No Stupid Questions - 219. How Do You Identify a Narcissist?
Episode Date: November 10, 2024What’s the difference between narcissism and high self-esteem? Does social media fuel arrogance or self-consciousness? And do people get less toxic with age? SOURCES:Brené Brown, research profes...sor at the University of Houston and visiting professor in management at the University of Texas at Austin.Jonathan Haidt, professor of social psychology at the New York University Stern School of Business.Michael Lewis, author.Cooper McAllister, senior consultant at Booz Allen Hamilton.Jean Twenge, professor of psychology at San Diego State University. RESOURCES:"‘Narcissistic Abuse’ Has Gone Mainstream. But What Is It?" Abby Ellin (The Washington Post, 2024)."Development of Narcissism Across the Life Span: A Meta-Analytic Review of Longitudinal Studies," by Ulrich Orth, Samantha Krauss, and Mitja D. Back (Psychological Bulletin, 2024).The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness, by Jonathan Haidt (2024)."America Is Obsessed With Narcissists. Is Trump to Blame?" by Charles Trepany (USA Today, 2024)."Narcissism Today: What We Know and What We Need to Learn," by Joshua D. Miller, Mitja D. Back, Donald R. Lynam, and Aidan G. C. Wright (Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2021)."Egos Deflating With the Great Recession: A Cross-Temporal Meta-Analysis and Within-Campus Analysis of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory, 1982–2016," by Jean M. Twenge, Sara H. Konrath, Cooper McAllister, et al. (Personality and Individual Differences, 2021)."Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Diagnostic and Clinical Challenges," by Eve Caligor, Kenneth N. Levy, and Frank E. Yeomans (American Journal of Psychiatry, 2015).Generation Me: Why Today's Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled — and More Miserable Than Ever Before, by Jean Twenge (2006).Cincinnatus and the Citizen-Servant Ideal: The Roman Legend's Life, Times, and Legacy, by Michael J. Hillyard (2001). EXTRAS:"Is Screen Time as Poisonous as We Think?" by Freakonomics Radio (2024)."Do 'Generations' Mean Anything?" by No Stupid Questions (2023)."Is Pride the Worst Sin?" by No Stupid Questions (2023).The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine, by Michael Lewis (2010).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, NSQ listeners. Before we start the show, we should note that today's conversation
briefly touches on presidential politics, but it was recorded before the November 5th
election. We hope you enjoy the episode.
Sounds riveting.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Maugham.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, what does it mean to be a narcissist, really?
I'm so tired read it to you.
Are you ready?
Yes, I am.
All right.
Dear Angela and Mike, is narcissism a range?
I was wondering what percentage of people are truly so narcissistic that it has a negative impact on people
How do we identify them? What would be an effective solution to minimize their possible negative impact on society?
Regards Aditi. Well, I love Aditi's question
I mean narcissism gets its name, of course, from Narcissus, who's a character in Greek mythology
who goes to, I think it's a lake or a pond, and sees his own reflection and falls so in
love with himself that he will neither eat nor drink nor move until he can be with this
reflection we love so much and ultimately dies, right?
Yeah, so captivated, He is rooted to the spot.
You remember how the myth ends, right?
Well, I thought he just dies because he's just so infatuated with himself.
But remind me.
So I don't remember probably all the details of the myth,
but what I recall is that he catches this reflection of himself.
This is, of course, before mirrors.
You know, he's rooted there to the spot and then dies
and the flower narcissist actually springs up in the place where he, because you know,
narcissist is a flower, right?
Right.
And it is very beautiful.
But the idea of narcissism and our own reflection, I mean, Jason was telling me that in the old
days, you know, before mirrors became commonplace, there was
a time where the common practice was if you did have a mirror, you would cover it with
cloth for most of the day.
Really?
Yeah.
And I think there was this kind of idea that like it could be a dangerous thing to be looking
at yourself all the time.
I have to say the only person I've heard this cloth over the mirror in old houses from is Jason Duckworth. So I'd have to fact check
that. But yeah, narcissism has a very long history.
