The Psychopath Next Door

Psychopath. We hear the word and images of Bernardo, Manson and Dahmer pop into our heads; no doubt Ted Bundy too. But they’re the bottom of the barrel — most of the two million psychopaths in North America aren’t murderers. They’re our friends, lovers and co-workers. They’re outgoing and persuasive, dazzling you with charm and flattery. Often you aren’t even aware they’ve taken you for a ride — until it’s too late.

Psychopaths exhibit a Jekyll and Hyde personality. “They play a part so they can get what they want,” says Dr. Sheila Willson, a Toronto psychologist who has helped victims of psychopaths. The guy who showers a woman with excessive attention is much more capable of getting her to lend him money, and to put up with him when he strays. The new employee who gains her co-workers’ trust has more access to their chequebooks. And so on. Psychopaths have no conscience and their only goal is self-gratification. Many of us have been their victims — at work, through friendships or relationships — and not one of us can say, “a psychopath could never fool me.”

Think you can spot one? Think again. In general, psychopaths aren’t the product of broken homes or the casualties of a materialistic society. Rather they come from all walks of life and there is little evidence that their upbringing affects them. Elements of a psychopath’s personality first become evident at a very early age, due to biological or genetic factors. Explains Michael Seto, a psychologist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental health in Toronto, by the time that a person hits their late teens, the disorder is almost certainly permanent. Although many clinicians use the terms psychopath and sociopath interchangeably, writes psychopath expert Robert Hare on his book ‘Without Conscience’, a sociopath’s criminal behavior is shaped by social forces and is the result of a dysfunctional environment.

Psychopaths have only a shallow range of emotions and lack guilt, says Hare. They often see themselves as victims, and lack remorse or the ability to empathize with others. “Psychopaths play on the fact that most of us are trusting and forgiving people,” adds Seto. The warning signs are always there; it’s just difficult to see them because once we trust someone, the friendship becomes a blinder.

Even lovers get taken for a ride by psychopaths. For a psychopath, a romantic relationship is just another opportunity to find a trusting partner who will buy into the lies. It’s primarily why a psychopath rarely stays in a relationship for the long term, and often is involved with three or four partners at once, says Willson. To a psychopath, everything about a relationship is a game. Willson refers to the movie ‘Sliding Doors’ to illustrate her point. In the film, the main character comes home early after just having been fired from her job. Only moments ago, her boyfriend has let another woman out the front door. But in a matter of minutes he is the attentive and concerned boyfriend, taking her out to dinner and devoting the entire night to comforting her. All the while he’s planning to leave the next day on a trip with the other woman.

The boyfriend displays typical psychopathic characteristics because he falsely displays deep emotion toward the relationship, says Willson. In reality, he’s less concerned with his girlfriend’s depression than with making sure she’s clueless about the other woman’s existence. In the romance department, psychopaths have an ability to gain your affection quickly, disarming you with words, intriguing you with grandiose plans. If they cheat you’ll forgive them, and one day when they’ve gone too far, they’ll leave you with a broken heart (and an empty wallet). By then they’ll have a new player for their game.

The problem with their game is that we don’t often play by their rules. Where we might occasionally tell a white lie, a psychopath’s lying is compulsive. Most of us experience some degree of guilt about lying, preventing us from exhibiting such behavior on a regular basis. “Psychopaths don’t discriminate who it is they lie to or cheat,” says Seto. “There’s no distinction between friend, family and sucker.”

No one wants to be the sucker, so how do we prevent ourselves from becoming close friends or getting into a relationship with a psychopath? It’s really almost impossible, say Seto and Willson. Unfortunately, laments Seto, one way is to become more suspicious and less trusting of others. Our tendency is to forgive when we catch a loved one in a lie. “Psychopaths play on this fact,” he says. “However, I’m certainly not advocating a world where if someone lies once or twice, you never speak to them again.” What you can do is look at how often someone lies and how they react when caught. Psychopaths will lie over and over again, and where other people would sincerely apologize, a psychopath may apologize but won’t stop.

Psychopaths also tend to switch jobs as frequently as they switch partners, mainly because they don’t have the qualities to maintain a job for the long haul. Their performance is generally erratic, with chronic absences, misuse of company resources and failed commitments. Often they aren’t even qualified for the job and use fake credentials to get it. Seto talks of a patient who would get marketing jobs based on his image; he was a presentable and charming man who layered his conversations with educational and occupational references. But it became evident that the man hadn’t a clue what he was talking about, and was unable to hold down a job.

