The School of Greatness - 1 in 5 of Your Friends Are Narcissists | Dr. Ramani Durvasula
Episode Date: December 3, 2025Dr. Ramani Durvasula reveals the shocking truth that one in five people you know may be narcissistic, explaining why this personality pattern has exploded with the rise of social media and reality TV.... She shares how narcissistic relationships follow a predictable cycle of love bombing, devaluation, and discarding that leaves survivors confused and blaming themselves. Through raw personal stories and decades of clinical research, she exposes why trying to fix or change a narcissist is a fool's errand, and introduces practical tools like the DEEP technique to protect yourself. You'll walk away understanding that the greatest defense against narcissism is radical self-acceptance and learning to spot red flags before you're in too deep.Dr. Ramani’s books:Should I Stay or Should I Go?"Don't You Know Who I Am?"It's Not YouDr. Ramani's InstagramDr. Ramani's YouTube channelIn this episode you will:Discover why personality doesn't change and how narcissists are trapped in a cycle of self-loathing they project onto everyone around themUnderstand the DEEP technique that protects you from narcissistic manipulation without engaging in exhausting argumentsBreak free from the athlete's trap of believing you can fix any relationship if you just work harder at itRecognize the love bombing cycle that seduces you in the beginning and keeps you hoping things will return to how they wereMaster the difference between healthy jealousy and pathological jealousy that signals dangerous narcissistic patternsFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1858For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Evy Poumpouras – greatness.lnk.to/1852SCJerry Wise – greatness.lnk.to/1747SCGabor Maté – greatness.lnk.to/1849SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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If you're dealing with a narcissist, don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, don't personalize.
This is a disorder of self-loathing, all that inadequacy and ugly insecurity.
They hate themselves.
But then they put it on other people.
Project it on to other people.
So narcissists are miserable.
They're miserable.
Miserable.
Today, I am joined by one of the world's leading experts on narcissism and narcissistic abuse.
She hosts the award-winning podcast, Navigating Narcissism.
Dr. Romney-Dervostela.
So how do you create boundaries with a narcissist?
It's not easy.
The key with a narcissistic person is to detect it early.
If you meet someone charming and charismatic, one away.
Like, get away from them.
This is dangerous.
But are there some people that are charming and charismatic who aren't narcissistic?
Yeah, but I'm like, I'm all about throwing the baby out with the bathwater this morning.
It's unfortunately at one in five, you date five people.
What are the odds?
Can you love a narcissist or is it impossible?
The bigger question I often get is can a narcissist love?
Is that possible?
So the...
Welcome back to everyone in the School of Greatness.
We have Dr. Romney in the house.
Very excited.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you.
You have been doing intensive work on psychology and specifically about narcissism more recently.
And really your content has been blowing up online.
Thanks.
You've got an amazing book out called Don't Know Who I Am.
Don't you know who I am?
Don't you know who I am?
How to Stay Sane in an Era of Narcissism, Entitlement, and Incivility.
Yeah.
And why is narcissism such a big topic, especially right now in our society?
It's interesting.
It wasn't for a very long time.
I mean, it's fascinating to have been studying something when nobody cared about it.
Like I was like, I was that nerd in the lab with the butterfly that nobody cared about.
I was literally back room of a lab and everyone forgot about.
and everyone forgot about me.
I was content because I'm a nerd.
I'm geeked out.
I was like, this is fascinating.
And then a lot of things happened.
You know, if anyone ever asked me,
this is my theory on it,
is I think, it's interesting.
If you, there's a book from the 1970s
by a guy named Christopher Lash
called The Culture of Narcissism.
And in that book, he really gets,
and this is the 70s, okay?
And he really gets into issues like materialism
and also the falling apart
of American community structures
and family structures.
And so he pins this sort of pathological narcissism
and selfishness to the sort of the erosion
of those structures.
But I think that misses something.
Then it was kind of quiet.
Like this has always been a quiet area,
interestingly, in mental health.
And then reality TV happened.
Social media happens.
We had to witness it all.
Yeah.
And we had to witness it all.
Kids are growing up with it now.
Political dramas and fights.
Lots of, and materialism was on the,
when we look at materialism, social media, and reality TV, that kind of triple threat
where everything was about shameless self-promotion, everything was about validation seeking,
look at me, no, look at me, no, look at me, my life's better than yours. And it was that,
it was, I will never forget the day, actually. I was, when I, someone told me about social
media, it was in that space between my space and Facebook. Yeah. And I had small, small
children at the time and I think I was up late and somebody said you got to look at this thing
called Facebook right and I'm like I don't know what this is and so I at the time I was even married
so really no social life and I look at it and and I'm and it's that moment that penny drop
moment where I could feel that dread in my stomach as though like a ghost appeared in the door
and I thought to myself oh my God this narcissism thing is about to blow up because before that
Think about it.
If you were a narcissist and you needed to get validation,
you actually had to get up and get out of the house.
Right?
Like, no one was going to, you had to get up, kind of get ready, go to work.
A lot of narcissists got their validation at work,
especially men in that era.
And then other people would get it by like going to social events,
going to parties, maybe succeeding at something.
But it was a different game.
Going to the gym, maybe going to the gym.
But now all of it, excelling at something visible, like sports or performing
or like singing.
or something like that.
But then I was like, oh, hell no, you're telling me that people are going to be able to get
validation just sitting at home.
And I thought this narcissism thing's going to blow up.
That was 2008 when I had that revelation.
I started telling people, and you know, people said like, oh, honey, you're just, you're running
off in your head, get some sleep, like you're acting crazy.
And I said, no, no, no, this is going to blow up.
And then it blew up.
And around that time, we're starting to see the beginnings of reality TV shows, like, you know,
survivor and things like that. I'm like, hmm, this is interesting. And then we'd start seeing more
and more, more of the attention-seeking reality TV, housewife type shows and all of that.
A bachelor. And I thought, oh, no, no, no. And then the political winds changed and the word
came into the, into popular use. So imagine going from something that you studied. Only you studied.
No one cared about it. Nobody cared about it. And then also it's in the mainstream.
And then the world had changed and it became mainstream. Exactly. And, but another thing that was
happening too is this, I was studying it in my research. I had been funded by the National
Institutes of Health to look at personality issues because I was working with folks who were working
in community clinics and they would come back from the community clinics back to the main
lab at the university and say, and they would look frazzled and I'd say, hey, what's up? And they'll
say, some of these patients, they're so terrible and they're ruining everyone's lives. And what
we came to find out was that there were some patients who come in entitled and grumpy and take
it out on the staff. And I thought, that's interesting.
These people are not only burning out the staff so they can't give good health care to other people.
They themselves, everyone's dreading, seeing them, so they're not getting good health care.
And then a few years later, I was noticing a pattern in my patients over and over again.
It's like they were all talking about the same relationship.
And I thought, this is interesting.
Nobody ever taught these people about narcissism, because this is clearly what was happening in their relationships.
And I'm not kidding you, once they got educated on these patterns, they were making changes like this.
Some were getting divorced.
Some were splitting up.
Some were saying, I'm going to set boundaries.
I mean, it was insta change.
And they said, we were in couple's therapy for five years
and always about marriage is hard.
You got to communicate.
I'm like communicating with the narcissist is,
I don't know, it's like it's impossible.
It's not as possible.
It's screaming into an abyss.
Like, there's no point.
Wow.
So is there hope for people in marriages
if you're in a relationship with a narcissist
to actually heal the relationship and improve it?
Or is it just going to be hard the rest of your life?
Going on a probability basis,
the answer is no. I think it's going to be hard always. Are there unicorns out there? Sure. But the amount
of commitment you'd need on the part of the person who's narcissistic. I mean, we're talking about
daily commitment. On the person who is a narcissist? The person who's narcissistic has to get into therapy
multiple times a week. They have to, they have to be willing to have humility. They have to be
willing to be mindful. They have to be willing to regulate themselves. That's a long list of things
they need to be willing to do. They can't be impulsive. They can't say whatever is on their mind.
I, it's fascinating because I have worked with, I'd say 25% of the clients I've worked with
in my clinical practice for a long time now, you know, have been narcissistic.
Why would they even come to work with you if they're narcissistic?
Because something's going wrong in their lives.
Their marriage is blowing up.
They're having some sort of public shaming.
Their career isn't going well.
They have to, essentially.
They feel the world is against them.
And in this victimized stance, they roll up to therapy.
And somebody's wanting to complain.
Right. Every so often they're given an ultimatum, maybe by a workplace or by a spouse or someone. Maybe they get caught in an affair. And then they're told that wife or husband or partner or spouse will say, we're not staying together unless you get therapy. Which is a fool's errand because if someone else is telling them to do it, even if someone, even if they do it on their own, there usually isn't much personality. Personality doesn't really change.
Personality doesn't change unless you're like doing therapy every week and holding yourself accountable on the internet.
Listen, I have a certain personality.
I got it tested when I was in my 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s.
It hasn't changed.
I'm a little bit more confident now.
That's how my personality, that's just time served.
Right.
It's like, I put in more reps.
Yes, I put in more reps.
So I'm like, now I know I can do this thing, right?
But it's not that I'm, I was born agreeable.
I grew up agreeable.
I was an agreeable adult.
I'm an agreeable person.
That's just who I am.
When is our personality shaped?
Well, there's two pieces.
of personality. We're born, the sort of the genetic part of personality, if you will, it's called
our temperament. Our temperament. Temperament. You're born and you're either a crying or not a
crier or you're... I can make it ultra simple. Like, you know, there's some kids out there
who have really difficult temperaments. So born into the world difficult. Talk to a parent,
they're kids who are difficult to soothe, to make them stop crying, to help them sleep. As time
goes on, they're just difficult kids. They don't play as nice. They have low frustration tolerance. They're
difficult with their siblings, they're punchy, fighty, they get to school, they can't sit
still, they're always getting into trouble, and none of the adults like them. So these kids
with these difficult temperaments actually have this relationship with the world that's pretty
unpleasant. Everyone's like, sit down, stop that, don't do that. And there's even this vibe
these kids get, like nobody really wants to spend time with them, right, because they're a real
handful. Is it their fault? I mean, they can't really change that when you're five. No, you can't,
but the difficult temperament's a risk factor for the adult narcissistic personnel.
Now, not everybody with a difficult temperament goes on to become narcissistic.
So it's not a slam dunk, but it's definitely when we tell that story backwards.
Every narcissistic client I've ever worked with, without exception, had a difficult temperament as a child.
So that either they, every so often I'd get lucky, we'd phone the parent during therapy and say,
could we talk about this?
Sometimes they'd ask the parent, and the parent would come clean on that and say, yeah, you were a real hand.
Because you had siblings, right?
So they'd compare them to siblings.
Some siblings have this great, easy temperament.
It's not quite, so temperament is that biological part of our personality.
It's how you might see your personality in either one of your parents or in a grandparent
or an aunt or an uncle.
You'll say, wow, I have such a similar personality to that.
That's the genetics of it.
All the rest of it is shaped by the world.
Environment, parents, society, how you were treated and what you're exposed to.
Exactly.
So if you had a, let's say, a challenging temperament growing up, is there hope for you to,
you know, I guess
shift your personality into a different
style with environment? I think so. I think so. I think
a couple of things have to happen. That kid
needs to be met where they're at. So let's say you have a boy
with a difficult temperament who's just energy and you get them into
athletics or you get them into something where they're using
their hands, whatever that might be, building things or something
like that. And you really are with them. Instead of saying
you're being so bad, you're so difficult. Like,
wow, look at that rocky you built. Or like, oh my gosh, you ran 10 miles.
today or are you through the ball or like this is great like let's do it together and they
have a parent who wants to maybe do those things with them I've I've heard of some
this is where it's interesting I hear a lot of these stories if not in athletics but
people who do things like climb mountains that kind of thing and sometimes the
parents got them into these things because the kid was just a bolus of energy
and then they would and then the parents would really encourage them might even go
with them like with them or whatever so I do think if that child feels loved
safe, protected, attached.
They feel like they have a safe base to return to,
which is usually their primary caregiver.
They can relax more into it.
And they have success experiences, right?
So maybe they're not the best kid in school,
but they're really, like they feel loved no matter what,
whether they can read or not,
whether they can do math or not, they're loved,
and that they have these other outlets.
That's cool.
And that a school is supporting them and meeting them.
How many kids do you know who have that things line up like that?
I can count on one hand the number.
because I know who got that lineup.
I mean, who had like all the support, love.
We love you no matter what, yeah.
It's very challenging.
