In a prior post, I discussed some differences between the narcissist and sociopath, a focus I’d like to continue in this post. For convenience’s sake, I’m going to use “he” and “him” throughout, although we can agree that “she” and “her” could easily be substituted.
The narcissist, if I were to boil his style down to one sentence, is someone who demands that his sense of self (and self-importance) be propped-up on a continual basis. Without this support—in the form of validation, recognition, and experiences of idealization—the narcissist feels depleted, empty, depressed.
The narcissist struggles to define himself independently and sustainedly as significant and worthwhile. The fragility of his sense of self is no big news; it is how he manages his fragility, his insecurity, that is telling.
The narcissist, for instance, feels entitled to a sense of inner comfort and security. More specifically, he feels entitled to what he requires in order to experience an unbroken state of inner comfort.
But wait a second? Don’t we all feel somewhat entitled to what we need in order to feel secure and comfortable?
Most of us, after all, feel entitled to the air we breath that keeps us alive. You might feel entitled, when dehydrated, to a cold stream of water from your kitchen faucet? Imagine feeling an intense thirst, yet when you twist the faucet, no water comes out? The pipes are empty”¦everywhere in the house.
You are deeply thirsty, and yet the water you count on to salve your thirst is being withheld. In this circumstance, especially if your thirst is great, you might feel outraged? Incensed? Even panicked?
You might even feel furious enough to hurl curses and imprecations on the forces conspiring to frustrate your thirst!
Imagine the narcissist’s thirst as constant and deep—a thirst for things like recognition, appreciation, for validation of his importance, and special signifigance. When the narcissist’s thirst for recognition is unmet, it is no small matter—anymore than it would be a small matter to find a spigot unresponsive in the midst of your urgent thirst.
In other words, the frustration of his demand of recognition is a major disappointment, a major problem for the narcissist—a problem felt not merely as an inconvenience, but as a threat to his fundamental equilibrium, sense of security, and comfort.
In a certain sense, then, that the narcissist feels “entitled” doesn’t make him a narcissist. It is what he feels “entitled to” that is most relevant.
Specifically, it is his sense of entitlement to an undisturbed stream of others’ approval, admiration and recognition that most separates the narcissist from the non-narcissist.
But the narcissist demands more than others’ idealization; he also demands others to idealize. The narcissist needs to idealize others.
For instance, when he finally meets, yet again, the “perfect woman,” he puts her on a pedestal—i.e., he idealizes her. Idealizing her—putting her on a pedestal—makes for thrill and excitement (which, by the way, he misjudges again and again as fulfillment).
After all, he is tasting perfection. He must be pretty special to have the enviable attention of someone so perfectly, admirably beautiful. He looks and feels good thanks to the reflection of her perfection on himself.
One of many problems here is that idealized states are inherently temporary and unsustainable; they don’t hold up permanently; they are fraught all the time with dangers of collapse.
Thus, the narcissist can’t permanently hold his idealizations. And he finds their collapse, over and over again, discouraging and deeply disillusioning. But instead of recognizing the futility of his need, he will blame the formerly idealized object for failing to have remained as perfect, and perfectly satisfying, as he demanded.
The narcissist loses something urgent here, namely the key to his feeling of vitality. Inarticulately, he feels betrayed; and in his sense of betrayal, he feels angry, even enraged.
Enter his “contempt.” The underbelly of the narcissist’s idealizing is his contempt. The narcissist tends to vacillate between experiences of idealization and contempt. In either case (or “state”), others are regarded as objects—objects, we shall see, not quite in the sense that sociopaths regard others as objects.
For the narcissist, others have an obligation to maintain his peace of mind. In the narcissist’s world, it is on others, through their cooperation with his demands, to ensure his ongoing inner comfort and satisfaction. When meeting his demands, others are idealized; when disappointing him, they are devalued contemptuously.
