Is he a narcissist?

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#1 Jan 28 - 2PM
Goldie
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Is he a narcissist?

Mentally-healthy people generally find NPD-rooted behaviors incomprehensible. The narcissist violates social norms that healthy people hold instinctively and therefore assume (usually correctly) that others hold—while at the same time he creates a semblance of normalcy, because being able to do so is part of the disorder. Because the rest of us cannot relate to, often cannot even imagine how a narcissist thinks and feels, it seems outside the realm of plausibility, and so his semblance of normalcy will fool us.
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) – the American Psychiatric Association’s guidebook for mental health diagnosis – gives diagnostic criteria for all mental illnesses. Between the fourth and fifth editions, the criteria for NPD changed, so I am going to use both to paint a fuller picture. From DSM-IV:
A pervasive pattern of grandiosity (in fantasy or behavior), need for admiration, and lack of empathy.
1. An exaggerated sense of self-importance (e.g., exaggerates achievements and talents, expects to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements)
2. Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love
3. Believes he is "special" and can only be understood by, or should associate with, other special or high-status people (or institutions)
4. Requires excessive admiration
5. Has a sense of entitlement
6. Selfishly takes advantage of others to achieve his own ends
7. Lacks empathy
8. Is often envious of others or believes that others are envious of him
9. Shows arrogant, haughty, patronizing, or contemptuous behaviors or attitudes
From DSM-5A. Significant impairments in personality functioning manifest by:
1. Impairments in self functioning (a or b):
a. Identity: Excessive reference to others for self-definition and self-esteem regulation; exaggerated self-appraisal may be inflated or deflated, or vacillate between extremes; emotional regulation mirrors fluctuations in self-esteem.
b. Self-direction: Goal-setting is based on gaining approval from others; personal standards are unreasonably high in order to see oneself as exceptional, or too low based on a sense of entitlement; often unaware of own motivations.
AND
2. Impairments in interpersonal functioning (a or b):
a. Empathy: Impaired ability to recognize or identify with the feelings and needs of others; excessively attuned to reactions of others, but only if perceived as relevant to self; over- or underestimate of own effect on others.
b. Intimacy: Relationships largely superficial and exist to serve self-esteem regulation; mutuality constrained by little genuine interest in others’ experiences, and predominance of a need for personal gain
B. Pathological personality traits in the following domain:
1. Antagonism, characterized by:
a. Grandiosity: Feelings of entitlement, either overt or covert; self-centeredness; firmly holding to the belief that one is better than others; condescending toward others.
b. Attention seeking: Excessive attempts to attract and be the focus of the attention of others; admiration seeking.
How else does this translate into behaviors?
Let’s start with the persona narcissists create. Because they lack empathy, they have to learn how to appear normal, which they do by rote-learning expressions and mannerisms from normal people around them. In fact, they are good at being charming; they learn what people want to hear and say it without regard to whether it is true. Because they are without moral qualms, they can come across as decisive, which normal people interpret as confident, and spontaneous, which normal people interpret as authentic. This is how Trump played the crowds at his rallies. None of it, however, is sincere; it is only for personal gain. There is no such thing as loyalty from narcissists; loyalty arises from the social norm of reciprocity, which is based on empathy, which they don’t have.
Next: falsehood. Honesty is also a social norm based on empathy, so narcissists feel no need to hold themselves to it. Falsehood serves two functions: 1) manipulating people into furthering the narcissist’s aims (e.g. making promises he never intends to keep); 2) maintaining his own delusion of superiority Because narcissists are so insecure at heart they can be control freaks, and the male of the species in particular can be authoritarian. Hence, executive orders that are likely unconstitutional as well as absurd. In a “love” relationship (because narcissists lack empathy, which is central to love), he can seek to dictate every aspect of his partner’s life, including that she conform to his standard of beauty.
At the same time, there will be impulsiveness, moodiness and disorganized thinking. A narcissist is really a six-year-old in a grown-up body, lacking reason and ruled by emotion;
In his exploitativeness, the narcissist violates social norms concerning appropriate boundaries, whether those boundaries are codified in conflict-of-interest prohibitions, investment loan contracts, business contracts, sexual assault laws or what-have-you. The narcissist basically feels that rules are for him to set, not obey. This includes even the rules of logic, such as “base your decisions on facts.”
Projection characterizes how narcissists describe people who oppose them. They will “project their own negative introject,” in Freudian terms, i.e. ascribe their own wrongdoing and faults to other people, whether it be criminality , lying or a rigged playing field.
Competitiveness and envy result from others apparently outdoing the narcissist, e.g.
Rage and vindictiveness result from the narcissist’s wishes being thwarted which, of course, life does fairly often, quite naturally. It is a primal rage, like a child’s. Rage translates into hate, which can manifest as racism, sexism, and homophobia.
So how to deal with a narcissist? To put it very bluntly: don’t. There really is nothing to do with these people but to disassociate with them. They bring nothing but harm and suffering. However, if you are stuck with one, there are ways to handle it:
1) Avoid being disillusioned: have very low expectations. Here are things never to expect from a narcissist: honesty, loyalty, reciprocity, change due to the gravity of a position, reasonableness in negotiation, learning through experience, maturation, adaptability, courage, ability to handle adversity, aspiration to genuine excellence, genuine altruism, humility, guilt or shame for wrongdoing, equanimity, sincere gratitude, sincere appreciation, sincere praise, admission that he is wrong, returned favors or improvement of the condition.
