This blog is about learning to understand all of our feelings and learning to consciously face, feel, and experience all of our feelings within the context of our own childhood.
Everything we become and everything that happens to us is connected to childhood. Not every victim becomes an abuser, but every abuser was once a victim of abuse. These are facts. Violence is not genetic; it’s learned.
https://sylvieshene.blogspot.com/2014/08/a-dance-to-freedom-book-reviews.html
The answer is painful, but it is also liberating. Because in understanding their origins, we stop asking "What is wrong with me?" and start seeing the truth: This was never about you. It was about a wound that was inflicted long before you arrived.
Alice Miller, in her seminal work The Drama of the Gifted Child, describes this dynamic with heartbreaking precision. The malignant narcissist is a classic case of the "gifted child" who was never allowed to be a child at all.
The Gifted Child Who Never Got to Feel
These are children who learned early that their own feelings, needs, and authentic selves were unwelcome. To survive, they developed a masterpiece of psychological defense: repression, projection, and transference, perfected to an art form.
They learned to bury their own pain so deeply that they lost access to it entirely. They became, in effect, unfeeling robots—brilliant at reading the emotions of others because their survival depended on it, but utterly disconnected from their own inner world.
And then, as adults, they go into the world looking for what Miller calls "poison containers" or scapegoats. They seek out feeling people—people who still have access to their emotions—and they transfer their own repressed childhood pain into them. It is not personal. It is mechanical. They do it to temporarily and superficially feel better about themselves, to offload the unbearable weight they have carried since childhood.
This does not excuse their behavior. It explains it. And explanation is the first step toward protection.
The Trap for the Feeling Person
Here is the danger for those of us who survived our own childhood repression and managed to remain seeing, feeling human beings.
We can read every book about narcissism. We can recognize every tactic—the love bombing, the devaluation, the discard, the gaslighting, the breadcrumbing. We can have all the intellectual knowledge in the world.
But if we have not created a safe therapeutic space to resolve our own childhood repression, we remain vulnerable. Our own unprocessed pain acts as a blindfold. The repressed emotions of the child we once were will rise up in the presence of a narcissist, and we will find ourselves caught in their emotional traps before our conscious mind even registers what is happening.
The body remembers what the mind has tried to forget. And the narcissist, with their finely tuned radar for unhealed wounds, will find that vulnerability every time.
This is why healing is not optional. It is the only path to true protection and staying free.
Evil Reborn: The New Generation of Narcissism
This narcissistic game is being played everywhere. From the highest office of the land to every corner of the globe, the dynamics are the same: the hero, the victim, the villain. The search for poison containers or scapegoats. The desperate need to avoid accountability.
And here is the hard truth: Evil is born anew with every new generation.
But today, something has changed. The new generation of narcissism is not content with the old methods. It is becoming more sophisticated, more insidious, and with the aid of technology, more destructive than ever before.
Social media provides an endless buffet of supply. Digital communication allows for manipulation on a mass scale. Algorithms feed the outrage, the division, the us-versus-them mentality that narcissists thrive on. The game is the same, but the playground has expanded exponentially.
Breadcrumbing vs. Gaslighting: Two Tools, One Goal
In this digital age, two tactics have become particularly prevalent. They are often confused, but they serve different purposes in the narcissist's toolbox.
Dropping small, sporadic "crumbs" of attention—an occasional text, a like on social media, a vague promise—to keep you hooked without ever committing.
Systematically denying events, twisting facts, and telling you that you are "crazy," or "paranoid," until you doubt your own mind.
The Goal
To keep you on the hook for ego supply, a backup option who is always waiting.
To gain total power and control by becoming the arbiter of your reality.
The Behavior
Inconsistent, flaky, avoidant of depth or real connection.
Direct denial, blame-shifting, reality-twisting.
The Impact
Confusion, anxiety, insecurity, and wasted time waiting for something real.
Loss of confidence, isolation, dependence on the manipulator, and potential mental breakdown.
An honest person does neither. An honest person does not give crumbs to keep you hoping, and an honest person does not erase your truth and experiences.
Breadcrumbing manipulates your hope. Gaslighting manipulates your mind. Both are designed to keep you under control.
