The School of Greatness - Signs You’re Dating a Narcissist & How to Know If You Are One w/Dr. Ramani Durvasula (PART 1) EP 1195
Episode Date: November 29, 2021Today’s guest is Dr. Ramani Durvasula. She’s a licensed clinical psychologist and Professor of Psychology at California State University in Los Angeles. The focus of Dr. Ramani’s clinical, acade...mic and consultative work is the cause and impact of narcissism and high-conflict, entitled, antagonistic personality styles on human relationships, mental health, and societal expectations. She’s also the best-selling author of “Don’t You Know Who I Am?”: How to Stay Sane in the Era of Narcissism, Entitlement and Incivility. This is a topic that truly fascinated me so much that I wanted to split this episode into two parts! Make sure to come back for part two later this week!In this episode we discuss the main traits of a narcissist and how people become one, what to do if you find yourself in a relationship with a narcissist, the "DEEP" Technique and why radical acceptance is so important, whether or not a narcissist is capable of feeling love, and so much more!For more go to - www.lewishowes.com/1195Read Dr. Ramani's books - https://www.amazon.com/Dont-You-Know-Who-Entitlement/dp/1682617521 & https://www.amazon.com/Should-Stay-Surviving-Narcissistic-Relationship/dp/1618688782Check out her website - http://doctor-ramani.com/The Power of Erotic Intelligence with Esther Perel: https://link.chtbl.com/732-podFind Lasting Love with Matthew Hussey: https://link.chtbl.com/811-pod
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This is episode number 1,195 with Dr. Ramani Dervasula.
The bigger question I often get is, can a narcissist love?
Is that possible? Besides loving themselves?
We love what we believe they are.
Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned
lifestyle entrepreneur. And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Welcome, my friend, to this special episode. I was kind of in shock and fascinated this entire
episode with Dr. Romani, and you're about to hear why. She is kind of in shock and fascinated this entire episode with Dr. Romney,
and you're about to hear why. She is a licensed clinical psychologist and professor of psychology
at Cal State University in Los Angeles, and the focus of Dr. Romney's clinical, academic,
and consultative work is the cause and impact of narcissism and high conflict entitled
Antagonistic Personality styles on human relationships mental
health and societal expectations she's also the best-selling author of don't you know who i am
how to stay sane in the era of narcissism entitlement and incivility and this topic
truly fascinated me so much i kind of had to pause and was in shock many times throughout this
interview and i wanted to split this into two parts because it just kind of had to pause and was in shock many times throughout this interview.
And I wanted to split this into two parts because it just kind of blew me away and was fascinating how I was kind of reliving my past in so many different scenarios in my
life.
So I want you to dive in, buckle up, get ready, because this is going to be a powerful two
part episode and part two will come out later this week.
In this first episode, we discuss the main traits of a narcissist and how people become one, what to do if you find yourself in a
relationship with a narcissist, and this was interesting what she shared here, the difference
between narcissists and psychopaths, the deep technique and why radical acceptance is so
important, whether or not a narcissist is capable of feeling love and so much more.
And I'm telling you, this has kind of been a fascinating topic for me.
And I wanted to dive in on this.
And so many of you were asking me about doing a subject on this because we live in an era
of narcissism, really, where social media has amplified a lot of these things and showcase
people this so much more.
I really think this is going to help a lot of people who are struggling in relationships, maybe controlling or manipulative
relationships where they feel like the life is sucked out of them, where they feel like there's
no hope, like it's never enough. What they do is never good enough, all these different things.
So if you are feeling inspired by this at any moment, make sure to share this with a friend,
a family member, or post it over on social media. Let's get the word out because this information is so powerful and it helped me realize so many things. And if you think
of someone who might be in a specific relationship that is struggling with a narcissist, send them
this episode and see if there are any common themes that come up for them from this interview.
Again, big reminder, if this is your first time here, big thank you for being here. Thank the
person that sent you here.
