“Would somebody please tell me why he did this?” is one of the most common questions victims of sociopaths have. Three weeks ago I introduced the idea that the Inner Triangle can help each of us understand the individual sociopath that infected our lives. The Inner Triangle is formed by three qualities that develop in concert during childhood. These three qualities are Ability to Love, Impulse Control and Moral Reasoning. Last week I discussed the concept of Ability to Love. Lack of Ability to Love defines those with sociopathy. No less important however, is the lack of Impulse Control, also universally found in people with this disorder.
What is Impulse Control?
I’m sure many of you noticed that sociopaths have a lot of energy. Their minds come up with many plans and ideas. This energy would be a good thing if the sociopath could direct it toward positive goals. Sadly, however, the abundant energy sociopaths have leads them to pursue goals that damage others. The reason is poor impulse control. Sociopaths are unable to control the many impulses that come from their basic drives and emotions.
This poor impulse control causes sociopaths to be vulnerable to addictions of all kinds. Once these addictions are established, they are particularly resistant to treatment. Many have noted that the impulses sociopaths have are especially destructive. For example, sociopaths are often sexually driven. They may also be greedily driven to obtain possessions. However, the impulse to have power over others is the central defining impulse of sociopathy. Sociopaths expend most of their energy trying to gratify impulses related to having power and influence over others.
The desire for power
The desire for power has been very difficult for researchers to study. The reason is that unlike our other desires, there is no feeling associated with it. Think about it—when you want food, you are hungry. When you want affection, you are lonely. When you want entertainment, you are bored. When you want sex you’re”¦. The point is, how do you know when you want power? Researchers have established that this motive is completely beyond our conscious awareness!
Victims high in empathy do not recognize sociopaths
One of the main reasons why victims high in empathy do not recognize sociopaths is that the desire for power is non-conscious. People high in empathy make use of their knowledge of their own emotions to interpret the emotions of others. Can you see then why people who rely on empathy in interactions with others completely miss sociopaths? An empathetic person correctly observes that sociopaths enjoy the company of others. He/she then self-references his/her own feelings of affection with regard to enjoying other people. The victim is fooled into interpreting power motivations as affection-related motivations.
Power motivated people are high in testosterone
The power motive is directly related to testosterone levels in both men and women. This is likely also responsible for the hypersexual behavior seen in sociopaths. The relationship between testosterone and the desire for power is so strong that testosterone predicts dominance behavior better than psychological tests.
Many studies have shown that sociopaths do have higher testosterone levels both during adolescence and adulthood. This higher testosterone of male sociopaths may also make them more attractive to women. Women unconsciously sense male characteristics that indicate high testosterone and are attracted to these qualities.
Medications that “help” sociopaths
Medications that reduce overall energy and block driven behavior reduce problematic behavior in sociopaths. The medications that do this are called antipsychotic medications. They are also used to treat schizophrenia. The most commonly used anti-psychotic for adolescent and adult sociopaths is Risperdal. In the past, we used Thorazine for this purpose.
You may also wonder if castration works. Eliminating testosterone through either surgical or chemical castration does help some. However, removing testosterone does not restore Ability to Love and so does not really treat the underlying disorder.
Why me?
It is my hope that providing you with knowledge about this disorder will help you answer for yourself the “Why me?” question and will help you stop the self blame. We all can benefit from considering our own Ability to Love, Impulse Control and Moral Reasoning. The best thing for victims is to come out of this experience wiser and better.
Dear adamsrib,
You are so right! So many of Satan’s spawn “join the church” to find prey. Hey where is the fox gonna find chickens if not in the HEN HOUSE?
When the Ps burned my egg donor she literally screamed “but they were so RESPECTFUL to me!” Like DUH!!!! “Ya catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.”
I guess she thought if they had said “give me your money bitch” they would have shown their true colors. EVEN a P is not dumb enough to try to CON an old lady by being hateful. Heck the sweetsie gets more money! (head shaking here)
It’s just like the old grandpa down the road from me in his 80s being conned by the crack-ho—she is telling him what he wants to hear and cuddling up with him and he is “saving” her from her drug and alcohol addictions. He’s going to get her out of jail this mornig even as we “speak.”
I think I have a compulsion. I too want to know, not exactly why but HOW to identify spaths quickly so I can avoid the nightmare. I am drawn to those articles, this website, even tv shows seeking that insight, that one piece of the puzzle that gives me the “aha now I get it” moment. The two tv shows I watch? Lie to Me. Criminal Minds. Sometimes these shows are way off base and I can tell the writer has no clue what they are writing about. Sometimes they make sense, like tonights Criminal Minds story about the child/families of an spath.
Anyone else do this? Is this compulsion part of healing or am I sick, like those people rubbernecking a car accident? I mean, do these tv shows give me a sense of control b/c it’s happening to someone else and there is a resolved ending? Guess I’ll have to have a ponder on that.
