Spoiler Alert

SPOILER ALERT

 

When I was with Siobhan (an ex girlfriend) her birthday arrived just four weeks after we had begun seeing one another. I took her away for the weekend, bought her a beautiful Tiffany bracelet, organised a huge bouquet to be delivered to the suite where we were staying in our hotel and then took her shopping for a couple of new outfits and some new shoes. She was swept off her feet. Just as I intended. All part of the golden period and naturally part of the ongoing seduction to ensure that not only was I receiving her positive fuel caused by her delight, admiration and thanks for such a wonderful time, but that she was becoming embedded into my world. All those I meet need to become part of my world, attached to me, fuel lines running from them to me. This is especially so with the person who is to become my Intimate Partner Primary Source (“IPPS”). I need to own that person, I need to draw them into my world, ensure they are completely subsumed within it and thus they will be under my control. I truly want them to succeed because they show such promise, they demonstrate that they have the ability to fulfil the Prime Aims and deliver what is required which in turn will give me the fuel that powers my construct and this illusory world into which this person has been drawn.

When it was her birthday a year later I didn’t give her a present and begrudgingly went for dinner with her that evening. I ensured she paid. I talked down to the waiter and insisted we leave without pudding and subjected her to silence on the drive home. I wanted to spoil her birthday because it was about her and not me. I hate attention being focussed elsewhere. I can tolerate it during the golden period because it serves my purposes to allow that person to have a wonderful and special birthday because of their positive fuel and the need to embed them, yet when devaluation occurs, there is no need to tolerate this state of affairs and the reality can be unveiled to the bewildered horror of the recipient.

There is no need to maintain the artifice. The person is embedded and if we have chosen the correct victim (and we usually do) they will not be going anywhere fast because they will cling to us in the hope of returning to the golden period. The victim, who most of the time will be the IPPS (as this is the person who suffers the longest and the worst type of devaluation) has been chosen for their desire to mend things, to understand and try to establish what has changed, what has gone wrong and their need to try to make everything good again. This creates an almost indefatigable approach by the victim to remaining with us. Nevertheless, when this devaluation is in place, everything has to be spoiled. What once was a wonderful occasion is either not acknowledged or is actively ruined. Whereas we once praised and complimented something you had achieved, this too is either ignored, put down or belittled in some way.

My nephew told me he had come first in his school’s 100m race. I told him I ran a faster time than him when I was at school. A colleague showed me his new watch. I told him I had one which was similar but mine was better. You’ve got tickets for a performance tonight? I went last week and it was rubbish. You recommend a new Mexican restaurant that has just opened? I tell you that it is attracting the attention of environmental health. Bought a new car? I don’t like the colour and criticise its miles per gallon ratio. The thing is that these comments often just spill from our mouths (especially with the Lesser and the Mid-Range) before we even have a chance to think. It is an instinctive response which is designed to make you give us negative fuel, to assert our control over you and to emphasise our superiority.Whenever the spotlight is shining elsewhere I need to smash it and train a new one on me. Sometimes the needs of the façade will mean that control has to be exerted so that the training of the spotlight occurs in a way where was outshine you as opposed to necessarily denigrating you, but the effect is the same. You cannot have the spotlight on you, it has to be on us.

If you have an important function you want to attend, I will pick a fight with you before you go and then text you incessantly whilst you are at it so you do not enjoy it. I have to ruin it for you. I cannot control this urge. Sam (an ex girlfriend) loved to garden. She would spend hours at the weekend tending her beds. I would call round during the week when she was not there and take a strimmer to her plants. As the stalks and stems were obliterated I could feel myself feeling better as I envisaged her dismay at returning home and seeing her garden having been hacked at. That Thought Fuel was welcomed and of course I would ensure that I just happened to call around later that evening to find her either sobbing at the destruction or raging at the carnage that had been caused. Witnessing her reaction to my spoiling behaviour of course provided me with significant fuel which was potent and edifying.

