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.)
I agree that victims are RE-victimized by the courts, defense attorneys etc. Many child molestation cases are not even prosecuted because of the potential trauma to YOUNG victims. dr. anna Salter PhD notes that YOUNG children are often targeted because they make such poor witnesses.
The “why didn’t you just leave” question is all too often the “proof” that a woman “wanted to be a victm”—I remember when Patty Hearst, who had been kidnapped, was arrested after her participation in the bank robbery, and even though there was a great deal of publicity at the trial for her Stockholm Syndrome, which I have NO DOUBT that poor woman suffered, she was none-the-less sent to PRISON. I HEARD THE TERM “STOCKHOLM SYNDROME” FOR THE FIRST TIME at the news coverage of her trial.
When Elizabeth Smart was recovered, after a time when she was noted to have had a CHANCE to escape and had not taken it, Stockholm Syndrome was again featured, but still 99.9% of the public (I made up that “statistic”) in my opinion still doesn’t have a CLUE what it is to be a victim or to be trauma bonded to your abuser.
There is also the cases where BOTH parties are personality disordered and it is difficult to determine who is the victim and who is the abuser since the roles change from day to day. the “two PD” relationships are definitely GASOLINE AND FIRE relationships where murder and mayhem frequently reign. It gives victims a “bad name.”
Elizabeth Conley: What you translate as “shame and anxiety etc.” of the Narcissist is a load of crap. The Narcissist has fear of being caught/found out, because they are not as experienced in crime as the psychopath. There is absolutely no such thing as a a Narcissist with “shame” ! You are still in denial about your experience with your N! He conned you..u are still buying his “shame” and “depression” act. He was fearful of being caught. Caught for all the things you never found out. Think about it.Thats it. Nothing else.
I have been “bitten” by narcissists just as often as psychopaths, and believe you me, their bites are just as painful, deadly and lethal. I hope I can save someone’s life here today by NOT letting them believe that a Narcissist is a:
“immature, childish little boy/girl who, on a scale of inflicting pain is only a “one”, and who , poor thing, has immense shame and low self esteem and guilt and anxiety and so we really need to understand them, poor things and be softer on them”. So, Lets just for fun, call the “Narcissiopath”, because really, they wont hurt us….MUCH.”
Thats the worst thing I have ever heard of on this site. You are sailing up the river NILE (denial) big time, and to advocate that a narcissist is any one of those things is dangerous in the extreme. I won’t be a part of it. Not ever!
Where I live we have deadly King Brown snakes (they are not all the color brown, they can be a variety of colours), they will kill an adult in minutes without anti venom. King browns are known to attack without prompting. We have tiger snakes that are even worse, we have red belly black snakes that are everywhere and can kill a child in minutes wthout anti venom and their are many more deadly snakes in Australia and all of them give shocking pain until you are dead. We have funnel webs spiders in summer, so that you always have to check your shoes before you put them on. When I was a child underneath our house was infested with them. Everyone in the street had the “funnel web man” come and spray twice a year. A pregnant woman was shaking out a sheet she had brought in from the clothes line and the funnel web spider bit her over thirty times. I sprayed half a full can of spider spray on a female funnel web spider and put a jar over the top of it, it was still alive days later. If you tap a funnel webs funnel, it will run out to attack you and stay frozen with its pincers out waiting to attack .Everyone has to check the wheely bin (garbage bin) under the handles in summer because of red back spiders EVERYWHERE, they don’t kill adults (only children), but their pain is one of the worst known to mankind and they sometimes leave life long problems where they bite.
We have stonefish,(looks like a lovely stone on the reef), crocodiles, stingers , a multitude of shark and lets not forget the blue ringed octopus the most potent killer of all, all just a few hours drive north of here in summer. They are all deadly.
I would rather meet up with any of them than a psychopath or a narcissist.
Steve:
What do you mean “flesh out the concept of a Narcissiopath in the future”? If that is “stringin em up and literally fleshin em out for our pig farm”…I’m all for it!
Elizabeth Conley says, “Mind you, I feel very sorry for Narcissists”,
Elizabeth if you sincerely feel this then you are a walking target.
Swallow:
“You can hate me – but don’t forget me”. These are not the words of a “narcissssisssisoooopaaatth”. They are the words of a deadly narcissist. Make no mistake. Narcciissisisisisopath is a word just to catch you off guard. Narcissist’s mean every horrible thing they say.
TILLY!!!!
BOINK!!!! DOWN, GIRL!!!! Keep in mind EC is one of the “good guys” and while I don’t always agree with everything she says (and I bett’ya she doesn’t agree with everything I say either!)
One definition of an N says “SHALLOW EMOTIONS: This person expresses and experiences FEW EMOTIONS, usually only Anger and fear. Sghe has words for feelings, but these are empty.”
I have found other “definitions” though that state that the Narcissist is “like a small child in emotions” (and boy do we all know what a two year old is like!!!!”)
There ARE VARIOUS PROFESSIONALS that disagree about all the “definitions” of Ns and Ps, etc. and heck, they can’t even agree on the NAMES FOR THE DISORDERS!!!
I think we (victims) can all AGREE though, that whether they are Ns or Ps or “Blue Devil Fish” or whatever you want to call them, nnone of them are people we want in our lives.
Tilly I am sorry that you have so many bad criitters there, we have a few here ourselves with 2-3 kinds of poison snakes, 2 kinds of poison spiders, the rare scorpion, ticks, mosquitoes, gnats etc. but nothing like all you named and most of the time the critters aren’t bothersome even here out in the boonies. When I was in Sout6h africa we had to shake our shoes out each morning (so when we were in camp, I just slept in mine) and had to watch for cobras and black mambas, carnivores and poachers as well. I’m like you, at least when you see a snake that is dangerous, you can recognize it and cut off its head, the law won’t let you do that with psychopaths! DARN IT!!! LOL (((hugs))))
Elizabeth Conley, I hope you didn’t really mean, that you feel very sorry for Narcissists. If you did mean it, I agree with Tilly who said, “Elizabeth if you sincerely feel this then you are a walking target.”
I felt sorry for my EX, got trapped, and got duped out of most of my adult life!!!!!!!!! Finally having to flee from him to save my very life — what was left of it!
Witsend, I really did get your point regarding what we see on these “prime time” shows on TV. Being housebound for months I have seen enough of them — and they just make me sicker!
I guess I was just jumping ahead with why it is going to be such an uphill battle, as someone else said, to educate the public.
Sorry if I didn’t make that clear. Really sorry!