2) Do not normalize. Healthy people have a tendency to give the benefit of the doubt, in part because they simply can’t believe a narcissist is the way he is. It is standard operating procedure for him to use that to gaslight you; normalizing is gaslighting yourself. Recognize and accept that he is the way he is, that it’s due to a personality disorder and that he will not change.
3) If you are trying to figure out why he would do something, ask yourself, “How might it be motivated by a need to feel significant or important?” Discount all other motivations. Your questions will be answered.
4) Keep interactions distant. Don’t depend on a narcissist for anything; never make yourself vulnerable to a narcissist. Don’t loan him money or do work for him without 100% payment upfront.
5) Expect those around him to be damaged. They are either brain-washed into being extensions of him, parroting his thoughts, or faking same for personal gain, or bewildered by the madness. Expect chaos in any organization he leads: good people will resign in disgust or be fired, while marginal people ascend to powerful positions.
6) Do not attempt to reason with or educate him. It doesn’t happen.
7) Manipulate him by using his disorder. Flattery will get you everywhere; convince him that your idea was his brilliant one and he’ll run with it.
8) Get rid of him as fast as possible. How?
a. Stop giving him what he so desperately needs. Once a narcissist realizes someone is no longer a source of approval, admiration and adoration, he’ll be off like a shot looking for the next sucker.
b. Expose him. Narcissists also tend to flee when they realize people are onto them.
The central thing to understand about narcissists is that their need for “narcissistic supply” – feelings of being significant, important and adored – overrides all other considerations, including empathy and all the human norms that arise from it, because their delusion is to equate narcissistic supply with survival—same as a drowning victim might drown their rescuer. Some narcissists, having flashes of realism as some of them sometimes do, have described narcissistic supply as a far stronger addiction than heroin.
It’s a throwback to the helplessness of early childhood, where not being considered important and lovable by parents is a genuine threat to survival. Thus a narcissist is always trying to soothe an all-encompassing internal terror, and no amount of narcissistic supply can ever soothe it entirely. This is their inner hell.
Don’t let their hell become yours.
How to Spot a Narcissist
In the comments, I asked if people wanted me to add a guide to the diary on how to identify someone with NPD. I got lots of yeses, so here it is. Reason it’s needed: one thing I didn’t mention in the diary is that every personality disorder is an extreme version of something normal. So, say, borderline PD is an extreme version of the childishness we all have, and dependency PD, the need we all have. NPD is an extreme version of the natural human desire to look good and put our best foot forward. Accordingly, narcissists are very good at making striking first impressions, and they’ll lie and fake and do Oscar-worthy acting to do so. If you know the signs, you have some defense against this. Note: all of them will not apply to all narcissists, so don’t eliminate the possibility if not all of them are there.
1) Appearance is attention-seeking, flashy, seductive, trying for star quality, has fake aspects (e.g., Trump’s hair).
2) Seeming intimidatingly impressive. If you wonder how their accomplishments are possible, they actually might not be.
3) Their Internet presence doesn’t match their story. Google is your friend here.
4) Dominating conversations, either one-on-one or holding court at a social gathering. Narcissists just love to be heard and are much less interested in listening to you or anyone else. You are spell-bound by the conversation but come away feeling steamrollered.
5) Talking about themselves without insight or self-examination.
6) Name-dropping, claiming to have notables and celebrities for friends. Find a way to verify it. Social status is of great concern to them.
7) Straight-out bragging. It’s not subtle, but some just can’t help it.
8) Complaining that the world doesn’t seem to recognize their awesomeness and give them enough credit. Also not subtle, but some just can’t help it.
9) Drama and tension in the air. Narcissists are the original drama queens and not at all at peace with themselves.
10) Love-bombing. This comes up on the dating scene. A male narcissist will sweep his date off her feet, with adulation, outings, generous gifts; a female narcissist will be more seductive. Avowals that the romance is somehow extraordinary or unprecedented – meant to be, you are soulmates, it’s the best ever, it’s yuuuge! And yet something whispers to you that this person somehow doesn’t seem to see… you. As an individual. Listen to that whisper. Note that cults use this same technique to draw in love-starved people.
11) Controlling behaviours: directs the topic of conversation, decides where you will sit, etc. May not mean narcissism, but whatever it means isn’t good.
12) A sense that you are privileged to be receiving their attention, so special a person they are. You feel flattered to be in their glow. You’re being groomed to become their minion.
13) You find yourself making excuses to yourself for behaviors that seem a little off, such as flashes of selfishness or meanness. I repeat: normalizing is gaslighting yourself.
14) Their emotions seem superficial, they don’t laugh naturally, their smile is bottom half of the face only, and you feel you never know what they’re really thinking.
15) A sense that you need to walk on eggshells with them, never criticize them. You feel compelled to give up your freedom of speech.
16) They don’t apologize for an overstep, or else they make a non-apology or an apology followed by self-justification. Or any other form of not taking responsibility for their actions.
17) Feeling an attraction that has a sense of excitement and even a frisson of danger. That frisson of danger is your intuition telling you “Stay away.”
18) Perhaps the most central: you come away from an encounter or a conversation with a sense that you are kind of… not there. Or at least diminished, or not seen in your individuality. Narcissists can fake all sorts of things, but there is one thing they cannot fake: normal human social relations.
By Karen Wehrstein

Feb 4 - 12AM
MsAtaraxia
MsAtaraxia's picture

Narcissist or Autism Spectrum?

MsAtaraxia

Jan 29 - 11PM
Lisa E. Scott
Lisa E. Scott's picture

Great post, Goldie!