Psychopath’s “Karma” Confirmed in Study (Patrick’s Triarchic Model, Hyperarousal)

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
  • The psychopath’s impulsive disinhibition results in adverse life outcomes as do, to a lesser extent his/her boldness and meanness (Triarchic Model of Patrick Fowels, and Krueger, 2009). Some psychopaths are prone to depression, anxiety, and suicide.
    LITERATURE
    “The personal cost of psychopathy: Impacts of triarchic psychopathy traits on impairment, internalizing, and life satisfaction,” by Kelci C. Davis, Nicholas Kavish, and Jaime L. Anderson, Personality and Individual Differences, Volume 219, March 2024, 112507
    doi.org/10.101...
    Find and Buy MOST of my BOOKS and eBOOKS in my Amazon Store: www.amazon.com...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 57

  • @nidaladil4150
    @nidaladil4150 6 місяців тому +48

    Thank you so much for the immense effort you have done and continue to do ❤ that's service to humanity

  • @maryvera123
    @maryvera123 6 місяців тому +14

    This video had a lot of information about psychopaths that surprised me. I particularly liked your last statements against splitting and labeling certain people as all bad.

  • @idiliusmidilius
    @idiliusmidilius 6 місяців тому +50

    You forgot to include lawyers!

  • @mannshaktide-addictionandr8971
    @mannshaktide-addictionandr8971 6 місяців тому +43

    Sir, Thanks for the information
    I was dealing with psychopath partner. I came to know about his series of broken relationships. Each and every relationship disrupted emotionally, financially and physically. Its been a year since I exposed. There is no Signs of Karma. Instead when ever he crosses me or pass by on road he stairs me with anger. Hope one day karma will knock his door.

  • @janndoe3718
    @janndoe3718 6 місяців тому +8

    To the first psychopath I encountered when I was 17 - others were not insects but marionettes. Then I met a few surgeons...
    I think medical schools should at least screen prospective students with the MMPI.

  • @dalefrank3713
    @dalefrank3713 6 місяців тому +41

    Thank you Uncle Sam

  • @bregjemarieke1434
    @bregjemarieke1434 6 місяців тому +28

    Maybe it’s interesting to study the way ( mis)usage of medication like valium ( Diazepam) affects the brain areas responsable for functions like fear. Or how medication like that, represses fear. What if someone started to use stuff like Diazepam in early adolescense to repress his anxiety, ( he secretly took mommys meds) is it possible that the still developping brain is damaged, causing sociopathy/ psychopathy..?

    • @bregjemarieke1434
      @bregjemarieke1434 6 місяців тому

      @@hiraijo1582 I know. I guess its also possible that in time the brain area permanently changes..? Talking about someone who was addicted to valium for over a decade.. talking high doses 80/90 mg per day.

    • @bregjemarieke1434
      @bregjemarieke1434 6 місяців тому +1

      @@hiraijo1582I know. Maybe over time such addictions are causing brain damage

    • @vaniacervantes4687
      @vaniacervantes4687 6 місяців тому +1

      It's a good cuestión my psychopath used epilepsy medication, before ten, my sister also have similar problem in childhood and now she has empathy issues, but...
      I am sure my ex was born like this, his sister used to tell me how he seated in the corner of her elementary school classroom all morning without stand up, he was 3 years old.

    • @vickitaylor7959
      @vickitaylor7959 5 місяців тому

      I had plenty of empathy in kindergarten over all my classmates, took care of a classmate who kept wetting his pants, and not one my other classmates cared to help him to the restroom. They even asked me why I cared to help him.
      Being molested during those years created a psychopathic personality. I wasn't born with it, it was created.
      And yes taking drugs later in life had a big effect on my inability to have stable relationships without major drama. My brain was definitely affected by many drugs, but the psychopathic tendencies were already inside me, the drugs just created more instability.

  • @Brandon-yr3nj
    @Brandon-yr3nj 6 місяців тому +9

    I think a psychopath may be someone who has learned to associate safety *with* fear, either in themselves or others. Not so different from personalities who feel “safer” in abusive dynamics.

    • @kaydi123
      @kaydi123 5 місяців тому

      I am a psycopomp maybe that is my path hehe a joke, or not 😂. Thank you always

    • @SuperKoMa-gir8L
      @SuperKoMa-gir8L 5 місяців тому +1

      Well, that's not a psychopath. Psychopaths feel no emotions, do you even watch this guy's videos??

  • @federalbranch4005
    @federalbranch4005 6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks very much for all the valuable information Sam 💯 Priceless

  • @semperdecorus37
    @semperdecorus37 5 місяців тому +1

    My favorite channel and professor! Love your videos ❤

  • @danielkrawisz8345
    @danielkrawisz8345 6 місяців тому +11

    Hi, could you do a video on the Machiavellian of the dark triad? It's hard for me to understand what macchiavellianism adds that isn't already in psychopath and narcissist. Thanks! Is he like a psychopath who lacks impulsivity?

