10 Things Narcissists do to Appear Smarter than They Really Are

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • This video answers the questions: Can I provide examples of what narcissists do to make other people believe that they are more intelligent than they actually are?
    Narcissism:
    There are two types of narcissism: With grandiose narcissism we see characteristics like being extroverted, socially bold, self-confident, having a superficial charm, being resistant to criticism, and being callous and unemotional. Vulnerable narcissism is characterized by shame, anger, aggression, hypersensitivity, a tendency to be introverted, defensive, avoidant, anxious, depressed, socially awkward, and shy.
    Narcissistic personality disorder is a Cluster B personality disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. It has nine symptom criteria, five of which are required for a diagnosis.
    1: Grandiose sense of self-importance
    2: Fantasies
    3: Special or unique
    4: Requires excessive admiration
    5: Sense of entitlement
    6: Manipulative
    7: Lacks empathy for others
    8: Often envious
    9: Arrogant attitudes or behaviors
    Costa, P. T., Jr., McCrae, R. R., & Löckenhoff, C. E. (2019). Personality across the life span. Annual Review of Psychology, 70,423- 448.dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psy...
    DASHINEAU, EDERSHILE, SIMMS, AND WRIGHT. Pathological Narcissism and Psychosocial Functioning, Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment. 2019, Vol. 10, No. 5, 473-478
    dx.doi.org/10.1037/per0000347
    Support Dr. Grande on Patreon:
    / drgrande

Komentáře • 10K

  • @jasonbean5052
    @jasonbean5052 Před 4 lety +11741

    I often use big words to make myself sound more photosynthesis.

  • @SirFuzzyLogik
    @SirFuzzyLogik Před 4 lety +3324

    This sounds like he's passive agressively roasting someone he knows haha

    • @willkirsch6976
      @willkirsch6976 Před 4 lety +137

      I had the same thought lol. I opened the vid with someone in mind so I appreciated the roast

    • @LosOne12
      @LosOne12 Před 4 lety +60

      I think Everyone, as in, every human being that has ever walked the earth has done that to an extent. This is the first video I watch of this man and I am an instant fan. About to go deep in a rabbit hole! Peace!

    • @moonrooster7160
      @moonrooster7160 Před 4 lety +56

      What's the word for people who call people narcissists?

    • @MRender32
      @MRender32 Před 4 lety +21

      Cosmic Perspective People.

    • @flugschulerfluglehrer7139
      @flugschulerfluglehrer7139 Před 4 lety +14

      I definitely know her...

  • @yvonnestephenson6676
    @yvonnestephenson6676 Před rokem +337

    What you said in conclusion reminded me of something a psychologist told me once:
    "Trying to reason with a narcissist is like playing chess with a pigeon - it will just poop all over the board, and strut around as if it's won anyway."

    • @FunnyMemo
      @FunnyMemo Před rokem +14

      I just love your analysis of a narc!! So funny and true!!!

    • @HowardARoark
      @HowardARoark Před rokem +7

      Good one.

    • @New-qy5mi
      @New-qy5mi Před rokem +7

      Ahhahahahaha😂

    • @kea5763
      @kea5763 Před rokem +8

      Hahahaaaaaa! Too many people, narcs or not, behave this way these days... Oh man! Help us, all! LoooooL

    • @yvonnestephenson6676
      @yvonnestephenson6676 Před rokem +5

      @@Catherine-bs1xj I don't remember her specifically crediting anyone, but it was delivered in that sort of 'as they say' manner. I doubt she made it up herself on the spot, but I appreciated the relatability (she knew I enjoyed chess).

  • @CityofButterfly
    @CityofButterfly Před 2 lety +610

    I had an aunt who was a narcissist (though we didn't know it at the time) and she lived right next door. She'd come over while Jeopardy was on and impress my grandma by knowing all the answers.
    Well, it turned out that she just used her satellite dish to see the episode before it aired in our local time zone and memorize all the answers.
    The effort some narcissists will go to is insane to me.

  • @lanceexe5685
    @lanceexe5685 Před 2 lety +1946

    im glad im not a narcissist as I am very humble despite my high intelligence and how attractive I am.

  • @Swingfinger
    @Swingfinger Před 2 lety +2563

    Plot twist: he’s a narcissist and dunking on other narcissists is his ultimate high.

    • @pong86r
      @pong86r Před 2 lety +14

      i have a gif for that (antonio banderas at computer)

    • @saharamustaf4997
      @saharamustaf4997 Před 2 lety +18

      I am from africa and i want to learn english , if someone have good advace from let tell me

    • @Lakupeep
      @Lakupeep Před 2 lety +24

      Sahara Mustaf duolingo

    • @KalomikaArts
      @KalomikaArts Před 2 lety +51

      Exactly. All content creators are narcissists

    • @shanescatsandcannabisfarm2965
      @shanescatsandcannabisfarm2965 Před 2 lety +21

      EXACTLY!!!! I have BEEN saying that!!!

  • @rosemaryangela1825
    @rosemaryangela1825 Před rokem +69

    I married into a family of narcissists. They were some of the most stupid people I’ve ever met, yet they always thought they were better then anyone else. How tiresome they were

  • @kaylajackson9896
    @kaylajackson9896 Před rokem +74

    My dad is a narcissist. What I’ve realized is that its almost like you can never really know him. Every time you think you’re speaking to him you’re actually speaking to this façade he’s putting up. Like everything he says to you has been calculated by him to make him look a certain way, not to actually speak to you.

    • @docbraniac7999
      @docbraniac7999 Před rokem +7

      If your dad is really a narcissist, it might just be better to stay away altogether.

    • @kaylajackson9896
      @kaylajackson9896 Před rokem +4

      @@docbraniac7999 Yeah I sort of have to. It causes so much more harm than good.

    • @dream-nz9yb
      @dream-nz9yb Před rokem +4

      Wow I’ve never heard it said like that but I think my ex did that! Did it ever feel like he didn’t even remember your conversations?

    • @adhilakt8598
      @adhilakt8598 Před rokem +3

      How true this is..! I have the same experience.. you can never know him completely.. he has different masks for different occasions and people.. his "real" face can never be seen

    • @69erthx1138
      @69erthx1138 Před rokem +1

      Been there, lived through it!!! Pretty much helped me become and insecure and brash younger prick. I owe a huge debt of gratitude to wife for helping me snap out of this years ago. Gotta have the right support.

  • @BlueFinch
    @BlueFinch Před 3 lety +1638

    non-narcissists watching this: "Am I a narcissist?"

    • @Tech_Traveler
      @Tech_Traveler Před 3 lety +239

      Nah, I'm too stupid to be a narcissist. My IQ is well below 15,000. Its more like 9,000.

    • @anacom4238
      @anacom4238 Před 3 lety +205

      People can be narcissistic without being narcissists. I think most people are narcissistic sometimes.

    • @huzaifa5926
      @huzaifa5926 Před 3 lety +216

      Even thinking of myself as non narcissistic makes me feel narcissistic.

    • @Logan_93
      @Logan_93 Před 3 lety +108

      I think maybe a lot of people exhibit narcissistic traits from time to time. I know that I do, but I tend to notice it and I end up feeling sort of bad about it, which I assume (hopefully) means that I am not a narcissist.

    • @Iamsam-jl5fn
      @Iamsam-jl5fn Před 3 lety +27

      @@Tech_Traveler narcissists are stupid and gullible. They aren’t smarter than most and they are quite gullible.

  • @athaisdubaie852
    @athaisdubaie852 Před 2 lety +1062

    When I got my Master's degree, my sister said, "Anyone can get a Master's degree". To which I asked, "Where's yours?". She hung up the phone on me.

    • @bugpal
      @bugpal Před 2 lety +150

      I’m also surrounded be negative nancies, in all things. If you dress down, you “look homeless”, if you dress up, they sneer and say “who are YOU supposed to be?”. They can’t just say “you look nice” or “congratulations” or “good job”, ever. It’s always an insult or a complaint or a dismissal of your hard work. Very toxic.

    • @analuisagoncalvesdeoliveir9812
      @analuisagoncalvesdeoliveir9812 Před 2 lety +11

      This funny

    • @stilhopefulmccall8832
      @stilhopefulmccall8832 Před 2 lety +15

      touche' lmao

    • @lundsweden
      @lundsweden Před 2 lety +73

      This says a lot about her. Instead of being happy for you, she tried to devalue your acheivement. I feel for you, I have a crappy, unsupportive family too!

    • @grangrampa832
      @grangrampa832 Před 2 lety +9

      Hysterical

  • @marymcintosh4406
    @marymcintosh4406 Před rokem +62

    I had my first I Q test in fourth grade after my first standardized K.E.S.T at school. I was immediately moved to a program for kids with high potential and low motivation. Thing is, I’m not a genius. I was horribly abused and I read constantly to escape into a fantasy life. I recognized patterns quickly because I had to to survive. I’m hyper aware of everyone in the rooms slightest body language. I have a great memory. All defense mechanisms. I’ve done nothing with it that others would call successful, but everyday , I work to develop more compassion for myself and others… and that has made all the difference.

    • @tammyfitzgerald5336
      @tammyfitzgerald5336 Před rokem +3

      Saddest part is extremely intelligent get bored that is maybe how borderline personality is second page after gifted child

    • @Shellshellzee
      @Shellshellzee Před rokem +4

      Well, you sound like you're a Very special lady.... and I believe that God wants to use you and all of your life experience, to be a blessing to others, and help others who may be hurting in the same (or similar) ways that you did when you were growing up

    • @martina21953
      @martina21953 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@tammyfitzgerald5336 I had a difficult time with my son who had a higher IQ and refused to do his homework because "I already know it." He passed every test though so he just rolled through high school. He's an artist/chef now.

    • @chuchaichu
      @chuchaichu Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yeah, same here, I seem to notice and remember many little inconsistencies in people’s words, actions and emotions, and I cannot help to poke a dark person if I identify one, not because I’m attracted to him/her, but because I have an insatiable desire to see through his/her inner workings so I can predict every move they make, and find out counter moves to contain them.
      It fulfills my need for security and my curiosity. I grew up in a family full of manipulation, deception, violence and fear.

    • @jakubswitalski7989
      @jakubswitalski7989 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Reminds me of the House MD episode with the woman who developed eidetic memory as a coping mechanism

  • @markkaravan4245
    @markkaravan4245 Před 2 lety +38

    1:12 Correcting grammar
    3:55 Using words incorrectly
    6:16 Talking about obscure topics
    7:46 Confirmation bias
    9:49 Ad Hominems
    10:54 Blaming other for their incorrect beliefs
    11:33 Using “Logic” and “Reason”
    12:26 Discounting other intelligences
    14:42 Lying about their IQ
    18:03 Pretending to know alien subjects

    • @itsasecret2474
      @itsasecret2474 Před rokem

      What's wrong with using logic and reason or being interested in obscure topics

    • @acdude5266
      @acdude5266 Před rokem +1

      @@itsasecret2474 it's the claims of referring to logic and reason without actually being logical or reasonable is the problem.
      As far as I obscure topics, this is how a narcissist gains leverage. They grope for the exotic to be able to use exotic concepts and terma to blind their targets with the obscure.
      I have seen this done by narcissistic managers so that they can sound intelligent and lord it over colleagues and subordinates.

