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Addiction to Spirituality
The following article is offered for free use in your ezine, print publication or on your web site, so long as the author resource box at the end is included, with hyperlinks. Notification of publication would be appreciated. For other articles...
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Relationships with Abusive Narcissists - Part I
Question:
What kind of a spouse/mate/partner
is likely to be attracted
to a narcissist?
Answer:
The Victims
On the face of it, there is
no (emotional) partner or
mate, who typically "binds"
with a narcissist. They come
in all shapes and sizes. The
initial phases of attraction,
infatuation and falling in
love are pretty normal. The
narcissist puts on his best
face – the other party
is blinded by budding love.
A natural selection process
occurs only much later, as
the relationship develops
and is put to the test.
Living with a narcissist can
be exhilarating, is always
onerous, often harrowing.
Surviving a relationship with
a narcissist indicates, therefore,
the parameters of the personality
of the survivor. She (or,
more rarely, he) is moulded
by the relationship into The
Typical Narcissistic Mate/Partner/Spouse.
First and foremost, the narcissist's
partner must have a deficient
or a distorted grasp of her
self and of reality. Otherwise,
she (or he) is bound to abandon
the narcissist's ship early
on. The cognitive distortion
is likely to consist of belittling
and demeaning herself –
while aggrandising and adoring
the narcissist.
The partner is, thus, placing
herself in the position of
the eternal victim: undeserving,
punishable, a scapegoat. Sometimes,
it is very important to the
partner to appear moral, sacrificial
and victimised. At other times,
she is not even aware of this
predicament. The narcissist
is perceived by the partner
to be a person in the position
to demand these sacrifices
from her because he is superior
in many ways (intellectually,
emotionally, morally, professionally,
or financially).
The status of professional
victim sits well with the
partner's tendency to punish
herself, namely: with her
masochistic streak. The tormented
life with the narcissist is
just what she deserves.
In this respect, the partner
is the mirror image of the
narcissist. By maintaining
a symbiotic relationship with
him, by being totally dependent
upon her source of masochistic
supply (which the narcissist
most reliably constitutes
and most amply provides) –
the partner enhances certain
traits and encourages certain
behaviours, which are at the
very core of narcissism.
The narcissist is never whole
without an adoring, submissive,
available, self-denigrating
partner. His very sense of
superiority, indeed his False
Self, depends on it. His sadistic
Superego switches its attentions
from the narcissist (in whom
it often provokes suicidal
ideation) to the partner,
thus finally obtaining an
alternative source of sadistic
satisfaction.
It is through self-denial
that the partner survives.
She denies her wishes, hopes,
dreams, aspirations, sexual,
psychological and material
needs, choices, preferences,
values, and much else besides.
She perceives her needs as
threatening because they might
engender the wrath of the
narcissist's God-like supreme
figure.
The narcissist is rendered
in her eyes even more superior
through and because of this
self-denial. Self-denial undertaken
to facilitate and ease the
life of a "great man" is more
palatable. The "greater" the
man (=the narcissist), the
easier it is for the partner
to ignore her own self, to
dwindle, to degenerate, to
turn into an appendix of the
narcissist and, finally, to
become nothing but an extension,
to merge with the narcissist
to the point of oblivion and
of merely dim memories of
herself.
The two collaborate in this
macabre dance. The narcissist
is formed by his partner inasmuch
as he forms her. Submission
breeds superiority and masochism
breeds sadism. The relationships
are characterised by emergentism:
roles are allocated almost
from the start and any deviation
meets with an aggressive,
even violent reaction.
The predominant state of the
partner's mind is utter confusion.
Even the most basic relationships
– with husband, children,
or parents – remain
bafflingly obscured by the
giant shadow cast by the intensive
interaction with the narcissist.
A suspension of judgement
is part and parcel of a suspension
of individuality, which is
both a prerequisite to and
the result of living with
a narcissist. The partner
no longer knows what is true
and right and what is wrong
and forbidden.
The narcissist recreates for
the partner the sort of emotional
ambience that led to his own
formation in the first place:
capriciousness, fickleness,
arbitrariness, emotional (and
physical or sexual) abandonment.
The world becomes hostile,
and ominous and the partner
has only one thing left to
cling to: the narcissist.
And cling she does. If there
is anything which can safely
be said about those who emotionally
team up with narcissists,
it is that they are overtly
and overly dependent.
The partner doesn't know what
to do – and this is
only too natural in the mayhem
that is the relationship with
the narcissist. But the typical
partner also does not know
what she wants and, to a large
extent, who she is and what
she wants to become.
These unanswered questions
hamper the partner's ability
to gauge reality. Her primordial
sin is that she fell in love
with an image, not with a
real person. It is the voiding
of the image that is mourned
when the relationship ends.
The break-up of a relationship
with a narcissist is, therefore,
very emotionally charged.
It is the culmination of a
long chain of humiliations
and of subjugation. It is
the rebellion of the functioning
and healthy parts of the partner's
personality against the tyranny
of the narcissist.
The partner is likely to have
totally misread and misinterpreted
the whole interaction (I hesitate
to call it a relationship).
This lack of proper interface
with reality might be (erroneously)
labelled "pathological".
