Habits and Hustle - Episode 75: Dr. Ramani Durvasula – Narcissism Expert, Clinical Psychologist, and Professor of Psychology
Episode Date: August 4, 2020Dr. Ramani Durvasula is a Narcissism Expert, Clinical Psychologist, and Professor of Psychology. What it means to be a narcissist, the different types of narcissistic behavior, how to spot those relat...ionships in your own life, and how to navigate entrepreneurship in a healthy way avoiding these toxic tendencies. Dr. Ramani expands on and explains these possible harms opening up what many people may be and have been enduring their entire lives. From the Me Too movement to an office job, to a “charming yoga expert”, to our homes… our lives seem plagued by these people. Tired of feeling used, like a pushover, or maybe even not sure how to spot if you’re dealing with a narcissist yourself? Take Dr. Ramani’s insight and see the world’s narcissists for what they truly are. Youtube Link to This Episode Dr. Ramani Durvasula’s Website Dr. Ramani Durvasula’s Youtube Channel ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Did you learn something from tuning in today? Please pay it forward and write us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts. 📧If you have feedback for the show, please email habitsandhustlepod@gmail.com 📙Get yourself a copy of Jennifer Cohen’s newest book from Habit Nest, Badass Body Goals Journal. ℹ️Habits & Hustle Website 📚Habit Nest Website 📱Follow Jennifer – Instagram – Facebook – Twitter – Jennifer’s Website Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Now you're doing, like, you're basically strictly doing narcissism.
Like, that's your women toxic relationships.
That's my, that's it.
And I, it's, you know, it's really where I found the greatest impact
in the work that I do ever.
How desperate people were to understand this, men, women, all over the world.
I mean, listen, I got nothing to bring to the weight loss table, Doni, and when you're
stressed, and so there's just a pointless conversation.
It's not a pointless conversation.
In many ways, the mental health profession has really contributed to people staying in toxic
relationships, not recognizing toxic relationships.
I mean, there's almost this unwillingness to recognize them.
So anything can be fixed through love and light, and it's obviously not the case.
And so that's where I was able to come in with all my beautiful pessimism.
Well, it was funny.
Well, not funny at all.
But when I was looking at your stuff, I couldn't believe
how many views some of these videos were getting on narcissism, which tells us something
much bigger, right?
I mean, that's obviously, isn't technically a mental disorder, though?
Isn't it?
So it's tricky, right?
So, you know, and this is where there's a lot, I prefer to take almost like the straight
orthodoxy in the sense of when you use the term narcissism,
narcissist, you're talking about a personality style
that is, to me, it's pathologic, but it's not diagnostic.
Right?
Right.
It's such a curious thing.
To me, it's very, very, very unhealthy.
And yet we live in a world that values it.
So in other words, yet we live in a world that values it. So in other words, imagine living in a world where people love to depressed people.
We're going to make depressed people our leaders.
We're going to give depressed people all the money.
The depressed people are going to have all the Instagram followers.
It's the same thing except it's narcissism.
Right.
Well, don't you kind of, I mean, I have all these questions I want to ask you, but I like I like just
Even before we even jump into them. I just couldn't like I said I couldn't believe the popularity of
Curiosity about narcissism and I was always thinking like and I do it to everyone does this
But like when they say things like when people deserve much they're very like they're very like Lucy Goosey
Like oh, I hate that person, they're psycho or like that person
with narcissists. Like it's such a throwback, right? Yeah. When you don't like
somebody or when someone like you feel wrong, you or that you feel. And then when
you kind of like delve into it, I do find like when I look at all the different
types of character traits that even you live in your book or in your videos about what
a true narcissist is, there has to be a correlation between a true narcissist and success because
you need to have that self- that feeling of self-importance and self- you know that a
grandizing feeling that you can achieve great things.
Yeah, but here's the challenge.
That's a tiny slice of the narcissism pie.
The bigger part of the narcissism pie
is that you invalidate people and you devalue people
and you gaslight people.
So while the aggrandizement often goes along with those things,
it's a matter of, it's very interesting how,
I think so many people struggle with confidence that when they see somebody with false confidence
It's deducted not recognizing that the narcissists are the most insecure people in the room and what's fascinating is that a person who's truly confident
In fact is at times somewhat self-effacing their humble
I know my stuff, you know, and so I don't need to make, I don't need to draw a lot of attention to myself. And so whereas the narcissist is so insecure,
that they're the ones that are frothing and spinning,
validate me, validate me, validate me,
and for some reason we fall in for it,
my hope and my lifetime is to get people
to stop paying attention to the aggrandizing people
and look at the quietly confident ones,
because they're the money shop.
I totally agree with that, right?
I totally agree with that because the people who are truly,
they feel like they have self worth,
they don't feel like they have to tell everybody,
and basically yell it from every raster,
and that, okay, so let's start this.
So how do you, so how do you even spot a narcissist?
How do you, here's a tough one.
It's like the people say, how quick until you get in a narcissist? Well, here's a tough one.
It's like the people say, how quick until you get in a room could you tell?
It can be tricky, right?
Because listen, I'm the first person to tell you charming and charismatic people make me
incredibly nervous.
If you're very charming and charismatic, I'm going to walk away from you.
It's actually a terrifying set of qualities to me because it's so well-synced associated
with narcissism.
Not all charming and charismatic people
are narcissistic, but so many are that I try to cut my losses and I won't even go there,
right? So because when we're looking at a narcissistic person, we're looking at somebody who
is grandiose, who lacks empathy, who is very entitled. In other words, they feel like the rules
don't apply to them. They apply to everyone else, but they don't apply to them.
They're arrogant.
They're constantly seeking validation and admiration.
They are quite sensitive.
So they can throw out zingers at everyone.
But if anyone even hints at something that sort of mildly, I don't even playful jiving
with a narcissist, they'll get very hostile, defensive, you know, angry.
They're prone to rage when they're stressed or disappointed.
They don't tend to value another other people enough to listen to them.
My favorite is when they say they'll Yamaron and hold court for 45 minutes,
but as soon as somebody else starts to speak, they'll get distracted.
They'll look at their phone.
They'll be looking off in the distance and then they'll claim that they have 80 HD.
I'm like, well, you didn't have ADHD for the first 45 minutes of this conversation when
you wouldn't shut up.
So I'm not buying it.
So it's all of these things.
It's an antagonistic style that may not emerge the first time.
But what you'll see is, again, they're often holding court.
And a lot of people are sort of, it's because people are almost mystified, seduced,
hypnotized by narcissists. It's amazing. If you don't know what you're looking for, it's very
easy to get sucked in. Like I said, I'm the only person in the world who, when they see someone
charming or charismatic, makes a beeline for the rumpled person in the corner. So what kind of
person do you look for? The person who's kind of like awkward, uncomfortable,
or just quiet, or quiet?
Why it humble, a good listener,
ask me as many questions as I ask them.
It's a balanced conversation.
They actually, what I enjoy are people
who are able to stay in the moment.
You meet them in a garden and they'll say,
do you know what kind of tree that is?
I'm not saying, you know, I don't know what kind of tree that is. And we'll start talking about the tree
and say, you know, I grew up with a tree like this. Really, you know, I did too. You, it
had to be 20 minutes before you even know what they do versus the, hey, John Smith, cell
cars. Yeah. Yeah. Mr. Jones, it worked for MTV. And you get the resume before you get
the person. That's always a good sign too. That's a very good sign. But I do think that there are, you know, that whole saying, like the
fox and what is it? Like a sheep and wolf's clothing or whatever that say.
A wolf is a sheep's clothing. Yeah, a wolf is a sheep's clothing because I think if you're smart and
you have that ability to kind of like be somewhat like aware, you know, you
can fool people at the beginning.
You can seem that you're interested.
You can kind of play it back in a bit and you can still be a narcissist, right?
Oh, absolutely.
In fact, narcissists are masterful at emulation.
They're listening to you, but they're listening to you to get data.
They're listening to you to get intel.
It's almost like they're almost trying to penetrate beneath.
And some people view that as,
when people tell me they just met someone
and they had a magical connection,
I say, don't, don't, don't go on a date.
Just end it.
There's a danger is where my world, magical connection,
so made, never felt this way before.
To me, it speaks to the love bombing,
the idealization, the larger than life,
that almost bizarre ability to climb into you,
because they're almost like sucking out
all your vulnerabilities, learning them,
because I promise you six months down the road,
they're gonna use them as a weapon against you.