    • @avarice.karmageddon
      @avarice.karmageddon Před rokem

      Thank you for taking the time in making the time stamps and topics! 😊💕

  • @jfish032
    @jfish032 Před 3 lety +1183

    Alternate title: Dr. Grande Vents about his Colleagues

    • @vblord
      @vblord Před 3 lety +64

      That's totally what I was thinking. Thank you. It sounds incredibly personal. I have inkling that this is a widespread issue among academics. I also wonder if professorships entice narcissists or create them. I worked for an college professor for many years and he would always say.. talk to me after you earn your degree - as if I couldn't form an opinion without a credential.

    • @michaelrobert8476
      @michaelrobert8476 Před 2 lety +18

      @@vblord - it's not who is right, but what is right. A degree has nothing to do with it.

    • @susanfudge1737
      @susanfudge1737 Před 2 lety +27

      Ah haha.
      This field is ironically, full of narcissists.

    • @jimfoster7986
      @jimfoster7986 Před 2 lety +3

      😂😂😂

    • @GTA2SWcity
      @GTA2SWcity Před 2 lety +8

      @@vblord I'm not an electrical engineer, not even an electronics repair tech nor an electrician but I can't tell you how many times I have had either my know-it-all friend or a professor try to comment on things of this sort and it ends up being diarrhea-mouth ranting under vague language.
      I usually just don't say anything unless it's painfully obvious they're wrong or their incorrect knowledge goes against safety and they're transmitting dangerous and/or fatal ignorance.
      Professors try to rebuke me that same way at which point either someone who is qualified steps in on my behalf, or I can simply reference what I'm saying and/or their words are demonstrably false. I've learned to drink in their seething resentment.
      My know it all friend on the other hand...evolves. He doesn't concede much unless it's absolutely obvious he's wrong (he loves to rant and argue) but when he thinks he might be wrong he either:
      1) talks really fast and talks over you ignoring anything you say, not letting you get a word in edgewise, and conveniently suddenly ends the conversation...or changes the subject and keeps on talking.
      OR
      2) he has some vague/convenient explanation trying to seize upon ambiguity of what he thinks I don't know. He's smart enough to not reach like he used to because I owned his BS several times.
      In any case, the posturing is a symptom of someone who learned to talk confidently and convincingly about something regardless of the truth of the matter. An old tactic. It's more about impressing people who don't know better and getting brownie points. The longer you live, though, the more this just looks stupid or worthy of ridicule.

  • @roshanakadorabarrett562
    @roshanakadorabarrett562 Před 3 lety +708

    “To the narcissist, every mistake that everyone else makes is a major mistake”.
    Goddamn.

    • @suicideking6966
      @suicideking6966 Před 3 lety +11

      I just thought i was being petty

    • @janniedotson9559
      @janniedotson9559 Před 3 lety +42

      Every mistake a narcissist makes: it's your fault.

    • @joanndrab2657
      @joanndrab2657 Před 3 lety

      @@suicideking6966 wwŵwwwwwwwww8www8w888 e

    • @Radagast-
      @Radagast- Před 3 lety +7

      @@Blue_Azure101 That's true, but escalation is a risky business, and someone who practises that methodology habitually is always going to be better at it than you.

    • @LaisCordiolli
      @LaisCordiolli Před 3 lety +5

      Many narcisist bosses agree with that

  • @vigilantezack
    @vigilantezack Před 2 lety +234

    One time my wife brought up a kind of "new" topic of study we were in to with a narc family member. They immediately dismissed the idea as nonsense and argued against every point and rejected even talking about it.
    One or two weeks later we see her again and she goes on and on about the exact same subject now presenting herself as the authority on the matter. Not rejecting it this time but fully into it, completely forgetting/ignoring the week before when she knew nothing and argued against it for no reason. She now was "teaching" us about it like we've never heard of it before.
    Major eye roll moment.

    • @osajohnson1957
      @osajohnson1957 Před rokem +22

      Oh! You know her, too?!!!

    • @heyitsbrandon733
      @heyitsbrandon733 Před rokem +8

      so true. around the christmas of 2020 i bought a tarot deck, my brother immediately criticized it and told me to never believe in it. (which is fine have your own beliefs) which he isn’t spiritual. now recently he’s trying to say he believes in jesus and got a bible…..

    • @kingayy9267
      @kingayy9267 Před rokem +1

      @heyitsbrandon
      Let's hope he doesn't fall down the Q rabbit hole.

    • @sgtmuffinbadger6147
      @sgtmuffinbadger6147 Před rokem +3

      Lol mine does this

    • @princessofgenovia1407
      @princessofgenovia1407 Před rokem +2

      Popcorn 🍿 and wear a Christmas sweater or a mermaid tail

  • @ChopBassMan
    @ChopBassMan Před 2 lety +272

    When I was a teenager and through my 20s, I was both a grandiose and vulnerable narcissist - vacillating between the two. I was also a practicing alcoholic from about 12 years old until I was 28. Since I got sober the narcissism is diminished somewhat, but I still have it. My 21 year old son told me that he thought that I'm a narcissist (somewhat) as recently as a year ago.
    I think that what really helped me to recognize my narcissism and to work at reducing it was my participation in Alcoholics Anonymous (working on the 12 steps) - where I learned that I'm not all the rage I thought I was and had to examine which behaviors of mine caused my troubles and why. Then I had to review my day to day behavior (and still do 32 years later), admit when I was wrong (or being a narcissistic ass) and apologize to those I hurt. Also working towards an attitude of humility helped.

    • @annamummy4166
      @annamummy4166 Před rokem +32

      Charlie Siefert, you sound like a great person to me. Congratulations on the 12 Step Progam.

    • @ChopBassMan
      @ChopBassMan Před rokem +23

      @@annamummy4166 thanks. I have worked hard to be better

    • @kennyfleck8630
      @kennyfleck8630 Před rokem +32

      @@ChopBassMan you sound like a flawed human being, but one willing to examine his flaws and when necessary attempt to be better. You focus on today and just remember that no matter what, you never have to drink again...

    • @ChopBassMan
      @ChopBassMan Před rokem +18

      @@kennyfleck8630 thank you. I have worked on it a lot and have not had any desire to drink for 32 years now.

    • @kennyfleck8630
      @kennyfleck8630 Před rokem +19

      @@ChopBassMan yes, but the fact that you dug deeper is what impresses me. I've seen a lot of people sober up and feel they were done. It truly is the beginning and only by eliminating the causes of what made drinking seem like the answer is the best way to continue on without worry about relapse...

  • @mikeweber6565
    @mikeweber6565 Před 3 lety +1350

    I admire others who can say "I dont know", the whole "fake it till you make it" is getting out of hand.

    • @mikeweber6565
      @mikeweber6565 Před 3 lety +26

      @FML Depends on the subject matter, I have many areas of specialty, and also many areas that I am ignorant about.

    • @drnogueiras8783
      @drnogueiras8783 Před 3 lety +85

      Same. Someone who never says “I don’t know” has always been a major red flag to me.

    • @briana14333
      @briana14333 Před 3 lety +8

      Agreed!

    • @backyardboosters9128
      @backyardboosters9128 Před 3 lety +43

      Yes we definitely in the first world live in a culture that nurtures narcissistic personality

    • @burrage59
      @burrage59 Před 3 lety +40

      Yes, nothing wrong with saying, "I don't know the answer to that".

  • @HandsomeJackoff
    @HandsomeJackoff Před 2 lety +1936

    I’m not a narcissist, I’m actually better than everybody.

    • @jaredbond7908
      @jaredbond7908 Před 2 lety +9

      same :P

    • @surfshack2
      @surfshack2 Před 2 lety +62

      @@jaredbond7908 The correct way to say that would be..."I'm not a narcissist, I actually AM better than everybody else". lol 😉

    • @TheMasterfulcreator
      @TheMasterfulcreator Před 2 lety +43

      imagining the plight of a non narcissist that actually IS smarter, stronger, more capable etc than everyone. i mean they gotta exist right?

    • @surfshack2
      @surfshack2 Před 2 lety +13

      @@TheMasterfulcreator yep. They’re all over the place!

    • @L.Reeves
      @L.Reeves Před 2 lety +6

      @@TheMasterfulcreator Saitama

  • @dhd-00
    @dhd-00 Před rokem +94

    We are already smarter than they are. The key is to not allow what makes us more evolved, our emotional maturity, cause for us to have so much empathy for them that we allow for them to abuse us. Most times, it is this empathy that gets us in trouble. We don’t respond the way we should at the first sign of misconduct because we assume that we are incorrect in our judgment. We are smart enough to know that if someone is damaged they are going to act out and mistreat others. So, we are more patient with them. This is where the problem comes in. Our caring and ability to identify with a person’s pain causes for us to fall victim to their callous behavior. We move the boundary for them because we believe if we do, we can help them. We believe that all they need is love. The problem is, they don’t really want it. They just wanted us to move the boundary. They literally want to see if they can continue to make us do things we not wish to do. They want to see if they can cause a reaction that is out of character. They want to watch us unravel. It makes them feel powerful. Moreover, if you feel sure that your husband might never cheat on you, you might have to rethink. Most wives in marriages are shocked when they find out their husband cheating, and it happens more with people who never thought they would cheat. This is why you have to take the tiniest suspicion carefully. If your husband is cheating on you, the best and probably the only guaranteed way to catch him is to spy on their phones. However, spying on a phone is not something you can do without any external help unless you have the James bond level of spy skills. In such case you will need an expert phone spyier Metaspyhub@gmail. com for the purpose,,,

  • @sugarmagnolia33
    @sugarmagnolia33 Před rokem +109

    I have a theory that certain professional fields really attract narcissists. Politics and business are two big ones. As a former activist, I met a loooot of covert narcissists who thought they were saving the world.
    Oddly enough I think the field of Psychology attracts a lot of narcissists as well.

    • @fumarate1
      @fumarate1 Před rokem +25

      also in the religious field as well.

    • @sugarmagnolia33
      @sugarmagnolia33 Před rokem +4

      @@fumarate1 1000%

    • @ZYX84
      @ZYX84 Před rokem +5

      Psychiatry, it is a medical profession, although the profession is the wrong word as we all know it is a practice. They are continually practicing. There’s a lot of wiggle room..
      I suppose it’s the field where there wouldn’t be a lot of challenge for those who are coming in to get “help“ or two “heal“… The “ Dr.”yields a lot of power over sad people sometimes..
      now.. please have your blood type in your credit card number.😐🤨😉.

    • @shivadasa
      @shivadasa Před rokem +1

      The vast majority of activists are also narcissists.

    • @ZYX84
      @ZYX84 Před rokem

      @@shivadasa Activist.
      It sounds like a school of some kind. That could be possibly where they all go to and get their degrees.
      The narcissist that I have come to recognize all seem to have graduated from the same place. They’ve become quite ordinary to me.
      Predictively boring quite honestly.
      Both activists and narcissist.
      🤡😐🤡.
      Oh well..
      look at their heads and forgive them..
      some wise guy said that..😉
      .

