nuttynutskin
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 15, 2011
- Messages
- 10,725
Stop engaging her if you can because that's what she wants. Narcissistic supply doesn't have to be positive.
Herbavore makes a good point. Our society encourages Narcissism and indeed we are told from day 1 that human beings are inherently selfish creatures who can never have enough wealth and power and that we should stop at nothing to obtain either. People who don't worship money and don't admire the rich and the powerful and are not materialistic themselves are thought of as weird by society as a whole. The whole greed is good thing is basically the motto of Western Capitalist society more or less. we are taught right from the cradle to the grave to want the unnecessarily big house, a spouse with a big wedding, 2 kids, the 2 car garage, the 2 expensive cars and a SUV for taking the 2 kids and your spouse out to some shitty diner every weekend which is the only time you ever really see each other.
So yeah in a way society conditions us to be narcissists
I recently started seeing a male friend, quite casually, and some of his behaviour is bringing up red flags and I'm struggling to figure out if they're real or if it's just my head.
I've tried CBT and talk therapy but it's not helped.
I feel incredibly, incredibly alone and like I'm completely defective.
Maybe this might help?...
I'm still pretty young, so maybe it's just part of growing up.
I feel a little stupid for posting, now. There's not much that anyone can do for me. But I can't stop thinking about the past, and I've been feeling pretty miserable about it. Thanks for replying.
One of my best friends as a teenager was a narcissist. As a thirteen, fourteen year old, narcissists are heaps of fun. They're impulsive, they have no regrets or remorse, they get what they want - exactly what every adolescent male desires. Breaking the rules, being a pest, living life without regret.
However, as we started to grow older, something odd happened; he didn't seem to be maturing. Myself and other friends took responsibility for our actions and recognized when we did wrong. We had a much more balanced view of things. We didn't lash out randomly when our egos were pricked, and we didn't take advantage of others and situations.
For this friend, nothing was ever his fault. When something went right, it was obviously because he inherently deserved it. When something went wrong, it was another persons fault, or an extenuating circumstance, or any excuse he could think of. As we reached the later years of high school, we realized something was seriously off, but we couldn't put our fingers on it. He'd single out one of our friends and abuse them verbally and emotionally, pointing out what he saw to be their flaws - basically, he shat on everyone around him. He manipulated and lied to get what he wanted, he had this insane capacity to bend and twist past occurrences where he did something wrong to seem like he wasn't at fault. He sent long, raving attacks to every person who cared about him, pointing out their flaws, and instructing them on how they could be better people.
I reached breaking point personally after one night out of no-where he sent me one of his now infamous and semi-regular character attacks which was so self-righteous, so scathing, so subtly abusive (it's called gaslighting) that I just said "enough." I sent the rant to another friend of mine, and he said, "Dude. He's a narcissist. I've known for ages." I didn't at the time know what pathological narcissism was, but I started doing some research. One of the things I picked up on is that if you ignore the narcissist (something they aren't used to and hate) they simply melt. They break down. It's as if they cease to exist. So the next day we were at his house, smoking a joint together, and he started going on like he usually did about angels and devils and such (he was a big psuedo-spiritual quack at the time, using spirituality as an excuse to "elevate" himself above others.) He turned to me with a completely straight face and said:
"I really believe i'm an angel sent from heaven down to earth to cleanse the world of it's darkness."
It hit me like a ton of bricks. The degree of grandiosity in this persons mind was beyond not normal - it was absolutely absurd. So I tried something, instinctively almost. As he blabbed on about why he was an angel, I slowly started disengaging from him. I stopped giving him eye contact. His voice started wavering. I stopped directing my attention and body posture toward him, even though it was only the two of us there. He started stuttering as he spoke. Eventually, I completely closed myself off to him. We were two people sitting in a garden smoking a joint, but I wasn't "there" with him anymore. His eyes filled with a mixture of confusion and rage. He struggled, with every trick in his little book, to regain my attention, but I wouldn't let him. This heavy weight, the realization of the years of bullshit: the idealization and devaluation, the rage, the manipulation... everything just made sense right then and there.
That was the last time I saw him.
I deleted him from Facebook, deleted his phone number, implemented a strict no contact rule, and I've never looked back. As the years have gone by, I've seen the ways I've been emotionally traumatized by him. I now know the power of emotional abuse - I feel immense empathy for those who have suffered from it. When I hear people grew up with narcissistic parents, it makes me want to give them a huge hug. Those who never come across these people are so blessed, they have no idea.
TL:DR
Had a narcissistic friend, didn't realize he was one till we got older, finally came to my senses, never spoke to him again.
The insecurity comes from an overall self-defeating attitude I have that I've never been able to get rid of. It's like there's a voice in the back of my head that's always finding a way to demean me. What the voice says is what I imagine other people are thinking of me. My parents are pretty snobby people, and the way they look down on everyone around them has rubbed off on me. Now, I can't shake the feeling that everyone else is looking down on me. The easiest way to cope with it is to simply demean everyone else more than I imagine they have demeaned me.Why do you feel insecure? I guess that could be a good starting point.
How old are you? Regardless, and especially because you are young, there is something that you can do! First of all, maintain your curiosity about yourself! You need to keep looking at yourself. You are off to a good start. Most narcissists will have a particularly hard time spotting their own destructive thinking and behavior - or recognizing it as problematic. Continue to be curious and probe your own behavior and the motivations behind it.
That said, changing these things is difficult. Very difficult. In fact, for most people (maybe all people) it is impossible without the help of a great therapist that you trust and see regularly. It can take many years. It's worth it.
Good luck.
Just in case I wasn't clear: We are married and live together.Blocking all contact sounds like heaven. Instead she is pretty much everywhere in my universe. She's the type of person that dominates all mental space in a room (or house). She has an amazing ability to be absolutely controlling and demanding (everything needs to be "just so" for every minute aspect of her life), whilst at the same time making herself appear totally helpless so that the people around her find themselves doing everything they can to manage her life. It's amazing really.
As I say, I've made a choice to stay with her for the sake of our kids. This isn't ideal for anyone, but it's better (for them) than the alternative. As much as I'm bad-mouthing her here, I am still trying to find a way to live with her in some reasonable way, for the sake of my own sanity if nothing else.
that's why it's called 'gaslighting'. it is named for the movie.^ That reminds me of the 1944 film Gaslight where a husband tries to convince his wife that she is slowly going insane.
Changing the way I act shouldn't be too difficult, but I'm worried that the way I feel will never go away. If my ego remains as sensitive as it is and all I can do is contain my anger, then what would the point be? That's really what I'm worried about.