Wow, so how did you become such a,
I mean, you're obviously a very brilliant,
and I'm not saying that just to like,
blow, you know, smoke up your butt, but you are always very brilliant psychologist. I back even went,
my question is, what made you really hone in on this? Do you have a narcissist in your
life that you wanted to really kind of like hone in on it, or you just kind, or you feel
like that of all the personality types? This one is such a common one that you wanted to kind of explain it
away to people. There's actually multiple pathways and I you know, although I've
had personal experience with it, what's interesting, it wasn't my personal
experience that pulled me into this area. It was actually after having I started
in it in a research and looking at it in research. And what it happened was I was
working in sort of looking at health care issues.
And several of my students who were working at a research project
would come to back to the main lab and say, I'm so frustrated.
Why are these clients so difficult?
In other words, they were harassing the nurses.
These patients were harassing the receptionist.
And I took a moment and I said, how interesting what's happening?
And they over and over the student assistance for telling me the same thing.
It dawned on me that there was a cluster of really difficult patients.
I happened to be seeing it in my lab and the clinic I was affiliated with, but then I
started asking around, nurses and doctors all the way.
Yeah.
There's like 10% of our patients, suck 80% of our resources because there's such jerks.
And they burn bridges.
And frankly, these people don't end up getting as good health care. That led me to get interested in
personality disorders of people who had illnesses. And so I started doing research actually funded
by the National Institutes of Health on personality and in people with HIV. Some of this happened
to be the area I was working in. At the same time, I was also working as a clinician. And I would
say from about, um, 2014 on,
increasingly I was working with people.
Most people come into therapy with relationship problems,
problems with husbands, wives,
boyfriend's girlfriends, bosses, siblings, families.
But particularly in the relationship space,
everybody kept coming in with the same story.
This person isn't listening, they deny my reality.
I feel like I don't exist.
And I was like, that's interesting. And they kept telling me the same thing. And after the session, they deny my reality, I feel like I don't exist. And I was like, that's interesting.
And they kept telling me the same thing.
And after the session, they'd sometimes say, I'm so adult and so confused.
Could you put some of this in an email?
And I take the clinical notes, I have to keep anyhow.
I toss them in an email.
And after a while, I started looking at these emails
on site, these emails might make a book.
And so, you know, and then I started doing a deeper dive.
And I felt like, well, I didn't think anyone was getting at this issue the way it could be. So I wrote,
should I stay or should I go surviving a relationship with a narcissist. As that process went on,
I actually started seeing that I had been affected by many narcissists in my life in professional
settings, in personal settings, in friendship settings, and in work and in my family of origin, kind of stuff.
So every part of my life, I thought, this is very interesting.
And as I did the deeper dive in my own therapy, I said, I floated to my therapist and said,
what do you think about this?
She said, all right, let's go, let's talk about this.
And even she hadn't gone there with me.
And then all of these journeys sort of sort of co-lust and
Then 2016 happened and there was a presidential election
So I was quietly talking about this and I thought oh my goodness
Is it gonna happen that this thing is reached the tipping point and this person and I don't care what your politics are
It doesn't matter your politics. He's a narcissist some people like his narcissism some people don't but that's just a statement of fact
Yeah, and so I thought we're about to normalize this that led me to write my most recent book which is don't you know who I am
How to how to stay sane in an era of narcissism entitlement and incivility so from the election yet
Thank you the election until it came out
in 2019, I actually worked on that book, watching everything that was going on in the world.
And then, you know what, everyone needs a millennial for a mentor. And I worked with two
magnificent, a couple of, actually more than two, but a couple of magnificent people. And
they said, you know what, Doc, nobody reads anymore. And your book is great, but you got
to make videos. I said, I don't like videos. And they said, will know what, doc, nobody reads anymore in your book is great, but you got to make videos. I said, I don't like videos.
And they said, will you give us a chance
and are sort of making videos.
And that's where we reached.
And then I saw how global this phenomenon was.
And then I started traveling to India, South Africa,
and meeting clinicians.
And I thought, oh my goodness.
And nobody in mental health wanted to touch this.
This was like the bug nobody wanted to study. The fish nobody wanted to catch. And I was like, okay, somebody has to to touch this. This was like the bug nobody wanted to study,
the fish nobody wanted to catch.
And I was like, okay, somebody has to talk about this.
And so I said, you know, someone needs to.
And so I did, here I am.
Why?
Why would anyone, why would people not want to touch this?
Because it feels juggie.
So in mental health, we're very trained.
Like you go to therapy,
let's say you go to therapy,
you're sitting in the room with your therapist
and you're going on and on about a partner, okay?
The therapist is gonna say, you know what,
can we just keep the focus on you?
You keep talking about this other person,
and you're like, I feel really confused,
I feel really anxious, I'm constantly invalidated.
Well, what is it about you?
How have you perceived the situation differently?
And I'm thinking, are you serious?
Proceed the situation differently. If I'm thinking, are you serious? Proceed the situation differently.
If I could teach my client what's happening,
because you gotta remember, I'm not making this up.
These clients would show up with emails,
with text messages.
Sometimes they even have phone calls
while they were in the office with me on speaker.
So I could hear what they were dealing with.
They would bring in voicemails.
They would bring in voice recordings.
It was very clear what they're dealing with. Some of these clients had been in therapy for a
decade with other therapists. Inside of six weeks, by merely educating them about narcissism,
they're like, oh, this was never my fault. I'm like, no, this was their personality and it's not
going to change. People getting out, adjusting, 50% of people say 50% of people go.
Not everyone was getting a divorce where people like,
now I know I'm not going to engage with this person anymore.
I am not going to fix my dreams to this person anymore.
I get it now and life's got changed and I said,
it's this simple, but nobody wants to do this in mental health.
They think we shouldn't be talking about people who are in the room.
You shouldn't be talking in diagnostic terms like narcissism about people you don't know. I said, oh, I think we should.
That's such a true point because people do stay in therapy all the time. I mean, when I've been
in therapy, I'm not a big therapy person per se, but when I have gone and I did speak about people,
that would happen all the time, which is why I never liked going there because they would
always say, well, what about you?
How do you, they would try to like manipulate the conversation when, I would always say,
and I'm sure other people are like, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
Sometimes a person's personality is what a person's personality is.
You don't always have to internalize it. A big thing in like performance also and in general is about, always about, you can only
control yourself. That's what a lot of people say. You can't control outside external
forces. So it kind of makes people feel like they, it is their fault. Or it's their problem that they are reacting to some other external action.
When, quite frankly, sometimes that is what happens, right?
Because other people do create reaction.
But here's the thing, what I want them to understand is that that thing they're reacting to is
predictable.
So I'd say you're being guessedlight. So your reality is being denied. Instead of going
with them, why can't you hold on to your reality? Because if I were to say something to me,
I don't know what something. And I'd say, you know, I think you're being too sensitive. I actually
don't think you're hearing me right. That's incredibly disrespectful. You know, instead of saying,
she's sharing a feeling with me, let me hear her feeling and respect that feeling.
And you know what?
Because I'm sitting here in the guise of the expert.
You'd say, maybe I am being too sensitive.
It's an incredibly manipulative thing for me to do.
And when people go through that for years, decades, and more importantly, if they grew
up like that, they don't even know that there's another kind of normal.
And I have to say, the people who make the rules
are more often than not narcissistic.
As we said, they're not narcissistic.
Yeah, exactly.
So it's really about getting into these systems
and saying, this isn't okay.
You know, we have to teach people that your realities
are your realities.
People can't take them away.
Being invalidated is not normal.
And once people understand this,
that these toxic patterns are not okay and they're not
your fault, the person's behavior, that's the problem.
The other person who's behaving this toxic manner, then it allows clients to almost get
freed up and say, okay, this still feels awful.
And I feel like I'm not enough.
But then we can start doing the deeper dive without them trying to please somebody who's
unpleasable.
It's like having a calculator that keeps giving you
two post two is five.
Throw the calculator out.
Yeah, that's a great way to put it.
So you keep on, you set a couple things here
and I know that you have a video about this
and you mentioned these two things a lot.
You say love bombing and gas, gas lighting.
What does that mean?
Give us a definition of those.
So narcissistic relationships have sort of a natural history to them.
And phase one is typically what we call love bombing.
Love bombing in general is a phase of idealization, seduction, winning someone over, but in often
a really big way.
Now in the classical form of love bombing, it's
the fairy tale romance. Let's go on a fabulous vacation on our fourth date. I'm going to
set a white tablecloth on the beach. I'm going to take you to all the expensive restaurants
and towns. I'm going to send a hundred dozen roses to your workplace. These big grandiose
gestures. And some people will even say, you know what? It almost felt a little bit off-putting.
