---
product_id: 85850784
title: "Psychopath Free (Expanded Edition): Recovering from Emotionally Abusive Relationships With Narcissists, Sociopaths, and Other Toxic People Kindle Edition"
brand: "jackson mackenzie"
price: "VT3851"
currency: VUV
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 11
url: https://www.desertcart.vu/products/85850784-psychopath-free-expanded-edition-recovering-from-emotionally-abusive-relationships-narcissists
store_origin: VU
region: Vanuatu
---

# Psychopath Free (Expanded Edition): Recovering from Emotionally Abusive Relationships With Narcissists, Sociopaths, and Other Toxic People Kindle Edition

**Brand:** jackson mackenzie
**Price:** VT3851
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Psychopath Free (Expanded Edition): Recovering from Emotionally Abusive Relationships With Narcissists, Sociopaths, and Other Toxic People Kindle Edition by jackson mackenzie
- **How much does it cost?** VT3851 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.vu](https://www.desertcart.vu/products/85850784-psychopath-free-expanded-edition-recovering-from-emotionally-abusive-relationships-narcissists)

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- jackson mackenzie enthusiasts

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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    A psychopath, by any other name...
  

*by M***I on Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2019*

You have no peace. You feel you’ve gone mad. Once a level-headed individual, you now feel intense jealousy, insecurity, low self-esteem, anxiety, depression, and a hyperactive need to cyberstalk the person in your life. You lie, walk on eggshells, or chase after this person, even if you don't want to. Something is clearly off, like they’re hiding something. What’s worse? They contradict themselves, say things that confuse you, and you react. And then they tell you how horrible you are for doing and feeling the very things that they wanted you to do and feel...“Before this person entered your life, you never behaved like this. After this person was gone from your life, you never behaved like this. So what does that tell you?”It tells me they’re the ones that brought out this side of you. You were in a relationship with someone who emotionally abuses their partners, friends and family members for fun. They dedicate their entire lives to this, and you’re far from being the only person they have done this to. There were people before you, and after you. Many of these people never find out who they’re dealing with, and they keep coming back to the same abuse and drama, only to be discarded and triangulated all over again. If you’re lucky, you’ll end the cycle once and for all, do your research, and move on with your life. And then you discover that — aha! — you’re not crazy, a stalker, bipolar, or whatever buzzword they use to describe you to their new targets. You’re not these things, because that’s what they are.You, my friend, had a close encounter with a narcissist/psychopath/sociopath. To put it simply, you were involved with someone with a Cluster B personality disorder. I won‘t go into details. Just read the book. Read the "30 red flags" on this product page, and that alone will give you invaluable information about the toxic person in your life. Fair warning: you'll want to keep reading.PSYCHOPATH FREE is the most relatable book I have read. I couldn’t have written it better! I literally went through all the things listed in this book. We all feel rather foolish after discovering the monster inside the good-guy mask, but don’t feel bad. How on earth would we know that people like this exist? But once you do, you can’t UNKNOW it, and it is up to you to help prevent this from happening again. You focus on yourself, on what makes you lovely and unique, and expand it. How? By setting strong boundaries and deal-breakers, and developing healthy relationships with lovely people. The journey won’t be easy, but there’s no time limit in self-care. Soon, you’ll restore your peace, become a stronger person, and thrive. As for the narcissistic psychopath — they are someone else’s problem now. And after that — yet another person’s problem. And another person’s problem. And then another one. You get the picture. It’s a never-ending cycle for them. Who has so much time to execute all that crap? They do. It's their oxygen. They can't NOT do it.That’s what set me free. The narcopath brought back the person before me. According to him, this person was the poster child for mental instability. And now she‘s back for a second (or third? fourth?) round of abuse. They covertly tried to throw their "reconnection" to my face, but I wasn't having it. I long suspected that this would happen — and it did. Like a true INFJ and super empath, I kept my distance because all kinds of warning signals blared back at me. This time, I was healthy enough to recognize the mind games, and was waiting for the shoe to drop. I didn't know about narc abuse at the time, but I was close to finding out. Real close. And then I did. After encountering mind-numbing mind games, lack of empathy, unmasking, a fresh new replacement (in addition to the recycled one), silent treatments, and overt abuse for months, I was no longer interested in whatever new torment he had devised for me, which apparently involved a “grand finale,” followed by another smear campaign and more triangulation. No, thanks, I’ll pass. I chose self-healing and my life goals. I chose me, because I love me. (Bad grammar? Who cares.)Mackenzie focuses on the chasing part of the abuse. His message? Don't chase after people. Narcs want you to chase them. The low- to mid-range ones (as explained by HG Tudor) tell you flat out that they want you to vie for their attention like some kind of dancing monkey. True relationships happen organically. No chasing necessary. No crazy love-bombing in the beginning. Just a slow and wonderful transition of getting to know that person.Love this book and how the author focuses on the target rather than the narcissistic psychopath. It is our healing journey, and it’s more important to focus on our side of things than on the narcopath’s. Downsides? Two things. The book uses the terms “psychopath,” “narcissist” and “sociopath” almost interchangeably. I see why he did this. His editor probably thought “psychopath” would be a more marketable and more recognizable term than narcissist. The author does a good job at differentiating these different Cluster B individuals, but not until way at the end of the book. The other downside? The author doesn’t address “hoovering.” Hoovering is when the narcopath tries to suck you back into their lives after you leave (or are discarded). Mackenzie brings it up sparingly, but he doesn't go into details, and he never addresses it as "hoovering" (at least not to my recollection). Hoovering happens in various forms. The narcopath will either send random texts, try to entice you with gifts, or contact you just to mess with your head, or send subliminal messages and remarks on Facebook or other social media. Even if their accounts are set to Friends Only, or they close or reopen them, they post the subliminals as "Public," and that's no random happenstance. They WANT you to see this and — YES! — it is a thinly veiled message to you. (This is why you should not look at their social media accounts. I'm serious, just don't. It'll bum you out, stifling your progress.) Their mission? To keep you unstable. That’s all they want. If you remain unstable, then you’ll never recover, and you won’t make the connection. What connection? That they’re the reason you're behaving in this strange and unprecedented way, that you’re not the crazy one. Once you have zero contact with these people, you’ll go back to your old self (only better), and you’ll do some digging, and this research will set you free. Don’t give them the opportunity to hoover you. They will try, and there's no time limit. I know of people who get hoovered after five, ten, fifteen, even twenty years later. It's mind-blowing. Don’t even tell them you’re in on their schemes. Waste no more time on them. Instead, learn more about this fascinating and toxic disorder, and turn a bad experience into a good one. Do what Jackson Mackenzie did, what so many life coaches are doing, and what I’m doing: help others recognize and fight this experience, and build a sizable platform for it. I give PSYCHOPATH FREE five solid Nitro Cold Brews, with extra salty caramel foam.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Eye opening
  