    • @V3RITAZ_42
      @V3RITAZ_42 5 місяців тому

      Narcissism: Need for attention and admiration, Manipulative, Fake self, Perfectionism potentially, egocentric, low empathy, usually has a guise of superiority, co-dependent in the need for others to confirm it. Neuroticism scores vary. Not exactly more likely to be incarcerated. Highly likely to be annoying.
      Psychopathy: Lack or very low level of Empathy, Disregard for rights of others, Manipulative, Parasitic potentially, low self-control for most, lower scores in Neuroticism. Highest of the three to be incarcerated. Most are poor planners. Most are quick to react with violence.
      Machiavellianism: Patient, Revenge-best-served-cold mindset, Business-minded, cynical and misanthropic view of humanity, most likely to be quieter than the other two, high impulse control, long-term plan oriented, not impulsive or very emotional, calm indifference, money money money and how can I make it attitude, not necessarily out to get you but does not care if they have to step on you. Desires material and power but not fame usually.
      NOTE: It is generally common for an individual high in one to have traits in others, however there are those who score high in one but not the others. I.e. a machiavellianism who does not want fame.
      source: Aced psychology in college...just find it interesting too.

    • @costaldevomito
      @costaldevomito 5 місяців тому

      Machiavellianism is basically manipulation, lack of morality, lack of empathy, and a focus on self interest. So basically doing whatever you have to to get the outcome you want, regardless of who is hurt in the process.

  • @dextirias
    @dextirias 5 місяців тому +1

    My personal experience with psychopaths showed me that they hate when you object the lies and respond with nonaggression to aggression.

    • @sneak9407
      @sneak9407 12 днів тому

      You probably interacted with a narcissists, but due to the fact that you had a bad experience you chose to label wrongly "psychopath" because calling someone a psycho is easier.
      A psychopath will only tell you half truths and leave the rest for your imagination to trick you. Unless you are too full of yourself and lack external narrating, then a pyschopaths will tell you exactly what you want to hear.
      There typically is no lie most times.
      Let me paint a picture for you: Sam goes to see Sarah "a friend notorious for being promiscuous". They watch a movie and did the deed.
      Sarah for a week kept trying to lock down Sam in a "relationship" despite being in a circle that is close to his actual girlfriend.
      Somehow, she spills the tea to one of her friend amd it gets to the girlfriend.
      Girlfriend confronts Sam:
      Girlfriend(GF): why did you cheat on me?
      Sam(BF): who told you so?
      GF: Sarah told me.
      BF: Sarah told you that?
      GF: no! But her best friend gave me all the details.
      BF: so you believed I went to sleep with Sarah, with her reputation?
      GF: she told me you guys watched a movie and you did had sex.
      BF: so you believed I will go watch "insert series name here" with Sarah, when you brought the show to light for me?
      BF: I actually did went to see Sarah, but she did make it seem friendly invite. When I got there, she offered we watched that series but I didn't want to watch the series without you, plus I wanted to know what she wanted so I could leave.
      BF: It will later turn out that truly, she had feelings for me and was trying to make me find reason to date her.
      GF: really?
      BF: of course babe.
      BF: please stop listening to people after our relationship.
      None of these events were a lie. Just the inculpatory facts were missing.
      A narcissists will flat out lie, and say "no, I didn't cheat on you"
      Realistically they did... Mentally they have found a valid excuse why what they did wasn't considered cheating *to them* . For example: you don't really own them (because Mentally it was an agreed polyamorous relationship, you just never recognised weirdly recognise it)
      Only a narcissists will be pissed that you didn't believe their lies, as it was the truth to their twisted reality. A pyschopath will be like "fair game" I see you could see through my scheme, and try another approach of manipulation. Being caught in a lie doesn't immediately cause a psychopath (ASPD) complete reality collapse.
      Plus a narcissists now also wants you to react physically, so they can properly label you the bad guy in this interaction instwad of them the lying thomas. While a psychopath will genuinely avoid physical confrontation, unless it's the only way to acheive their goal... And it won't be a question of if you get physical, as an ASPD will assault you with punches to make you conform, but beating someone to a pulp won't make the lie become more believable, lol.
      If you are truly after the truth, this will sink in.

  • @itchyscratchy7167
    @itchyscratchy7167 6 місяців тому +23

    I have a question. I left my narc husband 2 months ago. I am now understanding why no contact is the only way. Everytime I try to talk to him all i get is " you left me" . Thats it nothing more. What do I do now? I have only been married 8 months. Will he divorce me or will i have to divirce him?

    • @Gunny221
      @Gunny221 6 місяців тому

      How do you know he is a “narc” as Dr. V says only 5% of the male population are actual Narcissists.

    • @Axiomatic75
      @Axiomatic75 6 місяців тому +14

      Does it make a difference who files for divorce?

    • @dammitdad
      @dammitdad 6 місяців тому +11

      It's important to feel that you are doing the right thing and not dishonouring anyone. We also need to be seen. When we are faced with this sort of situation we don't know what is right. It's also the classic response from the victim of narcissism. You are a victim because you don't have the mechanism or capacity to protect yourself from any narcissist. You are probably an empath. You really have no choice but to divorce. I hope you have decent parents that you can trust. If they told you not to marry this man they are credible protectors. Listen to them next time! If they said nothing then you need to find reliable friends who will protect you. Usually a good conservative church is a good place to look. You need to get involved in community work. You will find decent people doing the same. Anyone who cares for the community expecting nothing in return will be decent.