How do you make sure you don’t get fooled when you’re hiring someone to baby-sit your child or for any other job? Hire based on reputation and not image, says Willson. Check references thoroughly. Psychopaths tend to give vague and inconsistent replies. Of course the best way to solve this problem would be to cure psychopaths of their ‘illness.’ But there’s no recipe for treating them, say psychiatrists. Today’s traditional methods of psychotherapy (psychoanalysis, group and one-on-one therapy) and drug treatments have failed. Therapy is more likely to work when an individual admits there’s a problem and wants to change. The common problem with psychopaths, says Sets, “Is they don’t see a problem with their behavior.”

Psychopaths don’t seek therapy willingly, says Seto. Rather, they’re pushed into it by a desperate relative or by a court order. To a psychopath, a therapist is just one more person who must be conned, and the psychopath plays the part right until the therapist is convinced of his or her ‘rehabilitation.’

Even though we can’t treat psychopaths effectively with therapy, it doesn’t mean we can’t protect ourselves, writes Hare. Willson agrees, citing the most important factor in keeping psychopaths at bay is to know your vulnerabilities. We need to “realize our own potential and maximize our strengths” so that our insecurities don’t overcome us. Because, she says, a psychopath is a chameleon who becomes “an image of what you haven’t done for yourself.” Over time, she says, “their appearance of perfection will begin to crack,” but by that time you will have been emotionally and perhaps financially scathed. There comes a time when you realize there’s no point in searching for answers; the only thing is to move on.

Taken in part from MW — By Caroline Konrad — September 1999

~ by joel trevino on October 16, 2007.

8 Responses to “The Psychopath Next Door”

  1. I’m glad to read this again, in another place. I am still recovering from a brutal break-up (only brutal in that it was a complete blindsidingly cruel surprise) from what turned out to be a sociopath/psychopath. Within days I was trying to find information to make sense out of what was completely senseless! The Sociopath Next Door got me started on the road to realization.
    AND although having been through this I do hope that I am more aware and more attuned to NOT let that wool be pulled over my eyes again, as Drs Hare & Wilson point out in their own ways: the psychopath is a PERFECT mirror of exactly what we are the most hungry for!!

    Thanks for this!
    Mirrors and Things We Learn

  2. That is a very interesting and detailed post about APD. I have often thought of sociopathy as a kind social parasitism-with sufferers of APD aping the social behavior of more empathetic people. You can read more about APD here

  3. I too am trying to make sense of what has happened to me. I was conned by the worst kind of psychopath! He is intelligent, witty, gorgeous, and works in my corporation. I am very successful, intelligent, and most would say I am beautiful. I have been narrowed down to low self confidence and cannot focus on my work. I show up everyday for someone to tell me how I should really meet this man because we would make a great couple. Little do they know the damage he has already done. I also get to show up at work and listen to him charm, manipulate, and con others. I am awaiting the day he pulls the rug out from under me and begins to shatter my name. The gross part is….I am addicted and am trying to move on and recover. I am going to buy the books. I wish someone would come up with an article on how to recover or tactics on how to deal with someone like this.

  4. Good luck to me and all those who have such a person as their life partner. :-) Not sure what will happen in future but this information does help understand things better. Will prefer to let go and let God!

  5. For extra help, please read Women Who Love Psychopaths by Susan L. Brown, M.A. and Liane J. Leedom M.D. I have read Hare’s book, Vaknin’s book….but this one broke it down into the bottom line on these men. I am divorcing my psychopathic husband of 28 years. My divorce will final in Nov 08. I am very broken………

  6. Note – a sociopath often can have a psychopath father and other relatives may also have the disease. It would be good to have a test in mind to see if your date lies. Also, you can be duped for 10 years before actually finding out! A clue is – “Oh, I am sooo sorry, I didn’t know”, or “Oh, he wouldn’t ever do anything like thaatt?” So soothing, but underneath, is the father hording all the money, are there other family members living in poverty or sent off to the nursing home, while one has all the money? Will they blame a crime they did on someone else? YES – YOU!!! Do they try to trick you, so it looks like you did the crime? You are in big trouble, it is hard to extricate from the situation, especially once they have all of your money. And it will be all YOUR fault, according to them, as they try to steal your house and all your possessions as you leave in tears. Look for the clues on the first date. Is he a little TOO nice?

  7. I met a pscyhopath a year ago. He told me everything I wanted to hear and I thought he was sincere. He only called and was nice when he wanted or needed something. He is a total narcissist too!! I should have went with my first instinct when I first met him. Always trust your gut feelings. Thank god I have finally seen the light and hope to never meet another man/women like him.

  8. My life is being destroyed by a psychopath stalker. Even the police are protecting her, but we don’t know why. She is also stalking my friends, and they too have found the police won’t help them. She has tried to kill me once, and has systematically taken my life apart and wrecked it. I have the best solicitors in the country, and they say its the worst case they have even known. Nothing stops her. She just gets worse and worse. Hers lies and manipulations are astonishing. She seems to be able to convince anyone. So remember, psychopaths can be women too ! I am leaving my country and going into hiding soon.

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