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Relationships

Would this be narcissistic?

32 replies

Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 16:32

Just trying to piece together if someone (man) is narcissistic- will give a few examples and please can everyone state opinions thanks

People comment on how 1 year old baby looks like him. This is said by random people and family/friends
His response always: "poor girl" or "hope she doesn't go bald like me"


He badmouths faults such as people who are overweight even size 12 calls them big or plump

Says he knows better and is always right - sometimes says jokingly but often repeats this so loses it's "humour"

When someone fancies him or has known to be fancied will say "can you blame her?"
Says jokingly but seems to mean it

Will think of more examples depending on replies
Thanks

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SistersKeeper12 · 16/05/2019 16:46

Sounds like a dick with a bad sense of humour to me?!

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Haffiana · 16/05/2019 16:52

No, he seems a bit irritating.

I really wonder if people genuinely think that a twat = narcissist. That is like saying a toddler tantrum = Columbine killer.

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CabbageHippy · 16/05/2019 17:02

OP is this your partner?

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 17:09

I've just been told by professionals he seems to have narcissistic tendencies so confused me a little bit

I'm trying to think of a few more examples

One being he is very derogatory about women - thinks women are money grabbers or cheats. Has zero respect in the way he talks about them

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Lonelycrab · 16/05/2019 18:25

The central traits of narcissism are the three e’s: entitlement, empathy impairment and exploitation. These are at the core of things to my understanding.

He sounds like (just) a bit of a twat tbh. Nothing you’ve said about him points to these three core features.

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NoBaggyPants · 16/05/2019 18:31

Have these professionals assessed him, or are these passing comments based solely on your observations?

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 22:32

Yes just comments made by what I've said

Can someone give examples of how a narcissist behaves in daily situations please?

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 22:35

He definitely has no empathy. Didn't bat an eyelid when my nana died who he got on with and made jokes about her estate. Doesn't seem to feel sorry for people's misfortune says they bring it on themselves
Commented on how he was sick of my friend crying on phone to me / she'd just lost her mum and
Been dumped st the same time , his view it was her own fault"

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 22:37

•bump

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Namechangeforthiscancershit · 16/05/2019 22:41

Just sounds like an idiot tbf

Do you want to be with him?

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DpWm · 16/05/2019 22:42

Can someone give examples of how a narcissist behaves in daily situations please?

Narcissists are all individual people with various personalities. Narcissism can manifest in many different ways.

Mainly, selfishness, excessive interest in ones own "image", lack of empathy, entitlement, constant need for their ego boost.

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DpWm · 16/05/2019 22:44

With small snippets like those you have provided it's impossible to know if he's a narcissist.

Have you read about NPD?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissistic_personality_disorder

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 22:53

Thanks
I have read up on it but haven't seen many examples of behaviour in day to day situations
Just thought I'd get that from here but I understand it's a complex situation
I would also say he's emotionally abusive but not sure if this ties in with narcism

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surlycurly · 16/05/2019 22:54

To be honest I don't think it matters what his medical diagnosis is or isn't; hows a horrible person. I'd LTB.

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PuppetShowInTheSoundofMusic · 16/05/2019 22:56

Can someone give examples of how a narcissist behaves in daily situations please?

If you aren't in a love bombing/revaluing phase, classic examples are:

You: I am so unwell I think I might be dying. Could you call an ambulance please?
Narcissist: Now you mention it, I don't feel too good either. sorry I've got an important meeting so don't have time. I really must get myself checked out at the doctors. You know where the phone is. I've got to go now.

You: I see Mr X was made a partner.
Naricissist: I should have been made a partner years ago. I'm much better than everyone.

You: I need help with this.
Narcissist: I need help with that. Why do you think you are more important than me?

Generally just doing what they want,when it suits them at all costs to everyone around them - except when it might benefit them to do otherwise -so early love bombing, treating people they see as equals or people they see as offering them something like work promotion, money, sex, fame by association.

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happybunny007 · 16/05/2019 23:01

Why does it matter?

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 23:03

Long story
But I'm trying to get some info on whether this man is narcissistic

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Irishdolly · 16/05/2019 23:04

@PuppetShowInTheSoundofMusic
Thanks puppets
Actually this is weird those scenarios you've posted ring a bell with him

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happybunny007 · 16/05/2019 23:10

Literally nobody can diagnose him over the Internet!