I have to cut people down. The urge to destroy, denigrate,criticise and belittle is overwhelming.

I have to spoil. There is no hope for an alternative because the need to keep people in their place, maintain my own superiority and also to create the contrast for the provision of potent negative fuel is overwhelming.

14 thoughts on “Spoiler Alert

  1. Caroline R says:

    Unit 2 mid-ranger N and spiteful husband sold their unit.
    As there was no need for further communication, I maintained no contact.
    They were disrespectful bullies from day 1, acting with entitlement and contempt for the other owners on the block. She’d scoff loudly when I was speaking, and he would smugly smirk in response.

    With time she used her baby as a tool of random reinforcement, offering social interaction on one day, and the next, ignoring me with cold stare in place.

    I’m wise to that game!

    She’d only speak to me because she was fishing for information.

    I’m wise to that game too!

    Once she ascertained that I didn’t have a strong man at the ready to beat them up for boundary violations, the social restraints on their behaviour were removed.
    I witheld that information for as long as I could, but as ex-N and his big muscles weren’t making an appearance anymore, they figured it out.

    So finally…
    As weeks went past, he’d send me spiteful text messages.
    I ignored them.
    The day they moved out, I stayed in.
    The next day I noticed that their final act of spite had been to snap in half the trunk of the Little Gem Magnolia in the garden.
    I didn’t respond, but I was angry.

    Fortunately I can replace it.

  2. Kelly B says:

    We always exchanged christmas gifts and did something at christmas. One year He takes off and goes to Chicago at christmas. No christmas card or gift for Christmas. And my birthday in January and he tells me. He is staying longer over there during my birthday..I was so pissed at him. I told him to move his ass over there.He could stay with his wacka doodle sister.

  3. Agnes says:

    What I would like to know is if the narcisst do all bis behaviour on purpose?! Does he is aware of his behaviour that is so frightenlinly similar of all narcissts?!

    1. HG Tudor says:

      It is not accidental (therefore is on purpose) but the actual reason for committing the relevant act is not known by Lesser or Mid Range Narcissists. Read ‘Does the Lesser/Mid Range Narcissist Know What He Is Doing’ articles.

  4. Believer says:

    Siobhan sort of looks like a guy.

  5. Rachel says:

    This article was, because of the gardening part, the one that made me wonder if my brother is a narcissist. He did, and does, really mean stuff. The one thing I’ll never forget is that he detroyed a drawing I made when I was 13 years old. For no reason, there wasn’t even an argument or something. I was proud of that drawing, and he ruined it with a black marker. And when I asked him why he had this grin on his face. Never any remorse.
    And my father, ruining all holidays and birthdays for everyone.

    Nice new dark layout. It’s suits this dark place.

  6. Jess says:

    Dear HG: Tiffany jewelry seems to be a recurring theme for your GFs, no?

    1. HG Tudor says:

      Not really, Jess. It got mentioned in particular instances.

      1. Jess says:

        Still very classy bling HG.

        1. HG Tudor says:

          I agree.

  7. santaann1964 says:

    Oh geez Mr. H so much work and torture. Is it really worth it, all this stuff. You can have all that fuel with someone and if you don’t wanna be with them then just tell the truth and move to the next.

    1. cb says:

      santaann1964
      I thought about this for years after first learning about narcissism.

      Why put daily constant energy on planning and manupulating. So much work?

      I guess the answer is that it’s no work, for a narcissist. He can’t do anything else, but manipulate.
      It’s instinct.
      No investment for him.

      You and I need to put down energy and think before we trick someone or decide to ‘surprise’ a person, or before telling a lie.

      But narcs don’t.
      Manipulating is easy and instinct for them. That’s their normal state.

      Every second.

      1. NarcAngel says:

        Cb
        I agree. People are always commenting that being a narcissist is so much unnecessary hard work, but I think the same can be said about being an empath. Of course neither side thinks it is because it’s what they know.

        1. cb says:

          Exactly

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