  • @ParandAndrd-iv4cq
    @ParandAndrd-iv4cq Před 3 lety +815

    I’m super humble. That’s what makes me so great

    • @rogerknights857
      @rogerknights857 Před 3 lety +39

      A former Israeli prime minister said, “Don’t act humble. you aren’t that great.”

    • @paulbentley1705
      @paulbentley1705 Před 3 lety +2

      Lol!

    • @Ali-kb8gr
      @Ali-kb8gr Před 3 lety +2

      Haha

    • @UnholyRave666
      @UnholyRave666 Před 3 lety +12

      Doublebinds at its finest. Humble? Narcissist. Not being humble? Obvious narcissist.

    • @BenPursley
      @BenPursley Před 3 lety +7

      and yet, I'm the humblest

  • @SweetPappyJones
    @SweetPappyJones Před 2 lety +1439

    The first rule of Condescending Club is pretty complex, you probably wouldn’t get it 😒

    • @jamesarrendell9517
      @jamesarrendell9517 Před 2 lety +18

      I’m surprised this comment hasn’t gotten more love

    • @MisterTutor2010
      @MisterTutor2010 Před 2 lety +38

      The first rule of Hipster Club is something you probably never heard of :)

    • @TheRTM
      @TheRTM Před 2 lety +5

      🤣😂

    • @mistersippi2945
      @mistersippi2945 Před 2 lety +45

      Lol, one of my niece’s boyfriends was meeting everyone and me and my cousin were talking and asked “so man, what kinda music you in to?”. The response was “I don’t listen to mainstream music like the media wants me to”. We all knew exactly what kinda guy he was. Tried to push it a little more and “I only listen to music that has meaning behind it you wouldn’t understand”.
      Thank god for my uncle who said: “You’re a real cunt aren’t ya? Bad parents?” and he stormed off and apparently said some mean things about us on social media.

    • @MandleRoss
      @MandleRoss Před 2 lety +17

      Condescending means talking down to someone.

  • @yamlwoz
    @yamlwoz Před 2 lety +70

    My late brother had a wonderful sense of humour. Someone we knew never missed a chance to use long and complex words. One day my brother said to him "Wow! You're so clever, you even know the botanical name for a fart!"

  • @user-hx7mi7ml8u
    @user-hx7mi7ml8u Před 2 lety +26

    My ex-husband, a narcissistic high-school teacher with a Master’s Degree, once told me after we were married for 7 years, that I wasn’t very “intelligent” because I was a “just” a beautician.
    He said, in his haughty voice, “I’ve been schooled, and beauticians can’t be that “intelligent” because there are so many of them, it can’t be that hard to become one.”
    (I thought, “Well, there are thousands of teachers in the world, so it must not take that much intelligence to become one either.”)
    A few years later, Mr. Scholar, made the highly intelligent decision to have an affair with our 18-year-old babysitter/his student. 3 years later, he married her when she was 21 and “legal” so he wouldn’t look like a total pervert. 😐
    My sister (another narcissist) was in school pursuing her Doctorate, and we were discussing something that she didn’t agree with, and she stated, “I HAVE A Phd!” (Again, I was just a beautician, so she had to let me know her opinion trumped mine because of her degree.)(Which she really hadn’t gotten yet.)
    🙄

    • @HowardARoark
      @HowardARoark Před rokem +5

      Sounds like a tough time. Many people with PhD have poor knowledge of their subject - the PhD system does not enhance knowledge - quite the opposite in fact.

    • @rockthecasbah6450
      @rockthecasbah6450 Před rokem +1

      I've known a couple of people with PhD who were totally delusional and snooty. I'm not stupid but I just couldn't afford to pursue my tertiary education and have to start working right after I obtained my diploma to help out my younger siblings. I was also subjected to subtle insults in my office because I don't have a university degree.

    • @HowardARoark
      @HowardARoark Před rokem +3

      @@rockthecasbah6450 I have a university degree and in my career as a software developer I worked with a number of developers who had no degree at all and I actually preferred working with them by far, and they were much better engineers. The head of a top web design agency I spoke to once told me it was extremely difficult to get suitable job candidates from the pool of graduates - he literally said they did not have a clue.

  • @djhagrid300
    @djhagrid300 Před 2 lety +1072

    "Every mistake that someone else makes, to the narcissist, is a big mistake."
    Beautifully said.

    • @PhilLesh69
      @PhilLesh69 Před 2 lety +22

      There is always something in your past that they can hold up in your face to prove how inferior you are to them.
      You know, like if you got caught doing something benign but mischievous as a very young child. They can always stretch that into "early warnings" of even deeper criminal or malicious behavior in your adult life. They can always find a mistake you made long ago in the past and turn it into something more catastrophic now.

    • @gabrielbusso4036
      @gabrielbusso4036 Před 2 lety +14

      Those commas are wrong (JK)

    • @reikosommerville6822
      @reikosommerville6822 Před 2 lety +12

      i hate when they do that shit.. undermining someone elses intelligence for their own amusement.. or literally to make themselves feel about themselves

    • @michaelo3599
      @michaelo3599 Před 2 lety +16

      Experienced this at work, it was relentless. he was my senior and now I'm his senior 1 1/2 years on. I treat him with kindness and he hates it as he has nothing to chew on :D

    • @michaelo3599
      @michaelo3599 Před 2 lety +4

      And don't worry, there are cameras up and down the place and my office room is always locked when unoccupied so he can't do anything slimy.

  • @daryllect6659
    @daryllect6659 Před 3 lety +88

    People who think they know everything are particularly annoying to those of us who do.

    • @child_of_God316
      @child_of_God316 Před 3 lety +12

      High five if that was a joke ....Jesus Christ if it wasn't!!

    • @child_of_God316
      @child_of_God316 Před 3 lety +3

      Nice screen name

    • @georgiak6017
      @georgiak6017 Před 3 lety +1

      I wish we had the laughing emoji on CZcams lol.

    • @halfmanhalfamazing9812
      @halfmanhalfamazing9812 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s funny I believe when people say not it alls tends to come from an objective standpoint. If I speak in a form of excitement about things I know, some people may say I am no it all. But I don’t know it all , I just what I know and I am very open to suggestions . But I think it falls in the same line perhaps of when people discuss confidence vs arrograncce. I remember I had a professor describe me in a gaslighting way when I did a speech in front a mass of people. Deep down I was nervous , but I had to psyche myself up. But in his mind he thought I was acting arrogant. Even after I thought I didn’t do a great job. But everybody tend to say it was a great job. I guess things are viewed differently from people who perceive you in a certain way.

    • @rogerknights857
      @rogerknights857 Před 3 lety

      It’s even funnier if the last words are, “... those of us who actually do.”

  • @r.w.bottorff7735
    @r.w.bottorff7735 Před rokem +28

    "... saving up the mistakes for a greater embarrassment factor later..." Wow, the inner workings of narcissistic thought gives me the chills when filtered through the angelic voice of Dr. Grande!

  • @Good_Vibes...
    @Good_Vibes... Před 2 lety +58

    I'm so glad I stumbled on this video. There are a couple of points that hit home for me. [3:05 - 3:45] "to the narcissist, every mistake that someone else makes is a major mistake." "...they're saving up the mistakes to get that embarrassment factor up higher." Narcissists are in a perpetual vortex of manipulation. It's their default.

    • @HowardARoark
      @HowardARoark Před rokem

      That's correct. It's so important to keep distance from that vortex - it draws you in.

    • @New-qy5mi
      @New-qy5mi Před rokem

      And there default is being better than everyone in every way possible and letting them know it, then again you know absolutely nothing

  • @eskhawk
    @eskhawk Před 2 lety +610

    Irregardless of what you say, its a mute point saying I'm an narcissists souly debased on the fact I use fanciful words in my grammer...But I digest...

    • @eclectic_gamer
      @eclectic_gamer Před 2 lety +86

      Dammit, I want to correct you, but don't want to look like a Narcissist!

    • @eskhawk
      @eskhawk Před 2 lety +18

      @@eclectic_gamer hahaha

    • @sineadkirby1826
      @sineadkirby1826 Před 2 lety +12

      Sounds like my ex husband lol

    • @k.d.2589
      @k.d.2589 Před 2 lety +29

      Ok, this one triggered me. 😂😂

    • @eelswamp
      @eelswamp Před 2 lety +19

      Nice won! ('Souly debased' even nicer :D)

  • @maxcovfefe
    @maxcovfefe Před 2 lety +691

    Being a narcissist sounds a lot like being in junior high.

    • @Slitspop
      @Slitspop Před 2 lety +3

      what

    • @Silentpartner2176
      @Silentpartner2176 Před 2 lety +24

      That’s because they are in junior high.

    • @bds8715
      @bds8715 Před 2 lety +10

      where everything is fiction, future and prediction

    • @CollegeDroputPowerpoints
      @CollegeDroputPowerpoints Před 2 lety +8

      ...or just regular high

    • @magisterrleth3129
      @magisterrleth3129 Před 2 lety +3

      @Erika Ives Can confirm, my last boyfriend was a bratty, bratty man. I probably should've watched this before I told him he doesn't make me happy anymore, if I did, I might've been able to predict that he'd actually throw me out that night for saying that.

  • @greentooth3097
    @greentooth3097 Před rokem +7

    If you want to really punish a narcissist, point out their mistake and make sure it's something they can't refute.

    • @razzberry4756
      @razzberry4756 Před rokem

      i’ve done that with my mother, she very quickly switches to extremely personal insults that dig deep like a dagger, i get so upset that i can’t think straight, then she goes back and “wins,” the argument because now i’m stumbling over my words in anger, then she makes me feel stupid for “losing,” the argument, when all i wanted was a discussion, everything is an argument with her

    • @greentooth3097
      @greentooth3097 Před rokem +1

      @@razzberry4756
      Wanting a discussion with them is a mistake.

  • @wendyelliott6828
    @wendyelliott6828 Před rokem +3

    I am late to the table now in 2023, but I am glad I listened Dr Grande.
    My narcissist prefaced conversations with, “ When I was in Graduate School …”. He especially liked doing this in the company of blue collar types, friends of mine, including my father. His credentials didn’t have any bearing on the point he was trying to make. It was just BRAGGING to diminish others.

  • @Noztube
    @Noztube Před 4 lety +1572

    "Item 5: Attacking people who have different views than them instead of arguing based on actual evidence."
    Everyone on twitter...

    • @SoulfulTruth
      @SoulfulTruth Před 4 lety +20

      "Scientists" are most excellent at "attacking people who have different views... " instead of relying on the conspicuous evidence, they memorize idiotic theories / guesses / wild imaginings / speculation while telling themselves they're "scientific".

    • @michaelmallal9101
      @michaelmallal9101 Před 4 lety +27

      Who needs evidence when one has prejudice? - Legal maxim.

