The pity party

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#1 Oct 5 - 4AM
Scoop
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The pity party

One of the best ways a narc can quickly lower your defences is by using your own empathy against you with the "pity play" . The pity play is designed to lower your defences at record speed time so the leach of a narc can attach himself to you and start the feeding frenzy .
If your narc is cleaver there could be a tiny element of truth to his "woe is me" story, for exsample my narc told me he was from a one parent family living in abject poverty .. his mother was a single parent but she owned a half a million pound house in the home countys ... So the lesson is to take what a narc tells you with a huge pinch of salt .. a gallon of salt and for the future if in the early stages of a relationship you hear way too many stories of how hard done by they where and no one understands them run for the hills .

This is a bit from the narcissist suck blog on the pity party .

She just behaved very badly. She had fought to get her way on something, but because she wasn't able to get her way, she had an adult version of a huge temper tantrum. Unfortunately for her she had a witness to the scene...a witness not entirely under her power. She is in a jam because this person's opinion of her matters to her a great deal. Her usual tactic of having a rage just won't work in this situation. She must do something much more artful.

This situation calls for the full on wounded act. She gets her target alone with just her. Her voice quavers. She takes on the look of complete defeat. Copious tears. Sighing and crying she is angling for her target to agree with her that she has been treated unjustly. She is making a play for the heart. A calculated grab for pity. While explaining how unjust the treatment of her was she looks tiny, pathetic, broken. She pretends to feel badly for the small little thing she did wrong while exaggerating and lying about how the other person reacted and treated her. The target feels their heart being wrenched in their chest with the desire to comfort her even while they logically know that they just saw her being a complete spoiled brat and a bully. The target starts to feel confused by these conflicting realities. The desire to comfort the pitiable creature standing in from of them is overwhelmingly compelling.

You've been invited to the Pity Party. Your host tonight: the conscience-impaired.

I'm about half way through the book, "The Sociopath Next Door", by Martha Stout, Ph.D.

"How can I tell whom not to trust?" is a question Ms. Stout has often fielded from her patients. She asserts that one of the best clues that you may be dealing with someone who has an impaired or absence conscience is the pity play:

"...the best clue is, of all things, the pity play. The most reliable sign, the most universal behavior of unscrupulous people is not directed, as one might imagine, at our fearfulness. It is, perversely, an appeal to our sympathy...More than admiration--more even than fear--pity from good people is carte blanche. When we pity, we are, at least for the moment, defenseless..."

You know this is true. How many times in the movies has this tactic been used by the evil villain? Innumerable. We are screaming at our TV screens, "Don't fall for that!!" as we see the camouflaged evil villain lure in the good guy by appealing to the good guy's intact heart and conscience with a convincing act of being wounded, pitiable, defenseless. If the good guy believes the act, he is the one rendered defenseless. This allows the bad guy to kill him or make an escape. This scene happens over and over again in movies because we all recognize it to be a common tactic of evil people, and we all recognize the good guy's vulnerability to such a tactic. His decency is what sets him up for the fall. We find ourselves wishing that the good guy could be just a little less decent for a moment so he can avoid what we can see is coming...his annihilation.

Do we have to lose our decency to insure we don't fall for such a ruse? No, I don't think so. We just need to pay attention. Don't assume that anyone who seems pathetic and pitiable is automatically going to deserve your compassion or pity. Remember that giving sympathy to evil doers is no virtue. If you want your compassion to be virtuous be sure to give it to the truly deserving.

Stout gives us some guidance on how to decide who is trustworthy and who is deserving of your compassion:

"When deciding whom to trust, bear in mind that the combination of consistently bad or egregiously inadequate behavior with frequent plays for your pity is as close to a warning mark on a conscienceless person's forehead as you will ever be given."

"I am sure that if the devil existed, he would want us to feel very sorry for him."
The Sociopath Next Door, pg. 109.

The devil does exist. Boot his or her sorry ass out of your life."

Scoopx

Oct 5 - 6PM
Susan32
Susan32's picture

That sums up the final D&D

When I declared my love to the ex-Psych prof, his responses were a sad "I'm offended. I'm disappointed. I'm discomfited." I had told him I LOVED him... and his response was "Poor me." What sort of a response is that? I ended up APOLOGIZING-a lot-for my "inappropriate behavior" and making him uncomfortable. When I congratulated him on being engaged (yep, his girlfriend materialized, forgot to tell me about her), he whined, "You're imposing on me. You're violating my personal boundaries." Um, he LIED about her and expected ME to apologize? My response was the *stunned eye roll* When he had personally attacked&ridiculed me in class after my grandfather's death, the ex-P constantly begged for apologies, pity. But this could also apply to the Narc workplace. I ended up working LOTS of double shifts because a coworker would call in, CRYING. She'd brag about it later, saying that all she had to do to make me work for her was turn on the tears, and proudly say "I FORCED you to work double!" I remember the Narc coworker who sobbed&bawled when he got caught trying to evade paying child support. I gave him the mercy of the cobra. I guess sometimes I end up crashing pity parties&totally ruining them. If the catering&the wet bar are worth raiding.
Oct 5 - 8AM
Joy2me
Joy2me's picture

This is so true!

My narc ex husband did the pity thing when we first started dating. I unfortunately fell for it and believed all his pity party stories for the next 8 years!  Finally a crisis occurred that made me take my head out of the sand and take notice.  Once that happened I began to see through all the stupid lies!  These days he now tries threatening me or scaring me into doing what he wants.  I have been NC now for almost a year. I intend to never respond to him ever again.  I live for the day that a mere email from him does get my heart pumping and my hands shaking!   I am almost there but not quite.  Even though I still get negative physical feelings I do not react.  NC is my solace. Joy2me P.S...I have the book The sociopath next door...I haven't started reading it yet! But I will very soon.
Oct 5 - 10PM (Reply to #3)
Crazy Train
Crazy Train's picture

Joy, big congrats on your

Joy, big congrats on your year of NC! I hope to follow by your example. When I feel weak, I come on this site and read as many posts as I can. It is very therapeutic. Thank you for sharing :)
Oct 5 - 2PM (Reply to #2)
Froglegs
Froglegs's picture

XN used the Pity Party tactic

XN used the Pity Party tactic in the beginning as well to a degree. He was subtle about it - wouldn't tell me about his childhood unless I asked, but he'd answer the questions. The last email I received from him was another invitation to his Pity Party. He said he was sorry for the way I felt and then totally tore himself up (ME! ME! ME! talk) and then ended the short note with a statement he's just no good. At least he got that part correct.