The narcissist, no matter how skilled, cannot operate alone. They require an audience. They require backup. They require enablers.
"There are people who sit on the sidelines and watch someone else being whipped. They could step in and demand that it stop. They have the power to do so. What do they do? Nothing. The narcissist depends on these weak-willed people. Abusing people isn't so much fun if it's only a party of two."
Enablers are not innocent. They are not neutral. They are active participants guided by self-interest. They choose not to help the target. They choose to look away.
And sometimes, they do more than just watch. They become flying monkeys.
The Flying Monkeys
The term comes from The Wizard of Oz—the Wicked Witch's minions who do her dirty work. In psychological terms, flying monkeys are people who act on behalf of the narcissist to abuse, manipulate, or harass the target.
How narcissists use them:
Smear Campaigns: Flying monkeys spread lies and misinformation to ruin the target's reputation, reinforcing the narcissist's victim narrative.
Gaslighting by Proxy: They tell the target, "You're overreacting," or "They're not so bad," reinforcing the narcissist's distorted reality.
Surveillance and Harassment: They spy on the target and report back, or directly engage in harassment, allowing the narcissist to maintain a "clean" image.
Isolation: By turning friends, family, or colleagues against the target, they complete the circle of isolation that Hirigoyen described.
Why do they do it?
Some are gullible and genuinely believe the narcissist's narrative. Others share similar narcissistic traits and enjoy the drama. But many are simply terrified. They have seen what happens to the target, and they will do anything to avoid becoming the next one.
"The abuser relies upon them not to back up the target. Before any attacks begin, a morally disordered person will carefully plan the battle. This can take months, or even longer, before direct hits are launched. Only if it's clear that there's an excellent chance of decimating a target does the warfare begin. If there's a solid support system, the abuser won't make a move."
This means the enablers are not just bystanders. They are the variables that can make or break the plan. The narcissist knows this. That is why so much effort goes into creating chaos and confusion—it makes it easier for enablers to rationalize their position. They may even begin to believe the target deserves what they are getting.
"The collective betrayal, which comes from the camp of these enablers, is even more devastating than the primary source of abuse."
This is the deepest wound. Targets watch as one by one, the people they thought were friends slink away as the battle intensifies. The isolation is not just physical; it is existential. It makes you question whether you were ever loved at all.
But here is what the target must remember: Their silence is not your shame.
Their choice to enable is about their own fear, their own self-interest, their own unhealed wounds. It is not a reflection of your worth.
What To Do
If you recognize yourself in this—whether as a target, or as someone who has witnessed abuse and stayed silent—there is a way forward.
For the target:
Set boundaries. Limit or cut off contact with anyone acting as an intermediary for the narcissist.
Use the Grey Rock Method. Be uninteresting, unresponsive, and emotionally neutral when engagement is unavoidable.
Do not engage in defending yourself. Flying monkeys are not looking for truth; they are looking for drama. Feeding it only prolongs the game.
Heal your own childhood wounds. This is the only lasting protection. Find a safe therapeutic space to resolve your own repression. The narcissist's radar cannot find what you have already healed.
For the enabler—if you are reading this and recognizing yourself:
It is not too late to choose differently. Silence is a choice. Looking away is a choice. You have the power to step in, to speak up, to refuse to be a tool of destruction. The question is whether you will use it.
The Only Victory
The narcissist's game is ancient, but it is not invincible. It relies on blindness—on your blindness to their tactics, and on their blindness to their own pain. When you choose to see, when you choose to heal, when you choose to refuse the roles they assign, the game collapses.
Not because they stop playing. But because you stop being a player.
You were never the villain of their story. You were never the victim either. You were the target who finally moved out of range.
If this post resonates with you, I invite you to explore the foundational work of Alice Miller and Marie-France Hirigoyen. Their insights have guided countless survivors out of the fog and into clarity.
There is a moment in every encounter with a malignant narcissist that changes everything. It is the moment you stop asking "What is wrong with me?" and start asking "What game are they playing?"
In her groundbreaking book Stalking the Soul, Marie-France Hirigoyen describes the process of workplace emotional abuse with chilling accuracy. She writes about how the real victim becomes stigmatized:
"They say she's impossible to work with, has a terrible disposition, or even that she's crazy. They attribute to her character the consequences of the conflict, forgetting what she was before or what she is now in another context. Pushed to the limit, she often becomes what the employer wants her to become."