But the people around me saying, oh my gosh, what's wrong with you? You're in a romantic love story
and you're questioning it. They were right to question it. But love bombing doesn't always look
like big grandiose gestures. Sometimes it's a person being super over-controlling. Good morning,
baby. Good afternoon, princess. Good night,
gorgeous. What you do and where you at, who you with? And it's a lot of that. And people
feel like, oh, wow, look at all this attention this person's giving me. And to me, it's
stalking. And I'll say, well, no, it's early in the relationship. And that first time you
don't respond to the good night text because you fell asleep, where were you? Who were you
with? And then you start seeing that it starts to escalate because this constant texting and calling and video calling
or whatever it is, was a means of control. So that's another way love bombing can take
can happen of almost too much intense attention that people interpret as deep, deep interest.
Wow, this person's so into me. Another form of love bombing is things move too quickly.
People move in with each other after the first month.
You're meeting their mother after the first week
and you didn't originally know their mom.
You're very quickly, things are happening too quickly.
They're talking about marriage and we should buy a house
and I'm moving here, you should move with me.
And you feel again, a lot of people will say,
they feel guilty saying,
ah, this is too much too quick. And they'll often get almost shamed by other people say,
well, you're in the love story. You always complain. People don't call you back. And here's this
person. So love bombing is confusing. It moves so quickly. You don't get a chance to notice the red
flags. And trust me, those red flags are popping up everywhere. Then the here's the funny thing about love bombing.
Once you give into it and love bombing, let me just go backwards a minute.
It's not even always this big, big interest.
Sometimes it's a person that feels like they need so desperately to be rescued.
So you meet this person and they almost sort of seem a bit like a sad sack.
Nothing's gone their way, you know,'ve worked really hard and yeah, you know, and nothing ever went my way and my
dad, this and victim this and I'm victimized by that and, whoa, it was me and why didn't
life work out for me.
And very empathic people often feel very tempted to rescue people like that.
So love bombing can look like this sort of rescue-y kind of experience as well.
They rescue you, you rescue them,
and very often a narcissist will meet you
at a transitional time in your life.
You've moved to a new city, you started a new job,
you're coming out of another relationship,
you're coming out of an illness,
a family member just died,
they're really good at smelling blood,
and the blood they smell is vulnerability.
Once the love bombing works, inside of a month or two,
they'll start devaluing you.
So once they've got you where they want you,
that's when the contempt,
because it's almost like the novelty is worn off.
The game, the hunt, the catch,
that's what they're looking for.
So is that really,
is that 100% of the time and the narcissist
likes a thrill of the chase?
They do, because everything's a game to them
and all about the win.
They want to win, win, win, win.
It's very much this idea of superiority and egocentricity and competition, which are
not the ingredients of a healthy relationship.
But winning is everything, which is why they're so successful on paper, why they make more
money, why they have big jobs, why they run the world, because they're so obsessed with
winning.
But for them, then courtship dating
becomes about winning.
So a lot of people think, well, I'm going to play hard to get because that's what you're
supposed to do.
That's even worse because now they're more obsessed with winning.
And now you're stuck with this narcissist when it's done.
Right.
And then so how often do those relationships end pretty quickly?
If the thrill of the chase is just the goal.
I would say in a certain percentage of cases,
here, let's not be a spit ball.
This is an even based on data.
This is anecdotally, I'd say about a third of the time
the narcissist is sort of a serial data.
It's almost like eating the top of the cupcake.
They just want the fun, and then yeah,
I'm throwing out the stump.
Like they want the bomb, they want the fun,
they want the new sex, the new experiences,
and then once you start talking about,
once it starts becoming sweatpants and hanging out
in commitment, not so much,
they move on to the next one.
Unfortunately, in the other two thirds of cases,
because believe it or not, these narcissists
who we think are also confident, like I said,
are actually quite insecure.
They're actually very uncomfortable with abandonment.
So they often will hold on to relationships
because they love the idea of a sure thing
because it helps them feel comfortable.
They just treat that sure thing really badly.
Right. I mean, so it's more about having like,
it's kind of like you're kind of just taking for granted
like an old sock basically.
Very quick.
But yeah, you've given the confidence to kind of feel that they have something like a safety,
like a safety net type of deal.
Well, in you.
So in other words, once they have somebody, they like that.
They like how it looks to the world that they're in a relationship.
Right.
They like having something consistent.
They like, again, they like the safety because they're so insecure.
And especially if you're a good source of what's called narcissistic supply, which is all the admiration
and validation that they need, then they're
going to keep you around too.
Because they need that narcissistic supply the way I
need the air that I breathe.
We just need it.
And if they don't get it, they get really, really frustrated.
So then what would you say, as we're going to say,
what personality type, you kind of said it
a little bit earlier, the narcissist will smell blood. Like they'll go for someone who is very empathetic you said right that would
be the first. So what other kind of personalities are they go for people who are hyper empathic
they go to people who are rescuers who want to fix things all the time. They go to people
who are hyper optimistic.
Like, I love your energy and let's go be energy together.
And let's do yoga and have energy and kale and have energy.
And I love you and you're so great.
And what a guy can.
And it's like all of that kind of happy, happy, happy.
And I'm thinking, oh my God, they're not seeing this
realistically.
So those hyper optimists, they can't see it.
And they're like, no, he just had a bad day.
No, he's just really stressed.
No, they're just friends.
And I'm like, seriously, keep eating kale sweet art
because you're not seeing this.
Right.
So it's very optimistic folks.
They also, they may not know this about the person,
but something that renders a person vulnerable
to a narcissistic relationship is somebody
who came from a family where they had one or two
Narcissistic parents and many ways you get so used to the narrative that you're not enough that when somebody starts treating you not enough
A lot of people go with it. In fact, it feels very familiar and I hate to say it almost magical and
Then sometimes they like a partner because they bring a value added to the table
So it's an older man dating a much, much younger woman.
It's a person going for someone who's incredibly attractive, incredibly wealthy, very famous,
or somehow very successful in their field.
So they bring a very superficial kind of thing.
Narcissists will love those kinds of partners.
That's very much what they're often looking for.
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Now, what's the percentage of male to female? Is there a lot of female narcissists? There's
more female narcissists than you would think.
I mean, I've often given a split of 80-20 with each passing year, I shift that number. I'm guessing
probably closer to 70-30. And because enough people listening to your podcast are going to say,
no, my mom's a narcissist. The number of people out there of narcissistic mothers are quite prolific and so those are all obviously women.
I think that men are more likely to be raised and socialized to be narcissists. They're not valued
for their emotional inner worlds. They're told they're weak if they show emotion. They're raised
to be more competitive. They're not raised to be as empathic. So that's sort of a byproduct of how we parent voice in our culture and how society reinforces
voice that said, it's not that simple.
And since these are very ancient developmental issues that come from infancy forward, a woman
can just as likely be a narcissist.
And like I said, there's plenty of men out there who could listen to something.
I just say, no, this is my wife.
This is my girlfriend.
I would say in my practice, it's getting closer to 50-50
that I'm seeing.
So I think we're getting there.
Yeah, I mean, because I think what you just said
is also very accurate.
When you hear other people talk about bad relationships
with them and their mom, their father,
you do hear that a lot.
Oh, my mother was really narcissistic,
which of course are women.
So you're saying it is it is becoming much more balanced.
I am seeing it much more in women.
I mean, listen, recently there was a whole spate of scandals where a bunch of rather
women who were sort of bosses of companies, like big companies were stepping down because
of their toxic behavior.
So, I mean, I had female toxic bosses, and let me tell you, it was a nightmare.
Every bit is nightmares as a man who is a toxic boss.
So, you see that.
I mean, there's no reason why there's limits on that.
So, I think it's out there.
I think it's absolutely out there.
I think that it is, again, it's probably more socialized in men, but in my, I honestly
think in my lifetime we're going to see those ratios balanced out to more 50-50.
Do women narcissists kind of pick a different, the same type of guy then?
Would it be the same?
Amphacetic, more, if they're superficially like make them look good, basically, and otherwise.
Optimists.
Yeah, optimists, they choose men who basically are enablers in both cases, whether it's a man
or a woman, ultimately what's a narcissist looking for in a partner, they need an enabler, and that's what they're
looking for, even though they've never said it, obviously.
Right, right, right.
And so, okay, that's very interesting.
Okay, then what is this gas light?
So gas light.
So gas light.
A lot of people use the word, you know, and it's very much on our radar now.
