Malignant Self Love by Samuel Vaknin (best ereader for students .TXT) đź“•
I am, as I said, my own worst nightmare. True, the world is repletewith my contributions, and I am lots of fun to be around. And true,most contributions like mine are not the result of troubled souls. Butmany more than you might want to believe are. And if by chance you getcaught in my Web, I c
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the natural development of the Superego. The narcissistic part of the
child’s psyche remains vulnerable throughout its development. This is
largely true until the “child” re-internalises the ideal parent image.
Also, the very construction of the mental apparatus can be tampered
with by traumatic deficiencies and by object losses right through the
Oedipal period (and even in latency and in adolescence).
The same effect can be attributed to traumatic disappointment by
objects.
Disturbances leading to the formation of NPD can be thus grouped into:
1. Very early disturbances in the relationship with an ideal
object. These lead to a structural weakness of the personality, which
develops a deficient and/or dysfunctional stimuli-filtering mechanism.
The ability of the individual to maintain a basic narcissistic
homeostasis of the personality is damaged.
Such a person suffers from diffusive narcissistic vulnerability.
2. A disturbance occurring later in life - but still pre-Oedipally
- affects the pre-Oedipal formation of the basic fabric of the control,
channelling and neutralising of drives and urges. The nature of the
disturbance has to be a traumatic encounter with the ideal object (such
as a major disappointment). The symptomatic manifestation of this
structural defect is the propensity to re - sexualise drive derivatives
and internal and external conflicts either in the form of fantasies or
in the form of deviant acts.
3. A disturbance formed in the Oedipal or even in the early latent
phases - inhibits the completion of the Superego idealisation. This is
especially true of a disappointment related to an ideal object of the
late pre-Oedipal and the Oedipal stages, where the partly idealised
external parallel of the newly internalised object is traumatically
destroyed.
Such a person possesses a set of values and standards - but he forever
looks for ideal external figures from whom he aspires to derive the
affirmation and the leadership that his insufficiently idealised
Superego cannot supply.
It is commonly agreed that a loss (real or perceived) at a critical
junction in the psychological development of the child - forces him to
refer to himself for nurturing and for gratification. The child ceases
to trust others and his ability to develop object love or to idealise
is hampered. He is constantly shadowed by the feeling that only he can
satisfy his emotional needs.
He exploits people, sometimes unintentionally, but always ruthlessly
and mercilessly. He uses them to obtain confirmation of the accuracy of
his grandiose self-portrait.
The narcissist is usually above treatment. He knows best. His
superiority extends to his therapist in particular and to psychology in
general. He seeks treatment only following a major crisis, which
directly threatens his projected and perceived image. We can say that
the narcissist’s “pride” has to be severely hurt to motivate him to
admit his need for help. Even then, the therapy sessions resemble a
battleground.
The narcissist is aloof and distanced, demonstrates his superiority in
a myriad of ways, resents what he perceives to be an intrusion on his
innermost sanctum. He is offended by any hint regarding defects or
dysfunctions in his personality or in his behaviour. A narcissist is a
narcissist is a narcissist - even when he asks for help with his world
and worldview shattered.
Malignant
Self Love
Narcissism Revisited
Frequently Asked Questions
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION # 2
Pathological Narcissism
A Dysfunction or a Blessing?
Comments on recent research by Roy Baumeister.
Is pathological narcissism a blessing or a malediction?
The answer is: it depends. Healthy narcissism is a mature, balanced
love of oneself coupled with a stable sense of self-worth and
self-esteem. Healthy narcissism implies knowledge of one’s boundaries
and a proportionate and realistic appraisal of one’s achievements and
traits. Pathological narcissism is wrongly described as too much
healthy narcissism (or too much self-esteem). These are two absolutely
unrelated phenomena which, regrettably, came to bear the same title.
Confusing pathological narcissism with self-esteem betrays a
fundamental ignorance of both.
Pathological narcissism involves an impaired, dysfunctional, immature
(True) Self coupled with a compensatory fiction (the False Self). The
sick narcissist’s sense of self-worth and self-esteem derive entirely
from audience feedback. The narcissist has no self-esteem or self-worth
of his own (no such Ego functions). In the absence of observers, the
narcissist shrivels to non-existence and feels dead. Hence the
narcissist’s preying habits in his constant pursuit of Narcissistic
Supply. Pathological narcissism is an addictive behaviour.
Still, dysfunctions are reactions to abnormal environments and
situations (e.g., abuse, trauma, smothering, etc.).
Paradoxically, his dysfunction allows the narcissist to function. It
compensates for lacks and deficiencies by exaggerating tendencies and
traits. It is like the tactile sense of a blind person. In short:
pathological narcissism is a result of over-sensitivity, the repression
of overwhelming memories and experiences, and the suppression of
inordinately strong negative feelings (e.g., hurt, envy, anger, or
humiliation).
That the narcissist functions at all - is because of his pathology and
thanks to it. The alternative is complete decompensation and
integration.
In time, the narcissist learns how to leverage his pathology, how to
use it to his advantage, how to deploy it in order to maximize benefits
and utilities - in other words, how to transform his curse into a
blessing.
Narcissists are obsessed by delusions of fantastic grandeur and
superiority. As a result they are very competitive. They are strongly
compelled - where others are merely motivated. They are driven,
relentless, tireless, and ruthless. They often make it to the top. But
even when they do not - they strive and fight and learn and climb and
create and think and devise and design and conspire. Faced with a
challenge - they are likely to do better than non-narcissists.