It's interesting because I interviewed Kobe Bryant before he passed, obviously,
and he said his father, one summer when he was playing basketball,
I think he was 13.
He said he didn't score one point the whole summer in like this summer competition league.
And he said, my father told me, no matter what, I'm going to love you.
Whether you score zero points or you're the highest score,
I'm gonna love you no matter what you do.
No matter how good or how bad you are,
I love you no matter what.
And he said that conversation with his dad
gave him the confidence to say,
I'm gonna go out and go for it.
No matter what happens, I'm loved,
is the way he explained it.
And I thought that was interesting,
but not a lot of people have had
like the school support and parent support
and slipping support and like the encouragement.
But it sounds like you can't change a personality,
but you can channel a personality,
into other activities to support their growth.
Is that right?
So every human being has the same sort of essential ingredients
that they need in terms of wanting, you know,
like again, a safe base, a safe place of attachment,
a sense of being loved no matter what.
Yeah, their behavior could be called out.
Like, no, you cannot tear up the living room.
That behavior is not okay.
I love you.
I love you whether you get the 13 points or the no points.
You're still grounded, but I love you.
You're still grounded, you know.
I love you, you know.
And so that sort of consistency and safety,
but it was interesting.
I was just reading a research paper from 2014.
And in this paper, they were talking about how do you,
basically how do you make a narcissistic adult out of a kid?
One thing we're seeing a little bit right now
is this problem of children being overvalued for nothing.
Celebrated for just being.
Celebrated for, like, you're just so great.
And it's, we, you're saying, well, what should we tell the kids
if they're not great?
Well, great means something, right?
Great is excelling.
So you love a child.
You cultivate their strengths.
But the idea being that narcissistic parents are very vulnerable to thinking their kids are great because they have to be.
They're my kids.
So they better be great kids.
So these kids are being told they're all that over and over.
And you're all that.
You're special.
You shouldn't have to struggle with the slings and arrows of the world.
Well, then they get to adulthood and the slings and arrows happen.
And they are not having it.
And that's where you see, that's, that on top of everything else, can also be what fosters the building of the narcissistic child, just overindulge.
And what happens is they're almost, they're overindulged for their outsides and you're so special, but their emotional world isn't nourished.
So nobody is sitting with their emotions and letting them be sad.
It's many times like, come on, let's all be happy.
You know, it's a lot of that.
And that's a dangerous game to play with.
Would you say with your research, if kids grew up in a healthy family,
let's say they got all the tools and resources
and their parents were healed from their traumas
and gave them, you know, discipline, but love
and all these things in the way that, the best way you could.
Is it possible for someone to still be raised as a narcissist,
even if they have this environment of love and safety?
Or how does a narcissist become one?
Is it only through family environment
and the way they were treated?
Or how does that actually happen?
So the problem, if someone had all the fundamentals, right?
The safety, the love, the consistency, the freedom from trauma.
Great values.
The great values.
All of those things, supportive educational environment, all of that.
You still will have a handful, but you will have dropped the probability from here down to here.
Okay.
Right?
It's a chorus race, right?
You've really dropped the likelihood significantly.
Narcissism is, creating adult narcissism
is a complex inter-blend of that biological temperament
meeting up all these environmental conditions.
And there's a range of conditions that can result
in adulthood narcissism.
At the most extreme and probably most difficult
is trauma in childhood.
So a child who is raised and experiences trauma,
you know, significant caregiver loss, chaos,
abuse, observing abuse.
Because that results in inconsistent caregivers, right?
And so that can put a person at risk for developing an adult with narcissistic personality.
But here's where it gets tricky.
The majority of people exposed to trauma and childhood don't become narcissistic.
You see what I'm saying?
We're talking about risk factors.
You could, but you don't always.
So that's one pathway.
This overindulgence is over like, you're so great, you're so special, you're so extraordinary.
My kids are the most extraordinary thing.
That's another model towards traumatic.
I'm sorry, that's another model towards narcissistic personality development.
Conditional love, Kobe Bryant's father.
I'm only gonna love you if you come back having scored 20 points.
If you didn't, don't even show up.
Now imagine that happening a thousand times, 10,000 times.
I love you when you clean the dishes.
I love you, if you get straight A's.
I love you, if you make the soccer goal.
I love you, whatever.
The child learns that they're all love is conditional,
which is really, that's transactional, basically.
All narcissistic relationships in adulthood are transactional.
You set the tone there with condition.
A lot of this, though, comes down to something called attachment.
An attachment is something that's created in the first year or two of life.
It requires an available, consistent, responsive caregiver.
One, singular, you need that.
That person who is there, who looks at the baby, who responds when it cries, who loves it,
who holds it, who feeds it, you need that safe, it's called a secure attachment.
A lot of the research really points to the importance of that secure attachment that as being
something that predicts a lower likelihood of adult narcissistic.
So if you have a secure, you're less likely to be narcissistic, if you don't have that.
But if you have an anxious attachment and an anxiously attached baby is the child who
absolutely flips out when their caregiver leaves.
Like, you know, if the mommy drops them all and they lose it, then person who receives
the child has a hard time soothing the child.
And then when the child sees the parent again, they start crying again, almost like,
how could you leave me?
You abandoned me for five hours?
And that anxious attachment style is very much associated with a narcissistic style in adulthood, yeah.
Can you break down the differences between narcissists, psychopaths, sociopaths, and then also how you spot them?
So there's a big difference.
If I was at a chalkboard here, I'd be drawing a Venn diagram with overlapping circles, okay?
Lots of overlap between narcissism and psychopathy.
lots, okay? The boldness, the meanness, the impulsivity, the disinhibition, the always
work in the angles, the exploitativeness, the manipulativeness, the entitlement, absolutely
overlapping. So you might be wondering, then what's the difference? Here's the difference.
Narcissistic people are insecure. And they are very insecure. And lots of feelings
of inadequacy, okay? So, but that's all happening at an unconscious level. But I want you to
think of a narcissist as somebody who constantly has a stomach ache, right? Because they're
going through their lives, but they're like, there's almost this tension. They're not aware
why they have it, but the tension that the top's going to get blown off and we're going to
be able to see their inadequacies. That's why they're so sensitive to criticism. Oh, my God. Like if I were to
say, hey, like, yeah, it's interesting. You got some dust on your shirt and you're like, oh, really? And
you start coming at me. It's like such a smart. Yeah, right. You got that. Like, yeah. This and this
Isn't criticizing you?
Yes.
You see what I'm saying?
That's a hedge against a shame.
That's the narcissist game.
Psychopath doesn't go there.
Psychopath is not anxious.
Psychopath is not insecure.
They're calm.
Their nervous systems are different.
So there's a part of our nervous system called the autonomic nervous system.
This is the involuntary part of our nervous system, and it's from which the sympathetic nervous
system comes off, which you know is fight or flight or freeze.
And that fight, flight, freeze, and there's even a fourth part to it called Fawn, which
you could talk about, but that autonomic reaction, that like, boom, adrenaline, got, you know,
eyes wide open kind of reaction, that's not there for the psychopath. So whereas I, I don't know,
if I saw something out there and I saw someone had a $100 bill hanging out their wallet,
never could I ever. Like, I would have a heart attack from the anxiety of thinking about, like,
no, you know, because I have a very, probably overly functioning autonomic nervous system.
But for somebody who's a psychopath, they'd clip that and their heart rate wouldn't.
They would not think, they just take it, steal it, and...
So they have no anxiety.
No excitement, no anxiety, and they're very stress-resistant.
In that way, that's why there's so many psychopathic CEOs.
If you're going to be a CEO and nothing bothers you, you're able to say, cut those 100,000 jobs,
and then you still go off and play golf for the afternoon because nothing gets you.
They sometimes make great surgeons, because when all hell's breaking loose, they're just sort of calmly doing their surgery thing.
It really is...
But there is a coldness and a cowardice.
Because there is almost like no capacity for empathy, no capacity for intimacy.
Interesting.
And psychopaths are almost singularly motivated by power, pleasure, and profit, and mostly by power.
They solely want to dominate because that's what they do.
Narcissists like to dominate, but they actually kind of seem like dumb dogs next to the psychopaths.
Really?
Yeah.
The closest we get to overlap is what we call malignant narcissism.
So that's when we have all the goodies we see in narcissism.
But we see is more of a sadism and a paranoia in the malignant narcissists.
They're the most dangerous narcissists.
They're still not fully psychopaths because they still have the insecurity and the inadequacy.
The psychopaths don't have that.
They're not insecure.
No.
I mean, if you see a psychopath get mad, it's simply because you might have gotten in the way
of something they needed to get done.
You know what they'll instead do?
They'll very quietly figure out a way to destroy you.
Get rid of it.
the other calmly have someone say, like, I'll literally look at you if I was the psychopathic boss
and you were working for me, I'd be like, and I'd be calm and I'd go, and then, I don't know whether
that means you'd kill that, fire that, or whatever, but no problem with that. Right. And very
they don't have the emotion, no empathy. Does narcissists have empathy?
Narcissists have, we tend to say, oh, they don't have empathy. They have what we call, I like to
call it, instrumental empathy. They weaponize empathy. So narcissists,
get what empathy is. They know. They use it against you. They use it. They use it. They use it to get
what they need. They don't necessarily use it against you. But like if they want to get you to do
something, oh man, I heard your mom sick. Oh, man. Oh my gosh. How's she doing? I'm so sorry. Like
it's rough. You know, my mom was sick. She was really sick for a while too. I get all that.
It's a rapport. It has a rapport. And then they're getting some from you. Right. So it feels like
empathy, you know. And especially when you first meet them, that's why so many people think
narcissistic people are charming and charismatic.
They know what the feel, they know what's right.
They know, or I should say, they know what empathy is.
They know how to read the room.
So they got it.
But they can't be bothered with it.
They actually cognitively get it.
They can think about empathy.
I need something from him.
Somebody said his mom's sick.
So let me work the mom angle here
because that's going to help him feel better.
What they don't have is any regard for,
so they have no regard for the feelings of others.
They don't care.
So when they're done with you and they've gotten what they need from you and someone's the next week when they're fully done with you and say, hey, his mom got sicker and be like, yeah, so what do you want me to do about it?
So it's very cold when they're done.
So that's why people say, well, don't tell me they don't have empathy because it seemed like they cried at that movie or they were really understanding my feelings.
Odds where they needed something at that point.
So what was the most, the scariest narcissist?
What was it called?
Or the most dangerous, malignant narcissist.
Okay, so can you explain again what that is?
So let's talk about, let's view narcissism as almost like this inner core, okay?
And the inner core of narcissism is this variable empathy, usually a lack of empathy, entitlement, grandiosity, validation seeking, a sense of envy for other people or the assumption that other people envy them, the inability to regulate their anger.
when they're frustrated, disappointed,
or stressed, a sense of shame.
So if anyone points out a flaw in them,
they tend to react with rage.
A reactive sensitivity to criticism.
So if anyone points out anything, they come at them.
Blame shifting and responsibility shifting.
So they blame other people for what is actually
their responsibility.
They're very controlling, very egocentric.
Everything is about them.
Everything is self-serving.
Insecure?
Deeply insecure, lots of feelings of inadequacy, but those are all sort of pushed down.
All of these things I'm talking about, the entitlement and all the rest of it, it's like
a suit of armor that protects that inner core of inadequacy, so nobody ever sees it.
If I'm walking around telling you I'm all that, well, then I can't be inadequate, right?
And if I got a big fancy car and a big fancy house and a big fancy person on my arm, then I'm all that, right?
But it is actually fascinating to watch that moment.
If you could put it in slow-mo when the shame gets activated.
I don't know.
They don't get the girl or they don't get the guy or they don't get the job.
And the rage, it just, it pops out like that.
Oh, man.
He is an idiot.
I feel like, I feel like I'm so reactive to this, not in a negative way,
but I feel I'm remembering many things in my life.
In many relationships, I have always wanted to do.
therapy with people. And in multiple relationships, they were resistant. They never wanted to do it.
They said, no, I'll never do therapy, so resistant, eventually getting into therapy. So it's so funny
you're saying this because I feel like, I don't know, I'm just having these flashbacks here,
but everything you're saying here just seems like crazy to me. So I feel like maybe I might have
been with some narcissist, maybe I haven't with everyone. But I'm wondering what attracted to
me to maybe some of people that had this when originally I didn't know they had this it didn't
seem like they had these things it seemed like you know they were loving and supportive and kind
and generous but the more you say these things i'm just like okay that's interesting just to
know so with the narcissism we have to talk about sort of the top of the line behaviors and those
are our presentations charm charisma confidence curiosity
And they also...
