By Ox Drover
My best friend has been visiting me and, as usual, when we get together we re-share “old stories” of “remember the time when so-and-so did such-and-such and how we laughed?”
One of those stories was a funny one about a small quarrel I had with my late husband. After relating the story, I had one of those “ah ha!” moments that applies to a lot of things in life.
My husband had a partial plate that was almost impossible for the dentist to get seated so that it did not “flop” and my husband used some of that pink goop that you put under a dental plate to keep it glued down. Every evening when he would get ready for bed, he would go into our bathroom, take the plate out, scrape the goop off, clean it, re-goop it, and then replace it into his mouth.
The pink goop, while wet, was the consistency of chewing gum, but when it dried on the sink, it became the consistency of concrete and I had to practically chisel it out to clean the sink. I offhandedly asked him if he would be sure he cleaned it out well before he went to bed and he assured me he would do so. I saw absolutely no improvement when I went to clean the sink the next time and I became irritated.
I asked him again to please make sure he got it ALL when he cleaned the sink and he assured me he would. Again, when I noticed that there was still no improvement, and now quite irritated, I started to nag him about how inconsiderate he was to make me have to chisel this stuff out of the sink, when it would be so simple for him to wipe it out when it was still moist.
He patiently listened to my tirade then said, “Honey, I am trying, but because it is pink, and I am color blind I can’t see it!”
Well, you can only imagine how small and awful I felt. About one inch high! Of course I knew he was partly color blind, so I should have known he couldn’t see it! His “reality” was not the same as “my reality” because we looked at the same sink and saw different things.
Blind to emotion
After thinking about this story in more detail and more depth, I think that the psychopath is maybe not “color” blind, but they are “blind to emotions” that we can see. Because we can see those things so clearly, we try to explain to them what we think is obvious, and “right before your eyes.” However, just as my husband could look at the sink and only see the “clean white” sink, and I could see the pink globs turning to concrete “right before my eyes,” our misunderstanding was because of the “different reality” that each of us saw.
A psychopath, who is unable to comprehend the “emotions” that go with words like “love” and “caring,” might think. “We are having sex, sex feels good, therefore, I love her. But because sex feels good with others as well, I don’t know why she gets so upset when I have sex with someone else. ”
We would think, though, because our “vision” is different, “we are having sex and the sex is good because we love and care about each other. Because we love each other, we will treat each other well. Treating each other well means we will not purposely do things that hurt the other one.”
My irritation with my husband was because I could see the pink blobs plainly, and I assumed that he could see them as well, and thought he was refusing to wipe them out. In fact, he was making an effort to wipe out the sink, but because he could not perceive them, he had no idea when they were gone, and his only “reality” was that the sink looked clean to him.
Family and friends
I also think this same “reality is what you see” can be applied to our friends and family members who “don’t see” what we see in the psychopath. There is a common thread among victims that “my friends don’t understand what I have been through” and “my friends don’t believe me that he is evil.”
Our friends and family members who “don’t get it” don’t see the same “reality” that we see. They are unable to draw the same conclusions that we draw, and therefore it is difficult for them to believe the same things about the psychopath that we believe. We can see things about the psychopath that they can’t see, just as I could see the pink globs and my husband couldn’t. Our realities were not the same. We didn’t see the same thing, even though we looked at the same thing.
Sometimes though we can see clearly the toxicity of the psychopath, our friends may not. They are sometimes “color blind” to the ability of a psychopath to be the way they can be. They are unable to see, to perceive, what we so clearly see as truth. These people cannot validate our vision, and they didn’t even have a way to know that their vision is defective, like my husband did. He knew he was color blind and couldn’t see certain colors, and because he believed I was honest and had good color vision, he took my word for the fact that the pink goop was there. Unfortunately, most of our friends and family are not aware that their vision is “blind” in this sort of situation. Just as the person who is color blind doesn’t know what color looks like, the person who has never personally experienced the true vision of a psychopath, has difficulty seeing this vision, even when it is before their very face.
We aren’t crazy (though sometimes others think we are!) our vision is REAL and our vision is VALID, and so is theirs, as far as they are concerned. I know it frustrated me for people about whom I cared and thought cared about me, could not “see” what I so clearly saw where my egg donor or my psychopathic son were concerned. I now realize these people cannot see what I see, cannot accept what I have finally so painfully accepted. Realizing that these people are blind in this sphere makes it easier for me to accept that they can’t “see” and can’t “get it.” Just as I had to accept that my husband was doing the best he could to clean the pink goop off the sink, but his vision prohibited him seeing it, I have to accept that those people who have a “blind spot” where psychopaths are concerned are doing the best they can with the somewhat “limited” vision that they are capable of. I also realize that my own vision was somewhat “limited” before the “scales fell from my eyes” and I could truly see the psychopaths.
My vision is my reality. The vision of others is their reality. Maybe those things will never be the same, but it doesn’t mean my reality is not valid. It also doesn’t mean that they are purposely doubting me, it just means that their vision is not the same as mine.
