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NARCISSISTIC_PERSONALITY_DISORDER[email protected] 
  
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"You did what you knew how to do,
and when you knew better you did better."
Maya Angelou


Excerpts from 'The Emptied Soul' - by Adolf Guggenbuhl-Craig

"Another trait, important for everyone who deals with a psychopath, is their ability to evoke pity; the same kind of pity we feel towards invalids or experience for helpless and sick children. They seem completely helpless, lost in a world where they do not belong. Again and again they try to adjust and to cope, in a fashion that always falls a bit shy of the mark. They are eternal strangers, arousing in each of us a longing to help, a feeling we experience with helpless human beings. Often this pity creates difficulties, and many is the person who falls prey to it. We often try to be kind to these "poor" people, and they are "poor" people - our pity is justifiable. However the problem is that psychopaths readily manipulate those around them through just such pity. Women are often victimized: mothering instincts are aroused, or the Archetype of the Nurse is constellated. They want to protect and care for the poor, sick thing and understandably so, for psychopaths strike protective chords and speak to the desire to help and heal."

"[Therapists] who have to deal with psychopaths readily succumb to savior fantasies. Confronted by a phenomenon which simply should not be, which somehow must be changed, they set out to save these individuals.... We would like to believe that we can help anyone who comes, for whatever reasons, seeking our help. We would like to believe that no symptom, no complaint, no difficulty can withstand our talent, our ability, and our understanding. Here we get caught, as they say, between a rock and a hard place. Since psychopaths understand our weakness, our need to help them against our better judgment, they can use us, manipulating us to the point where we start defending them, writing letters of recommendation for them and the like. To take the situation one step further, we react to psychopaths as we react to all human beings. We feel pity and sympathy, savior fantasies are called forth, our feelings of mothering and fathering are awakened." 

 
"Everyone knows someone like this. The one I knew was a pretty, colleague who had a bit of a dishevelled appearance, a little-girl voice with a take-care-of-me helplessness which hid her self-serving goal."
member quote

"It is no accident that narcissistic and sociopathic personalities will seek, and often successfully attract, partners who have their own issue: a tendency to dread the idea of disappointing or displeasing them. The exploiter, in other words, is looking much less for the perfect partner than the perfect scapegoat. For this reason the sociopath and many narcissists will recruit these qualities in a partner—qualities, for instance, of high self-doubt, high guilt, high fear of incurring others�?wrath or displeasure, and a strong tendency to self-blame."
http://www.lovefraud.com/blog/2008/10/23/exploiters-seek-partners-who-dread-to-displease-them/#


Question your tendency to pity too easily.
Respect should be reserved for the kind and the morally courageous. Pity is another socially valuable response, and should be reserved for innocent people who are in genuine pain or who have fallen on misfortune. If, instead, you find yourself often pitying someone who consistently hurts you or other people, and who actively campaigns for your sympathy, the chances are close to one hundred percent that you are dealing with a sociopath.
Related to this-- I recommend that you severely challenge your need to be polite in absolutely all situations. For normal adults in our culture, being what we think of as "civilized" is like a reflex, and often we find ourselves being automatically decorous even when someone has enraged us, repeatedly lied to us, or figuratively stabbed us in the back. Sociopaths take huge advantage of this automatic courtesy in exploitive situations.
Thirteen Rules for Dealing with Sociopaths in Everyday Life Martha Stout - Interview
Author: The Sociopath Next Door
http://www.bookbrowse.com/author_interviews/full/index.cfm?author_number=1097

From: Without Conscience, The Disturbing World of The Psychopaths Among Us by Dr. Robert Hare, Ph.D.
Set firm ground rules: Although power struggles with a psychopath are risky at best, you may be able to set up some clear ground rules, both for yourself and for the psychopath, to make your life easier and begin the difficult transition from victim to a person looking out for yourself. For example, this may mean that you will no longer bail him or her out of trouble, no matter what the circumstances.