Gas lighting is emotional manipulation that takes place because you're doubting or denying
the reality of another person. The most common way, one of the most simple ways you can gaslight
someone saying you're being too sensitive. So now I've just judged your emotion. It could be
things like that never happened. You're making too big a deal out of this. Dale deflect,
that you'll start talking about one thing and
I'll completely change the subject.
They'll minimize it, they'll minimize what you're going through, or they'll start saying,
you know what, there must be really be something very wrong with you for saying that.
So now they're calling you mentally ill, you're actually bringing up a relationship issue.
So again, it's a denial of your reality. And so it is
very harmful. It qualifies as emotional abuse. And it is the narcissist round game. Within
the first three to four weeks of a relationship of the narcissist, they will gaslight you. Stop
making such a big deal out of that. It's not that big a deal. That's the damn. That's
the real story.
Three to four weeks. I'm telling you, honestly, I have now probably talked to thousands of people who've been through narcissistic relationships.
And I will do surveys and we'll have them in these massive chats and people will drop their number in there.
And I'll say, these are people who have been married 60 years and people who've been dating for six months.
And I always ask them a question, how soon into the relationship did you suspect something
wasn't right that the red flag started popping up?
And invariably, people said within the first month, I'd say probably 10% of people don't
say that, but 90% of people say, in the first month I knew something wasn't right, but
I started making excuses and rationalizations because I thought I was the one at fault.
Wow. And it's always, is it always the gaslighting reason or is it something?
There'd be anything. It could be, they seem shady. They lie. They don't listen.
They would get angry very quickly. Their stories didn't add up. They would talk badly about other people.
I say, listen, if you're someone talking badly about other people, I promise you,
they're talking about you like like this, to somebody else.
It's a pretty good rule of thumb.
So, you would see these stories not adding up.
All these different things would start happening.
They would have poor boundaries with people.
It would be a million little things that are so easy to just gloss away.
Listen, there's a pressure people feel like, I want this to work. I've dated so long. I'm 35. I want
to get married. And I consider there's certain high risk relationship groups
people who are getting older and maybe coming out of a divorce. I can't tell you
how many women I've worked with probably age 50, 55 and older who will say, gosh,
in this town everyone my age wants a day to 25
year old gal. So if I find a guy who wants to date me, I've got to hold on to him for
your life. And that's a set up for dating and our sister.
Yeah. No, that's sure. You're talking about Los Angeles. I'm sure of it, right? Because
that's I'm talking about Los Angeles. I can't tell you how many emails I get from people
who live in small towns in all 50 states
and in every country in the world.
So this is, I think it's more pronounced in big cities for sure, but it's happening everywhere.
Are you wearing bracelets by chance because I'm hearing a...
Oh, you know what?
It might be my hair.
There you go.
Is it?
It might be.
Yeah, because I'm not wearing anything.
Oh, that's...
Yeah, would you have in your hair?
I'm hearing like all this like...'m not wearing anything. Oh, yeah. Would you have in your hair?
I'm hearing all this, like, it sounds like bracelets.
Yeah, no, I've had this problem with this microphone before, so I'm going to hold it out
a little bit.
Oh, okay.
Thank you.
I was going to ask you, do two narcissists get along then?
What happens with two narcissists together?
When two narcissists get along, it's sort of interesting, because initially they can be
quite drawn to each other,
because they engage in something I call parallel play.
Like they both, I got a bow.
Oh yeah, I got a big bow.
Oh, I have a test.
No, I have a test.
I like, look at my watch.
I love your watch.
I have a watch like that.
Ooh, what kind of card.
Da, da, da, da, da, da.
There's a lot of like pissing contests
to eat and along with you competitive.
The problem is, is when one of those narcissists
starts doing better than the other.
They feel like the other person, because narcissists are very prone to envy and coveting what
other people have.
So, now if their friend gets a better house, a better whatever it is, they're going to
start feeling competitive with them, and it's going to bring a lot of negative emotion
into the relationship.
And because narcissists are so insecure, this idea that your superficial friend
is doing superficially better than you is very unsettling for the narcissist. But because
they're afraid of abandonment, they may stick around because they like the narcissist to
supply their fancy narcissistic friend brings. And so they get into this very kind of tense
dance with these with another narcissist, but more often than not, these relationships
and friendships sort of blow up.
So then basically we're talking about success and narcissism, right? So what is the
like I guess do you have any data on what is the percentage of people who
are narcissists who are professionally very successful?
There's one survey that was done and the data was published.
Gosh, I wish I could remember the original article, but they were suggesting probably about
25% of CEOs would qualify as psychopaths.
Now my guess is that 25% of CEOs' numbers are probably more like malignant narcissists,
but that seemed about right.
In fact, that was lower than I thought it would be.
Maybe they were psychopaths and maybe 50% to 60% of CEOs are narcissists.
The numbers are high.
The higher you get up in leadership, the more likely you're going to find a narcissist.
Because naturally, narcissists want to be the boss.
There's people out there who are smart.
I don't want to be the leader.
I like what I'm doing.
I don't want the headache of dealing with all these people.
I'm good.
I don't need the title and I don't need the be the leader. I like what I'm doing. I don't want the headache of dealing with all these people. Like, I'm good. Right.
I don't need the title and I don't need the big office.
But the narcissist needs the title.
They need the big office.
So they're going to fight to be the leader
because you just simply have to be the leader.
It's not because they're visionary.
It's not because they want to do right by people.
It's because they need to be the boss.
And how about entrepreneurs, right?
Who have to be self-starters, who have to believe in themselves,
who have to kind of go in like, you know, every day
Fall and get back up and have resilience, you know, don't they have to have some narcissistic quality in that to not always, of course, but
Sometimes, right, because you have to have that self-belief that you will that you you want to succeed you want to be
You want to be successful.
The challenge for entrepreneurs is many of them are narcissistic and a lot of that feeds the
grandiosity, right?
In order to be an entrepreneur, that has to be some level of grandiosity or why bother,
right?
The challenge for the entrepreneur is that entrepreneurship is very frustrating, it's very disappointing,
more often than not people don't succeed.
Narcissists are not built for disappointment. So when things start going south, they start blaming everybody else.
They blame the world. They blame the I was important with a trust fund. They blame the people who are working with them.
They blame the venture the VCs for not giving them enough money rather than saying I'm not figuring this out right.
Maybe this is the wrong market. Maybe I'm not branding this correctly. There's a lot of externalization of blame.
Listen, are there narcissists out there who have tremendous work ethic?
Absolutely, because you got to remember, for them, the way they're thinking about it is,
if I become successful, now I'm in a lot of money, and if I have a lot of money,
everybody's going to love me, and I'll get all the validation I need.
So their drive is very much to get validation.
So they live in the fantasy world
that I'm gonna be the tech billionaire
with the house on the beach
and the model girlfriend in the fancy car like that's the fantasy,
which obviously comes true for a very, very tiny percentage
of people and for those who don't get that as an entrepreneur,
they can often walk around feeling like a victim,
feeling let down, being
very sullen, being very resentful, and treat people badly as a result.
So I don't think by any stretch, all entrepreneurs are narcissistic, but I think probably more,
you'll see more narcissists in entrepreneurship than you might see in other professions for
sure.
Right.
You got to be grandiose.
I mean, you got to be grandiose.
It helps.
And also actors, like anything in Hollywood, I feel.
You have to have some, but why does that?
But also it breeds that ability that you want to have
that grandiose, but it's the most insecure people a lot of
times, who of course have needed that validation.
And that's why you hear that all the time, right?
Like, she's such an insecure actress. And that's why you hear that all the time, right? Like she's such an insecure actress
and she's so difficult because of this,
because it's like, I kind of feel like
it's such a dichotomy, right?
Like they have this one side or the outside is very,
you know, look at me, I'm so great, beautiful
and smart and talented.
And then the inside, it's the complete opposite.
That's exactly right.
And so that insecurity means that any narcissistic individual, whether they're a CEO or an entrepreneur
or a performer or a hell, an accountant or anything else like that, they are constantly
feel like they're under threat from the world.
They're waiting for someone almost to spot their deficits, to spot their failings.
They live in fear that those, like I said, deficits
in them are going to be seen publicly and that the shame will kill them. So that's why
they're so grandiose. That's why they're so arrogant. That's why they're so obsessed
with their appearance because it's like a suit of armor that protects that fragile core
interior that they have, that they're forever living in fear that will be exposed to the
world.
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What happened at work, right?
When you have a boss and coworker, you're dealing with a boss, let's say, first,
who's an narcissist.
How does that, how do you, how do you kind of manage a relationship like that?
It's really, really difficult.