*by K***E on Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2022*

When you’re blindsided by the person you marry thinking he’s your life partner and things take a turn before you return from honeymoon, this book answers all the questions a healthy mind doesn’t think, believe or understand is possible. The closure to understanding without a direct explanation or apology you’ll never get from the abusive person. I wish divorce papers had the red flag check sheet to speed the process along.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Amazing
  

*by K***E on Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2013*

I began working in branch sales for a Fortune 500 company in 2002 and met our division VP in 2003.  He brought me on the National Account team and constantly flattered me and my sales performance.  It worked.  I sold $4 million dollars in new business when the company only projected a $1 million in new growth.  I attributed my success to his being a "good boss" rather than my 14-hour work days.  Then he promised me a promotion if I moved to our corporate headquarters in Memphis.  I moved and soon after he told me he was in love with me, his wife was horrible to him and he couldn't work with me if I didn't return his feelings.  What do you do when you're young, naive and your mentor and hero says this to you? If you're an empathetic person like me you try to save them because you think they saved you by giving you a career (what college graduate doesn't want to show their parents that?).  Our (fake) love story lasted 10 years and it didn't end in the happy marriage and home life he promised, it ended with him draining me of all my money due to his alleged $150K debt from ID theft, abandoning me with his sick mother in Boston for a VP job in Torrance and beach front apartment in Palos Verdes and then he told police I stole money from his mother when she gave me money as her caregiver to buy her food and medicine and pay her bills while he was away.  How did I feel after he destroyed my life?  Not angry.  Instead, I felt dazed or blamed myself.  Why did he have me arrested when he dumped his responsibilities on me and I was only trying to help?  What did I do wrong to make him stop loving me?  How could he want sex on Friday (fortunately I was too tired after spending two months on renovations he ordered on his mother's house while he was away), dump me on Saturday (an hour after the final walk through with the contractors), scream at me on Sunday he's going to see to it I rot in prison for larceny, and then have me arrested on Monday, catch a plane back to CA for work, tell my crying mother he doesn't have to listen to her sh*t and that night goes on Facebook and likes football photos of my nephews on my brother's page?  Furthermore, since my parents foiled his plans to see me rot in prison, he got a restraining order against me so I can't collect my pets, furniture, clothes and personal property for 6 months.  Because the judge issued a no contact order with his mother, he left my little dogs with her so I can't call her to ask how they are doing or arrange a pick-up.  I am amazed how well he knows how to use the law to continue to hurt me.  I never knew justice could be perverted.  That's what the soulless do.  Fortunately, my parents got me out of jail after 17 days (I've only been before a judge for a speeding ticket so that should tell how good of a storyteller these psychopaths are) and took their suicidal daughter (who suffered a miscarriage her 3rd day in jail) home and immediately got me into counseling.  I cried everyday for 3 months and when I broke down and called him he yelled at me how I ruined his life because he has to quit his job and go back to Boston to take care of his mother.  That was it.  I was a non-person to him.  I couldn't understand how this was the same man who love bombed me in 2003 and told me for years he would hunt me down and kill me if I ever left him.  I couldn't believe this was the real him.  Through therapy I came to understand words like narcissist, sociopath and psychopath.  I didn't want to believe he was one but then again the behaviors they engage in was like checklist on our relationship.  I couldn't ignore the obvious.  It was time to get educated.  So far this is my favorite book on the subject.  It discusses the psychopath but it also discusses the good hearts of their targets and how what feels like weakness because love is used against the victim it is actually our greatest strength towards recovery and finding the real love we want and deserve.  I had to see the ugliness to understand what (TF?!) happened to me but I needed hope too and I think this book offers that.  I also recommend yoga as part of this healing process.  I'm doing it everyday and yes, my body is as weak (he hated it when I went to the gym because he'd accuse me of flirting with other men so I stopped going to please him instead of seeing how he was erasing my ID) as my spirit feels but being patient with my body as it gets stronger teaches me to be patient with my spirit too. Self care is so important in the recovery stage.  Many people who love me want me to hurry up and heal and move on because they hate seeing me hurt but what it does is make me feel guilty because I can't.  What my body teaches me is strength takes practice and time and that makes me feel okay that the spirit does do.  This whole process hurts like hell and you will be a mess afterwards but this book is like a friend who gets it and walks you through the process.  I highly recommend it.

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*Store origin: VU*
*Last updated: 2026-05-17*