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- 00:03 last time i checked my name was still sam vaknin which shocked me and surprised me no end plus i am still the author of malignant
- 00:14 self-love narcissism revisited many other books many books and videos
- 00:20 and so on about narcissism and personality disorders
- 00:26 today we are going to discuss the four secret buttons of the narcissist
- 00:33 the buttons that you need to push if you want to survive the so-called relationship if you want
- 00:41 to manipulate the narcissist or if you even want to detached break up
- 00:48 and say goodbye in a manner which would be somehow somewhat amicable
- 00:55 and not acrimonious and destructive and threatening these are the four buttons that activate the narcissist these four buttons put together this is the operating system of the narcissist this is his internal landscape
- 01:12 these four buttons comprise all the introjects all the internal objects all the modes
- 01:18 of interrelatedness interpersonal in the workplace towards
- 01:25 physical natural reality in the human environment put these four together and you have a one-page leaflet which summarizes aptly
- 01:37 the much bigger user manual my book malignant self-love narcissism revisited
- 01:43 has 720 pages and you can reduce all of them into these four
- 01:49 sentences for operating principles for organizing principles and for
- 01:55 buttons to push so before we go there um
- 02:01 i would like just like to clarify yet again that the videos online are
- 02:08 either lectures university lectures and therefore highly academic and rely on studies and research and even the videos that i that are not university lectures they rely on a great on a big
- 02:24 relatively big database of people diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorders
- 02:30 almost 2 000 of them and they rely on hundreds of studies and scholarly
- 02:36 literature going back all the way to 1914
- 02:42 so my material the lectures the books everything is not autobiographical it’s not about me you keep ignoring the fact that i’m a professor of psychology
- 02:54 and a published author um in the field and you keep attributing
- 03:00 everything you hear and everything you watch and everything you learn from me to my personality now that’s bad for you it has no effect on me but it’s bad for you because you would sometimes tend to
- 03:11 reject a lot of information saying well that applies to sam that’s not the case with all narcissists
- 03:17 they would be wrong there will be fallacious that would mislead you because whatever i’m saying applies to
- 03:24 the vast majority of nazis many of whom have nothing in common with me actually
- 03:30 if you want um if you are interested in an autobiographical view of narcissism
- 03:37 there are a few analysis online and they offer literature and videos
- 03:43 and they are not professors of psychology and they’re not scholars and they’re not academics and a lot of the information they give you
- 03:49 is highly idiosyncratic highly specific to them highly autobiographical a lot of
- 03:56 information they give you is not applicable to all narcissists only to them so if you care to see one
- 04:02 narcissist’s point of view there are there are others online who um give you this vantage point
- 04:10 uh i myself had published my own personal diary it’s called the diary of a narcissist and it’s available on amazon it’s available i mean the chapters are available online free of charge on my website and that is
- 04:22 my personal point of view but all the rest is academic
- 04:29 and the equivalent of a textbook okay last last two points before we go
- 04:36 we get to the four buttons um there’s a debate can iq tests measure an
- 04:44 iq of 190 because my iq is 190 can it be is it possible at all and so on well is
- 04:50 the answer the most commonly used test is known as wais
- 04:56 there are various variants of this test and this commonly used test can measure anything up to 230
- 05:04 however any number above 160 is suspect because it is not normatively validated in other words the number of
- 05:16 people with 160 170 180 let alone 190 the
- 05:22 number is so tiny for example there are only nine people in the world with 190. the number is so small that this is not
- 05:30 a representative sample we cannot we cannot derive any valid
- 05:36 uh information from this tiny group of people so when when someone is diagnosed or
- 05:42 tested and scores 180 or 190 which can happen definitely can happen
- 05:49 with any iq test it’s a problem because there’s no one to compare him to
- 05:55 compare him with and when there’s no one to compare him with the number is suspect
- 06:02 now there are other iq tests highly highly matrix test for example highly specific iq tests where the result is normatively validated in other words even 190 or 200 is in a
- 06:15 way normatively validated because the engine the statistical engine at the core of the test is such that all the results are validated well at least up to 200 or 210. okay watch the video i made a video about 12 misconceptions of 12
- 06:32 superstitions um in psychology and you one of them is iqtus which i personally i think iq
- 06:40 tests are bordering on scam if you ask me and they’re very misleading because iq iq measurements are only only reflect your analytical capacity
- 06:52 not your synthetic capacity not your emotional intelligence nothing else so that you