    • @Jae-by3hf
      @Jae-by3hf Před 4 lety +9

      Absolute facts! I laughed, but your comment is so true! I had to disengage from there. It’s an absolute cesspool.

    • @octoberskye1049
      @octoberskye1049 Před 4 lety +24

      This seems to be true of the majority on Twitter. I've found a small percentage who do objective research and maintain neutrality (or civility). Some just throw out a complaint, then attack like pit vipers when any solution is offered. Of course, these same people *never* have any solutions to offer for their own complaints. I've asked. Nicely. They just go silent or block. I've learned to be very selective about the rides I take in that particular carnival.

    • @TheSpringClover
      @TheSpringClover Před 4 lety +8

      SJWs

  • @thariaxandre8484
    @thariaxandre8484 Před 4 lety +720

    "To a narcissist every mistake that somebody else makes is a major mistake"

    • @987sunrise
      @987sunrise Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, 💡

    • @manfredman5075
      @manfredman5075 Před 3 lety +8

      Yes. Mistakes make for good ammo.

    • @toddvanfleet8576
      @toddvanfleet8576 Před 3 lety +30

      Manipulative, Amphibious, Soul- sucking, emotional vampire succubus , dangerous, con artist cowards, without a moral bone in their body.
      And lousy in bed...

    • @drippinwet774
      @drippinwet774 Před 3 lety +2

      One trick to crushing a narc (ones who present a danger to themselves &/or others), that I use, is indirectly robbing them of their self-trust in their decision-making.
      I once had a narc pinned for believing they had me figured out. I'd use their tells to immediately adapt; change my responses to destroy any patterns they have developed on me, then drag their name through the dirt. These people are your enemies.
      Make them depend on you or destroy them completely.
      Oh! And don't brag! Remain formless and unseen in your efforts. This is the ultimate requirement.
      Its pure mental agony for a narcissist to attack/defend themselves from one or more enemies they cannot see.

    • @rosalindmartin4469
      @rosalindmartin4469 Před 3 lety

      Can I quote you?
      Why ask, you ask?

  • @sensitiveone8305
    @sensitiveone8305 Před 2 lety +9

    I started painting as an adult. I took classes, read books and watched CZcams videos. I am proud of my work. My sister asked how I created one piece. This was early in my learning phase, so I used tracings as I cannot draw. I still had to use the correct strokes, brushes, mix colors, etc to create the work. She looked at me and said, “I could do that.” She didn’t compliment my work as any normal sister would do, she said that she could do it.

    • @weantoine
      @weantoine Před rokem +2

      jealous hater. she prob. cant even properly communicate a thought. good for you in learning something new!

  • @judethaddeus9856
    @judethaddeus9856 Před rokem +2

    I use big words often because I love words.. I know you weren’t making a blanket statement or anything… words just fascinate me, always have… everyone reading this have a safe and happy life…

  • @kategould4857
    @kategould4857 Před 4 lety +822

    What's really annoying is how narcissists do manage to fool a lot of people. I am so glad that these videos are being made to raise awareness. Thank you Dr. Grande!

    • @987sunrise
      @987sunrise Před 3 lety +18

      I agree. They do tend to attract supporters.

    • @leelawrence1557
      @leelawrence1557 Před 3 lety +4

      Barack Obama comes to mind. Trump too.

    • @leeanncrowley-davies7628
      @leeanncrowley-davies7628 Před 3 lety +16

      They bluff it, they believe their own hype so much it pulls others in. They also lie, they also triangulate and bounce others off each other

    • @diane9247
      @diane9247 Před 3 lety +19

      There are a lot of B-list narcissists in middle management. They only pretend to work and their bosses don't notice, because the low-level staff does the work. They are the ones who know exactly what the pretender is up to. 😒

    • @leelawrence1557
      @leelawrence1557 Před 3 lety +2

      @mondblume63 You got it backwards.

  • @SouthernASMRSounds
    @SouthernASMRSounds Před 4 lety +1038

    My narc ex said that he was tested and scored so high that the test couldn't measure it. He said that he was literally too smart to be tested. 😒

    • @maryfrady7149
      @maryfrady7149 Před 4 lety +71

      I have actually heard different people say this! I just thought they were crazy.

    • @GeorgideMarne
      @GeorgideMarne Před 4 lety +60

      That's usually a clue that he wasn't content with the result... probably under 130 😃

    • @warmbloodydew
      @warmbloodydew Před 4 lety +30

      haha funny. remind me of My exnarc told me that he had IQ 180 and studied aerospace blablah and applied for a job in NASA. ....it isn't real but it seemed really real when he fabricated.

    • @dianefarley37
      @dianefarley37 Před 4 lety +8

      Thanks!! Now my sides are KILLING me! 😂😂

    • @afabuloussentientbeing8112
      @afabuloussentientbeing8112 Před 4 lety +2

      Are you sure he wasn't being sarcastic?

  • @pettytoni1955
    @pettytoni1955 Před 2 lety +36

    My brother, his wife, and their kids exhibit all of these traits. I'm the one with the MBA, and numerous work awards and they do everything they can to try to belittle me and others. I'm glad I know who I am, and don't let them get to me.

    • @6throundnate759
      @6throundnate759 Před 2 lety +6

      Let them be miserable together LOL

    • @dannywholuv
      @dannywholuv Před 2 lety

      Your the covert narcissist 😀

    • @nonyobisniss7928
      @nonyobisniss7928 Před 2 lety +1

      I suspect this isn't you, but there are lots of very stupid people with degrees these days. I'm happy for them if it helped them advance their lives and careers, but people who seem to expect respect because they have a degree are laughable to me. I assume they learnt something of value, but I wouldn't assume they know more than anyone else unless they demonstrate it. I'm not suggesting they should demonstrate it btw.

    • @pettytoni1955
      @pettytoni1955 Před 2 lety

      @@nonyobisniss7928 I expect to not be belittled by my own family. That's what any reasonable person expects.

    • @nonyobisniss7928
      @nonyobisniss7928 Před 2 lety

      @@pettytoni1955 That's a fair expectation, I'm sorry people you are close to try to diminish you. What is it they say to belittle you though? An awful lot of people think they're better than others because of their achievements, and I think it should be allowed for other people to question the value of those achievements.

  • @nlmcguire91
    @nlmcguire91 Před 2 lety +7

    In having discussions with my father-in-law, he often tells me not to say so much, deriding me for the “walls of text“ that I send him. So I started using larger, more meaningful words so that I can use fewer of them, but then I get accused of trying to sound smart. I came to realize that there is no pleasing this man

  • @kcc-karenschroniccorner9432
    @kcc-karenschroniccorner9432 Před 3 lety +485

    This is helpful. I was in an abusive relationship with a narcissist. He developed an interest in poker and took me along to a tournament one night to show off his skills. I won the tournament and boy was he mad! Lol

    • @jmschroeder5302
      @jmschroeder5302 Před 3 lety +6

      I love this!

    • @melodychance9399
      @melodychance9399 Před 3 lety +16

      Actually had a similar experience where my ex was convinced he could count cards and win BlackJack (it was literally an event run by my uni) and then just kept sitting there and losing while looking like he knew what to do...

    • @Chez114
      @Chez114 Před 2 lety +10

      🤣🤣🤣 I'm so sorry for laughing. I absolutely am sincerely empathetic to what you've been through, but damn I took so much pleasure in you kicking his butt in his own game 🤣

    • @tireachan6178
      @tireachan6178 Před 2 lety +3

      When I started reading this I thought you were about to say he brought you to a Poker Tournament and was down big money so he put you up with his Rolex and car keys before going all in.

    • @birdlady2725
      @birdlady2725 Před 2 lety +6

      @Jake Stockton Exactly why he is probably a N.... Perception is all they care about. Reality can be an ego buster, and that is unacceptable for them.

  • @iainowsiany7424
    @iainowsiany7424 Před 2 lety +771

    “When a narcissist is unable to win on the basis of evidence they switch to other tactics: Attacking people who have different views than them instead of arguing based on actual evidence”. Hmmm. Sounds like half our population, at least

    • @Lyrielonwind
      @Lyrielonwind Před 2 lety +16

      It must be global. I was thinking the same about my country 😂

    • @and_the_first_last
      @and_the_first_last Před 2 lety +21

      That's sexist

    • @schonlingg.wunderbar2985
      @schonlingg.wunderbar2985 Před 2 lety +11

      @@and_the_first_last It is possible to be wrong and sexist, just saying ...

    • @and_the_first_last
      @and_the_first_last Před 2 lety +5

      @@schonlingg.wunderbar2985 Tempting idea, but I'd rather be right and non-sexist

    • @kate9576
      @kate9576 Před 2 lety +10

      Especially in politics

  • @RedStarRogue
    @RedStarRogue Před rokem +8

    I had a friend in my teens and early 20s who when looking back, I would say fit the description.
    One early red flag was when he once requested I pick him up from the airport at midnight. He just never arrived and I didn't hear a word from him for two or three days. Eventually when I finally met up with him, I found out he had taken a flight the next day because "no one had woken him up for his departure announcement." Never got an apology from him for wasting my time that night, it was like he had been the one super inconvenienced.
    It got worse from there as the years went on.

  • @scorpiolove674
    @scorpiolove674 Před 2 lety +45

    the " I use logic !!" one especially resonates, of course coming from the vulnerable narcissist who has a terrible time remembering recent thoughts and regulating emotional outbursts.

    • @sylviatownsend410
      @sylviatownsend410 Před 2 lety +5

      One time early in our marriage I excitedly told my physician-husband that I had just read an article that said doctor were finding that there really is such a thing as a will to live. He angrily replied, "I believe in SCIENCE and LOGIC, not VOODOO!"

    • @nonyobisniss7928
      @nonyobisniss7928 Před 2 lety

      @@sylviatownsend410 Most scientists say shit like that, especially when somebody without a degree dares to have a personal opinion about something science has so far failed to find (or in some cases even look for) evidence of. They really are as irrational as any other human being. I don't really have a problem with what your husband said, just that it was unnecessarily snappy. There's a lot of pseudo-science out there, fake-science, fraudulent science. Defaulting to skepticism makes sense.

    • @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716
      @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716 Před 2 lety

      i say that but im actually using analytical data with source or self experience input data lol she hated when she would try and gas light me and id start plugging facts into an ai tool to argue facts lmao

    • @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716
      @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716 Před 2 lety

      she threatened to smash all my computers (this was all before she really got in my head)

  • @thomasallen436
    @thomasallen436 Před 4 lety +857

    Good thing I'm not a narcissist, I'm the most humble person I know

    • @markrafaello5191
      @markrafaello5191 Před 4 lety +129

      I’m not a narcissist either I’m even more humbler than you are in fact I’m the most humble person on Earth

    • @markrafaello5191
      @markrafaello5191 Před 4 lety +78

      If there was a contest to be humble I would win it hands down

    • @leonardofernandez6488
      @leonardofernandez6488 Před 4 lety +38

      I am not only the most humble, but also the smartest.

    • @raw5889
      @raw5889 Před 4 lety +4

      Sam Worth if that’s a real wit it HAS to be a troll.