What's interesting right now though, is that there tends to be, it looks like a rise in
at least familiarity with narcissism or the idea of Who's a narcissist and what it is look during the presidential election in?
2016 in 2016 when Donald Trump was running against Hillary Clinton it did spark a
Discussion about narcissism and Google Trends data
So Google Trends are just show you what people are searching on Google.
Web searches for narcissism skyrocketed between September of 2016 and January of 2017, which
is that period when Trump was elected and took office.
Interestingly, the hashtag, narcissisticabuse, has more than 1.4 million posts on Instagram
right now.
June 1st is now World Narcissistic Abuse Awareness Day.
Wait, narcissistic abuse, what is that?
Narcissistic abuse, to be clear,
is not a clinical term here.
It's more of a colloquial thing that people talk about,
but it's how people are able to express on social media
or in other ways the impacts that they have felt
in their lives from individuals displaying narcissistic
behavior.
I mean, I think I may have shared with you before, I spent years working with someone
who was a horrible narcissist, but I didn't have the language for it.
Well, you had a coworker who you felt was...
Yeah.
I mean, we could talk about whether they would qualify for a diagnosis, but as a narcissist.
And I'll admit that for years, I couldn't place it.
I knew it was a massively negative relationship.
I knew it was having negative impacts on not just me,
but people all around.
But it wasn't until a different person came in and said,
well, you know that so-and-so is a clinical narcissist.
Now, whether they are clinical or not, it
suddenly turned a light on in my mind, and I was able to view all of this past bad behavior
in a way that helped me understand. I mean, Brene Brown has given the, again, colloquial
definition that for me helped understand it. She said narcissism is the shame-based fear
of being ordinary.
And she nailed it for that one person. I'm sure there are better and more
accurate definitions, but this idea, a shame-based fear of being ordinary. So you had to exercise grandiosity and charm and all these things in a way that-
Because deep down you were just afraid.
Put other people down. Yeah, I think so. But tell me what does the psychological literature say on it?
So this question is asking, first of all,
like what is it and is it a range
or is it just like you are or you're not?
I'm gonna go firmly on the range side, right?
You know, there aren't many things in psychology
that are not ranges.
Like for example, ADHD, which people sometimes say like,
I have it or I don't.
But that's also a continuum. And even things like schizophrenia, actually, it turns out
you can be a little or moderate or like extremely schizophrenic. So almost everything that I
can even think of in psychology is a range. So if you're ever on a final exam and the choices are is it a range or is it like a
categorical thing that you are or you aren't on balance,
guessing that it's a range is a pretty good educated guess. And that is true for
narcissistic personality disorder, but for any
psychopathology there are these kind of clinical cutoffs where like you have to reach a certain degree of severity. And for clinical disorders in general, I believe also that it has to
be dysfunctional in some way.
And what does that mean?
You know, I think there's some judgment there. Very often, like for example, when it comes
to depression or anxiety, there are these like checklists of symptoms, trouble sleeping,
trouble eating, thoughts that you, you know. There's actually this book, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual,
it's abbreviated to like the DSM and it's used by psychologists and psychiatrists.
It's also used by insurance companies for reimbursement. You have to have criteria to say
like, oh yes, this person is clinically depressed and therefore like they qualify for a certain kind of treatment that should be reimbursed.
So in the DSM, at the end of these checklists,
there is, I think always, and certainly almost always,
a criterion that is basically causing dysfunctionality
in life and work and so forth.
Like, yeah, you have these symptoms,
but also now this is impairing your life,
like your personal relationships, your physical health, your work. But I think with narcissistic
personality disorder, one wrinkle might be that it's causing dysfunction for other people.
Right. I think anyone who's on the extreme or even close to the edge on narcissism is
causing massive issues for other people.
When you look at the formal diagnosis of narcissistic personality disorder, like what it really
is because there's a lot of debate about whether it is what people stereotypically think of
as narcissism, like in social media or whatever.
But the prevalence estimates, meaning like, you know, how many people in the general population
would have ever qualified for this diagnosis,
it is low single digits.