And please subscribe to the School of Greatness over on Apple Podcast or on Spotify or wherever
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And connect with us over on YouTube as well for some incredible long-form videos over
there.
And I want to give a thank you and a shout out to the fan of the week from Byron, who
said, I thoroughly enjoyed listening to your podcast because of your focus on helping us
all improve our lives and break through to living our best life.
I am thankful to have found your podcast and each episode is a treat.
So Byron, thank you so much for being here and leaving a review over on Apple Podcast
and being the fan of the week.
Okay.
In just a moment, the one and only Dr. Ramani Durvasula.
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.
Everyone was literally back room of a lab
and everyone forgot about me.
I was content because I'm a nerd.
I've geeked out.
I was like, this is fascinating.
And then a lot of things happened.
If anyone ever asked me, this is my theory on it,
is I think it's interesting.
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 into 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 happened.
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 and.
Lots of, and materialism was on the rise.
So 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'll never forget the day, actually. I was, when I, someone told me about social media.
It was in that space between MySpace and Facebook.
Facebook, yeah.
And I had small, small children at the time.
And I think I was up late.
And somebody said, you know, you've 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 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 like 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.
Maybe going to the gym maybe maybe going to the gym but now all of it be except like selling 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 gonna be able to get validation just
sitting at home and I thought this narcissism things gonna blow up that was
2008 when I had that revelation. I started telling
people, 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 at 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 and more of the attention-seeking reality TV, housewife-type
shows and all of that. The Bachelor. The Bachelor. And I thought, oh, no, no, no.
And then the political winds changed and the word came into
popular use. So imagine going from something that you studied,
only you studied. And no one cared about it. Nobody cared about it. And then also it's
mainstream. And then the world changed and it became mainstream.
Wow.
Exactly.
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 they
kept is like they were all talking about the same relationship and I thought this
is interesting nobody ever taught these people about narcissism because it's
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 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 couples therapy for five years
and it was always about marriage is hard.
You got to communicate.
I'm like, communicating with a narcissist is,
I don't know, it's impossible.
It's impossible.
Screaming into an abyss.
Like, there's no point.
Is there hope for people in marriages
if they'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 person who's narcissistic has 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 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's on their mind. 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 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 all in some ways 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 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.
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 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 not 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 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 to personality.
We're born, the sort of the genetic part of personality, if you will, is called our temperament.
Our temperament.
Our temperament.
Our temperament.
So you're born and you're either a crier 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.
They're 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. Nobody really wants to spend time with
them 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 personality.
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, can 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, 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 them. That's the genetic side. All the rest of it is shaped by the world.
Environment, parents, society, how you were treated and what you're exposed to.
So if you had a, let's say, a challenging temperament growing up, is there hope for you to, 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.
Yes.
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 them into athletics. Yes. 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, oh, look at that rocky you built.
Or like, oh, my gosh, you ran 10 miles today.
Or you threw 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 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,
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 things lined up like that?
I can count on one hand the number of kids I know who got that lined up.
I mean, who had all the support and love.
All the support.
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 this summer competition league.
And he said, my father told me,
no matter what, I'm gonna love you.
Whether you score zero points or you're the highest scorer,
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 the school support
and parent support and sibling support
and 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,
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 this 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 that we you, well, what should we tell 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 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 on top of everything else can also be
what fosters the building of the narcissistic child, just overindulge.
And what happens is 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.
It's a lot of that.
And that's a dangerous game to play would you would you say with your research if um kids grew up in a healthy family let's say it's 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 and or
how does a narcissist become one is it only through family environment and the
way they were treated or how does actually happen so the problem if you if
they someone had all the fundamentals yes right the safety the love the
consistency the freedom from trauma great 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 a probability
from here down to here, right?
It's a course race, right?
You've really dropped the likelihood significantly.
Narcissism, creating adult narcissism
is a complex interblend 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,
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
narcissistic personality. But here's where it gets tricky. The majority of people exposed to trauma
in childhood don't become narcissistic. You see what I'm saying? So we're talking about risk
factors. You could, but you don't always. So that's one pathway.