This is the narcissist's magic trick. They create chaos, then blame you for the mess. They push you to the edge, then point at you for being unstable. They isolate you so that your only reflection comes from their distorted mirror.
But Hirigoyen uses the word "victim." I prefer another word: Target.
Because a target is not a victim. A target is someone who is being aimed at. And once you know you are being aimed at, you can move.
The Stigmatization: How They Manufacture Your "Madness"
The first step in psychological destruction is always the same: isolation.
"Once the decision has been made to psychologically destroy an employee, in order to forestall any possible defense, the person must be isolated by breaking up potential alliances. It's much more difficult to rebel if you're alone, especially if you've been made to believe that everyone is against you."
The narcissist cannot afford for you to have outside perspectives. Other people might validate your reality. Other people might say, "Wait, that doesn't sound right." So those alliances must be severed.
They do this through triangulation—pitting people against each other. They drop subtle hints. They express "concern" about your behavior to others. They plant seeds of doubt so that when you finally reach out for support, you find the bridges have already been burned.
And then comes the stigmatization. You are labeled as "difficult." As "dramatic." As "crazy."
The goal? Hirigoyen states it plainly:
"The goal of the abusive individual is to gain or maintain power by whatever means possible or else to mask his own incompetence. In order to accomplish this, he must get rid of anyone who impedes his progress or sees through him."
You are not being destroyed because of who you are. You are being destroyed because of what you see.
The Victim Card: Their Favorite Role
All malignant narcissists, sociopaths, and psychopaths share one favorite costume:the Victim.
They will weaponize their past. They will weep about how cruelly they are treated. They will look you in the eyes and tell you thatyouare the abuser, thatyouare the unstable one, thatyouare the reason everything is falling apart.
This is the ultimate deflection. If they can make you the villain, they never have to look at themselves.
But something shifts when the target begins to see clearly.
When you can articulate what is really taking place—when you can name the games, identify the patterns, and trust your own perception—you cease to be a victim. Not because the abuse stops, but because your relationship to it changes.
You stop internalizing. You stop explaining. You stop hoping they will change.
The Game: Recognizing the Mechanics
Narcissists rely on a predictable, cyclical set of tactics to maintain control. Once you learn to recognize them, they lose their power.
Threat → Injury → Defense → Control. This is the loop.
Here is what it looks like in practice:
Gaslighting: Making you doubt your own sanity. "That never happened." "You're too paranoid." "You're imagining things."
Projection: Accusing you of the very things they are doing. The liar calls you dishonest. The cheat calls you untrustworthy. The abuser calls you abusive.
Triangulation: Pitting you against others to keep you insecure and isolated. "Everyone at work thinks you're difficult, but I'm defending you."
Love-Bombing & Devaluation: Showering you with affection to hook you, then withdrawing it to make you crave their approval. The cycle creates trauma bonds that are incredibly difficult to break.
Playing the Victim: The ultimate reset button. When cornered, they flip the script and make you feel guilty for their toxic behavior.
When you see these patterns clearly, you stop personalizing. You understand that their rage, their lies, and their coldness are not about your shortcomings. They are about their internal emptiness. They are about maintaining power at any cost.
Alice Miller, in Breaking Down the Wall of Silence, offers a vital warning:
"The unconscious compulsion to revenge repressed injuries is more powerful than reason. That is the lesson that all tyrants teach us. One should not expect judiciousness from a mad person motivated by compulsive panic. One should, however, protect oneself from such person."
This is crucial. Do not expect reason from someone in the grip of compulsion. Do not expect fairness from someone who needs you to be wrong so they can feel right. You cannot reason your way out of a game someone else is determined to play.
But you can protect yourself.
The Transformation: From Victim to Survivor
The moment you see through a narcissist's games, you stop playing the role they assigned you. This is the break in the cycle.
Here is what changes:
You stop trying to change them. You cannot fix someone who does not believe they are broken. You cannot heal someone who uses their wounds as weapons.
You stop explaining yourself. They do not misunderstand you; they simply do not care about your truth. Explanations are just more information they can use against you.
