Why Narcissists Lack Empathy

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Heal NPD

Heal NPD

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 1 900
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
I will remove comments that are abusive to any individual (including myself) or population. This includes comments that are abusive toward pwNPD.
@PutingPinoy
@PutingPinoy Жыл бұрын
I applaud with you for this! I do the same with my pages and channels.
@MsMirror
@MsMirror Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@HeartFeltGesture
@HeartFeltGesture Жыл бұрын
There is a spectrum of narcissism. From the amount we all have to survive as an ego identity all the way up to sociopathic, psychopathic, sadistic murderous killer. This guy obviously hasnt been on the receiving end of a covert narcissist. Only people who have can understand the complexity, the depth of depravity, the evil smirk, the systematic, conscious orchestration of abuse. This channel is for pathological narcissists with NPD who recognize their condition and want to heal (good luck with finding an audience). It is not for people who have been abused by narcissists, it will obviously be very triggering to hear this guy speak.
@FriggaRedSkye
@FriggaRedSkye Жыл бұрын
​@@sailingaeolus I'm with you, why give them ammo? It's been spoilt, even recovered ones don't seem that recovered to me, just holding off some of the more intense behaviour.. I think this compassionate thing is getting silly now.
@sarajohnsonlpc
@sarajohnsonlpc Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you've been fortunate enough to avoid narcissistic abuse.I agree on the DSM diagnostics, which are lacking, and that their empathy is definitely impaired, but they also weaponize empathy, and their lack of it, against you, 100%, and with intention. Also, they can all be malignant in a certain context, especially once you're onto them. there is no false dichotomy- they are suffering AND they are intentional bad actors. ALL OF THEM. They aren't completely blind once they've repeated their cycle 15-50 times! They would have you believe that though!
@collinr811
@collinr811 Жыл бұрын
Would love to see a video on the difference between narcissist who grew up in an abusive home and those who were overly praised.
@rmr1300
@rmr1300 Жыл бұрын
Yes!!!!
@oscarknutsen6436
@oscarknutsen6436 Жыл бұрын
Being constantly on a pedestal is psychological abuse
@nugget6635
@nugget6635 Жыл бұрын
Narcissists who grew up in abusive homes have antisocial traits and are closer to criminal behavior. Narcissists who were overly praised become smug prosocial Narcissists that do everything they can to maintain a good social image, they are what Ramani calls "communal Narcissists".
@bobbarker1798
@bobbarker1798 Жыл бұрын
I think it's the same as they view themselves as the most victimized and the most intelligent, and the most handsome/beautiful.
@mfcmxtt6490
@mfcmxtt6490 Жыл бұрын
yes
@brendacarey5207
@brendacarey5207 Жыл бұрын
The narc may be drowning and pulling others down with them to survive however in my experience the narc is the one that capsizes the boat, pulls everyone down and walks away with no remorse while blaming the people they drown for the whole mess.
@NopeNotTodaySatan
@NopeNotTodaySatan Жыл бұрын
That’s been my experience as well.
@rhondawallace4090
@rhondawallace4090 Жыл бұрын
My experience too
@catherinewilson1079
@catherinewilson1079 Жыл бұрын
Yes
@LOVEtoPLAYdrums
@LOVEtoPLAYdrums Жыл бұрын
Exactly this!!! ❤️🌍🌏🍻🌎🎼🎨🖼️🌄😇❤️
@lydiapetra1211
@lydiapetra1211 Жыл бұрын
You are absolutely right!!!!!!!!
@mama66333
@mama66333 Жыл бұрын
I’m 67 year old and have wondered why I initially have good relationships with people. There is mutual liking of each other and then I do something to sabotage the relationship and end the relationship. As a result I now have very few relationships and am very lonely and feel bad about myself. Having surmised “people don’t like me.” Your video has shone a bright light into understanding myself. I have an avoidant fearful attachment style. Having had 2 narcissists for parents that might explain how I developed a less than ideal attachment style. It’s gratifying to finally have an understanding of my behavior that has baffled me all of my life. Both of my narc parents had a lot of friends. I am not narcissistic and I have avoided having relationships despite wanting people in my life.
@JJ_FLA
@JJ_FLA 10 ай бұрын
Same😢
@ukegirl13
@ukegirl13 7 ай бұрын
Hi mama66333. You must be a long lost sister!! I just turned 68 and like you have no friends to speak of because of a narc father and older sister. It’s funny though I actually like being alone. I am alone, but not lonely. I inadvertently sabotage people (women especially) because my mother left when I was five and never saw her again. Take care my friend!! 😊
@uncleclaw171
@uncleclaw171 2 ай бұрын
my narc sperm donor had many friends.... a revolving door of short-term friendships. He'd charm them with his social mask at first, but when people finally saw under it and saw the real person he was, they'd bail. He'd either "take a piss" (not in the British meaning - more like a dog, establish 'dominance', and his warped opinion matters more than yours) or betray them somehow. He betrayed his first 6 wives by cheating on them... probably the 7th as well... but she was a sociopath too, so she probably didnt care? It's all transactional with them. He betrayed a neighbor/friend over a construction job that the friend made the mistake of telling my oldman-narc... who worked in the same biz, other company.... and he went and underbid and stole the account, killing their friendship permanently. There are many stories like that. just POS who CANNOT connect with anyone, not even his own children, who BTW, he bailed on when they were toddlers..... TWICE.... once with the first wife & two kids, and then AGAIN bailed on the 2nd wife, with two kids. The 'man' showed ZERO responsibility for his children, could never handle it his entire life. He bailed on his kids and went out to party and womanize... TWICE. And when he got old, this jackass had the audacity to act he was some kind of awesome father even handed out "advice". can you believe THAT?? FFS, they are so lacking in self awareness, and reality in general, imo.
@concernedcitizen2076
@concernedcitizen2076 Күн бұрын
Completely agree, I had a malignant narc. as father and a BPD/narc as mother and have avoidant fearful attachment style. I can feel some empathy for others but not really for myself, the drowning analogy is very spot on (watch movie "Passengers" - a good movie actually.) It is a terrible condition and I have lived my life shifting between periods of suicidal ideation (loneliness/depression) and periods of grandiosity. I am 66 and it has been a low quality "looser" life, fortunately I have no children. I have watched 100's of hours of videos on NPD/CPTSD and this Doctor is one of the most usefull and accurate in my opinion.
@artbygilik
@artbygilik 5 ай бұрын
The ones I met seemed miserable with a fragile ego but on the outside they are appearing outgoing and charming. They can dish the criticism and insults but they can’t handle being on the receiving end. Life is so much more peaceful after blocking these individuals from coming back.
@CraftingMom64
@CraftingMom64 4 ай бұрын
They will hang up on the appointment setter when you call a therapist office. Adults must consent to their own healthcare. Blocking is the only answer.
@iwritetoomuch8907
@iwritetoomuch8907 21 күн бұрын
I know exactly what you are talking about. They only know how to hurl insults. No emotional maturity. I constantly worry about catching their "fleas" as the saying goes.
@christiansmith5047
@christiansmith5047 15 күн бұрын
Except the ones you met and didn't know they were NPD. Kind of a huge oversight there.
@jonanon8193
@jonanon8193 Жыл бұрын
The drowning analogy is accurate. Throw them a life preserver, but whatever you do stay away from someone who is drowning or they will pull you under and both lives lost. Are they evil? That depends on your definition of evil - maybe evil can be defined as someone who is "drowning" and pulling others under trying to save themselves. Maybe most of us would be evil if we were "drowning" too. Being a Victim does not nullify being a Perpetrator. It may be the reason why they are a Perpetrator, but they are still a Perpetrator.
@joyslove3858
@joyslove3858 Жыл бұрын
Excellent, balanced thoughts! I agree.
@alanashford9207
@alanashford9207 Жыл бұрын
I like this bit of wisdom
@AprilKnudson
@AprilKnudson Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this comment
@ryangrundy4290
@ryangrundy4290 Жыл бұрын
Some in that same situation don’t pull others down with them
@valerieriggins3184
@valerieriggins3184 Жыл бұрын
IT'S The Making Excuses For EVIL Behavior....Either You Haven't Been Burnt BAD ENOUGH Or You Are The NARC. That's Why It's Victims, Crimes And Death Just Giving Them A Pat On The Back.
@julielesemann7621
@julielesemann7621 Жыл бұрын
I like how you recognize the human in the person with NPD, I think society tends to forget people with NPD are human first because they become unrecognizable to us because of their detachment from their self. I was raised by three caregivers with NPD and It's important for my healing that I understand my caregivers distress in order to let go of my pain. Watching your perspective has allowed me to humanize them instead of seeing them as monsters.
@cheralyse1352
@cheralyse1352 Жыл бұрын
Children do not have the capacity to intellectualize around the emotional neglect and abuse they experience at the hands of narcissist "care-givers". Severe damage for life!!!
@saintejeannedarc9460
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
Yes and yes. It has done leaps and bounds for my healing to see the person in the disorder, rather than see them as a raging monster that is out to get us, like too many channels make out. There are a number of self aware narcissist channels that are very helpful too. Though a few of them still buy too much into the plotting and scheming model of narcissism, because they still follow Dr. Ramani as the ultimate expert and guru. I know she really validates victims of narcisssim, but I think at this point she does more long term harm than good,even for the victims of NPD abuse and definitely for the actual narcissist side. Lee, Mental Healness got me started. Then Ben, Raw Motivations helped me recognize the trauma bond from a 10 year relationship. For me, recognizing what a trauma bond was took a big weight off me. I'd been out of the relationship for 4 months, but still mentally and emotionally stuck and obsessed, esp. given that ultimate panacea of "no contact" wasn't possible. Now I have a much better relationship w/ my 75 year old mother, who won't change or ever be diagnosed. My own mental shift made a huge difference though in her actually wanting to reach out to me for a change and be a bit more motherly.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@user-me3op3wg7v - pathological narcissism is not a fancy term for “abuser.” This condition is sometimes expressed in the form of interpersonal antagonism and emotional disconstraint, which can take the form of abusive behaviors. But abusive behavior is NOT the core feature of pathological narcissism or NPD. Unstable self-esteem is THE defining feature of these forms of mental illness.
@mealovesyu
@mealovesyu Жыл бұрын
@user-me3op3wg7v The audacity that you have to think that you know lore the people who have studied the condition for years in an empirical setting is mind blowing. Too many people think that because they were abused by a narcissist or psychopath, that they are somehow an expert on these disorders when really you are just blinded by your emotions and cannot see things objectively. The abusive behaviour is NOT a core feature of being a narcissist. Narcissism means to be in love with oneself as based on the mythological story. The core behaviour is the low self esteem and lack of self (disconnection from emotions), which they respond to by creating a false sense of self and layers upon layers of grandiosity in order to cover up their extremely low self esteem. This need to seem important and powerful and in control then leads to the abusive behaviours. But remember that ALL traits stem from this core trait which is the lack of self and this is true for BPD, ASPD etc. The lack of self and self esteem, that is the unregulated and distorted relationship with oneself and one’s emotions is what causes the lack of empathy which lead to abusive behaviours. This is true for psychopaths such as myself, the difference being that we are born with it, as it is a difference in the very structure of the brain, and not necessarily so much a difference in how it is wired i.e. a neurotypical child developing factor 2 psychopathy (sociopathy) through years of neglect and abuse in childhood. There is evidence that some sociopaths and narcissists can be predisposed to the disorder genetically, but it is not something that it automatically conferred at birth.
