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Let’s Stop Calling People Narcissists

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Narcissist. I’ve been hearing this word thrown around a lot lately, whether it’s talking about people who take selfies, the celebrity thieves the movie The Bling Ring is based on or my entire generation. Here are reasons why you should reconsider using that word:

1. By calling someone else a narcissist, you are implying that you yourself are not a narcissist.

Do you really want to go there? Shall we examine your life? Do you ever read your own Twitter feed? Look at yourself in a window reflection? Respond negatively to criticism about yourself? We could all be called narcissists, because we are all principally in charge of our own selves, and therefore very interested in examining and documenting those selves.

2. Extreme “narcissism” is usually a symptom of deeper problems people are going through.

The people with the biggest egos tend to be the people with the most fragile senses of self. For example, many journalists covering the kids behind The Bling Ring are quick to assume that they were principally motivated by the narcissism of youth and an attraction to fame. Maybe that’s partially true, but it doesn’t really seem like an actual examination of the motivations behind people’s behaviors. People who blindly pursue superficial fantasies are usually struggling with lives that are out of their control. For example, Alexis Neiers, one of the Bling Ring thieves who starred in her own reality show Pretty Wild, revealed that during the peak of her fame she was addicted to heroin, oxycontin and cocaine, and that she has spent her life trying to numb herself after years of childhood abuse. Narcissistic or just struggling to survive?

3.  Calling someone a narcissist is a superficial accusation.

That’s what’s so ironic about it to me. Truly trying to understand people tends to be a humbling experience. To me, when people are quick to smugly write someone – or a group of people – off as “narcissists,” it says more about their inability to look outside themselves than anything else.

4. Preoccupation with narcissism often seems like projection.

If you’re comfortable with your relationship to yourself, you’re not going to be overanalyzing everyone else’s.

Becky Lang

4 responses to “Let’s Stop Calling People Narcissists”

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  4. Lex Avatar
    Lex

    This is all well and good until you get into a relationship with an actual, narcissist. Then this article is a hell of a slap to the face. I just got done with a narcissist, a relationship with a celebrity, that I wish had never happened. I will not mention her name because she loves to Google my name and read all my posts about her. She tries to use them as ammunition against me. The idea is not to give her power over her secondary narcissistic supply (friends, lovers, family). Primary narcissist supply for her is her fans on social media and that’s bad enough.

    She’s a classic text book narcissist; be overly nice when I pull away and when I come back the abuse starts right back up again. I pulled away and staying away this time. She’s been making all kinds of threats because I am not allowing her to control me and my stuff.

    What it sounds like is that you’re irritated that you’ve called on the carpet for having this kind of behavior yourself, not all people that take a lot of selfies are narcissists, most are vain jerks but it’s the other behaviors they display that make them more likely to be a narcissist or not.

    I agree, the word is over used by the masses and most of the time they don’t know what they’re talking about because they’re not trained professionals.

    I will have to say this, studying narcissists and being in a relationship with one; the feeling is indescribably painful to watch, let alone deal with them, one on one.

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