You stop reacting to their emotional traps. When you refuse to be the Hero, the Victim, or the Villain in their drama, the drama collapses. Not because they stop trying, but because you stop participating.
You set boundaries and walk away. This is not about winning. It is about protecting your mental health and staying free. It is about reclaiming the energy they have been siphoning.
Hirigoyen writes about how the victim, pushed to the limit, often becomes what the employer wants them to become. This is the danger of staying in the game too long. You risk internalizing their narrative. You risk becoming the "crazy" one they always said you were.
But when you leave—when you refuse to play—you prove that their narrative was never the truth. It was just a script.
The Only Victory
There is no satisfaction in dealing with a malignant narcissist. There is no moment of final vindication where they admit you were right and they were wrong. That is not how the game works.
The only victory is your refusal to play.
The only victory is walking away with your sanity intact, your perception clear, and your life reclaimed.
You were never the villain of their story. You were never the victim either.
You were the target who finally moved out of range.
Social engineering, at its heart, is a manipulative game, and it uses many of the same tactics that narcissists employ in their personal relationships.
The Overlap: Why It Looks Like the Same Game
Both social engineering and narcissistic manipulation are about influence and control without the target's informed consent. They exploit human psychology, and the toolkits are remarkably similar:
Exploitation of Trust: Both build false rapport to lower your defenses. A social engineer might pose as a helpful IT technician; a narcissist might present themselves as a soulmate or a caring friend.
Information Gathering: Both use seemingly innocent questions to gather personal details. This is "pretexting" for a social engineer, and "love bombing" or "trading secrets" for a narcissist. They are building a profile to use against you.
Creating a Debts or Obligations: The "quid pro quo" tactic. A social engineer might offer a small gift or piece of information to make you feel obligated to give something in return. A narcissist might do you a small favor, only to hold it over your head later: "After everything I've done for you..."
Emotional Manipulation: While social engineers often target fear (your bank account is compromised!) or urgency (act now!), narcissists are masters of a wider range: pity, guilt, flattery, and fear of abandonment.
Playing on Cognitive Biases: Both understand that humans are not perfectly rational. They exploit:
The Liking Bias: We say yes to people we like. (Social engineers are charming; narcissists are often the life of the party).
The Reciprocity Bias: We feel a need to return favors.
Social Proof: We follow the crowd. ("Everyone else has already updated their software," or "Everyone can see you're being unreasonable.")
Scarcity: We want what's rare or about to be taken away. (A limited-time offer, or the threat of a narcissist withdrawing their love).
The Key Difference: The "Why" (Intent and Scope)
This is where the phrase "the narcissist game people play" becomes the crucial distinction. The goal is fundamentally different.
Feature
Social Engineering
Narcissistic Manipulation
Primary Goal
Transactional. To get a specific thing: passwords, data, money, unauthorized access. It's a means to an external end.
Relational/Egoic. To feed the ego, maintain a sense of superiority, and have a constant source of "narcissistic supply" (admiration, control, drama). The relationship itself is the game.
Target
Often impersonal. You are a means to an end, a statistic. A "user" with access to something valuable.
Deeply personal. You are chosen for your specific qualities (empathy, status, vulnerability) that can provide supply. The goal is to keep you engaged.
Duration
Usually short-term. The goal is to get in, get what they want, and get out before they're caught.
Long-term. The narcissist aims to create a cycle of idealization, devaluation, and discard to keep you trapped in the relationship for a continuous source of supply.
Emotional Involvement
The social engineer may fake emotions, but they are emotionally detached. It's a performance.
The narcissist's manipulation is driven by their own deep-seated insecurities and lack of empathy. Their need for control is an integral part of their personality.
Aftermath
Once the data is stolen, the game is over. The connection is severed.
The game is never truly over. Even after a discard, the narcissist may try to "hoover" you back in for more supply.
Examples to Illustrate the Difference
Scenario: Someone sends you a frantic email, pretending to be your CEO, asking you to buy gift cards immediately.
This is Social Engineering. The goal is the money from the gift cards. They don't care about you personally.
Scenario: Your partner constantly criticizes your friends, makes you feel guilty for spending time with your family, and then tells you that they are the only one who truly understands you.
