Acknowledging Your Inner Narcissistic Sociopath

           For the past ten years there has been a narcissistic sociopath on the national stage in the US. He and the others like him with whom he surrounds himself are a trigger for many. I’m often asked by clients and readers how to deal with this.

When you are emotionally triggered, you are projecting. Projection means you see in others something you don’t want to see in yourself. If you are not triggered, you are merely observing. So, first sort that out. To see someone’s behavior and merely not like it or to feel it does not express your values, is not to be triggered, so it is not projection. But when you have a strong emotional response, you see in someone something you don’t want to see in yourself. And when you get in touch with that, you will no longer project and no longer be triggered. (This is a form of what is known as “shadow work” or dealing with the unacknowledged dark side of your own mind.)

Most psychological disorders are universal traits taken to the extreme. They rise to the level of disorder because they interfere with the normal, healthy function of one’s life—or would if one was not enabled by those close to them. For example, all egos are self-centered, but a narcissist displays ego’s self-centeredness to the extreme. They hold up a mirror to all egos and expose what any ego has the potential to be. What ego does not have an aspect that longs to be free to think only of itself? But what ego also does not want to admit this? Well, a narcissist will admit this and say they are being honest where others are not. There, perhaps, is the trigger: Unacknowledged, undesired admiration. “No, no, that can’t be in me!!!!” But it is. You, too, are self-centered. It’s only a matter of degrees. When you see this, you will see the source of your projection and trigger.

Humans are social animals, and empathy is for the survival of humanity. But as A Course in Miracles points out, ego doesn’t like even human love, human “joining” because it hints at the unity of truth. A sociopath is one who lacks empathy. It might be harder to find your inner sociopath if empathy comes naturally to you. For those who have empathy, a lack of empathy is baffling. It’s just there, how can you not feel it? But there are moments, aren’t there? There are times you overlook someone else’s pain. Not deliberately, maybe, but, well, you just didn’t notice! Just like a sociopath. Or you push the empathy away, you don’t want to feel for them. Take, for example, the followers of the narcissistic sociopath on the national stage. His pull is so strong to his followers because he gives them something they feel they lack: self-esteem. They feel so inadequate that they don’t care that his policies go against their best interests because he fills a void that is larger than anything else for them. Their self-esteem is so low that they feel they can rise up only through cruelty and trampling over others. Now can you empathize? Maybe not with the methods, but with the desperation to feel good about yourself? If you didn’t before, if you didn’t bother to find out what motivated them and just hated them, perhaps you can understand just a little bit what it is to be a sociopath—and maybe you are triggered because you didn’t want to see that it is potential in you, too. And maybe it is envy here, too, because ego doesn’t want to care, it wants to squash the empath in you.

Ego wears masks to hide itself, not just from others, but from itself as well. Those masks hide the source of the triggers. “But I’m a decent person!” Yes, but…not always, right? Maybe you don’t act on dark thoughts and feelings, but they are there and so is the potential to act on them. You make a choice, but you are triggered when others don’t make the same choice because you don’t want to see you made a choice. You are not inherently decent. You’ve grown up, you’ve learned to “tame” the darker side, but it is still there in you. And if you are triggered you are in denial about your darkness and it still has power over you. But if you claim it, if you acknowledge that you, too, are just like them except you made another choice, its power will be gone. 

>>>> 

If you have a question the answer to which you feel may be helpful to others, send it to Liz@acimmentor.com and indicate that you want it answered in this newsletter/blog.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Ladies, When you start diagnosing people from their surface traits or from social media you are walking down a very dark road.
Anonymous said…
There is no quicker way to bond with the ego than being judgemental.
Anonymous said…
When you describe the followers of "the narcissistic sociopath on the national stage" it is a perfect description of how the woke are perceived.
Anonymous said…
We know your hatred of us that you expressed in the blog. We hear it all the time. There was a tipping point that you never saw. Now there is confusion about how you lost.
sister said…
Liz, I just returned to your blog this morning and reread it.

Yes. Beneath all unloving thought and behavior there is a thorn. I have never looked beyond the action of another for the underlying thorn and not found a condition, always some expression of lack, that I didn't recognize is also potential in me.

To see this and know there is always beyond the thorn another place to land is freeing. This acknowledgment frees me because it reveals that the perceived other also has, beneath their thorn, the very same place. They have only not yet found it. But, with the help of the Holy Spirit, I can meet them there and accept healing for us both. This is what frees me.

Thank you for your clarity and help ever.


Thank you for bringing
Anonymous said…
OMG, Woman Think! No wonder the sexes can't communicate 🤗
Anonymous said…
Idiot
Phil said…
I also struggle with the political theater-- it's got its hooks into me too. I have been reading and re-reading Bernadette Roberts' "stage 5-- the open mind" and trying to open myself to its application in my own life. There is a tendency for sure to try and plaster over our judgements with "it's not my opinion-- it's just a sober description of how things are", yet they really are still judgements, and how things are cannot be understood until they are forgiven. Know that the people who disagree with us politically have their own reasons for their opinions that are no less valid than our own, and any view that we take that does not include their views as much as our own is necessarily self-referential, and thus judgmental.

I know from experience how difficult it can be to release our narrow personal viewpoint when it tells us the other side is destroying everything, but keep in mind the other side feels just the same about us. The solution comes from a higher-level view that encompasses everyone, not from psychoanalyzing the "opposition" in order to delegitimize them and bolster our own personal sense of virtue.
Anonymous said…
Closing my eyes to the madness doesn't seem like a good choice right now. Kids are being surgically altered among other things. There is mass mental illness.
Phil said…
It's not a matter of closing one's eyes, but only committing them to the Holy Spirit's Vision, which does not take worldly sides, and is not political. We only need to open any history book to see that people have been trying to fix the world by playing the blame game forever. Has it gotten us closer to Heaven or internal peace? Certainly not. When Jesus took Thomas aside and spoke three sayings to him he said 1) "You dream of a desert where mirages are your rulers and tormenters." 2) "Father did not make the desert, and your home is still with him." 3) To return, forgive your brother, for only then do you forgive yourself."

Saying three is most relevant here, because perception is a double-edged sword. We are a part of our perception as much as anyone else, and to see guilt in another IS to see guilt in ourself. To see others as undeserving of God's Peace IS to see ourselves of God's Peace.

Engaging our minds in the world of sin is a game that goes nowhere. Never has, never will. To return to our Heavenly Home, let us forgive our brothers, for only then will we forgive ourselves.
Phil said…
Edit: To see others as undeserving of God's Peace IS to see ourselves *as undeserving* of God's Peace.
Anonymous said…
Can't do the push to surgically change kids. I'll have to side with the children and our country on this one. Glad to face the consequences.
Anonymous said…
Glad to see myself as undeserving of Gods peace. He doesn't seem too interested in his children. It's on Him.
will said…
ACIM just isn't cutting it on this issue. Threats against my spirituality have no weight.
will said…
It's up to spirit to let me experience ACIM's forgiveness. Until now it is just words. The ball is in Their court.

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