Narcissism

What is Narcissism?


1.

A Personality Disorder where you have a abnormal disire for ones self, where you lack empathy, and unconscious inadequency of self esteem, due to regression of child development. also a delusion that you are more important than everyone else.

Narcissistic people are not self centered there is a difference.

See Na

2.

1. a common affliction among professional basketball and soccer players. Symptoms include excessive bling blingand meterosexuality

2. egocentrism; absorption in oneself

3. psychological and emotional centering of erotic interest and gratification on one's own body.

From the Greek myth of Narcissus, who fell in love with his own reflection.

Only you can stop narcissism.

I'm always right and you're the one who's wrong. Why? Because I'm a narcissist.

3.

1. Having excessive pride in one's self with out justification, being pig-headed or having excessive self-admeration.

2. A personality disorder charatorized by overestimation of his her own appearence and abilities and an insatiable need for admeration.

3. the element of self-directed sexual desire in the condition.

The man had such a bad case of narcissism, all he thaugh about was him self and how he looked to others.

See pig-headed, vane, self-absorbed

4.

1. Generally a deeply dysfunctionalstate of mind in which one is in lovewith oneself, often at a rather superficial level. From the Greekmyth of Narcissus, who wasted away out of unrequitedlove for his own reflection in a pool.

2. More specifically described at its worst as Narcissistic Personality Disorder, or NPD. NPD is characterised by the following:

Refusal to admit that one is narcissistic. The horror authorStephen King once wrote that alcoholics build defence mechanisms like the Dutch build dykes. Narcissists are kind of the same, except that compared to your average narcissist, your average alcoholic is a rank amateur.

An exaggerated sense of self-importance, with the narcissist often talking about private, professional or other interpersonalrelationships in which they are involved as though nobody else really existed.

A preoccupation with fantasies of pure or unlimited power, beauty, " authenticity", intelligence, love and so on. Has an urgent need for praise.

A tendency to read what people say out of context, or more likely without any context, and a disabilityto spot when they are being taken for a ride.

Belief on the narcissist's part that people vastly more giftedthan they are (in whatever respect) are their natural equals, and a snobbish contempt for anything less.

A sense of entitlement; narcissists are typically manipulative, haughty, arrogantand generally destructive in their relationships with others.

A narcissist may appear overly anxiousto show respect for the property and privacy of those they cannot profitably step on. Towards those under them in any social hierarchy ( employees, offspring, subservientspouses, etc.,), they are shamelessly controlling, frequently treating such other peoples' property as their own to use or discard, on a more trivial level bargingintrusively into their conversations, and so on. Narcissists treat those below them, or loyal to them, as extentions of their own egos.

Lack empathyand tends to treat other people like dirt, when they can get away with it.

Project a sense of immense effort, as though eternally hoping that some teacher will award them an Afor it; at the same time their work is frequently slipshod and they secretly delegateto social subordinates.

Narcissists show no need to take any responsibility for the untowardresults of their own actions, frequently going to ingeniousextremes to weasel their way out of anything of the sort. After all, anything else would first require them to admit, as more than some petty platitude, that they aren't perfect.

Frequently project their own shortcomings onto others, especially whose whom they can controlor of whom they are envious.

Carol's narcissism inspired her first husband to leave everything to her in his will. Some say she drove him into an early grave. She enjoys the money, but now nobody with a brain cell will touch her and her kids don't want to know her.

See narcissist, mirror, reflection, complex, npd, personality, disorder

5.

Narcissim;

A form of self obsession. Someone who has a case of narcissim is a excessive self admirer.

A personality disorder characterized by ones obsession of his or her own appearance and has an excessive need for admiration. In some cases he or she may feel self-directed sexual desire.

A example of Narcissism is:

Talking into a mirror telling oneself how sexy they are and how they have a nice figure etc.

Maddona.

See obsses, endulge, admire, sexy, scene

6.

1. An extreme fascination with oneself and one’s own physical appearance and/or sexual ability, to the point, wherein, one finds pleasure, in the contemplation there of. 2. One who gets off contemplating the thought of the sexual arousal or gratification that they produce in others.

Nikki loved her stripping job. The attention and adoration, from the customers was like a drug to her narcissism.

7.

The greatest kind of ism...

Narcissism? I'm no narssist, I'm just really, really, really, ridiculusly good looking...

*which for all the ladies out there, I am ;)

See beautiful, sexy, modest, lovable, intelligent


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