A new book called "Confessions of a Sociopath; A Life Spent Hiding in Plain
Sight," written by pseudonymous author M.E. Thomas, describes what it's
like to be a sociopath — someone who lacks the ability to feel or sympathize
with others.
Sociopaths can be sexy and beguiling; they take risks the rest of us
don't and come across as bold and exciting. Socially, they are often leaders,
the life and soul of the party.
The downside is that they regard others to be used, don't feel sympathy,
empathy or guilt, and are often one step away from becoming what psychologists
used to call psychopaths: criminally vindictive types whose only motivation is
to take advantage of weaker people.
In her book, Thomas describes many disturbing episodes from her own
life, including the time she let a baby possum drown in her swimming pool
because she couldn't be bothered to fish it out with the net. In another
chapter, she describes a recurring dream in which she kills her father with her
bare hands — because she hates him.
Thomas is also a successful law professor, married, and teaches Sunday
school. Or so she says — grandiose lying is one of the characteristics of being
a sociopath.
Psychologists have changed the diagnostic definition of sociopathy
several times over the decades. It used to be called being a
"psychopath." Sociopath is the newer term. More recently, the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition has
renamed the condition "Antisocial Personality Disorder" and reduced
it to seven main characteristics.
However, the first researcher to name the concept of psychopathy was Dr.
Hervey Cleckley, who published a book titled "The Mask of Sanity" in
1941, Thomas writes.
Cleckley noted
that psychopathy was difficult to diagnose precisely because it presents itself
without the obvious symptoms of mental disorder. Psychopaths and sociopaths are
often a bit too rational.
In her new book,
Thomas says Cleckley's 16 behavioral characteristics hit home. "Nowhere
else have I recognized the sociopath inside me more than in Cleckley's clinical
profiles," she writes.
Here are
Cleckley's 16 characteristics. Ask yourself if they apply to you.
1.
Are you superficially charming and intelligent?
Yes
2. Do you have delusions
or other signs of irrational thinking? For sociopaths, the answer is no.
They're super-rational, coldly so.
3. Are you overly nervous, or
do you have other neuroses? Sociopaths are rarely nervous or anxious. They
aren't scared of risk.
4. Are you reliable?
Sociopaths are unreliable.
5. Sociopaths are
comfortable not telling the truth when it suits them.
6. Do you feel
remorse or shame? Sociopaths rarely feel guilt
7. Is your behavior
anti-social for no good reason? Sociopaths may have "inadequately
motivated antisocial behavior," according to Cleckley.
8. Do you have poor
judgment, and fail to learn from experience? Sociopaths think they're smarter
than everyone else, but they take risks the rest of us would not and don't
learn from punishment.
9. Are you
pathologically egocentric, and incapable of love? Sociopaths are.
10. Do you generally
lack the ability to react emotionally? Sociopaths don't experience emotions the
way the rest of us do.
11. Do you lack
insight? Sociopaths aren't self-reflective or meditative.
12. Are you
responsive to others socially? Interestingly, sociopaths often have to fake
their reactions and responses to the rest of us in order to get through their
days without being "spotted."
13. Are you a crazy
party fiend? Sociopaths engage in "fantastic and uninviting behavior with
drink and sometimes without," Cleckley says. Thomas adds that sociopaths
often crave (meaningless) sex more than the rest of us, too.
14. Do you make false
suicide threats? Yep, sociopaths are drama queens.
15. Is your sex life
impersonal, trivial or poorly integrated? Sociopaths lack the ability to love.
16. Have you failed
to follow a life plan? Sociopaths have difficulty holding down jobs. (It
requires long-term obligations to others.)
There's no surefire way of self-diagnosing yourself as a
sociopath, as sociopaths also tend to lie in tests like these.
But if you recognized yourself or others in these questions, you
might want to seek professional help.
Thomas points out that many sociopaths do not want to end up in
prison, or as psychotic outcasts. They can use their skills to be successful in
business, in ways that less single-minded people cannot.
Source: Business Insider
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