“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.
oops strongwoman you just made the 500th comment on this threasd ”you win a BOZO button ~!
Friends…..pah!
Ex used to say they were too stupid to realise they were being used.
Hmmm charming …..urgh
Hens, I AM a bozo lol
Welcome Sadie,
Sorry to hear how you were used and you had to go through that despicable discarding. I recognize you reactions though. The discarding I experienced gave me an instantmy immense clarity: I deserved better, he had been the lie from start to end, and I accepted he was a spath, and promised myself NEVER again. Yes, sometimes I felt my mind and body ache for him, but the clarity helped to remind myself what an undeserving heartless being he was. And it gave me a source of strength.
It sounds like you have this clarity and empowered feeling from the clarity to keep yourself strong from any lovebombing from him at this moment. USE IT! It also sounds like you are starting to feel anger. You have a right to be angry, but do not let the anger be a trap to contact him either and tell him where he can crawl in. Curse and swear on him at the privacy of your home! My first weeks I had this mental picture whenever the rage became unbearable where I threw all my dishes to smithereens at him (just a mental picture). And it felt great!
Keep reading, keep informing yourself, keep the clarity which will help you to NC. Do not be surprised if you have painful dreams and suddenly remember long burried pains of events you thought you had forgotten. It is actually a positive sign. Its unpleasant, painful, but it means you are ready to deal with the abuse while within the relationship, and that you are recovering from the discarding itself. Do whatever to make you feel loved and pampered by yourself in the coming time. You’ll make your body less dependent of the fix via him.
Thank you so much, Darwinsmom. As awful as this time is, I feel already a slight relief, like a weight off my shoulders. I’m starting to get moments of clarity already, which at this early stage I believe to be a positive sign.
I’m still in shock that this happened to me; it’s still sinking in. I think about him all the time and had an awful moment yesterday where as I was waking up, thought of something funny and thought “I must text him that!”. Then I remembered he ditched me only a couple of days ago and it was such an awful wave of realization.
I know I’ll have more moments like this but just have to stay positive and think of the bad times – which I’m understanding most of them now were. Time – I wish it would pass quickly and get me out of this nightmare. I want to be back to my old self and not second guess anything. Patience, right? 🙂 thanks again for your kind words.
On an earlier note, another great song I’ve been listening to is “Jar of Hearts” by Christina Perri. LOVE it.
Katy you sound so sane, and you get what your spath is doing. And apparently he tells you about all the OW? Why are you still there?
Sadie, how we have all been where you’re at in our own way. I was only with my sociopath for 2-1/2 months, but he wove a fantasy so convincing that the grief and loss was almost unbearable when I ended it. I say “almost” because you CAN bear it, and it does get better once you do. We have all survived and not one person here would tell you it’s better to stay with him or go back to him. The high we get from them is very much an addiction. It is very painful breaking an addiction, but once you do, you will start to feel better.
Thank you so much, Star. I know I can get through this and I know I’m worth it and just have to be patient with myself and allow myself to grieve. I only had one breakdown today which is good considering I’m only on day 3 since he cut me off. I keep reminding myself it could have been worse and that at least he isn’t contacting me and making it harder. I do not feel that he’s gone for good, however and I’m just going to work on ME so that when that time does come, I’ll have the strength to not be sucked in again. Once I truly believe it was all an act is when I think I’ll really start to heal. Of course I’m not close to that yet. But I’ll give myself time and not be too hard on myself.
Sadie, I used to break down in my car driving home from work every day when sad songs came on the radio. It took a while for me to recover, considering it was a very short affair I had with him. For a long time, every step of the grieving process, I considered whether deep down he might have really loved me. Maybe he was a DIFFERENT kind of sociopath….blah blah blah. Those thoughts don’t really go away until the grieving is over. At least they didn’t for me. But once I was done, I was done. I can now look at his pictures without the slightest twinge of emotion. He is just a memory to me – without the emotional tone. The label of “sociopath” is important only in the degree of evil and destruction they cause. But there are many abusive types that are all over the spectrum of antisocial and other personality disorders. To me it doesn’t much matter what they are. If they treat me like crap, I’m done.