A narcissist "wants" you for what you provide to their ego—attention, admiration, and validation—often starting with intense "love-bombing" (excessive praise, gifts) to hook you, followed by manipulation, self-centeredness, exploitation, and a lack of empathy, making you feel special while actually controlling you for their benefit. They show they "want" you through grand gestures to gain trust, but the focus remains on their needs, not yours, using you as an accessory to fuel their inflated self-image.
The best way to know if a narcissist loves you is by looking at their behavior over time rather than just relying on words or expressions of affection. If they are consistently putting your needs first, even when it doesn't directly benefit them, then it may be possible that they truly care for you.
This is perhaps the most damaging thing a narcissist will do when you start standing up for yourself – they'll make you question your own sanity. They'll imply, or even outright state, that you're overreacting, being irrational, or even losing your mind. This is a form of gaslighting and it's incredibly harmful.
These six common symptoms of narcissism can help you identify a narcissist:
Do not give the narcissist a lot of energy when engaging. Be direct when answering questions. Speak with factual points. Do not engage emotionally. Monitor your body language. No nods or shrugs. Do not engage in drama, back and forth communication. Be as boring, non-responsive, and uninterested as possible.
When you stop giving a narcissist attention, they feel a profound sense of loss, as their self-esteem relies on external validation, leading them to escalate tactics like manipulation, charm, guilt-tripping, and smear campaigns to regain control, but with consistent boundaries, they may eventually lose interest and move on, though the initial withdrawal often involves intense attempts to re-engage you.
Believe they are superior to others and can only spend time with or be understood by equally special people. Be critical of and look down on people they feel are not important. Expect special favors and expect other people to do what they want without questioning them. Take advantage of others to get what they want.
Five key signs of a narcissist include a grandiose sense of self-importance, an excessive need for admiration, a strong sense of entitlement, lack of empathy for others' feelings, and a tendency to exploit or manipulate people for personal gain, all stemming from a fragile ego and deep insecurity. They often boast, feel unique, get easily slighted by criticism, and disregard others' needs.
As a Harvard-trained psychologist, I've found that there are seven phrases you'll hear from highly narcissistic people:
The number one trait of a narcissist is often considered a grandiose sense of self-importance (grandiosity) combined with a profound lack of empathy, where they see others as tools for their own gain and have an inflated, often unrealistic, view of their own superiority, needing constant admiration without acknowledging others' feelings or needs, as highlighted by HelpGuide.org and The Hart Centre. This core creates other behaviors like entitlement, manipulation, and arrogance, making them believe they deserve special treatment.
🤔🚫 Five Questions a Narcissist Can't Answer 🚫🤔 Here are five questions a narcissist simply can't answer: 1️⃣ Anything regarding the truth 🧐 2️⃣ Anything about giving credit to others 🙅♂️ 3️⃣ Anything about failing or losing ❌ 4️⃣ Anything about vulnerability or their true self 🌫️ 5️⃣ Anything about their interactions ...
The "3 E's of Narcissism" refer to three core traits often seen in individuals with narcissistic tendencies: Empathy impairment, a profound lack of understanding or sharing of others' feelings; Entitlement, a belief they deserve special treatment and admiration; and Exploitation, using others for personal gain without guilt. These characteristics highlight how narcissists often struggle to connect emotionally, feel superior, and manipulate people to meet their own needs.
There's no point about arguing with a narcissist because they don't care at all about reasoning and what's actually true. They just care about making it sound like they're right, there's an endless number of baseless arguments they can make up in response to anything you say.
Terrifying because once a narcissist knows that you've figured them out, you've just become a threat to their carefully crafted world. They don't take kindly to being exposed. The masks they've been wearing fall away and the real emotional warfare begins.
The Types of People Narcissists Seek
Narcissists may see them as easy targets for manipulation and control. On the other hand, some narcissists are attracted to strong and independent individuals. They may view these individuals as a challenge to conquer or as a means to enhance their own image.
The concept was introduced by Otto Fenichel in 1938, to describe a type of admiration, interpersonal support or sustenance drawn by an individual from their environment and essential to their self-esteem.
The 10 Harmful Traits of a Narcissist (With Real-Life Impact)
Five common habits associated with this disorder include grandiosity, entitlement, attention-seeking, manipulation, and lack of empathy.
“You're wrong.” Granted, no one likes to be told they're wrong. But it's especially irksome to a narcissist because it challenges their sense of authority or infallibility. “It's an accusation, which is going to bring up defensiveness right away,” Potthoff says.
Narcissists are attracted to dynamic and appealing partners, individuals who appear as if they have high self-esteem but who also have a "pocket" or two of low self-esteem.
The way to outsmart a narcissist, is to know the game they're trying to play, and opt out of it! Don't even think about stepping out onto the field, because they will out play you! The game narcissistic people play, is called staging dramas and setting traps.
Narcissistic traits often peak in late adolescence and early adulthood (around ages 14-23), particularly with grandiosity and entitlement, as individuals seek identity and status, but then tend to decline as people mature and face life's realities, though some individuals with NPD may see intensification in these years before a potential mellowing in middle age.
Seduction plays a part in this romantic phase. Some narcissists engage in love-bombing. To differing degrees, they shower you with attention, gifts, compliments, expensive dinners or trips, and even promises of commitment to “win” you over.
The most overlooked symptom of narcissism is aggressive, habitual non-listening, where they talk excessively and dismiss or interrupt others with phrases like "but..." to regain control, masking deeper issues like fragility and a need for admiration, especially in covert or vulnerable types who often appear charming but are inwardly insecure. It's overlooked because it's subtle, masked by faked interest, and often mistaken for simple rudeness rather than a core disorder driven by a fragile self-image and lack of empathy.