Estimates range from 0%, I mean, obviously close to zero,
to 5% in the general population.
And, you know, for example, rates of depression and anxiety
and many other things are way higher
than narcissistic personality disorder.
And that's what I think is actually somewhat interesting in the common parlance using the word narcissist right now.
Some are saying we're using the word too loosely and it's losing its power because it just means everything nowadays.
Well, look, what we immediately think of when we think of a narcissist,
which is this kind of like grandiosity, excessive self-esteem,
just like thinking you are the cat's pajamas.
I don't know where that expression came from.
It's adorable. It makes no sense.
But anyway, you know, having this like exceedingly high sense of self-esteem,
one could argue, like that's the stereotype.
And then low regard and low empathy for
other people. That is what everyone thinks of as narcissism. But what
clinical psychologists would say is there are two forms. So I'm gonna read to you
from an article that was published in 2015. It's called Narcissistic
Personality Disorder Diagnostic and Clinical Challenges.
Sounds riveting.
You know what?
I saw that title and I was like, ah, but then I started reading it and it's actually fascinating.
Okay, okay, okay.
Because narcissism is fascinating.
So what the authors say is that individuals with narcissistic personality disorder may be grandiose or self-loathing.
They may be extroverted or socially isolated, captains of industry
or unable to maintain steady employment, model citizens or prone to anti-social activities.
And so I want to say that the grandiose form of narcissism is what is stereotyped and the vulnerable form of narcissism is less
well known. That actually is characterized by having low and fragile self-esteem.
Interesting.
So, there are these two subtypes, but the way you get these two subtypes, it is now
thought, is that there are like three underlying ingredients
or elements and in different combinations they give rise to these two subtypes.
So basically the thing that these two subtypes, you know, grandiose and vulnerable narcissism,
have in common is something called antagonism.
Let me read to you from an article called Narcissism Today, What We Know and
What We Need to Learn. And the idea of antagonism, which is common to both forms of narcissism,
is in the words of these authors, rivalry, entitlement, individuals high in antagonism
tend to be arrogance, callous, deceitful, entitled, exploitative, cynical.
Your victories are their losses.
Your advantages are their disadvantages.
It's this like excessive comparison in a very zero-sum way with other people.
But if you ask, you know, what is really grandiose narcissism, the kind of that we usually think
of like, well, what else is there other than antagonism? The other ingredient is what psychologists call agentic extraversion.
Okay.
So let me again read from this paper on what we now think about narcissism. So, agentic
extraversion. It is more adaptive, i.e., causes the narcissistic individual fewer interpersonal problems, and it is associated
with assertiveness, leadership, high self-esteem, and a tendency to be proactive rather than
reactive and to be motivated by reward more than punishment.
Agentsic extraversion uniquely characterizes grandiose narcissism."
And when I read that, I was like,, oh wait that doesn't sound so bad. And actually one of the items used to assess this element of grandiose
narcissism is I aspire to greatness. And when I read that item, you know, I thought
about grit and I thought about, you know, the people that I study and it's like, oh yes,
they 100% aspire to greatness. So grandiose narcissism, which is one of the subtypes,
is the combination of agentic extroversion
with an antagonistic view.
But I do want to tell you about vulnerable narcissism
because when I dug into this a little bit,
it was news to me.
I had never even heard of vulnerable narcissism.
Maybe that's what Brene Brown is talking about,
like this shame-based fear,
but have you come across this at all?
And just to clarify on the Brene,
it was the shame-based fear of being you come across this at all? And just to clarify on the brunette it was the shame-based fear of being
ordinary. Like I can't be ordinary so I have to continually show how grandiose I
am that I'm better than everyone right? But no I've never seen anything on the
vulnerable side of it so teach me. So the vulnerable narcissist not only has this
you know antagonistic view but they also have what's
called narcissistic neuroticism.
And again, let me read to you from this 2015 article because I think the clinicians who
have thought long and hard about what narcissism really is put it best.
The vulnerable, quote, fragile, unquote, or thin-skned covert subtype is inhibited, manifestly distressed,
hypersensitive to the evaluation of others while chronically envious and evaluating themselves
in relation to others.