- 06:58 have a higher iq means nothing it maybe predicts your intellectual or academic achievements
- 07:05 but that’s all so don’t be too impressed with iq now at the end of the video i’m going to
- 07:11 discuss the gamma men the construct of the gamma men and the social sexual hierarchy
- 07:17 it’s going to be the end of the of the video and at the end of the video i’m also going to read to you an extended excerpt
- 07:24 from a wonderful book and this excerpts except demonstrates how and why
- 07:30 narcissists are agents of chaos agents of madness among us
- 07:38 which would explain the fraught relationships between narcissist and normal or healthy people but we’ll come to it at the very end and let’s get now
- 07:50 finally you to the topic of the video analysis is four secret
- 07:56 buttons why is the narcissist why are some narcissists sexless while other narcissists are
- 08:03 hypersex why some narcissists objectify people while others implement a shared
- 08:12 fantasy well actually they act as hyper-romantic and and so on why some of them avoid
- 08:18 intimacy and others seek it why some of them are schizoid and others are
- 08:24 gregarious and very sociable why some narcissists engage in engaging in system others do not etc etc narcissism is such a spectrum of behaviors that sometimes people feel that anything can fit in under this single word anything the in
- 08:42 anyone could be a narcissist well that’s untrue of course narcissism is a very clear clinical
- 08:48 construct the diagnostic and statistical manual committee um deliberated for well over two or
- 08:56 three years on the issue of whether narcissism is a real thing or not is it a clinical entity or not and they
- 09:03 had reached the conclusion having reviewed reams of literature interviewed dozens of experts and so on
- 09:09 they had reached a conclusion that it is by all means a real very real thing but
- 09:15 it narcissism is the totality of the personality narcissism is not like cancer or
- 09:21 tuberculosis narcissism is not like for example bipolar disorder
- 09:27 or schizophrenia narcissism is the totality of the person that’s why the diagnostic and
- 09:33 statistical manual uses the word all pervasive every field every area
- 09:39 every behavior every cognition every lack of emotion every negative emotion all of them are
- 09:46 imbued and imprinted with narcissism so that’s why there is such a diversity and
- 09:52 variety of behaviors affect emotions cognitions reactions when we look at
- 09:59 different narcissists but all these can be reduced to four organizing explanatory motivating effective cognitive principles
- 10:12 only four and if you learn these four if you get acquainted with these four if you really delve into these four you will easily know how to coexist with the narcissist
- 10:23 obtain favorable outcomes or leave the narcissist abandon him in a way which will not have long-term repercussions so here are the four precautious child
- 10:37 conquering hero father guru and divinity now immediately some of you
- 10:43 will say that is very reminiscent of jung’s archetypes it’s even reminiscent of tarot cards
- 10:51 you know in tariff cards you have these characters and it’s very true turret cards of course reflect
- 10:58 deep unconscious archetypes as jung called them deep unconscious constructs that’s why
- 11:04 tariff cards and other forms of divination unfortunately are so effective and so successful because they do reflect something profound and deep in the human psyche same with jung’s
- 11:16 archetypes jung had created as was his habit a whole ideology psycho history and
- 11:24 went bonkers because he was bonkers he was psychotic so there’s a lot of nonsense around
- 11:30 these archetypes but the core is true each one of us has these ways of relating to the world
- 11:38 modes of existing and being which are highly highly stereotyped
- 11:45 highly structured highly uh and conform to symbolic representations of operational principles and the narcissist has these four
- 11:57 let’s deconstruct them one by one precautious child the narcissist
- 12:04 considers himself to be precautious in other words he believes that his accomplishments
- 12:11 are way outside his age range even when the narcissist is 60 he would say i’m like a 200 year old man
- 12:20 the narcissist always infantilizes by comparison so he is always an eternal child where i
- 12:27 tell us there’s always a peter pan syndrome underlying an underlying
- 12:33 democracy’s personality and embedded in it and it could be a child by comparison even compared to history compared to older people but it will always be an element of i’m younger and because i’m younger my
- 12:49 accomplishments are dazzling amazing spectacular unprecedented now these accomplishments let it be clear can be intellectual and then we get a
- 13:00 cerebral narcissist but these accomplishments can also be physical and then we get athletes we get
- 13:08 bodybuilders we get um hypersex narcissists known as somatic narcissists they are focused on social conquests but whatever they do they believe themselves to be unique they believe that
- 13:24 the way they do things the energy that they invest
- 13:30 their mind when it get gets intermingled and enmeshed with the action renders the
- 13:37 act unique and so uniqueness in the narcissist mind one of the pillars of his grandiosity and sense of superiority haughtiness
