How Treatment Can Make a Pathological More Dangerous
How Treatment Can Make a Pathological More Dangerous
by Kathy Krajco
It is often pointed out that treatment increases the recidivism rate and even makes the patient more dangerous. Here is one example of how that can happen.
Let's say that you're a narcissist in treatment. You flew into a rage at another patient yesterday. The therapist asks you about the incident. You say that you felt slighted by something that patient did and lost your temper.
The therapist knows, however, that you regained your temper in one nanosecond upon the arrival of a nurse.
"Yeah, so what?" you think.
But then as the therapist discusses this with you, she reveals that normal people don't just switch off their anger like that. You see that she is suspicious that you just lay in the weeds and go off at people whenever the coast is clear and they least expect it.
So, you have learned something valuable. Now you know how to fake real human behavior better. Now you can fool people better. You eventually learn enough to fool the therapists themselves, because they tell you everything you need to know in order to fool them.
She thought she was helping you explore your feelings and understand yourself. But she wasn't. She was just teaching an old dog new tricks.
This is why people entering therapy should be screened for psychopathy and narcissism. For, they need a radically different method of treatment than other patients. Simply because their behavior isn't based on normal human premises.
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