Interpersonally these individuals are often shy, outwardly self-effacing and hypersensitive
to slights while harboring perhaps secret grandiosity.
So both types of narcissism are self-absorbed, both are very comparative, but you can see
this almost like mirror image in vulnerability.
Research suggests that the vulnerable subtype of narcissism is associated with low self-esteem,
whereas the grandiose form is associated with low self-esteem, whereas the grandiose form is associated with
high self-esteem.
Right.
So I too see the through line here as being this like antagonism.
And also think about that myth of narcissists.
There's something wrong with how you are thinking about yourself too much, like this deep self-absorption.
Because healthy self-esteem, I think psychologists would agree, is a fundamental
positive thing, right?
Like, self-esteem is good to have.
Right.
What's interesting is some of these traits that we're saying are in a narcissist have
their positive place, right?
If you think about it, in terms of a strong leader who's going to take big, bold risks, make decisions, you have to have some
element of belief that you are the right person to take the job. You are the one who should
run for president.
Well, I'd say it's true of agentic extroversion, right? Sorry to for all the terminology. I
did not make up these terms. But that agentic extroversion ingredient. I think you're right
about that. Like, awesome think you're right about that.
Like, awesome, you wouldn't be great.
But you don't need to have antagonism to be a leader.
There doesn't have to be a loser for you to be a winner.
Like, if this grandiose narcissism reveals anything, it's that that element of,
I want to be awesome, can be very dangerous when you think of life as a zero sum game.
Yes.
All I'm saying is let's not throw the baby out
with the bathwater.
Some of these traits when decoupled from the negative ones
are actually pretty powerful.
Yeah, just that one, by the way,
I don't think there's a whole lot to say
in defense of antagonism or narcissistic neuroticism.
But Mike, I know you and I would love to hear
our listeners' thoughts on narcissism. Do you think that you have a narcissist in your
life? If so, how do you deal with them? Record a voice memo in a quiet place with your mouth
closed to the phone and email us at nsq at Freakonomics.com. Maybe we'll play it on a future episode of the show.
Also, if you are as obsessed with this podcast as narcissists are obsessed with themselves,
the very best thing you can do is to tell a friend about it.
You can also spread the word on social media or leave a review in your favorite podcast
app.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions,
does narcissism fade or intensify with time?
Wait, peak narcissism is when you're eight years old?
Now, back to Mike and Angela's conversation about narcissism.
Are you familiar with the myth of Cincinnati?
No.
Is that like a Greek myth?
So Cincinnati is named after Cincinnati.
He's a Roman figure.
Like an actual person.
In antiquity.
I don't remember the years.
Not like narcissists didn't exist. He's an actual person who's antiquity, I don't remember the years. Not like, narcissists didn't exist.
He's an actual person who's been mythologized.
Okay, he was a human.
So he was celebrated for being this humble leader who just focused on civic duty.
And according to legend, he was out plowing his fields when he gets this call to come
serve as the ruler during this epic crisis
in Rome. So, he successfully comes in, he defends Rome, and then he promptly resigns
and goes right back to the farm to plow his fields. And so, Cincinnati is often talked
about in politics where the way people often use it now is like, oh, well, I didn't want to run for president,
but I felt a calling from my country,
or I'm doing this for the future of my grandchildren, right?
It's like, I don't want this,
but I'm doing it on behalf of others.
What I think's interesting today is that instead,
it's like, I want to be president
because I'm dang good at what I do
and I'm the best person for the job.
Whereas historically it's been, I'm doing this to serve.
Well let's talk about change in narcissism.
So yeah, there is this clinical diagnosis to meet full criteria is quite rare, but there's
a range and all of us are somewhere on that range, just like for any other personality
trait. And one way of thinking about change is to think about how there are ebbs and flows in
narcissism in the population, depending on culture.
You're alluding to that, right?
Like, well, maybe there is more, at least brazen embracing of like one's own ego and
being okay with that being the primary motive for you to seek
office or have power.