Can you have those things and not be narcissistic?
You can't.
Because I'm a very curious person.
I care, you know, I'm like...
So here's where it gets interesting, right?
Is you can be curious and when you can find an empathic, charismatic person, be whole to them.
They are the unicorns of the human being.
Like you really are like...
Someone who is confident and caring.
When I meet the confident, charismatic, empathic, kind, respectful, humble person.
I do. I literally, I'm like, okay, everyone. And I can tell you it doesn't happen often. And I'm usually like, I look goo-go-go-eyes because I'm thinking. And then, of course, I'm poking at it. I'm like, no, no, no, I'm going to find, or find what's wrong with it. Every so often I find it. And I'm like, it hasn't happened often. It hasn't happened often. But here's the thing, the charm, the charisma, the confidence, the curiosity. There's also comfort that they also offer. It's like they'll often feel like they're rescuers. I can take care of it all.
they'll be very generous.
Up front, right?
You know, all, it's all a front game, right?
So what happens then?
The curtain comes down across all your common sense.
And you miss the little things.
Yeah.
And people, and if you, either you miss the lack of empathy
and the anger and the rage and all the other stuff,
or you justify it.
Well, yeah.
You know, well, he's got a big job or she's really stressed
or she doesn't mean that or that's just their culture.
Oh my gosh, you just said that.
Someone I was with was like, well, this is my culture.
No, no, no.
Someone said that all the time.
This is my culture.
No.
No.
And I tell me no empathy?
Like, it makes no sense to me.
Like, I've heard that excuse and I get to say this because I'm from a very different
culture.
And I'll say, oh, no, I do not know a culture where meanness is permitted.
And to say to that person, if that's your culture, then go with God.
Exactly.
Because this is working at someone and being angry and not regulating your emotions is not culture.
No, that's not a culture.
culture. But yet, but yet, I'm amazed at how often, I was listening, I was reading an article
by a linguist recently, and the linguist was talking about how people talk over each other
in certain cultures, right? And they were using that as a way to rationalize interrupting.
And there's interrupting and there's interrupting. Narcissistic interrupting is not only, it's
contemptuous interrupting. What's that I mean, like dismissive interrupting? It's dismissive, like,
Um, okay, all right. You know, you're talking and then I, I not only cut in, but it's basically like, uh, your point of view doesn't matter or yeah. You're, you're an idiot. This is, I know what's really, yeah. Yeah. Interesting. Okay. So you, you share some of these signs of, um, malignant. No, that's, okay. So let's go back to the core. So we got the core of lack of empathy, all that stuff I talk about. Entitlement. Yes. Yes. Now the problem with narcissism is their subtypes. Oh my gosh. Not all narcissists are created. We really,
do need a whiteboard nail, like, I'd be writing notes up there because what we have then
is the classical narcissist, the sort of 57 Chevy of narcissism, is the grandiose narcissist.
It is the big, charming, confident, I'm the one, I'm the best, no insight, very little empathy,
kind of, but very like big salespersony.
That's the grandiose narcissist.
Wow.
Grandios.
This is someone who says when you meet them in the first day, I love you.
Yeah, they're often like, we're going to be together forever.
Once in a lifetime love story.
This is magical, right?
Is that?
Oh, man, flashbacks for me.
Grandios.
But then when we talk about the malignant narcissist, again, we have all that stuff, lack of empathy
and all that other stuff, but they are more menacing, they are more controlling, they're
a little bit more scary they're sadistic they're paranoid what if they have both of those
things usually they can they can but and what would that's a horrific combination because then that
person's real charming on the front end and then once you cross the threshold and walk through all the
way in with them now you're dealing with their malignant manipulative scary and and when we see controlling
When we see manipulative, I'm sorry, malignant narcissism,
we're seeing people who are often,
they're more likely to be aggressive, to be violent,
to be abusive, to isolate people from ever being able to get help,
from being abusive in the workplace.
We hear these big, awful workplace abuse stories,
especially a lot in the Me Too era,
a lot of those folks are malignant narcissists.
Right.
So how do you, and Tyler, if we have a whiteboard in there,
can you bring it one way into the Sharpie?
or with a dry erase marker because i think we have i think we have a small i think we have a small
i think we have a small whiteboard if you find one or see if matt has one um so what happens if you're
with a narcissist you you maybe it's been a year you've been dating someone or you're you're
you're boss didn't seem like it at the beginning but then you're figuring out oh check check check
they've got a lot of these things but you know the first six months was seemed great or it seemed
like it was amazing but now we're seeing the curtain you know pull back and some of these things
are coming out and we're not feeling good about the relationship whether it's a working
relationship a friendship an intimate relationship we've spotted it yep what I'm hearing you say
is there's really no way to change a narcissist no so trying to change them is not going to happen
that's a fool there doesn't mean we just pretty much have to rip the cord and and rip the band-aid
and get out or how does it so it's not that simple yeah right we can
can't walk away from all relationships. People can't just quit their jobs. Let's say a person
starts figuring this out five years in a relationship and then married and they're children.
What if it's their family of origin? And they're like, I've done my homework and this is actually
my parent or my sibling. People say, well, I don't know that I'm willing to cut off from my entire
family. So I'm not going to sit here and tell people that, oh, you just got to always go.
In fact, my first book on the topic of narcissisms called Should I Stay or Should I Go, Surviving a Relationship with a Narcissist.
And I wrote it from that point of view because it's too simplistic to say, well, get up and go.
Like you said, rip off the Band-Aid.
So if you're, and neither path is easy.
But in an ideal world, I will be frank with you.
And there's actually an interesting group in Israel that's gathering, has gathered some data on this on narcissistic abuse.
And they've found that the thing that works best in dealing with the narcissistic.
relationship that resulted in the best outcomes was going no contact, like having no contact
with them. Completely blocking, cut you off.
Because it's almost like a toxin, right? If there's a toxic gas, the best way to feel better
is to eliminate. I have no more toxic. You have a little bit, you're just going to be feeling
a little bit of pain consistently. It's going to be holding on to it. Correct. But a lot of people
don't have that. So the biggest, if you're going to have to stay in this relationship,
you have to engage in something that I and others have called radical acceptance. This is never going
change. This is who they are. This is it. So, and I then I tell people, I have something
called the deep technique that I talk about. The deep technique is when I tell people, if you're
dealing with a narcissist, don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, don't personalize.
So deep, don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, don't personalize. And so when they're
coming at you, and if you can remember, you really are keeping it tight. It's a lot of
lot of, you, you talk you're in a deposition. Yes? No. Okay. Sounds good. Sure. Now, now, narcissists don't
like that because they love the fight. They're going to bait you. They're going to bait you.
They're going to bait you. And they, when I tell you, when they bait you, they don't play.
They go for everything that's going to do. Make something else on making stuff up.
They start making stuff up. They go after your friends. They draw your friends in it.
Threatening to shame you publicly, whatever it is, right? And so then at some people, people,
take that bait and then the narcissist's like game on, you know, and they're all, I got you. Because when you're fighting, they're fighters. That's what they do. In fact, there was a great research study came out from Ohio State University, Ohio Boy. And phenomenal study that came out this year. And over, over 450 studies they examined and found really strong effects that narcissism is consistently associated with aggression. It's a very, it's, there's nothing soft about this. This is about aggression. They want the fight.
They are always a better fight.
Oh my gosh.
And they want the fight, so they bait you.
So you got to be made a steal.
Don't defend, don't engage, don't play.
To not get into the fight.
Yeah, I won't, I want to speak names here.
But in a previous relationship, I remember I learned to let go of jealousy in my 20.
When I was in my teens and 20s, I was jealous.
And, you know, if my girlfriend, the person I was dating was with other guys, I was just didn't know to handle it.
Right.
I was, you know, afraid.
I was like oh what's happening it was just like jealous then I remember a friend of
mine was like you've got to kill the jealousy monster inside of you this is not
serving you in your relationships if someone cheats you're gonna find out about it
and then you move on or whatever but being jealous about something that's not
happening is just making you anxious and worried and it's hurting you and it's hurting
the relationship so it took me a while but I learned in my 30s and in a specific
relationship, which was someone who got a lot of male attention, let's say, a lot, always.
And I was never, I never was insecure or jealous about it. I think I was just so confident,
I was like, you know, whatever. I mean, this person was getting a lot of attention in public
and in line or whatever they did. And I was just like, okay, like it never bothered me. And I don't
know why. I think maybe just because I'm older and I'm in maturity. And I was just, I felt so
comment, I was like, okay, if they want to go to someone else, go be with them. If I'm not the
right fit for you, why would I be jealous and insecure? But they, it's almost like they always
wanted me to react to something. And I was like, okay, if you want to be with them, go be with them.
All right. So, you know, and I never reacted. And they are always trying to be like, oh, this person
took my number today. And this person, I was like, okay, well, what do you want? There's a name for that.
And that thing you're talking about is called triangulation. Triangulation. Every relationship with a
narcissist is a threesome. You just don't know it because they always need that third person
in the relationship, whether it's someone gave me the number or someone's noticing me or this person
DM me or this person's hitting on me here. They're always trying to and they're always trying
to create that sense of intrigue or the idea that somebody is more into them or their or again,
it's often them creating the jealousy or they be incredibly jealous of their partners.
There's a difference between jealousy and pathological jealousy.
There's two different things.
So jealousy is normal.
We are a, actually, we're a pair bonded species, we human beings.
We are, we like, we pretty much are about generally, normatively, have sex with one person.
People are like, no, that person she had.
I said, yeah, they were only having sex with them.
They weren't having sex with you.
They were still sexually monogamous.
With one part at that moment.
They weren't banging you.
They were banging someone else.
You were on paper in a relationship with them.
You went to the same home, but their sex was as someone else.
Okay?
But we tend to be parabonded.
We tend to be monogamous, all right?
So, jealousy is a threat to that.
Think of it Darwinianly, right?
If I'm in a relationship and a threat comes in, right?
Normal jealousy is that sort of evolutionary jealousy, right?
I'm with a person.
If somebody comes in as a threat to that relationship,
I've lost the resources and support for our offspring, right?
That's all that Darwinian stuff's right, movie production.
Pathological jealousy, though.
That starts getting into the realm of things like paranoia and negative mood states and all that.
Jealousy doesn't feel good.
But when I've worked with couples, they're like, I'm jealous.
I'm like, that's good.
That means you still got a skin in the game.
Because when I've been with people worked with couples or worked with individuals,
and they'll say, I'm not even jealous when people notice my husband.
I kind of feel sad because I'm like, yeah, this thing, this thing's kind of kind of done.
I feel like, yeah, I don't feel jealous.
I feel like I trust the person I'm with.
Yeah, but that's where we're talking about pathological jealousy, right?
So I think of my partner, ironically, on my drive here, he was talking about something
and about this woman who I knew we were going to see who had hit on him.
And this dude is so loyal, it levels it to a whole new level.
And I remember thinking in the driver, I'm like, I got that little funny thing in my tummy.
I don't like, huh?
He doesn't even live in this country.
And so I'm thinking, that's, and I was like, that's good.
That's good that I'm still feeling like.
I still got a dog in the fight.
But it doesn't mean you're like, for days letting it stress you out and like talking
about it.
Only because we're talking about it here.
Yeah, of course, yeah.
And so the paranoial jealousy is some, I mean.
That's a narcissist thing.
This is where, paranoia.
Yeah, okay.
So I remember in this specific relationship, it was like, she would make things up.
be like oh this person is hitting on you and i was like no i didn't even know this person is
and then we just be like used against and then it was like well i'm not speaking to you for a couple
days because i've you're you're like you're lying to me you must not be telling me the truth i'm
like what it's just like kept going on and on so yeah if you want to use this if you have any
examples next time we have been yeah i think this would be this would be cool to show on youtube
people love this yeah um okay so there's a little bit of jealousy as normal means you care
but the path what are you saying with a parent paranoid the pathological jealousy
pathological jealousy yeah that's a narcissist that's more of an it's a more paranoid it's more
antagonistic it's more about you must be doing something you're doing so it's accusatory it's
almost delusional oh my gosh okay just so much is coming up for me and what would you say again
are the main causes what are the main things that happen to cause someone to become
is it all trauma-based it's no it's it's partly trauma it's also that
temperament it is chaos in the early environment it's it's lack of secure
attachment it's overvaluation of the child I should be the child can do no
wrong and they're so wonderful I mean it's interesting we're about to see
something fascinating happen and I don't know it's gonna go down we're
we're about to see because what Facebook's coming up on 20 years soon right we're
We're about to see the first generation of kids who were born into the Facebook world,
where every moment being documented and shared.