@healnpd
@healnpd 11 ай бұрын
@user-me3op3wg7v In *most* cases there is a sociopathic quality present? I would be interested to see the data that backs this up. Regarding abusive behavior being somehow definitional to NPD, I think if you examine that claim you will see how it is either not true *or* must be true for nearly all forms of mental illness. People with anxiety view others as potentially dangerous, how could that not result in some forms of abuse? People with depression lose interest in social interaction, how could that not result in some form of neglect? People with substance use disorders prioritize use of the substance over other people, how could that not result in some kind of abuse? People with bipolar disorders experience manic or hypomanic episodes during which they often feel superior than others - is abuse also inextricable from bipolar disorder? I could go on and on, highlighting the key distortions in thought and perception that characterize each form of mental illness, and drawing the conclusion that every one is unavoidably "abusive." Thinking about mental illness in terms of abusers and victims is not really helpful.
@i.ehrenfest349
@i.ehrenfest349 Жыл бұрын
I am relieved to hear this explanation. Dr Ramani’s videos, and those of others, have helped me. I’ve suffered quite a bit of abuse in my childhood, and I think it may have been narcissistic abuse. Throughout, I’ve felt the vulnerability and wounds of these people. That led me to be too understanding and forgiving. Videos and books like those of dr Ramani and others have finally helped me see that something is really going on, there’s a genuine disorder, it’s not going to change, and I have a right to move away from that. On the other hand I’ve been quite confused, over the many years of reading about narcissism, about the attitude with which narcissists are treated. It’s an “us and them” thing. They’re portrayed as bad people with no redeeming qualities - and if you’re too nuanced in your viewpoints, you can easily get accused of being an enabler. I do see that that risk exists. But in the people that abused me (including quite a bit of physical violence) I never saw the cold, calculating individuals that the books and experts spoke of. I know they exist. But they were not my family members. My family members lashed out sharply and damaged me quite severely, but not because they were evil geniuses. They are troubled. The worst of them, it’s true, isn’t all THAT troubled. But even as a child I knew she wasn’t acting from strength, just from a kind of primitive, troubled feeling. I will never have contact with her again because she’s just too destructive, but I don’t see a demonic human being. I see tragedy. In her own upbringing, and just possibly some brain damage from a fall. One huge danger from the antagonistic approach is that, in the worst cases, people are encouraged to lash back out at the narcissist. Just look at the countless posts on Quora about how to get back at the narcissist. These posts, with thousands of upvotes, are filled with people who are extremely resentful about what happened to them, feel that the other person was 100% to blame and should be punished. Well, what sort of person is especially attracted to such a worldview? Right, the narcissist. I am convinced that many people who comment on that sort of post and see themselves as victims of narcissistic abuse in their marriages were in fact themselves the narcissist. The anger and vindictiveness are frightening. I’m reminded of a documentary about a murderer who bonded with his latest victim over…their bad former marriages, and how he was allegedly treated badly by his ex-wife who even cheated on him. In reality, the ex wife had long been trying to get away from him and was seeing someone knew. He murdered her. Then he bonded with a new woman over both having been victimised by their exes. And then he murdered her, too. So yes, I get very uneasy when I see excessively vindictive victimhood. No disrespect meant to people who have been genuinely victimised and are understandably deeply angered. I hope I’m making myself clear. I believe my sister is narcissistic, and after many decades of hurtful interaction I want to change our relationship or sever it. I’m not helped by people who underestimate narcissism and preach healing and forgiveness and so push me back into the damaging interaction. But I’m also not helped by people who paint a black and white picture in which my sister is some kind of demon - she is not, she’s someone who hurts very much, but doesn’t want to talk about it and has to elevate herself above her loved ones in order to feel good about herself. And I have often hurt her, if not in the same way. Confronted with the abusive actions I’ve been withdrawing, rigid. I didn’t know how else to deal with it. She and I are not demon vs saint. We’re both deeply damaged from our childhood. She’s used me a lot to take out her anger on, and I need to get out of that. I don’t think it will ever change. But she’s not a cold hearted person who uses her empathy against others. Yes, she can spot the weaknesses in those around her with lightning speed, and will taunt you with them. But why? Because she’s got those weaknesses, too, but doesn’t want to see them. In short - I don’t know how to move on from here, but demonisation isn’t going to help. And is reminiscent of how borderlines were demonised until recently - when now, they’re suddenly seen as a group that has a very good prognosis with treatment. Demonisation is no good. It’s what narcissists do.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Preach.
@catherinewilson1079
@catherinewilson1079 Жыл бұрын
By the time I reached the end of my 23 year marriage to a man with NPD, I realized much the same facts as you have. Narcissists are drawn to people with the same type of abusive histories as they have. By the end one part of me felt sorry for him and recognized that he was a very broken individual. My personal unspoken name for him was « The hollow man ». But I never felt sorry enough to stick around and be mentally, emotionally and financially destroyed any more than he had already done. His actions were those of a sociopath, if not a psychopath.
@i.ehrenfest349
@i.ehrenfest349 Жыл бұрын
@@healnpd Sorry - what do you mean by “preach”?
@i.ehrenfest349
@i.ehrenfest349 Жыл бұрын
@@catherinewilson1079 Well, that’s especially dire, sociopathy or psychopathy. Hollow man, indeed…I’m glad you didn’t stay.
@catherinewilson1079
@catherinewilson1079 Жыл бұрын
@@i.ehrenfest349 Thank you. It cost me more abusive acts and some PTSD but I got away.
@Mom_Luvs_Tech
@Mom_Luvs_Tech Жыл бұрын
This, all of this. I’ve noticed the trifecta of core wounds in narcissists: abandonment, unworthy, rejection. The unworthy wound is the core shame. The rejection causes them to be defensive and use control dramas. And the abandonment wound causes them to live in deep fear and create a false self, perfectionist tendencies, lie and manipulate. These wounds consume them (drown them) so they cannot escape the grip. I believe the treatment of these 3 through several therapies and the practice of radical honesty and vulnerability that many NPD symptoms go away. They can replace their thoughts with “I matter and you matter.” “I’m okay and you’re okay.”
@teresa1992-t5o
@teresa1992-t5o 5 ай бұрын
Both my parents and 2 siblings have many traits of NPD. I've watched thousands of videos and don't believe any of the experts are wrong. I finally decided that it didn't really matter why they treated me like they did... but just focus on healing myself and not try to fix or understand them. I don't want to be an expert on NPD, I just want to focus on healing my pain it caused and figure out how to escape the roll of family scapegoat. I'm 64 and just learning how to love myself and not allow others to mistreat me anymore...
@thomaspan6514
@thomaspan6514 4 ай бұрын
This is a good way of thinking. If you don't want to be a profession, there is no need to understand them since it will not do you any good. Understanding them or not, they will still hurt you if you do not keep the distance,
@Wavicle
@Wavicle Жыл бұрын
So much this! My wife is a covert narcissist. It is very difficult being with her, and overall not healthy for me, but I can see that she isn't acting with malicious intent. She is a collection of very anti-social behavior patterns that were developed as a survival mechanism during an extremely unhealthy and traumatic upbringing. A few days ago while she was recounting her experiences that day, I received a notification and checked my phone to learn that a former coworker who I had worked closely with for several years had passed away. I was emotionally floored; it took me out of the moment immediately. I told my wife that my former coworker had passed and that I was not okay with it and she promptly.... continued telling me about her day. I needed empathy or if not that just a little time not being chatted to, but she didn't pick up on it. It wasn't that she was malicious and "just didn't care"; it was more like she "just didn't realize that this was a situation where one should care". She is deeply broken, and my codependent self feels absolutely awful for her. She does many wicked, nasty things and is completely oblivious to the damage these things do. She doesn't give true empathy - she does some kind of performance art empathy that looks kind of like the real thing, but just doesn't *feel* like the real thing.
@theblackrainbow1
@theblackrainbow1 Жыл бұрын
That's awful 😞. My mother is like that , I tried so hard to get through to her, I tried to ignore these things she does and says , I tried to convince her to go into therapy, I tried to hide my feelings, everything just to have her in my life some way . But nothing worked and it was such torture for me . Then I cut contact and over time started feeling much better, discovering myself again and actually enjoying my life .I realised that I can't help her no matter how bad I feel for her , I have to save myself, otherwise she will pull me under like a drowning person . Please consider leaving your wife , it's not your responsibility nor your fault she is like that
@andrewholding483
@andrewholding483 Жыл бұрын
Yes! I totally agree with this video as well. I have been coming to the realization that my wife is a narcissist, but I feel more that it is a developed way for her to cope. She is also diagnosed with BPD, Anxiety, and possibly ADHD as well as having a difficult childhood. I believe that she is capable of recovering eventually, but she has been dragging me down for too long, and I have to leave. It is a possibility that she will never recover. I really think that is what most people mean by 'getaway' is you have to care for yourself by not being dragged down by this drowning person. It is human nature to try and help someone who is suffering, but we need to realize when that person needs more help than what we can offer.
@isacerveira5138
@isacerveira5138 Жыл бұрын
all narcisist person will have a bad history to tell to excuse their behavior. Your wife know very well what she is doing.
@isacerveira5138
@isacerveira5138 Жыл бұрын
@@theblackrainbow1 mother is the worst king of narcisist. The society protects them as saints. Mother narcisists are evil
@Vierre15
@Vierre15 Жыл бұрын
This was very well written. I can 100% relate in my current relationship. I’ve been grappling with the concept of someone with an unintentional lack of empathy vs someone who outright does not care. Your comment is definitely challenging my perspective and bringing some comfort in an interesting way. I got news that my grandfather will be passing away in a matter of weeks, and similar to your wife, my partner immediately continued venting about their day and completely disregarded the heaviness that I expressed to them.
@jds6964
@jds6964 10 ай бұрын
My mother I have finally figured out is a narcissist and she has zero empathy. I had a very close personal friend (more than that actually) passed away unexpectedly. My sister that lives near me came to his celebration of life service with her husband. My other sister watched the service being live streamed on facebook. My mother never asked about his service at all. When my sister and her husband went to visit my mom a couple of weeks after the service, my mother never once asked about his service, never once asked about my friend and never once asked how I was doing. Yet she always likes to tell me "I love you with all of my heart". I received more empathy from my coworkers and my next door neighbor than my mother is capable of giving. The only love that I have ever felt from my mother is a very superficial love based on her being in control.
@gretapantophlet9201
@gretapantophlet9201 Жыл бұрын
For whatever reason, I see and can agree with your videos. I think people have been hurt so bad by narcissist, that they can’t have any compassion nor understanding for the disorder. Thanks for sharing !
@Antonocon
@Antonocon Жыл бұрын
This is brilliant. I think you are very much on to something here. I'll read your dissertation later in the week when I have time. My mother and brother are vulnerable narcissists and my father would be considered a malignant narcissist at best and very much a borderline sociopath, I would say, if tested. Religion kept that group together. If you think this sounds highly unlikely, just imagine every moment of every day being a screaming match that you could hear from about 6 houses away on our road. I stayed away as much as possible as a kid and moved out very young. My father really does not understand other people's emotions at all. He's trapped with a 3 year old's emotional intelligence but in a very powerful body. I really thought he was like an alien when I was young, I met nobody like him, nor saw them on TV. I'm very very far away from all of them now but I understand that they were all quite traumatised as children. Me too, thank god I had neighbours to hang out with.