And I, I'm sure again, many listeners are thinking, I had a toxic boss and it brought me
to my knees, like having a toxic boss, toxic supervisor, toxic leader in your organization,
especially if you're a direct report, can actually make you sick.
I mean, it can devastate you.
Toxic bosses are more likely to be harassers.
They're, you know, in the Me Too movement, I thought, you know, the Me Too movement isn't
about men harassing women, it's about narcissists.
And if every one of the people who fingered in those cases were narcissistic men, you know,
that's they were not just men, cases were narcissistic men. You know, that's, they were not just men, they were narcissistic men.
And so, they are, you know, it is,
you're not gonna get recognized to your work,
your work is gonna be stolen.
Toxic boss is foment, a lot of chaos and triangulation.
They create gossip, faction A goes against faction B.
They whisper secrets in people's ears.
It's like being in a toxic family.
And so, as a result of that,
you can't win with a toxic boss.
A lot of, you'll see this in Hollywood a lot.
I just need to get one film under my belt with this particular guy.
He's the biggest jerk in town, but if I could get one film under my belt, especially
this film wins an Oscar, then my career is made.
Said everyone, whoever worked with Harvey Weinstein.
Yeah.
And they were all his enablers.
And that's a horrifically tragic story.
And that story happens in a million smaller ways,
not just in film and media,
but in numerous other industries.
If I can just get my PhD with this person,
if I can just make partner.
And in doing that, you not only sell your soul
to the devil, you, honestly,
you make yourself both mentally and physically ill,
and you may not always get the return on investment.
So, you have to be, some people get there, they can get over the line, they get what they're
goodies and they get out, they kind of cash out, but many other people get destroyed in
the process. Part of it is because they don't know what they're dealing with. If you understand
that all the promises that this narcissistic boss is making, you are probably not going
to come true, then that helps you are probably not going to come true.
Then that helps you understand this whole picture quite a bit.
The odds of you coming out on the plus side after working with a narcissist are pretty slim.
The trick is to figure out how to cut your losses.
I always tell people, if you know you're working with a narcissistic boss, you start documenting
on the first day of the job.
You save every email, every text message, every voicemail, every minutes
from every meeting you take notes at the end of each day,
you get all of it off the company servers,
print it out, take it home.
It's like a whole nother full time job
to document this mess you're in.
Because if you ever do need to take legal action,
you're gonna need that.
And even if you don't need to take legal action sometimes,
it helps you feel sane.
And people say, this is my job.
I need this for money.
And I'll say, that's fine.
And you need to understand what you're dealing with.
And I always say that the key, the two key tools to being able to not only work, but have
a relationship with a narcissist are realistic expectations and radical acceptance.
Realistic expectations is this boss is going to take advantage of you and throw you under
the bus and probably not give you all the things they promised you and the radical acceptance
pieces and they're never going to change.
There is no magical thing you're going to say to this person to change them.
You're not going to be the person who comes around and pulls off the miracle.
And so when people can get their head around that they'll decide, this is a waste of my
time. I don't want to spend years in this job.
I'm getting out of this before I look back and 20 years later,
see I have absolutely nothing to show for what I did or worse get harassed
and, you know, harmed or have my reputation hurt and all of those things.
So I don't think you can win at it.
I tell people make good solid collegial relationships, not to gossip,
but so you have other supports
in the workplace.
I'd say figure out once you, this is the toxicity you're dealing with, figure what you can
get out of this situation, what you can learn.
Is there anything you can walk out with your name on something and then once you get that
thing, get out because it's not going to change.
And what you'll see in narcissistic organizations is ultimately you're left with the narcissist
and they're enablers.
And it's about that time that the company tends to fall apart and
we've seen some high and mighty companies fall apart and it was often because
they had too many narcissists running a show and the enabler is watching it all
bring down. Wow, like who give us an example that's recent. I mean, I mean, Harvey
once is a great. I mean, my size, I remember every since I cent time. I've really made up. Yeah, very made up for that.
That's a good one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Look, I was just reading an article
about multi-level marketing companies the other day.
Were those that went to hell?
Those are also many times run by narcissists,
people selling a false future.
And in fact, the selling of a false future,
whether you're dating someone, whether you're working
with someone, is again, a signature move of the narcissist someday, and when I, and down the road, it's called future faking.
And it's a key element of the narcissistic relationship, no matter where it is.
So it's the parent who promised you something down the line and that thing never materialized,
it's just pushing that into adulthood.
And that's called future faking.
Future faking. I've never heard that before adulthood. And that's called future faking. Future faking.
I've never heard that before.
I like that one.
Yeah.
And it's basically like empty promises, basically.
It's empty promises and it's empty promises that are designed to keep you on the chain.
Stay with us for another year.
We've got this really new great strategy.
We just need you to sign on and then all these NDAs and all this, you sign away your life on this nonsensical promise.
Trust your gut, it's probably not.
Everything that seems too good to be true is too good to be true.
It's too good to be true.
I say that all the time.
But there's also, you talk about,
there's a lot of types of narcissists, right?
Yeah.
So all these narcissists do fundamentally,
these fundamental things like gaslighting, love bombing,
future faking.
What's the difference?
What are the types of narcissists that?
The narcissistic type we've been talking about the most on this call is probably more
the grandiose narcissist, the showman, the circus barker.
Look at me.
I've got, I'm so great.
I'm so powerful.
Look how nice my house has come.
Look at my wine collection.
Don't you want to spend time with me?
I do better than anyone on an, like very braggie, arrogant,
pretentious.
That's your classical grandiose narcissist.
And that's the obvious one in my opinion.
The obvious one.
What's not so obvious, and I think there's just as many
of them out there, are what we call the covert
or the vulnerable narcissist.
These are the narcissists that at first blush
to aren't charming, aren't charismatic,
don't seem confident. They're sort of brutally resentful. The best way I can capture them is
they're like internet trolls. They save nasty things about people, but like in a passive-aggressive
way or anonymously or something like that. They're very angry at the world and they feel like they
didn't get what they deserve. They sort of live with a permanent grudge.
They just feel constantly let down, constantly victimized.
Life isn't fair, life isn't just.
I got the short end of the stick and they're kind of always in a bad mood as a result.
And they're very, again, very sullen, very sour.
They almost sometimes seem depressed.
They can be very socially anxious, so they're definitely not the smoothest person at the party.
But if you talk to them, the comments they'll make
will be sort of mean-spirited, snide,
and passive-aggressive.
So people, and you'll say, how the heck does a covert
narcissist ever attract a partner?
I'll tell you how they attract people
who want to rescue them.
They listen to their sad, sad story of like,
if only people could have seen what a great filmmaker I had.
If only I got as much money as him from my father,
then I could have made the great American film.
Man, man, man, man.
And then I can't even get out of my parents' house.
And then somebody comes on and say,
you know, why don't you move in with me?
I got you covered for six months.
I see you're such a visionary.
Boom. And then that's it.
You've been sucked into the covert narcissist vortex. It's like resc it's like rescuing a puppy, except a puppy is cute,
and a covert narcissist is just going to grow up into a mess. So don't do it.
That's interesting. So they both attract the grandiose narcissist and the covert,
both attract the empathetic person. Yeah, always. Always. Because anyone who's not
hyper empathetic and is sort of wise and gets it
wouldn't have fallen for either of these people. That's right.
I was a little toxic, I'm out. But even people in the know, because you've got to remember,
no matter how wise you are, if you've had a narcissistic parent, this is often a replaying of
that script from early life. So you can be smart as anything. I consider myself wise and I got
sucked into one of these, more than one of these relationships
and I think it's because of my history, you know, I was so used to thinking I'm not good enough. No one's ever gonna want me
No one's ever gonna be interested in me. I'm lucky that anyone even noticed me. That was my narrative that somebody actually stuck around for a little while
I'm like, well, I better sign up for this because no one else is gonna come along. That was the narrative. I was sold as a kid
so you take that into adulthood and you play in your relationship
You this is why every 20 year old in America should be in therapy
In fact, everywhere in the world so they can undo those childhood scripts and enter into adulthood
Not feeling like they're not enough
Right because a lot of times from what I noticed and I'm not a doctor like you, but people
have the story in their head from what they thought, what they think they are from when
they were a child, right?
And they behave as such to the world when they're adults, when they're very different people.
Very, very different.
So I think that that's an important thing to keep in mind that even if you can read all
the books, watch all the videos, which you still have to do your own personal deep dive.
You might end up getting, because you might say, gosh, this feels so familiar without recognizing
it's really so familiar.
I'm like, oh, this is so wonderful.
It's wonderful, because it's toxic.