So when I think of generational change, the person who really leaps to mind always is
Jean Twenge.
So Jean Twenge is a psychologist.
She's very well known for doing these generational studies.
So whenever there's a questionnaire, like
for narcissism, the leading questionnaire is the narcissistic personality inventory.
And it's been around for a while and Jean Twenke analyzed data that begins in 1982.
So she has college students who have taken the questionnaire in the early 80s, through the mid 80s,
college students in the 90s, and then college students in the early aughts, and then on and on.
It's kind of like a, you know, instant cultural study across generations.
One of her most famous findings was the conclusion that we are becoming more narcissistic as a society,
particularly in the United States.
Which isn't shocking.
Do you think that we are?
Well, yes, I think so.
I think part of it though is maybe going along with this idea of the death, if you will,
of the myth of Cincinnati.
Maybe we're not becoming more narcissistic.
We just don't feel the need to hide it anymore.
Which would affect how people answer questionnaires, by the way.
For sure. I will say one of the periods of my life that I was maybe least happy was when
I was applying to business school, because for a period of months, you're only focused
on yourself. You're writing all of these essays about how great
I am and I'm just thinking about stories of things that I've done or getting my resume
up or getting people to write letters of recommendation about me. And I remember saying to a friend,
I can't wait for this to be over because I'm so tired of just thinking about myself all
the time.
Well, maybe this study that I'll tell you about from Gene Twenge,
and I should say there's a graduate researcher,
at least at the time, Cooper McAllister, who is also a co-author.
I mean, maybe we'll say something about focus on self.
So what Gene has found is that beginning from the early 80s,
all the way up through, I want to say like around 2008, like what I guess is now called the Great Recession.
You find an upward trend, meaning that the scores on this narcissistic personality index on average trended upward,
that each successive generation was more likely to score higher in the trade of narcissism.
I think Jean may have coined the term generation me.
But then, and here's the plot twist, really interesting, what she finds using the exact
same techniques, looking at data since the Great Recession, is a decline in scores on
the narcissistic personality index.
Really?
Yeah.
Like actually a steeper decline than there was an incline. In the summary of this paper, she says that the decline in narcissistic personality inventory
scores during and after the recession took narcissism back to their original levels in
the 1980s and 90s.
I mean, I think it takes something like a societal shift, which you could say the Great
Recession was, to reset expectations of individuals and maybe even a society to create that massive
change, right?
Yeah.
So what is your speculation?
Because, you know, by the way, it's all correlational data.
And there are many scientists who hate this kind of research because, you know, you can
just have a really long dinner party conversation about all the reasons why there are these
trends because it's not an experiment, right?
So there are so many things going on that could account for it.
Nevertheless, I think it's very important data.
So what are your intuitions about why narcissism may have risen and then fallen during this
later period?
My mind immediately goes to the mortgage lenders.
Michael Lewis writes about this in The Big Short.
You have all of these individuals who think that they are the king or the queen of their
castle who are just crushing it.
And I am the greatest I, I, I, I, and they think that they can do anything.
Titans of the universe.
And then when the market and the global economy goes through this massive recession, we stop
thinking about ourselves individually and how great we are, and instead have to look
collectively.
It's almost like when things are going well, I want to take credit.
And when things are going poorly, it's like, it's everyone's situation.
Your attention maybe goes outward instead of inward.
Yeah.
And so now it's less about me and thus narcissism dies and it's more we're in this collective
thing together.
Well, nobody knows, but that is absolutely the explanation that is put forth in this
study.
The gist is that when the economy is doing great.
Oh, so they say it's based on the economy itself.
Well, they're just speculating just like you are.
Speculating, yes.
Yeah, but no, it's very consistent with what you're saying. It's like, you know,
the times are good. You think that you're doing great as an individual. Like, I'm amazing.
The article also talks about like a sense of entitlement
and this antagonism that we were talking about a moment ago, this kind of like, I'm doing
great relative to you. There's something about these times of economic growth and prosperity
that incline one to think that way more on average, not everybody obviously, but a cultural
trend. And then in times of economic decline,
times where people are really suffering,
that might lead you to be more communal, right?