    • @KyonXyclone
      @KyonXyclone Před 4 lety +2

      😂😂

  • @dayc5933
    @dayc5933 Před 3 lety +277

    I love this guy’s dry humor.

    • @Griselda_Puppy
      @Griselda_Puppy Před 3 lety +6

      *I do as well! I much prefer Dr Grande's affect, personality, and humour over other popular youtubers!*

    • @roy_for_real2674
      @roy_for_real2674 Před 3 lety +1

      It evaporated.

    • @BeckBeckGo
      @BeckBeckGo Před 2 lety +2

      It took me awhile to get it. I had to watch him a bit before I started hearing it. Now even some of his title names make me chuckle

    • @benlynch6730
      @benlynch6730 Před 2 lety

      So dry it ain't humour

    • @benlynch6730
      @benlynch6730 Před 2 lety

      @@BeckBeckGo you forgot a space between the 'a while' wording.
      Point 1. Damn it!

  • @solitaireburton3740
    @solitaireburton3740 Před 2 lety +91

    I found it spot on. Having lived with one for 22 years too long, I could identify with EVERY 10 POINTS. I hope MANY people find your video so they can avoid narcissists.

    • @kimbleeblob
      @kimbleeblob Před 2 lety +3

      Too late 😔 I've been in a "relationship" with a narcissist for 8 years. That's what brought me to these videos

    • @cassandrarosado8688
      @cassandrarosado8688 Před 2 lety +1

      Excuse me, but some of us can be rather interesting. Some of the stories we make up for ourselves are worth listening to and at times very creative.

    • @solitaireburton3740
      @solitaireburton3740 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cassandrarosado8688 making up for yourself and about yourself are different. And it makes a big difference if you are trying to manipulate someone else with the story, which narcissists invariably are.

    • @solitaireburton3740
      @solitaireburton3740 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kimbleeblob please Kim, try to get away, especially if he/she is physically abusive. Inbox me at Margaret Burton if you would like to talk.

    • @This_Planet
      @This_Planet Před 2 lety

      I am sorry I never did. Would have left 6 plus years ago.

  • @brianhales1416
    @brianhales1416 Před rokem +9

    I've had to cut ties with a friend I've known over 20 years. This is something I didn't care to do, considering the years. But then in those years I've gotten to know him well whereas he didn't think I had saw him. It was his world and to be in it, wasn't hard to lose one's self there. Every relationship he's had as that after awhile they got fed up with the way he poked at 'em jokingly whenever company was around. And he was always following up with "You know I didn't mean it, I was just funning". It never failed as when they had finally left, it was automatically their fault. He's the victim, they abandoned him, they didn't love him and I knew this wasn't the case as I've witnessed it and as I aforementioned, I've gotten to see him for who he is. But I also saw something else in him and so he wasn't entirely bad. I tried explaining to him unless stop living in denial and come to understand your self, you'll never move forward. He got with a woman in which perhaps they'll make it as marriage was on the table. I was like wow ok and I'm genuinely happy for people who are doing well and happy in their lives, especially family and friends. Sadly this to ended with her to blame about how she didn't love. She out lasted others and apparently he hadn't changed. She loved him and most likely still does in some ways. Personally, I got tired of being lied to and he's lied to me for years. But I hung around; not only in hopes of trying rekindle that glimpse of spark I saw in him as when he was young spunky kid, cause when I become a friend it's for life... Sadly he's a first hopefully a last. I'm sure I'm added to the long list of people who've disappointed. So be it as I no longer care to accompany nor compliment his misery.

  • @marksprinkle
    @marksprinkle Před 3 lety +291

    I hope these don't apply to me.
    "Item Number One: the narcissist feels the need to correct the grammar of others."
    Damn it.

    • @melaniekeeling7462
      @melaniekeeling7462 Před 2 lety +18

      I correct my daughters' grammar and vocabulary at home. We speak several languages and I feel it is a parent's job to help their children speak as well as possible. I also correct my students or help them to correct themselves, because that's my job. Otherwise, you're on your own.

    • @jodityler8799
      @jodityler8799 Před 2 lety

      @Mark Sprinkle I know right??

    • @CarlyJ
      @CarlyJ Před 2 lety +12

      @@melaniekeeling7462 Did you use the incorrect 'you're' the second time to bait people? 😏

    • @samanthawhang7498
      @samanthawhang7498 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CarlyJ 😅

    • @melaniekeeling7462
      @melaniekeeling7462 Před 2 lety +2

      @@CarlyJ my bad

  • @salliegallegos918
    @salliegallegos918 Před 3 lety +205

    Also, when a person humbly asks a narcissist for help, the narcissist will lord it over them and make the task seem 15,000 times more complicated than it actually is instead of simplifying the steps, encouraging, and teaching them.

    • @calebncontreras-117
      @calebncontreras-117 Před 3 lety +17

      Its a shame that half of them are college professors

    • @wwevsecwvswcwvstna
      @wwevsecwvswcwvstna Před 3 lety +19

      And once the work is done, he will constantly throw it in the persons face. "You wouldn't be here, if it wasn't for me!" "I got you here!" Etc

    • @evilmunky72
      @evilmunky72 Před 3 lety +5

      @@calebncontreras-117 Also, professional chefs... not sure why, but most professional (as in formally educated in a culinary art) chefs are narcissists. I maybe have met one or two who weren't, and have met many as I am in the profession (FOH).

    • @dingfeldersmurfalot4560
      @dingfeldersmurfalot4560 Před 3 lety +9

      One of my favorite versions of this:
      Boss to a new hire: Don't forget, I have an open-door policy. Anytime you have a question, come see me.
      New hire a little later that day: Hello there. You know, I found something I'm not too sure about ...
      Boss(overloud and with a sour exasperated face): What are you, stupid???

    • @russellstare6610
      @russellstare6610 Před 3 lety +2

      My ex wife to a tee

  • @lgp5619
    @lgp5619 Před rokem +19

    Having been raised by a narcicist mother, its scary how many of these traits have been passed onto me, I beat myself all the time recognising these issues in myself.

    • @Active0Bserver
      @Active0Bserver Před rokem +6

      "Narcissist fleas" is a term I've heard used for people who show some degree of narcissistic traits due to spending a good deal of time around them. If you were raised by one, it's no surprise that some of those tendencies would rub off on you. Being aware of them within yourself is powerful. Best of luck to you in your healing.

    • @ZFern9390
      @ZFern9390 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@Active0BserverI learned to lie a lot because of my narcissistic mom growing up and didn't even realize it until my twenties when a friend of mine pointed it out and asked me why I lie. I figured it out soon afterwards. I had to learn to discontinue that horrible habit.

  • @laurenclark5734
    @laurenclark5734 Před 2 lety +5

    I was married to a narcissist and his ignorance absolutely baffled me because he showed all 10 of the things that you mentioned in the video. One of my favorites was when I told him I had a degree in sociology and he was convinced that I was studying psychiatry and trying to analyze him. I just shook my head after I picked my jaw off the floor.

    • @marydipietro8124
      @marydipietro8124 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Sounds like my husband with his unreasonable unreason. Surely no one can possibly be that stupid, but he was.

    • @laurenclark2081
      @laurenclark2081 Před 10 měsíci

      @@marydipietro8124 sadly “unreasonable and reason” make sense. I never imagined my situation was to the point where I would start questioning reality.
      Just when I was starting to question my sanity doors open for me to get out and I did.
      Wish you the best.

  • @wolfafterdark
    @wolfafterdark Před 3 lety +279

    "Narcissists tend to over-commit to ideas that protect their ego." - Dr. Todd Grande
    I hear that.

    • @TheOlivecat
      @TheOlivecat Před 3 lety +3

      Yep, like religion, or the military

    • @kasperchristensen8416
      @kasperchristensen8416 Před 3 lety +16

      An excellent example would be protecting your ego by continuing to commit to the idea that you actually won the election despite an overwhelming amount of evidence that shows otherwise, even when it reaches the point where your followers are literally storming the capitol for believing your unsubstantiated narcissistic claim.

    • @RaxxorxD
      @RaxxorxD Před 3 lety +6

      @@kasperchristensen8416 Thank You Kasper, very cool!

    • @DianaIsabel929
      @DianaIsabel929 Před 3 lety +2

      Seen this so many times. They also gaslight you in the argument too. Using your strong arguments and then telling you that you misunderstood their position to save face.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Před 3 lety +4

      @@kasperchristensen8416
      That’s oddly specific. I wonder where that could apply...

  • @DaveGIS123
    @DaveGIS123 Před 4 lety +130

    "Even fools are thought wise if they keep silent, and discerning if they hold their tongues" (Proverbs 17: 28).

  • @charlesiragui2473
    @charlesiragui2473 Před rokem +2

    I had a person inform me in an email that I had misused the word "whoever" when I should have used "whomever". Good catch.

  • @abnoco
    @abnoco Před 2 lety +11

    My oldest sibling is a narcissist. That’s bad for the other siblings, trust me on this.

  • @segovia102
    @segovia102 Před 3 lety +184

    This was phenomenologically good. I'm tiresome so I think I need a nap.

    • @WonderfulWorldofAwesomeness
      @WonderfulWorldofAwesomeness Před 3 lety +10

      Maybe you just over idealogicalled

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 3 lety +1

      I like the idea of writing a longer story like this. Unfortunately I suck at writing, but perhaps someone else can make this work.

    • @Lindsey0007
      @Lindsey0007 Před 3 lety +11

      Narcissists are tiresome and cause others to need a nap lol

    • @nillchen
      @nillchen Před 3 lety +6

      I can recommend you some of the best tires that exist

    • @katrinawikstrom4335
      @katrinawikstrom4335 Před 3 lety +2

      I bet you need something! !

  • @alexlloyd3850
    @alexlloyd3850 Před 2 lety +378

    Wow, I really learned a lot about 10 Things Politicians do to Appear Smarter than They Really Are.

    • @sylviatownsend410
      @sylviatownsend410 Před 2 lety +16

      A lot of politicians are narcissists.

    • @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716
      @scavengerkryovsnetworks4716 Před 2 lety +4

      clearly u never been in a situation like mine before. If you had you would see they are much worse bc the spotlight isnt shining on them they can do so much more damage. trust me or dont but if you find yourself in that situation dont say i didnt say so

    • @brischarrer
      @brischarrer Před rokem +2

      Lol.

    • @danmasters1568
      @danmasters1568 Před rokem

      Biden is a perfect example of narcissistic behavior.

    • @MrMoto289
      @MrMoto289 Před rokem +12

      He described Trump to a “T”.

  • @jaymacintyre1777
    @jaymacintyre1777 Před 2 lety +8

    Your descriptions are so accurate, based on my experience with a couple of extremely narcissistic people. One person, in particular, seems like a textbook example. He will automatically discount the achievements of others, mainly in fields where he himself has been active. Most,or all, of his credentials are suspect. Someone who does not know him well once asked about his experience in graduate school (the rest of us have doubted he ever attended grad school). He evaded the questions and changed the subject until the person gave up. He seems to think that he can simply say he is qualified in some way and others will accept it, but he completely lacks any in-depth knowledge. I think jealousy plays a big role: he will show respect for people of the past, who are now dead, but people in fields that interest him and are currently active are dismissed as phonies or just 'lucky'. He has openly stated that he "has no flaws"", that's he is a good person in every way, and highly intelligent of course. I also know he thinks he is extremely attractive and will rarely credit others with being good-looking.