This is Narcissistic Manipulation. The goal is to isolate you and make you dependent on them for emotional validation, thus securing a steady stream of supply.
Conclusion:
Social engineering looks and feels like "the narcissist game people play." It's a brilliant analogy because it reveals the fundamental manipulation at play. The tactics are the same.
The distinction lies in the fact that social engineering is a tactic—a tool used for a specific, often financial, goal. Narcissistic manipulation is part of a personality disorder—a deeply ingrained pattern of behavior used to regulate the narcissist's own fragile ego by controlling others.
So, in a way, we could say a narcissist is a social engineer for whom the ultimate prize isn't a password or a bank account, but you. Your attention, your admiration, your despair—your entire emotional self becomes the system they are trying to hack.
described the two primary "costumes" a narcissist wears in their social engineering game. They are masters of these two roles, and their power comes from their ability to switch between them seamlessly.
If social engineering is the game, then playing the Hero or the Victim are the two most effective character classes. Both are designed to achieve the same goal: control and narcissistic supply.
Let's break down how each role functions as a power play.
1. Playing the Hero: The "Savior" Complex
In this role, the narcissist gains power by positioning themselves as a protector, a mentor, or the only solution. They create or exploit a problem, and then ride to the rescue.
The Tactic: They present themselves as perfect, competent, powerful, and indispensable. They often seek out partners or friends who are vulnerable, going through a crisis, or have low self-esteem.
How It Grants Power:
Indebtedness: If they "save" you, you owe them. This debt can never be fully repaid, giving them a lifetime of leverage. ("I was the only one who was there for you when you had nothing.")
Control Through Guidance: Their "help" often comes with strings attached. They know what's best for you. Your success becomes their success, and they will take credit for it. If you fail, it's because you didn't listen to them.
Unquestioning Admiration: The hero is supposed to be admired. This role guarantees a steady stream of praise and validation. They are the "knight in shining armor," and the spotlight must always be on them.
Classic Lines from the Hero:
"I'm the only one who really understands you."
"I built this; you'd be nothing without me."
"Let me fix that for you." (Without you asking, and then holding it over your head).
"I know what's best for us."
2. Playing the Victim: The "Poor Me" Gambit
In this role, the narcissist gains power by leveraging guilt, pity, and sympathy. They position themselves as the one who is constantly wronged by the world, by fate, or by you. This is a masterclass in deflection and guilt-tripping.
The Tactic: They portray themselves as helpless, misunderstood, and persecuted. They will paint a picture of a world that is constantly conspiring against them. Any criticism or boundary you set is framed as another attack on the poor, innocent victim.
How It Grants Power:
Deflection of Accountability: A victim can't be held responsible for their actions. If they lash out, it's because of their "terrible childhood" or "awful ex." You end up comforting them for the hurt they caused you.
Emotional Blackmail: Their suffering becomes a tool. "If you leave me, I'll fall apart." "How can you be so cruel to me after everything I've been through?" Your needs and boundaries are sacrificed to soothe their perpetual victimhood.
Control Through Guilt: You become a caretaker, walking on eggshells to avoid "upsetting" them. Your energy is consumed by managing their emotional state, which gives them total control of the relationship's emotional landscape.
Classic Lines from the Victim:
"Why is everyone always so mean to me?"
"I can't believe you would say that to me, especially knowing how sensitive I am."
"You're just like everyone else; you're abandoning me, too."
"After all I've sacrificed for you, this is how you treat me?"
The Ultimate Power Move: The Role Swap
This is where the true genius of the narcissist's social engineering lies. They are not locked into one role. They are fluid. The ability to switch from Hero to Victim in an instant is what leaves their targets utterly confused and off-balance.
The Cycle:
Hero Rides In: They meet you when you're down. They build you up, solve your problems, and become your everything. You feel eternally grateful.
Cracks Appear: You start to notice their controlling nature. You set a small boundary or question them. You are no longer playing your role as the grateful admirer.
The Flip to Victim: The moment you challenge them, they instantly become the victim. "I've done everything for you, I saved you from your terrible life, and now you're attacking me? You're so ungrateful and cruel. I'm the one who's really hurting here."
You Become the Caretaker: Suddenly, the argument isn't about your boundary. It's about their pain. You drop your complaint and rush to comfort them, apologizing for being "so mean."