This overindulgence, this 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 narcissistic personality development.
Conditional love.
Kobe Bryant's father.
I'm only going to love you if you come back having scored 20 points.
If you didn't, don't even show up.
Right.
Now imagine that happening 1,000 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 if you whatever.
The child learns that all love is conditional,
which is really, that's transactional, basically.
All narcissistic relationships in adulthood are transactional.
Interesting.
You set the tone there with conditionality.
A lot of this though comes down to something called attachment.
And 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 as being something that predicts a lower likelihood of adult narcissism.
So if you have a secure attachment, you're less likely to be narcissistic.
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 off and they lose it, then the 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.
Exactly.
And that anxious attachment style is very much associated with the narcissistic style interesting in adulthood yeah mm-hmm
can you break down the differences between narcissists psychopaths
sociopaths and then also how you spot them hmm so there's a big difference if
I was at a chalkboard here I be drawing a Venn diagram with overlapping circles.
Lots of overlap between narcissism and psychopathy.
Lots.
The boldness, the meanness, the impulsivity, the disinhibition, the always working 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 constantly 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. 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. Oh no, you got this on here. Yeah, right. You got that. Like, yeah.
Look at this and this and this. Criticizing you. Yes. You see what I'm saying? That's a hedge
against the shame. That's the narcissist game. Psychopath doesn't go there. Psychopath is not
anxious. Psychopath is not insecure. The 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 we could talk about.
But that autonomic reaction, that like boom, adrenaline,
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
hundred dollar 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 psychopath, they'd clip that and their heart rate
would never go up.
They would not think, they'd just take it, steal it.
So they have no anxiety.
No excitement around it.
No excitement, no anxiety,
and they're very stress resistant.
In that way, that's why there's so many psychopathic CEOs.
You're gonna 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 sorta calmly doing their surgery thing.
It really is, but there is a coldness and a callousness
because there is almost like no capacity for empathy,
no capacity for intimacy.
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 as more of a sadism and a paranoia
in the malignant narcissist.
They're the most dangerous narcissist.
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.
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.
To get rid of you, yeah.
Exactly, or they'll 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 them
or fire them or whatever, but no problem with that.
Right.
And very easily.
The emotion, they don't have empathy.
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 narcissists get what empathy is. They know. They use it against you.
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's 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's a rapport.
And then they're getting something from you.
Oh my gosh.
So it feels like empathy.
And especially when you first meet them,
that's why so many people think narcissistic people are charming and charismatic.
They know what's right.
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 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 it. 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 are they needed something at that point.
So what was the most, the scariest narcissist what was it called or the most most um dangerous malignant narcissist okay so can you explain again what that what that is so
let's talk about let's let's view narcissism as almost like this inner core okay the inner core
of narcissism is this variable empathy usually a lack of empathy. Okay 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.
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?
So with narcissism, we have to talk about sort of the top-of-the-line behaviors.
And those are presentations.
Charm, charisma, confidence, curiosity.
And they also-
Can you have those things and not be narcissistic?
You can.
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.
When you can find an empathic, charismatic person,
behold them.
They are the unicorns of the human being.
Like you really are like-
Someone who's confident and caring.
When I meet the confident, charismatic, empathic, kind, respectful, humble person.
It's a unicorn.
I literally am like, okay.
And I can tell you it doesn't happen often.
And I'm usually like, I look goo-goo 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 what's wrong with it. Every so often I find it. And I'm like, it hasn't happened course, I'm poking at it. I'm like, no, no, no. I'm going to 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.
It's all a front game, right? Yeah.
So what happens then? The curtain comes down across all your common sense and you miss the little things.
You're like, this is amazing.
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.
You justify, Well, yeah. You know, he's got a big job or she's really stressed
or she doesn't mean that or that's just their culture. 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 mean, like dismissive interrupting?
It's dismissive, like, okay, all right, you know, you're talking,
and then I not only cut in, but it's basically like,
you don't know what you're talking about.
