Alcoholics Anonymous. Until I looked it up, I didn’t know who actually wrote it. What is wisdom, though? Albert Einstein says, “Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it.”
Still, that doesn’t tell us exactly what wisdom is. Wisdom is defined by Webster as:
1a: accumulated philosophic or scientific learning: knowledge
1b: ability to discern inner qualities and relationships: insight
1c: good sense: judgment
1d: generally accepted belief
2: a wise attitude, belief, or course of action
3: the teachings of the ancient wise men
According to the Bible, Solomon was the wisest man who ever lived. The story of him deciding who the real mother of a baby being fought over by two women is well known. He said, “I can’t tell who is telling the truth, so let’s just cut the baby in half, giving half to each.” Well, of course, the real mother said, “Oh, no, let her have it, don’t divide the baby.” Then he knew that the mother was the one who had the welfare of the infant first, and so he knew whose baby it was.
Solomon may have been “wise” enough to judge this case before his throne, after all, he wrote the book of Proverbs, which was filled with wise advice to his sons. However, in his own life, he didn’t always act wisely, especially where it came to women. He had hundreds of wives and concubines. He also let his children do evil. So even though he may have been wise in some areas, in others he was unwise.
Thomas Jefferson is my favorite president. I think his ideas of government finance were very wise; he demanded a totally balanced budget. However, in his own personal budget, he was a spendthrift and didn’t balance his budget in business or personal spending.
So we can see that we may have wisdom in some areas of our lives, and in other areas we may have little wisdom.
My wisdom gets sidetracked
I have found in my own case, that while I generally have “wisdom” in how I conduct myself with people, I frequently fall prey to the “love bomb” that we know psychopaths are so good at. I lack insight into people’s motives and actions if I allow my wisdom to be side tracked by a “love bomb” and allow my own vanity to blind me as to what I should do in dealing with that person.
There are times in my life that I have done things I knew were wrong, immoral, illegal, or just plain bad. But over all I have tried to live a morally upright life, in good graces with my friends, family, my community, and my God. I think most of us at Lovefraud are probably pretty much like I am in this respect. We have consciences, and we try to live within our consciences.
Unfortunately, not everyone has a conscience or empathy or the desire to live a morally upright life in good graces with friends, family, community and whatever Higher Power (if any) they believe in. To interact with this type of person we must learn what they are and how they behave. We must accept that they are not going to change and that nothing we can do is going to effect change with that person, or that relationship.
Maintaining serenity while dealing with a psychopath is extremely difficult. They twist reality (gas lighting), they pathologically lie, they divide our friends and family, and they slander us (smear campaign). They also keep us in the “spin cycle” by a thousand inconsequential problems that they create.
Healing comes from knowing
I’ve often said here that “healing starts out about them, but ends up being about us.” Each day I live makes that statement more firms in my opinion. We must learn about them, so that we know what we are dealing with. But if we get stuck in doing this, if we don’t advance past the learning about them, no matter how much we learn about them, we are not going to develop the wisdom to combat their evil.
After my husband’s death, I found among his papers this quote: “Experience is a hard teacher, she gives the test first, and the lesson afterward.” While writing this article, I found that the quote is attributed to Vernon Law. Psychopaths also give the “test first” and the lesson afterward, because we do not expect that a person can actually be that evil, that mean, that underhanded.
“He is truly wise who gains wisdom from another’s mishap” is another very true quote I ran across about wisdom. There was no citation of the origin, but that makes it no less true. That is one of the really great things in sharing our stories with each other. Not only do we validate each other, but we can gain from the experiences of others, without having to endure those hard lessons personally.
Accepting life
There is a great deal in life that we can’t change no matter what we do. We must accept that or we are like a moth pounding itself to death on the glass globe of a lantern. Accepting those things with a calm mind is difficult, but we can do so. As we move past learning about sociopaths, and move on to learning about ourselves, we gain the wisdom to discern the differences between what we can change and what we can’t and the courage to change what we can.
I miss a lot of post’s on the weekends. I don’t have computer access at home and I only work one out of 7 weekends. I was reading post’s from around the 23rd. I’ll have to catch up on those. I feel like you are all my friends and we have this special club. Not a club I ever thought I’d belong to or wanted to for that matter. Nothing personal and I know nobody else wanted to be part of the club but, the support is really good.
Thanks to all. Going home now to take care of me and my animals
Kmillercats,
Thank you for your post. I occasionally still doubt if my ex was REALLY a spath–as in someone without normal feelings, which seems so unbelievable–because I was never able to talk with his ex wives, and so I only have my own experience and what his new girlfriend told me about their relationship to go on. My story also isn’t nearly as terrible as some of the ones I’ve read; he never abused me to my face in the way that so many of them do. He always tried to keep the mask on with me, to the end. He never did the triangulation thing with me. When I found out about the new girlfriend, he blocked me from seeing his FB page. And the only reason I know about the other women he slept with behind my back is because the new girlfriend said he confessed that to her, and then she told me. All of that makes me doubt my diagnosis. And I’ve really been thrown off by the fact that he still has what seem to be good connections to his family (the new girl met many of them very quickly; I only met a few of them once), and he also has long-term friendships. I kept wondering, why would they want to keep a pathological liar, a completely immoral, very mean person in their lives??