Why is it that the partner
seeks to prolong her pain?
What is the source and purpose
of this masochistic streak?
Upon the break-up of the relationship,
the partner (but not the narcissist,
who usually refuses to provide
closure) engage in a tortuous
and drawn out post mortem.
But the question who did what
to whom (and even why) is
irrelevant. What is relevant
is to stop mourning oneself,
start smiling again and love
in a less subservient, hopeless,
and pain-inflicting manner.
The Abuse
Abuse is an integral, inseparable
part of the Narcissistic Personality
Disorder.
The narcissist idealises and
then DEVALUES and discards
the object of his initial
idealisation. This abrupt,
heartless devaluation IS abuse.
ALL narcissists idealise and
then devalue. This is THE
core narcissistic behaviour.
The narcissist exploits, lies,
insults, demeans, ignores
(the "silent treatment"),
manipulates, controls. All
these are forms of abuse.
There are a million ways to
abuse. To love too much is
to abuse. It is tantamount
to treating someone as one's
extension, an object, or an
instrument of gratification.
To be over-protective, not
to respect privacy, to be
brutally honest, with a morbid
sense of humour, or consistently
tactless – is to abuse.
To expect too much, to denigrate,
to ignore – are all
modes of abuse. There is physical
abuse, verbal abuse, psychological
abuse, sexual abuse. The list
is long.
Narcissists are masters of
abusing surreptitiously ("ambient
abuse"). They are "stealth
abusers". You have to actually
live with one in order to
witness the abuse.
There are three important
categories of abuse:
Overt Abuse – The open
and explicit abuse of another
person. Threatening, coercing,
battering, lying, berating,
demeaning, chastising, insulting,
humiliating, exploiting, ignoring
("silent treatment"), devaluing,
unceremoniously discarding,
verbal abuse, physical abuse
and sexual abuse are all forms
of overt abuse.
Covert or Controlling Abuse
– Narcissism is almost
entirely about control. It
is a primitive and immature
reaction to the circumstances
of a life in which the narcissist
(usually in his childhood)
was rendered helpless. It
is about re-asserting one's
identity, re-establishing
predictability, mastering
the environment – human
and physical.
The bulk of narcissistic behaviours
can be traced to this panicky
reaction to the potential
for loss of control. Narcissists
are hypochondriacs (and difficult
patients) because they are
afraid to lose control over
their body, its looks and
its proper functioning. They
are obsessive-compulsive in
their efforts to subdue their
physical habitat and render
it foreseeable. They stalk
people and harass them as
a means of "being in touch"
– another form of narcissistic
control.
But why the panic?
The narcissist is a solipsist.
To him, nothing exists except
himself. Meaningful others
are his extensions, assimilated
by him, they are internal
objects – not external
ones. Thus, losing control
of a significant other –
is equivalent to losing the
use of a limb, or of one's
brain. It is terrifying.
Independent or disobedient
people evoke in the narcissist
the realisation that something
is wrong with his worldview,
that he is not the centre
of the world or its cause
and that he cannot control
what, to him, are internal
representations.
To the narcissist, losing
control means going insane.
Because other people are mere
elements in the narcissist's
mind – being unable
to manipulate them literally
means losing it (his mind).
Imagine, if you suddenly were
to find out that you cannot
manipulate your memories or
control your thoughts. Nightmarish!
Moreover, it is often only
through manipulation and extortion
that the narcissist can secure
his Narcissistic Supply (NS).
Controlling his Sources of
Narcissistic Supply is a (mental)
life or death question for
the narcissist. The narcissist
is a drug addict (his drug
being the NS) and he would
go to any length to obtain
the next dose.
In his frantic efforts to
maintain control or re-assert
it, the narcissist resorts
to a myriad of fiendishly
inventive stratagems and mechanisms.
Here is a partial list:
Unpredictability
The narcissist acts unpredictably,
capriciously, inconsistently
and irrationally. This serves
to demolish in others their
carefully crafted worldview.
They become dependent upon
the next twist and turn of
the narcissist, his inexplicable
whims, his outbursts, denial,
or smiles.
In other words: the narcissist
makes sure that HE is the
only stable entity in the
lives of others – by
shattering the rest of their
world through his seemingly
insane behaviour. He guarantees
his presence in their lives
– by destabilising them.
In the absence of a self,
there are no likes or dislikes,
preferences, predictable behaviour
or characteristics. It is
not possible to know the narcissist.
There is no one there.
The narcissist was conditioned
– from an early age
of abuse and trauma –
to expect the unexpected.
His was a world in which (sometimes
sadistic) capricious caretakers
and peers often behaved arbitrarily.
He was trained to deny his
True Self and nurture a False
one.
Having invented himself, the
narcissist sees no problem
in re-inventing that which
he designed in the first place.
The narcissist is his own
creator.
Hence his grandiosity.
(continued)
About the Author
Sam Vaknin is the author of
Malignant Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain
- How the West Lost the East.
He is a columnist for Central
Europe Review, United Press
International (UPI) and eBookWeb
and the editor of mental health
and Central East Europe categories
in The Open Directory, Suite101
and searcheurope.com.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
Resources
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