Your point of view doesn't matter, or yeah, you're an idiot.
You're an idiot.
I know what's really, yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, so you shared some of these signs of malignant narcissism.
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 talked about.
Entitlement, yes.
Yes.
Now the problem with narcissism is there's subtypes.
Oh my gosh.
Not all narcissists are created.
We really do need a whiteboard.
Wow, that's crazy.
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 salesperson.
That's the grandiose narcissist.
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. And 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 all the way in with them,
now you're dealing with their malignant, manipulative, scary. And when we see controlling, when we see manipulative narcissism, 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 were malignant narcissists.
Right.
So what happens if you're with a narcissist?
Maybe it's been a year, you've been dating someone,
or your 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 the first six months seemed great
or it seemed like it was amazing,
but now we're seeing the curtain pull back
and some of these things are coming out
and we're not feeling good about the relationship
that we're in, whether it's a working relationship,
a friendship, an intimate relationship, we've spotted it.
What I'm hearing you say is there's really no way
to change a narcissist.
So trying to change
them is not going to happen. It's a fool's area. So does it mean we just pretty much have to rip
the cord and rip the bandaid and get out? Or how does it navigate? So life's not that simple.
Yeah. Right? We 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 they're
married and they have children. They got kids. 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 my first book on the topic of narcissism is 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 bandaid.
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 a narcissistic relationship that resulted
in the best outcomes was going no contact,
like having no contact with them.
That's the thing.
Completely blocking, cutting off.
Completely done.
Because it's almost like a toxin, right?
If there's a toxic gas, the best way to feel better
is to eliminate.
No more toxic gas.
If you have a little bit, you're just gonna 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 to change.
This is who they are.
This is who they are.
This is it.
And then I tell people, I have something called the deep technique that I talk about.
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, it's like you're in a deposition.
Yes?
No?
Okay.
Sounds good.
Sure.
Now.
Man.
Narcissists don't like that.
Because they love the fight.
So they're going to keep coming and digging and digging.
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.
They go for everything that's going to get them.
And make something up.
Start making stuff up.
They talk to your kids.
They start making stuff up. They go after your kids, 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 is like, game
on.
And they're all in.
I got you.
I got you.
Because when you're fighting, they're fighters.
That's what they do.
In fact, there was a great research study that came out from Ohio State University,
Ohio boy.
Yeah. And phenomenal study that came out this year. And over 450 studies they examined and found
really strong effects that narcissism is consistently associated with aggression.
There's nothing soft about this. This is about aggression. They want the fight. They are always
a better fighter. And they want the fight.
So they bait you.
You got to be made a steal.
Don't defend, don't engage, don't excite.
This is crazy.
To not get into the fight.
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.
This person DM'd me or this person is hitting on me.
They're always trying to create that sense of intrigue or the idea that somebody is more
into them or they're, or again, it's often them creating the jealousy or they'd 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 pair bonded species, we human beings.
We pretty much are about, generally, normatively,
have sex with one person.
People are like, no, that person cheated on me.
I said, yeah, they were only having sex with them.
They weren't having sex with you.
They were still sexually monogamous. Just happened they weren't banging you, they were only having sex with them. They weren't having sex with you. They were still sexually monogamous.
Just having, 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 with someone else, okay?
But we tend to be pair bonded.
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 the Darwinian stuff, movie production.
Pathological jealousy.
Pathological jealousy though, that starts getting into the realm of things like paranoia and um oh my gosh and
negative mood states and all that like jealousy doesn't feel good but it i always 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 like because when people i've been with people worked with couples and 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's 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 what 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 drive room
I'm like
I got that little
funny thing in my tummy
and I'm like
huh
he doesn't even
live in this country
and so I'm thinking
and I was like
that's good
that's good
that I'm still feeling
like I still got
a dog in the fight
I care
but it doesn't mean
you're like
for days letting it stress you out and like talking to him about it.
Only because we're talking about it here.
Yeah, of course.
And so the pathological jealousy.
