Narcissists like partners who provide a constant supply of admiration, validation, and power, often choosing highly empathetic, attractive, or high-status individuals who will worship them and fulfill their needs, while disliking self-sufficiency or independence in a partner because it threatens their control. They seek relationships as extensions of themselves, expecting partners to serve their grandiosity through adoration, mirroring their feelings, and boosting their image.
Narcissists choose partners who provide admiration, control, utility, and low-threat compliance. They favor empathy, agreeableness, insecurity, attractiveness, and caretaking tendencies depending on their subtype and goals.
What should I say to someone who is narcissistic?
Narcissists are often attracted to empathetic, nurturing, and people-pleasing women because they are more likely to prioritize the narcissist's needs over their own. They may also be drawn to confident, successful women as a source of admiration and status.
How to talk to a narcissist: 9 smart ways to handle conversations
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.
What Happens When You Go No Contact With a Narcissist? Expect a wide range of reactions when going no contact with a narcissist. The narcissist may love bomb you, announce they left you first, or say you don't deserve them. They may even seek revenge by spreading rumors to damage your reputation.
If you are a people pleaser, who likes others to need them, likes to be indispensable to others, you may find that you are attracted to narcissists and that they are attracted to you. Someone with narcissistic tendencies will be able to identify others who will allow them to be dominant in the relationship.
As a Harvard-trained psychologist, I've found that there are seven phrases you'll hear from highly narcissistic people:
The 5 main habits of a narcissist center on an inflated self-image, need for adoration, lack of empathy, sense of entitlement, and manipulative behavior, often seen as grandiosity, constant need for admiration, inability to understand others' feelings, expecting special treatment, and exploiting people for personal gain. These traits, rooted in Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD), create a cycle of seeking validation, demeaning others, and using manipulation for control.
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.
People with narcissistic personality disorder are often manipulative, which can be highly destructive. Their manipulative communication takes two forms: positive reinforcement with empty promises and flattery, and negative reinforcement with blame-shifting, criticism, and deception.
As mentioned previously, narcissists are attracted to trophy partners, whom they see as mirror images of their own faultless self and as a springboard for their own status (Campbell, 1999, Grapsas et al., 2020, Seidman, 2016).
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 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.
The 10 Harmful Traits of a Narcissist (With Real-Life Impact)
A narcissistic partner may often avoid taking responsibility for their actions by shifting the blame onto the victim—a control tactic commonly seen in abusive relationships, which can sometimes foster trauma bonding. They might say, “You made me do this,” or “It's your fault I'm like this.”
Five common habits associated with this disorder include grandiosity, entitlement, attention-seeking, manipulation, and lack of empathy.
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.
From this perspective, it might be most rewarding for dispositionally dominant individuals (such as narcissists) to seek romantic partners who are low in dominance, because these cannot impose submissiveness on them.
Someone attractive, successful, wealthy, or talented who enhances the narcissist's self-esteem or lifestyle. Someone who admires them and who won't compete with them. Someone non-confrontational, who avoids conflict and doesn't express strong opinions or tell them that they're wrong. Someone without strong boundaries.
Your Moving On Makes the Narcissist's Head Spin
Narcissists count on you to stay connected to them. They do not believe you will have the strength to finally put a stop to the manipulations. They know you care, and they will take everything you have to give them as long as you give it.
By understanding narcissistic behavior patterns, setting clear boundaries, practicing emotional detachment, and prioritizing self-care, we can protect our mental health and maintain healthier relationships. Remember that you deserve to have healthy relationships free from manipulation and abuse.
Identifying Narcissistic Rage
Rage can be triggered by criticism, perceived rejection, or any situation where they feel they're not being treated as the special and important person they believe themselves to be.