Certain personality types are at high risk of perpetrating domestic violence. I want to emphasize physical domestic violence here. As in my last article, the borderline, narcissistic and sociopathic personalities lead the risk pack here.
Let’s look first at the borderline personality. The borderline personality is a powder-keg of rage prone to detonate at any experience of a perceived wound, insult, threat of abandonment or (as a less appreciated match to their rage), threat to their malignant pride. Sound pretty narcissistic? Welcome to the synergy between these two personality types.
The borderline personality, much like many narcissists, is littered with “rage mines” that can “tripped” in a flash with a wrong step, which is exactly why it can be so nerve-wracking to be involved with one.
“Walking on eggshells” may be an understatement in describing the unnerving experience of dealing closely, or intimately, with a borderline personality.
I might suggest that even more metaphorically apt than “walking on eggshells” is the experience with borderlines as of “walking through a rage-littered minefield.”
Again, make the wrong the step and beware the rage that can follow with disorienting, sometimes frightening and bewildering intensity. The borderline individual may even goad you, provoke you into stepping on a “rage mine;” indeed, she may salivate at the chance to righteously “go off” with an utter lack of accountability for her provocation, depicting herself, in the process, as having been victimized by your insensitivity.
In any case, her abuse and violation of YOU will be remarkably self-excused as she positions herself, pathologically, as the victim.
I emphasize: Because this is such a narcissistic process, it’s often challenging, as I stressed in my last article, to distinguish the borderline, narcissist and sociopath, all of whom may present similar, if not identical forms, of disturbing “acting-out” fireworks.
As I’ve suggested, when the borderline is “borderlining” in her violent raging, she is acting-out utterly pathological narcissism, even sometimes at sociopathic levels. I’ve previously written about the borderline personality as “transient sociopath,” because in her rages she can be as callous and destructive as the sociopath, not to mention sinisterly vindictive and totally remorseless in the expression of her rage.
Now how about the narcissist? In the narcissist’s case I would designate the state of “outrage” to be a very typical trigger of his rage, which can lead to domestic abuse. The narcissist, it should be noted, often feels “outraged.”
His “outrage” leads to his “rage.”
The narcissist feels outraged to be ignored, disregarded, offended, insulted, misunderstood. States of outrage, in general, are conducive to very poor emotional self-control; because the narcissist is so often outraged, he is often “out of control” emotionally. His rages often have the timbre of a wounded, tantrumming child thrashing at a sibling or parent for recompense at having been mistreated. The problem is that he is not a child, he is often a big, strong adult, thus his tantrums are proportionately more extreme and infinitely more harmful. A raging child is unpleasant and stressful to deal with; a raging narcissist can be scary, destructive and dangerous.
As we know, in the narcissist’s case, and underlying all pathological levels of narcissism, we enter the terrain of “over-entitlement,” really the bane of all interpersonal psychopathology. The narcissist believes that the world should treat him fairly, sensitively; he believes that the world—that is, everyone—should give him his due (whether he’s earned it or not); he has the underlying belief that he should be protected from, really excused from having to endure, the “slings and arrows” that others have to suffer with composure.
Deprive the narcissist of these protective, catering experiences and you are inviting his wrath and retribution. Consequently, the narcissist is at high risk to abuse his partners and others, domestically and otherwise.
The sociopath’s view of the world, in general, is somewhat different from the narcissist’s, which is to say that at sociopathic levels of narcissism, the sociopath is viewing the world from a somewhat different perspective than at the narcissistic level of narcissism.
Here’s the difference: whereas the narcissist, as I just noted, tends to regard the world, and all in it, as owing him unwavering respect, attention, recognition, sensitivity and the like, and will feel outraged to be denied this experience (his outrage leading directly to his rage), the sociopath, while he may be comparatively less obsessed with feeling appreciated, understood and getting his “due,” will be highly, uniquely oriented to viewing the world—and everyone in it—as existing to supply him with whatever he wants to “take” from it.