- 13:49 uniqueness lies squarely relies squarely on his infantilization
- 13:57 for the narcissist to be unique he needs to feel that he is a prodigy precocious
- 14:04 either via his body or via his mind in many cases both because as you know there’s no type
- 14:10 constancy the narcissist switches from cerebral to somatic and back now this gives you
- 14:16 gives you an important key because if you want to gratify the narcissist if
- 14:23 you want to coexist with the narcissist survive with the narcissist manipulate the narcissist all you need to do is reaffirm
- 14:32 this button push this button and you can push this button into whis to confirm to confirm the prejudice
- 14:40 in other words to broadcast to the narcissist to signal to the narcissist
- 14:46 to somehow convey to the narcissist that you also see him as a child or that his accomplishments are amazing
- 14:54 and timeless that he is too young to have accomplished what he had accomplished
- 15:01 that there is a discrepancy between his chronological age and the mounting weight or the mountain
- 15:08 of his achievements that he is amazing that he is unprecedented that he is
- 15:14 unique in terms of the discrepancy what he had between what he had secured in his life
- 15:22 and his age so you can push this button or you can push
- 15:28 the button in another way and that is when you want to break up when you want to dismantle the shirt
- 15:34 fantasy we want where you desperately want to exit and you don’t want to betray the narcissist you don’t want to cheat on him as many as many partners do um you want to end
- 15:45 it amicably and not acrimoniously and not violently and not aggressively and not you don’t want to prolong the process of breakup you know to render it into a multi-decade
- 15:57 opera so there’s another way to push this button you push this button by insisting
- 16:05 that the narcissist behave his age acts his age becomes age appropriate you impute to
- 16:13 him adult chores adult responsibilities you broadcast your expectations
- 16:22 of him you bargain you enter the bargaining phase that’s essentially the bargaining phase it’s
- 16:29 when you give up on the pretension that the narcissist is a precautious child a prodigy child an eternal eternal
- 16:37 adolescent you give up on this pretension you give up on this shared psychotic narrative and you
- 16:44 insist that the narcissist becomes what he is and i a mature adult not only an adult and so you are beginning to make a
- 16:55 series of demands they’re all reasonable they’re all common demands you don’t ask for anything
- 17:01 outlandish you don’t ask for anything that is unheard of you’re just asking
- 17:07 the narcissist to be responsible to be reliable to be present to not be deceitful
- 17:15 to act his age to be tidy to be neat to be i mean just to be a
- 17:22 mature adult to have hobbies and preoccupations which conform to his age
- 17:28 to um have a job take on a job to bring money home to to
- 17:35 take up his share you know uh to contribute to daily chores and so this bargaining
- 17:42 phase pushes the narcissist away because it vitigates it negates the shared fantasy a critical
- 17:49 element of the shirt fantasy is the narcissist infancy
- 17:55 the narcissist is a toddler the narcissist is a spoiled brat is the axis and pivot of the shared
- 18:03 fantasy never mind if the narcissist is cerebral or somatic or even covert in all these cases the
- 18:10 narcissist needs to be a child confronting the narcissist with adult demands
- 18:17 renders the shared fantasy mute and dead and he cannot survive outside the shirt fantasy it’s a little like fish and aquarium fish out of water
- 18:28 the narcissus water is um the shared fantasy and no wonder the shed fantasy is very fishy okay this is the precautious child
- 18:40 button and the two ways of pushing it each of these buttons has two ways of pushing it
- 18:46 if you want to maintain and preserve the shirt fantasy with the narcissist there’s one way of pushing the button and if you
- 18:52 want to destroy the shirt fantasy and thereby exited with the narcissist blessing
- 18:58 there’s a second way of pushing the button let’s talk about the next button the next button is the conquering hero
- 19:06 these are all stereotypes or even archetypes the conquering hero superman batman
- 19:14 spiderman what do we know about these comic marvel heroes they transform
- 19:21 they are one thing during the day another thing during the night they are human fully human
- 19:29 in private and fully inhuman or partly human in public
- 19:37 they are in private they are people just persons with foibles
- 19:44 with fallacies with with shortcomings with limitations when they are in private when they’re in public they’re heroes they’re saviors
- 19:55 they’re rescuers they’re infallible they’re mighty they’re invincible they’re omniscient
- 20:01 they’re omnipotent so you see the narcissist is a public face and a private face
- 20:07 when the narcissist is alone with himself he experiences he experiences this
- 20:15 inferiority complex he experiences his lacks and deficiencies and shortcomings
- 20:21 he needs input from the outside known as narcissistic supply in order to restore himself because when he is alone with himself he is alone with his worst enemy we now think the new thinking is
- 20:38 that all narcissists are compensatory so all narcissists have covert phases