What else does the narcissist demand? The narcissist on pretty much a constant basis demands various forms of reassurance. It may be reassurance of his attractiveness, superiority, special status in a girlfriend’s eyes (and history). He may seek reassurance of his virility, that he is still feared, respected, admired, idealized, and otherwise perceived as impressive.
For the narcissist, such reassurance, even when felt, proves always only temporarily satisfying, and is translated as something like, “I’m okay, for now. I’ve still got it. I’m still viable.”
In his pursuit of reassurance, the narcissist is a very controlling individual. His controlling tendencies arise from his desperation—his desperation, that is, for the reassurance he demands. And desperate people tend to be heedless of the boundaries of those who have what they want.
The narcissist, for instance, may grill his partner controllingly about her ex-boyfriends in order to establish (demand assurances of) his unique, special status with her. Or, he may text her during the day compulsively, in the guise of his interest in, and love, for her, when, in fact, it is not about his love or interest but rather about his demand to know that she is thinking about him that drives his invasive behavior.
He will rationalize his invasiveness as his thoughtfulness and love of her. And he will feel entitled to an immediately reassuring response, anything less than which will activate his anger/rage.
The narcissist’s legendary self-centeredness, to some extent, is a function of the fact that so much, if not all, of his energy is invested in resolving anxious questions about his present standing.
He is vigilantly afraid lest his present, fragilely, and externally supported status be upended, a development he struggles to tolerate. Consumed as he is with obviating this disaster, he has little energy left with which to be genuinely interested in others.
How about the sociopath? What’s his deal?
To begin with, the sociopath lacks the narcissist’s insatiable underlying neediness. Unlike the narcissist, the sociopath’s violating behaviors stem less from a deep insecurity than from his impulsive or calculated greed, and especially his basic view of others as objects, as tools, to be exploited for his entertainment, amusement and ongoing acquisitive agenda.
The sociopath is a more purely exploitative individual than the narcissist. For the narcissist, others are desperately needed, and demanded, as validators. Athough the narcissist will use and exploit others, he does so typically with the ulterior motive of reassuring himself, on some level, of his persisting viability.
For the sociopath, others are his potential “play-things,” their value a function of the gratification that can be extracted from them.
The less validating you are, the less worth you have for the narcissist.
The less exploitable you are, the less worth you have for the sociopath.
Said differently, the narcissist uses others as a means to establish (or reestablish) the sense, and view, of himself, as special, impressive, dominant, compelling, whereas the sociopath uses others more for the pure amusement of it; more for the sheer entertainment of seeing what he can get away with (and how); and/or for the immediate satisfaction of his present tensions, itch, and/or greed.
The term “malignant narcissist” seems to me to describe the sociopath more accurately than the narcissist. This term has been used to describe megalomaniacal individuals whose grandiosity and sinister appetite for control (over others) better reflect, to my mind, psychopathic processes of exploitation.
The “malignant narcissist” is, to my mind, driven by the sociopath’s (or psychopath’s) pursuit of omnipotent control over those he seeks to exploit. He is a power-hungry, often charismatic, ruthless and exploitative personality whose grandiosity serves more psychopathic than classically narcissistic purposes.
Don’t misunderstand me: The malignant narcissist is someone whose most toxic narcissistic qualities have attained malignant status (hence the concept). In the end, however, he is as coldblooded, callous, exploitative and deviant a creature as the most dangerous sociopath.
Does it matter, finally, whether a cult figure like, say, Jim Jones, who led hundreds of his followers to mass suicide, was a “malignant narcissist” or psychopath? Not if you regard the terms, and destructiveness of the personalities, as essentially indistinguishable, as I do.
(This article is copyrighted (c) 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Jim:
Did you say the French Foreign Legion is hiring?
Oh. I’m sorry. I thought you were throwing me a job lead. You can tell I’m obsessed with being unemployed at this moment.