Your attention is going outward.
I don't know whether this has been tested
or even how you would test it,
but let me just suggest another explanation
for things that changed around that time in history. And again, I'm going to reference Jean Twenge because she's more recently been
known for thinking about social media. A lot of her research is cited in this New York
Times bestselling book, The Anxious Generation by NYU professor John Haidt. You've probably
heard of this book, right?
Of course. I mean, I feel like it comes up in conversation all the time.
So this thesis that John Height advances in The Anxious Generation is that the young people today,
I think Gen Z essentially, like they grew up in a completely different environment than he grew up in,
than I grew up in, then our parents grew up in.
And the big change is social media, this technological invention.
And I don't know the exact birthdate of Facebook, which was like the OG social media platform.
Obviously, there's not only TikTok, and there's Instagram, and there's Snapchat.
But we do know that those things did not exist in the 70s and 80s and the book the anxious generation says that
increases in social media have led to increases in
anxiety, it's very possible that
this decrease in
narcissistic personality traits is really about a decrease in self-esteem
I would have thought it was the opposite.
This is where I was trying to figure out where you were going,
because I would have thought the rise of social media
led to a rise in narcissism,
because everybody wants to be an influencer.
And you're saying that it's having an opposite effect.
I would not have guessed that.
I find this all so confusing.
I, like a lot of people, you know, wanted to know what John
Hyde who, by the way, I think I met him even before I went to graduate school. So he was
maybe one of the very first psychologists that I met. I've been interested to understand
what he's saying about social media because he's a really accomplished prominent social
psychologist. But at the same time, I was talking to other people who are more expert in
adolescent mental health, and they were arguing literally the exact opposite that he was arguing.
They were like, there's almost no effect of social media on mental health, and there's a lot of
evidence that it's good for, you know, many teenagers, you know, it's so complicated. And
what I really think is that we need more research.
I know we're digressing a bit from this original question about narcissism, but to the extent
that there is a relationship between social media and narcissism, I do think it's worth
thinking about. And absolutely, given that narcissistic personality inventory scores
have dropped, not increased since
the birth of social media, which again might be a coincidence. So yeah, you know,
the scientific jury is out. Mike, I want to turn to one last piece of
scientific evidence as we come to the end of this conversation on narcissism.
And that's a different kind of change. And here I get to be positive because there's change across the lifespan.
Across a human's lifespan.
Yeah, across one human's lifespan, right?
So now I'm not talking about like growing up in the 60s
compared to growing up in the 80s.
I'm talking about, you know, Mike when he's 20,
Mike when he's 30, Mike when he's 40.
So that's a very different way of thinking about change.
And I wondered if you might share with me
about how old the narcissist that you used to work with was.
When I worked with him, the individual was in his 30s.
Okay, well, they're older now.
Yeah.
So there was recently a meta-analysis,
meaning like you take all the data that have been collected
and you kind of average together what's been found. And in this meta-analysis, meaning like you take all the data that have been collected and you kind of average together what's been found.
And in this meta-analysis of narcissism across the lifespan, it's very clear that narcissism
decreases from as early as you can measure it, like as early as you're able to read and
respond to questionnaires.
I think they actually started eight, which has got to be the very, very low end. Not a lot of data there. But the linear trend is downward all the way across
to age 77, which is, I think, the span.
Wait, peak narcissism is when you're 8 years old?
Well, I will say that it's a linear trend, so I guess so. But I will also just say that
there's got to be scant data at the young end because I never give questionnaires
Honestly to kids who are like younger than 12 or 13 at the lowest right? You're not even sure any well
They're they're very I don't want to be too confusing here
They're very egocentric in that like they don't actually
Make comparisons with others in the same way that the older among us do right like you ask a nine or ten year old
How messy they are they're like just? others in the same way that the older among us do, right? Like you ask a nine or ten-year-old
how messy they are, and they're like just not thinking about things the way that like
when you ask a sixteen-year-old, they're thinking about how messy they are relative to other
people. So that's a bit of a footnote. But essentially, if you consider narcissism to
be not a great thing, which it's not a great thing, the good news is that these linear
declines suggest that maybe that narcissist that used
to work with is a little less narcissistic, at least a little bit, than they were then.