@HansenFT
@HansenFT Жыл бұрын
Haha, I thought my father and sister where aliens too. I though they where as if the aliens had almost nailed a fake human, but not quite.
@debracappiccille6485
@debracappiccille6485 Жыл бұрын
My older daughter is exactly the same and at 43 is worse than ever. She abuses us now that we are elderly and very sick. She asked us to move in with her to help us. Please don’t judge. You don’t know our circumstances. Instead she immediately started the covert malignant narcissistic psychopathic terror. Police and senior abuse organizations are involved but we don’t have the money to leave. In medical bankruptcy. I believe this was her plan from the beginning. I’m terrified and we are not going to make it if we can’t get out. The horror is worse than you can ever imagine. This really does happen.
@rharia
@rharia Жыл бұрын
About at 6:25 minutes in you give the best explanation of why narcissists lack empathy. They certainly have empathy but their experience of it is superficial in that their own experience of their personal feelings of shame, guilt, etc is suppressed and replaced with that grandiose false self. Objectification of self… well explained.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@ASoulHere
@ASoulHere Жыл бұрын
Your perspective is so helpful. This description of narcissism from the individuals internal perspective is something we all can relate to in varying degrees. I bet the degree to which we relate is directly correlated to the amount of narcissistic traits we display. Rendering us all the same, just different levels/degrees of the same characteristics. That’s a much healthier perspective on narcissism than the one that is present in society today. Looking at this in a new way helps me a lot. I’ve gone round and round on all of this. I feel I’m finally getting somewhere in understanding myself, others and how life operates. Almost all of us are all wounded just in different ways. We all have some sort of injury/lack to self that prevent us from growing up/fully developing/individuating/developing internal locus of control/agency. Those are the differences among us when you get down to it.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your thoughtful comment.
@cheralyse1352
@cheralyse1352 Жыл бұрын
But we don't go through life abusing others the way the NPD person does!
@bobbarker1798
@bobbarker1798 Жыл бұрын
The only way to be safe is to get away completely.
@lauraboyes6345
@lauraboyes6345 8 ай бұрын
YES - good understanding.
@Lora-215
@Lora-215 3 ай бұрын
@@cheralyse1352 Or we don't THINK we do.
@f.frederickskitty2910
@f.frederickskitty2910 Жыл бұрын
I'll never forget the day I was horrified to discover the person I had called my best friend for several years was a narcissist and a bully who had emotionally sucked me dry like a vampire. I'll also add that I realized that she had been my best friend but I was not her's. Although we still work together I vanished like Harry Houdini and still maintain a safe distance for my mental health.
@cheralyse1352
@cheralyse1352 Жыл бұрын
Exactly my experience! Thank you.
@LaVerdad65
@LaVerdad65 Жыл бұрын
​@AmandathePandaBooks youre a narcissist
@dociledeer3818
@dociledeer3818 Жыл бұрын
Same here, a close friend since four years old, grew up together, pals for nearly 50 years, made a lot of allowances for bad behaviour then one day it clicked. Went total no contact.
@AlwaysHapp1989
@AlwaysHapp1989 11 ай бұрын
@@dociledeer3818same here. I considered her my sister (we r both only child) I was always there for her, but after 30 years of her not being there for me and people telling me stuff she did or said behind my back and some times it wasn’t even behind my back. She would make outrageous claims to which I wd always apologize, even then it took several more years of me directly seeing what others saw before I finally cut ties. It was hard to accept the reality and I mourned the loss of what I thought I had. Now I choose to look back as to a learning time for me. I have learned how to recognize when and how to set my boundaries. Still a process but getting better. I hope same for u. Thank u for sharing, I don’t feel so silly now.
@weaviejeebies
@weaviejeebies Жыл бұрын
I literally just found your channel today and am working my way through your content. One thing I want to add about "intentional bad actors" is the sadism assumption in particular. To me it seems like that is an attribute that lives more into the ASPD part of the cluster. My father was incarcerated and diagnosed with ASPD and NPD. (3 different doctors, forensic psych said ASPD, the VA doc said NPD, the state hospital doc said both, long story....) Having been his child, his victim, survivor, witness in his trial, and cptsd patient trying to make sense of it all, I think I have a pretty good picture of now the subtle differences of the more antisocial attributes as opposed to boundary issues and shallow smarm I've encountered in other narcissistic, but not antisocial people I've met in life. I think the sadism quotient in an individual is really important to spot accurately and be well educated on, and both things are not widespread skills in society, unfortunately. People on the receiving end of all these offensive behaviors might attribute the cyclic nature of splitting as proof the person is enjoying themselves. Because people w/NPD can frankly just be scary because of the way they can turn on a dime and don't appear to be living in shared reality, those who have been mistreated inflate them into being more smart/powerful than they actually are. Many of my friends in the cptsd community see narcissistic manipulation as some kind of sophisticated 'puppet master' mentality or evil superpower, when it might actually be some of the most primitive, badly planned, and duct tape/band aid coping there is to engage in. But having been there myself, I think that is a very natural assumption after being exposed to a confusing, hurtful agressor who is capriciou, reckless, and just...weird. It took me a long time to see manipulation as just their go-to because it can get immediate results and restore control. My father's sadism vs his manipulative strategies are way different in appearance. He is, unfortunately, one of that small percentage of people Dr. Ramani's description applies to. I am not sure people are familiar with what someone with sadism as one of their primary motivations looks like. I'm not trying to belittle others' experiences. People w/NPD are capable of causing others excruciating pain and trauma that no one should ever have to endure. It's just that for many narcissists, the 'why' behind their behavior is way more about meeting the need of the moment, whatever that need is. Your suffering is just a necessary byproduct that is fairly easy for them to forget as their constantly auto-redacting personal narrative moves on. Yeah, they might feel "look at me, I won! I showed them who's smarter, better, the boss, etc, but again it's a byproduct, not the objective. An antisocial sadist (or at least the only one I know personally) digs your pain because the need of the moment is to feel something. That is what they came to you for. It makes them come alive and display a kind of affective change that is only attainable to them via controlling someone to an extreme degree and seeing how the person is desperate to escape. So I'm very interested in watching more of your content to see if my armchair theories have any veracity. If you haven't done a deep dive on the twilight zone where ASPD and NPD run together, I encourage you to do so. Sorry for the essay, y'all, but the guy just died and I'm reacting by splattering my insights all over KZbin. Indulge me, please. 🙏
@inkihans97
@inkihans97 Жыл бұрын
This is very compassionate view. Thank you for sharing . Even though we need to be aware that some people cannot love, they deserve compassion. We all do . And with self compassion we can feel it for others without remaining an "en-abler".
@GracielaGordon-v2w
@GracielaGordon-v2w 10 ай бұрын
👍
@SoundsBogus
@SoundsBogus 5 ай бұрын
Yes ! But it's a slippery slope. The moment they sense your compassion they'll take it and drain your energy.
@makomattie
@makomattie Жыл бұрын
Dr. Ramani is spot on with the weaponized empathy. I know because I'm moving away from a person who uses this tactic. I can only be myself and can't change who he wants me to be on his terms. I never hid my true self, he wanted me to be someone that I'm not or ever will be.
@cutiebeautie5459
@cutiebeautie5459 5 ай бұрын
😢 Yes! They have a plan to make you over to a "better" version of yourself. Your true self is rejected.😢
@Yes-hn8mg
@Yes-hn8mg 4 ай бұрын
That doesn't necessarily mean the people doing it are narcissists 😭
@thomaspan6514
@thomaspan6514 4 ай бұрын
@@cutiebeautie5459 This. I felt inadequate when with them, and aimless to be their version of better me because their goal post changed constantly.
@johngreene6783
@johngreene6783 16 күн бұрын
I enjoy Dr. Ramani's videos. I have learned a lot from them. That being said, when it comes to NPD she can be very cruel. I do understand what happens to the innocent people/victims of Narcissists, but she never offers any methods to fix the problem. I felt like she was attacking on behalf of those that have suffered at the hands of NPD folks. Everyone says "control your emotions". If it were that easy, narcissism wouldn't exist. Thank you Dr. Ettensohn for your kinder approach.
@allm5542
@allm5542 5 ай бұрын
My father was diagnosed with a high level of narcissism by a professional in the mental health and he hurt my family and me throughout my life. I grew up with terrible self-esteem, paranoia, attachment issues and a great deal of rage against any type of unfair authority. It's hard for me to feel empathy or some level of consideration for those people. Nevertheless, I'm open to the idea of understanding them at least, because the hatred I developed towards him and people like him shouldn't define my identity, unlike what I usually see with many other victims. Thanks for showing a new perspective. Maybe, over time, I'll learn to have some consideration towards them. I guess it's starting, since I'm typing this...
@heidij70
@heidij70 3 ай бұрын
I agree with you. Actually, the more I watch Dr Ramini, the more I feel she's talking in circles, and I'm not getting anything from her videos. So I find myself drawn to the captions, but quickly click off.
@debrabrookham6670
@debrabrookham6670 Жыл бұрын
No matter how you want to describe them they have the same result on their victims. They destroy them emotionally and physically. Escape if you can!
@ShivaSolentei
@ShivaSolentei Жыл бұрын
Agree 100%!
@samwalker3660
@samwalker3660 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂 OMG! It's so great. Sad and funny, because ONLY other survivors who lived this experience are able to understand the level of destruction... and this is the advice. Agree 100%!
@nugget6635
@nugget6635 Жыл бұрын
The idea of the channel is not to advise victims because everyone is doing that already including the self aware narcissist Lee Hammick. The idea is to figure out inconsistencies in what mental health professionals think about this disorder and come up with possible treatments. For example not sure if you know this... But Borderline and Antisocial are treated with cognitive behavioral therapy. But it seems to be harder to treat narcissists. Antisocial is easier to treat even though ASPD is much closer to developing into a murderer than a narcissist. Why is it possible to treat people who are very close to murderer psychology and not narcissists?... So yeah.
@toastiesburned9929
@toastiesburned9929 Жыл бұрын
I never get tired of laughing because my mom shamed me so much I developed a shame complex, and then was shamed for having the shame complex. Now she's trying to shame me for seeking help. A big problem I had with my parents is that I KNEW what I was experiencing was emotional abuse, I TRIED to tell them but I was gaslight into believing that my "normal" mindset was in fact wrong. I had severe depression and they put ME in therapy for it. My father would give me a list of issues I wasn't supposed to talk about because it would make him look bad. Every time I got close to the real issue, I clammed up because I believed so hard that my parents had my best interest in heart. It was like I was in therapy to make my mask better, not to fix anything.
@toastiesburned9929
@toastiesburned9929 Жыл бұрын
​@@samwalker3660 Narcissists are OFTEN victims of narcissistic abuse themselves. They just processed the abuse differently and were often praised for having those traits themselves. I could never cry hard enough for the abuse to stop, but when I was 15 something snapped. I decided that I wasn't going to be the victim anymore. I destroyed my bedroom and the hallway leading to it. I punched holes in the walls and threw anything within arms reach, yelling the same way they did to me. When I calmed down, everyone was gone and I got my peace. Basically I started to use their own strategy against them. If I could make them feel ashamed of how bad of parents they were and cause the same fear of bodily harm they did to me, at least SOME of my needs would be met.
