What do you call someone you’ve been describing alternately as a narcissist and sociopath? Someone for whom neither diagnosis alone quite suffices as a complete description of the individual, but rather in whom both disorders seem as if wrapped up in one menacing individual?
Pardoning my grandiosity for daring to expand the already crowded psychiatric nomeclature, I propose to call these hybrid personalities“narcissiopaths.”
While I don’t expect the DSM folks to take me very seriously (or anyone else for that matter), I’m thinking (unfacetiously) that there’s a case to be made here.
The narcissiopath, as I envision him (using “him” for convenience’s sake) will meet many of the essential criteria for both narcissistic and sociopathic personality. The closest extant clinical description of this disordered individual that comes to mind is the confusing term “maligant narcissist.”
Now personally, I find the term “malignant narcissist” wanting: for instance, precisely at what point does a narcissist turn “malignant?” And doesn’t this imply the concept of non-malignant narcissists who, by definition, must be “benign?” (I’m not so sure their partners would attest to their harmlessness?)
My concept, the narcissiopath, suggests very directly the personality fusion of narcissism and sociopathy in this particular personality. The narcissiopath is the individual who effectively conflates narcissism and sociopathy.
Let me briefly review these separate personalities—the narcissist and sociopath—in their more classical presentations. The narcissist is fundamentally a recognition-craver, a reassurance-craver, a convenience-craver, and an inordinate craver and demander of attention, catering and special status. He is in many respects insatiably needy emotionally.
At root, the narcissist is an overly entitled personality. He feels entitled to be accomodated on a pretty much continual basis. This begs the question, on what basis does he accord himself this right—to expect, that is, the continual accomodation of his needs and desires? The answer is, on the basis of his sense of himself as “special,” and his expectation that others—indeed, the world—will also recognize him as special.
Psychologically, a compensatory process often occurs with the narcissist. His “sensed” and “imposed” specialness is often a compensation for underlying and threatening self-vulnerability; and compensation for doubts about his power, worth and attractiveness—doubts that he is too immature to face squarely and maturely.
Although exploitation is not typically the narcissist’s primary motive, we recognize his capacity to be manipulative, cruel, deceptive and abusive; yet his darker machinations are usually secondary to his demanding, and sometimes desperate, pursuit of others’ attention and cooperation.
The narcissist is imfamously inept at managing his disappointment. He feels that he should never be disappointed, that others owe him protection from disappointment. When disappointed, he will find someone to blame, and will quickly de-idealize and devalue his disappointer.
Devaluing his disappointer now enables him to abuse her or him with more righteous indignation and less guilt.
For the sociopath, this is all much easier. Unlike the narcissist, he doesn’t have to perform mental gymnastics to subdue his guilt in order to exploit others with an unburdened conscience. The sociopath has no guilt to manage.
But the sociopath’s dead conscience isn’t per se what makes him sociopathic. Many people have weak consciences who aren’t sociopaths. It is his dead conscience in conjunction with his orientation to exploit that gets to the heart (really, heartlessness) of the sociopath.
The sociopath is variously a manipulator, liar, deceiver and violator of others; and he is these things less to regulate his unstable self-esteem than, more often than not, to enjoy himself, amuse himself, entertain himself, and take what he feels like taking in a way he finds optimally satisfying.
The sociopath, as I have discussed previously, is an audacious exploiter. His lack of shame supports his imperturbability, which enhances the experience of his audacity. The sociopath leaves one shaking one’s head at his nerve, his gall. One imagines that to venture the deception and outrages the sociopath pursues with his famous, blithe composure, he must possess a chilling callousness and coldness beneath what may otherwise be his veneer of “normality.” One imagines correctly.
Now sometimes we find ourselves dealing, as I’ve suggested, with individuals who seem, at once, to be both narcissist and sociopath, as if straddling, or embodying both disorders.
These are the individuals I’m proposing to call narcissiopaths.
For a good celebrity example of this, consider O.J. Simpson. Simpson, as his story evolved, was someone you found yourself confusingly calling a narcissistic personality disorder (probably correctly) in one conversation, and in the very next, a sociopath (probably correctly).
You found yourself vacillating between the two diagnoses because he seemed to fulfill important criteria of both. There was O.J. the narcissist: publicly charming, charismatic, disarmingly engaging and seductively likeable while privately, behind closed doors, he was tyrannizing Nicole Brown whenever he felt his “omnipotent control” threatened.