- 20:45 even classic and overt narcissists have covered phases this is the new the newest
- 20:52 thinking about narcissism it’s reflected a distant echo in the alternative model of narcissism
- 20:59 of narcissistic personality disorder in the dsm 5 page 767
- 21:05 applause now conquering hero is janus the god with two faces
- 21:13 this is the narcissist so he wants to be considered superman
- 21:20 he wants to be considered by everyone as a good person who is out to save and rescue as
- 21:28 someone who is whose powers are infinite and communal and pro-social all nazis is
- 21:36 one bit by the way so but when they’re alone they’re insecure they feel unsafe
- 21:43 because they never had a safe base as children they they they fee they are
- 21:49 re-traumatized all the old early childhood conflicts the ancient traumas are provoked
- 21:57 when the narcissist is alone are triggered and he needs other people to soothe him
- 22:03 to soothe him to restore a reality testing that is actually grandiose and fantastic
- 22:11 he needs other people to reaffirm his grandiose fantasies about himself
- 22:17 he needs other people to tell him yes you are a genius you are amazing you are a hero and so
- 22:24 this is a button this is one of the narcissist buttons and there are two ways of pushing it one
- 22:31 way of pushing it is to go along for the ride to convey communicate to the narcissist that he is indeed a savior a rescuer
- 22:44 all-powerful amazing of unique potentialities and capacities
- 22:50 x-men this is one way by massaging his ego by catering
- 22:57 to his infantile needs for reassurance and reaffirmation and narcissistic supply you can of
- 23:03 course manipulate the narcissist or at the very least preserve the peace in the relationship
- 23:09 reach a kind of modest operandi within the relationship which is essentially calm and peaceful and tranquil and long
- 23:16 term a homostasis an equilibrium the other way of pushing the button is
- 23:22 narcissistic injury or in extreme cases narcissistic mortification it’s by challenging the narcissist self-perception as a conquering hero by not allowing him
- 23:35 to conquer for example the somatic narcissist somatic narcissist needs desperately needs subsists on sexual conquest deny him his sexual conquests and he
- 23:48 disintegrates like a vampire exposed to sunlight same with the cerebral narcissist
- 23:54 the cerebral narcissist needs adulation and admiration and affirmation and applause when he
- 24:00 displays like a peacock his tail his intellectual tale his pyrotechnics intellectual pyrotechnics deny him this supply and he
- 24:11 disintegrates as well so the second way of using this button is gray rock
- 24:18 the famous technique which i had not invented regrettably it’s a great technique possibly the
- 24:25 strongest technique most powerful technique after no contact so gray rock is this pushing the
- 24:33 conquering hero button by ignoring or by rendering yourself
- 24:39 an interesting dull boring anxious stupid pseudo stupid
- 24:46 so when you gray rock the analysis you’re pushing his conquering hero button although in all the wrong ways here he
- 24:54 is a spectacle displaying himself trying to amaze you into submission
- 25:01 to shock you and fascinate you into addiction and you are ignoring him and ignoring
- 25:08 all all his spectacular feats and manifestations and exploits
- 25:15 and the narcissists cannot survive this is likely to dump you okay the next button the father guru
- 25:25 again we see two elements here as a father paternal figure
- 25:32 the narcissist would tend to gravitate to towards women who have daddy issues of course and thereby create a kind of
- 25:39 compatibility he would be a father to their missing father he would be the father
- 25:45 they never had he would be a father who is not as abusive as the original father they’ve had so this is the father element but he still is still dispenses
- 25:56 tough love discipline strict discipline rules boundaries regulations
- 26:05 uh rigid expectations that’s the father part now in with most narcissists the father
- 26:12 part is actually rare in cerebral narcissus it is triggered when the cerebral narcissist is asked
- 26:18 for advice when you solicit the cerebral narcissist advice he becomes a father guru similarly with the somatic he is likely to present himself as far
- 26:30 more experienced than you sexually he’s going to teach you what is real sex he’s going to introduce you to new worlds and universes of sick of sexuality that you had only seen in the movies or heard of i don’t know bdsm or whatever so the father guru
- 26:48 is intermixed the paternal figure the avancular figure paternal figure
- 26:54 that analysis cuts in his relationship with you has elements of superiority sexual superiority intellectual superiority superiority of knowledge superiority of experience he has something over you and it’s the
- 27:10 guru element he also has the right which any father has to discipline you to tell you how to behave to instruct you is what as to what
- 27:21 constitutes misbehavior displeasing misbehavior and he he assumes this role
- 27:28 and it’s very disconcerting and disorienting because he can switch very very speedily
- 27:36 with alacrity between the child and the father the
- 27:43 the ingenue the the naive and the in the guru and these
- 27:50 pendulations these oscillations and vicissitudes are such that you’re thrown thrown off balance