Yeah.
You know, it's got to get you out.
But now speaking of toxic, probably the most dangerous form of narcissists is the malignant
narcissist.
The malignant narcissist is exploitative. They're manipulative, they're coercive, they're
the ones who will control someone, isolate someone, take advantage of someone, they're
menacing, these are where you're going to see it sort of the people who are major workplace
harassers, workplace manipulators, they're much more dangerous narcissists.
And almost to me, it's a little bit difficult to tell the difference between the malignant
narcissist and the psychopath.
There's a little bit of a difference in it.
There's subtle things that, you know, the psychopath is actually more calm, cool, collected.
They're not at all insecure.
Psychopath will just, we'll slice your throat and go have lunch with their friends.
A malignant narcissist still feels some remorse when they do bad things, but the psychopath does not.
But a malignant narcissist has a lot of that same kind
of menace to them.
And so that starts to feel,
I would say someone like a Brittany Maidoff
is a great example of a malignant narcissist.
You will fail.
So what?
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It sounds like a lot of crossover between a grandiose narcissist and a malignant narcissist.
Very much so. The big difference is a malignant narcissist. Very much so.
The big difference is the malignant narcissist is a little bit more dangerous.
They're much more willing to exploit people.
Like, take advantage of them in a way that's, it times almost dangerous and someone like
Jeffrey Epstein was likely either a malignant narcissist or a psychopath.
He was, his insecurities that I've seen in the various documentaries make me think
more malignant narcissistists than psychopath.
Right.
You know, it's right.
He's sort of re-screditing that line and a lot of them do.
But then we get into some other interesting narcissistic types, one of which is the communal
narcissist.
The communal narcissist is one that often gets missed.
In fact, this is a subtype.
This term is only coined probably in the last 10 years, actually actually by a researcher in Germany. And the way he described it was the communal narcissist is the person who gets
validation by doing things for other people. So these are the people who run big
charities and I'm a yoga savior and I'm going to save all of you and I'm a guru
and you know I rescue every animal known to man all of which could be nice things to do
but they're actually not nice people. So they're a yoga guru but they're being really mean to their
partner and abusive or they're like some kind of animal, animal rescuer but they're a horrible
parent. So they portray themselves to the world as this humanitarian, they throw all the gallows, they make all the money,
they seem like the most charitable person in the world,
but they're a terrible person.
And so, but people think they're a wonderful person
because they're raising so much money
or drawing so much attention to good works,
but in an individual relationship,
especially with somebody who has less power than them,
they often lack empathy, they're very inclined. They're very invalidating and dismissive. Their validation
comes from people saying, Oh, you're such a great person because you do such great yoga
or you do such great coaching or you do such great, I animal rescuing or and they're constantly
on Instagram saying, you know, in their bathing suit, rescuing a cat, but I was like,
is this the cat or is this you getting likes for the,
I mean, it's all very confusing.
It's not.
It's all, first of all,
but I'm laughing because it's so true.
Okay, it's so true.
I mean, I know a few of those people
where they're like a master yogi
and they are like saving on their animal rescuing
to like every animal alive
and yet they're such awful humans.
That's a communal notion.
It's such a dichotomy and personality.
I don't understand how the two can even like,
it's in my boggling.
It's actually not because what they've done
is they found a really interesting way
to get validation, right?
So the grandiose narcissist gets validation
by like having a great body and having a great card
and having a great job and holding court, the communal narcissist gets validation by like having a great body and having a great card, having a great job and holding court, the communal narcissist gets
validation by doing all these things for other people. And since most people
aren't hip to it, they get sucked in and they get lots of validation. They get
lots of likes on Instagram and all that stuff. I wonder if it's like if it's
because like a lot of a lot of these things, you would think that people, who are self-aware and have a high-ish emotional intelligence
or IQ, EQ, they would pick up on a lot of these things.
Do you feel that once you're in a situation,
it's much more difficult to spot some of these narcissists?
It's easy to spot a narcissist when they're not
in your social circle
or they don't really affect you, but when you're really directly affected, I feel like
the smartest people I know, the highest emotional intelligence that I know,
are in these woven relationships, be it personal and professional,
and it's just like you're saying they make excuses, they justify, they make, you know, it's like,
oh no, it's because they're doing this.
Or like there's a lot of like,
a lot of justification for people's behavior
when you're in that situation.
Right, so one could actually argue
that this is almost like a little bit of a blind spot
in the emotional intelligence piece
because I've got a bit, the way I approach this
is rather cynical and not very friendly.
And it's certainly not very optimistic or positive.
It's very practical, but it's also very realistic.
And I think that people, actually, I think it makes
them anxious to think that, yeah, it's really, you know,
that we, some people are just not safe or healthy.
And I'm not saying to people, you need to discard everyone.
I'm saying you need to be a wise consumer of them.
So don't give all your money
to the communal narcissistic master, Yogi.
And if the cat rescuer is being mean to you,
you don't have to excuse a monkey to rescue cats.
Like, no, this is rude.
You're being rude to me.
This is not acceptable.
I don't care how many cats you rescued.
So it's your ability to set a boundary without making a rationalization.
And I think that that dissonance, there's a tension when you want to believe a person
is mostly good.
It's hard to integrate the good things they do with the bad things they do.
And that's the tricky part.
In fact, there is a woman named Mira Kirshenbaum who wrote a book a while ago, and it was called Too
Bad To Stay Too Good To Leave. That was a very popular book.
Very popular book. And it was a great title, and it was very much the sense of narcissists
aren't monstrous all the time. In fact, a lot of people, when I help people through divorces,
they'll go back and look at 20 years of
addiction, say, we did have fun in Cabo. And that was a nice holiday. And then guests like guests like guests like guests like
but we have fun in Vegas, guests like guests like in Valedade. And Miami was fun. You see what I'm saying? Like no super sprinters. You can actually have, they can be great conversationist, they can be fun to be with, they throw a great party, they may be great lovers,
then you take a great picture with them. So they often take a lot of the narrative, I want this beautiful family, I want this beautiful life, I want this cool career,
and it gets hard to fit in those two sets of pieces, and I do tell people judge your relationship on how it's going on the most stressful days,
because that's really where it's meaningful.
When you're lost and you run out of money and you're on vacation, when you're sick and
you guys are having other problems in your relationship, don't judge your relationship
on a really fun day in Miami.
That's just going to get you into a lot of trouble.
Oh, absolutely. I mean, I guess you're kind of saying, though, you have to balance out
to good and the bad, right? Like, how much percentage is good versus bad?
No, I wouldn't say that. I would say that you have to, yes, you have to look at holistically,
but the minute somebody starts emotionally abusing you, I don't care how good it is,
it's unacceptable. It's unacceptable.
Yeah. Now, I agree, but I'm saying like if you're saying they're going through the
pictures and their lifespan, they're like, oh yeah, that was good. This time is good.
You know, like, it's like you said, they're sprinters. They're not always bad.
But yeah, and even the good moments tend to be, and this is a lot of people will
cough to this years later, they'll say the good moments were superficially good.
We had fun. We were laughing.
That was a fun night. You know what I'm saying? Fun. Good. I hear all the time I hear he was so smart.
She's so smart. Smart's not a virtue. Okay. Compassion is a virtue. Smart is a parlor trick.
Why is that though? That is another trueism.
I think that is so true.
I feel like people, that is, she's so smart.
He's so smart.
That becomes why they want to stay or work with the person.
Especially with work, right?
Like they're so smart.
I want to be around that person because they're so smart.
Is it because it makes you feel that it elevates to you, like you feel like you want to be around that for because they're so smart. Is it because it makes you feel that it elevates
to you, like you feel like you wanna be around that
for some reason, makes you feel smarter?
Or it elevates you, but it also may be the sort of thing
where you have more confidence in the endeavor.
You think that this is the next succeed,
you know, that I, you know,
plenty of people in tech, you know,
like various CEOs in the tech industry
have been
called out for being rather difficult people.
They're smart.
You know, so, and then a lot of people cashed out of those companies with tens, if not hundreds
of millions of dollars.
I understand the appeal, but the fact of the matter is, is that smart is smart, and, but
it doesn't necessarily mean kind.
And some people, if they can adjust to this and say,
okay, this is a very difficult mean
invalidating abusive person.
However, I think I can stick this out for this long.
If I, for example,
what's say you have a toxic boss,
invalidating cruel, exploitative, difficult, you name it,
but you have a very strong support network
outside of that job.
It may just give you the resilience you need.
It may just give you the resilience you need to tough it out for about the year or two you need
to get vested or whatever it may be, and that you learn to set boundaries. Here's the thing.