So, what you wrote…YES, I did not know people like this existed! YES, they ARE good at what they do! And YES, I too was so open and trusting! And what you wrote about the minions…it really helped me understand why he still has those relationships. Maybe he lies to them here or there, but like you said, it’s not the same kind of emotional involvement that I had with him. The more I read about the stories of others here on LF, the more I learn about sociopathy/psychopathy, and the more I think about my relationship with him and the extensive lies he told ME, the more I realize that he is solidly on the sociopathic spectrum. And it’s important to me to be confident about that because I want to have an explanation for his behavior. And labeling him a sociopath really does explain it! And that, in a weird way, gives me comfort. So thank you.
Laura, it doesn’t matter if he is a full on psychopath or just a JERK, he iis TOXIC to you, and THAT’s what matters. You were not stupid and in fact the fact that most of the wo/men here are professionals and smart is what made me feel validated here. When people with MD or PhD behind their names get conned, well I feel I’m not so dumb after all. 🙂
Thank you for your response, Ox, and thank you for all of your excellent articles, too. I know in the end, when I am fully healed, it won’t matter what, exactly, he is. I guess that I just can’t make sense of his behavior unless I look at from the perspective of psychopathy. And I realize that psychopathy is a spectrum, not an either/or scenario. I have been trying to trust in that…all of the pieces REALLY DO fit together when I look at him and what he did through that lens.
Absolutely, I am impressed with all of the posters here on LF! And by the way, Ox, I’ve been making my way through the Aftermath Radio podcasts. It’s nice to put a voice to all of your posts/articles. I feel like I’ve been in touch with a celebrity! 🙂
Laura, LOL ROTFLMAO “Celebrity” LOL ROTYFLMAO yea, that’s me all right!
I can’t stand to listen to my recorded voice and my Arkansas TWANG! LOL It’s odd but when you hear yourself speak as you are talking you hear it through your head bones and it sounds different than when it is recorded and you hear it through your ears.
Laura, just keep on that “healing road” because healing is a spectrum too…as long as we live we are learning and growing, so keep on that road! I learn new things each and every day!
I agree, our own voice does sound different through our own head, doesn’t it?
Thank you so much for your support…I will definitely keep on that healing road! And I still think you’re a celebrity!!
I have read this through a second time within a couple days…interesting how as my perception changes and my awareness grows, I am slightly more in tune with the discernment that I “see” I must cultivate.
Thank you Joyce for these ‘Lights” that your post set off in my head..
To note ; It is wonderful to be caring…deadly to be caring without wisdom.
“Experience is a hard teacher, she gives the test first,and the lesson afterwards.”
This is the script for the life I have lived.
He tested me from day one, I failed every test….he knew I was the perfect victim. I opened my heart/soul at every command. Like a child playing simon-says.
It will be about me when I am past my anger…LF is a hiking staff to get me through a treacherous trail.
The validation and sharing here is so valuable to me…I am not ok yet…I needed the help getting out of the trench I crawled into. LF is a rope ladder, ointment for wounds and a light to the path of healing.
Thank you for your shared wisdom.
Blue
Bluemosaic, beautiful honest words.
I was thinking about your question….am I a Spath? Was it me?
I’ve asked myself the same questions. I see spathy elements to myself, especially when I was younger. My background is perfect for me or become a Spath or at least borderline, narcissistic, etc.. And maybe I was/ am to some degree. However, I think the difference here is that I know I’m willing, and God knows I am, to feel my own pain, deal with my self and my injuries, be responsible, accountable, etc….basically wipe my own ass to the best of my ability. They are not. They want to stay in the crib, poop on themselves and others, play with their pee pee and have someone else clean up the mess. They want someone else to do the heavy lifting so that their precious time can be spent doing the above.
As adults, the crib is the bar, the bottle is now filled with alcohol…….my Spath is now back at mommys and she is more than willing to play the roll that I refused to play..
Joyce………..FANTASTIC ARTICLE, and I appreciate the discussion of “wisdom.”
I’ve been familiar with the Serenity Prayer since 1975, and I’ve uttered the words, but most often not “felt” the core of their meaning. “Acceptance” is the key term, I believe. I also believe that acceptance of my spath experiences doesn’t necessarily mean that I am obligated to “like” the lessons that I learned, but that those painful experiences were probably the only way that I could LEARN.
By accepting that I have issues that can be exploited, and that there really are predatory human beings, I don’t have to “feel” badly about setting up boundaries and sticking to them.
I also believe – as this applies to me, personally – that I understand the difference between “humble,” and “humiliation.” I have been humbled by my experiences and I am truly grateful that I’ve learned some of the things that I really needed to know about myself.
There is, truly, a “serenity” in acceptance, even if I don’t like the facts. They are what they are, and I’m no longer obligated to “feel” that I can somehow change the facts.
Again, thank you so much for this article!
Brightest blessings
Blue, you said “”LF is a hiking staff to get me through a treacherous trail.
The validation and sharing here is so valuable to me”I am not ok yet”I needed the help getting out of the trench I crawled into. LF is a rope ladder, ointment for wounds and a light to the path of healing.
THAT SOUNDS LIKE WISDOM TO ME.
I can’t remember who said it, but someone said “knowledge is what we learn, WISDOM is what we do with it.”
Truthy, your post above does ring with WISDOM as well…accepting, humble, but not humiliated, can lead to the wisdom and serenity that we want and need.
Dorthy, yep, bottles and diapers and someone else to take care of both.