The sociopath, in this sense, feels entitled to “take” from others whatever it is he wants. Others do not exist as individuals with legitimate personal boundaries. There really are no boundaries sacred to the sociopath: if he can transgress boundaries to “take” what he wants, and “get away with it,” he will do so, because he feels absolutely entitled to have what he wants; if others have what he wants he feels absolutely entitled to take it or steal it from them; and the impact of his incursions on others’ space and dignity means nothing to him because the sociopath relates to others as “objects,” and thus feels no more remorse ransacking a human being than he would an empty room full of things he covets.
This obviously primes the sociopath to be a high-risk domestic violence offender. He will abuse easily, without compunction, because you are merely an “object” to him; in his frustration or rage, for instance, he might kick you in the stomach and bend you over in agony, and feel no more remorse than if he were to kick and dent his car door in a similar discharge of rage. As a matter of fact, his subsequent reaction is less likely to be genuine sorrow than regret, or worry, at the consequences or inconveniences that might ensue from his violent action. In any case, he is likely to stand over you and watch you writhe in pain on the floor as if he’s kicked a car door.
This summarizes some of the features and dynamics of these troubling personality types and what puts them at high risk to domestically abuse. I hope it’s a helpful summary.
(This article is copyrighted ©2012 by Steve Becker, LCSW. My use of female and/or male gender pronouns is strictly arbitrary and not to suggest that males and females aren’t both capable of exhibiting all the attitudes and behaviors discussed.)
Ana, I don’t follow your comment. I know it wasn’t addressed to me, but ??
Athena,
Sorry, it was a private joke made public. Skylar know’s I’m just kidding with her.
Oh, sorry didn’t mean to get personal
LOL!
you’ve got me ROTFLMAO, Now I can’t be held responsible for anything I do or type!
Skylar,
LOL! Well, lets see what happens next….;)
Athena,
They are obsessed with shallow things like money and appearances because that ALL THERE IS for them. No feelings, no emotions, no deeper meaning. And they are constantly comparing quantities: who has more money and who gets more attention.
skylar: your post made me laugh. You said: “…and they are constantly comparing quantities: who has more money and who gets more attention.” Absolutely. I so agree with that.
They keep a listing and in that listing, they keep track of who has what and which is more beneficial to them. That is usually where they end up and if they are really talented, they have five, six, seven or eight, all at the same time. They get ‘dropped off’ the list by the degree of resistance they show. If you are not compliant, then they spin them all against one another. “IT” was trying to include me in that spin and that’s when I jumped ship. If you don’t jump ship, you will end up leaving, eventually, by being tortured, enough, sooner or later…either way, they end up ‘winning’, so they think. ahahahaha Jokes on them.
Oh yes, we have seen that same ugliness…I know…
Amazing there are actually people like this among us…
It takes a while to recognize their intentions but it eventually comes….that peeling off of the mask…
Dupey
Dupey, my sister has that kind of mental list.
I’ve found that there are many more out there like her than I ever imagined. It’s sad. I can’t imagine what it must feel like to be so shallow.
skylar: I am sorry. 🙁
Yes, there are more out there than anyone could imagine. And, as I pulled that mask off, I was told: “Go on and tell anyone you want. They will never believe you. You are insane.” Oh yes…many more just like that out there. It’s real sad.
I don’t want to know what it feels like to be that shallow, skylar. I am finished trying to understand it. I just want my life back now and am taking it. Absolutely. It was one month ago today that I went NC for the last time. But it has only been a few days since there has been no stalking. Imagine that. For the first time in just about ten years now, I absolutely have peace and quiet. I must have gotten my point across this last time.
YAY!!!!
But, where’s hens? There is a full, new moon tonight, so who knows what is going to happen because of that?!!! 🙂
Dupey,
Glad to see you posting and happy! I like reading your postsssss.
I’m so happy you are NC with IT. I can tell that you sound sooo much better. Keep up the good example for us all.
Hi Ana: Thank you so much for your great feedback. You make me feel better by saying you can hear the change…
I am so happy that I have finally gotten this ugliness out of my life. I have absolutely no regrets about putting it in the past.
Thanks for the inspiration….
You are such a dear girl….xxoo
Dupey