Going through our archives, we came across this great post by Dr. AnnMaria De Mars from June 4, 2016 “Signs You’re Hanging Out With A Sociopath” that we wanted to share in case you missed it the first time around.
Since I’m still trying to convince Maria and my husband to have the next More than Ordinary podcast focus on relationships, I decided to write about it here until they come to see the error of their ways and go along with me.
LESS THAN ORDINARY
First, let’s talk about less than ordinary relationships These traits don’t seem to change very often so I would be for requiring certain people have
Warning: I’m the person your parents warned you about
tattooed in a conspicuous place.
Since that has not happened, let me give you Mama AnnMaria’s red flags that you might be hanging out with a dirt bag
Fake honesty
For example, I worked with a guy who was having problems in his marriage. In explaining what happened he said
I made a mistake. I was having an affair with this other woman. My wife found pictures on my phone and saw the charge for the hotel on the credit card. When she confronted me about it, I was honest with her
Okay, what is it with you people charging hotels? This is far from the first person I have heard of doing this. If you have to be bumping ugliest with some stranger, can’t you and McCheatypants between the two of you come up with the cash to cover four hours at the Sleazy Slime Motel?
Anyway, what I told my co-worker, Bob Loosed*** , was
What the hell, that’s not being honest. She caught you dead to rights with nasty pictures and evidence from your MasterCard. Saying, “Yes, that is my phone that you took out of my pants pocket” isn’t being honest, or not denying it and saying, “No, I’m not cheating, I’m studying to be a gynecologist.”
You weren’t honest. You were CAUGHT. There’s a difference.
It’s the same thing with these stupid women dating guys in prison who say,
He’s an honest guy. He doesn’t deny that he beat the old lady with a lead pipe to steal her Yorkshire Terrier to sell it for body parts to buy crack.
Honest would be not be stealing in the first place. Similarly, if after denying you committed a crime, then getting convicted with DNA, security camera, eye witness and dog bite scars as evidence, admitting you did it when going up for parole isn’t honesty, it’s strategy.
Fake Remorse
Ogden Nash said that he’d
Rather have a rude word from someone who had done me no harm
Than a graceful letter from the King of England saying he’s sorry he broke my arm
I’ve more than once had words with someone who thought their being sorry about some behavior should excuse it.
You know when the time to be sorry about doing something that would hurt me is? Before you do it. And then don’t f****** do it.
Then, they whine about it.
How can you not forgive me? I feel so BAD about running over your Yorkshire Terrier and getting you fired because I lied to your boss about you being the head of an international sex slave dog trafficking ring.
Ok, let me get this straight. YOU did something rotten and I should be okay with it now because YOU feel bad. If the biggest concern in my life was your feelings that would make sense but excuse me instead if I am concerned about my veterinarian bills and finding a new job before I get evicted. Also, people give me dirty looks now at the dog park.
Tell me again just how you’re feeling bad is supposed to be an improvement in MY situation that you caused?
Fake Appreciation
Watch out for people when your relationship is 99% one way.
If there is ever anything I could do for you … I hear that a lot.
Thank you so much for flying to Antartica and teaching judo to penguins for me.
Writing this, I thought of a couple of friends at whose request I have given thousands of dollars to charities and non-profit organizations they support over the years. In that same period of time, we have run two Kickstarter campaigns that they have not supported in ANY way – not backed us for $5, tweeted out a link, posted on Facebook, emailed to a friend, nothing. They’ve never bought a single one of our games, never donated one to a school. The cheapest game is $4.99 so it isn’t as if it is a hardship on them. How hard is it to email a friend who is a teacher or a parent and say, “Check this out”. They aren’t bad people, but they are kind of bad friends. They are just so caught up in their own ‘crusade’ that they never think of anyone else. However, thinking about this, I’m going to be giving that money to different causes next year. There are lots of really good charities out there. *
The people you really have to watch out for, though, are the sneaky ones that try to PRETEND that you are doing each other favors.
“Here, I brought you back this postcard from my trip to Nebraska. I came over here personally to give it to you and talk to you about investing $9,000,000 in my chain of Marijuana Dispensary and Pasta Restaurants called Pot O’ Spaghetti. Because we’re such friends and all, that’s why I bought you the glossy postcard even though it’s 3 cents more expensive. Also, here is a piece of string I had in my pocket that you can use to hang the postcard up over your desk.”
* P.S. Random weirdness. There will be people who say to me, “I can’t believe that you’d be so petty to quit supporting a charity because your friends never bought a $5 game from your stupid company.” I notice this happens to people (not just me) all the time – they can give thousands of dollars or countless hours to a charity and end up with people mad at them because they didn’t give more or didn’t give it for more years.
Listen to AnnMaria and quit hanging out with sociopaths. Play our games instead!