“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.
I’m new here, just found this blog today after searching for some answers. I think I was involved with a sociopath for the last two years. It ended yesterday and I’m left feeling absolutely shattered and don’t know what to do. Please, if someone is out there to hear my story and give me advice, I’d so appreciate it. I’m so confused and heartbroken.
Sadie73,
Welcome to Lovefraud. Feel free to post about what happened – without identifying information, of course. We have thousands of Lovefraud readers, and they all know exactly what you are talking about. Someone is sure to respond.
Dear Sadie73,
Welcome to LoveFraud. This is the “information central” about sociopaths and healing from their wounds.
I suggest that you start to read the archived articles, go to the left of the screen and read under categories “explaining sociopaths” and read and read and read. KNOWLEDGE IS POWER.
There are many questions you will have, but first of all, THE best defense is NO CONTACT…don’t listen to voice mails, don’t read e mails, don’t talk to him AT ALL. It will give your head time to quit spinning and give you time to start learning what you need to know to heal.
This is a wonderful place. No one will flame you here, you will receive support because the people here have all survived a psychopath’s attack, so we understand and empathize with you. Again, welcome, and God bless.
Sadie…
Start by journalling your story and feelings. This is a lifesaving place to do this. If you try to explain to others out there, they won’t understand.
You are NOT alone, and you are VERY lucky to find this place.
We will help you get through this. I was in a VERY dark place when I logged onto this site one night. The people here not only saved my life, but they continued to carry me for a long time. You are NOT supposed to do this alone. Thats why Donna started this blog.
The good news is that because you found LF, you WILL recover and end up stronger than you have ever been, and happier than you have ever been in your life. Hard to believe today, but you will feel SO lucky to have gotten Satan out of your life…..once you realize that you are OKAY alone for awhile and MUCH better off without the evil in you life.
Start journalling. It saved me. HUGS
Thank you so much for your responses. I’m going to read as much as I can. I’m already amazed at how many people have gone through this – the profiling stuff could have been written about him to a tee.
It’s a long story but I’ll condense it here.
I met him two years ago. I was in an unhappy marriage and he had just divorced his second wife. He was soooooo charming and successful and we had so much in common. He started texting me and wanting to see me non stop and made me feel like I was special, however made it clear he wasnt looking for anything serious, he wasnt ready yet and i was still married. He would contradict himself though and reel me in of talk of ‘one day’ if I distanced myself at all. After six months of a very very intense ‘thing’ he ditched me. Via TEXT MESSAGE. Saying I was the one who was getting too serious. I was needy, it was my fault. I was devastated. I was at the tail end of my marriage and my self esteem was in the toilet. I then found out via Facebook he had just gotten a girlfriend so that explained a bit. No contact from him, I didn’t contact him for the next three months and felt I was getting better. Then he contacted me, said he missed me and could we meet for drinks. Spiral number two. Comments about how we are meant to be together once the timing is right etc So I continue on with him. I notice at this point he pretty much lies about EVERYTHING. Even small insignificant stuff, stupid stuff. The next year is a pattern of me thinking of him 24/7. He would go from one extreme of wanting to see me all the time and texting me obsessively to a big fat zero once I was reeled in enough and thought this is it, this is where he tells me he wants to be with me. He would say I was needy and back right off until he wanted to reel me back in again.
So to cut a long story not as long as it could be, we made a promise about something which was ongoing and we talked about often. I trusted this man completely despite the fact I knew he was a compulsive liar. I was different, I was the one who would be there for him. I wasn’t like any one else in his life – he told me so.
So he broke this promise and I caught him. I was devastated and calmly asked him why. He said he didn’t mean to and left very quickly. He texted me saying sorry and I expected to hear from him the next day. I didn’t. I had to contact him about something else and he was VERY cold to me. By a couple of texts regarding the promise, he was clearly trying to find a way to blame me and I was shattered. I had done nothing wring at all, though he started the night being a bit distant, said I was being needy (I wasn’t) and was texting his ex.
