1 Introduction
00:00 • 4min
chevron_right 2 How Did You Know You Were Different?
03:59 • 3min
chevron_right 3 The Going Gets Weird, the Wrong Turn Professional
06:54 • 2min
chevron_right 4 Relationships
08:42 • 3min
chevron_right 5 How Did You Goggle When You Found Out You Were Dislexic?
11:29 • 3min
chevron_right 6 How Does This Reflect on Me?
14:10 • 2min
chevron_right 7 Is There a Strong Connection to My Identity?
16:00 • 2min
chevron_right 8 The Ends Justify the Means
17:41 • 2min
chevron_right 9 Are You a Writer?
19:42 • 2min
chevron_right 10 What Is the Truth About Being a Writer?
22:10 • 2min
chevron_right 11 Are You a Social Slash Political Type of Person?
24:09 • 4min
chevron_right 12 I'm on a Mission to Educate People
28:27 • 3min
chevron_right 13 Ampathy - I Don't Think It's Unampathetic
31:40 • 4min
chevron_right 14 I Don't Think I'm Smarter Than Most People Anymore.
35:36 • 2min
chevron_right 15 What Is It You Really Want the World to Know About Psychopaths?
37:18 • 2min
chevron_right 16 Is This What Everybody's Afraid Of?
39:43 • 2min
chevron_right 17 Is It True That Psychopaths Mask All the Time?
42:10 • 3min
chevron_right 18 Psychopaths Are Not Too Oblivious to Adapt and Mask
45:24 • 2min
chevron_right 19 Can Psychopaths Love?
47:09 • 3min
chevron_right 20 Why Would I Kill My Mother?
50:00 • 2min
chevron_right 21 Is There Research on Blood Lust Amongst a Psychopath?
52:01 • 2min
chevron_right 22 What's in It for the Average Psychopath?
54:30 • 2min
chevron_right 23 The Greatest Financial Scam Artist in History
56:13 • 3min
chevron_right 24 You Know, I'm Just in the Moment, Right?
59:12 • 2min
chevron_right 25 The Boy to Man Journey, Isn't It?
01:01:30 • 2min
chevron_right 26 Don't Give Me Your Home Address, Right?
01:03:32 • 1min
chevron_right 27 I Could Have a Long Term Relationship With You
01:05:01 • 5min
chevron_right 28 I'm a Psychopath, I've Been in a Job Situation Where I Can't Be Myself Enough.
01:09:55 • 3min
chevron_right 29 Are We Soul Vanted?
01:12:58 • 3min
chevron_right 30 Is There Anything You Want to Know About Relationships?
01:15:53 • 3min
chevron_right 31 Is She's Sad, I Get Sad?
01:18:42 • 2min
chevron_right 32 Can I Say Something Sensitive?
01:20:30 • 2min
chevron_right 33 Can I Put My Right Hand on Your Left Buttocks?
01:22:14 • 2min
chevron_right 34 I'm a Cychopath and I've Lost My Job, I Lost My Relationship, and I Lose My Job.
01:23:46 • 2min
chevron_right 35 Psychiatry Is a Difficult Process
01:25:39 • 3min
chevron_right 36 Is There a Heaven on Earth?
01:28:59 • 3min
chevron_right 37 You Don't Care What Other People Think, Right?
01:32:20 • 3min
chevron_right 38 Is There Anything You'd Like to Touch on Before We Rap?
01:35:08 • 4min
chevron_right On this remarkable episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, we talk with M.E. Thomas about psychopathy, and how you can be in a relationship that works with a psychopath.
M.E. Thomas is a pseudonym of the bestselling author of Confessions of a Sociopath. She’s a lawyer, musician, and now a teacher. She is among the first psychopaths or sociopaths to come out of the closet, and share her life and experience.
This episode will have you thinking deeply about your identity, relationships, and the masks that we all wear. So stay tuned.
M.E. Thomas on Knowing she was “Different”
The conversation started with the question of identity. Specifically, about when M.E. Thomas found out she was “Different”.
“I always knew that I was different. But I had so many things that they’d be different, I just assumed it was one those – like, I was raised in a big Mormon family, so I grew up with five siblings. We just had weird idiosyncrasies. My dad was kind of a crazy guy. Even now, they call him Einstein because he wears his hair, kind of like white and crazy, and his eyebrows were long and curly. He says, he thinks that makes him look distinguished.” – M.E. Thomas
Aside from this, there were a lot of things that people would think weird about her. But it came off most of the times as precocious and charming as a child, and cool and collected growing up.
M.E. Thomas on Not Experiencing the Same Things
Another way M.E. Thomas knew she was different from others was when she and the other kids her age hit puberty. Simply put, she wasn’t experiencing the same things that others were being self-conscious or worried about.
“During puberty, everybody was kind of losing their collective minds. And I was just like, “I don’t get it”. I didn’t get the self-consciousness, and I didn’t get the awkwardness. And I didn’t get the kind of like, “we’re going through some sort of new identity”. I kind of didn’t get that, although I got it in a way because I would kind of choose a new identity every day for whatever situation I was in.” – M.E. Thomas
Looking back, M.E. Thomas was kind of relieved that she didn’t go through all that, citing a Reddit page that showed teenagers and all the stupid things they did and wear growing up.
How to Work the Social System
M.E. Thomas muses that she was glad that she didn’t go through the same experience, as she’s heard stories of how people were both very happy and unhappy during those times in their life. She particularly calls out peer pressure, which is probably the number one reason teenagers do stupid things for stupid reasons.
She herself wasn’t subjected to peer pressure, because she admits that she already knew how to work the social system even then. Given the cool demeanor she portrays, she was easily part of every social circle and friends with different groups. Though she does say that being that much of a social butterfly should’ve been an indicator of a personality disorder.
To learn more about M.E. Thomas and her experiences growing up, download and listen to this episode.
Bio
M. E. Thomas (a pseudonym) is the author of Confessions of a Sociopath: A Life Spent Hiding in Plain Sight. (Penguin Random House)
She is a former law professor who has written extensively on music copyright issues, a current California attorney, and the founder of a non-profit. She is also, most recently, a professional musician.
Links
Connect with M.E. Thomas!
Website | Twitter | More about the Author
More about M.E. Thomas
NYTimes: Confessions of a Sociopath
Slate: American Psychopath’s Patrick Bateman Reviews M.E. Thomas’ Confession of a Sociopath
YouTube: Ask a Psychopath - What is your background?
YouTube: Ask a Psychopath - What are some things you've done?
We hope you enjoyed this episode of Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on iTunes!