Just like the mythical “vampire” doesn’t show up in a mirror, psychopaths, don’t always appear in their true form in the vision of those who behold them. Just like the soiled sink with its pink globs appeared perfectly clean to my husband, with his limited color vision, psychopaths appear “perfectly normal” to those who do not have the sphere of vision capable of “seeing” them for what they truly are.
This truly resonates with me. I have an ex P who has skillfully manuevered my own family into getting him out of jail for stealing MY debit card to buy drugs. They no longer speak to me at this point because of what he’s told them/done to them. I understand, however, this is their vision, their reality. I can only trust that with time, that will change. This one is good, really good. He went from being a petty criminal to being a victim of MY anger to being the “altar boy” in their eyes. Go figure. I am only happy that I see through it all. One can only pray for these people and hope they are not too badly taken in the end. I know I tried to tell them and was accused of being a liar.
Thank you for writing this.
Dear Cat,
I had to laugh, although at the time I was NOT laughing, when I was the ONLY ONE in the whole situation who was NOT lying and I was accused of being the liar before they could swallow the lies in their own mouths!
I hope that your family does get out of the FOG, but they may not. That is part of the damage that they do to us is the smear campaign that they paint so eloquently sometimes that it becomes the “reality” because they said it even if it is NOT true, not even close.
It hurts when people we love and thought loved us turn their backs on us because of the P’s lies. Sometimes those people will discard us at the urging of the P, and sometimes we must go NC with them as well as the P.
Learning to VALIDATE our own REALITY is I think one of the most difficult things I have done. And finally realizing that just because THEY don’t see it, doesn’t mean it is not TRUE.
What you see is REAL, Cat. They are emotionally blind. And as frustrating as it is for us, we have to not let that make us hate them, or feel like we are crazy—we just have to keep on plugging away doing what we know is OUR REALITY. (((hugs)))) and God bless
Dear Ox,
Thank YOU for the validation. It’s nice to see I’m not the only one, though I would wish this on no one. I have evidence in black and white on this person and what he has done. I’m the one that was accused of stirring up such a family mess! I told my parents when they accepted that first call from the jail that the manipulation would begin and so it did and now it’s all a mess. I even had to let this person back into MY home, which he doesn’t pay for, due to legal technicalities.
I am laughing, yet NOT laughing now because he has convinced my parents I am in love with him and just can’t see it and that he loves me. He uses our son as an excuse for us to “work it out”. He is angry because I caught on. This is all about revenge. He doesn’t resort to physical abuse. It’s all mental.
My main concern is our 10 yr. old son and I am watching him play with his mind as well.
My only hope is to get both of us out of here and to a place where he knows nothing about. That’s MY reality for today.
God Bless you as well…
Oh, the smear campaigns…I used to wonder why my ex never invited me to Chicago to meet his sister & her husband…then when I finally did meet them at a funeral, I didn’t understand why they completely ignored me.
I later found out the whole time he was telling me how much he loved me, how I was his soul mate, blah blah blah he was telling them I was “disturbed, a gold digger, pathetic, labile…”
He later said they believed he always chose women who needed help & he was just too naive & gullible…geesh. I was wife #4, #2 was a psychiatrist & the breadwinner who funded his PhD. By the time he was finished with her–used her up financially and in every other way, she’d had a nervous breakdown and was working as a candy striper. From a fully functioning MD to a candy striper…he used to tell me this and shake his head, saying “I thought (__) was so normal, but look at her. All she can do is be a volunteer candy striper.”
Wife #1 ended up severely depressed & agoraphobic when he left her. “I thought she was so together, but…”
Wife #3 was a therapist. She was the only one who managed to stay afloat after their relationship ended. Somehow. He left her a bit of a mess though. She was in therapy for a few years.
He told me dozens of times that he somehow always managed to pick narcissists for wives and figured it was because he was such a “giver” they took advantage of him.
Reality? He cleaned out all joint bank accounts and then left every one of them. He justified this by saying, “the marriage was already over in my mind.” The wives didn’t know the marriage was over in “his mind.” He was still living with them and playing husband while searching for a house to buy, another city to live in, having sex with new women (and men).
So, me. #4. I left him but still kept contact for a while. I went back to him once after he swore he’d stop with the control stuff, the porn, the gay stuff, the bad-mouthing me. And of course how much he needed me, loved me, wanted me. Once I returned, he was worse than ever. I eventually got out but spent a few years pretty wrecked, physically and emotionally.
Before the S I had a life I loved. I was happy. The S was icing on the cake. Until he ate the cake, stomped all over me and did his best to destroy what was left of me.