Power Restored. They have successfully deflected your challenge, reasserted control, and secured a fresh dose of supply—this time as the victim receiving your comfort. The Hero will likely re-emerge later, completing the loop.
Tying It Back to Social Engineering
Think of the classic social engineering pretexts. The "Hero" is the IT guy who saves you from a computer virus (that he may have sent). The "Victim" is the stranded traveler begging for your help to wire money.
The narcissist simply takes these short-term cons and stretches them into a long-term relationship dynamic. The roles of Hero and Victim are not just characters they play; they are the very mechanisms by which they hack human emotion to gain the ultimate prize: power over another person's reality.
the Hero, the Victim, and the Villain.
In their narrative, there are only three roles, and if you refuse to be the Admiring Audience (for the Hero) or the Caretaker/Rescuer (for the Victim), they have to force you into the only remaining slot to explain why their game isn't working: The Villain.
Here is how they cast you as the villain, and why your refusal to play is the most powerful (and dangerous) move you can make.
1. The Casting Process: How You Become the Villain
The narcissist's internal world is a drama where they are the star. For them to be the Hero or the Victim, someone else must be the obstacle, the persecutor, or the bad guy.
If you set a boundary: "I won't be able to help you with that." In their mind, this isn't a healthy limit; it is a selfish act of sabotage. You are now the Villain standing in the way of their needs.
If you refuse to be the Audience: You don't applaud their Heroic deeds, or you fail to gasp in horror at their Victimhood. By not giving them the emotional reaction they want, you are "withholding." In their narrative, a person who withholds praise or pity is a persecutor.
If you expose the truth: You catch them in a lie or point out an inconsistency. This is the ultimate villain move in their eyes. You aren't seeking clarity; you are "attacking" them.
2. The "Narcissistic Injury": Why Your Refusal Hurts Them
You are spot on: when you refuse to play the Villain (or any role they assign), you cause a Narcissistic Injury (also called Narcissistic Wound).
To understand this, you have to understand that the narcissist doesn't just play a game; they are the game. Their entire identity (the "False Self") is held together by these external validations. They don't have a solid, internal sense of self.
The Supply is Their Fuel: When you play the role they assign, you are giving them "supply." The Hero gets admiration (good supply). The Victim gets sympathy (also good supply, because it confirms they are important enough to be wronged).
Withholding is Starvation: When you refuse to play—when you go "No Contact" or "Grey Rock"—you stop the flow of supply.
The Injury: Without supply, their fragile ego collapses. They are forced to confront (for a split second) the emptiness inside. That pain—the feeling of non-existence, of worthlessness—is the injury.
3. The Meltdown: The Tantrum of a Broken Player
When you cause a narcissistic injury by refusing to be the Villain, the reaction is explosive. They cannot process the idea that you simply opted out of the game. They must find a way to get their supply back, and the easiest way is to double down on casting you as the Villain.
This is often called Narcissistic Rage. It is the reaction of someone who is emotionally dying of starvation and lashing out to force-feed themselves.
Smear Campaigns: Since you won't play the Villain in front of them, they will go to your friends, family, or coworkers and tell the story there. "Look at how horribly they treated me!" They are trying to force others to see you as the Villain so they can reclaim their Victim status.
Hoovering (The Trap Reset): They might try to switch roles rapidly to suck you back in.
They might try the Victim: "I'm so hurt, how could you do this to me? I need you." (Trying to make you the Villain who abandoned them).
If that fails, they might try the Hero: "I forgive you for how you've treated me. I'm the bigger person. Let me help you." (Trying to make you the Villain who needs saving).
Escalation: If you remain steadfast, the rage can turn to outright destruction. They want to "punish" the Villain. They might try to get you fired, turn your children against you, or spread malicious lies.
The Only Way to Win: Refusing the Game
You stated the golden rule perfectly: "The only way to stay safe is to refuse to engage with them."
Once you understand that the roles of Hero, Victim, and Villain are the only options they offer, you realize that choosing any of them is still playing their game.
If you fight the "Villain" label, you are engaging.
If you try to prove you are the "Hero," you are engaging.
If you try to show them you are also a "Victim" to gain their sympathy, you are engaging.