@PutingPinoy
@PutingPinoy Жыл бұрын
I am REALLY glad that your channel is finally getting traction. Let's get that collab going and I'll make sure awareness about you skyrockets. -J
@franlewis1607
@franlewis1607 Жыл бұрын
I have never heard your definition of lack of self-awareness. The pathological narcissist pretends not to have emotional needs. This is an eye-opener. Thank you.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Yes, and the pretending can be so convincing that it fools the narcissistic individual, themselves, into believing that they don’t have emotional needs.
@franlewis1607
@franlewis1607 Жыл бұрын
@@healnpd wow, that is really indepth insight. TY for sharing more.
@atuhairetabitha3674
@atuhairetabitha3674 2 ай бұрын
This is extremely important to me , I needed this
@allyjay7395
@allyjay7395 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the in depth explanation but I think Dr Ramani simply acknowledges that they are no longer the victim when they decide to prey on other people.
@Isabela2024-yr
@Isabela2024-yr Жыл бұрын
Narcs lack of emphaty? Because they prefer to be evil. They know what's emphaty all about but that's not what they believe in. They think emphaty is stupid. That's how evil and crooked minds think. To satisfy their ego, they create problems out of nothing. They explode madness when they don't kike something. Whoever close to them will become very confused, you don't know where the madness is all about. It's a roller coaster ride living with the narcissist. Poor wife, poor children, If you're not crazy, you'll become one.
@joekanter1168
@joekanter1168 Жыл бұрын
Ramani almost exclusively talks about narcissism as a personality trait and not about the NPD diagnosis. Almost no one with NPD would ever seek treatment unless it is court ordered. The NPD diagnosis is almost a waste of time. I liked the second observation you made about Objectification of self and others. Either everyone is all good or all bad, all shiny or all dirty. There is no room or thought of nuance in others. People are either to be placed on the pedestal with them, used like a tool for self benefit or thrown into the trash heap.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
I have a wait list a mile long full of people who identify as having pathological narcissism or NPD and who are desperate for treatment. In fact, it’s one of the main reasons I started this channel.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
I think the dialogue surrounding this disorder too readily collapses into the two-dimensional paradigm of predator and prey, doer and done-to, abuser and victim. It is challenging, because no one wants to invalidate survivors, and safe spaces are important. But we also need spaces that can make room for the reality that pathological narcissism, mental illness in general, the swirl of public stigma surrounding this diagnosis, and the complexity of actual human relationships make this a very complex issue.
@jonellis6235
@jonellis6235 Жыл бұрын
I agree.
@WaterBug46
@WaterBug46 Жыл бұрын
In my experience, empathy is only extended when it benefits the narc, as it is a conditional response over an actual emotion.
@jaimebanks8377
@jaimebanks8377 Жыл бұрын
As someone with significant pathologically narcissistic traits, I can say with certainty that I sometimes do kind things simply because I care. Not all narcissistic individuals are the same. People with Antisocial Personality Disorder are more utterly callous, and many narcissists have comorbid ASPD or traits thereof. This incessant demonization of people with this MENTAL ILLNESS is not benefitting anybody.
@WaterBug46
@WaterBug46 Жыл бұрын
@@jaimebanks8377 I hesitated to reply but decided to take the chance. I stated that ‘in my experience’ what ‘I’ have experienced living with people who exhibit narcissistic/sociopath traits combined with years of formal study, informal study, and personal therapy. On both sides. It was by no means a broad brush indictment. Merely a personal observation. Yet you perceived it within the narc mindset and took offense. I get that and I’m sorry. It’s ok. Yet you have reinforced my position with your final sentence. Also, I question if you actually have been diagnosed as npd, for if you were you would know that npd is a cluster B personality disorder. Not an actual mental illness. The differences are profound. I wish you well.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@sharongrause6005 - Personality disorders are forms of mental illness. I see this misconception frequently enough in the comments that I might make a video addressing it specifically. ‘Mental illness’ is the umbrella term that includes all diagnosable mental disorders. Personality disorders like NPD fall under that heading. You don’t have to take my word for it. The American Psychiatric Association agrees. Here’s a quote: “Mental Illness...refers collectively to all diagnosable mental disorders.” Reference: www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/what-is-mental-illness#:~:text=Mental%20illnesses%20are%20health%20conditions,social%2C%20work%20or%20family%20activities.
@mvbigmagic4048
@mvbigmagic4048 Жыл бұрын
@@WaterBug46 I agree. "Demonization" is projection. When I tell people what my narcissistic parents have done, they get angry instead of apologizing. That is the hallmark of a narcissist, especially the malignant ones. Like O.J. Simpson.
@jaimebanks8377
@jaimebanks8377 11 ай бұрын
I've not been diagnosed with NPD. I display many of the traits listed in the DSM, however. Cluster B personality disorders, like all of the personality disorders, are mental illnesses. I'm not sure why you think otherwise. They are severe mental illnesses, in fact. I also have a lot of experience dealing with pathogically narcissistic individuals. My family is composed of narcissists. I was severely abused throughout much of my life by psychologically narcissistic family members.
@soniacolley2411
@soniacolley2411 Жыл бұрын
I am really impressed by your presentation which host a real over view of a narcissist, however not impressed that you call out Dr Ramani as she has blessed so many with her knowledge and her experience with living around such people. Yes , I agree with both of you about this area . I have experienced the treatment first hand for 34 years and as someone with a passion to understand this disorder as well as a victim that is totally scarred from what your discussing, I totally see both Drs as having validity in their studies. In areas they do totally lack ability to emphasise. However what come to my mind is their stonewalling attempts are a deliberate act of withholding some form of empathy. Narcissistic Personality individuals can be empathic in areas of their lives , however when it comes to areas where accountability & responsibilities is called there is no ability to be empathic in this area due to internal damage.
@Dreamhousedream
@Dreamhousedream Ай бұрын
This channel has been a treasure for me. Thank you from the bottom of my heart
@Meadows1966-st3wl
@Meadows1966-st3wl 4 ай бұрын
Dr. Ramani is totally correct. My narc husband can show empathy for our dog and for a select few in his outer circle, but never towards me, his wife of 30 years. Their lack of empathy towards their significant others is just one of the NPD symptoms. Yes, sometimes he appears to show empathy when I share something, but I fear that he will use it against me, because he has used the info I have shared against me so many times. Their "empathy show" is to extract more information to use later or he expects something in return.
@sagebay2803
@sagebay2803 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. Both of my parents are Narcs. I think one has NPD b/c she is very grandiose and the other is Narc. entitled but very sensitive. I had to go no-contact during Covid b/c they are older now (80) and they are just awful/nasty/entitled people....STILL! I think my whole 50 years have been in therapy. LOL. These people are like 2 separate people inside... and I never knew what would show up? They both came to me with their sadness, anger and made me the parent (oldest girl). It was so confusing! They would never seek therapy b/c they said there was "nothing wrong!" with them....that it was all ME! I believed it. Sorry for the novel, just wanted to thank you for this video. Dr. Ramani helped me go no-contact finally! I am glad there are a lot of videos on this topic now. We need all the help we can get!! ha
@foxiefair123
@foxiefair123 Жыл бұрын
I’m sorry you went through all that.😢
@melanieneill3398
@melanieneill3398 Жыл бұрын
Hello there! Wow I need to watch this video again… it was life changing! My hubby insists I’m a narc and when he calls me a narc, I just feel like a monster. (Ugh… narcissists… what a cringy thing to be… self absorbed, selfish A Hole. Ugh!) There are so many videos on KZbin warning people about narcissistic abuse and run as fast as you can and it doesn’t help or motivate me to be better, it just makes me feel even lower. I’m on a journey to self awareness and I’m looking forward to seeing more videos. Thanks for not calling me a monster!
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and best of luck on your journey of self awareness.
@catherinewilson1079
@catherinewilson1079 Жыл бұрын
Hi Melanie. Just so you are aware; a true narc specializes in projection, meaning that they project upon others the personality characteristics that they CANNOT acknowledge in themselves.
@Eva-np7hf
@Eva-np7hf 5 ай бұрын
Finally someone that shows empathy in this field. What a wonderful explanation. Many thanks ❤
@lntcmusik
@lntcmusik Жыл бұрын
I find it interesting, watching both of your channels, how different, yet amazingly diverse your content is. And wonderful watching you, educating yourself further from Colleagues.
@Jason-Moon
@Jason-Moon Жыл бұрын
I appreciate this thought provoking perspective. There are many facets of this topic. I find 3 main facets to be... A.) Neural: brain chemistry and cognitive function. B.) Emotive: effects of trauma, abuse, and neglect upon personality formation. C.) Spiritual/moral: the application of the concepts of good and evil to individual narcissistic afflictions. ...... I absolutely believe most narcissism is rooted in childhood abuse and neglect; mistreatment by source figures. However, many are abused and neglected throughout their formative years and manage to preserve their sense of care, empathy, and compassion for others throughout it and beyond. Suffering is an inescapable aspect of human experience and the way we choose to respond to it largely defines our personalities. I've been struggling all my life so far to understand this topic as someone who was born the single child of 2 separated narcissist parents. With exceptions that come with every rule, for me it still comes down to free will and personal responsibility. Narcissists avoid personal responsibility as they also avoid suffering. The truth is that suffering and personal responsibility are primary aspects of human experience. Narcissists dissociate from their experience of both, and so dissociate from true connection with themselves or others. The narcissists I have known have all been very dissociated people. They dissociate from personal responsibility and suffering to an extent that their behaviors constantly create more suffering for themselves and others, and more personal responsibility for that suffering in a horrifying exponential cycle. Narcissism is certainly a terrible affliction.
@olivegoddess1
@olivegoddess1 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the best comments thus far. I strongly disagree with much of what Dr. E has presented here, and what he derives from the research he referenced. Not all adults who experienced the forms of abuse and neglect during childhood become pathologically narcissistic. Choice is still a factor. Narcissistic people ARE aware of what they do, but are not aware of WHY, or the emotional triggers and deficits that cause their impulsive behaviors. But they DO know that what they do is wrong. Most narcissists will not display their behaviors toward those they abuse while in public due to the shame of knowing that this is unacceptable behavior. Free will choice to avoid personal responsibility and accountability are absolutely factors here. Dr. E leaves this out and describes them as people who, because of their childhood, just can’t help themselves but to abuse others because the compulsion is as strong as that of a drowning person wanting nothing else but air, or starving person wanting nothing else by food. Absolutely an exaggerated analogy, as narcissistic people are perfectly capable of seeking help if they choose to. The number of people with NPD creating social media channels and using these platforms has increased significantly (there are so many now!), which is a testament to the fact that they CAN choose to get help, usually after a rock bottom. So no. Childhood factors alone cannot explain and justify their behaviors. There is also deliberation and choice involved. All it takes is having the actual experience with one or more of them to know that they do know, to a surprising degree, of what they are doing. And no, they’re not “out to get us”, like Dr. E said, and Dr. Ramani had never said that. I’ve actually watched nearly every video she provides-not just one. Never had she said that narcissistic people are out to get others. They seek relationships like we all do, but choose to play around with empathy in ways that only benefit them and not the other person in the relationship.