    • @MIRNA_LIZ
      @MIRNA_LIZ 6 місяців тому +34

      My humble opinion:
      Don't talk to him, anymore. Hire a lawyer and start the divorce, because he will not do it.

    • @DianaIbarra-y1e
      @DianaIbarra-y1e 6 місяців тому +9

      Seems that the "you left me " line = I refuse to take any accountability because he can't/refuses to do so. Maybe you could make the decision to take charge of your life, since he's refusing to do so. Currently, my 90's parent trying to reel me back to a narc-infested fam., after the fact that they've turned fam members against me, when ive been there for them throughout the yrs. Lots of horrible details. My blood pressure back to normal range. BEST WISHES TO YOU & YOUR SANITY!!!

  • @larryparks1520
    @larryparks1520 6 місяців тому +1

    Brilliant.

  • @bakters
    @bakters 6 місяців тому +4

    It seems very weird that it took so long to state something so logical. Obviously, if all psychopathic traits were beneficial to the individual, we'd all be psychopaths.
    I can hardly imagine, that a statement like that would be even controversial. Is something wrong with it, that I can't see?

    • @bakters
      @bakters 6 місяців тому +2

      @@elaineinarizona6354 I'm talking about long term benefits. Being immoral rarely pays off.
      Like stealing - works great, until you get caught. Then you spend the best years of your life in prison. Not that great overall.
      If stealing did pay off in the long term, we'd all be doing it. It happened in some hunter-gatherer societies.

  • @Louis-20
    @Louis-20 6 місяців тому +16

    Say an individual with psychopathic tendencies was just neglected and ignored growing up, but did not experience physical violence.
    Would they be alot more passive and pro-social?

    • @samvaknin
      @samvaknin  6 місяців тому +55

      Most psychopaths do not experience childhood abuse of any kind.

    • @wearereligion2489
      @wearereligion2489 6 місяців тому +7

      ​@@samvakninRly? Could you explain more?

    • @danielledaisley6166
      @danielledaisley6166 6 місяців тому +8

      ​@@wearereligion2489I think he said this because ASPD is not a personality disorder it's a brain disorder, so the way that they interpret the world would be different in comparison non-ASPD folks. Unlike the rest of the cluster b disorders that have experienced childhood trauma which caused them to be that way, the psychopath is very much born that way, his/her physiology however, yes physiology changes the older he/she gets. You should watch Dr.Vaknin's video titled "Latest on psychopathy" and "myth of the fearless psychopath" to further understand what he's trying to say but hope this helps 💯.

    • @VictoryBeardman
      @VictoryBeardman 6 місяців тому +2

      @@wearereligion2489 Sometimes they ven are behind the abuse of others as children.

    • @wearereligion2489
      @wearereligion2489 6 місяців тому +1

      @@danielledaisley6166 Thank you very much. I was under the impression that "psychopath/sociopath" weren't medical terms, but colloquial. I know the proper acronym is ASPD, but that described characteristics that fell under the umbrella of sociopathy/psychopath.
      Yet you said psychopaths had physical abnormalities.
      I understood it as sociopaths being more "social", e.g. able to form loyalty to a group or persons, yet also able to enact calculating moves that others would view as less socially acceptable.
      Psychopaths were characterized by a detachment that made interpersonal relationships difficult. Their emotions were described as blunted yet they could appear charming and glib.
      This superficiality is noted between both the sociopath and the psychopath which made sense because I assumed they were actually ASPD acting out in different degrees.
      However, your comment on the physical alteration in a psychopath's brain isn't a trait I heard applied to sociopaths.

  • @colourupyourlife
    @colourupyourlife 6 місяців тому

    thank you for this video! Can you please tell us about adhd impulsivity?

    • @samvaknin
      @samvaknin  6 місяців тому +3

      Search the comorbidities playlist.

  • @bethmoore7722
    @bethmoore7722 6 місяців тому +14

    Psychopathy always has been the subject of drama and literature, and is a frequent subject of movies & tv series.
    If you’ve seen Alfred Hitchcock’s work, does he seem to accurately portray psychopathy, and the Dark Triad, in his characters? Are they psychological believable to psychologists?

    • @samvaknin
      @samvaknin  6 місяців тому +11

      Yes. Watch my review of “Psycho”.

    • @bethmoore7722
      @bethmoore7722 6 місяців тому +2

      @@samvaknin Thank you! I certainly will!

  • @lisamcmahon-q1z
    @lisamcmahon-q1z 6 місяців тому +4

    Would a psycopath fake cry, do they want attention from others by playing the victim?

    • @samvaknin
      @samvaknin  6 місяців тому +15

      No. This would be a covert narcissist.

  • @paullothyan8602
    @paullothyan8602 6 місяців тому +1

    So the psychopaths in movies we see don't commit suicide to escape accountability and justice.

  • @michaelclark1501
    @michaelclark1501 6 місяців тому +8

    Sounds like the bold Trump