Childhood Roots Of Narcissistic Personality Disorder
It’s estimated that up to 6% of the US population has narcissistic
personality disorder (narcissism for short), which is more common in men and
has its roots in childhood. Extremely resistant to treatment, this severe
mental illness leads affected individuals to create chaos as they harm other
people. Before discussing how demands for support of ego and desires can go off
the rails, let’s start with an overview of pertinent normal child development.
Small children are naturally selfish as a normal part of development in
which they work to get their needs met and can’t understand other people’s
needs and desires. Then as teenagers, kids are still typically self-centered as
they struggle for independence.
As opposed to self-centeredness that should gradually decline, children
need to develop healthy, lasting levels of self-esteem to be able to protect
and care for themselves while caring about others, to resist dangerous
influences, and to stay connected to family and society. Healthy levels of
self-esteem indicate a child’s belief that he or she is loved and worthy as a
person in the family and in society, and thus doesn’t deserve and is more
resilient to mistreatment. In a nutshell, self-esteem isn’t self-centeredness
because it doesn’t lead to putting oneself first to the detriment of other
people’s needs and rights.
Typical childhood self-centeredness must change to pave the way to mental
health in adulthood. To grow up able to function well in families and society,
kids must gradually gain both the ability to see other people’s viewpoints and
empathy for other people’s suffering. So, healthy kids should gradually
show sincere signs of caring about the well-being of others. Not developing
empathy while growing up is a warning sign of developing a serious personality
disorder as an adult, including the narcissistic type.
How do people with narcissistic personality disorder (narcissists for
short) act? Besides showing lack of empathy (as judged not by words but by
actions), narcissists filter information and react on the basis of effect on
their egos. Their actions reflect grandiose beliefs of superiority and
uniqueness as well as their need for admiration and worship.
Source: Izusek/iStockphoto
Narcissists are arrogant and preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited
self-importance, success, and power (including that they alone can do
something) and exaggerate their accomplishments and popularity. They exploit or
take advantage of people for personal gain including feeding their egos and
thus require excessive admiration. They pit people against each other to get
what they want they divide people to conquer and gain power over them. They manipulate
others by influencing emotions like fear and anger, and with threats and lies.
Another manipulation technique used is redefining reality by repeatedly
fabricating fiction and arguing about it as if it were fact (such as
presenting alternative facts), which leads listeners to question their own
understanding of reality. Victims often experience a "twilight zone" sensation
that is accompanied by anxiety.
Narcissists make others miserable and get aggressive with people who won’t
give them the agreement, admiration, and respect they feel entitled to,
expecting automatic compliance. These traits are often found in dictators. Like
most personality disorders, narcissism is very difficult to treat because
people affected aren’t able to understand that anything is wrong with them and
thus are not motivated to change.
A narcissist is toxic to situations and people, except perhaps to an inner
circle of supporters at least for as long as they continue to support the
narcissist’s agenda.
Now let’s go back to
youth. Preteens aren’t developed enough to manipulate and given that teenagers
are typically self-centered, clinicians are reluctant to diagnose narcissistic
personality disorder before age 18. Still, you might notice one or more of
these warning signs in teenagers indicating risk of developing narcissism:
- persistent bullying behaviors
such as making fun of, threatening, degrading, or scapegoating people
(including parents and other adults)
- persistent need to win no
matter who is hurt
- persistent lying to benefit
oneself (will lie about lying, turn lies into someone else’s fault,
deflect accountability by attacking messengers who point out lies)
- egotistical view of
extraordinary self-worth
- preoccupation with getting own
needs met over other people’s
- entitled attitudes which lead
to acting as if they deserve special treatment and to get whatever they
want, no matter the circumstances
- aggressive responses to being
criticized, wronged, or upset
- repetitively blaming others for
bad outcomes
- and being much more competitive
than cooperative.
If your child or one
you know behaves this way, you can save your family and society from harm by
focusing on doing the following:
- teach empathy
- value character traits like
honesty and kindness over being tough or dominant
- change entitled attitudes and
stop entitled actions
- squelch greed (say, "You’re
acting selfishly and that’s not okay")
- insist they put other people
first routinely, remembering that actions speak louder than words
(narcissists often say they are doing something to benefit others when
they are really doing it for themselves)
- build healthy self-esteem (low
self-esteem can also lead to entitlement and using others to support one’s
ego)
- don’t allow false blame of
other people for one’s own problems and failures.
Also avoid parenting
styles linked to developing narcissist personality, such as neglecting,
indulgent (spoiling with privilege and possessions, and promoting entitled
attitudes) and cold, overcontrolling authoritarian methods which insist on
perfection, winning, and toughness from a child.
On the flip side, you
can also help teens and young adults learn to recognize narcissists so they can
avoid their toxic harm or survive it. A necessary foundation for this is the
ability to think critically about what someone says or does, which starts to
develop during adolescence.
Critical thinking
skills help us tell lies from truths and determine when someone is manipulating
to take advantage of or scam us. Parents and mentors can help teach these
empowering life-skills that protect against deception by con artists and
abusive bosses, friends, and partners.
You can give your
child life-long protective gifts of healthy levels of self-esteem and critical
thinking skills while squelching entitlement and narcissistic traits to benefit
you, your child and family, and all of us. And don’t forget that there is no
shame in seeking help to get it done seeking knowledge and help is a sign of
strength, not weakness.
References
American Psychiatric
Association. Diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders. 5th ed. Arlington, VA: American
Psychiatric Publishing. 2013. Pages 669-672.
Barr, C. T., Kerig, P.
K., Stellwagen, K. K. & Barry, T. D. (Eds.). (2011). Narcissism and Machiavellianism in Youth: Implications for the
Development of Adaptive and Maladaptive Behavior. Washington, DC:
American Psychological Association.
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