@Jason-Moon
@Jason-Moon Жыл бұрын
@@olivegoddess1 Lifts my spirit that my words resonated with you. Sending out thoughts and feelings to strangers is a mysterious act. I appreciate what you have shared in reply and your words are wise. When I wrote of narcissists avoiding personal responsibility, I refrained from directly stating that I find this very video providing example. But I'll say it now in response to your reply. I think this is an important video still for myriad reasons. At base, it opens a dialogue in a safe space between those who suffer from narcissism and those who have suffered narcissistic abuse. It would be enlightening for certain to witness this man and Dr Ramani have an actual conversation on the topic. This external voicing of a narcissist"a internal narrative about their own dysfunctional behavior is important because it reveals what is usually quite hidden and guarded. To me, this demonstrates the fracture of the psyche caused by self-deception. I believe this guy has a part of his mind that is a persona he manufactured to avoid suffering and personal responsibility. He can be seen here believing what he says from within that persona and unconnected and unaware of the overarching part of his mind that knows the truth and knows better, because it manufactured the persona he's personifying. ! Edit: I also think this video is important because in studying the topic I have encountered much disconcerting villainization of those with NPD without much attempt to understand what it means for those who have such traits. This contributes to exacerbation of the condition in my opinion. Narcissism is characterized by dysfunctionally overwrought defense mechanisms to begin with and compensatory personifications to avoid underlying lack of self worth. This man is correct in my opinion to assert that the condition needs to be examined from his perspective with compassion rather than enmity. The fact that much of society, especially capitalism, actively encourages, rewards, and supports narcissistic mentality in many ways exacerbates the condition as well. It's important to identify and examine all the factors contributing to narcissistic character disturbance. Again, however, personal responsibility and accountability must be acknowledged in the face of it all- especially as a key to healing damages caused by the condition on both sides of the equation.
@lydiapetra1211
@lydiapetra1211 Жыл бұрын
For part B...how about being spoiled... being treated like you are a king or queen.- very entitled... there's not always abuse.....or neglect or abandonment.... Otherwise I agree with your assessments!
@cyndigooch1162
@cyndigooch1162 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@olivegoddess1 Have you watched all of Dr Ettensohn's videos though? I'm thinking that the one in regard to Malignant Narcissism might be more helpful. I've found that it's more complex than simply making a choice and a lot of highly narcissistic individuals DO make fun of, or abuse, others in public, which I've experienced and witnessed many times over the years. 🙁
@cyndigooch1162
@cyndigooch1162 Жыл бұрын
​@@lydiapetra1211 I want to inform you that spoiling or overindulging children is still abuse though. 🙁
@loulouober62
@loulouober62 Жыл бұрын
A very compassionate portrait as well as easy to understand. Some other posters do seem pejorative towards what we could call a disability. Thank you and please keep posting.
@ThePortalTheory
@ThePortalTheory Жыл бұрын
Being a child of a narcissist I can answer in questions if anyone reading this wants to know if their mom is a narcissist. I finally broke off the relationship a year ago in April. Very very hard and sad however 100% necessary for healing to happen. ❤ to all in the beginning of realization. You are NOT alone.
@lydiapetra1211
@lydiapetra1211 Жыл бұрын
Good for you....may you find healing 🙏❤
@matilda4406
@matilda4406 Жыл бұрын
100% So many people are identifying their mothers as narcs! One of the most difficult and most painful things in life to have a narc mother. Slowly move toward love and away from narkism.
@wayneelliott1180
@wayneelliott1180 Жыл бұрын
We are not alone. Mother Dearest gets to speak to me about once a month. She babbles all about her fabulous self and I grunt occasionally. I was midway through life before I finally grasped that she was a sharp lump of ice that will never melt. The damage done in those formative years, however, cannot be ignored and educating ourselves is our best weapon.
@matilda4406
@matilda4406 Жыл бұрын
@@wayneelliott1180 Spot on Wayne ! Good illustration. Women have kids to boost their ego, to have someone to control or as an insurance policy but that never eventuates. Only very few actually love their kids and are prepared to meet their kids' needs.
@wayneelliott1180
@wayneelliott1180 Жыл бұрын
@@sino4456 It’s an excellent point you make. There is no doubt my mother is a narc - an hysterical totally self-centred know-it-all who made our childhood a sterile, deluded, tip-toe environment. I have noted and pondered some behaviours in myself (just as you have mentioned) and wondered if I have narcissism. All my siblings exhibit similar behaviours. Since there is a genetic marker for psychopathy, I would suggest there’s one for narcissism. The anomaly would be triggered when narc behaviours are modelled by immediate care-givers during our formative years. It’s a horrible realisation that we may have been infected by narcissism, but researching and understanding it can shed light on why we are how we are. My core is also empathic, I have remorse, am able to put myself in another’s shoes, am creative and do not think I’m the centre of the universe. I reckon I have a duty to understand the damage of that childhood and the resulting conundrum of what I am. Many never explore it because they are unconscious of it, in denial, or couldn’t care less and will continue sowing destruction throughout their lives. Another disturbing fact is that a narcissist - like a psychopath- cannot be cured. It’s only self awareness and behaviour regulation that can curb the behaviour - and a willingness to do it, of course. Something reassuring is that as Souls having a physical experience is that we are not the sum of our personality. Our job is to understand ourselves, warts and all. Don’t stop looking.
@SeanG0ne
@SeanG0ne 4 ай бұрын
ironically this is the first video that actually made me feel empathy towards the narcissist who hurt me and nearly ruined my life. she was molested as a child and now I understand her much more. I haven't felt sorry for her after the events of our relationship snowballed into the worst event of my life. thanks for this.
@andrewrees8749
@andrewrees8749 3 ай бұрын
@SeanG0ne my ex Narsisist G.F had a very abusive father, so she left home very young, but it doesn't give her an excuse to treat me so dam Evil, I had to finally walk away from her. No contact for 6 months .
@alphawolfie1232
@alphawolfie1232 11 ай бұрын
Your channel has been mentioned on an online community for pwNPD. I checked some of your videos and I'm really thankful for your attempts to make pwNPD more understood and less stigmatized. Your videos are helpful, informative and most importantly unbiased. Watching just few of your videos made me restore my belief that maybe I am not a monster. I really hope to see more content from you in the future.
@healnpd
@healnpd 11 ай бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@TJ-bs4wv
@TJ-bs4wv 4 ай бұрын
Thank you. This is the first video, that have a little different perspective on narcissism. My girlfriend, can be spiteful, patronising, and she is always the victim, and I'm always the problem when we have arguments. Even I'm getting tired of it, I have never seen her behave like she planned to say bad things. She has low self worth, lots of shame and feeling depressed. She is reactive and defensive, and can't handle any criticism, then I get it back on me, but I haven't seen her be calculating and malicious intentionally
@michelleduncan9965
@michelleduncan9965 Жыл бұрын
Very helpful. I have two relatives who are narcissists & they fit what you described quite well. They are most unpleasant to be around &/or relate to. Each has a lot of material things, yet each never seems to be truly happy.
@volkerd714
@volkerd714 Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate your work here! Saying narcissists cause harm because they are evil is circular and explanatorily vacant - it treats them as objects (like they see others and themselves..) and totally bypasses the subject-hood that is essential to UNDERSTANDING why they tick as they do (like a bomb...)
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your feedback!
@tomchurch2285
@tomchurch2285 Жыл бұрын
Whether narcissists intend to manipulate others or not, they do real damage to people’s lives! Having experienced some of this harm myself, the danger over time becomes being worn down by such abuse to the point in which one’s internal “tapes” of toxicity all but take over one’s life! Dr. Ramani and others have been invaluable in helping me get “the knowledge”. While her message is never to wish harm on the narcissist, it is also not to execute it on one’s self!
@Helena-to9my
@Helena-to9my Жыл бұрын
by understanding you can forgive, "hate the sin but not the sinner". See the wounded infant that was forced to make the self into an object.
@zeddeka
@zeddeka Жыл бұрын
This is the big debate. Are we looking at it as a moral failing or a mental illness. If indeed it is a mental illness, then it would appear that it's a stop on the way to psychosis, where the people who have it have a greatly reduced grasp of reality.
@AprilKnudson
@AprilKnudson Жыл бұрын
This comment!
@valerieriggins3184
@valerieriggins3184 Жыл бұрын
NARCS Don't Care About No Forgiveness.....BEST To Forgive Your SELF For Putting Up With Them. Matter Of FACT They Don't Think They Do Wrong Or NOT Sorry About IT.
@bobbarker1798
@bobbarker1798 Жыл бұрын
#valerie riggins I agree. They don't care about being forgiven. I don't care to forgive them either!
@nickf2170
@nickf2170 5 ай бұрын
It's because narcs feel a deep rooted feeling of incompetence, and they internalize this negative emotion. Then, when they see someone else struggling, that makes them feel like that is someone they can "surpass". Much like a race car drive, who feels good when his competitor get a flat tire. They feel empowered that they are now "ahead" of someone else.
@bethfridinger5373
@bethfridinger5373 5 ай бұрын
Narcissists have cognitive empathy that is how they ensnare their victims in order to get their fuel but they dont personally feel empathy.
@healnpd
@healnpd 5 ай бұрын
@bethfridinger5373 - This situation is much more complex than that.
@jaialaiwarrior
@jaialaiwarrior 3 ай бұрын
​@@healnpdhow so?
@Lora-215
@Lora-215 3 ай бұрын
@@jaialaiwarrior It's explained in the video.
@angierox6964
@angierox6964 Жыл бұрын
I think you make some very good points, and I agree with the narcissistic characteristics you discuss. There is a lot to learn in this area. In addition to there being numerous types of NPD, there are also levels of severity and so on. We all have different thumbprints. Targeting Dr. Ramani was not only unnecessary, but makes me question your level of professionalism, knowledge and experience. I think we can all agree that there is a long way to go and that working together will allow for us to help more people. Blatant disagreements only tend to confuse and frustrate, and make those who need the help feel even more lost. First do no harm.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Dr. Ramani is a professional with an enormous following. She’s going to be okay if someone disagrees with one thing she said in one video. She wasn’t “targeted.” My video provides a direct quote, discusses only that quote, and explains why I disagree with her assessment. It was in good faith and professional disagreement is in the interest of furthering science and treatment. Thanks for watching.
@Staying_aliveforwomen
@Staying_aliveforwomen 10 ай бұрын
​@@healnpdThe difference is that Dr Ramani professional conduct is impeccable. She never done what u did to anyone.I notice ur air of indifference with this comment.
@healnpd
@healnpd 4 ай бұрын
It’s fine if you don’t like that I disagreed with her. You are allowed to feel that way. But it doesn’t make my conduct unprofessional, nor does it make it right or appropriate to criticize me, personally. My conduct in this video is in line with both the code of ethics that govern my profession and commonly accepted standards of professional conduct. Just say you don’t like something if you don’t like it. That’s perfectly valid. No insults or allegations required.
@lynnstervinou2530
@lynnstervinou2530 Жыл бұрын
This is the BEST description I’ve ever heard.
@m.hartyfool
@m.hartyfool 5 ай бұрын
This is deeply enlightening for me. I'm grateful for your kindness toward those who suffer vs. those who shame them.
@scottdwyer646
@scottdwyer646 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your view, but I think it might fuel codependency. I was married to a narcissist and I had the same opinion as you do, and it kept me in if it's a cycle with him, and he consistently took advantage compassion and disease that he was broken and just needed healing. Also caused me to not hold him accountable because I considered him as emotionally and socially disabled, which eventually he learned how to capitalize on and use it to manipulate me at a higher level
@nellyd2933
@nellyd2933 Жыл бұрын
My experience as well
@julesgreen5079
@julesgreen5079 Жыл бұрын
I agree. This is a very dangerous approach and definitely codependent behaviour. Bad behaviour should never be rewarded or tolerated. Best to have nothing to do with them and heal from their intentional wounds.