Pathological jealousy.
Yeah.
That's a narcissistic thing.
It's more paranoid.
It's more antagonistic.
It's more about.
You must be doing something.
You're doing something.
It's accusatory.
It's almost delusional. Oh my gosh, okay
What would you say again are the main causes?
What are the main things that happen to cause someone to become a narcissist? Is it all trauma based? It's no it's it's partly trauma
It's also that that temperament it is
Chaos in the early environment. It's lack of secure attachment.
It's overvaluation of the child.
They 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 how it's going to go down.
We're about to see, because what?
Facebook's coming up on 20 years soon, right?
We're about to see the first generation of kids who are born into the Facebook world.
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 who saw their pictures were the people I actually put them in an envelope,
mail the picture kind of thing.
Or came over to the house and looked at the picture book.
Or came to the house and looked at the actual baby.
But 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 do you think it's okay to share some of your family life on social media and some of your children's 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, 10 or 12?
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 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 as we 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 say, oh, this may not be entirely cool.
Yeah, what happens when the the kids 23 and they start
going back and seeing all these like things that their mom or dad posted 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.
You're wondering, are you costuming your child for Halloween for you or for them?
Or for the validation online. Yeah, except for the validation the parent is getting.
Yes, exactly. Man, it'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?
I mean, 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 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.
Love and attention.
All they want is their parents' love and 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 interest 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 a psychologist i'm concerned about when
these chickens come home to roost and they're going to let's say 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 kind of a different game.
Or it's the ones that have a bigger following.
If they were gonna be posting
and they have a bigger following,
let's 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? Being 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 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 Disneyland.
We're going to the park because 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 for our Christmas card.
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 but the false self.
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.
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's 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 experts on these kind of personality traits and these masks that men wear.
And I wrote about it because I realized I was wearing a mask,
a couple of different masks, for many different years of 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 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. And so I could make sure that, you know, I'd beat myself up and train obsessively until I got better, until I could make sure that I could put myself
in a better position athletically.
And there's these different masks that men wear,
and I realized 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 and talk to you about the authentic self, because it's such the authentic self. Correct. And that, I mean, that's, maybe we'll have a different day.
I'll come in and 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 even 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 as a mountain, self-actualization is the summit. It's the top. 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, you did feel like you were
in the face of greatness with them, but some of them were ordinary. Like one was a man who 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?
It was like absolute serenity.
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, you know, 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 him, 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 sewer and it smelled like an open sewer he's just
chilling he's just chilling and I'm like 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 the and it wasn't just 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.
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 your point across if you need to get it across?
You don't, you can't.
So 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, 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 a parent of a narcissist, we're going to give the other parent full custody.
Not happening.
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
I my favorite is when people file for divorce like the day of their youngest child's 18th birthday
I'm like I don't know what that was about. You see that happen quite a bit.
They literally wait till 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, 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 is endurance. Radical acceptance.
This thing sounds exhausting.
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.
Okay. Why? Because inary in chicago it's cold
radical acceptance yeah so you just accept it right if your window's facing east and you don't
want the sun to wake you up get curtains radical acceptance you cannot talk to a narcissist so i
tell people there's like 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 important to your core values, to 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 prejudicial language.
True north gets activated and they'll say, I'm taking the fight.
They pull off the gloves.
They pull out the earrings and then they're in.
They're just, they'll go at it. it is exhausting nothing good happens nothing good happens right but at least they can say i took the fight dr romney yeah so i could live with myself
right to know that i fought for my kids yeah 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 though is when a person finally gives up they're overwhelmed with grief they're like
there's no there 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 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, that's it.
But that's, I mean, what do you do with the rest of your time?
You cultivate other stuff in your life, interests.
Can you love a narcissist
or is it impossible to love a narcissist?
That'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, right?
You're in short sleeves.
I'm in a sweater.
Yeah.
You know, so it's a subjective word.
So can a, lots 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 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, you know, again, that's a philosophical conversation.
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?
Thank you so much for listening.
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
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