  • @dianerodriguez6546
    @dianerodriguez6546 Před rokem +30

    When my husband and I were in our dating phase as boyfriend and girlfriend he would use uncommon higher educated words and I would just nod and pretend to understand him, then excuse myself and look up the words he would use to finally understand what he was saying. After years together I finally told him about this secret and we both laughed about it 😜

  • @ryanfischer4457
    @ryanfischer4457 Před 2 lety +442

    Dr Grande just described every single person on Twitter.

    • @kagaria
      @kagaria Před 2 lety +11

      NARCISSISTS EVERYWHERE

    • @manuel0578
      @manuel0578 Před 2 lety +12

      Actually he only described blue check Mark Twitter

    • @Terri_Hugs
      @Terri_Hugs Před 2 lety +1

      Lol...funny

    • @CWPTraining
      @CWPTraining Před 2 lety +1

      Ryan Fischer tryna tell us he aint on the Tweeters, without sayin' he aint on the Tweeters

    • @Lyrielonwind
      @Lyrielonwind Před 2 lety

      👍😂

  • @Cyberspine
    @Cyberspine Před 4 lety +400

    One 'tactic' I've observed from a narcissist is that when I ask a question they don't know the answer to, they try to divert the conversation to something else, or respond with a silly joke answer. It is impossible to get them to admit 'I don't know'.

    • @empemitheos
      @empemitheos Před 4 lety +41

      Dude shut up, stop revealing our secrets

    • @brandonvanlieshout7303
      @brandonvanlieshout7303 Před 4 lety +3

      @@empemitheos look at the little troll. Must have not got enough attention this week huh? Nihilist my butt

    • @Nancy-yw1rr
      @Nancy-yw1rr Před 4 lety +34

      Mine most often just lies and makes something up when he doesn't have an answer. Occassionally, you can catch him off guard and stun him into silence when you make a valid point that he can't refute.
      They want others to believe they know everything, that they truly are superior in every way. Not knowing something is akin to weakness and inferiority to them. They are totally clueless and exhausting.

    • @brandonvanlieshout7303
      @brandonvanlieshout7303 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Nancy-yw1rr exactly. Although I don't see anything wrong with making a little joke about not knowing. I learn something new about narcissists everyday. Woman ones at least.

    • @Nancy-yw1rr
      @Nancy-yw1rr Před 4 lety +22

      @@brandonvanlieshout7303 I think mine truly thinks letting anyone know that he doesn't know something is shameful. Common sense dictates that no one can know everything, but narcs interact with others on an emotional level- that's why it's so easy to bruise their ego.
      Yet, they're often the first ones to call others "too sensitive". They are very hypocritical in almost every aspect of their interactions with others.

  • @cliffordchase319
    @cliffordchase319 Před 2 lety +5

    Remember a narcissist has a need to argue. Even more than that is thier craft. They lavish you with praise. They entrap you for the future manipulation.
    I've only noticed one particularly creepy thing they do. They will pretend some bond of intimacy exists. You are a " kindred spirit " you will suddenly find them using your name as if they have known you forever. Bugs the shit out of me.

  • @reneepound2832
    @reneepound2832 Před 2 lety +2

    Richard Ramirez said “I do not expect you to understand me. I am beyond your experience.”

  • @juliegarceau5414
    @juliegarceau5414 Před 4 lety +418

    In my experience, they often raise their voice instead of improving their arguments..

    • @paulclinton6414
      @paulclinton6414 Před 4 lety +23

      Yeah then they ask why you are yelling when you speak up.

    • @serenasmuckers9310
      @serenasmuckers9310 Před 4 lety +20

      Mine attacks me personally. When I point out she's wrong, she says stuff like, "your just trying to say things to hurt me. I could hurt you if I wanted to. You're trying to micromanage me and always have to have the last word." A. She can't hurt me because I'm grounded in who I am and I like me. B. I barely have time to manage MY life, why would I take on micromanaging her's? C. I don't have the last word. I walk away. She continues muttering something passive aggressive, then I pop back in with "who are you talking to? "
      Her: you! Me: I wasn't even in the room!

    • @undeadpresident
      @undeadpresident Před 4 lety +21

      @@paulclinton6414They raise their voice to try to get you emotionally off base then make you look unstable.
      Despite not being triggered by this, I've had them accuse me of yelling when talking calmly and quietly. They will still accuse you of yelling just for standing up for yourself no matter how calm you are.
      Simply standing up for yourself creates conflict with the narcissist and they will do all sorts of dirty tricks to blame you and make you look like the offending party when it is them.

    • @metalwellington
      @metalwellington Před 4 lety +11

      yes. using anger to manipulate people.

    • @kuukuyankson2033
      @kuukuyankson2033 Před 4 lety +4

      Oh my word, that is so true

  • @laruku1006
    @laruku1006 Před 3 lety +189

    I think it’s hilarious that he delivers sarcasm totally straight faced.

  • @fredhubbard7210
    @fredhubbard7210 Před rokem +3

    My brother tested "over 180" on an IQ test at Stanford University Admissions. My sister-in-law told me "You have to understand. When we were first married we got into terrible arguments. Then I realized that he is so smart that he is always right."
    Call it smart if you must.

  • @chrishere4272
    @chrishere4272 Před rokem +3

    I’ve put up with a narcissist relative for years. I didn’t know there is an actual name for her behavior. Whenever I was around her, I’d have to defend or explain everything I said no matter what it was. She’s always superior in every way. I’ve been done with her for one year and I really mean that this time. I’ve put up with a pattern of behavior where she eventually will go into explosive rage over something simple. I realized looking back that it’s usually when I’ve made a big decision without her permission. I have no desire to be around her anymore, literally none.

  • @lauriej.5706
    @lauriej.5706 Před 3 lety +116

    My witchy mother used to say she had a college degree. In reality, she had attended ONE night class at a major University. When I found out, I asked her what the one class she'd taken was and she answered, "It was a long time ago. I don't remember."

    • @PhilVerryChannel
      @PhilVerryChannel Před 2 lety +3

      I know your mother, I asked her and she replied..."It was how to fill the paperwork out to apply for college." It was a pre course. ;)

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 Před 2 lety +1

      Did she pay for the class or just sit in on it?

    • @xkidgey
      @xkidgey Před 2 lety +1

      I know that all too well, narcissism is rampant in my family. My mother was an honorary "secretary" that didn't do anything but collect money from my father and she'd get pissy at family get togethers trying to compare herself to others who were like career nurses and teachers and stuff. Of course you don't find out until the next day when she's taking it out on everybody else

  • @katrinbandel
    @katrinbandel Před 2 lety +187

    Another common thing I notice is, a narcissist will try to dominate the conversation and always choose topics he knows something about. So situations where the limits of his knowledge become visible, don't even occur. And if other topics do come up, he might dismiss them as irrelevant.

    • @sylviatownsend410
      @sylviatownsend410 Před 2 lety +14

      Or figuratively elbow his way in again with HIS chosen topic.

    • @jaymacintyre1777
      @jaymacintyre1777 Před 2 lety +11

      Yes a very good example. The worst one I know will dismiss topics that don't interest him all the time.

    • @m0rtred
      @m0rtred Před 2 lety +4

      who would engage in a conversation with someone about anything they know nothing about? If i don't know anything about the topic how can i contribute to the conversation? If its one-sided it isn't really a conversation and the narcissist is actually you.

    • @katrinbandel
      @katrinbandel Před 2 lety +19

      @@m0rtred In conversations with several people, it is common that topics come up that only some of the participants are knowledgeable about. In a healthy conversation, the one who is not knowledgeable would be interested and ask questions, or would just shut up and listen. But a narcissist can't stand not being the one who is most knowledgeable and who is telling everyone else how things are, so they'll try to turn the conversation back to the topics he is most familiar with.

    • @IMWeira
      @IMWeira Před 2 lety +5

      Bingo! Knew someone like that. He got up an hour early to read the papers so he could spring something on you that you "should have known." Two can play that game, lol.

  • @livsamech8450
    @livsamech8450 Před 2 lety +6

    Love the clarity of your points. I was raised by such folks and being smart was a big deal. Thank you! Been working through this stuff for a long time!

  • @acdude5266
    @acdude5266 Před 2 lety +4

    One of the most spot on videos I have ever viewed in CZcams
    I worked at a government lab in Southern New Jersey which was a remarkably narcissistic and toxic organization. Undercutting was done more than actual work toward the mission.
    Some tactics I saw that were referenced by Dr. Grande: Pretense about understanding of logic (overuse and even misuse of logical fallacy terms to fabricate opportunities to impress others and gain power by correcting other people), foraging for more obscure terms and concepts ("uncanny valley", "Poincare maps") that staff would go "woo" over, and pretense if statistical understanding and refusal to yield to those who know more than they do.
    One key manager and the site leader used all of the tactics Dr. Grande mentioned. Their egos did not allow them to acknowledge that anyone that challenged their often non+starter or incomplete proposals could actually be correct. in fact, they used overt and covert tactics.
    They did this to my predecessors and then to me and other colleagues: Blame shifting, credibility loss claims, covert management, keeping staff from meetings, triangulating employees against each other, rewriting narratives, and using employee surveys and performance reviews as weapons.
    The problem is that the fiefdom management structure with low turnaround and lack of accountability in a government agency in a low work alternative region resulted in a system which promoted narcissistic behavior. Together with the security aspect of the work, an opportunity for ambitious narcissists to work the system covertly and even be incentivized and rewarded for toxic behavior.
    The shocking thing was how much of the staff rationalized the behavior at the lab. Clearly, some were benefactors of others' misery. Some employees seemed to have Stockholm syndrome. Others either adapted and evolved to fit the system or were fit to survive because they themselves were narcissists. Most were blue-pilled and in denial.

  • @user-gs2hg8km1y
    @user-gs2hg8km1y Před 3 lety +41

    One thing I have learned. If someone doesn't feel they have to live by the rules they put on everyone else, they have core problems. This seems to be a common thread that connects major mental/personality problems like narcissism.

    • @seriouscat2231
      @seriouscat2231 Před 2 lety

      The problem is that in disorders of personality there is a false self. And because the false self is just an appearance made up on the spot, then so are all the rules it seeks to impose or pretends to obey. They do not first believe in a rule and then apply it in order to undestand reality, but they first know what they want or can use and then use the rule as a a part of that.

    • @user-gs2hg8km1y
      @user-gs2hg8km1y Před 2 lety

      @@seriouscat2231 well said

  • @GoodnightJLH
    @GoodnightJLH Před 4 lety +104

    I appreciate having my friends correct my mistakes. But I can usually tell if someone is sharing knowledge in a caring way vs gloating over and enjoying seeing me make a mistake.

