MarshaRice
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Pathological Narcissism., Psychosis, and Delusions
By: Dr. Sam Vaknin
http://samvak.tripod.com/journal91.html
Though the narcissistic personality is rigid its content is always in flux. Narcissists forever re-invent themselves, adapt their consumption of Narcissistic Supply to the 'marketplace", attuned to the needs of their "suppliers'. Like the performers that they are, they resonate with their "audience", giving it what it expects and wants. They are efficient instruments for the extraction and consumption of human reactions.
As a result of this interminable process of fine tuning, narcissists have no loyalties, no values, no doctrines, no beliefs, no affiliations, and no convictions. Their only constraint is their addiction to human attention, positive or negative.
Psychotics, by comparison, are fixated on a certain view of the world and of their place in it. They ignore any and all information that might challenge their delusions. Gradually, they retreat into the inner recesses of their tormented mind and become dysfunctional.
Narcissists can't afford to shut out the world because they so heavily depend on it for the regulation of their labile sense of self-worth. Owing to this dependence, they are hypersensitive and hypervigilant, alert to every bit of new data. They are continuously busy rearranging their self-delusions to incorporate new information in an ego-syntonic manner.
This is why the Narcissistic Personality Disorder is insufficient grounds for claiming a 'diminished capacity' (insanity) defence. Narcissists are never divorced from reality they crave it, and need it, and consume it in order to maintain the precarious balance of their disorganised, borderline-psychotic personality. All narcissists, even the freakiest ones, can tell right from wrong, act with intent, and are in full control of their faculties and actions.
**Or, are you talking about pathological narcissism and Brief Psychotic Disorder?
Pathological narcissism, malignant narcissism, narcissism, narcissistic tendencies, as clinical terms these are all different from NPD, which, by the way, last time I heard, is going to be dropped from the new DSM next year. This doctor in the article you quoted is giving his opinion of what narcissism and NPD are and how they are different from psychosis. This is understandable because many NPDs are child molesters and child killers, and try to argue insanity defense (i.e. psychosis). The legal constructs of differentation of APD, NPD, psychosis, and narcissism as a trait as opposed to a clinical diagnosis are semantic nightmares. Narcissism is a trait, just like sociopathy is a trait...in the proper amounts it can be good and quite healthy, but it can also be pathological--even without an NPD diagnosis. In the instance of the LISK offenders, I am of the opinion that the psychosis (delusions) is outweighing the narcissism. To put it another way, I think that the mission has become the important thing. The offender(s) in this case I believe are way too far gone in their own missions to care about some profilers trying to bait them.