Guest Author SAM VAKNIN, PhD:
“How Can I tell if He is a Psychopath?”

"Audacity" by Mimi Stuart © Live the Life you Desire

“Audacity” by Mimi Stuart ©
Live the Life you Desire

Guest Author SAM VAKNIN, PhD writes:

1. Psychopaths are “too good to be true.” They besiege their interlocutors with a relentless charm offensive, flaunting their accomplishments, skills, talents, brilliance, acuity, and good fortune.

2. Information asymmetry: The psychopath may flood you with unwanted and unwarranted information – and disinformation – about himself while conspicuously being incurious about you. Alternatively, he keeps mum about his life while intrusively “milking” you for the most intimate details of yours.

3. Belaboured normalcy and effortless deviance: Actions that are reflexive, or effortless with normal, healthy people require an inordinate amount of premeditation, concentration, planning, and laborious investment by the psychopath. Acts that normal folk would find abhorrent come naturally and effortlessly to the psychopath.

4. Alloplastic Defenses: The psychopath blames others, the authorities, institutions, or the world at large for his failures, defeats, and mishaps. It is never his fault. He has an external locus of control: his life is ruled from the outside, the collected sad outcomes of injustice, discrimination, and conspiracy.

5. Psychopaths are said to be fearless and sang-froid. Their pain tolerance is very high. Still, contrary to popular perceptions and psychiatric orthodoxy, some psychopaths are actually anxious and fearful. Their psychopathy is a defense against an underlying and all-pervasive anxiety, either hereditary, or brought on by early childhood abuse.

Remember this:

The Familiar is tempting – but, it is a trap. The Unknown is terrifying – but, it holds a promise. Your only chance at happiness, even survival, is to move on.

by Sam Vaknin, PhD, Author of the comprehensive book on narcissism “Malignant Self-love: Narcissism Revisited.”

Read S. Vaknin’s “How to Recognize a Narcissist or a Psychopath on Your First Date, Before It is Too Late?”

Read S. Vaknin’s “People-pleasers and Pathological Charmers.”

Fear of commitment:
“I like to keep my options open. Something better might come along.”

"Song of Everest" by Mimi Stuart © Live the Life you Desire

“Song of Everest” by Mimi Stuart ©
Live the Life you Desire

Some people are drawn to new and exciting experiences and relationships, and are reluctant to limit their options. Yet when they habitually avoid commitment to keep possibilities open, they may end up with little of value, whether in terms of relationships or a career.

While young, bouncing around and having a variety of experiences can be fun and eye-opening. Yet when individuals continue on the “keeping-my-options-open” path, they may end up distracted, scattered, and drifting. A lifetime of spontaneity and novelty can eventually leave a person feeling empty, shallow, and jaded. Relationships will lack depth and have little meaning. Work may not be enriching. Every moment might be filled with questions such as “What next?” and “What else?”

Youthful or immature?

In mythology, the Puer aeternus represents the eternal child. Fluttering around like a butterfly, this Peter Pan like personality delights in adventures and fears the possibility of being trapped. People who embody the Puer adapt easily to new people and ideas. Yet they can be impulsive, impatient, and have difficulty focusing on a particular direction in life. Magnetic and charming when young, the Puer is emotionally juvenile and un-rooted as he or she gets older.

The continuous need to keep our options open is a choice that limits our lives in a substantial way. By keeping all our options open, we limit ourselves to the superficial. We eliminate certain meaningful experiences from our life, including the experience of a deep and committed relationship as well as dedicated and satisfying work. There are no perfect choices in relationship and in work. But even when marriages and careers don’t work out, at least we haven’t missed out on the richness of trying to live life with depth.


Inner Stillness

The fear of missing out comes from a need for anticipation, excitement, and busyness, which stems from discomfort with being still and present in the moment.

Individuals who fear commitment can best deepen life experience by getting in touch with their inner stillness. Through being able to be still and present to one’s internal voice rather than just to externalities, one can learn to appreciate, enjoy, and feel greater depth in all of the experiences in life without needing as much variety and constant stimulus.

This is not to suggest that we should commit to someone we are not in love with or to work that repels us. Yet by becoming more grounded and centered, we will lose our fear that we will be missing out by limiting our options. Instead, we will find that only by making commitments and choosing directions can we really experience the joy and awe of the simple wonders in life, the feeling of self-empowerment coming from dedication and depth within a field of work, and the strength and potency of a long-term committed relationship.

by Alison Poulsen, PhD

Read “After multiple affairs, he promised he’d never cheat on me again. Can I trust him this time?”

Read “When Facebook erodes real-life relationships: ‘I’m only checking in with friends and seeing what they’re up to.’”

Read “Infidelity: ‘Hoping and wishing my husband would give me the same love he showers on other women over ten years of infidelity.’”