Guest Author Sam Vaknin: “I am a Narcissist. It’s a Disability. How Can I Improve My Life?”

"Can't walk but I can fly" by Mimi Stuart ©

“Can’t walk but I can fly” by Mimi Stuart ©

GUEST AUTHOR SAM VAKNIN writes:

Narcissistic Personality Disorder has been recognised as a distinct mental health diagnosis a little more than two decades ago. There are few who can honestly claim expertise or even in-depth understanding of this complex condition.

No one knows whether therapy works. What is known is that therapists find narcissists repulsive, overbearing and unnerving. It is also known that narcissists try to co-opt, idolize, or humiliate the therapist.

But what if the narcissist really wants to improve? Even if complete healing is out of the question – behaviour modification is not.

To a narcissist, I would recommend a functional approach, along the following lines:

Know and accept thyself. This is who you are. You have good traits and bad traits and you are a narcissist. These are facts. Narcissism is an adaptive mechanism. It is dysfunctional now, but, once, it saved you from a lot more dysfunction or even non-function. Make a list: what does it mean to be a narcissist in your specific case? What are your typical behaviour patterns? Which types of conduct do you find to be counterproductive, irritating, self-defeating or self-destructive? Which are productive, constructive and should be enhanced despite their pathological origin?

Decide to suppress the first type of behaviours and to promote the second. Construct lists of self-punishments, negative feedback and negative reinforcements. Impose them upon yourself when you have behaved negatively. Make a list of prizes, little indulgences, positive feedbacks and positive reinforcements. Use them to reward yourself when you adopted a behaviour of the second kind.

Keep doing this with the express intent of conditioning yourself. Be objective, predictable and just in the administration of both punishments and awards, positive and negative reinforcements and feedback. Learn to trust your “inner court”. Constrain the sadistic, immature and ideal parts of your personality by applying a uniform codex, a set of immutable and invariably applied rules.

Once sufficiently conditioned, monitor yourself incessantly. Narcissism is sneaky and it possesses all your resources because it is you. Your disorder is intelligent because you are. Beware and never lose control. With time this onerous regime will become a second habit and supplant the narcissistic (pathological) superstructure.

You might have noticed that all the above can be amply summed by suggesting to you to become your own parent. This is what parents do and the process is called “education” or “socialisation”. Re-parent yourself. Be your own parent. If therapy is helpful or needed, go ahead.

The heart of the beast is the inability of the narcissist to distinguish true from false, appearances from reality, posing from being, Narcissistic Supply from genuine relationships, and compulsive drives from true interests and avocations. Narcissism is about deceit. It blurs the distinction between authentic actions, true motives, real desires, and original emotions – and their malignant forms.

Narcissists are no longer capable of knowing themselves. Terrified by their internal apparitions, paralysed by their lack of authenticity, suppressed by the weight of their repressed emotions – they occupy a hall of mirrors. Edvard Munch-like, their elongated figures stare at them, on the verge of the scream, yet somehow, soundless.

The narcissist’s childlike, curious, vibrant, and optimistic True Self is dead. His False Self is, well, false. How can anyone on a permanent diet of echoes and reflections ever acquaint himself with reality? How can the narcissist ever love – he, whose essence is to devour meaningful others?

The answer is: discipline, decisiveness, clear targets, conditioning, justice. The narcissist is the product of unjust, capricious and cruel treatment. He is the finished product off a production line of self-recrimination, guilt and fear. He needs to take the antidote to counter the narcissistic poison. Unfortunately, there is no drug which can ameliorate pathological narcissism.

Confronting one’s parents about one’s childhood is a good idea if the narcissist feels that he can take it and cope with new and painful truths. But the narcissist must be careful. He is playing with fire. Still, if he feels confident that he can withstand anything revealed to him in such a confrontation, it is a good and wise move in the right direction.

My advice to the narcissist would then be: dedicate a lot of time to rehearsing this critical encounter and define well what is it exactly that you want to achieve. Do not turn this reunion into a monodrama, group therapy, or trial. Get some answers and get at the truth. Don’t try to prove anything, to vindicate, to take revenge, to win the argument, or to exculpate. Talk to them, heart to heart, as you would with yourself. Do not try to sound professional, mature, intelligent, knowledgeable and distanced. There is no “problem to solve” – just a condition to adjust yourself to.

More generally, try to take life and yourself much less seriously. Being immersed in one’s self and in one’s mental health condition is never the recipe to full functionality, let alone happiness. The world is an absurd place. It is indeed a theatre to be enjoyed. It is full of colours and smells and sounds to be treasured and cherished. It is varied and it accommodates and tolerates everyone and everything, even narcissists.

