Opinion He Married a Sociopath: Me - I always know when my husband is lying

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He Married a Sociopath: Me​

As a wife and a mother, I have learned how to tell the truth. Which is why I always know when my husband is lying.


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Credit...Brian Rea
By Patric Gagne
  • Oct. 16, 2020
My husband was trying to tell me I was “the only one” for him.
“Don’t lie to a liar,” I said.
It wasn’t a very romantic reply, I’ll admit. But I’m not a romantic. I’m a sociopath.
My husband knows this, of course. As for me, I knew as early as age 7 that I wasn’t like other children. I didn’t care about things the way they did. I was a girl (my male-sounding name, Patric, is short for Patricia) who mostly felt nothing. It wasn’t until college that a therapist told me what I had long suspected: My lack of emotion and empathy are hallmarks of sociopathy. A few years later, doctors would confirm my diagnosis.
Human beings aren’t designed to function without access to emotion, so we sociopaths often become destructive in order to feel things. I used to break into houses or steal cars for the adrenaline rush of knowing I was somewhere I wasn’t allowed to be — just to feel, period.
It didn’t take long for me to realize this was not an effective life strategy. Rather than risk incarceration (or worse), I used my diagnosis to fuel my pursuit of a Ph.D. in psychology.
Like many, I gained my first understanding of sociopaths from pop culture, which portrays us as singularly dangerous and threatening, our flat emotional state and lack of remorse making us unfit for normal life. It wasn’t until I began my research in graduate school that I learned sociopaths exist along a wide spectrum, like many people with psychiatric disorders. You’ll find us everywhere in daily life, as your colleagues, neighbors, friends and, sometimes, members of your own family.
My husband and I dated in high school and found each other again after college. You would think my insincerity, emotional poverty, absence of shame and guilt, and reduced empathic response wouldn’t exactly land me in the “dream girl” category. Perhaps because he and I had grown up together and he was already familiar with my “bad” side, he remained in denial for years about my having any sort of real psychological problem. Nevertheless, 13 years later, we’re still in love and happily married.
But am I “the only one” for him? Definitely not.


My husband had developed a crush on a female colleague at work. It was obvious, and I understood why. She was everything I’m not: thoughtful, kind, compassionate. I doubt she ever attempted to choke anyone. Unlike me.

She was socially appropriate at parties, appreciated compliments and affection. Her charm was authentic and her darkness, if she had any, relatable. Unlike mine. It made sense he would like her. They would make a great pair. So why wouldn’t he just admit it?
He knew I didn’t take things like this personally. That’s one of the perks of being married to a sociopath: I don’t get jealous. He knew that if he were to tell me he liked her, I would listen and relate without reaction. I might even end up helping him shed some of his Catholic-school guilt. All he had to do was be honest.
When you’re a sociopath in a marriage, especially one with children, honesty is critical — even more, I would argue, than for people in “normal” relationships. As a sociopath, I had difficulty prioritizing telling the truth, but as a wife and a mother, I forced myself to learn.
Outside of my family, my loyalty to the truth is what has enabled me to connect with other people. As a doctor who specializes in the research of sociopathy, I prize credibility and integrity as my greatest asset.
Granted, it hasn’t been easy. People claim to want complete honesty from their partner or spouse, but I have found they aren’t always happy when they get it, especially when that honesty is coming from a sociopath.
My husband was never thrilled to hear that I had spent the day in a stranger’s house without that person’s knowledge or committed other misdeeds. But his real anger was reserved for the fact that I never felt guilty about these things.
For my husband, guilt is a driving force. His formative years were shaped by his overbearing and infirm mother. And then he married someone who seemed immune to it. He wanted to know: Why did I never care what anyone thought? Why was my behavior never limited by guilt?
For a long time, he was angry. But eventually he began to understand it wasn’t my fault that I was born with a reduced capacity for remorse. And it wasn’t his fault his mother was so negatively attached.
A few years after we married, with his encouragement, my behavior started to shift. I would never experience shame the way other people do, but I would learn to understand it. Thanks to him, I started to behave. I stopped acting like a sociopath.
And thanks to me, he started to see the value in not caring as much about what others thought. He noticed how often guilt was forcing his hand, frequently in unhealthy directions. He would never be a sociopath, but he saw value in a few of my personality traits.
He learned to say “no” and mean it, especially when it came to activities he was doing purely out of obligation — family visits or holiday gatherings he didn’t enjoy but couldn’t decline. He started to recognize when he was being manipulated. He noticed when emotion was clouding his judgment.
What a pair we are. Certainly, there have been setbacks. He isn’t always patient. I’m not always on my best behavior. And on those occasions, I leave a token on his desk to let him know when I have been up to no good (minor mischief like sneaking embarrassing items into a line-cutter’s grocery cart). The token I leave is an innocuous trinket, a Statue of Liberty figurine from a key chain. Anyone else who saw it wouldn’t think twice. But he knows what it means.
Whenever I leave the figurine on his desk, it means I’ve done something wrong. The second he sees it, he comes to find me, gives me a kiss and slips it back into my purse. Often, he doesn’t ask what I’ve done, but if he does, he knows he can trust me to be honest. And I know the same, so I never stray too far outside the lines.
Which is why his denial of his office crush was so confusing.
For the first time in our relationship, it wasn’t my interpretation of the truth that was causing a shift in our marriage; it was his. Believe it or not, I could appreciate the cause of his dishonesty. On good days, I was almost entertained by it. His clumsy white lies were like a toddler’s, and nearly as endearing.
On those days I wanted to hug him for being so cute. “You see what you’re doing?” I wanted to say. “You’re not being honest about your feelings for her. You’re lying. Now, how is this any different from what I used to do?”
And just like that, he would have gotten a lesson in empathy — from a sociopath, no less! And we would have laughed and understood each other better and gone back to sharing everything. At least I’d like to think so. My husband, after all, was the one who said we must be honest without exception. And he was the one who insisted I confess to every single thing every single time. So why wasn’t he playing by the same rules?
I have been forced to come clean about everything, even when — especially when — I don’t want to. It’s hard, frustrating, confusing and annoying, but I have done it for him, for us! If he wasn’t willing to do the same, then what? Should I leave him? Go back to being dishonest? Wait for him to leave me?
On bad days, these were the thoughts that dominated. When I couldn’t help but wonder: Is this what fear feels like?
I think it was. My husband was lying to me. Gaslighting me. Sneaking. Acting like a sociopath. And isn’t that how we sociopaths are defined — as liars without the ability to empathize? On such days, I saw what it must be like to be married to someone like me. And the irony is almost shimmering.
Still, I couldn’t help but smile thinking of the future, of the days when we would be able to joke about the time we almost split up because he started acting like a sociopath. And that in doing so, my husband was finally able to teach me the one thing I have been trying to learn all of my life: empathy.