- 27:58 it’s extremely disorienting and dislocating and it is of course the core technique
- 28:04 in gaslighting it underlies gaslighting as the narcissist changes his reality
- 28:10 who he is his identity because he has no core identity his shape shifts his chameleon and his shape shifts and sometimes his shape shifting is a reaction to internal processes as he shape shifts everything around him shape-shifts as well reality itself
- 28:28 is warped and distorted and this is what we call this process is
- 28:34 what we call gaslighting it may drive you to the point of madness or at least to the point of believing that you are crazy
- 28:40 that you’re mad again there are two ways of pushing these buttons this button i’m sorry the father guru
- 28:46 button one way of pushing the father guru button is to seek advice to cater to the guru and paternal side in in other words to infantilize
- 28:57 yourself to agree for stretches of time periods or events where you are the one
- 29:05 who becomes the child in the relationship you switch roles in effect it’s a role switching game
- 29:12 first he’s the child you’re the mother now you are the child he’s the father so you play along you pretend that
- 29:19 everything is he says is the eleventh commandment that is the new reincarnation of jesus and moses
- 29:28 combined that is the reification of the principle of wisdom that is truly a
- 29:34 unique unprecedented guru and you’re lucky to be in his presence and breathe the
- 29:41 same air that he does you’re at his feet sometimes literally if he’s a foot fetishes you’re at his
- 29:48 feet so this is one way of pushing the button it guarantees bliss
- 29:56 marital or relationship bliss let me tell you the other way of pushing the button is
- 30:02 of course if you want to exit the relationship destroy the shared fantasy
- 30:08 challenge and undermine this shared psychotic space so the other way is to challenge
- 30:16 both roles when he tries to be a guru you dispute what he says you disagree
- 30:22 you criticize you provide alternative sources of information which this which kind of don’t sit well with
- 30:30 what he’s saying you mock him you doubt his credentials you ask him openly to prove what he’s what he’s saying and to prove that he is that he has the
- 30:41 authority to say etc so this undermines the narcissist grandiosity and nothing is more precious than the narcissist than his grandiosity he’s going to dump
- 30:53 and sacrifice you just in order to preserve his grandiosity similarly when he’s trying to act the father the second way of pushing the button is to refuse to act the child
- 31:04 to remain an adult to maintain your adulthood so he’s trying to be the father you’re
- 31:11 the adult in the room you disagree you contest you push back
- 31:17 you insist on your boundaries on your personal autonomy your agency you become certifications so
- 31:23 you don’t need him you don’t ask for his advice and if he tries to push it push it on you you inform him that you
- 31:31 don’t appreciate unsolicited advice and tips and help etc etc so this pushes
- 31:40 this specific button the wrong way and this is one of the possibly the crucial button the father
- 31:47 guru button the last button is divinity but it’s not the divinity of the
- 31:54 olympian sort it’s not divinity of uh like um
- 32:01 the greek gods as the greek gods were essentially anthropomorphized the greek gods were
- 32:07 human they copulated with beautiful human females they had offspring with these
- 32:14 women hercules for example so the greek gods were around a bunch they were drunkards
- 32:22 they were alcoholics actually many of them were alcoholics they were somatic narcissists they were
- 32:28 omnipotent i mean they were narcissistic grandiose the greek gods were mental illness writ large no the narcissist divinity is not like the olympian greek gods the
- 32:41 narcissist divinity is old testament divinity or new testament divinity
- 32:47 some narcissists all narcissists regard themselves as god-like remember that narcissism is a religion there’s a godhead the false self it’s
- 32:58 the moloch the false self the child sacrifices child makes a human sacrifice
- 33:05 the child sacrifices his true self to the false self the idol and the fourth self then takes
- 33:12 over and it there’s a religion of one god in one worshipper a cult where the
- 33:20 narcissist fulfills all the roles he is god he is the worshiper and he is the cult so this is the structure of narcissism and some narcissists
- 33:33 fashion and mold the false self to be like the old testament god it’s an aggressive god a vindictive god petty pretty petty um
- 33:46 it’s a micromanaging god it’s a control freak god it’s a god who is sometimes absolutely
- 33:53 sadistic it’s um grandiose god highly narcissistic
- 33:59 and so on so that’s the old testament god not someone you would like to spend a few hours in the pub with trust me the new testament god is the exact opposite it’s a loving god compassionate god
- 34:11 caring god an empathic god but still psychotic and grandiose so
- 34:20 the narcissists can choose to to enact or re-enact the old testament god god the god of
- 34:27 thunder and brimstone or the new testament god the victim the martyr the saint in either capacity he self-imputes he
- 34:39 attributes to himself divine powers divine attributes
- 34:45 you can push this button in two ways as usual one way of pushing the button button is