@healnpd
@healnpd 6 ай бұрын
@scottdwyer646 - Your comment is why I talk about boundaries in many of my videos. I don’t know if your husband actually had NPD or if it was some other issue or combination of issues. But what I see very clearly is that you needed help setting adaptive boundaries. A video vilifying narcissism wouldn’t have helped you in that situation. A video about recognizing and setting boundaries would have helped immensely.
@JessCyph
@JessCyph Жыл бұрын
Love all of this. Your analogies and explanations are so helpful. I do have a few questions: You said, “In the drowning person scenario: Even the most admirable among us will clutch at someone attempting to save them from drowning in such a way that both lives are often lost.” Who is the lifesaver in this metaphor? And what do you suggest those of us who find ourselves in that position should do? In “real life,” how do we throw someone a lifesaver while also protecting ourselves? Also, your video discusses the connection between vulnerable narcissists and the love-bombing/discard cycle. This cycle exists with grandiose narcissists as well, too, right? I would love to see a video about this idealization-devalue-discard cycle to better understand it. Dr. Stephen Johnson talks about it in “Humanizing the Narcissistic Style,” but I do not have a background in psychology and struggle to understand the connection (or lack thereof) to a caregiver in early childhood that leads to this need for perfection and absolute mirroring in others when children grow up. It seems many narcissists end up with empaths like myself who would give anything to show them the love and support they didn’t get as children, and yet nothing we do is ever enough. Also, thank you for mentioning Dr. Ramani. I can’t even watch her videos anymore. They are too black and white and, you’re right, they do not address the suffering those with NPD go through. And for those of us who love narcissists, demonizing them isn’t helpful.
@cyndigooch1162
@cyndigooch1162 Жыл бұрын
JC I'm glad you mentioned your issues with Dr Ramani and had to unsubscribe from her channel, along with another extremely popular one, because I was getting too angry while listening to them! I found that it was causing more stress in my life, so decided to take their advice by going no contact. Lol. I don't think that it would've bothered them though. I'm aware that she's a very intelligent person and has done an immense amount of work over the years; however, something isn't right at all and I'll leave the rest for now. I want to add that I'm not able to respond to more of your comment because I'm extremely tired and can't even think properly at present. 😊
@Anne.....
@Anne..... Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I appreciate encountering an empathic explanation and understanding of narcissism instead of the prevalent demonization of this particular trauma reaction. I never really understood why we are able to empathize with c-PTSD, borderline personality disorder and other emotional manifestations of childhood trauma, but not with narcissistic personality disorder. It seems to me that people with narcissism might have even suffered more in their childhood than people with many other diagnoses. I do not advice staying in a relationship with a narcissist and putting up with being objectified and with the lack of empathy, because you feel sorry for them, however, it is possible to hold care for their suffering while at the same time being fully aware that they are not capable of fulfilling your emotional needs and therefore instead to choose partners and friends who are able to do that.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Yes, I agree that culturally we should work to regard all forms of mental illness with compassion. Individuals can make their own choices when it comes to personal relationships.
@marthawhite3353
@marthawhite3353 Жыл бұрын
Is it possible that you are both right? I think Dr. Ramani is right in her idea that some people do choose to be more predatory and calculating, and yet you also raise good points that some people are completely unaware. In science, research, it seems like both truths can be correct. Yes, there are malignant personalities, for sure, but can it be along a spectrum? These personalities are so complex, and respectfully, many good people do have helpful insight into these explanations. I agree that we can't experience others' feelings if we can't access and be in touch with our own feelings. It really does start with us. Working through our early life wounds and healing those hurts and pains can free us to be our true or authentic selves. We truly can heal, and develop the under nourished original "us." It would be great if damaged personalities (NPD) could do the same.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@marthawhite3353 - Yes, it's possible. I even say that in the video. Thanks for watching.
@heatherlynn3438
@heatherlynn3438 Жыл бұрын
I understand narcissist to have cognitive empathy. They knew exactly what to use against me, but they had no mercy.
@heatherlynn3438
@heatherlynn3438 Жыл бұрын
@@astridmiller7938 Yes! It’s soooo MEAN!!
@rosettemarshall3024
@rosettemarshall3024 Жыл бұрын
And they have empathy for themselves. Do something to them and see how they act
@heatherlynn3438
@heatherlynn3438 Жыл бұрын
@@rosettemarshall3024 Giant Babies!
@nicolamacaroni2755
@nicolamacaroni2755 9 ай бұрын
All narcissists are not the same, and just cause they know what to do to make u feel things doesn’t mean they have empathy or understand it. Borderline and narcissists are caused by the same thing and are more similiar than u think
@nicolamacaroni2755
@nicolamacaroni2755 9 ай бұрын
If they have “cognitive empathy” meaning they understand the actions fully and don’t care, that’s sociopathy
@blakemiller6532
@blakemiller6532 Жыл бұрын
Great presentation. Where does taking personal responsibility, for the pain and destruction the narcissist causes? It seems deep down they know how much pain they cause but don't care. Sometimes it seems they get a "high" from emotionally squashing a "loved" one. Isn't that the definition of evil?
@assplundah
@assplundah Жыл бұрын
Yes! Completely true! My ex said during the breakup conversation, in a moment of clarity, “ I’ve just realised how insensitive I’ve been about this!” She then doubled-down on the cruelty & disdain. It can & did completely cripple me as a human.
@wavy6470
@wavy6470 Жыл бұрын
You are not describing a narcissistic, but a sadist or a psychopath. Have you even watched the video?
@Deadmau5x5
@Deadmau5x5 Жыл бұрын
What you are describing is a textbook sociopath, and not a narcissist. A sociopath with narcissistic traits is still a sociopath. Having a grandiose way to present oneself has little to nothing to do with cruel behavior towards others, finding joy in the act of inflicting pain and having no remorse for their actions. Narcissists feel shame about their behavior, sociopaths have no remorse. I feel terrible for anyone who has experienced people like this in their life, but comments like this only makes the stigma around NPD worse.
@bonnielee316
@bonnielee316 Жыл бұрын
It is evil. It is on a spectrum. Some act perfectly fine around certain people or hide it but around their targets they are sadistic to them and extract a high off of that. And they’re not going to give that up. Targets need to leave them.
@bonnielee316
@bonnielee316 Жыл бұрын
Wavy, That’s why I call them Narcissist/ psychopath I painstakingly type the full two words out so that people know that I mean the evil cruel ones who derive sadistic pleasure and a sense of superiority.
@mindypendergrass2710
@mindypendergrass2710 Жыл бұрын
As a pwASPD, I wish I could find a therapist that believed the way you do in regards to what ASPD actually is. I’ve never deliberately or intentionally hurt anyone.
@itsamerrylife9128
@itsamerrylife9128 5 ай бұрын
This was really good. Thank you for this video.
@TheCreoleVegan
@TheCreoleVegan 5 ай бұрын
It’s very heartbreaking to love someone with NPD but self perseverance is first law nature and life for humanity..
@victoryministries2193
@victoryministries2193 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for being an empathetic voice for the realities involved! Sadly, the misinformation online is overwhelming nowadays and just not reflective of the truth. If only people were that simple… There’s nothing more pathetic than demonizing, shaming, bullying, or marginalizing people with mental illnesses…
@anthony_panepinto
@anthony_panepinto Жыл бұрын
Excellent Channel! One of the most compassionate and understanding views of NPD on KZbin. It helps me better understand some of the narcissists in my life. I do have to ask though, is there a genetic component to NPD? In other words, is NPD always caused by some childhood event or could it be genetic?
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching! Yes, as with most mental disorders there is a genetic component. It is not clear how genetics interacts with environment, but we do know that temperament predisposes some children to certain developmental trajectories, especially when combined with emotional trauma or neglect.
@saintejeannedarc9460
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
If there's a genetic component, that might explain my ex who has no obvious childhood trauma, and parents most would envy. If there's an innate hypersensitivity they are born w/, the triggers wouldn't have to be much though.
@fionah3433
@fionah3433 2 ай бұрын
I am reading Care of the Soul by Thomas Moore. I would invite anyone to read his take on the myth of Narcissus. He works with Jungian psychology and mythological symbolism to illustrate his analysis. I have worked long and hard to be able to see people with certain forms of narcissism, with eyes of compassion. They must be very sad, lonely and unfulfilled. What a terrible way to go through life, missing the most rewarding aspects of the human experience. There is a friend who means a lot to me that may exhibit some features of the type of narcissism that Dr. Ettensohn describes. He does not intentionally hurt people other than himself (IMO, self-sabotaging actions, not direct self-harm) but some of the other aspects seem to fit. I sense in him a tremendous need for love but unable to truly accept it. One day I asked him if he was more afraid to give love or to accept love...he danced around it but generally denied any fear. I have known him for 3 1/2 years and the best I can do is to keep showing up for him consistently. There are addiction and other mental health issues at play here, but one would need a comprehensive approach to treatment and to be a willing participant.
@thewitchskitchen
@thewitchskitchen Жыл бұрын
thank you! I went through the process of observing narcissism first in others then myself, and quickly realised it was nearly all unconscious, and innocent just as you say. A symptom of c-ptsd.
@E4439Qv5
@E4439Qv5 5 ай бұрын
Mine was the reverse. Observed the CPTSD in myself, recognized that it mirrored some certain Cluster B stuff and lined up with my mom's childhood experience of being pretty *heavily* harassed by her older brothers... shaping *me* into a 'model citizen' of an older brother. That _became_ her catharsis for a time, but it was also _repressive _*_af._* ...and so, we're no-contact now that I'm out on my own; other than that I'd be no-holds _barred_ over her apparent *_inability_* to self-regulate. For _cryin' out _*_loud,_* mom. Can't you _see_ this stuff *came* from your side?!?
@ourdivinemouseoverlord3308
@ourdivinemouseoverlord3308 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Ettensohn, this was a good video. If you ever run low on ideas for videos, I would like to learn more about vulnerable/covert narcissism and attachment styles. Also, I was wondering is there some kind of patholical problem with me where I suppose I treat people like objects, but am by default nice and respectful towards the people I interact with as if I had empathy? I can't tell what's wrong with me other than the theory that I put other's needs before my own to have moral superiority or to gain external validation? I have a therapist that refuses to acknowledge that I have NPD so I have no one to talk about this with.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Vulnerable NPD and attachment is a great idea. I will have to circle back to the second part of your comment when I have more time to respond.
@BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat
@BodyLanguageAnalysisInterrogat Жыл бұрын
You sound like a kind, self-aware person who chooses to be kind & do good but maybe is numb with emotions but does the right thing anyway or maybe I relate & am projecting. Speaking for myself sometimes I feel the same. For me, I have been drained, depressed, anxious, have rejection sensitivity, adhd, ruminating ocd and have brought up or learned boundaries & was/am too afraid to many times stop or take myself out of negative, unkind people. Also, since I don't want to disappoint people, I have really cut back socially, emotionally and in person with many people to cut down the critical or controls to immediate family. I have online groups and am trying to heal & grow myself and find safe people. So I relate a lot of this and feel guilty that I can't do more. I respect & and love until I heal myself but I would rather not get more negative judgment with "you should-ers" or critical people until I can heal more and I am trying to internalize their actions are about them. I was raised & believed if you are kind to others, they will be kind to you and like you. It never occurred to me others would feel good or power being critical, judgmental, or controlling. Boundaries, codependency, people pleasing and even my own challenges were not even in my conscious awareness until someone kindly brought it to my attention in my late 30s. Also I was consistently told whatever I thought was wrong, and have very poor intuition & had my mistakes told as funny stories at parties for my fathers entrainment up until I finally spoke up in my 40s. Having seared mistakes I made has created some very critical voices in me to where I don't know which is my intutiton and which is my almost false, critical self - 2nd guessing, so decision making, fear, guilty, shame, procrastinating have made even EMD hard
@dr6884
@dr6884 Жыл бұрын
I truly appreciated your very thoughtful explanations throughout this video but especially surrounding the attachment styles of those thought to be vulnerable narcissists. Your words removed much of the villainy associated with the three phases of a relationship with them (Idealization, Devaluation, and Discard) and other actions that cause emotional pain and turmoil. As one who was not long ago discarded (and replaced), I appreciate the knowledge imparted by clinicians like you and Lise Leblanc. The knowledge imparted has helped me immensely during this very challenging time. Could you help explain how the mirroring occurs during the “love bombing” phase in the same way you described how “love bombing” and discard occur in the vulnerable narcissist? Your description of the attachment styles and how those with specific attachment styles (anxiety and fearful avoidant) leads them to an internal conflict of wanting love and being terrified to actually have it which leads to the manifestation those phases of a relationship. Once again thank you for your words. It has helped me feel more compassion for the person who has caused me so much pain. And I prefer compassion to hate. 🙏🏻
@elizabethaberns
@elizabethaberns 16 сағат бұрын
I have not even finished watching the video but felt compelled to comment... I will be subscribing and watching all of your content. As someone who is married to a fragile narcissist for 20 years, and have only just realised in the past couple years that he is in fact, a narcissist - simply because I never knew it manifested in different forms and he is not grandiose by any means. In doing research, it really bothers me that so much content portrays narcissists as "evil" and even though my husband (we are now separated) has caused a lot of trauma for me; A LOT... I know him better than anyone else and he is not "intentionally evil" I think he does care in his own way, but his "default setting" is to always focus on himself and his needs and his wants. I think he tries to have empathy, but doesn't really know how... Even though our marriage is essentially over, it still frustrates me that so much information out there "demonizes" people with NPD, but in reality it is not something that they chose. His behaviour and choices have likely (inadvertently) caused him a lot of problems and pain in his life. It's a difficult place to be, as I am someone who is highly empathetic and was already a trauma survivor with CPTSD when I met my husband. Obviously 20+ years of living with a narcissist has caused me much, much more trauma... but I can't hate him because I see the struggle. I know it isn't intentional but it seems impossible for him to change. Much more information and support is needed without the "evil stigma" attached. Imagine being the narcissist who finally acknowledges that maybe they are a narcissist, and they start researching. The overwhelming majority of information they find is not going to help them; quite the opposite. Not really here to defend any narcissist, but just to say I appreciate information that doesn't promote a very negative stigma.
@Jacquelinerenees
@Jacquelinerenees Жыл бұрын
Thank you SO MUCH for adding the attachment style to this. I have been aware of some time of my attachment style (disorganized) and only recently aware of the NPD diagnoses however I was immediately aware of the connection between the two.
@karenkilbane8043
@karenkilbane8043 9 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Thank You.
@Iam_laurenthrasherrr
@Iam_laurenthrasherrr Жыл бұрын
I finally understand my ex better. We always ended up breaking up because he just wasn’t able to be very empathetic and then turned it all around to be about him. Just heartbreaking. I saw the human in him and only wish and pray for his healing.
@sirlarek
@sirlarek 2 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation.
@healnpd
@healnpd 2 ай бұрын
Thank you kindly!
@kristinmeyer489
@kristinmeyer489 Жыл бұрын
Whether both my parents were narcissists or not, based on their manifestations of abuse towards me in front of a therapist a few times, I can offer a few observations I've had from up front and personal narcissistic abuse lifelong. First, narcissists lie to themselves. They have to foundationally, because they truly feel inferior to others. This inferiority is variable, and social relationships are where they prop themselves up. Narcissists put on an act to avoid appearing vulnerable, as this is threatening to them. Narcissists are experts at framing things to be, or seem like they want them to be. At various times in my much younger life (before going no contact), I actually heard the reframing as the OPPOSITE of what actually happened, and with IMPORTANT details completely omitted. My mother negated my entire childhood after age 14 (considering all the travel and partying they did, it's not any surprise to me that I was never any kind of priority when it was essential that as a child I be one to them) when she ragefully, with demon-fire in her eyes accused me of "lying" when I innocently brought up my history, FACT of having worked summers as a kid. Not in her eyes! I was "lazy" after losing a job, and suddenly, everything I had ever done to prove I wasn't evaporated, just because she said so. She was a woman of extremes who only showed her full self carefully, selectively, guilefully, and dishonestly. Nothing was ever her fault, including her choice to spend her time the way she did when we were kids away from us, doing what she preferred. My parents could both be quite charming, but they were cognizant of who was around when, and for what. I thank God they weren't sadistic until I was older (yes, it got worse over time) and I got out, despite the games to suck me back into the vortex for use as an object of blame and distraction, and of course disappointment. So long as they're lower on the spectrum (not sadistic, seeking to CAUSE others' suffering) narcissists aren't all bad, all the time. That's how they fool those who don't really know them, but think they do, because of their own projections and expectations. Imo, what makes this tricky is that everyone has a level of narcissism in them, which can fluctuate based on stress and other factors (even the healthiest people can have a bad day) and being around others causes their "accents" to rub off over time (narcissistic fleas). Perhaps the deliberately socialized normalization of narcissism, concurrent with its stigmatization will push further research.
@morningforestfog
@morningforestfog 9 күн бұрын
But aren't codependents the same way? In my pov, narcissists=codependents inside... but the way they relate to others is different. Both narcs and codependents share the same mantras: owns worth is attached to external things/not intrinsic, toxic behaviour is taken as normal, both operate in their own reality, etc Both share a self-concept of shame. But I understand how NPD is specific in their response, due to very early trauma. Codependents are usually golden children, right? So they get a sense of love, making them seem more "normal". I don't know if I'm saying dumb things, but this is my pov. Usually codependents, from what I observe, tend to see healthier people as narcissistic, while the true narcissistic ones are given excuses all the time. It's so hurtful. It's scapegoating.
@lauraboyes6345
@lauraboyes6345 8 ай бұрын
Yes - I agree. Lack of self-awareness. No-one took care of them in childhood - so they are "survivors" - all relationships are problematic for them because they don't understand their own emotions, never mind anyone else's. No one validated their feelings. So people are not trustworthy or reliable - control is a key issue because they were not given priority as children. They had to get attention through negative behaviours - force, coercion, acting-out. They believe others get what they want/need through similar means. They had bad role modelling. Life exposes them to people as problematic because no-one responds well to any form of coercion so they learn to hide overt behaviours. They become adept at "invisible" manipulations. At the beginning partners do not know their background but slowly the manipulations become more and more obvious - partners become angry, confused and give more and more resistance and eventually leave. "Narcissists" move on learning that there is a limit to the period of hiding their behaviours. They don't learn new behaviours because they are afraid to let go of the coping structures they have built around them - it is easier to start with a new 'victim'. Because they do not have a central Core of self-value and good sense of themselves as a valuable entity they cannot let go of "learned" coping - those are their structures - put in place from their earliest memories. I also find Dr Ramani - limiting - one dimensional etc. I live with one of these people and Ramani's diagnosis is simplistic to say the least. She has failed to take into account the terrible loss of self that produces people who don't have the "normal" negotiation skills and tools. So called 'narcissists' are exclusively self-focused because they learnt from the earliest age that no-one will focus on them. They have only themself. It's actually profoundly sad - that human beings are brought into the world and 'abandoned' by unknowning, incompetent, parents. And I use the word 'abandoned' to mean emotional abandonment. Dr Ramani and other YouYube psychologists need to extend a message of HEALING - to all humans - not simply to abandon 'narcissists' as they have been abandoned their whole lives.
@bethfridinger5373
@bethfridinger5373 5 ай бұрын
You cannot change a narcissist because they are always right. They can never takr redpinsibility for something its always simeone elses fault. It is up to the narcissist to help themselves but most of them will never be willing to look at themselves in the mirror and admit they have done anything wrong. Therefore I have found that I need to disengage from people like that to avoid harm. It is a personality disorder whereby they dont allow themselves to learn and grow. Therefore it id best to avoid interacting with them as much as possible. They dont make good friends and they are horrible partners. I can feel empathy for them but they will never feel empathy for me as they only care about themselves. They only know how to use people and will throw you away when done with you.
@pbohearn
@pbohearn 4 ай бұрын
You’re right; I can’t change a narcissist nobody can. Just like I can’t change a drug addict and get them to stop using drugs. It’s always up to that person if and when they ever get to a point when they want to give it up that this style no longer works for them, but I do believe they can change themselves. And there are things we can do to at least, show them how they style leads them ultimate to failure or other kinds of problems and let them know that there’s another way of living. They probably won’t listen to it but it’s just a seed.
@Ocean_Summers
@Ocean_Summers 9 ай бұрын
What an incredibly kind human you are …. Thank you for sharing this perspective .. the world needs this perspective louder than ever all narcissists …❤
@kimparke6653
@kimparke6653 Жыл бұрын
It makes sense that you can't give what you didn't get
@bigaddo
@bigaddo 3 ай бұрын
I am like this. I was overly praised and suffered humiliation at school. How can I recover/heal? I don't want to hurt people or myself anymore.
@pdquestions7673
@pdquestions7673 Жыл бұрын
After living w an NPD dx for 35 years, I'm more an more convinced that there is a kind of mindflooding in the cluster B experience, maybe due to hyperactive amygdala, but in any event stimulating situations seem to overflood the mind... Maybe the "lack of empathy" is nothing more than the natural result of having your mind overflooded with any kind of stimulation. The more the mind is overflooded (occupied), the less reserve RAM or processor space for the broader scan of our environment - which includes others. My hunch is that people who aren't so overflooded have much more processing space to accommodate a broader more natural peripheral environmental scan. So I wonder if there are exercises or methods for trying to "cool down" whatever is overflooding the brain... maybe to unplug from stress and start life from zero, starting very easy, and slowly adding complexity. Cooler brain, with an environment of relative security, and maybe there's more mindspace available to naturally consider things beyond one's immediate flooding concerns.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
This is sort of what the dialectical behavioral approach (DBT) attempts to do. Thanks for watching. 👍🏻
@catherinewilson1079
@catherinewilson1079 Жыл бұрын
People who have experienced trauma often react with a knee-jerk reaction from the limbic brain whereas we should try to answer from the prefrontal cortex. Meditation can really help with this as it can give your brain some training to allow space in your mind before automatically reacting.
@pdquestions7673
@pdquestions7673 Жыл бұрын
@@catherinewilson1079 -- That makes sense. Maybe also it would help to incorporate the discipline of "stewing" in intense feelings, as opposed to flash reactions. Even 1 minute of stewing will allow some intermediation w the more advanced parts of the brain, which is at least a step towards a more integrated mind. As cluster B's we feel "stewing" is self-torture, but - with practice - we can learn it's actually better for us. Trick is to remember this in the most triggering circumstances. I always promise I will, and I still often slip. I'll be this isn't far from the neurology of addictions (compulsive behavior).
@AmusedChild
@AmusedChild 15 күн бұрын
All right, I will admit I resisted your arguments because the way the narcissist treated me was outrageously abominable, but I ultimately agree with everything you said.