 
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for someone who is "not very emotional" she sure is flipping her shit over her husband telling her a white lie. Though I agree he's better off coming clean, he might not even realize it himself yet. Sounds like he hasn't acted on this crush at all. What's the big deal.

She's clinging too hard to her expectations of what a sociopath is. She comes off as a basic bitch narcissist who thinks she's much more powerful than she really is, flipping out at the realization that she doesn't have as much control as she thought.

love the disney ending where she implies he magically cured of her life-long condition during this mundane event
 
As an expert who has only dated sociopaths:

What sociopaths don't have is sympathy. They cannot sympathize with you. They cannot manifest emotions that cause them to care about another person. This is where you can see a sociopath or person with ASPD for. They can empathize, but they cannot sympathize because they DO NOT understand it. That's the trap. That's basically how you can identify sociopaths. If they cannot understand compassion, you got them. Its the one thing that is extremely difficult for them to fake effectively, because they can't grasp caring about anyone other than themselves.

Like, if a sociopath causes harm to someone else, all they can talk about is themselves. It is very difficult for them to refocus on that person who they basically destroyed. They will gaslight and manipulate and paint themselves as the victim. They will try to steer things away from sympathy and compassion to emotions they understand better. If you keep hitting them with sympathy and compassion, they'll break down and get angry. Some are completely unrepentant and just don't care what you feel at all about them. Others are highly manipulative and know that they require that mask to keep functioning in society.
I'm 300 different kinds of stupid and don't quite get what you mean, what like, lay on the pity real thick, or?
 
"Sociopaths" are some of the most annoying people in the world. They exhibit all the signs of emotional response but swear up and down that they don't "feel" anything. In my opinion, a lot of emotions are wound up in social interaction so the performative aspects are the emotion themselves. If you're yelling and throwing things you're angry, regardless of if you "feel" something internally or not. It may be that their experience of emotions isn't as vivid as other people but the idea that they feel nothing seems pretty suspect to me. Also, we only have their words to go by and people are notoriously unreliable when it comes to assessing themselves, doubly so when they're admitted liars.

ETA: It's also extremely suspicious that they claim to have no empathy and then turn around and torture people for their own amusement. If you didn't know what kind of hell you're putting your victims through, why are you torturing them? It's circular logic.
People don't label themselves accurately. Whatever they tell you they are, you can safely know they actually are not. They just want you to give them the treatment they think that thing affords. "I'm a very loyal person. I'm very trustworthy." are all the standard grifter phrases you'll hear. "I'm a sociopath" generally means:
"I am supremely selfish and only value my own pleasure above all else. You will not hold me accountable or make me face the consequences of my actions, because everything I do is not my fault, it's this invisible demon inside me you should direct your anger at. Deal with it all or you're a bad person. You don't want people to think you'd abandon your poor demon-victimized wife, would you?"
 
I'm not like the other girls: The Article

Brought to you not by a 16 year old's tumblr, but an adult woman with a husband and kids writing for NYT. I'd was willing to entertain the possibility there's some truth to what she's saying until I found out she put "sociopath" in her twatter bio because she thinks that makes her cool and smart. Even has a picture like Morticia Addams.

Islam is right about women.
 
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