Right.
I'd love to go back to Aditi's question and just say what I would tell myself if I could
go back and tell myself how I should have dealt with a narcissist in my own life.
Because she says, what would be an effective solution
to minimize their possible negative impact on society?
I don't know that I, or any of us can answer necessarily
how to reduce a person's impact on society,
but I will say, I wish I could go back to myself
all those years ago.
Yeah, what would you do?
And tell myself that it's not worth spending one minute
with someone that toxic and that narcissistic,
and you don't have to go through that.
Either get out of the situation if possible,
or get away from that relationship.
I think I thought I had to endure it,
and I had to just deal with it.
You were probably thinking like, what can I do?
Right, and I wish I had told myself,
in fact, don't do anything about this.
Don't try to fix the situation.
Don't try to fix the relationship.
Don't try to power through.
Don't try to bring out their non-narcissistic self.
Just leave.
Yes, in every way, yes.
Look, I wanna say something else about this meta-analysis.
So you look at this graph and you're like,
oh, narcissism goes down some, like over life,
and it's like a downward linear trend.
You're like, yay, people become less narcissistic.
I think you also didn't want to wait around
until the guy was like 65 when he would be like.
Well, also if they started at 100
and their linear trend is down and ends at 80.
Well, okay, this is the thing I want to say
about this meta-analysis.
The meta-analysis also found that this is a fairly stable trait.
So the rank ordering, meaning like if you line everyone up
and you're like, most to least narcissistic,
and you line them up again 20 or 30 years later,
you get, you know, every similar rank ordering.
So even though the average levels are dropping, there's a lot of stability like there is for
other traits.
And so yeah, if you have somebody who's really narcissistic, unfortunately, in your life
space, right, you can make a good educated guess that they're going to continue to be
relatively narcissistic for a very long time.
I mean, that's why it's called a personality disorder.
You know, there are many forms of psychopathology that have an acute time course.
It's like, you know, you have an episode of depression, for example.
But personality disorders are chronic.
And so in answer to Aditi's question, well, you gave an answer, which is leave.
As you know, I'm a big fan of changing the situation, so 100% agree with you.
But you can't leave society.
Right.
So, like, what do you do when political candidates or whoever are narcissistic?
I went and looked in this 2015 article that I've been quoting occasionally in this conversation.
This is, like, the clinical perspective on narcissistic personality disorder and its treatment.
And I went and looked at what they recommend to clinicians for treating clinically diagnosed
individuals with narcissistic personality disorder.
And this is incredibly depressing. It's like, well, try to use words like, as you said earlier,
to like help the narcissist share your perspective, like try to be non-judgmental and maintain
inquisitive stance. And I was just like imagining being a clinician who had to see people with
narcissistic personality disorder all day. And I was like, oh my gosh.
So I don't think we have an answer for DT.
I don't think these clinical recommendations give you much of a solution.
I don't think your personal recommendation helps us at a society level.
But maybe at least naming the fact that this is a problem.
I don't know if it's a solution, but seems like a step forward.
Maybe the idea is the more informed we are, the better we'll be able to face the situation.
And that's where, as they say, knowledge is power.
Coming up after the break, a fact check of today's episode and stories from our NSQ listeners.
And now here's a fact check of today's conversation.
Angela says that the myth of Narcissus predates the invention of mirrors. However, the earliest known manufactured mirrors, found in modern-day Turkey, date back 8,000
years, much earlier than ancient Greece, and were made with volcanic glass.
Mirrors were also used throughout antiquity.
We see evidence of this in depictions of people gazing at hand mirrors found on ancient Greek pottery.
Angela is also slightly incorrect about the history of covered mirrors.
The practice, which has been documented across many cultures, has long been associated with mourning.
Many Jewish people still practice the tradition during Shiva as a display of humility and to focus attention on the deceased.