@mhiywlpoetrycreativityvlog2455
@mhiywlpoetrycreativityvlog2455 8 ай бұрын
This helps because someone with a great deal of empathy can allow themselves to entertain and cobceptualize their own place on the narcissistic trait spectrum with more honesty and less shame
@jusjeany
@jusjeany 7 ай бұрын
Such a calm voice...I love these explanations...this makes so much sense and puts many pieces of the puzzle together...finally...I'm looking forward to reading Dr. Ettensohn's book "Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life"...
@axolotlwaddle
@axolotlwaddle Жыл бұрын
This guy is on some groundbreaking shit in general. As Dr. Ettensohn stated, he has waitlists and there's forums full of ppl identifying with NPD helping each other out. Just in my experience, even therapists don't want to touch cluster B sometimes. People do want help tho. Maybe just like how we normalized therapy by talking about it in a non-stigmatizing way, maybe we can get more open convos going so ppl with NPD can get help sooner and then everyone wins. Keep it up, doc.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Will do.
@saintejeannedarc9460
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
Yes, everyone wins if more people get treated for it. More people get treated, if there's better awareness that treatment is possible for pwNPD, instead of friggen hundreds of channels of making them all out to be moustache twirling monsters that do it all on purpose because they feed off "empaths" like vampires. Sorry, getting a little spicy, because that crap just gets old. I used to go on those channels to tell my story and get validation. I was recoiling from the endless victim mentality soon enough though, and didn't want to stay stuck. Learned about trauma bonding, and that was freeing. Remembering these are still people w/ a serious and painful disorder was probably the last brick in my wall to freedom. Being locked in to bitterness and resentment, when we are told it's all on purpose is not at all freeing.
@Lora-215
@Lora-215 3 ай бұрын
@@saintejeannedarc9460 "Being locked in to bitterness and resentment, when we are told it's all on purpose is not at all freeing." Excellent point. Thank you!
@zepgirl6495
@zepgirl6495 11 ай бұрын
I have been on the receiving end of a pathological narcissist and believe they know exactly what they are doing. If not, then why can they portray themselves as one way in public and entirely different in private.
@healnpd
@healnpd 11 ай бұрын
This video might be helpful: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rHe7gqWdqJKGqrssi=neDOosLcpKHs3e1p
@zepgirl6495
@zepgirl6495 11 ай бұрын
@@healnpd Thank you.
@niyserenjiy
@niyserenjiy Жыл бұрын
I've experienced what Dr. Romani stated concerning empathy with narcs I've also experienced those weaponizing empathy as well. I also experienced Narcs with empathy, not mirrored of myself. There's so much more to this topic based on the individual battling Narc syndrome within themselves.
@Tpoleful
@Tpoleful Жыл бұрын
What I've learned from almost two years of obsessive research on the topic, Narcissist's are inherently selfish and controlling. However, they think they are good people and want to be seen as a good person. In order to do that, some of them learn learn how to mimic empathy through others they respect. But, their true selfish nature comes out when they are exposed to sociopathic ideologies. A fantastic example is how Andrew Tate, an obvious Malignant Narcissist managed to convert many Covert and Communal narcissists into his way of thinking. Donald Trump also did the same thing years ago. So yeah, narcissists have no empathy. What you see is just a poor imitation. Or maybe the narc with empathy you're talking about is actually a BPD, OCPD or PPD. They all appear like narcissists but do have instinctive empathy. Oh and don't forget Narcissistic Psychopaths. They all have fake empathy but unlike narcissists, they fake it really well.
@lydiapetra1211
@lydiapetra1211 Жыл бұрын
I have experienced cognitive empathy only and a very empty and barren souls...
@toastiesburned9929
@toastiesburned9929 Жыл бұрын
I know with ME, my mother constantly weaponized empathy and love bombing, I didn't realize there even WERE authentic relationships. This was just how people were to me.
@HansenFT
@HansenFT Жыл бұрын
Just that most of them don't really "battle" it. Extremely few by all accounts. They are not known for self-improvement, after all.
@betscgee
@betscgee 4 ай бұрын
Totally agree. Reading the early theorists such as Kohut gives a much clearer view of the inner life of someone with NPD. And we are all human beings no matter our wounding. Trying to differentiate ourselves from others using labels is a primitive way of managing conflict.
@crazyduck1254
@crazyduck1254 10 ай бұрын
We can’t see in others what we can’t see in ourselves - i think this disconnect from the self is so very real in NPD
@juliehay
@juliehay 3 ай бұрын
Thankyou soooo much for this video, I'm exceedingly grateful.
@healnpd
@healnpd 3 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@aldovirooo
@aldovirooo Жыл бұрын
I have NPD and your channel is a life saver, it makes me understand myaelf better and want to improve. Dr Ramani has a rhetoric that just makes me upset and angry. Keep doing your good work.
@kathleenb6375
@kathleenb6375 Жыл бұрын
I feel the same. I come away from most videos regarding NPD feeling angry because I can’t imagine someone purposefully acting this way. I feel less victimized by my relationship.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your feedback and encouragement. I'm glad to know you feel helped.
@Live-life-to-the-fullest
@Live-life-to-the-fullest 5 ай бұрын
Dr Ramini has helped me to cope with a family member who has NPD.
@rinn9671
@rinn9671 5 ай бұрын
I am with Dr Ramani. Empathy has different levels. 1st is understanding what feelings the other person has. And this is what the narc is good at detecting and will utilise against the person later. 2nd, feeling those feelings, and this is what the narc is lack or uncapable of.
@thomaspan6514
@thomaspan6514 4 ай бұрын
Cognitive empthy and affective empathy are what you described. Cognitive empthy is to recognise someone else's emotion, affective empthy is to feel some related emotion after recognising. NPD is very very good at the first part, but unable to do the second, they cannot even feel their own emotion.
@theconsciousearthangel
@theconsciousearthangel 9 ай бұрын
Is it normal to very sometimes exhibit a lack of empathy because you are emotionally exhausted? But mostly emphasize. I also agree w you in that narcs lack empathy. I have seen it time and time again. It is mind-blowing. I remember me throwing up and my mother completely ignoring me and wanting to explore NY. While it was my friend that was taking care of me.
@stevenheart77
@stevenheart77 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the nuanced way of explaining from psychology, the structure of npd. I think, as so much, of what we think is a matter of perspective. In this vid the perpective is more of the psychological neutral outake on the person suffering from npd. Rightly so. Dr. Ramani is more on the perspective of the victim and validating the experience of the one abused. And the lack of empathy, projection and gaslighting etc is experienced as abuse. And it also needs validation. The perspective from the impared narcicist and its dysfunctiobal coping strategy is also true. The common demoitator is that 99% of humans long for safety, acknowledgement, being seen and experiencing worth and validation. Simply what we describe as love. Hence all you need is...And I also think that most is not intentional. But aligned with the drowning analogy. The ugly truth is, in my opinion, that in the relationships with people with npd both will drown. And that is both. The narcicist going on the the next supply is nothing more or less than clinging on to a liferaft. Npd is a spectrum. And I think that also taking in the account of the human with npd as in distress is of worth. But just don't forget to use the pole and secure your own safety first.
@aiieke
@aiieke 7 ай бұрын
Finally, a voice of reason.
@kayp2083
@kayp2083 Жыл бұрын
I gained some insight from the reasoning you provided that people with NPD view themselves and others as objects. Can you explain why if they view themselves as objects do they actually require so much empathy and sympathy from their partners and others but they can't give empathy or sympathy? Do they think only some objects deserve empathy and others don't? Thanks for any clarification on this I appreciate it.
@GoBiggie1880
@GoBiggie1880 Жыл бұрын
Hi Dr. Ettensohn, I want to express appreciation for the valuable content you share and the style you have that combines both depth and accessibility. Your insights have been instrumental in my learning journey. I've noticed that many discussions about Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) portray it as a fixed condition, seemingly impervious to change due to a lack of self-awareness or motivation to alter established defensive behaviors. While it's widely acknowledged that early attachment experiences play a crucial role, I find myself grappling with the idea that individuals, even when educated and exposed to new information, might still struggle to break free from a defensive posture formed in their early years. How does the weight of early experiences persist throughout a person's entire life, especially when confronted with new evidence and knowledge? \
@stefal22
@stefal22 4 ай бұрын
After consuming an awful lot of bs content on narcissism the info in this video is mindblowing
@lilylunsford
@lilylunsford Жыл бұрын
I have a question. How is It that people who grew up in the same home, one may develop npd and the other don’t?
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@lilylunsford - It’s likely a combination of genetics and experience. Kids growing up in the same home don’t have identical experiences. They may play different roles in the family. Important events/losses/traumas may occur when one child is at a crucial age or stage of development and the other is not, etc.
@PutingPinoy
@PutingPinoy Жыл бұрын
Dr Ettenhson, I love that you addressed the damaging information Dr Ramani has spread. This is a very important video; and, your balanced and insightful takes makes me feel that there is still hope to de-stigmatize this condition which I was recently diagnosed with. Please don’t stop. And I really hope we can link up for a collaboration soon. (I am Jared from our email correspondence). Please keep up your work!
@rayjay292
@rayjay292 Жыл бұрын
Theres hope, Just because Ramani says something does NOT mean its true for everyone!
@PutingPinoy
@PutingPinoy Жыл бұрын
@@rayjay292 100% agreed!
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@PutingPinoy yes, I have been meaning to reach out. I have been absolutely underwater with work the last few months. I will have a clearer schedule this summer.
@PutingPinoy
@PutingPinoy Жыл бұрын
@@healnpd sounds great, Doc! (Not the part about ya falling ill, though. Seriously you are one of the most important doctors in your field right now. You have given me and thousands of others the hope for compassion, patience and love. You are literally saving lives and mental health like mine.) I look forward to our meeting and collaborations!
@seeing1111
@seeing1111 Жыл бұрын
I found that after viewing DR. Ramani for a few years is that she has contradicted her self a great deal. I also believe she has enabled Histrionic and BPD types to become victims in a different way. In turn these types call their partners or family members, strangers a Narcissist with ease. Example, Narcissists say this , Narcissists do this and that.
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
@mkabaroff - I think you point to a general phenomenon that is fed by the recent explosion of stigmatizing videos, articles, etc. People marinate in forums that make pathological narcissism seem like the epitome of evil rather than a comprehensible form of mental illness that has varied presentations and is often actually a component of other diagnosable disorders. They don’t know what they don’t know, and over time they develop a high level of confidence in their limited understanding.
@cyndigooch1162
@cyndigooch1162 13 күн бұрын
@seeing1111 I'm so glad you mentioned Dr Ramani contradicting herself because I used to watch her videos regularly, then started noticing that as well, which reminded me of many highly narcissistic people throughout my life! 🙂
@SLiCkJo
@SLiCkJo Жыл бұрын
Doc, it looks like this video grew pretty popular. You already knew this but as you can see by some of the comments, it feels like an uphill battle to educate folks on the nuance and complexity of the disorder that is narcissism. I just want to say, don’t be discouraged and please continue sharing your professional views, and also personal opinion on the subject!! There are many of us that are trying to get better, and your channel is one of the very few sources of real, humanizing information on NPD. Thank you again!
@healnpd
@healnpd Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your support and encouragement. It means a lot to me to know that people feel helped by these videos.
@remyost8228
@remyost8228 3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your compassionate and thorough videos related to NPD. They are absolutely fascinating and enlightening.
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