As always, insights appreciated. Night all.
kaydid – many of us are driven to understand – how to avoid them, what makes them tick, how to get over them…we all have different needs at different times in our healing.
i see lots of spath behavior in people who are not spaths because our societies are generally unwell. hard to tell about some people, but others…well, make a list of all the qualities that people here have experience of with their spaths – and avoid those. i don’t know if there is one ‘aha’ for you to get what they are so that you can really spot them, or if it is a composite picture as it is for most of us.
have to tell you i did spend a LOT of time googling psychopaths and psychopath quotes and reading about some of the infamous spaths in jail. so, it IS a compulsion, but it is also part of the journey toward healing for me. I haven’t done it in awhile…and i am very good with that also – my heart needs to beat slower in general. i feel it and i know it, so i try to stay away from things that jazz me up now
Dear KatyDEid,
I think we all have that compulsion to understand what train hit us! How to recognize we are on the tracks and so on. We want to FEEL SAFE from being hit again, so we want to know what hit is the first (or second) time. Don’t sweat it, just read and learn and it will start to make you trust YOURSELF to keep yourself safe.
The worst trust we lost is trust in “ourself” to know when someone is dangerous. You will get it back! Keep on learning.
Katy-I agree with what one_step said about it being part of the healing journey. I love Criminal Minds. It is competing with SVU for my favorite program. I also agree with what she said about people being generally unwell. We have to work in teams of 3 people at work and every three months they switch up the teams. Everytime I change teams, I experience a new level of psycho behavior by my coworkers. There are SO many people who are not normal and many of them are at my job.
one step:
You are right on. Like seeing narcissistic traits or behaviors doesn’t make someone a narcissist, I see a LOT of spath behaviors which lead me to wonder if there’s a lot more of them than we admit (like cockroaches, see one there’s 100 in the wall?) Maybe what’s really happening is “Normal” people do IMMORAL behaviors, and then excuse themselves for it, thus it makes it hard for them to identify spath behavior until they are a victim.
Conclusion: May be 1-4 Spaths per 100 people, but there’s a LOT of spath behaviors in 80% of theose “normal” people. Might explain why so many people in my little town were so eager to ignore what my spath was doing. imho.
NoLonger,
Why do they change up every three mo? Seems when you have gotten to a supportive level of relationship, they cut ya’ll out. I’d imagine that makes you feel off center?
I have doubts about anybody new that I meet now. I find myself looking to find things that remind me of my spaths original behavior. I third degree them to the point that they don’t want to talk to me. It is awful but I am so scared that I am going to get fooled again. I hope this eventually gets better. :/
katy-I THINK that they change every three because the people who work in our lab are not the easiest to get along with and it may keep them from fighting too much. I think there is only one or to normal people in there in addition to myself. The two that I am currently with think they are God’s gift to the universe and they like to talk to me like I’m the stupidest person on the planet. I do feel very off center and it’s frustrating. I don’t have the right personality to work in this lab. I am currently being recruited for a different job altogether and I’m praying that I get it. You’re right-it feels very off center.
Dear Brokenpieces,
The hypervigilence will decrease as thinggs get better, but it will take some time. I lived in TERROR for a while, but now I live cautiously. Terror is not the same as caution.
When you meet new people why would you trust them completely? You dont know what these people are or what they think. It takes TIME to be around someone. Just cut back on the questions and WATCH what they do. People’s behavior will tell you more about them than their words will.
Are they honest? Do they talk about the dishonest things they do or did? Do they treat others respectfully or are they snippy and nasty? Are they responsible. Do they pay their bills. Do they blame their problems on others? LOOK and listen and then little by little either trust or distrust them, but move slowly and cautiously.
You will get there and you will learn to spot the kinds of behavior that you will no longer tolerate.
I set some boundary limits.
NO LIARS.
NO THIEVES.
NO CHEATS.
NO CUTTING CORNERS IN HONESTY in any way
NO IRRESPONSIBLE PEOPLE WITH THEIR FINANCES
NO EX-CONVICTS
NO “EX” DRUG ADDICTS/NO DRUNKS (I know there are people who quit, and stay quit but right now I’m not willing to take a chance to pick out the ones who are real from the fake ones, so just NO to all of them in my personal life)
NO DEAD BEATS THAT WON’T WORK, won’t pay child support or bills.
NO ONE WHO WANTS MY MONEY
So if I find out by observing someone that they have a problem with these issues (just to start) I will never trust them completely or let them get CLOSE to me or intimate in my life. Why would I need someone in my life who had ANY ONE of the above problems? I’ve known folks with ALL of those problems and more!
If we eliminate the people who have major problems in honesty etc. then right there goes out the window 99% of the psychopaths.
So clean out your rolodex of everyone who has any of those DEAL KILLERS and keep your eyes open for anyone new you meet to exhibit one and then POOF, they are gone!