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ChristmasFluff · 17/05/2019 11:29

surlycurly absolutely has it spot on. It's pointless trying to diagnose others. what matters is their behaviour and how you deal with it.

If this is your partner, why on earth would you want to continue a relationships with someone who doesn't care when you are bereaved and is boorish and insensitive to you or others?

You do not need a diagnosis to be boundaried. You do not need a diagnosis for 'permission' to end a relationship. You do not need a diagnosis full stop.

Whereas understanding why you feel you need a diagnosis will tell you a lot about yourself.

Lots of people feel that if their partner is a narcissist, then either 'it's not their fault' and so they will continue to tolerate abuse; or they will think 'my love can fix him' (it can't) and they will stay and tolerate abuse; or they will believe that narcissism is unfixable, and so they will feel 'hooray - permission to leave!'.Any of those responses reveals a gap in self-love.

Knowing someone else's diagnosis doesn't repair your own boundary function. Knowing your own vulnerabilities does.

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purplelass · 17/05/2019 11:43

I don't understand the need for a diagnosis? There isn't a cure that I know of

I would describe my ExH as a narcissist, or at least having narcissistic tendencies, but never had any kind of diagnosis. I just knew that I couldn't tolerate what he was doing, or the way he was acting, any longer.

If you don't like his behaviour, just leave? You don't need to label anything. If it's wrong it's wrong...

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TeaForTheWin · 17/05/2019 12:02

The first lot of stuff you listed...meh...not anything to go on really.

But he definitely 'doesn't have empathy' is pretty telling. Could be a cluster b personality disorder, sure. And 'derogatory of women' potentially another sign of it.


Hmm, trying to think of examples.
*Have you ever seen triangualtaion from him - eg: with another women or friend (or even a place - he would rather be there than here with you).
*Nagging, a lot of them are prone to nagging (even buttering toast has 'a correct way to do it' - their way). Nag nag nag.
*Put downs - you can never seem to do anything right and they make you feel 'not good enough'. They take any opportunity to make you seem stupid/weak/over-reacting/crazy/ugly ect...
*Neediesness - you have other things to do today (a test to study for or family to catch up with) and they know it, they suddenly need you to pay them attention in some way. Eg: they are having a crisis today and you NEED to be there for them.
*Sexual/affection rejection - they make you feel like you are 'clingy' or perverted for wanting affection or sex.
OR the opposite - weird sex obsessions or extreme kinks.
*Draining - after spending time with them you feel knackered or sad or really low about yourself and the state of your life.
*One upping - you have a dingy? Well THEY have a speedboat. You passed your exams today with B's, well THEY remember that time they passed their exams when they were much younger than you, wit A+s
*Hobbies and interests - you have something you like? Either they take it up and try and one up you in it OR (if it is something they can't do) - it is 'sad' or 'boring' or 'so easy I don't know why you waste your time'. They'll flirt with anyone you like too OR try and put that person off you to make sure you don't get them.

  • General competitiveness.
    Slagging off good influences in your life like nice friends. But praising other people who are mean to you. Eg: you decide to drop a fake friend who has been taking the pss for far too long - the narcissist will encourage you to give this person another chance.

    Just some general stuff, some are more common in friendships with one. Others more common in relationships.
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Haffiana · 17/05/2019 17:04

But he definitely 'doesn't have empathy' is pretty telling. Could be a cluster b personality disorder, sure. And 'derogatory of women' potentially another sign of it.

@TeaForTheWin You win MN Armchair Diagnoser Gold Medal hands down. Thread after thread you trot out this utterly embarrassing shite.

Amazing that others need a medical degree and then a further 5 years specialist training, when all you need is a check list of cartoon behaviours, eh?

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TeaForTheWin · 17/05/2019 17:34

Pretty sure you don't need a medical degree to notice signs of a potential narcissist. I'm not diagnosing anyone am I?

Also, what are you my stalker? Get a life.

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TeaForTheWin · 17/05/2019 17:42

Also, no idea where you got the idea that anyone needs a medical degree to diagnose narcissism? xD Not even true.

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