27 Oct How Narcissism Harms Your Relationship
Narcissism = Selfishness = Egotism: Are you more focused on yourself than on your partner?
[Note: In this article, I speak as a masculine man in relationship to feminine women. Please adjust the gender terms to suit your relationship life.]
In previous articles, I described narcissism as an extreme form of selfishness. But narcissism goes beyond mere self-interest. It’s more akin to egotism — an excessive or exaggerated sense of self-importance. In the extreme, a narcissist exists alone at the center of his (or her) known universe. Other people appear as instruments that serve a purpose: to satisfy the narcissist’s needs, wants and desires. If they don’t, they are considered useless (or worse) and can be easily discarded.
If that’s the extreme, where are you on the scale of narcissism? I have always considered myself an evolving “conscious male,” so my own narcissism was submerged, hidden in the subconscious shadows. I couldn’t see it — but the women in my life could.
Here’s how it looked in my earlier days: As long as I was getting what I wanted from the woman in my life, I was happy. I felt good about my relationship. I was cooperative, kind, and loving. But if I didn’t get what I wanted, if she wasn’t showing up consistently as the perfect Love Goddess I expected, I began to shut down, withdrawing my energy and attention. I frequently became resentful. I stopped caring about her as much as I had initially. I got snappy, overly irritable, and reactive. I would hit an internal limit, then started looking for an exit, or someone else who would be more pleasing, and less of a problem.
Looking back, I can see that this was a narcissistic demand that my woman satisfy all of my needs and appetites. If she couldn’t do so (and of course, no one could), my dissatisfaction grew. If she didn’t meet my expectations, there was clearly something wrong with her. I couldn’t see my own role in the dynamic.
This type of narcissism has destroyed many good relationships.
Eventually, my girlfriend would mention my withdrawal, or my lack of care or attention. Or she pointed out my rude behavior. I didn’t want to hear it. I pointed back to her, informing her that the problem was how she was reacting. I said things like: “You’re too sensitive. You’re not taking responsibility for your stuff. The way you’re delivering the message isn’t clean. If you used different words, or a different tone, I might be able to hear you.”
This blame-the-victim tactic drives women bat-shit crazy — and for good reason. When your behavior has a negative impact on her, and she responds or reacts to it, and you then make her the problem, you’re doubling down on narcissism. You avoid responsibility for hurting her, and blame her for responding to the problem. It’s cruel.
This kind of narcissism tears relationships apart.
Men are generally bigger and stronger than women, and throughout history, men have been responsible for most of the damage done to women. It’s understandable that women have a natural fear of us — especially when we get big, huffy, demanding, or angry. When confronted by a large raging male, most animals avoid being hurt by employing one of the safe strategies: flee, freeze, or fold. When men act like macho jerks, most women shrink back to become invisible.
If you see your woman folding in on herself, collapsing, or withdrawing from conflict when you bark or yell, your narcissism is doing damage. If you see this in your children, you’re doing significant damage to them. (Get some help, now.)
I learned from my partner that when women blame, shame or criticize men, it’s usually because the man won’t listen to them. They then have to escalate the delivery of their message. After a few frustrated attempts at telling you what you did to hurt them, their communication starts to sound and feel like emotional castration.
Beneath their rising anger, women are trying to inform and inspire us to become more kind, loving and virtuous. It’s our own block-headedness that gets them so riled up. It’s as if someone is trying to hand you a gift, and you refuse to accept it, so they start pushing it in your face until you figure out that it’s good for you.
A woman, at her best, is a beacon of the truth. If you hurt her feelings, whether by unconscious mistake or a narcissistic act, she will tell you about it, either verbally, or in non-verbal body language. The truth is often uncomfortable to hear, but when a woman tells you that she’s hurt, or someone else is being impacted by your insensitivity, it’s time to button up, quiet down your narcissistic ego, and be humble. In other words, shut up and listen. And if you’ve hurt someone, don’t expect them to be elegant in how they deliver the message.
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Love is caring. This isn’t just an adage — it’s a description of a specific set of behaviors that demonstrate real love. When you care about the other person, you care about her (or his) needs, and about the impact of your behavior on them. If you want to be a good man, a loving man, and be initiated into your full masculinity, start caring more about your impact on others. Anything less is an ego protection racket.
Listen carefully to your woman’s truth, even if it comes in the form of anger or upset. She’s trying to communicate something important. Be genuinely curious. Ask, “What are you feeling upset about? I want to know because I care how you feel.” If you don’t ask, you won’t get the information you need to improve yourself or to love her more deeply.
