Malignant Self Love
- Narcissism Revisited
Crime and Punishment:
The Never Repenting Narcissist
(faq page 57)
Question:
Do narcissists feel guilty and if so, do they ever repent?
Answer:
I have been often accused of being too harsh on the narcissist.
The truth is that it is impossible to pass moral judgement over him. The
narcissist has no criminal intent (mens rea), though plenty of criminal acts
(acti rei). He does not victimise, plunder, terrorise and abuse others in a
cold, calculating manner. He does so offhandedly, as a manifestation of his
genuine character. To be obnoxious one needs to have intention, to deliberate,
to contemplate one's acts and then to choose. No ethical or moral judgement is
possible without an act of choice.
The narcissist's perception of his life and his existence is
discontinuous. The narcissist is a walking compilation of "people", each with
his own personal history. The narcissist does not feel that he is, in any way,
related to his former "selves". He, therefore, does not understand WHY he has to
be punished for someone else's actions.
Societal punishment coupled with the narcissist's detachment from
his former selves breeds in him surprise, hurt and rage. The narcissist is
surprised by society's insistence that he should be punished for his deeds and
be held responsible for them. He feels wronged, hurt, affected by bias,
discrimination and injustice. He rebels and rages. Unable to connect his act
(perpetrated, as far as he is concerned, by a previous phase of his self, alien
to his "current" self) to its outcomes the narcissist is constantly baffled.
Depending upon the level of pervasiveness of his magical thinking the
narcissist may develop a feeling of being persecuted by powers greater than he,
forces cosmic and intrinsically ominous. He may develop compulsive rites to fend
off this "bad", unwarranted, influence.
The narcissist is an assemblage. He plays host to many personas.
One of the personas is always in the "limelight". This is the persona, which
interfaces with the outside world, and which guarantees an optimal inflow of
Narcissistic Supply. This is the persona, which minimises the resistance to the
narcissist offered by his human environment and, thus, the energy, which the
narcissist needs to expend in the process of obtaining his supply.
The "limelight persona" is surrounded by "shade personas". The
latter are potential personas, ready to surface as soon as the narcissist needs
them. Their emergence depends on their usefulness. An old persona might be
rendered useless or less useful by a confluence of events. The narcissist is in
the habit of constantly and erratically changing his circumstances. He switches
between, vocations, marriages, "friendships", countries, residences, lovers, and
even enemies with startling and difficult to follow swiftness. He is a machine
whose sole aim is to optimise its input, rather than its output the input of
Narcissistic Supply. To achieve its goal, this machine stops at nothing, and
does not hesitate to alter itself beyond recognition. To achieve ego-syntony (to
feel good despite all these upheavals) the narcissist employs the twin
mechanism of idealisation and devaluation. The first mechanism is intended to
help him to tenaciously attach to his newfound Source of Supply the second to
detach from it, once its usefulness has been exhausted.
This is why and how the narcissist is able to pick up where he
left off so easily. Sometimes a narcissist returns to haunt an old or defunct
PNS (Pathological Narcissistic Space, the hunting grounds of the narcissist).
This happens when a narcissist can no longer occupy physically or emotionally
his current PNS. A narcissist who is imprisoned or exiled is a good (though
rare) example. Once imprisoned or exiled, the narcissist can no longer rely on
obtaining Narcissistic Supply from his old sources. He has to reinvent and
reshape a new PNS. In his new country, for instance, he would try out a few
personas in his wardrobe until he finds the one that provides him with the best
results. But if the narcissist were to return to his previous PNS (his original
country) he would have no difficulty in adjusting. He would immediately assume
his old persona and begin to extract Narcissistic Supply from his old sources.
The personas of the narcissist, in other words, bond with his respective PNSs.
These couplets are both interchangeable and inseparable in the narcissist's
mind. Every time he moves the narcissist changes the narcissistic couplet: his
PNS and the persona attached thereto.
Thus, the narcissist is spatially and temporally spread out. His
different personas (he does not feel that they are part of the current "he")
forever wander in the twilight zone of his various four-dimensional PNSs. We say
"four dimensional" because, to a narcissist, a PNS is defined and "frozen" both
in space and in time. This narcissistic slicing is what stands behind the
narcissist's apparent inability to predict the inevitable outcomes of his
actions. This coupled with his inability to empathise is what makes him so
obnoxious to many and, on the other hand, so resilient and a "survivor". His
daredevil approach to life, his callousness, his ruthlessness, his
maverick-ness, and, above all, his shock at being held accountable are all
partly the results of his uncanny ability to reinvent himself.
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