
How THEY See YOU: Narcissist, Codependent, Borderline, Psychopath (Compilation)
it may come as a shock to you but the narcissist doesn’t see you the way you see yourself The narcissist doesn’t see himself the way you see him And

it may come as a shock to you but the narcissist doesn’t see you the way you see yourself The narcissist doesn’t see himself the way you see him And

today I want to talk to you about two archetypes first proposed by Carl Gustavong anima and animus femininity and masculinity but it is a lot more complex than this

This conversation between journalist Eve Tawfik and Dr. Sam Vaknin explores how narcissistic con artists don’t just target victims for money—they seek emotional control, admiration, and psychological dominance. Vaknin explains

The discussion focused on somatization and its connection to psychological trauma, particularly narcissistic abuse, explaining how psychological distress can manifest as physical symptoms without an identifiable medical cause. It detailed

The speaker highlighted key differences between narcissists and psychopaths, emphasizing how narcissists manipulate external reality to distort a victim’s internal perception, whereas psychopaths manipulate internal realities to distort external perception.

The meeting discussed the concept of inverted narcissism — a covert, codependent subtype of narcissistic personality that derives narcissistic supply vicariously through an overt grandiose partner, characterized by self-effacement, extreme

The video discussed the psychological concept of transference, particularly focusing on narcissistic transference as explained through psychoanalysis and self psychology. It detailed how individuals project unresolved childhood dynamics onto others,

The discussion focused on developing ‘peace post,’ a language-based tool to help victims of narcissists and psychopaths communicate neutrally, reduce emotional escalation, and protect boundaries through techniques like gray rock

In the meeting, the speaker explained how people pleasers, often driven by distorted cognitive patterns rooted in childhood parentification, are easily manipulated through clear communication of expectations, intermittent reinforcement of

The speaker presents a nine-principle path to recovering from narcissistic abuse, divided into three categories: body (attention, regulation, protection), mind (authenticity, positivity, mindfulness), and systemic functions (vigilant observer, shielding sensor,
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