Safety lies in exiting the theater entirely.
When they try to cast you as the Villain, and you simply shrug and walk away, you aren't just denying them supply; you are demonstrating that their drama is irrelevant. You are living proof that their game isn't the only reality.
And to a narcissist, your peaceful, detached existence is the most insulting thing of all. It is the ultimate narcissistic injury, because it shows them that the world keeps spinning without them at the center.
The Narcissist's Two Costumes: How Playing Hero or Victim Keeps Them in Control
If you have ever tried to have a genuine, honest relationship with a narcissist, you know it feels like stepping into a play where you never got a script. No matter what the issue is, you always seem to end up in the wrong role.
That is because, in the narcissist's mind, there is a very strict casting call. There are only two leading roles:the Heroandthe Victim.The narcissist plays both. Their goal is to ensure you are cast as the supporting act—the Admiring Audience or the Guilty Caretaker. And if you refuse those parts? They will rewrite the script to make you theVillain.
Understanding this dynamic is the first step to escaping the drama.
The Two Masks of the Narcissist
Narcissists lack a stable, internal sense of self. They cannot simply "be." Instead, they mustperformto get the emotional fuel they need (often called "narcissistic supply"). They have two primary costumes for this performance.
1. The Hero Complex: Control Through Superiority
When a narcissist wears the Hero mask, they position themselves as the savior, the expert, or the indispensable one.
How it looks:They rush to "save the day," offer unsolicited advice, and present themselves as the only ones capable of fixing you or a situation. They may seek out partners who are vulnerable or going through a crisis.
The Goal:Domination and admiration. By being the Hero, they create a power imbalance. You are the damsel in distress; they are the knight. This makes you dependent on them and indebted to them.
Creating the Villain:A hero cannot exist without a villain. To make themselves look honorable, they must invent or exaggerate an enemy. This could be an external force (a bad boss, an unfair world) or, eventually,you—if you stop appreciating their "heroics."
2. The Victim Mentality: Deflection Through Martyrdom
When the Hero routine stops working—usually when someone sets a boundary or dares to criticize them—the narcissist executes a flawless costume change into the Victim.
How it looks:Suddenly, the tables turn. They are the ones being wronged. They will weaponize past traumas, hardships, or sacrifices to excuse their current bad behavior. "I can't believe you would say that to me, knowing how much I've suffered."
The Goal:Accountability avoidance. A victim cannot be held responsible for their actions. If they lash out, it's because of their terrible childhood. If they lie, it's because you are "too judgmental." They twist facts to blame others for their own wrongdoings.
The Accusation Tactic:They often accuseyouof being the aggressor. If you raise a valid concern, you are framed as "too sensitive," "overreacting," or "abusive." This gaslighting makes you question your own reality.
The Oscillation: The Art of the Role-Swap
The true mastery of the narcissist lies not in playing one role, but in their ability to oscillate between them rapidly to keep you off-balance.
It often follows a predictable cycle:
The Hero Rides In:They charm you, fix your problems, and make you feel like the most special person in the world.
The Challenge:You eventually notice a pattern of control or disrespect. You set a boundary or express a need.
The Flip to Victim:The moment you challenge them, the Hero mask drops, and the Victim mask appears. "AftereverythingI've done for you (Hero talk), I can't believe you would treat me this way! You're so cruel. I'm the one who's really hurting here." (Victim talk).
They use the goodwill earned as the Hero to fuel the guilt-trip delivered as the Victim. The message is clear:"I saved you, so you have no right to complain, and if you do, you are hurting me."
The Ultimate Goal: Power and Subordination
These roles are not just quirks of personality; they are tools of control.
Avoiding Consequences:By being the Hero, they are above reproach. By being the Victim, they are beneath it. Either way, they never land in the role they deserve:the Villain.
Maintaining Control:The constant shifting keeps you confused. You spend your energy trying to figure out "which version" of them you are dealing with today, rather than focusing on your own needs.
Keeping You Subordinate:Whether you are admiring the Hero or comforting the Victim, your energy is focused entirely onthem. You are kept in a reactive, subordinate position.
The Only Way to Opt Out
So, what happens when you refuse to play? What happens when the Hero boasts, and you don't applaud? What happens when the Victim cries, and you don't comfort them?