Since they were born.
Since they were born.
This is the first time we're going to be seeing this.
So I bless the people out there who are going to start collecting this data because we now have,
you know, you're going to see what happens if you were, because I had kids way before this.
So I did not, the only people saw their pictures with people actually put them in an envelope,
mail the picture, a picture, kind of thing.
Came over to the house and looked at the actual baby.
But this is a, this is a whole new game.
for kids who basically were accessories
to their parents' lives.
Like, look at my child this, look at my child this,
look at my child this, every day there's a new picture.
So is it, do you think it's okay
to share some of your family life on social media
and some of your children's, you know, special moments?
Or do you think we should be protecting our kids
at all costs and never show their face,
never show anything until they're, whatever,
tant or something.
It's a super interesting area.
There's some actually really interesting thinking
and writing about this,
which is these children aren't consenting to this.
Are these children consenting to you showing them have a meltdown?
Or, you know, we see all these silly child videos,
and sometimes I kind of feel a little sadness
because these things stay evergreen.
They didn't agree to that.
And as much of us say, oh, no, it's so cute.
They didn't consent.
It's a vulnerability, right?
So there's some, I know some folks in the developmental sphere of psychology
saying, oh, this may not be entirely cool.
They're not agreeing.
What happens when the kid's 23 and they start going back
and seeing all these, like, things that their mom or dad post.
and they're like, huh, that's not really cool.
I wish you wouldn't have done that to me.
But it goes beyond that because even when the child is young,
there's this sense of things are constantly being done to them
without them agreeing to it.
Posing and put these clothes on and do this and let's post you.
Yeah, in a public way.
And then the child also gets this sense of their utility,
their importance to their parents is their social media persona.
You look so pretty in your dress.
You look so cute in your costume.
Like you're wondering, are you costuming your child for Halloween for you?
you or for them.
Or for the validation.
Yeah.
Exactly.
For the validation.
For the likes and engagement.
Yes, exactly.
And that's tough because I have friends who never show their kids stuff and then I have friends
who do show their kids.
And, man, it's just like, yeah, how do we navigate that conversation and how do we?
We're building this airplane in the sky.
Oh, man.
And so the challenge becomes then that I would say it's a.
It's a balancing act between parents talking to each other, both parents, but also, I think there's a larger issue of how much is the child feeling that they're valued, validated for being the kid who poses in social media, right?
Because what does every child want?
They want their parents love and attention.
All they want is their parents love and attention.
So if they start to recognize that if I'm looking good on social media and mommy's getting validated, then they'll put on the weird thing they want her to wear or do the thing that she,
wants them to do, but what's not happening is that their interests, what they value, may not
be cultivated, or everything's a photo op. It's as though the child feels that they're constantly
on display versus just having a moment where they're being present and mindful, and it doesn't
all have to be documented. That, I'm, I've been in fact with this psychologist, I'm concerned
about when these chickens come home to roost and they're going to. What, let's say there are
there are parents that are posting about their kids online, you know, maybe they have a small
following, maybe it's to a private group of their friends and family.
Sure.
That's a kind of a different game.
And or it's the ones that have a bigger following.
If they were going to be posting and they have a bigger following and say, not to their
friends and family, what would be appropriate that you think psychologically in a healthy
manner to be able to talk about your family and your kids, is there a healthy way psychologically
that's going to, you know, not mess them up or, you know?
present with your children emotionally, being aware of their needs, of not turning them into
a performing pony in your circus? Do you know, I mean, again, I say this as the mom of two kids,
right? And there are moments when you think, well, this is the day we're going to take such
and such picture. Somebody's sick. Someone's crying. Someone is torn their dress. Someone is this.
And if you get angry at them because they've ruined your finally laid plans, that child then starts
getting that conditional sense of, I'm only about this person's finally laid plans,
listen, we all do it, we all screw up, we all do that conditionality to our kids.
It's almost impossible to not, it's how quickly we catch ourselves and say, that's not
what they want.
This is not, this is, we're going to Disneyland because they want to go to Disney and we're going
to the park, they want to go to the park, not because what a great day for a photo
op.
Like, I've been on vacation and I've watched families like practically, I mean, literally
screaming, we need this festival of our Christmas.
No way.
And I'm like, oh, my God.
Pay attention, look here.
Let them just splash and be sandy and muddy.
They're at the beach.
And it's that kind of obsessive zeal because all of that social comparison of people wanting
to put out the false self and what is narcissism about the false self.
Ah, narcissism is the false self.
It's a mask.
It's always a mask because it's the mask of what they think the world wants,
how the world wants them to look, which is why more and more people are looking the same.
the same. They're getting the same cosmetic procedures. They have the same bodies. They're driving
the same cars. They're really sort of shills for this sort of artificial mask. That's a
narcissist game. Narcissism is the opposite of authenticity. It's so interesting because
four years ago I wrote a book called The Mask of Masculinity, which is about, and I interviewed
a lot of psychologists and, you know, experts on these kind of personality traits and these masks
that men wear. And I did, I wrote about it because I realized I was wearing a mask, a couple of
different masks for many different years in my life to protect myself, to try to fit in, to try to be
liked and loved by society. One of them being like the athlete mask, it's like I always had to win
at all costs. I needed to be number one. And if I ever lost or got second, then no one would
ever love me. So at all costs, I was like training and developing myself to be the best
athlete I could be and I was a horrible loser I was a sore loser I couldn't handle it I would get
angry I would be like moody I would be like frustrated and I'm not good enough I'd beat myself up
and train obsessively until I got better until I could make sure that you know I could put myself
on a better position athletically and there's these different masks that I'm aware and I realize
that it's all about trying to fit in it was all about men trying to fit in and trying to
belong, but it's not the authentic self.
Correct.
And that, I mean, that's, maybe we'll have a different day.
I'll come in to talk to you about the authentic self, because it's such a big conversation.
When we look at the work of Carl Rogers, right, the humanistic psychologist and other humanists
like Abraham Maslow, so these were the big players in that humanistic universe.
This idea of authenticity and self-actualization, so if you're ready to view human growth
is a mountain, self-actualization is the summit, it's the top.
I can, in my lifetime, I've met five self-actualized people, and it was unforgettable.
And they were always older.
I think it's hard to self-actualize when you're younger, and they were deeply authentic.
I mean, like, you did feel like you were in the face of greatness with them, but some
from ordinary.
Like, one was a man who was a, he was an auto mechanic in Johannesburg.
And I was like, I am in the presence of absolute greatness right now.
What did that feel like, in his experience?
It was like, absolute serenity.
I felt it I felt at one with him at one with the situation
I felt more calmed down I felt like I could keep listening to him
this was a man with almost no education who again he fixed cars
in Johannesburg and actually in a pretty not in the nicest of surroundings
and he was joy like he was just human joy and it's not because he was laughing
but he was so proud of what and anyone looking at it like there's not a lot happening here
But it was this genuine, authentic, like, please come into my, look at my beautiful space.
This is my life.
And the other person I met who was same thing, Joy, and that man, that Johannesburg man,
I'm still not in touch with, but this other man I am.
And he is somebody who had a moment in his life, and he decided to devote his life to
children and families living in poverty in India.
And I worked with a school he was working with in India.
And I remember sitting with him, we were kind of actually kind of sitting next to an open tour.
it smelled like an open sewer he's just chilling he's just chilling and i'm like i was i could have
sat there all day and it was hot and there were flies it was uncomfortable and and he was magnificent
and the and it wasn't just the good the mechanic guy wasn't out there saving the world he was
fixing cars this guy happened to be doing something for a very small community in in this village
in india right in service but he was in service the other one was not but there was such a
congruence between who they were as human beings and how they conducted themselves and how
they were in the world.
There was no sense of someone has more, I want what they have, someone's got it better,
why is that happening?
How come they got their turn first?
And I remember when I think about them, I have the photograph of the gentleman from Johannesburg,
this other man I'm still in touch with, and I need that to sort of try to get myself recalibrated
to my center.
But again, the opposite of narcissism, no mask whatsoever.
They were just in themselves.
Like, what a life, like, what a gorgeous life.
You mentioned the deep technique.
Don't defend, don't engage, don't explain, don't personalize.
So how do you argue or communicate with a narcissist to get like your point across, if you
need to get it across?
You don't.
You can't.
So the, sometimes I tell people, okay.
But do we, life is meant to be lived in a beautiful way.
Not with them.
So that we should just rip the bandage, you know what I mean?
Not necessarily.
We can't, right?
So like I said, you know, I'll give you an example, okay, narcissistic divorce.
Family court and family law is not written around saying,
narcissistic parents aren't good for kids.
So if you're parenting or the narcissists, we're going to give the other parent full custody.
Not happening.
Yeah.
State of California, 50-50, all right, unless somebody doesn't want that.
So what happens then is a person says, if I decide to split up from this person,
I'm only going to be with my kids 50% of the time.
And I don't want them with that influence 50% of the time.
So some people will stay.
My favor is when people file for divorce, like the day of their youngest child's 18th birthday.
I'm like, I know what that was about.
You see that happened quite a bit.
They literally wait until that day.
And then at 18, those kids are free agents.
So there's no, no one can say you have to be here, you have to stay here, you have to celebrate this holiday with that or anything.
They get to call their own shots.
So how do you?
So you just have to have extreme patience, I feel like.
It's beyond patience.
It's radical acceptance.
Patience is endurance.
Radical acceptance.
This thing sounds exhausting.
It is getting it.
It is absolutely exhausting.
It's just knowing that this isn't going to change.
You ever spend time in Chicago?
I'm sure you have, right?
Go to Chicago.
It's February.
in Chicago.
Oh, it's miserable.
Are you going to go for a run in just your shorts and no shirt?
No, unless you're crazy, yeah.
Okay.
Why?
Because in February in Chicago, it's cold.
Radical acceptance.
Yeah, so you just accept it.
Right?
If your windows facing east and you don't want the sun to wake you up, get curtains.
Radical acceptance.
You cannot talk to an artist.
So I tell people, there's another concept I use is something called True North.
Sometimes you have to get into the argument.
True North are those things that you're going to fight for because they're sort of
So they're important to your core values, so who you are.
For some folks, it's their kids.
For some people, it may be a cause they believe in or a belief they have,
or they will not listen to, I don't know, prejudicial language.
True North gets activated and they'll say, I'm taking the fight.
They pull off the gloves and pull out the earrings, and then they're in.
They're just, they'll go at it.
It is exhausting.
Nothing good happens, right?
But at least they can say, I took the fight, Dr. Romney, so I can live with myself.
right to know that I fought for my kids I stood up but but do not get into the fight about
the dishwasher or what you know why were you late to the party or why were you rude to my sister
or whatever I mean if you keep taking every fight it's exhausting the minute you let go it
you know what happens those when a person finally gives up they're overwhelmed with grief
they're like there's no there's nothing here there's nothing to talk about I can't tell
them good news because they make fun of it or they dismiss it I can't
tell them bad news because they get really angry and rageful. So all we can really talk about
is the weather. I'm like, uh-huh. It's it. But that's, I mean, what do with the rest of your
time? And you cultivate other stuff in your life? Oh my gosh. Can you actually, can you love a
narcissist or is it impossible to love narcissists? It's a subjective question, right? Love is such a
complicated word. It means something different to you. It means something different to me. It means
different things to the people out in the street. So the, and that's the bigger question I often get is,
can a narcissist love?
Is that possible?
It depends.
Besides loving themselves?
What is cold to you?
You're in short sleeves.
I'm in a sweater.
You know, so it's a subjective word.
So can a lot of people love narcissists?
They do.
They're like, I love this person.
They represent something to me.
Maybe this is where it starts getting to a philosophical question.
Maybe when we love someone, it's very, it is very representational.
We love what they stand for.
We love what we believe they are.
But we don't know.
maybe we never know someone enough to love them.
So, again, that's a philosophical conversation.
But when it comes down to it, there are people out there who will say, I do,
parents are a great example.
People have narcissistic parents.
They're like, I love my mother or I love my father.
I can't stand them.
Sure.
But love is much more metaphysical.
Yeah, of course.
So.
What's the biggest misconceptions about a narcissist then?
That they love themselves.
They don't love themselves?
Oh, hell no.
It's self-loathing.
This is a disorder of self-loathing.
All that inadequacy and ugly insecurity, they hate themselves.
But then they put it on other people.