    • @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934
      @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934 Před 4 lety +2

      J. Holan exactly

    • @scousemouse9715
      @scousemouse9715 Před 4 lety +5

      Its nice to have friends who save you from social blunders.

    • @archywiseman
      @archywiseman Před 4 lety +5

      It's the difference between someone who embarrasses you publicly on social media and someone who sends you a message in private in a real effort to help you.

    • @MicahBuzanANIMATION
      @MicahBuzanANIMATION Před 4 lety

      @ludlow 889 We need more teachers like her. That is so inspiring. This type of empathetic teaching should be taught to teachers.

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 Před 4 lety +1

      @ludlow 889 I don't mind my pronunciation being corrected but it should not stop the flow of conversation. For example, I would allow the speaker to finish what they are saying and casually correct mispronouced words before responding to the content... If a teacher has created an atmosphere where making mistakes is natural part of learning and not a big deal, then direct and instant correction is also not a big deal or source of embarrassment.

  • @Craigdna
    @Craigdna Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for the humor in this one, although, narcissism is really something that is in itself, far from humorous. Personally, I think the number of narcissists in the US is very significant, and we do not pay enough attention to it. The fact that Donald Trump has so many followers, demonstrates that. I appreciate the depth behind this post on the most important topic to engage ourselves in. From one of your prior posts, I learned that there are different types of narcissism, which I have never learned of. I want to thank you for that as I have not heard that from anyone that comments on narcissism. It is always a learning experience in watching your posts. Thank you.

  • @danielrichwine2268
    @danielrichwine2268 Před 2 lety +3

    Watching this, realizing that at one time or the other I have done every one of these narcissistic things...

  • @jessicabamber8732
    @jessicabamber8732 Před 3 lety +174

    When I was younger, I thought that using big words made me (and other people) sound smart. The older I get, the more I think that truly smart people use big words when they need to and can explain difficult things in simple ways.

    • @bettye444
      @bettye444 Před 3 lety +6

      I believe this is correct.

    • @its1110
      @its1110 Před 3 lety +11

      @@bettye444
      Yep. Often "big words" just say something in a particularly apt way. You don't use the "big word" to show off but because it has the nuance you really need.
      Picking a nuanced word means you thought about what you were saying... rather than just spraying sounds.

    • @bettye444
      @bettye444 Před 2 lety +2

      @@its1110 I wish I had explained this the way you did. Most excellently articulated.

    • @baronesselsavonfreytag-lor1134
      @baronesselsavonfreytag-lor1134 Před 2 lety +15

      Some people have large vocabularies and are so used to using colorful language, it gets misinterpreted as grandiose or melodramatic when it's natural.

    • @jdd1318
      @jdd1318 Před 2 lety +1

      You're name sounds so familiar

  • @marcoscalifornio8766
    @marcoscalifornio8766 Před 4 lety +154

    1) 1:11 - Correcting other people's grammar --when you don't have to or it's impolite to do so
    They may avoid telling them in order to use it against them later.
    2) 3:55 - They often use words incorrectly (that's the irony)
    3) 6:16 - They try to talk about areas where they believe other people don't have a lot of knowledge
    4) 7:47 - They support a position even though the evidence is against it --they tend to over commit to ideas that protect their ego
    5) 9:48 - Attacking people who have different views than them
    For example: "If that person can't spell that word correctly, I wouldn't trust them with anything"
    6) 10:53 - Blaming others --"That person gave me bad information"
    7) 11:35 - Using the words 'logic' and 'reason'. Simply by using them makes their argument sound better
    8) 12:25 - They discount constructs that are connected with intelligence
    For example, if they're unsuccessful: "Success is a matter of luck"
    Or, in front of a very smart person, they focus on their flaws like social inability.
    9) 14:42 - Narcissists lie about their performance on intelligence tests --and they don't remember what type of test they took, where, or who administered the test
    10) 18:02 - They pretend to understand material that they clearly don't understand

    • @_Junkers
      @_Junkers Před 3 lety +9

      @@caspian3755 5) is you

    • @absinthefandubs9130
      @absinthefandubs9130 Před 3 lety +2

      @@_Junkers That's not what attacking means. That's just criticism. Attacking would be if I accused you of victim mentality because I assume you're a fan of those two (which I do, but as long as you haven't explicitely stated so I can't go through with that reasoning).

    • @Noodles.Doodles
      @Noodles.Doodles Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the summary, big help.

    • @SylentEcho
      @SylentEcho Před 3 lety

      Haha this just sounds like, business as usual for an Alpha male. XD
      Fake it, act like a a big shot, dominate and get the chicks, lol.

    • @SylentEcho
      @SylentEcho Před 3 lety

      @@caspian3755 Haha, I guess? Most jocks do that, anyway.

  • @MG-ot2yr
    @MG-ot2yr Před 11 měsíci +1

    I stopped my narcissist friend from correcting and trying to display knowledge by telling her that intelligence really isn't knowledge, its processing speed, everyone has different pockets of knowledge based on a lot of factors, formal or informal education, hobbies, etc. But also telling her that she's quick to solve problems, which is true, I wasn't lying to her. So many narcissists are unfortunately very deeply insecure. At any rate, it really solved that issue.

  • @w3tua
    @w3tua Před 2 lety +267

    My brother, a malignant narcissist, once tried to belittle me while I was working on my undergraduate degree. He told me that I needed to 'catch up with his TWO master's degrees in photography'. He never went to any accredited school for photography but felt the need to compete with me. What started the whole thing was he asked what was new with me and I simply stated that I had started school to finish my degree. That's just one example of many that he fit which caused me to have to distance myself from him. It's been almost four years of peace so far.

    • @thejils1669
      @thejils1669 Před 2 lety +12

      Ya gotta do what ya gotta do, to make things right for you...

    • @novelist99
      @novelist99 Před 2 lety +19

      Distancing yourself was a wise choice. I had a toxic friend like that. I was hired to write poetry for a publication and my friend, who'd never had anything published, acted like an expert. He said, "Someday I'll teach you how to write poetry." He was so upset about my success that I didn't hear from him for ten years. When he came back into my life, he was still toxic and made fun of my looks--just about anything he could think of--in an attempt to demean me. He's deceased now. In 2021, a drunk driver ran over him.

    • @New-qy5mi
      @New-qy5mi Před 2 lety +1

      Bc he’s probably just simply better than you

    • @thejils1669
      @thejils1669 Před 2 lety +1

      @@novelist99 ...Dear Lucille: Nice touch with the Jack Daniels and the car combo. I heard a rumor that during a seance, he quipped: "Oh, yeah, well you got me good this time, Lucille, but I'm doing a better job being dead than you could ever possibly do when you're pushing daisies!"

    • @sophiepires792
      @sophiepires792 Před 2 lety

      @@novelist99 Sounds like a happy ending to me. Good riddance, you didn't deserve that. Congratulations on your work getting published.

  • @bugrilyus
    @bugrilyus Před 3 lety +198

    If a person corrects you in front of everyone, think about your relationship. A person who really cares for you corrects you without embarassing in front of everyone. And kindly.

    • @gorkyd7912
      @gorkyd7912 Před 3 lety +14

      The really dangerous relationships are those that correct you to others while you're not even present, share the credit for your work with you in front of others, and praise you when you're alone with them when no one else can hear.

    • @-KMA-
      @-KMA- Před 2 lety +1

      Took me 13 years to figure that out unfortunately.

    • @maxresdefault8235
      @maxresdefault8235 Před 2 lety +2

      @bugrilyus I correct people in front of other people, I don't see why that's a bad thing. If someone said something incorrect I don't want other people to take that fact and spread the incorrect fact

    • @gorkyd7912
      @gorkyd7912 Před 2 lety +1

      @@maxresdefault8235 It's a bad thing when someone who knows nothing decides to correct an expert in front of everyone else to make themselves sound superior. I see this very often, but usually in the context of email chains rather than in-person meetings.
      Graphic Designer: Here is that logo design.
      Know-nothing, CC: all: Well clearly this is wrong because everyone knows you don't use the color green for a restaurant logo.

    • @anthonymonge7815
      @anthonymonge7815 Před 2 lety +1

      @@maxresdefault8235 it can be detrimental to the person that you corrected. They may feel out off by what just happened and stop talking when you approach. It is so much better that when you get a moment alone with the person to tell them then. It is better for the relationship as well. Now, it is on the person that said the untrue “fact” to go and correct themselves to the others.

  • @andrewschultz6608
    @andrewschultz6608 Před rokem +6

    The end of #5 is a big one for me because I remember being corrected on small things by people who claimed to be big thinkers. I thought they were just pushing me to nail down the details. I felt awkward (but eventually liberated) finding, later, that they weren't actually trying to help.

  • @eamonbutler6369
    @eamonbutler6369 Před rokem +3

    I like to watch university challenge, learn all the answers and then go and watch the repeat at a friends house. Obviously my friends are amazed by my knowledge as I trot out all the correct answers. But best of all ,when it’s over, I believe that I am really erudite and intelligent. Narcissism has its compensations.

  • @DivergingUnity
    @DivergingUnity Před 3 lety +65

    Narcissists watching this video-
    "ah, I don't do any of those stupid things; damn, I'm so great"

    • @user-xq4st9ie7r
      @user-xq4st9ie7r Před 2 lety +2

      Well an actual narcissist would embrace those things because it makes them special. That's why a good way to find out if the person in front of you is a narcissist is to ask them if they are.

    • @DivergingUnity
      @DivergingUnity Před 2 lety

      @@user-xq4st9ie7r and if they say yes, what do we know about them?

    • @jordanbrett4269
      @jordanbrett4269 Před 2 lety +2

      You got me

    • @prof.crastinator
      @prof.crastinator Před 2 lety

      They’re a witch!

  • @ruthnelson7451
    @ruthnelson7451 Před 4 lety +419

    I am 69 and only recently have started to become aware of my own narcissism. This is painful, but in a useful, necessary way. This video was very clear and very 'convicting': it 'held up a mirror', one that gave a true reflection, in a way that got through to me. I plan to listen to it again, to take some notes, and possibly post some 'bullet points' from it somewhere that I will see them often (or, at least, daily). Thank you for making this available: I know it is something I needed to see; and I hope it will help me to grow up and out of where I usually am now. Thank you, again.

    • @stephenroche5194
      @stephenroche5194 Před 4 lety +40

      I like these videos a lot, but the approach in this one seems off. Dr. Grande is usually scrupulously careful about diagnosing people outside of clinical settings. He even demurred about associating Trump with the n-word, despite the Braggard-in-Chief's daily exhibitions of many of the traits described in this video. So, it's a bit odd to see Dr. Grande recount here various anecdotes about 'narcissists' he's met. Judging by the anecdotes, these encounters were in social rather than clinical settings. So, really what Dr. Grande encountered are different people exhibiting narcissistic traits. All of which is a longwinded and possibly narcissistic way of saying that you, at 69, are probably not a narcissist, just a flawed human being like the rest of us, some of whose flaws are of the narcissistic kind.