The isolation of narcissism prevents empathy. Empathy is a natural ability we were all born with. It’s “feeling the feelings of others, as if they were your feelings.” But most boys got this emotional talent squeezed or beaten out of them during their upbringing. Most of us were told, or shown, that it’s “not manly” to feel deeply, or cry, or share in the suffering of others. We were expected to be tough, impervious to pain. Too often we were taught how to inflict suffering on others. Empathy is not a valued emotion in competitive sports, military operations, or the cut-throat world of business.
As men, we can re-learn this crucial skill of empathy. Stretch your awareness out to the other person, and feel what they’re feeling. You don’t have to agree with the feelings, or even like them — you just have to feel them. When you lower the impervious shield you’ve built to stay invulnerable, you become more willing to feel. This opens you to more of your own suffering, and the suffering of others, but it also opens you to compassion and joy.
Men who are shut down into egotistical narrowness are missing out on the glory of true masculinity. Full masculinity includes both vulnerability as well as strength, the ability to cry as well as laugh, and the ability to feel grief as well as joy. In our full masculinity, we can care more openly, and receive the potent love and wisdom of the feminine.
And by the way — this increased awareness, openness and care prove useful in business relationships, too. Research shows that compassionate leaders produce better business and financial results, and their employees are more productive. (See Stanford’s Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education for more information.)
It looks like a long journey from narcissism to true love, but it can be accomplished one step at a time. Care a little more each day. Practice one intentional act of kindness every day. As you care for the well-being and feelings of others, you grow to be more fully human, and certainly more masculine. And the sooner you get there, the better, not just for your self, but for the women and children whose lives you touch.
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Catherine Carija
Posted at 13:46h, 16 JulyI can’t thank you enough for this timely post. I have never perceived myself as a victim but as the object of abuse from a narcissistic family and a narcissistic lover each time I have endeavored to explain or in any way educate them on their behavior, I was told I was playing the victim.. seems they want quiet submission. Still, the same message thrown at me repeatedly, I could not help but start to wonder if they were right. Additionally I have been told I need to forgive and forget. In the end I have had to ask family to stop inviting me to functions. The thought of pretending we are a happy loving family when their behavior screams otherwise and demands I just accept they are right and I am wrong is not an option anymore. It’s just a lie. My request was met with comments that told me once again I was playing the victim and giving up my power. Yet, in asserting I would not play the obedient, subservient powerless child victim, I feel better and more powerful. I must admit I needed / appreciated the confirmation this article provided. I went out on a limb to take care of my self by asserting the need for distance. I would say their response confirms that my decision was appropriate. Please set me straight if in fact I am off base??? . Thanks again for the post.
Lion Goodman
Posted at 14:24h, 16 JulyCatherine: People with narcissistic tendencies are often good at gaslighting, which is defined as “using psychological or mental tactics to make the other person believe that what they are experiencing, saying, or feeling is not true, or that they are crazy.” That’s what’s been happening to you. Your putting a stop to it by not participating is the best thing, and the most healthy thing, you can do. When you point out narcissism to a narcissist, it shames them, and they then have to attack you to invalidate you. Shame is at the core of most narcissism. It’s like poking a tiger. Better to just move away from the danger.
Alice Aird
Posted at 14:54h, 16 JulyThanks Lion, very interesting. But what about the narcissism of women? I would love to hear from Carista too on this topic! I totally agree that men have had more conditioning to be unempathic but have a twinge that the way you have described this pattern is too polarised…
Catherine Carija
Posted at 17:42h, 16 JulyThank you for responding. . Asking for distance and distancing myself without explanation and shaming is a novel approach for me. Your encouragement that what I had done was in fact the best and healthiest thing for me to have done, was very helpful for me to hear. This has been a hallmark occasion for me and you have been very helpful. Thank you.
Anjee
Posted at 16:03h, 24 MarchInformative, well written, and interesting article Lion. Thank you for sharing your personal journey and insights.
Paula J Battaglio
Posted at 08:42h, 01 DecemberObviously, narcissism transcends gender. It is a personality trait. I have known people of both sexes who are on the spectrum. However, because of the patriarchal subjugation of women, and how this shadow is now in the process of being revealed and healed, male narcissism is highlighted right now.
Rosie Bondi
Posted at 18:41h, 02 DecemberYou just put in words what many women and/or men have needed validation on. Thank you..
Cecile Raynor
Posted at 09:23h, 10 AugustThanks for sharing your journey with us on such an essential topic.
So much texture to it. I want to share it with a friend because of part of it. Yet, I am afraid he will find all the dimensions in here that he does not do and will conclude it’s not for him and will therefore stay in his cherished delusion which he is aware of and jokes about.
Any suggestions?