Simpson came to epitomize the indulged athlete: catered to all his life for his special athletic gifts, somewhere along the line he came to believe, with ultimately violent conviction, in his right to control and be heeded, not defied.
Simpson was all about “looking good,” about public show; in Nicole Brown he’d found a woman—a “trophy wife—”who could “reflect well” on him publicly, and on his “greatness.” She was also, tragically, the “perfect” choice to engage his narcissistic compulsion to alternately idealize, and then devalue, her; that is, to idealize the perfect, and then devalue the perfectly dirty, sex object.
In other words, in choosing her, Simpson chose well for his narcissism.
In the end, Simpson was as charming, ingratiating, and as shallow and superficial as so many narcissists (and all sociopaths) are.
But he was more than that. He was also callous, and brutally violent. He descended upon Nicole Brown and Ron Goldman like the knife-wielding devil he was, nearly carving Brown’s head off and massacring Goldman.
And then”¦he lied.
He maintained his innocence with outrageous brazenness, determined to win the next stage of yet another game. And where was the remorse? There was none; just his arrogant, insulting contempt.
Simpson had executed a miraculous performance. He had escaped from double-murder and the incontrovertible evidence of his guilt as improbably, as impossibly, as he’d so often escaped (brilliantly) opposing defenses and game-plans geared to stop him.
Finally, although I’d say that Simpson probably tilts, on balance, more to a narcissistic personality structure than not, he also possesses many of the most dangerous and essential diagnostic features of the sociopath. He seems, in other words, to be not entirely one or the other, but both narcissist and sociopath all in one.
I intend to flesh out the concept of the narcissiopath in future posts. And I look forward, as always, to your feedback.
(This article is copyrighted © 2009 by Steve Becker, LCSW.)
Oh Kathy, it was you! Sorry I didnt remember it was yours!! BUT its the only thing I copied from this site and put in my special document I keep wth inspirational texts PLUS I emailed it to my ex ex, the woman who is also trying to heal from the same psychopath as me. I thought it was extremely insightful and totally changed my perception on fogiveness.
Thank you for that!
You’re welcome, MariaLisa!
If you have the time and money, I learned a lot from an online class in forgiveness. I think I mentioned it in the article, but you can find it at http://www.emindful.com. It’s a live class with the author of “Forgive for Good,” and it really changed a lot of my thinking.
They also have free mediation sessions there every day at 8 a.m. EST.
I would love it if, in the future, you are sharing my writing with other people, that you keep my name on it as the author. It might be a bit of viral marketing that helps when I get my book on healing published.
Kathy
Kathy:
thanks.
absolutely, will do!
Oxy, thank you for mentioning the example of Joseph, “…Years later, Joseph had FORGIVEN his brothers, but when they showed up he did NOT TRUST them, he TESTEd them to see what kind of men they had become.”
I believe this is the exact same place I am now with my daughters, including DD#3, even after she has begun communicating with me for over a year. Forgiving them was easy, “they knew not what they were doing.” but trusting them? They are going to have to earn my trust.
I can be happy and full of joy that thngs seem to be changing, though. I think Joseph, too, felt joy upon recognizing his brothers, even if he didn’t trust them yet or reveal his identify. It took time, too, as the brothers had to travel long distances to and from their father in Canaan. If Joseph could be patient, so can I!!!
Hi Oxy if you are still around, and I dont want to be all me, me, me, but I think I need a BIG boink. You know I spoke yesterday about my mother and my daughter and all that hoo-haa, well I too had little sleep last night and was completely disturbed by it all, so I am not really emotionally even today, BUT mother took my daughter out again today, to the restaurant I had booked for me and her later on in the week when I have the cash, when my daughter returned, even after I spoke to her about it AGAIN tis morning, she gave me a speech about how I was the only one in the family who couldnt ‘move on’ and I needed to stop living in the past, that my mother was her graaandmother. So I have asked her to leave and stay at a friend’s tonight because I cant cope with it at all. I just CANT. So mother dearest gets her reaction from me, via my daughter I am the bad guy for asking her to leave. I am so glad my son is on holiday ( at the sea side with his paternal granparents) and not being subjected to all this hoo-haa. So I am angry, I am upset … I need a boink on the head, some breathing exercises an emergency yoga intervention or something… I know there have been lots of dicussions here on forgiveness today, which I am reading… I am not trying to monopolise anyones time but could someone point me in the direction of discussions/ articles past or present about how to calm the frick down when the creatures come in and undermine your peace using your children as a trojan horse… Thank you LF-ers xxx
Now someone here asked about my daugther being ‘normal’ and i see she is currently the weak link to the toxic mother and sister that I am trying to get out of my life, but she is being used here… how do I effectively deal with this without alienating my daughter. I am NOT strong enough to go into battle with these people over my daughter, which is what they are trying to force… I am not strong enough to go into battle with my daughter(neither do I wish to!) about them… but I am NOT being respected by her or them at the VERY least. I need a magnanimous shot in the butt.