Also, we should clarify that the subtypes of narcissism that Angela describes, grandiose and vulnerable, have been documented extensively in recent psychological research,
but they're not differentiated in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
And some researchers argue that these two subtypes of narcissism should
be broken down further.
Later, Angela refers to Facebook as the OG social media platform.
Facebook was founded in 2004 and became available to the public in 2006.
Several other social networking platforms came earlier, including MySpace and Hi5, which were founded in 2003,
Friendster in 2002, LiveJournal in 1999, and 6 Degrees in 1997.
One final note.
Listeners who want to know more about Gene Twenge and Jonathan Haidt's work on teenagers
and social media might like to check out episode 602 of Freakonomics Radio.
Is screen time as poisonous as we think?
That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts on last week's episode about parents
oversharing about their kids, both on and offline.
Hi, Angela and Mike.
This is John Rury from Lawrence, Kansas. I think that many
people would see this as a cultural phenomenon as a sort of example of this.
We were in Iceland last year and made some friends and were at the house of
one of them, Peter, and his wife Efti mentioned that their son lived in Boston.
It took us quite a while and many questions to finally ascertain that he was a PhD student
in mathematics at Harvard.
Of course, for many Americans,
this would be a point of great pride
and one of the first things that we would hear
about this young man.
But in Iceland, this was not something
that was a focal point at all.
I think Annette Oro at Penn would say
that this is a status-affirming behavior among
educated Americans and of course in places like Iceland and many other parts of the world,
values are quite different and behavior is different accordingly.
Hi Mike and Angela. I have a fairly mobile job that takes my family literally to different
continents every few years. When my kids were little, it was comforting to share my children's lives on social media
with family and also with friends that live similar lives because they're in a sense my tribe,
my proverbial village that it takes to raise a child. It was a pleasure laughing together
at my kids' silliest moments, but also receiving their advice and words of wisdom,
and also seeing kids grow up as well. Now, as my little ones are getting older,
I've almost stopped sharenting completely at this point,
but I do mourn that sense of virtual community
that we used to have with these people
that have pretty much seen our kids since birth.
Hello, Angela and Mike.
I'm firmly in the camp of not posting photos
of my children online.
Not only am I friends with many people
I am loosely in contact with,
I feel that our kids deserve the space and nonpermanence
to grow into their own and define who they are.
Seeing posts from parents showcasing
what their children are doing as a memory is one thing,
but we all know the dopamine hit that parent is receiving
when someone likes or comments that photo.
To me, it turns into a cycle of posting children for psychological gain that the parent is receiving.
Ultimately, we live in a world where everything is trying to steal our attention.
Instead of posting about my children, I try my best to be as present and engaged by storing my phone away during family time.
I believe my lack of sharing will allow my children
to grow up in the anonymity they deserve.
And should they choose to have a lively online presence
in the future, it will be their choice,
their voice, their perspective, not mine.
— That was, respectively, John Rury
and two listeners who would like to remain anonymous.
Thanks to them and to everyone who shared their stories with us.
And remember, we'd love to hear your thoughts on narcissism.
Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com
and you might hear your voice on the show.
And you might hear your voice on the show.
And you might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions,
are attention spans really shrinking?
Do we now have the attention span of a gnat or a dog like squirrel, squirrel?
That's coming up on No Stupid Questions.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics
Radio, People I Mostly Admire, and The Economics of Everyday Things.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
The senior producer of the show is me, Rebecca Lee Douglas,
and Lyric Bowditch is our production associate.
This episode was mixed by Greg Rippon,
with help from Jasmine Klinger and Eleanor Osborne.
We had research assistance from Daniel Moritz-Rabson.
Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra. You can follow us on Twitter at nsq.underscore.show,
and you can watch video clips of Mike and Angela
at the Freakonomics Radio Network's YouTube shorts channel
or on Freakonomics Radio's TikTok page.
To learn more or to read episode transcripts,
visit freakonomics.com slash nsq.
Thanks for listening.
Narcissist, that is such a hard word to say.
I know, it's a tongue twister.
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