Talks to bosses don't let you set boundaries. You say, listen, I can't work on a Saturday.
My kids got a birthday party. They're going to say, well, then that means you're not a team player.
And those are the kinds of things that people are going to run
into.
So there's a point at which you're going to have to say
surrender, or you're going to lose that entire compassionate
network, because you're going to drain them, too.
Absolutely.
But people also say that also, the whole like, well, he's
though, or she's so smart in personal relationships.
Oh, that's going to do it work.
All the time.
And that's hard to keep telling All the time. And that's why I have to keep telling
that smart is not a virtue. Okay, it's no different than saying he's hot. You know, you know,
it's smart. It doesn't look so good on Instagram, but it's like, you know what I'm saying? Like,
it doesn't have a lot of work. But I mean, listen, I love smart people as much as the next person,
but any day of the week, I'd rather spend an hour with a kind one. I agree with that 100%.
In your book, you do a couple of things that I was curious about.
You talk about pathological and normal.
So you'd be like, I think you're like, you know, normal versus pathological, like, you
know, lack of insight, normal amount, pathological amount, right?
Why?
Because I use saying that everyone has a normal amount of lack of insight, a normal amount of,
you know, arrogance, a normal amount of passive aggressiveness, right? Where does it become?
Where does normal and path lot, where is that line between normal and pathological?
The reason I did that and don't you know who I am and that's the book I made that
attention was because, excuse me, when I wrote, should
I stare, should I go?
After people read that book and the 30 traits of narcissism are saying, I'm some of these
things, but they were doing it.
We all do.
Like, you know, for example, let's say you know how to make an apple pie like nobody's
business, and you're watching your friend making a hot mess of this crust.
You might say, you don't know how to do this.
Okay.
I don't know much, but I know pie crust. So step say, you don't know how to do this. Okay. I don't know much,
but I know pie crust. So step aside, that's going to seem arrogant. But if you're saying,
oh, and then you, but if you quickly catch yourself, I'm saying, oh my gosh, that was so, I should
let you do this. I'm so sorry. I'm so used to being able to make the pies and you quickly catch
yourself, you know, and say, yikes, I had, I've, that was not okay. And you're able to do it non-defensively. To me,
that's not pathologic, but your little moment with the pie crust might have been a little
arrogant. We all have some of these things. We have moments when we're not empathic. It
might be a day we've got 10 big deadlines. And somebody wants to tell us a big personal
problem. And you're like, oh my god, I love you so much. Can this wait till tomorrow?
Not very empathic, right? Your friend's suffering,
but if you don't make these deadlines,
you might not make a grade.
Wow.
But what I'm saying, so,
but the next day you say,
I'm calling you,
I am, or that night,
you say,
I am so sorry I wasn't there for you.
I'm here,
if it's not too late,
I apologize,
and you quickly take ownership of it.
So that sort of less than empathic moment, there's a, there's self-awareness, there's
an attempt to correct the rupture.
Now you can't keep doing that.
You can't keep blowing off your friend 27 times saying, I've got a deadline, but we all,
I mean, we have lives.
So I think that it jumps the line to pathological when it's pervasive, when it's consistent,
and when you are hurting other
people.
To me, that's when you really do jump the line.
And again, consistently, we all screw up sometimes.
And then if somebody gives you feedback like, whoa, you're not being very empathic and
you integrate that feedback and say, I can't do this anymore.
And you correct the behavior.
To me, that's not pathological.
And can people who have who are all the different types of narcissists,
is it possible to get better, like to heal a narcissist,
to get to be a less of a narcissist?
Is that even a possibility?
So in the macro, your classical, I've got no problem.
You're the one with the problem.
I'm so great.
Get away from me.
Don't you ever tell me to be a therapy narcissist is not getting better.
However, I would say about 10% of people with who are narcissistic don't like who they are.
They're like, I have just burned 20 bridges. Nobody likes me.
Nobody's inviting me to the parties anymore. I've blown up two marriages.
me. Nobody's inviting me to the parties anymore. I've blown up two marriages. This probably may be me. And I've got to commit to the change. I actually recently put out a video on this
that like basically it's like 10 things narcissists need to do if they want to change. And
it's really a laundry list of the kinds of things they need to do. And it ain't easy.
Because like, be mindful and stay in the moment
and listen to the other person and look at them in the eyes when they speak and don't interrupt
them and use empathic statements and do this every day and in every conversation. It's don't interrupt other people.
It's don't be so competitive.
Don't always feel like life is a pissing contest.
It's all of those sorts of things, but more than anything else, it's a daily practice.
It's every single day, every human interaction that you stop and think before you speak.
And when you feel frustrated, instead of taking that out
and someone else, you come up with other ways to deal with,
I'm going to take a run.
I can feel that this is hard going to be hard for me.
Can I take a minute to myself?
I don't want to hurt you and sort of take that moment
and do it on your own instead of harming someone else.
But that means after 40 years
of never counting for other people's feelings,
you're being asked to do a complete 180.
It's not easy.
So how many people have you seen who are recovering narcissists?
How, what's the percentage of that?
In my clinical practice, 2%.
Yeah, it's really low.
I mean, I can think of one case in particular,
this guy made massive strides. And there is a gentleness that emerged, but he had to lose that. He lost everything.
He, in fact, she was pretty recent in the pandemic, lost everything. And I thought,
either this guy's going to kill himself or he's going to turn a corner. And there's
actually, I thought he killed himself. He didn't kill himself. He turned a corner. And
so that turning a corner was, he's very gentle. He's very aware of other people.
He's cleaning the toxic people out of his life.
Like he is a real success story,
but he had to lose everything.
If he stayed on the trajectory,
he was making money and it was about to blow up big.
I don't think he would have ever changed.
But many people in that same circumstance,
when they lose everything and we're seeing this in the pandemic,
they become angry, frustrated, they rage at other people,
they blame other people, and sometimes they harm themselves,
and sometimes they kill themselves.
So it's, you know, the intolerance of failure
for a narcissist can actually be quite dangerous
and catastrophic.
So we see a range of responses, that may not be a typical
response, but it's pretty rare.
By and large, when a narcissist is under pressure, they tend to crack.
And one, more than a few people said, I just have too much contempt for people.
I think everyone's an idiot.
You're telling me to be nice to people?
Everyone's an idiot.
I'm not going to be nice to idiots.
That's more of what we see with narcissists.
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Right. And then, so like also this guy, I mean, it's free, it's probably too soon to tell,
right? Like I was going to say, you don't know if it's gonna be long, it's gonna be long term.
It could just be because, you know, right now everyone's in a very frustrating experience and,
you know, shorter, right? I mean, time will tell if that guy actually lasts.
It's time to tell.
I totally agree, time will tell tell and probability is not your friend.
So I say to people, if you have a story of a narcissist that's made a true 180 and maintain
that change for five years or longer, it's a unicorn.
Because these are such baked in patterns that especially because they're so reactive.
In fact, one of the biggest pieces of feedback I have for a narcissist who wants to change
is I tell them, you need to learn to respond and not react.
Reacting is what you do like that.
It's when you're like, ah, you scream at someone.
But responding is when you listen and you wait and you think before you speak.
That is a very, very important skill.
It's something narcissistic individuals do not have.
And that's how they burn so many bridges.
I think also people who aren't even narcissists do that, right? They have absolutely absolutely
a lot of learn from that. We can, that's a very good piece of advice for anybody. I'm going
to write that down, react. I mean, we're still going to consider react.
I like that. I'm writing that down. And what do you think about social media, right? Because especially now, has that just made narcissists
to, has that just like plummeted it?
I mean, has that just like completely plummeted narcissism
to a whole new level now?
Social media blew narcissism up.
It was like gas on a fire.
And people say, were there narcissists before social media?
Absolutely, they were, but think
about it. They had to get up and leave the house to get validation. Right? They had to clean up, take a
shower. Now, how you just take 100 pictures in one day, boom, boom, boom, boom, put them out. You're not
leaving the house. You're getting validation. I will never forget the day because I was already doing
this narcissism work. My kids were very small. It's almost a while ago, right? When Facebook and these
things came out, even not even my Facebook but Facebook. And I remember looking at it and
thinking, oh my God, we're in so much trouble. And of course, I sounded like chicken little. And
everyone's like, what are you talking about? This is a great way to share baby pictures. I said,
oh, no, no, no, no, this is not baby pictures. This might be the end of the world. And I hate to say it, pick a little here.
The sky is falling.
It's a way for narcissistic people
to literally mainline validation.
And they've even given it a job title.
