Malignant Self Love
- Narcissism Revisited
Excerpts from the Archives
of the
Narcissism List
Part 15
1. Money and the Narcissist
Money stands for love in the narcissist's emotional vocabulary. Having been
deprived of love early on in his childhood, the narcissist constantly seeks for
love substitutes. To him, money is THE love substitute. All the qualities of
the Narcissist are manifest in his relationship with money, and in his attitude
towards it. Due to his sense of entitlement - he feels that he is entitled to
other people's money. His grandiosity leads him to believe that he should have,
or does have more money than he actually has. This leads to reckless spending,
to pathological gambling, to substance abuse, or to compulsive shopping.
Their magical thinking leads narcissists to irresponsible and short-sighted
behavior, the results of which they believe themselves to be immune from. So,
they descend to debt, they commit financial crimes, they hassle people,
including their closest relatives. Their fantasies lead them to believe in
financial (fabricated) "facts" (achievements) - incommensurate with
their talents, qualifications, jobs, and resources. They pretend to be richer
than they are, or capable of becoming rich, if they so resolve. They have a
love-hate ambivalent relationship with money. They are mean, stingy, and
calculating with their own money - and spendthrift with OPM (other people's
money). They live lavishly, well above their means. The often go bankrupt and
ruin their businesses. Reality very rarely matches their grandiose fantasies.
Nowhere is the grandiosity gap more evident than where money is involved.
2. Treating Your Narcissist
Treat them as you would children. This is so CLEAR and so endearing. It
fosters in many the wish to protect the narcissist from his own delusions or to
violently shake him into submission for his own good. The narcissist is like
that wide eyed, hands up, Jewish kid in the famous holocaust photograph, his
clothes concealing a load of food weightier than he, his fate sealed, his gaze
accepting and far. A Nazi SS soldier is pointing a gun at him. It is all in
sepia colours and the bustle of everyday death is muted in the background.
3. Forgetting My Self
I HAD amnesia of myself. I knew next to nothing about who I was, what I did,
how I felt. Then, life shattering events handed me the answers. Then I went
looking for a label for what I learned about myself.
- I knew nothing.
- I discovered that I knew nothing.
- I studied myself.
- I labeled my findings.
Are labels self fulfilling prophecies? I think that yes, to some extent.
This risk DEFINITELY exists. I try to avoid it by interacting with other
narcissists and especially with victims of narcissists. I FORCE myself to be as
un-narcissistic as I can: help people, empathize, deny selfishness, avoid
grandiosity (and I do face temptations).
It is not working. I act out. I lash at the new "Sam". Maybe it is
my narcissism fighting the last battle. Maybe I am administering the coup de
grace.
And maybe not. Maybe my new found philanthropy is another narcissistic ploy.
The worst part is when you are no longer able to tell the healthy from the
sick, your self from your invented self, your will from the dynamics of your
disorder.
4. What to Tell Your Narcissist?
I would tell him that we are all shaped in our early childhood by people:
parents, teachers, other adults, our peers. It is a delicate job of fine
tuning. Very often it is incomplete or wrongly done. As children, we defend
ourselves against the incompetence (and, sometimes, the abuse) of our elders.
We are individuals, so we each adopt (often unconsciously) a different defense
mechanism. One of these self-defense mechanisms is called
"narcissism". It is the choice
not to seek love and acceptance from - and not to give them to - those
incapable or unwilling to provide it. Instead, we construct an imaginary
"self". It is everything that we are not, as children. It is
omnipotent, omniscient, immune, grandiose, fantastic and ideal. We direct our
love at this creation. But deep inside, we know that it is our invention. We
need others to inform us constantly and persuasively that it is not MERELY our
invention, that it has an existence all of its own, independent of us. This is
why we look for "narcissistic supply": attention, adoration,
admiration, applause, approval, affirmation, fame, power, sex, etc.
top | continued |
table of contents
home | about me |
narcissism defined | faq | narcissism list
excerpts
the book | book excerpts |
articles |
email me
|