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’m with Housie on this one. I’ve been almost 4wks NC (95%), and reached a point where I had no interest WHAT his problem is, (he’s been called both an N and a P), or WHAT you call it. I just want to focus on my life, and my recovery, moving from all about him to all about me.
All fine and good and true and hopeful…but what am I doing on this site, late at night on a Friday night?! Yikes! I feel like I got pulled back in, without even thinking about it. Why did I end up here instead of well, anywhere else?! Back to focusing on myself, or what’s left of it…
But thanks for the informative post and the hybrid definition.
Good one Steve! You do have a way with words! I love your articles!
Aloha
I apologise to you Steve, Henry EC and everyone. I have been thinking about it all day and reading all your comments. You are all definitely right. My ex boyfriend narcissist really was just depressed, guilty and ashamed of himself that he and his friends had treated me so bad in front of everyone. I feel really sorry for him too now. You are right. I am ringing him up and asking him to take me back. I know he will. This whole thing of being on your own sucks.
Tilly, why would you want a depressed, guilty and ashamed boyfriend? Seems like that’s someone you’d feel sorry for — preferably from a distance — rather than want around.
Hard as it might be to imagine, I feel sorry for my ex. He’s an emotional cripple. A dangerous emotional cripple who is half the man he might have been, and unfortunately the wrong half, for the most part.
You can feel sorry for someone without being in the least tempted to have something to do with them. Pity is not exactly the first step to falling in love, and being able to feel it certainly doesn’t make me a target. It makes me able to the very large gap between someone like him and someone like me.
Kathy
Yeah, your right, you and I are too different for you to ever understand.
Chow Baby
The feeling sorry for the narc debate.
I think Jen raises an important point when she says:(sorry it’s a big chunk of text I am quoting here):
” From the socio blogs/forums I used to follow, the one thing most of them seemed to have in common was a great capacity to have you be out of sight/out of mind (so no they didn’t sit around and obsess over you until they could get revenge if they felt you wronged them in some way), BUT they still tried to get revenge when an opportunity presented itself, even many years later. Many of them said they could patiently wait years and years to seek revenge (and one forum actually had a thread started about the revenge subject), yet they could carry on with their life not really giving you any thought, pretty much like you did not exist for them most of the time unless they were in the mood for you to exist for them, until the time was right. But they never EVER forgot being wronged by you (in their mind) no matter how many years passed.”
I personally dont believe that the S/P I was involved with expends any energy day to day on thoughts of me , I am an old candy wrapper and i want to keep it that way, BUT I DO believe if given so much as a chink of opportunity how ever long down the line the snake would strike. Not necessarily out of revenge but because it is in his nature to do so.
As kathy says, feeling sorry for or having empathy for the snake does not automatically mean that you are going to pick it up and stroke it and take it to bed with you.
I DID that, and each time I got bitten. And each time I fell back into it out of pity, he got faster at biting me. I had to separate the pity I felt and my response to it.
I think the lesson here is a cognitive one for all of us, sympathy and empathy for the devil should not ever be a begining to or a reason for a relationship with him.
It could be a much stronger stand point to be able to feel my natural empathy, and STILL protect myself.
I agree with Jen 2008. A Psychopath never forgets and always want revenge.
Looking back on conversations I had with mine, he never forgot people who has ‘wronged’ him but was very confident and patient about getting his own back. I think that that is one of the reasons for my slow recovery – I was and am scared that one day he will sneak up on me and either try to hook me back in again or something worse as punishment for having the audacity to walk away. I say this even though I am happily back with my husband as he doesn’t seem to be afraid of anything and has stalked me in the past.
Many of my friends think that I am paranoid but I sure most of you on here know otherwise.
We should never underestimate them.
Swallow
Tilly
Boy girl – you pack a punch – say it like it is! You really make me laugh – am I the only one who got the ‘irony’ in your post of 1.02 am?
But seriously, I admire your stand and, you’re right about ever feeling sorry for them because they feel ashamed and guilty – they might portray that because they think it’s going to ‘keep you where they want you’ but they don’t actually ‘FEEL’ it – I too got duped into this too many times that pulled me right back in there to take more abuse, once the dust had settled.
Keep keeping us all strong Tilly.
All love E x
Escapee:
Hell NO. You are NOT the only one who caught the sarcasm in Tilly’s post @....... 1:02 a.m.
That is Classic Tilly.
I get you, Tilly!!! LOUD & CLEAR!