They projected onto other people.
You're a horrible, lying, disgusting person.
You make me sick.
We're talking about themselves.
Oh, my gosh.
Sometimes you just want to give them a hug.
So, narcissists are miserable.
They're miserable.
Miserable.
Miserable.
It's awful. I actually say that the compassion we can find in ourselves is people like, I want to get revenge on them. I say, you don't have to. They have to keep being them. They have to live with it. The universe wins on that one. Like, they have to keep being them. It is a, imagine every day you're comparing yourself to everyone. They're thinking, they have that and they have that. How come I don't have this? And how come this? And they're constantly anxious. They're constantly angry. They constantly feel like a victim. They feel like everyone is out to get them.
That's a very difficult way to live.
Their nervous system must be always heightened, too.
Kind of.
Kind of, yeah, different than their psychopathic cousins there, obviously.
It doesn't feel, yeah.
Yeah, but narcissists really, really, it's in a very uncomfortable way to live
because you always feel like, they always feel like they're getting the short end of the stick.
And so what are the signs then if you're a kid and you've thought one thing about your parents,
but all of a sudden you're starting to see like, oh, maybe they might have a parent who's narcissistic.
What would you be, what would you say the main signs if a parent for a kid would be narcissistic?
I don't think, when you, let's say a child is anyone under 13.
I don't even think kids start understanding that their parents are messed up until they're in around middle school or high school.
Selfishness, inattentive, real inattentiveness.
Dismissiveness.
Dissiveness.
Devaluation of their emotions, shaming them, humiliating them.
expecting them to be like them,
devaluing them if they don't excel at the things they want.
What do you mean?
You don't want to go to Harvard?
Or like, oh, you want to go to that college?
Like any kind of contemptuous dismissiveness of their children,
that's all narcissistic parent behavior.
Wow.
Rage is a big one.
And I think that's probably the one my clients have brought in this.
Anger.
Anger, but rage.
Like that walking on eggshells.
If anyone says to me, I felt like I was always walking on eggshells around my parent,
probably dealing with an antagonistic parent.
Yeah, I think I was telling you before I know it was, I felt that for a part of my life and then things started to shift.
But I've definitely walked in eggshells for many relationships in the past, which makes me be like, why did I jump into different relationships where I felt that way?
Which maybe I hadn't learned to heal the past yet or I hadn't learned to.
But you didn't jump into a relationship.
I didn't feel that in the beginning.
You didn't feel it at the beginning.
But it was like six to 12 months later when I was like, that I justified.
Then I justify, oh, let's just get back to where it was.
One of the great, your, I would say your greatest vulnerability, quite frankly, to narcissistic
relationship is your history as an athlete.
Athletes are actually at not only a great risk of being narcissistic, but for falling for narcissists.
Why is it?
And a lot of that is because for any gifted athlete, all you needed to do was work harder.
You just had to go to the gym or had to run or do whatever, whatever it was you needed to do,
It just meant more reps.
Yes.
There was always a way to make it better.
You're going to do the Sunday workout.
You're going to go to the gym at four in the morning.
Right?
And so the more in you had this belief, you got better.
And you were in control.
So the belief is you could extend that to anyone.
I just got to talk to them harder.
I'm going to be more clear.
I'm going to make this work.
More loving.
Everything becomes a workout.
Oh, my gosh.
This is what I did in the last 10 years.
And every relationship for the last 10 years.
And I remember just being like,
it never felt enough and it was always draining to give them it was never enough what I gave there
was always something wrong with me there was always something to pick at yeah and they never wanted
to go to therapy with me I was it was funny because I was like what meant you know I don't
generalize but I was like I'm a guy who wants to go to therapy and and get feedback from my like
I'm not perfect give me feedback tell me how to improve because I'm an athlete and I'm like I want to
improve and they never wanted you know I think women would kill for this you know for a guy
who wanted to go to therapy with them.
Not a narcissistic woman.
Oh my gosh.
But that idea of surrender is kind of actually
the opposite of what an athlete is conditioned to become, right?
And that's really the core of the narcissistic relationship.
It's a sense of surrender.
I'm not engaging with this.
I'm not doing this.
It doesn't work.
And then you just fold it and step away.
No, it was more like, I want to make this work.
What can I do to make it better?
How can I improve?
Tell me what I can do.
I'm here.
I'll support.
I'll do this.
And then it just drains your energy.
athletes, entrepreneurs, or anyone who's a doer and it's worked for them, they're screwed.
It wasn't until I really started lifting the veil with my therapist,
I started to really realize like, okay, I don't need to keep working, working, working.
You talked about this one of your recent videos, like the marriage and relationships should be hard work is kind of the narrative.
And when I realized, like, it shouldn't feel like, it should feel like commitment and there's attention and presence,
but it shouldn't feel like this draining hard work.
No.
Otherwise, I'd rather be single if that's why it is.
Exactly.
And I think that that, and I have to tell you, a lot of people have had a lot of harm done to them in therapy where therapy say to them,
it's hard work.
Relationship of hard work.
No.
No, no, no.
It's not.
I mean, yeah, maybe having to say no, like having to sit through a football game you don't want to watch.
I don't know that this is hard work because they sat and watched your French film with you.
It's just an uncomfortable moment.
I'm just going to read my book while you watch your football game.
I guess we're good.
Yeah, that's fine.
Yeah, I can show up for a few hours.
That's not hard work.
Yeah.
Hard, you know, and the other person's kind, right?
Again, every healthy relationship, every healthy relationship has the same core ingredients.
Kindness, compassion, patience, mutuality of regard, reciprocity, respect.
Yeah.
Every single one.
And as long as you got that.
Flexibility.
Flexibility.
No narcissistic relationship has even one of those ingredients.
So that's why they don't work.
They don't work.
So, yeah, they're always going to be hard work because you have not one of the essential
ingredients.
Like you're trying to make a bake a cake without flour, eggs, or sugar.
Good luck with that.
All right.
Oh my gosh.
This is just bringing me back to someone with so many realizations.
How do you know when you're entering a new relationship if the person is not a narcissist?
Like maybe you've been in a narcissist relationship where your parent was or whatever
is and you have some PTSD from those experiences and you feel like well I'm supposed to be
walking in eggshells but I don't need to it's kind of healthy like is the shoe going to drop
like when you know the person isn't a narcissist how long does that take to find out about the
same amount of time it takes to discover that they are in the sense that the difference is
narcissists actually there's red flags right okay I call these green flags green flags
mean go and green flags are things like watch the person
watch how the person behaves under conditions of stress.
So let's say that you're running late to the airport.
That's a great example of a stress, right?
How are they acting?
And are they, you know, they're saying, oh, I'm a little worried about this,
but we're going to make it work and listen.
What's the world that's going to happen?
We'll get rebooked and they're calm and like, you know, listen,
I'm just glad to be here with you.
Like, we'll figure it out.
To make the most of the moment.
Yeah, we'll go to an airport hotel if we have to be fine.
But we're going to be fine.
I'm narcissists when they're running late to the airport.
Oh, oh, no, no, no, no.
So, and it just, it's just, I'm not going to curse, right, but it's chaos, stress,
accusations, this is your fault, entitlement, let me speak to the manager, get me on that plane,
get that plane back to the gate.
Like that kind, that's the narcissist, right?
Whereas with the, with somebody, you watch them.
And that doesn't have to be something as dramatic as the airport.
It could be even something like, hey, I noticed you've been working late.
How about I make some dinner?
So it's the noticing.
It's the presence.
It's the mindfulness.
It's the willingness to be flexible and make compromise when it's needed, to meet you halfway, to listen to you.
And more than anything is to also see the growth potential in you.
So not to be threatened by your own success.
So if you go up to this person and you're like, hey, you know what, I got this totally cool new opportunity.
And the healthy person says, that is amazing.
You have worked your whole life.
I saw this in you.
What can we do to make this work for you?
Whereas everybody else, not just narcissists, but insecure people will say,
oh, I guess that's just going to mean more time away,
and you're going to be traveling a lot,
and there's going to be a lot of women on the road.
And you're like, oh, my gosh, they just got the job of their dreams.
Oh, my gosh.
Bringing back so many memories to me.
That's the key.
And I'm a big believer that, you know, there's actually something in,
I'm going a little off topic, but you're an off-topic guy.
You can handle it.
There's something called the Michelangelo phenomenon.
And it's a big relationship theory.
Is there, is there a graph for this?
No, I was going to say, I want to use the chart.
I'll start trying the sustained chat.
At some point, I want to use this.
So the Michelangelo phenomenon is this idea that the one person in the relationship
sees the absolute potential in the other in such a way that they say, what do we need
to do to get you to your dream?
Like, do we need to, should we like, should we take a second on the house?
should we cut back, you know, should we move closer in?
Like, because I see, or, you know what?
It can be as simple as simple as they eat a cake that their partner made and said,
okay, this is the best cake I've ever had.
Have you ever thought of making this into a business?
Or a partner of yours might have said, you ask the most amazing questions,
you need a podcast.
Like, it's seeing that something bigger in the person.
That's a good thing.
That's the Michelangelo phenomenon.
That's everything.
That's a good thing.
It's the best thing.
And very few relationships get that because what you've got to do is that person who's saying,
go, be your best you, is secure enough to say, I'm not going to lose you.
Right, right.
Like, I see all the good in you.
Yeah.
And that.
And I want the best for you.
And I want the best for you.
And I believe in you.
And I'm here with you.
And that might even mean the person encouraging you might have to make sacrifice.
Things like, you know, I know that you're going to have to go take this course for six months and I may not see you.
And that's okay because this is our future together.
That's the Michelangelo phenomenon that's never ever happened.
What's the opposite?
Narcissistic relationship.
Because I, man, I think I've, I'm just having so many realizations here, but I, in the previous, I would say, 10 years of my relationships, I think I was just really good at choosing specific people because I was always like, I always saw the masterpiece.
And I said, I said, you're a masterpiece and I can see what's possible for you with all these skills and gifts.
but there was like some insecurities with some of them, not all of them.
And they never were able to see it within the selves.
They weren't able to see it.
And then I remember when I would accomplish something big in some of these relationships,
not all of them, it was almost like they would get depressed or sad and say,
oh, and then make it about what they're lacking and what they don't have
and wanting to put the intention back on them.
I remember I got an email for a year.
I was training to become, to make the,
USA national team was a dream of mine to go to the Olympics and make the USA national team for a
sport called team handball. It's a big sport in Europe, not that big in USA. I remember getting an email
and literally almost in tears that I was selected for the USA team. And it was just like a dream for
a couple of years of a journey. This was 10 years ago. And I remember I showed my girlfriend at the time
I go, I just got called up on the national team. And I'm like getting kind of emotional just chills
now back in that moment and she didn't congratulate me she just kind of went back into
god I wish I was doing what I wanted to do and I wish there this and I was just like what bingo
right there this okay well yeah let me come back and help you I kind of put my attention back on like
you know you're gonna get these things going and you know I'm here for you but it's like this
diminishing I had this happen at one of my big events one time I host this annual event called
the summit of greatness and a relationship out of the time made it
all about them at the event, that I wasn't there for them
because the attention was on me
and people were coming up to me and I was like,
this is something I've been working all year to host.
And then I said, you know what,
let me pause on my event for two hours
to give the attention to this person.
And I was always trying to see the masterpiece.
But it's like, I don't know.
I'm like, you're having so many realizations for me.
Right, yeah, I mean, but that's the idea
that that ego, and it's interesting,
not everyone who's not capable of this sort
of Michelangelo phenomenon in a relationship
as a narcissist by any stretch.
They may just have more of the low-grade insecurity that so many people are plagued by, right?
So all insecurity doesn't mean narcissism, right?
Insecurity paired with all this entitlement and lack of empathy and all of that is the problem.
And so it's so unfortunate because it is there then, again,
you're talking about self-actualization for the individual.
I think there can even be actualization in relationships where two people, like,
they really see the greatness in each other.
It can't just be you the only one seeing the masterpiece.
They have to see the masterpiece in you.
Well, because it's just draining.
Yeah.
If it's just one person, right?
It's also a mirror that's not reflecting back at you.
Yeah.
Man, this is crazy.
So what I'm hearing is say, the ultimate experiment in a relationship is when both parties
are seeing the masterpiece in each other and are supportive of each other.
And when one is succeeding, a person I'm with right now, she's incredible.
She's just a walking success.
Everything she does is just successful.
I'm so happy for her.
I want her to succeed.
I'm like, this is amazing.
Let's celebrate you.
And she's happy for you.