The dichotomy of his child-like vulnerability and yet his adult mystique. The psychopath invested a lot in portraying himself to her as “wounded.�?Many psychopaths played the “pity�?trump card,
using this card to attract and keep women based on sad stories. Psychopaths have no problem simultaneously playing both dominant and doomed personas. Likely, he acted as if the disclosure of his hidden pain was only to her. She was the only one who “understood him�?or he felt “safe enough�?to share his pain with. Even Ted Bundy feigned medical disorders to attract women to
himself. The women, being extremely high in empathy, feel the psychopath’s story at the core of their being. They feel compassion, empathy, and sensitivity to his pain and even to the resulting damage and dysfunction he brings to the relationship. They understand it all in light of his circumstances. Many women stated that he had a “child-like quality to him�?or he seemed “vulnerable�?or “emotionally wounded.”Women Who Love Psychopaths �?Inside the Relationships of Inevitable Harm, Sandra L. Brown, N.A. & Liane J. Leedom , M.D.
www.SafeRelationships.com  or   www.WomenWhoLovePsychopaths.com

Playing the Victim Role
This tactic involves portraying oneself as an innocent victim of circumstance or someone else's behavior in order to gain sympathy, evoke compassion and thereby get something from another. One thing that cover-aggressive personalities count on is the fact that less calloused and hostile personalities usually can't stand to see anyone suffering. Therefore, the tactic is simple. Convince your victim you're suffering in some way, and they'll try to relieve your distress.
In Sheep's Clothing - Understanding and Dealing with Manipulative People
by George K. Simon
http://www.amazon.com/Sheeps-Clothing-Understanding-Dealing-Manipulative/dp/096516960X


In 1999, I appeared as an expert on "Oprah" to discuss "The Disease to Please."Oprah said this "disease" - the people-pleasing syndrome - is an issue very important and personal to her. It is a problem that she has struggled long and hard to overcome. And, she believes as I do, that there are epidemic numbers of women - and men, too - plagued by the self-imposed pressure to please others at the expense of their own health and happiness."Our tribute to the late Harriet B. Braiker, Ph.D. Author The Disease to Please, Curing the People-Pleasing Syndrome


Helplessness and Neediness of Relationship Partners Maybe you get hooked by the neediness and helplessness of your relationship partners. You find yourself hooked when your partners get into self-pity, "poor me" and "how tough life has been." You find yourself weak when your relationship partners demonstrates an inability to solve personal problems.
10 Hooks that Keep you in Boundary-Less Relationships
http://www.coping.org/relations/boundar/alertb.htm

Why are narcissists so hard to leave? Narcissism is also about feelings of sadness and depression. So the classic narcissistic partner has this 'look-at-me' quality, but also has this 'oh poor me, I really need help.' They draw you in with the sadness and the emptiness and you feel that somehow you can fill this void. And you tell yourself, he really loves me -- even though he's cheating on me every other night of the week."
Review of
Help! I’m in Love With a Narcissist, by relationship authors Julia Sokol and Steven Carter. (M. Evans and Co. by Kristin Dizon for Seattle Post Intelligencer
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/lifestyle/219049_narcissist07.html

But he does not need companionship, emotional support, let alone true partnership. There is no beast on earth more self-sufficient than a narcissist. Years of unpredictability in his relationships with meaningful others, early on abuse, sometimes decades of violence, aggression, instability and humiliation - have eroded the narcissist's trust in others to the point of disappearance. The narcissist knows that he can rely only on one stable, unconditional source of love: himself.
MALIGNANT SELF LOVE  NARCISSISM RE-VISITED UNIQUENESS AND INTIMACY By: SAM VAKNIN, Ph.D.
http://samvak.tripod.com/msla2.html

(song - turn on speakers!)
Cupid Works for the Devil
Be suspcious if he cries
I'm a magnet for the fixer-upper man!
http://www.minibite.com/send/mendont.htm

 

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