They call themselves influencers.
But really, it's the validation.
And it's a constant broadcasting of one's life.
And the day somebody doesn't notice their life, they actually
become depressed. And there's lots of research showing that narcissistic individuals are more prone
to having their mood crash and their self-esteem crash on a day when they don't get enough validation.
So social media changed the game in a very... So did reality TV?
And reality TV. I mean, and I honestly don't think for the good. And I think people who even worked full on narcissists,
maybe just had a little bit of like, you know,
sprinkle of it, have become full on narcissists
because of social media, because they got the validation.
And when they don't get it, it's like Pavlov dog,
you know, you get a little bit, you want more.
That's right, more.
Yep.
And more.
And, you know, and because of that, depression has skyrocketed. So what do you say to this?
Is this what's happening? It's going to get worse, not better.
It's going to get worse. And now we live in a world that's chronically disappointing.
And narcissists don't do well with disappointment. Narcissists are also more extroverted than
most other people. So by and large, covert narcissists tend to be a little bit more introverted, but grandiose narcissists, malignant narcissists, communal
narcissists are naturally extroverted. And it's a really hard time to be extroverted,
right? Because you can't be in a crowd, you can't be in a bar, you can't be in a party.
So we're really seeing a lot of narcissistic rage, a lot of narcissistic crumbling, a lot
of acting out.
And so I think that it's absolutely getting worse.
And I think we've got a real problem on our hands because we're talking about this in
sort of this kind of, you know, explaining these concepts.
But if you've ever spent time with somebody who has experienced narcissistic abuse, whether
in their family of origin, with their partner, with a boss, with a friend,
it is hellish.
These people suffer.
You suffer deeply when you've been through these relationships.
You're confused, you're full of self-doubt, you feel anxious, you feel helpless, you feel
hopeless, you feel powerless.
This isn't just a bunch of jerky people making people laugh uncomfortably.
This is really doing a number on people's mental health.
And my crusade, really my work,
is to elevate this concept of narcissistic abuse
to a real phenomenon.
So therapists are trained in how to work with people
who are going through this because it's real.
And it's not just traditional depression and anxiety.
It's something very specific that requires that person
to understand the narcissist in their life
and understand their own history so they can figure out how they don't do this again.
Wow.
But in that situation again.
I mean, it's so basically then, would you also say that for social media purposes,
like you should obviously limit the amount of social media that you would have?
Yeah, I think so. I think that we're just on beyond it all.
You know, he'd listen and that's, but that can't give that as a recommendation.
It's like telling people to never eat sugar. Like, good luck with that.
Right. Right. Right. Right.
I think it's more of a having, I think what we should be starting as early as first grade,
teaching kids how to consume this and consume it as the fictional fictional storybook that it is rather than a lifestyle manual.
You know, I think that teaching young people how to critically think about social media,
what it means, the purpose it's serving, it's really turned people into, there's an insecurity,
why does her life look better than mine?
And then there's that concern, like I said, of that victimized kind of identity, which
really limits a person, rather than people feeling giving themselves a freedom to sort of be their authentic
cells.
And that's what I'd like to see more of.
And I think narcissists to abuse really steals a lot of that authenticity from people.
Because basically the narcissist tells them, your authentic self is no good.
You're an idiot.
You're a loser.
Are you kidding me?
You're never going to succeed. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Stay in your lane and all of that kind of stuff.
That's what narcissists do to people's dreams. To me, that's unacceptable.
Yeah. I'll let you go. I know I've been taking too much of your time. But
what's, you say this in your book called toxic masculinity? What is that?
So toxic masculinity is a concept that was raised a few years ago.
When, do you remember the Gillette ads that had gotten all that controversy? And it was
this sort of sense of like, we want, we want is the conversation became that we were seeing
this sort of epidemic in men where manliness and masculinity was associated with being unimpathic, with being abusive,
with being aggressive, with not accounting for other people's feelings, being unimpathic,
all of those things.
This isn't some way, something culture created because we tell boy, little boys, don't
cry, grow up, be a man, only weak men or even worthy
of these worst terms, talk about their feelings, men don't cry.
You see, so all of that has resulted in a sort of compensatory,
cold-hearted, unemotional manliness that does nobody any
favors. It's bad for being a father, it's bad for being a father. It's bad for being a partner
It's bad for being a boss and we've come off of generation after generation of these really authoritarian
patriarchal harsh fathers. That's how it's always been
Now we're sort of seeing a little bit of a shift
But I've got to say in recent years with this uptick and global narcissism
I'm seeing some
of a return to that sort of authoritarian form of thinking and it's not good for us,
but that's what that term toxic masculinity has referred to.
And then because I have a mom and I have to ask this and we can end on this is how do
you not raise a narcissist?
You know, that's very important.
You've got to start early.
One of the most important things is to hold emotional space for your child
and let them talk about their feelings
without interrupting them
and without inserting your feelings into them.
Let them talk.
So your child, I don't know,
they might have broken a toy
and they start to cry and say,
sweetheart, how are you doing?
I'm so sad, I broke my toy.
I'm telling me more about that.
That's so sorry.
That must feel really, really hard. Yes, I love this toy. I'll tell you
that every day, honey, I hear you. No, we're going to the store right now. I'm going to buy
you a new toy. You may end up buying them a new toy, but use that moment to teach them
that talking about emotion is safe. It's appropriate, and it doesn't always just need to be fixed.
And doing that over and over and over again, we are so uncomfortable with our children's
discomfort, understanding that they can have their discomfort and get through to the other side
safely is the single most important lesson we can teach a child. The other piece is helping them
learn how to regulate their emotions.
We so don't want them to tantrum and fuss. We don't, again, we don't want them to be disappointed.
Let them be disappointed. This is why kids need to lose. Let them play the board game and lose their game.
I hate this game. Slow down cowboy. What's going on here? It didn't feel good, but it felt good for me, and I'm enjoying this.
Can you imagine if you won the game and I started yelling, that wouldn't feel very good.
Read story books to them.
Ask them, how do you think that pig fell?
Step pig, when it was a pig, feels sad because all his friends left him.
You're watching a television show, pause it and say, how do you think that child felt?
And she'll say, oh, she feels really disappointed because her friend didn't invite her to a birthday
party.
Process emotion everywhere you can
Process emotion. I like that. Thank you so much. It's my pleasure. Oh, you are so great
Thank you so much for being on this podcast. It was so nice. Thank you
I really am sorry. I love talking about it
But I really hope that everyone listening gets something out of this and and more than anything else, that I don't want people to feel that they're defined by their toxic
relationships and to be self forgiving if you fell into it. A lot of people say, how could I've
been so foolish? I can't believe I fell for this. All of us do. I think it's because the world
enables people like this. One by one we can stop this enabling structure and
take the power back into structures that are authentic and compassionate. I'm
convinced businesses can be run that way and be incredibly profitable. I love
that. Now where do people find your videos? You have a YouTube channel. That's very good.
Yeah, and it's Dr. Romani, D-O-C-T-O-R-R-A-M-A-N-I. And if you go to my website, which is again,
doctor-r-r-a-m-a-n-i.com at drromanie.com,
you'll find everything there.
Instagram, my videos, links to my books,
anything you can imagine is all there.
And then if you go to YouTube, you'll see my videos,
you go to Instagram, you'll see.
I love those videos.
Thank you so much.
And you still have a private practice. You keep on saying patience.
I don't know.
I do, but I got to tell you it's full till forever.
And so I do consultations.
And so if people are interested in that,
they can certainly go to my website
and get more information about that.
And then as the world slowly opens up,
we sometimes actually, and we're doing them already,
I do small master classes,
10 people at a time, you can get tickets for those
on my website, and then I also, one day,
the world will open up again, and we'll be doing live retreats
again, which help people heal from narcissistic abuse.
I love that.
Thank you so much for being a guest.
Elijah, thank you for having me.
Absolutely.
I learned a ton, so I can't wait to share this with everybody.
So thank you.
I appreciate it.
Take care.
Be well.
Bye.
Bye. Hope you enjoyed this episode.
I'm Heather Monahan, host of Creating Confidence, a part of the YAP Media Network, the number one business and
self-improvement podcast network.
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I've actually been using it all along. I just used a Miro board to plan the best vacation.
Okay, I'm on board.
See how Miro users save up to 80 hours every year by meeting less and doing more. Get on
board at Miro.com with three boards free forever. That's M-I-R-O-O.
are saved up to 80 hours every year by meeting less and doing more.
Get on board at Miro.com with 3 Boards Free Forever.
That's M-I-R-O.com.