This lecture really drives home how the narcissist's disorder is all-encompassing. And there's no cure due to the totality of the damage done in childhood. Thank you for this series, Professor Vaknin.
One thing my possibly narcissistic friend/roommate used to repeat often was “You know, my mom would say/do…”. It stood out in my head when he said it before I started watching these videos, which helps me think he really was/is narcissistic & possibly had/has a strange relationship with her. His father left the family when he was 7. This & other things about his & his family’s behaviors led me to watch these videos. Thanks.
Thank you for another insightful video professor Vaknin. I have a question, though, how do you think a debilitating illness might affect a narcissist. Don't you think that it may be a life-changing experience, an experience that will give him/her a chance to get in touch with the real self, the hurt, lonely, abandoned child?
Professor, you say you are a “common person” I would say to the contrary. If you can make an emotional connection not cognitively but empathetically to all that you know and understand then it would be suffice to say you are far from ordinary.
Sir,How does personality disorder and individual character effects each other,do you think so called sociatical good character effects negatively in case of a person with borderline personality disorder and vice versa ,have you made content on this subject? Please make a video on same if not made. As you have said in one video, philosophy has answers for mental health problems in context with the medicalisation of mental disorders.
This lecture really drives home how the narcissist's disorder is all-encompassing. And there's no cure due to the totality of the damage done in childhood. Thank you for this series, Professor Vaknin.
Compulsive listening. Many thanks from the Midlands UK.
Thank you so much dear Prof. Vaknin, for all parts of the seminar in Zagreb
Not all. Bonus part tomorrow.
One thing my possibly narcissistic friend/roommate used to repeat often was “You know, my mom would say/do…”. It stood out in my head when he said it before I started watching these videos, which helps me think he really was/is narcissistic & possibly had/has a strange relationship with her. His father left the family when he was 7. This & other things about his & his family’s behaviors led me to watch these videos. Thanks.
this was excellent thank you so much Dr. V
The joke about Sadism didn’t seem to land with the audience, but I was laughing (alone) in my living room. 😂
Lady Haversham in Charles Dickens Great Expectations was the woman you referred to Prof.
Correct.
Thank you for another insightful video professor Vaknin. I have a question, though, how do you think a debilitating illness might affect a narcissist. Don't you think that it may be a life-changing experience, an experience that will give him/her a chance to get in touch with the real self, the hurt, lonely, abandoned child?
Search the channel for “body” and for “disability”.
very good seminars! thank you so much🙏
Professor, you say you are a “common person” I would say to the contrary. If you can make an emotional connection not cognitively but empathetically to all that you know and understand then it would be suffice to say you are far from ordinary.
Sir,How does personality disorder and individual character effects each other,do you think so called sociatical good character effects negatively in case of a person with borderline personality disorder and vice versa ,have you made content on this subject? Please make a video on same if not made. As you have said in one video, philosophy has answers for mental health problems in context with the medicalisation of mental disorders.
Watch the SEEU playlist.
"...especially after 6 o'clock", had me 😂😂😂
Haha
Some good questions here.
Thank you