Regarding the earlier discussion on duct tape — one of my friend’s kids when she was little called it “GOOSE TAPE.” Needless to say, we’ve never let her live it down.
Matt-French Foreign Legion hiring?..don’t know yet, but I’ll probably be looking on line if things don’t settle down. I know there’s no local office-maybe they go through “temp agencies” now….
GOOSE TAPE…really? I knew it was for DUCKS.
Oxy…I smashed the glass slipper a few minutes ago…so that’s out of the way!
Jim:
After S, my siblings were telling me that maybe it was time for me to have a great adventure in life — just pull up stakes and go work for one of the agencies that works out of foreign countries.
Today I went on line and found a few of them are hiring. Not the foreign legion, but I’m giving it some thought.
Matt, the foreign jobs…brings back a memory. Still with the ex-Tox, going into an accelerating devalue phase, before the discard. Must have been after March 2003. Her son came over, and we’re sitting around the kitchen table talking. He started to talk about contract wages in Iraq…pretty good. The ex-Tox looked at me and said…”maybe you should look into that”. I felt more loved than ever…LOL
Jim:
Think about it — whether you stepped on a landmine or got hit by a heat-seaking missle, didn’t matter. She had already destroyed you.
Matt-good point..a quick and easy end with no complications…and a big insurance pay-off for her..Maybe God hasn’t abandoned me after all. Could’ve been worse.
Jim:
Since they’re so incredibly reckless — too bad you couldn’t have convinced your ex to investigate those career opportunities.
It would have been like hitting mega-millions — she would have been out of your hair, probably a goner AND you would have hit the jackpot financially!
As they say in the NY Lottery “all it takes is a dollar and a dream…”
keeping_faith:
“…what i really desire in a relationship) Basics first:
TRUTHFULLNESS
FIDELITY
RESPECT
INTEGRITY (he does what he says)…”
Good list. Add to that my “4 ations”:
Do they have occupation?
Do they have habitation?
Do they have education?
Do they have transportation?
Matt-her? Maybe reckless in some ways…a bully, for sure. Courage…no.
But, when the divorce got filed, the reactions from my family were enlightening: Daughter and husband from first marriage..”Well, she finally showed her true colors.”
Me…still in the FOG.
Older sister in VA, who rarely ever saw her…”Doesn’t surprise me. Boy, did she screw up!”
Well, turns out there was a little family money. I didn’t know, didn’t care, hadn’t asked…would have preferred my folks lived forever…good people, best parents ever. All happened after the divorce was final…I was protected…good lawyer.
I will need to go back to work after I get back from Scotland end of March…but there were some burdens I didn’t have to face the last few years.
I hear second-hand it really pissed the ex-Tox off…
There are always good things that come out of bad. I’d have survived anyway…always have so far.
Jim – Going out on a limb here. But here it goes, IF SHE CONTACTS YOU OR IF YOU WOULD LIKE, you could consider simply telling her you would like to get to know her better, at her pace, but you really would like to get to know her and be friends and just see where it goes.
YOU KNOW ALL THE RED FLAGS, YOU KNOW HOW TO STOP. CHANGE DIRECTION. IF SHE EXHIBITS ANY TYPE OF BEHAVIOR THAT CONCERNS YOU OR ALARMS YOU OR SIGNALS TO YOU THAT SHE IS JUST IN A PLACE THAT YOU DONT WANT TO DEAL WITH OR BE INVOLVED WITH OR AGAIN SAYS NO THANK YOU= THEN YOU WILL KNOW.
You could also relay that you are not particularly interested in making her or yourself feel UNcomfortable. But you enjoy her company and recent time spent with her and that hasnt happened to you in quite some time…
There is alot of FEAR surrounding both of your pasts. But if you are really wondering about whether or not there are things you two may have in common, then Abby says address it or give it time to find its place as a casual connection that didnt grow.
Abby will refrain from any futher unsolicited advice! :)) But you know she just had to comment on all the car sightings!