He didn’t apologize on the phone, was cold as ice and when I tried to be supportive when we were hanging up I told him I love him – no I love you back. That night I noticed he hid most of his Facebook page from me and the next day he deleted me entirely after I was appearing to be my usual upbeat self online. I’ve not heard from him since (two days) and I’m goig from angry and indignant to missing him. I know I’m not to blame but that self doubt keeps creeping in. I keep asking why he did this to me, why he has cut me off after HIS fuck up and how I can come back from this. I KNOW he will contact me again once the dust settles and I’m so torn and not yet strong enough to tell him to fuck off.
Is this man a sociopath??? I think so and if so what is my next step. Thanks so so much for reading this.
Wow I sound so stupid now ive put this is writing 🙂 I’m not. I’m successful, single, attractive and live in a cool inner city loft. Every part of my life is great, bar this. Also as an added note, I hid his Facebook feeds so I wouldnt have to see them about a year ago cos I’d obsess about who he was with or what he was doing. I knew there were other women (easy to tell by some comments on fb) but I was his soulmate, remember. Interestingly, if I posted on Facebook about going out or whatever, he’d be texting me all night, fearful I’d meet someone else, wanting all my attention. Also, I believe this man has a severe problem with sex addiction. Nothing illegal or too out there, pretty normal, but the frequency and the intensity of sex for him could be another characteristic of something amiss?
Sadie,
total spath behavior.
I’m reading “The Mask of Sanity” right now. I’m struck by the similarity in the stories in which a psychopath continues to self-sabotage. Now I know why. He asks others to invest in his well being – emotionally invest – then he self-sabotages in order to destroy that investment.
I think that is what you are experiencing with your spath. He tests to see how much you are willing to invest, then he pulls the plug as you watch your investment go down the drain. The moment he thinks you’ve recovered a bit, he will be back with a new investment scheme, string you along for awhile and then pull the plug again by making it disappear.
And no, I’m not talking about your money, I mean emotional investment.
You have to say, “No, I’ve been down this road before and I’m not getting hooked again. I’m out of emotional investment in you.”
Be careful on FB, I read a story recently about a gal who would tell everybody ( all her FB friends ) her every move, one time she told her FB friends she was going out and one of her ‘ friends ‘ broke in and stole all her stuff ~! oh my ~!
Sadie,
The “rush” he gave you was what we call the “love bomb” it HOOKS the victim, makes you feel so SPECIAL and wonderful, and we fall for it.
Then it is the devaluation and the discarding, then comes back and RINSE AND REPEAT….over and over and over.
it is nothing that you did, and you are NOT STUPID! You are also not alone, every one of us here has been through the same process.
It doesn’t matter if the sociopath is your lover, your boss, your friend, your sister/brother, neighbor, etc. the GAME IS THE SAME. Pretend one day you are wonderful, the next day they shiat on you and try to make you believe it is your fault.
Another part of the “game” is the PITY PLOY—where they are so pitiful and they need your help to make them well….THEN they SHAIT on you again…rinse and repeat.
Read and learn, and don’t feel aloine or stupid because you are neither, you have found your FAMILY here…and WE UNDERSTAND. KNOWLEDGE IS POWER, so read and read and read. The more you know about how to SPOT the fraud before it is under your skin (spotting the RED FLAGS) the quicker you will be able to spot the NEXT PSYCHOPATH that comes across your path, and there will be more. So your knowledge is the best insurance plan you can have. Glad you are here. God bless.
Really good point, Skylar. That’s exactly it. Like he used me as a tool for his own self worth. This man also would brag about his achievements, his high IQ, his income. I wasn’t impressed by any of that and used to just mock him about it. He was never aggressive, always charming and understanding and supportive in good times. But now I realize that’s how they are.
Hens, thanks. I’ve stopped using the fb check in tool now. I’m hardly posting at all and my profile is set to friends only and we have no friends in common.
I don’t think he will seek revenge (revenge for what I don’t know) but it’s in the back of my mind. I have as much dirt on him as he does me but image is everything to him. I guess I’m just being a bit paranoid which is normal once realization of what he is sets in.