Dear Lily,
I have found many of the old Bible stories to have NEW MEANING as I re-read then while all this was going on. The story of King (to be) David hding in a cave from King Saul who was trying to kill him. God COULD have kept Saul from trying to kill David, but i believe there was a LESSON FOR DAVID in the fact he had to run and hide. I also found a LESSON FOR ME in having to run and hide from my would-be murderers. It bought me to the realization that I had also been enabling my psychopathic offspring for many years and that my hope for him was built on LIES.
If none of this had happened, if none of this had been exposed, if my X DIL had not had the affair with the psychopathic would be killer, and been caught, and then tried to kill son C (unsuccessfully thank GOD) then my son would still be unhappily married to that woman, I would still be enabling my P son and God alone knows what he would have done, I might not be alive today….so you know, “it is a VERY ILL wind that blows no one good.” In spite of the pain, I feel blessed that I had this happen because the end is much better than I deserve, and I am FREE of my delusions and my enabling of undeserving others. I am taking care of God’s daughter, ME!!!!
MariaLisa, thank you for reposting Kathleen’s article on forgiveness. Yes, it is important to acknowledge the source because once something is written, it is truly copyrighted material. I see that you recognize that and will rectify it. Good job!
But, I want to thank both of you TODAY for allowing me to reread the section about “…what forgiveness is NOT”
All five bullet points reassured me today that my forgiveness of my adult children was correctly given.
Somehow I missed that upon first reading. But, then, the JOY about my children finally making contact these past few days makes it more timely for me, I guess.
Those points also fit in with the reminder that I don’t HAVE to trust them YET.
Again, thanks to both of you.
blueskies
i believe i asked whether your daughter was normal. you said she was.
im no expert on raising, i dont have kids, but i dont differ as much from the age of your daughter ( 18 i believe you said, correct me if im wrong) as most of the LF-ers so: i dont think there is anything you can do to prevent all this from developing. i suppose your daughter will have to be dissappointed all by herself. when it occurs ( the disappointment from getting to know her grandma’s patterns and the negative effect it will ultimately also have on your daughter), she will at least have a loving mother to fall back upon. and you will have to have taken good care of yourself in the meantime. repeat what your opinion and your view is. no more.
thats my view….hope its of any good to you. good luck…
Hi Blueskies
Nice to see you back. Mind if I chip in.
Really sorry to hear about the latest on your front and it must be the worst feeling in the world (I get uptight with myself because mine are grown-up and absent in the ‘normal’ way that they are once they get to adulthood (empty nest and all that), so this must be very difficult and painfu for you).
As this is NOT my experience, I am perhaps being presumptious in giving out advice. All I can say is that I have been close to this with my own sister and her daughter – coming under stronger influences of the toxic variety.
Don’t lose her. It sounds like you’ve suffered enough ‘losses’ and this would be a terrible blow. If you have to, keep your own counsel – use LF, as you already do, as your outlet and trusted friends. I don’t know how old your daughter is but sounds like she’s still ‘forming’ – the closer you are, the less chance ‘they’ have of influencing her – make up your mind that they ‘ain’t gonna win this one’ no matter what. If you can muster it, when she makes a comment about something they’ve said, be light and airy ‘dissmissive’ – don’t give it any credence. Love wins out.
Remember – they divide and conquer – close off the opportunity for ‘division’ from your precious girl. When your hackles rise, see your serenity and calm towards her as a ‘victory’ over their toxicity.
Don’t know if this helps but it’s all I have to offer from experience and it’s just in case there’s no wiser soul around.
All love and keep posting for strength.
hi anewlily
yes its a great piece by kathleen! im gonna order the book ( forgive for good) she advised aswell ( got soo much to read!!), maybe you like to look into it too.
i did say right away i thought it was from the lovefraud site or eve wood’s and that it wasnt mine naturally…..i posted it because it summed up a profound answer to so many questions that were occurring.