She's happy for me.
It has to be a two-way street.
She's like, you're in crazy.
She, you know, she admires the work I'm doing.
She admires the mission we're on to help people.
And she's like, what can I do to support you?
It feels interesting.
I mean, it feels beautiful.
It is beautiful.
I mean, that's the key, though, because that ability to sort of co, like, you know,
again, to have that, that, that, that, that, that,
co-located growth, that Michelangelo, if you will.
In essence, you're realizing the statue from the raw piece of marble every day, and you're both
sculpting that for the other.
Oh, my gosh.
It's beautiful.
You know, but that's, again, no narcissistic relationship is like that.
And with a narcissistic relationship, it's really the them show.
Like everyone is just sort of in the audience watching them and celebrating them.
So they can be the only great one in a relationship.
Really?
Yeah.
So is it possible that two narcissists?
that two narcissists would be in a relationship together?
I actually love when that happens,
so it kind of gets a water supply for everybody else.
I'm like, so you guys do you.
They're like perfect for each other.
Here's what it is.
They're very volatile relationships.
They're very superficial relationships.
A lot of people who are power couples,
that's sometimes what you're seeing like this kind of,
they're all about the, they're only about the aspiration.
They're not about the empathy,
but in any relationship of two narcissists,
as soon as somebody doesn't stay in their lane.
So let's say one classical trope of two narcissists in a relationship,
one partner, very wealthy, very powerful, very successful.
The other one, very beautiful, looks good, goes places with this one,
looks good with them, it all looks good together.
Compromise each other.
Like, ish, complements a strong word.
The first time this one, though, might look someplace else
because this one's a narcissist, this person, the powerful one,
it's a narcissistic mate notice someone else this person's going to blow up because they're
doing their beautiful thing full time and they're like how can someone be more beautiful than if you're
not looking at me obsessive then not giving me all the attention lots of jealousy lots of volatility
lots of me me lots of egosentricity lots of on social media it's like I'm so blessed hashtag
love my person hashtag best relationship ever I mean I laugh when I see like oh yeah there we go
you know another narcissist super narcissistic relationship where it's all about
advertising the relationship, but it's very superficial, very volatile, no empathy, there's no
depth to the intimacy, it's almost transactional, that that's what happens when two narcissists
get together. I honestly would be fine with all the narcissists pairing up like Noah's are,
as long as none of them have kids. Because that's a real, because there's a real mess.
You're a messed. You're traumatized. It's a really empty way to grow up, those kids that grow up
either, they either become incredibly anxious as adults or they become narcissistic as adults.
It's not a good, it's not a good look.
I don't know if I'm inspired by this conversation or depressed.
Yeah.
How many, what's the percentage?
How many, what's the percentage of people in the world who are narcissists?
Do we have that even?
Okay, so here's where it gets interesting.
So let's start with something we haven't talked about yet.
So give me a way to talk about this.
A lot of people use the word narcissistic, or the term.
narcissistic personality disorder.
I actually think it's phenomenal
that you haven't been using it
because it's a mistake to use that languaging.
And I'll tell you why.
Narcistic personality disorder, okay?
NPD.
So lots of people out there will say,
oh, I'm in this relationship bar,
I got this boss, and they have narcissistic personality disorder.
I'm always like slow down, sister, okay?
Because narcissistic personality disorder,
like all diagnoses, require a full workup,
a lengthy clinical interview.
It even takes me, I'm honest with you,
if I have a client in my office,
usually takes me four to six sessions to be confident
that that's what I'm dealing with with a disorder.
Because you could have narcissistic personality traits.
Correct.
It's different than a disorder.
And it gets into the weeds in terms of diagnostic stuff.
You don't want to.
It could be more like when I'm triggered,
I can have narcissistic traits as opposed to.
It's more complex than that.
Because it's that in order to give someone a diagnosis
and the diagnostic and statistical manual
of mental disorders, the DSM,
in order to give someone a diagnosis,
that person who is showing the symptoms has to either be uncomfortable themselves, like
we call it subjective distress.
So like, depressed people are like, they're like, I'm miserable, I can't, I'm miserable,
I'm sad all the time, I can't get out of bed, that's subjective distress.
Or they have to have something called social and occupational impairment, meaning that
the symptoms are getting in the way of their lives in a way that they're aware of, right?
It's causing problems for them.
Where this gets dicey with narcissistic personality is that, first of all, a lot of narcissists
are on top of the world.
They think their lives are great.
They walk around and saying, I'm the one, I'm the guy, I'm, you know, I'm working
one, I'm the best.
Look how great I am.
I got money, I've got success, I've got the girl, whatever it is, it's working for me.
So everything's working for them.
So that's real subjective distress.
No.
Yeah.
Social and occupational impairment.
Now, in some cases they may be having trouble at work and then, yeah, sure, they'll meet
that criterion. But for a lot of folks just walking around in the street, they're making,
they're making bank at work. They got, they got a partner and a side piece. Like, everything's
working out for them. So they don't even think they're having that impairment. But what they're doing
is they're blowing up other people's lives. Oh, yeah. We as therapists, cannot issue a diagnosis
of social, we can't say that they have social and occupational impairment because someone else is
bothered by them. Make sense? Yeah. It has to be in the, it has to be that the person is
is saying, I'm not going to work on time,
or I got a DUI.
Those are examples of social and occupational impairment
or behavioral impairment.
I personally think they need to get rid of the diagnosis.
I think it's worth nothing.
It's a diagnosis with no treatment.
So why would you have a disease that you can't treat?
There's no point to that.
So let's, okay, so now let's go to the numbers.
Because the epidemiological studies are studies that tell us
the number of people or the percentage of people
who have a given mental illness,
given disorder.
Gotcha.
So the epidemiology statistics on narcissistic personality disorder put the rate somewhere
between 1 and 6%.
Okay.
Those people who are diagnosed with a disorder.
Okay, so they've gone into research studies.
But most people aren't diagnosed because they would never come in and do these sessions.
So what do you...
The million dollar question.
How many do you think is?
This is my number.
This is the Dr. Romney number.
Okay.
I'm going with 20 to 30.
25% oh of the world or of of the u.s or the world one in five to one in four you think it's
narcissistic of one in five is probably and i'm saying adults let's take the kids yeah yeah okay so 18
and above 20% that would make it one in five and i would tell you in a major metro like l.a
i'm going to 25%. i think that just the pressures of the new york especially in new york l.
l.a being an entertainment city um the nature that sort of the the it's a company town and the business
of the town is very superficial and very validation seeking so i'd say 25% here so that's one in
five so buddy if you know five people one of them's narcissistic when do you know someone is
not a narcissist what are the the qualities that they possess the real qualities it's it's empathy
kindness respect flexibility self-awareness um the capacity to reflect on their impact on other people
emotional regulation, managing, this is more of the emotional regulation, like managing
negative states like frustration and disappointment, genuine curiosity about others, setting
goals from an internal space rather than what they think the world expects of them, having a strong
sense of identity, a sense of who they are, having a solid sense of values.
conscientiousness, agreeableness.
These are the things that make a person not narcissistic.
It's nice to be around those two people.
Oh, they're so good.
And I feel blessed.
I have a fair number of those in my life,
but I'm very careful.
Like, I curate my world the way some people
curate their closets.
Like, I don't, and I've made them as I'm,
because recently this year, I've let more than a few in.
So it happens.
You've let narcissistic friends in.
Yeah.
I'm getting, you know, and I got to tell you,
it just means that people who've been through
what's called narcissistic abuse or all the negative psychological impacts of being in a narcissistic
relationship. One thing I work with people on is just narrowing their social world. Like it's,
it's unfortunately at one in five, what are the odds, right? They're pretty darn good. You date five
people, one of them. And depending on what swimming pool you're pulling these people out of,
it could be one in three. Oh my gosh. I'm going to be so many memories. Yeah, this is
for a whole other conversation off camera about why I think I attracted some of these things.
This is fascinating.
So even you, you attracted people in your life.
100%.
And I know what my vulnerabilities are.
I'm very aware of it.
My personal vulnerabilities are things like I devalue myself.
I feel like I'm not enough.
Really?
I pity people kind of easily.
And so narcissists actually are pitiful people.
and that pity can sometimes drive me to say maybe I should try harder.
So at this point in my life, I'm closed off in a way that actually sometimes makes me feel guilty.
And I'm like, yeah, if that's the price of poker, I'm good.
Like I don't, I've been through too many times at this rodeo that I don't want to do it.
So it's definitely my own lack of valuing of myself is what's made me vulnerable to narcissists.
If I boiled it down to one simple thing is that I feel like I'm not good enough.
Because I feel like I'm not good enough.
I let those kinds of people in.
So what I found, unfortunately, is that it's just better off to close the gates.
And not let anyone in.
And not let anyone in.
Unfortunately, yeah, that's kind of the downstream effect.
Or, I mean, would you say the greatest defense against attracting narcissism
is to fully love yourself?
It's to fully love yourself to be deeply authentic.
I consider myself authentic-ish, authentic adjacent.
But I know I've got a ways to go because I still struggle with it.
the monkey on my back of feeling like I'm I'm not enough kind of thing yeah and I know that and
that's my work on my in my own therapy on that consistently and but it's a I know where my
barriers are so anything that pings that it's it's great it's interesting I've got my staff is
fantastic I mean and they're much younger than me this is what's so remarkable about it
they actually act like guard dogs that's great we feel like one's coming no and I'll be like
I kind of feel bad, and I'm like, good for you, go feel bad in another room.
We're not letting them in.
So they're, I mean, these two are gangster.
I mean, they're the two most amazing young women, yeah.
So what's the key to learning how to love ourselves fully so that we don't, so that when we see someone coming in, we just say,
no, we're okay, we don't need to let you into our life.
So let's go back to the Carl Rogers, the humanist I was talking about before.
It's to lift the conditions of worth from our lives.
that we are lovable and cherishable simply because we are.
I mean, if we could get totally into a different conversation
about we're all made of energy, who judges energy, right?
Like, you know, we're all lovable because we're,
this stuff of life, you know, where,
and that makes us beautiful and lovable.
And so it's-
Who said this?
Carl Rogers talks about conditions of worth.
Dr. Romney says, and many others I do believe say,
we're energy, like who judges energy?
It's like judging the sun.
I guess we do, like we were sunscreen.
You're right, right, right.
But you know what I mean?
Like it's a, these conditions of worth like whatever people say to themselves, I'm not
attractive enough, I'm not smart enough, I'm not rich enough, I'm not accomplished enough,
I'm not this enough, I'm not that enough, that those conditions of worth, if I'm, I would
be lovable if.
As soon as you put love and if in the same sentence, you're screwed.
Wow.
So it's very much like dropping all that and saying, you're lovable because you are.
everyone is lovable, everyone is cherishable, all of us, not because somebody's more beautiful
or somebody's more famous or somebody's more attractive, it's not, or rich or something like that,
but it's hard because we're given the message of, you're better if you. Look this way, act this way,
do this way, live here, drive this. It's a lot to break out of. And so I think that, and those
narratives even go deeper than materialism. It's almost like as a kid, many kids were taught,
were, they almost felt like you grow up with a parent who's not attentive in any way or not
interested of, well, I'm not, they're not paying attention because I'm not interesting. I'm not
enough. And I get attention when I excel in something that they like. And so let me do more of that
to get more attention. Exactly. And if I lose of that, then they're not going to love me.
That's exactly right. So it all becomes like people think like if I do these things and I can be loved
rather than you're just lovable. And so that's the, that's where people, most people lose the plot.
And I think the other piece, those people don't understand narcissism.
I think that a lot of people say, oh, come on, now everyone can change or some, I just got to get to know them better.
Or they don't really mean that.
We enable it.
We justify it.
But if people really got to learn like, no, that's unacceptable.
That tantrum they just threw, not okay.
That entitled behavior, not okay.
And honestly get to the point where I don't care why they're behaving like this.
they're behaving like this.
So how do you create boundaries with a narcissist?
It's not easy.
I mean, I think that the narcissistic people,
the key with a narcissistic person
is to detect it early, set boundaries early,
because then they get disinterested
and they walk away.
You're not an easy mark anymore, right?
So charm and charisma come walking in the door.
I think I'm the only person in the world
who's telling people, if you meet someone charming
and charismatic, run away.
Like, get away from them.
This is dangerous.
But are some people that are charming
and charismatic who aren't narcissistic.
Yeah, but I'm like, I'm all about throwing the baby out with the baffir.
Right, right, right, right.
Yeah.
All out.