You, the narcissist, should try to see the positive aspects of your disorder. In Chinese, the ideogram for “crisis” includes a part that stands for “opportunity”. Why don’t you transform the curse that is your life into a blessing? Why don’t you tell the world your story, teach people in your condition and their victims how to avoid the pitfalls, how to cope with the damage? Why don’t you do all this in a more institutionalised manner?

For instance, you can start a discussion group or put up a Web site on the internet. You can establish a “narcissists anonymous” in some community shelter. You can open a correspondence network, a help centre for men in your condition, for women abused by narcissists … the possibilities are endless. And it will instil in you a regained sense of self-worth, give you a purpose, endow you with self-confidence and reassurance. It is only by helping others that we help ourselves. This is, of course, a suggestion – not a prescription. But it demonstrates the ways in which you can derive power from adversity.

It is easy for the narcissist to think about Pathological Narcissism as the source of all that is evil and wrong in his life. Narcissism is a catchphrase, a conceptual scapegoat, an evil seed. It conveniently encapsulates the predicament of the narcissist. It introduces logic and causal relations into his baffled, tumultuous world. But this is a trap.

The human psyche is too complex and the brain too plastic to be captured by a single, all-encompassing label, however all-pervasive the disorder is. The road to self-help and self-betterment passes through numerous junctions and stations. Except for pathological narcissism, there are many other elements in the complex dynamics that is the soul of the narcissist. The narcissist should take responsibility for his life and not relegate it to some hitherto rather obscure psychodynamic concept. This is the first and most important step towards healing.

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by Guest Author Sam Vaknin, the author of Malignant Self-love: Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain – How the West Lost the East, as well as many other books and ebooks about topics in psychology, relationships, philosophy, economics, international affairs, and award-winning short fiction.

He is the Editor-in-Chief of Global Politician and served as a columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, eBookWeb, and Bellaonline, and as a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent. He was the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Visit Sam’s Web site.

3 thoughts on “Guest Author Sam Vaknin: “I am a Narcissist. It’s a Disability. How Can I Improve My Life?”

  1. There is a therapy that really work, it is named “Congnitive, Conductual therapy” and the read of authors like http://www.amazon.it/poder-pensamiento-flexible-Flexible-Thinking/dp/6074006644

    The problem is humility, recognizing we are not special, we are not superiors, we are not “Gods chosen people”, that reality is outside us and we need to understand it the way it is, “Reality” is not the reflection of our ego drived perceptions.

    Nacissism is an illness like alcoholism, and need humility to control it, we also need a “superior being”, and this superior being can be “God”, “Nature”, “Universe”, or a person who care about us, like a therapist or a doctor or someone to whom we can be truthful, and rely on.

    Narcissism is about “entitlement”, is about feeling that we deserve, these are called “deformed thoughts”, we need to learn how to avoid them, and this is what a well trained “Cognitive, conducutual therapist can do!

  2. Yes. In a perfect narcissistic world, this “sounds” great except narcissists like themselves the way they are. They do not have compassion for their own selves so how can they turn compassion inward to turn it outward? They cannot. Even if they followed this advice, what would motivate them to do so or continue to do so. Not everyone is a Sam Vaknin who can analyze their own selves. The ones who frequent my Facebook page at Yourlifelifter do so to learn more about themselves and prove the experts wrong or to get attention. The ones who pretend to have healing pages continue to exploit the ones they damaged. You cannot polish a turd but you can roll it in glitter yet it remains a turd. Untreatable pain addiction and perpetual lack of compassion and empathy! Can narcs learn how to put on the brakes? Sure but rarely and what will motivate them to continue to do so? Self love? No. Love? No. Feeding off of others’ energy? YES! Point being…it doesn’t matter because if not authentically for others’ benefit, even “good actions” are exploitive. At least Sam Vaknin admits the truth about his intentions.

  3. Therapy works, for a while, but only because it feels good to have someone pay attention to you — for the first time ever; even if they’re only pretending they care, but nobody does care. You feel a little hopeful for a while, then the same old s*** comes back again and guts you like a fish. Everyone is an idiot in this society. This whole society is just one big club with smaller clubs inside of it; a bunch of neotenous cretin pack animals. With this Internet s***, the whole world has turned into an endless stream of humiliating and acidic obloquy. The whole world has been destroyed by these armies of political warriors. Everyone has been abducted into these ideological cliques. If I hear one more neotenous cretin say “bigot” I’m gonna ring them out like a rag till there isn’t a drop of blood left in them. The only option is to just lay in bed till you die. That’s pretty much what I do.

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