- 34:51 worshipping the narcissist he’s a god you’re a worshipper you have a two-man cult a two main sect or a two-man
- 34:58 religion two people religion i’m sorry you’re not a man so one way is to worship the narcissist
- 35:05 simply conform to his religious rituals use his uh theological language
- 35:13 regard the false self is unassailable infallible the epitome and rarification
- 35:20 of perfection perfection brilliance and and rightness moral
- 35:26 uh righteousness so this is one way of pushing the button
- 35:32 if the narcissist chooses the new testament god you push the button by catering to his
- 35:39 need to feel victimized martyred and so and so forth ironically by mistreating him the more you mistreat him the more attached he will be to you because the more you mistreat and abuse
- 35:50 him the more you cheat on him the more you betray him well up to a point and that point is the mortification
- 35:56 the singularity point up to that point as the longer you torment and taunt and
- 36:03 torture them this kind of narcissist the new testament narcissist the more gratified he is he’s he’s in
- 36:09 his jesus comfort zone he feels crucified for a good cause so this is one way of pushing the butt
- 36:16 the other way of pushing the button is of course challenging the self-imputed alleged self-proclaimed
- 36:22 divinity of the of the narcissists pointing out to him mistakes that he had made
- 36:28 inconsistencies discrepancies sheer nonsense stupidities wrong decisions failures
- 36:36 defeats etc etc and doing so repeatedly like you know the chinese
- 36:43 drop torture water drop torture drop by drop until finally
- 36:49 he would walk away his divinity the father guru and the divinity buttons are the two important ones because they are at the core of the grandiosity these are the four buttons and these are
- 37:01 the way ways to push them now why do we feel why do we feel so
- 37:09 uncomfortable with with narcissists and and so what what why when we come across
- 37:17 narcissist there is this dis-ease your illite is somehow
- 37:23 it’s like something’s missing something ambient something is in the air as though the atmosphere has had been instantaneously polluted or poisoned even when you’re in love
- 37:34 with the narcissist even when you’re irrevocably inexorably attracted to the narcissist even when you find him amazing and humorous and funny and witty and stunning and super intelligent and
- 37:47 drop that gorgeous there’s still a tiny voice whispering in your ear your intuition
- 37:54 actually your gut instinct your survival instinct whispering in your ear beware
- 38:00 be careful either it’s too good to be true so it’s probably not true or
- 38:07 some of the behaviors of the narcissist don’t don’t sit well with the way he pres he represents
- 38:13 himself the mask the mask sometimes slips and you get a glimpse of the alien
- 38:19 beneath the alien beneath so one of the things that narcissists force you to do
- 38:25 which healthy normal people don’t is this constant self-scrutiny when you’re with
- 38:32 a healthy normal person you don’t keep asking yourself is everything okay what am i doing here why am i here what’s gonna happen what is this behavior why is he not
- 38:45 behaving in a way that you know i predicted what’s wrong with me what’s wrong with him what’s wrong with
- 38:52 us and so i mean this constant background dialogue monologue
- 38:58 trying to make sense of your experience as essentially a senseless nonsensical
- 39:06 experience as collectly had observed in his masterpiece mask of sanity this is what psychopaths do and many of the psychopaths that he described
- 39:17 were later renamed borderlines and narcissists so that’s what psychopaths do they
- 39:24 discombobulate they introduce chaos and madness and uncertainty and
- 39:32 and discomfort and wariness and hyper vigilance and sensitivity
- 39:39 into the situation and you don’t have this with normal and healthy people on the one hand it is precisely this the
- 39:46 fact that you have to um be on your toes new or connections it’s precisely this
- 39:53 that heightens amplifies emphasizes the experience experiences
- 40:00 like nothing else it’s like being ten times more alive than normal everything becomes everything falls into sharp relief you know when you’re in an accident or
- 40:12 when you suddenly get sick and taken to a hospital everything falls into sharp relief when
- 40:18 when you when there’s a global calamity like assassination of jfk or the or 911
- 40:26 you remember every moment and every second you remember erroneously by the way but doesn’t matter the memory is imprinted the narcissist heightens heightens your experience
- 40:38 colors it brings you in into an ex permanent excitatory state you can’t relax on the one hand
- 40:47 but on the other hand you feel more alive than ever and the reason the narcissist does this
- 40:53 is because he’s an agent of chaos he’s an agent who cares because he forces you to think this is the book escapism by ifutuan yifutwang
- 41:11 y-i-f-u-t-u-a-n he was a cultural geographer this is an excellent book called escapism and i would like to read to you an extended excerpt from the book about chaos and order remember the narcissist
- 41:24 forces you to think where healthy and normal people do not so he starts with a because he’s
- 41:33 a cultural geographer essentially a kind of anthropologist a navajo father