So it's a, because charming, charismatic people, I would say then always make sure they have humility.
There you go.
If you have the humility back.
That's the unicorn.
That's when you're like, they're charming and they're humble.
And they're humble and.
They're all that, they're incredible.
And they're like, listen, you know, I'm great.
Can you just tell me about you?
a little bit, talk a little bit about you.
That's a keeper in your life.
Yeah, that's a keeper.
Or you can see how they're talking to other people,
their interest in other people.
They're not talking down to people,
maybe because let's say they're in a service position that evening, right?
That they're not, and not in a smarmy, like,
oh, the server's my best friend,
but they're not like that.
It's none of that.
It's really like, oh, let me wait for the server to come along
and see if I can get or whatever.
I mean, they're just really, they're present in a situation, they're not elitist, they're not status-conscious, that kind of humility, you know, that they don't brag, you know that they're all that, and they're not going on about how all that that they are.
That's cool.
They're not talking about, oh, let me tell you about my new this and my new that and this accomplishment and my, no, they're just, they're actually able to be with you, be present with you.
It's rare because, again, people who are that hyped up, they're hyped up from all sides.
you have to be really resistant, authentic, self-actualized to not drink the Kool-Aid.
Yeah.
What else do we need to know about a narcissist?
Is there anything else you think that's important for us?
I think that...
One in five of your friends is a narcissist.
So, again, if we're using this number of 20%, okay, which I don't think is a bad number,
to be honest with you.
I think that just, I mean, it's a spitball number, and it's just sort of boiled up in this world,
and it may be a fervent myth, I don't know.
It's hard to get good data on this, right?
You know, the assessment of narcissism
is one of the hardest things
in the business of measurement and psychology
because who's going to be honest about it, right?
There's all these backdoors we try to do to figure it out,
but I'd say the other things.
Let's talk a little bit about what happens
to a person who's been in a relationship with a narcissist.
Because I think that we've been talking,
we've been so much focus on the narcissist.
The question is,
what if I've just been through this?
Is there a signs of PTSD that you're going to face?
A lot of PTSD.
You'll see it's a, there's confusion, self-doubt,
a sense of powerlessness, helplessness,
sometimes even hopelessness,
anxiety, a lack of not feeling motivated anymore,
a sort of sense of like,
I can't be bothered with life,
rumination, regret,
something we call euphoric recall.
You remember the good parts of the relationship
and say,
Why can't we have that part again?
I'm like, well, no, because that part wasn't really real.
It wasn't real.
It was like this explosive.
It's with people have physical symptoms.
They have trouble sleeping because of the rumination.
They might find themselves engaging in less behaviors that are involved, like self-care behaviors, we call them.
Like things like working out or eating well or even taking their medications on time.
They just almost let themselves go because being in these relationships is just basically like completely being, you know,
overwhelmed by them. So people aren't in good shape when they're coming out of these
relationships. Because then they'll start beating themselves up. How could I stay in this? What was I
thinking? Well, that's the worst part. It's the self-blame and the self-shame. Because the self-blame
is this is my fault. I'm the one who stayed. I should have known. I'm, I'm, I'm a fool.
And then they, a lot of people go back. Why? Why? Because they think there, let's talk a little
bit. I want my whiteboard. Yes. I got to use the whiteboard. So here we go. So let's talk about
the narcissistic relationship cycle. Okay. Step one is something called, I'll write it down. I'll
lift it up. Love bombing. Okay. Love bombing is that big, seductive, exciting experience that
happens early in a relationship. We have a magical connection. Let's have a picnic on the beach,
wild and crazy sex, texting for 12 hours straight. Good morning, princess. Good night, my darling.
Let's take a vacation for our third day. I want you to meet all my friends. I'm so into you.
Let's move in after a month. My lease is up. Love bombing. It's exciting. It's intoxicating. It's seductive.
And what it does, it's a narcissist ground game. That's how they're able to get you to not notice all the red flies because you're so focused on the 10 dozen roses on your doorstep that,
Or the unreal sex you're having, or these amazing, like, constantly being these text messages
or being going to San Francisco on your fourth date, you know, and you're thinking like, okay, red, what red flags?
I'm having this incredible, yeah.
The minute the narcissist knows they've got you, when you kind of let down your guard, because some people are like, this seems too good to be true.
And then they're like, okay, I love you too.
Oh, I'm, I'm, boom.
That's the day.
called devaluing starts okay now devaluing is characterized by invalidation little digs like um oh gosh
you know my ex-girlfriend could cook um or oh my you know it's like the digs it's it's little
it's subtle you're like how where did this go like where's where's this because it's not feeling so
good and people in devaluing are confused as heck they're thinking how
How do I get back here?
Now they start blaming themselves.
Because it was this, now it's this.
It must be me.
Oh, my gosh.
Now then we go to...
I just feel like you're going through my life right now.
Okay.
We go to something called the discard.
Now, the discard is not always a breakup.
Is this where like they won't speak to you for two weeks?
It's the silent treatment.
It's the deeper level manipulation.
It could be infidelity.
it could be significant lying it could be on even sometimes even the other person leaves the
relationship at this point like the not narcissistic person like i'm out i'm out i can't do this
and then comes a phase oh my gosh called i'm going to write it and then unveil it to you very
love on me of me hoovering hoovering is when the narcissist tries to suck you back in they don't like
to lose. And in the majority of cases, once after the discard, try to woo you back.
Try to woo you back. Love bombing part two. Now, love bombing part two is never as heavy
as love bombing part one. It's always love bombing light the second time around. But it'll be like
maybe, what was I thinking? You're the best thing that ever happened to you. This could be because
they cheated on you. And they say things like, you're so much better. And you know what? People
fall for that because that's that triangulation dynamic that idea very edible that you're the
favored child that you're the favored one and the hoovering is choosing you then in the
part of the hoovering is a dynamic called you're going to love this one is my guess after what
the way you've been putting future faking okay future faking is no as soon as this deadline is
done we're going to or i'm going to get therapy or i know let's just put it off for another
six months, for sure I'm going to do it then. They keep moving the goalposts. Oh. And future faking
is what keeps people in the game because they're like they're promising the thing you want, six months.
We're going to have kids. We're going to have kids. Yeah, for sure. You know, like, I just need to get
my career established and now you're 50 and you don't have kids. Or we're going to, you know,
we're going to definitely move closer to your parents. I know we had talked to about moving back there
and I know you said there's some better opportunities for you. Years you're waiting. Or I'm going to
get into therapy. I'm going to work on these anger issues.
and then if you push it, God, you know what?
You're really impatient.
You are not a nice person.
Can you just see what I'm going through my life and I need time?
That's the cycle of every narcissistic relationship.
Not everybody gets Hoovered, okay?
Sometimes the narcissist moves into something else and then they're done.
So people sometimes feel bad if they're not Hoovered.
They're like, oh, what's wrong with me?
It doesn't always happen and consider yourself lucky.
I always say the lucky are not Hoover, because then it goes back to the cycle.
goes again and again and again.
So what is hoovering again?
Whovering is when they try to woo you back in, suck you back.
Oh, they bring you back in.
And they'll do that.
Let's say they're the one who left you, okay?
And you finally start getting your life in order.
And maybe you're dating someone else and they find that that's when they want you back.
They just want to mess your stuff up.
Or you're in a good place.
They don't want a job you want.
They don't want you happy.
They don't like losing and they don't like the idea of anyone else winning.
It's all about domination.
Oh my gosh.
Okay, so I tell people like maybe you could get a good
trip to San Francisco and a couple of flowers and get out and then get out
like before you get in too deep but if that happens where they'll give you like a month
or six weeks or two months of love bombing on you and then you're like you know what
they're going to get mad I'm not in the right place this isn't for me like it's not you
it's me I'm not ready they're going to get mad so either way once you get it once you
on the first weekend love bomb extravaganza, you're kind of sunk. Yeah, because and they're,
they want to get out then. You want to get out. You want to get out the first weekend. You want to get
out. Listen, here's a interesting tell on narcissistic people. It applies more in L.A. than in a place
like New York. They, they drive really badly. They drive dangerously. They cut people off and they
come up on their bumpers and they cut people off on the freeway. And that's actually been
documented in research. So a narcissist is a bad driver. Bad driver. Dangerous driver. Dangerous
driver. Not bad. Not like dumb driver. Fast, cut people off, Hong Kong's road gauge driver. Yeah.
Oh my God. You got to use the whiteboard. I like it. Anything else we should use on there?
You got another grab or a diagram? I love this stuff. I love this. This is fascinating.
Anything else we should talk about? Last thing. Yes, give it to me. Gaslighting.
Oh, I wanted to ask that. I had a note here. Okay. So gaslighting is the word of our time. And if nothing else, I want, your podcast is so
amazing that I want to make sure that people get things. Great.
get things right here.
So what is gaslighting?
Gaslighting is the denial of a person's reality
and the taking a part of another person
so that they have completely not only given up on their reality,
they've given up on themselves.
So let me say that in a little bit more of a clear way.
Gaslighting is a grooming process.
It's not a one-off, right?
So let's say a day like today,
we'd set up our shoot and everything and I would say and we had our time we were going to meet the date and I said you never said we're meeting on that day you'd be like what and then you go back to your email and say no it's right there right but for a minute you might have doubted yourself I don't have that much power to gaslight you because we don't really know each other maybe you trust me a little but it would be enough to throw you off for a minute say did I not do I not send that email right and you you catch yourself okay the
reason it's called a grooming process is it happens over and over again. I never said that. I never
did that. You're being too sensitive. Stop making such a big deal about that. You really aren't
committed to this relationship. And they keep saying things to you that are not your reality.
So what do people do in their gaslighted initially? They defend themselves. No, no, no. You did. You
really did. Like you said that. Or I'm not being too sensitive. And now you're getting more and more
worked up right and then you know they'll say things to you like oh yikes somebody is a little bit
craxie like have you seen a therapist so now what are they doing not only they doubted your
reality and you're a little off balance then boom they close it by saying there's something wrong
with you and you start believing it oh wow many people are gaslighted we'll start wondering
maybe i'm the narcissist maybe i have a mental illness maybe i need to get help there's something
wrong with me. And at that point, the gaslighter fully controls this person. Oh, my gosh.
That's the process. And so, but the initially, the person who's being gaslighted has some
level of trust in the gaslight her. Maybe they're in a new relationship together. Maybe
this is a family member. Maybe it's a boss or a respected colleague. You've got to have a little
of that from the jump. There has to be some skin in the game for someone to be able to gaslight
someone. Then they're groomed. Now, let's say the first time someone gaslights you say,
no, here's the email, this is the time you said we're meeting, and don't ever do that to me again.
The gaslighter's probably going to move on to a new target.
They'll stop with you.
Yeah, because, yeah, so they'll say like, oh, this is not a fertile target.
I'm going to move on to another one, right?
But so early on when a person says you're being too sensitive, say, no, that's my emotion.
Don't you dare play judge and jury on my emotions.
I'm sad right now.
I'm going to stick with that.
That's a good one.
That's a good one.
Right?
So, and then the gas lighter will probably lose interest.
But they'll always get their last digging.
They'll say, she's just a really difficult person.
So they'll still have to get their parting shot and say,
I'll wear that as a badge of honor.
But you, but just look how solid you have to be in yourself and understand gaslighting.
In fact, I'm doing a gaslighting seminar on Saturday.
Literally, three hours, all gaslighting.
Because that's how much people are confused by this.
It happens at work.
It happens in families.
It happens in relationships.
it happens from the world at large like no every everyone can every all the playing field's equal
and then the people like it can't be equal because like here gets up so the first so the first time
you feel like someone's gaslighting you what should you say without them saying because I feel like
this happened to me in a previous relationship where I'd be like no I never said that and then it was
like they bring up three other things that were unrelated to try to confuse and be like well you
this this this this and I'll be like just focus on the one thing
thing we're talking about. And so I have to go to, you know, go around all these other things
and talk about them where I forget what we were talking about in the first place. That's
gaslighting. That all that's delection. It's very exhausting. It's like, let's just focus on this
thing. So a great example, a gaslighty thing that people will do is they will say something like
in a relationship. And, you know, I'm really uncomfortable with how much time you've been
spending with that person and there's been a lot of communication between the two of you. Like,
It doesn't feel good.
It doesn't feel good to me.
It feels shady.
It feels like a boundary violation.
Like, this isn't okay.
They'll hit back with, let's go back to when you were in college and you're like, wait
and then you know what?
I tell people, have a whiteboard, say, okay, I'm going to table that.
We'll get to them.
