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.
Oxy,
Hello, dear one. Fabulous post. Absolutely right on the mark. They are blind to emotions. I suppose one could say that the vision of emotion is empathy and/or compassion; to feel what another feels. They are handicapped this way.
Even so…their handicap is not the kind you run to offer assistance. In fact, it’s more like…”Do not stand in the path of a man beating himself up.”
Hello to all & thank you for the welcome~~
Donna: Yes, he was a practicing clinical psychologist and taught psych at the university. He’s retired & I don’t think he sees clients any more. I hope not.
Pollyannanomore: The knowledge he acquired to get his degree in psych was used to manipulate and he was excellent at it. I had psych 1 in college long before I met him and had no idea what was happening to me. He was both a Psychologist and a Professor so I gave him total credit–if he said x was normal, I believed x was indeed normal.
Jill: Those damn PhDs! Gotta remind myself that while it takes a lot of work to get one, it doesn’t make anyone omnipotent. I dropped out of college my jr. year~so a PhD was like, wow…and in Psych! He could quote Freud in his sleep, if he ever slept that is. (hard to do when you’re strung out on meth!)
Ox: I’ve thought of forming a “Dr. (__)’s survivor’s group.” Only 2 of us are on the same coast; the 1st 2 are on the east coast, the last 2 on the west. But I would love to hear their stories & think we could help each other, along with sticking pins in little voodoo dolls…; )
Twice: Yes! “charm bracelets” is a great way to put it. And I so relate to marriage meaning nothing to them…he said his first 3 meant nothing, really, as divorce was always an option. That he always “hoped” the marriage would “take.” Of course he said I was different…ha! He’s looking for #5 now.
And it is very hard to realize there are people who are out to destroy us. I think for him (and my sister–also a S) it’s fun.
Both my ex and my sister have a low tolerance for boredom and I think at times just do stuff to watch how others react. I felt like a specimen under a microscope if that makes sense? Like, let’s see what happens if we poke her here, or pour some stain on her here…
my sister caused a huge international drama just because she could…it was all b.s. but put her back in the spotlight. The ex would call me sobbing (after I moved out) and then hang up. I’d call back–no answer or busy…and I’d drive to his house, scared. He’d be fine, drinking coffee on the terrace with a (fake) perplexed look on his face. After the 2nd time I never reacted. But he knew I *would* drive over in a panic as my dad had been suicidal when I was 21 & call sobbing & I would drive over to his house and find him drunk and holding a loaded pistol. I had told my ex that story & how traumatizing it was, so he just repeated it. How easy for him…
In the horse world the saying is, “whoever moves their feet first loses.” I have a horse & try and make sure *she* moves her feet (hooves) first. It’s about power struggles & horses can test us by crowding our space. In the ex’s case, and my sister’s, they like to make us move first, pull the strings and watch the reaction. Sorta like entertainment I guess.
Cat: I love the putting on your own glasses analogy…yes.
I really wish I had found this wonderful group when I was living through the nightmare but am so grateful you are here. And sorry you are here as well.
Reading all your posts helps so much, so much of it I have gone through also. Some things not as bad as some of yurs, but still the same concept. I never really saw the violent side of him, I guess he got smarter as he got older. He sure does the manipulation and controlling thing though. It’s like one day my rose colored glasses fell off and I saw the real him. I found a book “Boomerang Love” by Lynn Melville, it has helped me soooo much, every time I find myself slipping back, I pull it out and remind myself what he is all about. You are all right, the hardest part was accepting that he really didn’t love me and that I wasted 3 1/2 years on someone like him. My kids keep saying, they tried to tell me. lol 2 years ago when I first started feeling like there was something really wrong with him, and I began my search for the name of my pain, once you know how and what your dealing with and you finally realize it’s not going to change, ever, you can begin to move on. It still hurts like nothing I’ve ever been through before, but I’m healing. I now know I have not been alone in going through this. I have also read” The Sociopath Next Door” Great book!!!! I’ve only ever been in the 2 relationship, my ex-husband, who by the way also got hit with lightening (made him a real looney) and my ex BF. Between them I have learned a lot about Mental Illness. You guys are a great support group!!! I’ve been reading your posts for over a year now, I don’t know why I didn’t join in before. Denial I guess, lol
your right CA, it is sad that anyone has to be here, but it’s so nice to know we are not alone!
anymore that is, lol
Lovefraud-I am struggling right now. What is wrong with me? I called my ex late last night/early morning trying to see if he would come over. I think it was God’s way for him not to come. If he would have come I think I would be sitting here even more depressed.
Why did I call him? I am disturbed…lol. All of the things he has done to me. Why would I still want to be around him? He has hurt me ever since I met him in 2003. I am finally divorced from him. He hasn’t come to see his child in 4 weeks but I called him to come and see me.
I don’t know what to do. I have a problem. He is toxic, evil, etc. What does that say about me? I have to move on with my life. I haven’t slept with him since Feb. 2009 even though there has been numerous opportunities. It is so hard. I am scared to date again so I have not been with anyone but him for 6 years.
Any advice or wise words would be so helpful.