His family, being so far away and not ever knowing me or even talking to me, believed every word he said. The other wives never met his family either, and must have wondered why…it’s kinda obvious he couldn’t let his family meet the wives as they might see for themselves that they weren’t pathetic, wounded narcissists who were unable to survive on their own~~and that he wasn’t being abused and having to cater to them, that he wasn’t really co-dependent, a giver, and helpless to do more for them–because, too late, he realized they were all narcissists. So he told them his reality, assuming he believed all of this and I think he does. He sees himself as the victim, and so does his family.
Oh the irony.
While we were married he adopted a public persona of a giving, kind husband. In private it was completely different.
If I pointed out some bad behaviour he claimed it wasn’t really him, but a sub-personality he called “Sam.” And that he wasn’t responsible for anything “Sam” did. Interesting twist. And sounds as if he was crazy, or had DID. But no, just a way of making me crazy…gaslighting. OK, so YOU didn’t just choke me and call me names…it was Sam? YOU didn’t stay up all night on meth, it was Sam?
Uh, yes, in his mind Sam was a part of himself he had introjected from his father. (remember this guy has a PhD in clinical psychology so had a toolbox full of stuff he could use and somehow make sound reasonable)
Now I can laugh about “Sam” but at the time it was chilling.
And very confusing. The real him was, he claimed, a giving person…(who walks around the house saying out loud, “I’m such a giver” apropos of nothing? In no context, saying it as one might say, “where did I leave my keys?” or “it’s really cold today”…he’d walk around saying “I’m such a giver” like some sort of mantra. Bizarre.)
He equated giving with talking…so would keep me up for hours talking and talking (the meth helped I’m sure) and if I showed signs of sleepiness, he’d yell “you’re such a narcissist” for not being able to stay awake and fully alert while he was “giving.”
Reality. What a disconnect between his reality and mine. And what his family believes and what is true. They have no idea.
Now he’s in Florida looking for a wife…he’ll tell her she is special, unique, like no other woman he’s ever known…and then when he feels he has her (marries her) will destroy her.
I just hope he never finds her…that the red flags will stop anyone from getting involved with him.
He has no conscience. He told me in grad school he had a kitten he was trying to train to stay out of his way, so he’d put his full weight on her (step on her) to “teach” her to move…well, he killed her and threw her in the trash. Kind of a metaphor for what he does to women.
Wow, CAmom, I can so relate to you on some levels and I’m so sorry for what you went through. My ex-husband (the P) and your ex sound the same. He has his PhD too and it’s not a good combination for Ps. The power trip thing makes them more dangerous, IMO. Thanks for sharing.
CAmom,
What a terrible experience! I’m so glad you are out of that relationship.
Was this guy a practicing psychologist?
Reading the post at LoveFraud, have helped me so much over the last few months, I want to thank you all for your posts
It took me awhile to see what he was doing to me. I started to see things were not right with him and went on the internet and looked under philandering. We were not married, but he wanted me to move in with him, so I did. We were together for 3 and a half years. He asked me to marry him and I said yes thinking he was the “ONE”. I had just come off a bad 29 year marriage. After 8 months of being engaged, I broke the engagement off off with but we still lived together. In 2 weeks he was meeting another woman, still sleeping with me and keeping her a secret. He allowed me to read his e-mails and I noticed one from this woman. I didn’t really think anything of it at the time but was curious. We made up and still he kept in touch with her. I found out he likes to keep every woman he’s ever been with as friends. Brags about it even to his brother. I just dumped him in July and he was already hitting on his new victim before I broke it off. He is now engaged to her and she has NO IDEA what he is about. He threaten and tried to commit suicide, is addicted to prescription drugs and overdoses, he goes through cycles it seems. Like when he gets to close to someone it triggers it off. I have been reading a lot of books on sociopaths and Borderline Disorder. They fit him like they were written just about him. I kept trying to figure out what was wrong with him, and wondering if I was the crazy one? My kids certainly thought I had lost my mind, I wouldn’t listen to anyone. He lives in his own reality, his own idea of how things are, for one thing I am certain, he does not love anyone, not even himself.
Dear Too innocent to know,
I’m glad you are here and glad that you are away from HIM. I;’m also glad that LF has helped you, it I think saved my sanity if not my life.
CA mom, a nightmare for sure. Sorry you had to go through so much chit. Maybe you and teh x-wives and X GF can have a convention, I’ll see if you can rent the ASTRODOME! It might hold the crowd! I’m sure if we got 2-3 of us together with our X’s exes it wouldn’t hold the crowd! Maybe we could throw rotten cabbages at them for a “half time show” LOL
To camom and too innocent-WOW, I’m pretty sure our ex’s must keep in touch! I experienced the women(and men), questioned my own sanity, went through depressive episodes, the whole 9 yrds. In the end, as I’ve written to Ox, I am free by seeing the reality of it all. I took off my ex’s glasses and finally put my own on. I think that’s the best way I can describe it. It was such a relief to have my mind back. I think this site is exceptional in that I’ve learned so much here already. I truly like it here!
I’m so sorry that you had to go through all that has happened, but you aren’t alone. Not anymore.
Cat