Let's write that down.
I don't want us to not talk about it.
Let's go back to the original issue.
So keep going back to the original thing.
Go back to the original issue.
Until they have a discussion and resolve.
They'll get mad.
And they won't discuss.
They won't discuss.
So how do you find resolve?
You don't find resolve.
And these relationships.
There's no resolve.
There is no closure.
And that's the radical acceptance.
Oh my gosh.
So you just got to accept this person isn't going to have these conversations.
This person's not going to have rationality for certain things.
It's going to be their way or the highway.
And they won't be flexible.
And you've either got to live with it and accept it for a certain period of time.
time or you can choose to move on.
Right.
But being in an argument is only going to make your life.
Correct.
And you might say, like, that seems lonely, yeah.
And so I have worked with people who have stayed in long-term narcissistic relationships
who have done everything from get very involved in like a religious community, church
community, something like that, to do a lot of things with their friends, really build friendships.
Unless the narcissist tries to control them hanging out of their friends.
If you have a controlling narcissist, none of this will work.
Like malignant narcissist, it won't work.
If they, you know, but if you can build out friendships, if you can build out collegial
relationships, if you're working, church community, some people do this on online communities
if they're not able to easily get out of the house and have friendships that way, develop
hobbies.
They care deeply about a garden, building something, whatever their groove is music, something
like that.
I've known people that have lovers, you know, to say like, I haven't, my body hasn't
been touched in 15 years and so they'll do that and they'll say, I felt a little
guilty but they're having sex with other people. I haven't touched and they're like, you know, I know
I'm not, and they're not, I know I'm not very attractive, but they found, everyone's got someone,
everyone finds someone and they find there someone. And so I've heard it all. I've heard people do all
kinds of things, finding their way, finding their way to get that support on the, when they're
not being, when they have to stay. Because that's where you get on gaslighted, right person's saying,
oh, that's not, that's not okay or this person's conduct isn't okay. But I think,
where most people destroy themselves is they're like a moth to flame.
They're like, I can fix them.
And I'm telling you here, you can't.
Stop trying to fix it.
Stop trying to fix it.
It's just not going to work.
That was probably my challenge is I wanted to fix.
Which again, your athletic background, it makes sense.
I mean, people who have had a track record of being able to get things done, they're the
ones who are very vulnerable to staying in these relationships too long.
I think I was attracted to it and then wanted to stay in.
It's attractive.
And then I was just like, it just becomes exhausting when it's.
when it's a full energy on someone else opposed to a combination of let's work together on
a shared vision towards our relationship, towards life, not all the energy in one place.
Correct. Correct. And it's very, it is very draining. And I think a lot of people do feel
like, you know, a good relationship is me doing everything they ask or catering to them. No,
relationship. Yeah, being unselfish all the time. No, it's about give and take. I'm not saying
transactional give and take. It's that you feel supported enough that when they say,
hey, do you mind going to this dinner for work? And you're like, of course I'll go to that dinner
for work. Because you care about them. And even if you both think it's ridiculous, you're kind
of giggling at each other or, you know, having fun with it, is that you understand that there's
a give and take and you give graciously. And the other person gives graciously. This isn't just
about, you know, grinding your teeth and, you know, being irritated, you have to go. But really
that giving with grace. But at the, I'll be frank with you, it really comes.
comes down, though, to finding somebody who has a good
personality.
That it's not, and I keep using this what agreeableness, right?
Being agreeable.
Being agreeable.
And that's actually a personality style.
How do you know when someone's agreeable?
All those things I talk about.
Flexibility and warmth and kindness.
Just the time.
It's just, yeah.
But here's the problem.
Agreeable men make less money.
Agreeable men make less money.
The research has shown that pretty clearly.
Bless their hearts.
And so for everyone out there who want somebody who's got the money
and the stuff,
The probability that that person's going to be agreeable is a lot lower.
You just need to find a unicorn.
Someone who's agreeable and who has money.
I have not.
You've never seen that?
I'm very,
I know.
Yes, I have.
I can think of one person off the top of my head.
Billionaire.
Most agreeable man in the world, sweet, sweet.
Kind, humble.
Married to a rager narcissist.
You can't.
Oh, man.
He's a darling.
Oh, man.
But just gets walked all over in his relations.
Oh, my God.
beyond walked all over but in his business he can go and have killed it he can be assertive and
yeah i've met i've met a few agreeable um rich folks i mean really i'm not just rich like
really good at what they do they unicorns like they definitely um but what was interesting
you know with some of the a couple of these folks the agreeable very wealthy at the end of
their career they got taken down they got like people in their company they they were in
soft target they were the vulnerable targets they were the vulnerable target they built the
company and they're gonna we're gonna take the equity from them or they're gonna be
gonna blame they did they got a group of because they got voting block for what they
well they would know they weren't willing to be disagreeable they just wanted to keep the peace
at all costs and because they were they were collaborative people they actually thought
they were bringing up the next generation it's interesting because man over the last decade
i really started doing a lot of healing work when i turned 30 i was i've talked about this many times in my
show that I was sexually abused when I was five by man that I didn't know. And it definitely
shaped a part of me for my life until I started to heal that process and really go through
a healing journey of, you know, the shame that I felt for so long, the guilt, the insecurity,
the not feeling enough, we're not feeling lovable, all these different things.
And they're kind of reshaping the story, the narrative. And finding, you know, finding
the value in the process and in the pain, I guess,
and really finding the value from 25 years of holding it in
and it's channeling it, saying,
how can I be of service at a greater level?
How can I use this to support other men
who have gone through sexual abuse?
And that's why I wrote the book,
The Masking Man, Massacre.
Yeah, one in six men have been sexually abused,
one in four women, obviously.
And what I always tell people is that, you know,
men just don't talk about it, you know,
and they hold it in,
and then they become angry or reactive or rateful or, you know, dismissive or whatever it is,
they have put a mask on.
And, you know, that shame causes that mask, at least it did for me and a lot of men that I've talked to.
So I can't remember where I was going with this, but for many years, I had to learn how to kind of
unwind and heal that process.
And it's been a beautiful journey of healing where I can,
because i used to be very competitive it was like i had to win at all costs and now i'm like
well that didn't work for me you know it got me results but it left me feeling empty and alone
and unfulfilled and i didn't have peace because i always needed to win then i started
transitioning and when i hit 30 to i just want to collaborate and i just want to support
others and work together and it feels a lot more peaceful inside and fulfilling what do you think
the function was of trying to win oh to get love be accepted to get love and be accepted i was
can say maybe to be safe yeah to get loved to be accepted to feel like I was yeah to fit in you know
because I didn't feel like I had any friends growing up so it was like well if I win people
recognize me and they like me right right and I'm desirable right if I lose and who wants to be
you know around me yeah and then the shame gets activated but it's also safety that's why
that idea if I win I'm safe yeah that's the ultimate get for any I'm not alone to be safe
I'm not alone if I'm accepted I'm safe if I'm loved I'm safe
And it's funny, when I moved into, and Jay Shetty talks about this a lot.
When I talk with Jay about this, he's like, just being in collaboration is the key.
And I was like, I know that's what I feel like in the last eight years.
Because you're safe when you're still collaborating.
You're still with people.
You're helping each other accelerate together.
Right.
But there's a fear, and I think one of the big impediments to collaboration is the sense that others will leave you behind.
So if you become an island unto yourself, you feel safer, right?
So I think that's often a blockade.
Yeah, I'm at the top of the mountain and everyone else is down.
Yes, if they leave you, it's not even the, it's not the collaboration that's the issue.
It's the potential for abandonment.
Interesting.
Like if I'm in this business, like the billionaire friend, I'm at the top, but then I collaborate with others, but then they take it all and they leave me behind.
Well, they took it all away.
I mean, this was somebody in that, that man, that agreeable billionaire was collaborative from the day one of his career.
So how do you stay collaborative and live in abundance?
and want others to win around you,
but also not get taken advantage of.
It's not easy.
It's with the one in five number I'm giving you,
it's not easy.
I mean, it is, you know, what is the best offense
is a good defense?
You better have a good defense.
Yeah, get your contracts in order,
get everything.
Contracts in order, document.
Don't put your head in the sand.
I mean, a lot, the reason narcissism is proliferated
the way it has is enabling.
People keep giving it a free pass.
Oh, come on now, you know, don't, what is it?
Don't, don't hate the,
don't hate the player, hate the game.
It's not how that works, right?
It's a player.
And yeah, so it's a player.
Yeah, no.
So, like, it's a, we have all this kind of culture around.
And in some ways, people, like, want to see, they, they, the best example I can give is that
people hate the idea.
When we see a magician do a trick, we know they didn't do magic.
We know they had something up their sleeve, but we want to believe it's magic because
that makes the world seem more interesting.
With narcissists, we want to believe.
We want to believe in the magic.
I want to believe they're...
We want to believe that they're going to be...
We want to believe that this charismatic person doesn't really...
...is real.
That someone this larger than life is larger than life, rather than an ordinary person who...
Who just has ordinary things and could fall and, you know, and we want superheroes.
We want...
It's why we've always written myths as a species.
But the myths should remain stories, not the person who's trying to scream at you from the other cubicle.
I've read to that. You've got some great books. Don't you know who I am, how to stay sane
in an era of narcissism, entitlement, and insubility. And you've also got another book called
Should I Stay or Should I Go? I'm just laughing because of all my experiences in my life. Should I
Go? Surviving a relationship with a narcissist, it just feels like the best way to
you know, set yourself up for success is don't commit to being in a relationship with one in the
first place. Take it slow. Learn the person. Learn as long as you can. Spot the red flags. You talk a lot
about this in these books. You talk about this on your YouTube channel, which is amazing. I was watching
some of the videos. Very inspiring. So if you want to make sure you learn this, I do not get committed
until you learn the person you're with. Learn the person. Take it slow and don't just
justify bad behavior. When you witness bad behavior, unfortunately, it's like, you know,
if it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, you know, scorpions sting. There are no such
things as scorpions that hug. And so, you know, once you see a scorpion, you just got,
it's going to sting you. So walk the other way. And once it sting if you wants, don't pick it up
again. Huh. Yeah, I'm like we dated a couple scorpios. Yeah. Not that all scorpios are
guys is this but yes it's funny um how else can we be supportive of you right now besides
checking out your website YouTube social media the books yeah do workshops now I do
workshops if you go to my Instagram following me on Instagram we often put you know we put
the let people know what's coming up then we're gonna have a healing program and
recovery program for people have been through narcissistic relationships that's coming
up next year yeah just follow me in YouTube we're always making our announcements there
every day we have a new video coming out so you would be three
365 days wiser if you just keep watching yeah dr romany everywhere right yeah dr romany
everywhere there we go okay cool um a couple final questions this one is called the three truths
that's what i ask everyone at the end of our interviews so imagine a hypothetical scenario it's your
last day on earth many years away you get to live as long as you want but it's the last day and for
whatever reason all the content you've ever created has to go with you or go somewhere else but it's
not here we don't have access to any your information anymore books the videos
everything's gone. But you get to leave behind three things you know to be true from all your
life lessons and experiences. And this is all we would have from your information. What would you
say would be those three lessons or three truths? If someone else is cruel to you, it's not your
fault. Okay. You came into this world lovable and will always be lovable. And, um,
trust and honor your truth and don't let anyone ever take it away from you.
Those are beautiful.
Those are beautiful.
Before I ask the final question, Dr. Romney, I want to acknowledge you for your commitment to this information, to this message.
I feel like there's a lot of people, including myself, I've gone through a lot of this,
who've always struggled feeling like they're wrong and they're bad and they're not good enough in these types of relationships.
And so for you to commit your adult life to this,
to research and studying, teaching in a university,
in an academic level, and now to the masses
with your information, your books, your content,
I really acknowledge you for the gift
and also the pain that you went through
in your journey to learn these things
and experience it so you can help educate
and teach others to hopefully heal
the relationships they've been through,
make sure they don't get in those relationships
and have a much more peaceful life.
Well, I appreciate that.
Pain is a hell of a mentor.
Absolutely, it is.
And it's going to keep coming until we learn the lesson.
It's going to keep coming.
My final question is, what's your definition of greatness?
My definition of greatness is humility,
self-awareness, compassion, and empathy.
There you go.
Dr. Romney.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
This is amazing.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance
in your life, and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make
it easier.
You want to make it flow.
You want to feel abundant.
Then make sure to go to make moneyeasybook.com right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is going to help you transform your relationship with money this moment moving forward.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of today's episode with all the important links.
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