- 41:39 instructs his children in the use of a string game showing how it connects human life to
- 41:45 the constellations is prelude for telling the coyote
- 41:51 the game and the tale may be entertaining in themselves but they have a deeper purpose which the
- 41:57 father explains thus he tells his children we need we need to have ways of thinking of keeping things stable healthy
- 42:09 beautiful we try for a long life but lots of things can happen to us so
- 42:15 we keep our thinking in order by these figures and we keep our lives in order with
- 42:21 these stories we have to relate our lives to stars and to the sun and the animals and all the
- 42:27 nature or else we will go crazy and get sick essentially what the father is telling
- 42:34 his children don’t overthink and if you do think think in a rigid
- 42:40 structured dictated predefined manner don’t think independently the narcissist
- 42:46 forces you to think outside the box the narcissist takes you out of your comfort zone introduces you
- 42:54 to unsettling sometimes harrowing and always discomfiting and frightening
- 43:01 and threatening menacious experiences he forces you to think independently
- 43:08 and so to innovate i continue quoting so happy people uh i’m sorry let me continue with the
- 43:19 exit the navajo father commends thinking for its power to produce to produce temporary stays against disorder many societies however recognize that
- 43:31 thinking without some immediate practical end in mind can cause unhappiness
- 43:37 and that indeed it is in itself evidence of unhappiness happy people
- 43:44 happy people have no reason to think they live rather than question living
- 43:52 to inuits thinking signifies either craziness
- 43:58 or the strength to have independent viewers both qualities are antisocial and to be
- 44:04 deplored one inuit a woman was overheard to say
- 44:10 in a righteous tone i never think another woman complained of a third woman because she was trying to make her thing and this way shorten her life
- 44:22 even in modern america thinking is suspect it is something done by the idly curious
- 44:29 or by discontented people it is subversive of established values it undermines
- 44:35 communal coherence and promotes individualism there is an element of truth in all these
- 44:42 accusations says the author in an updike novel a working class father
- 44:49 thinks about his son reading it makes him feel cut off from his son
- 44:56 the father says he doesn’t know why it makes him nervous to see the kid read like he’s plotting something they say you should encourage reading
- 45:07 but they never tell you why the author again to remind you i’m
- 45:13 reading from a reading from escapism escapism a book by ishu
- 45:19 yi foot one so if one says i have chosen the words
- 45:25 isolation and indifference to capture a fundamental human experience
- 45:31 other people may choose other words or concepts one of the most common is chaos which invokes the ultimate in
- 45:38 disconnectedness isolation and indifference even as the navajo father uses a string game
- 45:45 to show his children how human fate is tied to the constellations he feels and fears the undertow of chaos likewise
- 45:58 an
- 46:04 um says the same when the danish explorer knew the
- 46:10 rasmussen tried to get awa this igloo eskimo to articulate a coherent philosophy
- 46:18 auwa replied that it cannot be done moreover it is presumptuous to do so
- 46:25 presumptuous and futile as to build elaborate material shelters and camps
- 46:32 whatever people may say whatever they would like to believe they know through the shocks of
- 46:38 experience that nature is indifferent and can be chaotic to hunt well and to live happily
- 46:46 says our men must have calm weather why this constant succession of
- 46:52 blizzards in other words why think thinking is a blizzard you need calm weather to hunt well and
- 47:00 live happily and he says why must people be ill and suffer pain by thinking
- 47:07 personal misfortune seems to be quite unrelated to good or bad behavior here is this old
- 47:14 sister of mine cesaro as far as anyone can see she has done no evil she has lived through a
- 47:20 long life and given birth to healthy children and now she must suffer before her days end
- 47:27 why why you see says awa to rasmussen you are equally unable to give any
- 47:34 reason when we ask you why life is as it is and so it must be
- 47:40 in a world so full of uncertainty the igloo leak seek comfort in the rules they have
- 47:46 inherited to quote awa again and what he says is remarkably similar to the navajo
- 47:53 father we do not know how we cannot say why but we keep those rules in order in
- 48:00 order that we may leave untroubled reflective individuals
- 48:06 may be defined as those who suspect that the order and meaning they discern and strive hard to maintain a little more than a measure of their desperation
- 48:17 awa was such an individual another also in igloo league was
- 48:27 aspired to become a shaman but changed his mind during the period of training to his kinsmen he said that he was not good enough to the friendly outsider know
- 48:39 he explained that the real reason was that he had come to doubt his master’s claims to reading the signs of nature and to establish contact with helpful spirits
- 48:51 he saw such claims as lies and humbug well-meaning perhaps but manufactured to