Henry, darlilng, you missed the point, NO, I DO hold the Ps RESPONSIBLE for their “disabiility,” it is the peopole who know them but don’t know what they are that I try not to hold responsible because THEY are the blilnd ones. They are blind to what the P is and therefore they have trouble validating our point of view. They can’t SEE for example that my egg donor is not the pious little old lady she pretends to be any more than my husband could see the pinik goop.
I could stand there and scream “there it is, can’t you see it stupid?” till hell froze over and he still could not have seen it. It is the same way with the people the P has fooled, no matter how much you tell them what the P has done, what the P IS, they look and CANNOT SEE IT.
Jesus said “they have ears to hear and cannot hear, eyes and cannot see” (paraphrased) and I think it is the same. The DUPEs are BLIND and the Ps REFUSE to see, but the MOTIVE is different.
My husband was TRYING to see, but couldn’t. The Ps REFUSE TO SEE and the DUPEs are also BLIND so just different motives.
We get frustrated at our friends and other people who can’t see how bad the P is, but I think they TRY to see but are just BLIND because of the P’s lies.
I know I have been blind to other;’s warnings and deaf too for that matter when other folks warned me about some of my P relationships until I finally got my senses back and then realized the warning was RIGHT!
Maybe the P s have some magical power that renders us deaf and blind around them for a while—I think that is in the love bomb stage. LOL
Dear Nic,
I think we were posting over each other. Sweetie, you are feeling the normal phase of wanting him back. you KNOW the truth, he is TOXIC but now that the divorce is over you are starting to question yourself again and to feel lonely.
I’m glad he is losing interest in your child. My gosh I remember how he used to use your baby as a weapon to slap you with.
I am glad he did not come, but NC is the only way to stay on that road to healing, and I know you know that. I am NOT going to boink you for calling him, because you are beating yourself up enough for that, but I do want you to stop beating yourself up over this and just tell yourself that you slipped, just like an alcholic falls off the wagon and has a drink sometimes, but you, just like them, have to pick yourself up, brush yourself off and say, I made a slip yesterday, but today is a better day.
I know your story and I know what a creepy jerk your X is and I am really GLAD he is losing interest in your child. He was only using your child lto hurt you and doesn’t care about the baby. That final acceptance stage where you are getting to the point that you can EMOTIONALLY accept all of this is coming closser and closer, so this is a good thing.
I remember when I had my hysterectomy done, I did NOT want more children at that time, but afterwards when I no longer had a choice, I would CRY when I saw a preg woman on the street. If that makes any sense. I actually grieved over the loss of the possibility I might want kids later and then had no choice.
So this final step I think is a good place for you to be. It is painful, but it will pass. Honey, you are FREE of him.
Don’t worry about not wanting to date, you need some time to YOURSELF to get further along with your healing before you even think about dating. IN a vulnerable state right now, it would be easier for another P to target you, get your feet firmly back under you, your emotions stable and then you find a REALLY NICE man, a responsible, caring man, not a “mr. Bad boy” to love you and your baby! (((hugs))))
nic…
go easy on yourself. you’re still under his evil spell, is all.
it’s not easy to get them out from under your skin, that’s for sure! they stick in there like an oil spill to rocks. you have to clean every nook and cranny.
perhaps you aren’t really in touch with your anger over how he treated you. you’re thinking of good times, of what may have been, of what he pretended to be. getting over the s/p/n in my life was about realizing how incredibly sick he is; not just evil, but truly mentally sick … demonic … manipulative to the core. while there are STILL times when i wish he was here with me, curled up on the bed watching TV, or being intimate, or laughing over an inside joke at the dinner table, i have to remember that it was ALL a lie. the jokes, sex, mellow moments were just more manipulation to make me believe: 1) that he was normal 2) that he loved me 3) that i could count on him to be there for me. Lie, Lie. Lie.
if they loved us, they wouldn’t treat us so horribly. if they were normal, they wouldn’t do such outrageously agregious things. if they could be counted on — for ANYTHING — we wouldn’t have felt like we were walking on egg shells waiting for the next shoe to drop!
it helps to get to the abject hatred phase! when i think of him now, it’s 90% rage. i despise him, loathe him. slimy cretan that he is. i’m lonely and sad, but that’s far better than letting him have one more moment of the love and warmth i have to give.
you called him because you still believe, on some level, that he is what he pretended to be. it takes a while to realize that — yes, he was that good a fake.
perhaps your child is better off without him, as you are. as for dating, it will feel right for you at some point. maybe you could become closer to your own Self. heal and breathe and find joy in little things and the peace that comes with being without a s/p/n.
the bad man in my life was the only one i was with for the past 16 years. i’m not dating either. don’t know if i ever will again. just taking it day by day, figuring out why on earth i fell for those obvious lies for so many years.
be good to yourself. and your baby. ((((NIC))))
If a Blind person has more tuned sences of smell , hearing , touch , taste . Does it not follow that a persons development however nature or nurture , with the handicap of no concience , no worth! percieved. That these peoples brain adapts to survival instinct! They seem to have a 7th sence to read others more acutely and use it against us! Does that make sence? I also think that this can be learned by us , it is just not a necessarly dominant way to deal with life for those who have a normal concience!