You commit the unpardonable sin: you refuse to engage.
When the narcissist can't cast you as their supporting act, they try to force you into the only remaining role: the Villain. They will launch smear campaigns, rage at you, and try to make you the monster in their story to reclaim their status as the victim.
The only way to stay safe—to truly win—is to refuse the game entirely. You cannot win an Oscar in their movie. You can only walk out of the theater.
By understanding these roles, you stop being a confused actor and become an observer. And from the audience, you can see the play for what it is: a repetitive, tragic performance designed to keep one person at the center of a universe that was never theirs to control.
My side of the story doesn't matter anymore. Life happened, I healed, but most importantly, I learned who deserves a seat at my table and who will never sit at it again.
People lack accountability, then say, 'You could've talked to me.' No, I couldn't. You don't listen. You deflect. You twist everything into an attack and then play victim. Conversations with you aren't healing; they're exhausting. And honestly, I don't owe my peace to someone who only shows up to win an argument, not to understand.
Too many dead people walking around, no empathy, no emotional intelligence, no good intentions for anyone. Just looking to drain people's energy and sabotage whoever they can control or manipulate.
Never re-friend or re-family anyone back into your life if they've tried to ruin your character, finances, or relationships. A snake may shed its skin, but it's still a snake. Always.
Of course, I'm different from them. They walk with anyone just to avoid being alone. I walk alone, so I don't have to walk with just anyone.
Don't argue with a narcissist; their lies are their truths, and they want to watch you go crazy trying to prove it.
I don't walk away to teach people a lesson; I walk away because I learned mine.
The most beautiful gift in the world is time, because when you give your time to someone, you give them those moments of life that can never come back.
Before you argue with someone, ask yourself: "Is this person mentally mature enough to grasp the concept of different perspectives?" If not, there is no point in arguing.
No revenge because people who are naturally ugly inside end up destroying their own lives anyway.
Walk away from people who put you down. Walk away from fights that will never be solved. Walk away from trying to please people who will never see your worth. The more you walk away from things that poison your soul, the healthier you will be.
Life goes on, with or without friends. You were born alone, you'll die alone. Focus on yourself.
When you have a heart of gold and pure intentions, you don't lose anyone- they lose you.
Signs You're Being Used:
1. They only contact you when they need something.
2. Your time is expected, but theirs is always "too busy."
3. You give support, but when you need help, they disappear.
4. They keep you close only while you are useful.
5. Your boundaries are ignored, then guilt is used to pull you back.
6. You start feeling like a tool instead of a person.
7. Your body feels calmer the moment you create distance.
8. Remember: being needed is not the same as being valued.
One day, you will realize that being the scapegoat of a narcissistic family is actually a compliment to your character.
A narcissist will be angry at you for finding out the truth about them.
You think disrespect is an insult. It is not. It is information.
It shows you the person in front of you has low character, poor judgment, or hidden insecurity. It shows you they are not your people. It shows you that it is time to move on.
A lion does not get angry when a sheep disapproves of its roar. It simply keeps walking.
"Narcissists are the world's biggest hypocrites. They present themselves to the outside world as ethical and of the highest moral character. However, behind closed doors, they will pathologically lie, abuse, insult, manipulate, gaslight, and terrorize their family with massive rage. And they have zero guilt, shame, or remorse. They believe they are entitled to do it." Jill Wise
Distance is the only answer to disrespect.
Don't react.
Don't argue
Don't get involved in drama.
Simply remove your presence.
Rowan Atkinson
Ego- Prevents you from learning from others.
Envy - Prevents you from focusing on yourself.
Anger - Prevents you from seeing clearly.
Ignorance - Prevents you from making good decisions.
Fear - Prevents you from seizing opportunities
BILLIONAIRES DON'T EARN THEIR WEALTH
There are two ways to become a billionaire:
1. Inherit it. (44% of all billionaires)
2. Cold-blooded, merciless exploitation of the working class
If you make $156k a year (triple the US median income), it would take you 6,410 years to earn a billion dollars. If you make the federal minimum wage, it'd take you almost 70,000 years.
A billionaire is not working 70,000 times harder than a janitor. Labor creates wealth.