Yet, we often find that narcissists abandon their efforts in
mid-stream, give up, vanish, lose interest, devalue former pursuits, or
slump. Why is that?
A challenge, or even a guaranteed eventual triumph - are meaningless in
the absence of onlookers. The narcissist needs an audience to applaud,
affirm, recoil, approve, admire, adore, fear, or even detest him. He
craves the attention and depends on the Narcissistic Supply only others
can provide. The narcissist derives sustenance only from the outside -
his emotional innards are hollow and moribund.
The narcissist’s enhanced performance is predicated on the existence of
a challenge (real or imaginary) and of an audience. Baumeister usefully
reaffirmed this linkage, known to theoreticians since Freud.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION # 15
The Narcissist’s Reaction to Deficient
Narcissistic Supply
Question: How does the narcissist react when not in receipt of
sufficient Narcissistic Supply?
Answer: Very much as a drug addict would react to the absence of his
particular drug. The narcissist constantly consumes (really, preys
upon) adoration, admiration, approval, applause, attention and other
forms of Narcissistic Supply. When lacking or deficient, a Narcissistic
Deficiency Dysphoria sets in. The narcissist looks depressed, his
movements slow down, his sleep patterns are disturbed (he either sleeps
too much or becomes insomniac), his eating patterns change (he gorges
on food or is unable even to look at it). He is be constantly dysphoric
(sad), anhedonic (finds no interest in the world, no pleasure in
anything or in any of his former pursuits and interests). He is
subjected to violent mood swings (mainly rage attacks) and all his
(visible and painful) efforts at self-control fail. He may compulsively
and ritually resort to an alternative addiction - alcohol, drugs,
reading. This constitutes a futile effort of the narcissist both to
escape his predicament - and to sublimate his aggressive urges. His
whole behaviour seems constrained, artificial, full of effort and toil.
The narcissist gradually turns more and more mechanical, detached,
unreal. His thoughts constantly wander or become obsessive and
repetitive, his speech may falter, he appears to be far away, in a
world of his narcissistic fantasies, where Narcissistic Supply is
aplenty. He withdraws from this painful world which knows not how to
appreciate his greatness, special skills and talents, potential, or
achievements. The narcissist thus ceases to bestow himself upon a cruel
universe, punishing it for its shortcomings, its inability to realise
how unique the narcissist is. A schizoid mode sets in: the narcissist
isolates himself, a hermit in the kingdom of his hurt.
He minimises his social interactions and uses “messengers” to
communicate with the outside. Devoid of energy, the narcissist can no
longer pretend or succumb to social conventions. His former compliance
gives way to open withdrawal (a rebellion of sorts). His former smiles
are transformed to frowns, courtesy becomes rudeness, emphasised
etiquette used as a weapon, an outlet of aggression, an act of violence.
The narcissist, blinded by pain, seeks to restore his balance, to take
another sip of the narcissistic nectar. In his quest, the narcissist
turns to and upon those nearest to him. His real attitude emerges: for
him, they are but tools, one-dimensional instruments on the path to
gratification, Sources of Supply or pimps of such supply, catering to
his narcissistic lusts. He regards them as shallow, no longer
functioning objects. In his wrath, he tries to mend them by forcing
them to perform again, to function. This is coupled with horrendous and
torrential self-flagellation, a deservedly self-inflicted punishment,
or so the narcissist feels. In extreme cases of deprivation, the
narcissist may entertain suicidal thoughts, this is how deeply he
loathes his self and his condition.
Through all this, the narcissist is beset by a pervading sense of
nostalgia. It is a malignant variety, harking back to a past, which
never existed except in the thwarted grandiosity of the narcissist. The
longer the lack of Narcissistic Supply, the more this past is
glorified, re-written, missed and mourned. This serves to enhance all
the other negative feelings. Put together, it already amounts to what
might be clinically described as depression. The narcissist then glides
into the shores of paranoia. From his mental closet, he draws a model
of a prosecuting world, incorporating in it those around him and events
in his recent life. This gives meaning to what is erroneously perceived
by the narcissist as a sudden shift from over supply to under or to no
supply (such over and under valuations are typical of him). The
apparent diminishing of the Narcissistic Supply is best explained by a
theory of conspiracy. The narcissist then - in pain, in despair, in
fear - embarks upon an orgy of self-destruction intended to generate
“alternative Supply Sources” (attention) at any cost. The narcissist is
poised to commit the ultimate narcissistic act: self-destruction in the
service of self-aggrandisement.
When deprived of Narcissistic Supply - primary AND secondary - the
narcissist feels annulled. It feels much like being hollowed out,
mentally disembowelled or watching oneself die. It is evaporation,
disintegration into molecules of terrified anguish, helplessly and
inexorably.
Without Narcissistic Supply - the narcissist crumbles, like the zombies
or the vampires one sees in horror movies. It is terrifying and the
narcissist will do anything to avoid it. Think about the narcissist as
a drug addict. His withdrawal symptoms are identical: delusions,
physiological effects, irritability, emotional lability.
Narcissists often experience brief, decompensatory psychotic episodes
when their psyche is disassembled - either deliberately in therapy or
following a life-crisis accompanied by a major narcissistic injury.
These psychotic episodes may be closely allied to another feature of
narcissism: magical thinking. Narcissists are like children in this
sense. Many, for instance, fully believe in two things: that whatever
happens - they will prevail and that good things will always happen to
them. It is more than a belief, really. Narcissists just KNOW it, the
same way one knows gravity - directly, immediately and surely.
The narcissist believes that, no matter what he does, he will always be
forgiven, always prevail and triumph, always come on
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