    • @TahtahmesDiary
      @TahtahmesDiary Před 4 lety +65

      I think we all have a bit of narcissism in us, but that doesn't make us a full blown narcissist! Keep trying to improve yourself--it's a lifelong process!

    • @annode
      @annode Před 4 lety +17

      If you come from a neglectful mother/broken family structure, talking to a psychologist about all this could possibly come to some inner healing.

    • @mbcraps7423
      @mbcraps7423 Před 4 lety +29

      u said sixty nine

    • @josenavas9968
      @josenavas9968 Před 4 lety +2

      Ms Nelson; I'm 68 years young.. like the old saying. As i get older, its surprisingly how smart that person was or this one is. Either way would rather be a person who wisdom is obvious. If not prehaps soon?..😇🕶

  • @nullifier_
    @nullifier_ Před 2 lety +5

    It's interesting how this align so well with some folks who are outspoken about conspiracy theories like flat-earthers. A handful of them diminish other people pointing out minimal mistakes discarting the entirety, believe in themselves to be smarter than everyone else (even specialists and other credible authorities) to very end of the road and say they are reasoning and being logically right.

  • @AH-gi6mo
    @AH-gi6mo Před 2 lety +1

    Perfect. Thank you for this wonderful analysis. You are incredibly intelligent, well educated, and well-spoken professional. Great service.

  • @JenniferSmith-is8mt
    @JenniferSmith-is8mt Před 4 lety +338

    I actually married into a family of narcs I think. I know for sure and for certain that one of the things they regularly discussed was their IQs. They were completely flabbergasted that I didn’t know mine or my son’s. My oldest child is pretty intelligent, always straight As and in gifted and talented, even received a letter from Duke University when he was 13 wanting him to take the ACT. However, his brother struggled but was technically a savant of some sort. He started taking things apart when he was 3 and fixing them. It taught me really quickly that there are different types of intelligence and all are a gift. My oldest son wanted to be a kid and I thought his childhood was more important than Duke wanting to ‘measure ‘ his intelligence. It was a travesty in the narc family. How could we NOT want to know EXACTLY how smart he was?!?! They completely lost the point that the most beautiful thing about my ‘smart ‘ child was his tender heart and the way he never put himself above others

    • @NetiNeti-gm5bz
      @NetiNeti-gm5bz Před 4 lety +13

      Science is 80% practical. They're both extremely smart. Both kids will make the perfect scientist if they were to pursue in those areas

    • @kesmarn
      @kesmarn Před 4 lety +19

      Jennifer Smith, your kids are very lucky to have you as a parent!

    • @TheSimonScowl
      @TheSimonScowl Před 4 lety +15

      True geniuses do NOT need a number next to their names (or bank balance). They simply do not care or, in many cases, due to the Dunning-Kruger bias, don't WANT to know.

    • @Aaron-kj8dv
      @Aaron-kj8dv Před 4 lety +29

      I had a friend bothering me to find out my IQ through one of those stupid online tests. After I a while I lied and said I took it, when she asked how I did I said I got an 85 (which is technically retarded, but most people don't know that). She quickly changed the subject and never brought it up again.

    • @JenniferSmith-is8mt
      @JenniferSmith-is8mt Před 4 lety +11

      Aaron That’s awesome! You obviously are smart enough to come up with the perfect solution 😊

  • @iandunn206
    @iandunn206 Před 2 lety +407

    Chapters:
    1:11 Correcting other people's grammar
    3:54 Using jargon (often incorrectly)
    6:16 Discussing esoteric topics
    7:45 Supporting a position that the evidence is against
    9:48 Attacking people who have different views
    10:53 Blaming someone else for their incorrect beliefs
    11:35 Using the words "logic" and "reason" rather than making logical arguments

    • @seamusoleary3712
      @seamusoleary3712 Před 2 lety +49

      i will add one more: they scan the comment sections for the answers instead of watching the video.

    • @benx6549
      @benx6549 Před 2 lety +17

      @@seamusoleary3712 I*
      😉

    • @b3at2
      @b3at2 Před 2 lety +16

      @@seamusoleary3712 lol no.. but still funny.

    • @HealthyAndrew
      @HealthyAndrew Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you!

    • @Cernunnnos
      @Cernunnnos Před 2 lety +40

      @@seamusoleary3712 I'm a very important person who doesn't have the time to waste on salubrious exaltations such as long winded rambly you tube videos.
      It isn't narcissism to know that my time is worth more than yours, give me the answers in the first 30 seconds or I will look elsewhere.
      You have been warned.

  • @TheBroSplit
    @TheBroSplit Před 2 lety +2

    The depth of your understanding of things narc will say or do and how to manipulate them in short term exposures. Is remarkable, thank you Dr. Grande

  • @elenasolis5804
    @elenasolis5804 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you, Dr. Grande.
    I appreciate your very informative discussions of this condition.
    Your analysis are very accurate as I have experienced in my life.

  • @greensombrero3641
    @greensombrero3641 Před 4 lety +315

    Finally, a youtube recommendation that fits my personality.

  • @yetanothermusicboi
    @yetanothermusicboi Před 4 lety +191

    I learned two things today;
    - I learned the correct usage of the words entitled versus titled.
    - Also, I'm a narcissist.

    • @wherejulietmetromeo5605
      @wherejulietmetromeo5605 Před 4 lety +12

      @Josh Belcher actually i think i am too, even if i didn't want to belive it at first, and i think i am empathetic as well, but i have all other symptoms of npd and i'm scared because it makes me look crazy and i lost many people because of it

    • @marcoscalifornio8766
      @marcoscalifornio8766 Před 4 lety +23

      You're not. People with NPD (narcissistic personality disorder) don't have any introspection skills, and you do. It's not fear to see inside, it's that they can't.
      They wouldn't start a comment saying "I learned 2 things today", bc that's showing a prior lack of knowledge and that's a sign of weakness (in their mind).
      We're all a bit narcissist, a bit obsessive-compulsive, a bit dependent, a bit codependent, a bit shy/avoidant,... and we don't have those disorders. It's just personality colors.
      A personality disorder is much more than that, it's when some of those traits grow like a tumor and take over the whole personality, the patient has no control over it, together with a lot of suffering for themselves and/or people around them

    • @wherejulietmetromeo5605
      @wherejulietmetromeo5605 Před 4 lety +5

      @Josh Belcher thank you very much for your answer,
      i don't really understand my situation now, i'm far from thinking that i'm perfect, and i'm also that "too sensitive" person, i think i'm gonna read a book about it to understand more, it seems interesting and maybe it could help me, so thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge, it was very helpful, have a great day :)

    • @lademac5791
      @lademac5791 Před 4 lety +7

      In fact, the doctor is not correct about the usage of "titled" and "entitled." But I understand his point. I am a chronic grammar corrector. I've always called it motherhood.

    • @fayemcarthur4609
      @fayemcarthur4609 Před 3 lety

      dehydratedgrrr you can’t be both it’s impossible.

  • @moreykowalenko583
    @moreykowalenko583 Před 2 lety +1

    I am much better informed after watching this video. Thank you so much for the great in depth content and explanation on this topic.

  • @marilialevacov2939
    @marilialevacov2939 Před 9 měsíci

    You are absolutely correct in every point ! Thank you for explaining this so clearly.

  • @charliebubbles9501
    @charliebubbles9501 Před 4 lety +285

    Once I remarked that something my ex said was “very droll”. He immediately took offence and asked why I would accuse him of being boring.
    I pointed out that “droll” meant sharp, witty, or clever. He argued the point, I went and got the dictionary looked up droll and showed it to him.
    His jaw dropping reply was “well that copy of the dictionary is 8 years old and WE In academia know the meaning has changed”.
    I was speechless, talk about not being able to admit that one is wrong. Interesting how he managed to align himself with the world of academia to support his position too.

    • @TheModestRat
      @TheModestRat Před 4 lety +25

      Huh, I always thought it meant boring too. The more you know!

    • @oopalonga
      @oopalonga Před 4 lety +5

      @@TheModestRat reminds me of the word "jaded"--i think peopel always misuse it to mean deceived when in actuality it means exhausted

    • @f.c.laukhard3623
      @f.c.laukhard3623 Před 4 lety +7

      Hm, when I read it, I assumed it means funny since it sounds close to the French "drôle" but I have to admit that I never heard the English word "droll" before. Guess I would have fallen for a false friend there.

    • @f.c.laukhard3623
      @f.c.laukhard3623 Před 4 lety +4

      Sorry, I have some follow-up question: I just looked it up and it does say it means something like funny. I could not find anything about witty, sharp or clever. Am I missing anything? Is it used in a way to refer to witty humour specifically? Sorry, I am no native speaker so I probably am not picking up the subtleties in using certain words.

    • @lenasamzelius5530
      @lenasamzelius5530 Před 4 lety +9

      @@f.c.laukhard3623 You were not wrong; the meanings are close. Droll means "curious or unusual in a way that provokes dry amusement." (Google)

  • @JohnVC
    @JohnVC Před 4 lety +223

    Damn 15,000 is high for an IQ test, I thought I did well when I got 13,275. 🤔

    • @sheckyfeinstein
      @sheckyfeinstein Před 3 lety +9

      John Caputo But you, my friend, are a stable genius.

    • @dannybrazil3986
      @dannybrazil3986 Před 3 lety +1

      Bahahahaha .... And you did so well!

    • @azmodanpc
      @azmodanpc Před 3 lety +5

      Is that a comma or a colon? :D

    • @touzj316
      @touzj316 Před 3 lety +5

      @@azmodanpc In french, the comma is the decimal point.

    • @robijuli236
      @robijuli236 Před 3 lety

      @@azmodanpc u seeing shit homie

  • @asyouwish8883
    @asyouwish8883 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for your help,time ,and compassion for US( simpler minds ) to learn ! Thank you ,thank you,thank you ! Much appreciated 👍

  • @SwimminWitDaFishies
    @SwimminWitDaFishies Před rokem

    This video is GOLD, Dr Grande!! It is a spot on description of many of the people I work with!

  • @wrender
    @wrender Před 3 lety +137

    This sounds like every argument on the internet.

    • @StratMatt777
      @StratMatt777 Před 3 lety +7

      You don't know what the hell you are talkin' about boomer!
      /sarcasm

    • @seanmatthewking
      @seanmatthewking Před 3 lety +5

      True. What I’ve noticed is I’m more likely to employ more narcissistic techniques the more I don’t like someone. If you’re being a dick and you’re stupid, I’m going to call you stupid.
      On the internet, it’s easy to misunderstand and assume the worst because of miscommunication, misunderstanding tone, etc. it’s also easier to insult without repercussion.

    • @Radagast-
      @Radagast- Před 3 lety +2

      "Argument" being synonymous with "interaction"?

    • @tanukiZoot
      @tanukiZoot Před 3 lety

      @@Radagast- its CZcams, what do you think?

    • @Radagast-
      @Radagast- Před 3 lety +3

      @@tanukiZoot I think that social media isn't very sociable, for the most part.