- 48:58 provide reassurance to timid people the anthropologist monica wilson
- 49:04 asked the women of an african village why they set such store by their ceremonies when the ceremonies
- 49:12 are so important and they answered what
- 49:18 and she asked them was it because they exerted real power over the external world these ceremonies their answer was always
- 49:26 the same such ceremonies were conducted for inward rather than outward effect they served
- 49:33 to stop people from going mad i’m reminded of
- 49:39 says the author i’m reminded of wh odin’s gloomy porn death’s echo
- 49:46 in which he says echoing the ancient greeks that not to be born may well be the best but there is always
- 49:53 a second best which is formal order the dance the dancers pattern to make some sense
- 50:00 of life to prevent ourselves from going mad we have one ready means of escape and that is to
- 50:07 dance while we can an iron handkerchiefs could lead to madness writes iris
- 50:15 murdoch people must opt for order somewhere down the line
- 50:21 a touching confession of helplessness before the world’s bewildering complexity comes from the distinguished
- 50:27 anthropologist claude levistraus he has been accused of reductionism of suggesting that structural analysis has the power to illuminate human experience and social reality le vista house
- 50:40 denies this as outrageous the possibility he says has never occurred to me
- 50:46 on the contrary it seems to me that social life and the empirical realities surrounding it unfold mostly at random as le vistraus picturesquely puts it disorder reigns
- 51:00 in social life’s vast empiricals too he for his part chooses to study only
- 51:08 its scattered small islands of organization moreover these islands refer not to what
- 51:16 people do but to what they believe or say must be done
- 51:22 this is a an extended except from escapism by he foot one and this is what the
- 51:29 narcissist does he introduces chaos he introduces madness by forcing you to think by forcing you to reflect by forcing you
- 51:40 to doubt and question by introducing the unpredictable the incomprehensible the senseless and the cruel into your lives
- 51:52 and this leads me to the last segment and that is the gamma male gamma male is borrowed from a
- 52:00 typology known as the social sexual hierarchy produced by the far right activist vox
- 52:07 day vlogs there was a pseudonym i think his real name was bill
- 52:14 b-e-a-b-e-a-l-e according to him gamma males are intellectual highly romantic ideologically driven men who hold a low status position in the social
- 52:26 dominance hierarchy though they desire to be leaders and are envious of the rank and privilege
- 52:32 that comes naturally to alphas and betters this is one definition and there is a
- 52:38 list of attributes or traits of the government the highly intelligent the kind and empathetic their hopeless romantics they believe that the depth of their love should hold value to the women they pedestalize they struggle to succeed
- 52:53 on the dating marketplace they adopt secret king delusions of grandeur they they are
- 53:00 conflict avoidant they are failure avoidant they lie to themselves they fail to understand women it’s a
- 53:07 good description of the cerebral narcissism actually and here is another definition from the
- 53:13 from urban dictionary of the government the gamma male is a person who rejects status and authority believing that
- 53:21 thinking for oneself is possible and desirable and valuing fraud freedom the most the orientation puts gamma
- 53:28 males at odds with most people in society so gammas tend to be perceived as outsiders but outsider
- 53:36 status may or may not be important to their identity gammas tend to be comfortable alone but
- 53:43 they have material sexual and social needs like everybody else their attitudes towards society tend to
- 53:50 alternate between disdain for the herd the betters and their cattle ranchers the alphas
- 53:58 and a struggle to just accept people as they are and give up bitterness often they find a small group
- 54:05 of other gammas and proud battles to hang out with in relations with strong alphas the
- 54:12 outcome is usually mutual dislike that sometimes develops into grudging respect in sexual relationships
- 54:19 they can be clingy towards the few people they can relate to use those they don’t respect
- 54:25 or be very detached if they have found happiness in their personal pursuits socially gammas are usually nice but they can turn vicious if their personal space is threatened
- 54:37 they reject prevailing morality and can be extremely cynical and manipulative or else find their own way often
- 54:44 drifting towards quasi-quasi but histic worldview gammas tend to derive satisfaction from
- 54:51 their private sense of all beauty and mystery rather than social acceptance of material things the ability to find
- 54:58 satisfaction in these things is often what keeps them going while being misfits in society and that’s a good description
- 55:06 of the schizoid narcissist so schizoid cerebral narcissists are probably what these people call
- 55:12 gamma males chamomiles is not a clinical entity nor is it accepted in academia but it’s an interesting classificatory
- 55:21 system and gamma males correspond very closely to schizoid cerebral narcissism i hope you enjoyed the tour
- 55:28 and the wackening horror show and i invite you to the next episode if you’re still alive