When you ignore a narcissistic boss, they are likely to escalate their behavior to regain control and attention (their "narcissistic supply"). They view being ignored as a significant personal injury and a challenge to their superiority.
Ignoring a narcissist will enrage them because of their fragile egos. They'll feel humiliated and lash out against you to protect themselves. They may ignore you back, for a while anyway, to reassert their power. They may hurl insults at you, demean you or damage your reputation. They may become violent or threatening.
Try not to take their nature personally. Ignore insults, deal with gaslighting by recording what they say (for your own sanity) and act as though their words have no effect on you. Don't engage with them. Don't be vulnerable to them by sharing ANY personal information for them to wound you with.
What can you expect when you do confront a narcissist? Generally, they will resort to narcissistic rage (explosive or passive-aggressive) or denial. He or she may become enraged, deny everything, call you a liar, twist reality, blame you and then play the victim.
Here are some tips:
🤔🚫 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 ...
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.
As a Harvard-trained psychologist, I've found that there are seven phrases you'll hear from highly narcissistic people:
I wouldn't confront but rather find ways to heal from your pain from within yourself. I'm sorry you have had this pain in your life. Time and NO CONTACT does help.
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.
The following are 16 key phrases to disarm a narcissist:
How to apply the Grey Rock method?
3 signs your boss is a narcissist—'they don't appear to be listening and learning,' Harvard professor says
They deny that the relationship has changed: They ignore your boundaries because they are in denial of your decision to end your relationship with them. They feel challenged to get you back: Going no contact might lead the narcissist to try reaching and persuading you to return by any means necessary.
"A narcissist's greatest fear is being exposed for their true nature. To safeguard their carefully crafted reputation, they'll stop at nothing to conceal their abusive behavior , hiding behind a mask of deceit.
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.
Never say to them, they can never change
A narcissistic person is inherently oppositional. They will fight back on anything we ask them to do, just to hold their ground and exercise their freedom. If we tell them to do something, they commit to not doing it.
Narcissists Hate Being Ignored
Narcissists thrive on control. They feed off your reactions whether it's anger, frustration, sadness, or even love. Ignoring all of that removes their fuel.
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.
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.
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.”
A narcissist's apology is usually fake, manipulative, and lacks genuine remorse, focusing on shifting blame, avoiding responsibility, and regaining control rather than acknowledging wrongdoing, often using phrases like "I'm sorry if you were offended" or "I'm sorry but you started it," leaving the recipient feeling worse and unheard. They lack empathy and accountability, using these "fauxpologies" to disarm criticism, preserve their ego, and quickly move past conflict to get what they want.
Smear Campaign
The narcissist spreads rumors and lies and spills your secrets to make you look bad and get other people on their side. If you in some way challenge their dominance or they feel you are no longer under their control (e.g., if you question or confront them), they feel entitled to “destroy” you.
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.
Narcissists cannot handle being portrayed in an unfavorable light. To avoid the issues that can cause, confront their behaviors by focusing on yourself. Explain, using your predeveloped scripts, what you plan to do or how you need to tend to yourself, and avoid blaming language.