How Narcissist Survives Defeats, Errors, Failures
Overview The speaker (S. Vaknin) outlines the central paradox of pathological narcissism: two mutually exclusive, irreconcilable narratives that create chronic dissonance and overwhelming anxiety for the narcissist. The talk explains how the narcissist oscillates between grandiosity (omniscience, omnipotence, divinity) and a persecutory victim stance (believing others conspire, envy, or seek to destroy them). This duality forces persistent externalization of regulation and the development of compensatory self-deceptions called “internal solutions.”
Key points
- Core paradox: Narcissists hold two incompatible narratives simultaneously: (1) Godlike superiority (genius, beauty, omnipotence) and (2) victimhood (believed persecution, envy and conspiracy by others).
- Dissonance and anxiety: The impossibility of being both omnipotent and victim creates intense anxiety, leading to pervasive attempts at self-regulation.
- External locus of control: Narcissists experience their lives as driven by external forces (others’ envy, conspiracies, institutional discrimination), outsourcing ego-regulation and self-worth to others — i.e., seeking narcissistic supply.
- Self-deception and internalization: To reduce terror at being dependent on others, narcissists convince themselves that external agents are actually internal objects (figments), then craft narratives that reestablish a sense of control — the “internal solution.”
The Internal Solutions (strategies to reconcile omnipotence and victimhood)
- Puppet-master narrative: The narcissist claims to be the cause of others’ hostile behavior — they “make” people conspire or attack because the narcissist triggers or manipulates them. This preserves omnipotence while acknowledging external hostility.
- Permission/consent narrative: The narcissist believes others act against them only because the narcissist allows or permits it (i.e., others have implicit or explicit permission to mistreat them), maintaining control.
- Creator/architect narrative: The narcissist asserts they shaped or created the environment and people’s personalities; therefore, any hostility occurs within a space the narcissist defined — preserving mastery over context.
- Imitation/plagiarism narrative: Hostile acts (denigration, theft, plagiarism) are reframed as attempts by others to copy or emulate the narcissist; others’ transgressions underscore the narcissist’s superiority and justify being targeted because they are reminded of their own inferiority.
Religious and mythic resonances
- The speaker repeatedly highlights parallels between narcissistic internal solutions and religious narratives, especially Christian themes (Jesus’ foreknowledge and willing crucifixion). Narcissistic self-victimization and grandiosity mimic theological frameworks where suffering is willed or instrumental to a higher design.
- The talk suggests narcissism functions like a personal religion — employing doctrines that reconcile paradoxes by invoking control, destiny, and sacrificial narratives.
Clinical and psychological implications
- Narcissists lack an integrated, self-contained regulatory system and thus outsource regulation to others, making them highly dependent on external validation and prone to intense dysregulation when that supply is threatened.
- Internal solutions are self-deceptive but functional: they mitigate terror at dependence, permit continued grandiosity, and justify maladaptive behavior.
- These narratives enable narcissists to reinterpret persecution as proof of superiority (envy, plagiarism), maintain moral exemption, and frame victimization as self-chosen, controlled, or even meaningful.
Illustrative examples and metaphors used
- Puppet-master metaphor: narcissist as director controlling actors who “think” they act autonomously.
- God/theodicy analogy: comparing narcissist’s rationalizations to theological attempts to reconcile a benevolent omnipotent God with the existence of evil.
- Supreme Court/Trump analogy: judicial approval as “permission” allowing transgressive behavior, mirroring how narcissists imagine permitting or causing others’ hostility.
- Jesus/Crucifixion motif: the narcissist as both divine and victim, choosing or orchestrating suffering to sustain a unifying narrative.
Conclusions
- Pathological narcissism is an “inexorable machinery” of defensive strategies designed to resolve the impossible coexistence of omnipotence and victimhood.
- Internal solutions are elaborate, often religiously inflected narratives that restore a semblance of control, meaning, and moral coherence.
- These strategies are deceptive yet psychologically functional: they reduce unbearable dependency, justify hostility, and maintain grandiose self-concept despite experienced setbacks or persecution.
Recommendations/Implications for further study or clinical attention
- Clinicians should note the central role of external regulation and internal solutions in maintaining narcissistic defenses.
- Exploring the religious and mythic content of internal solutions might help in formulation and in developing interventions that address the core paradox rather than only surface behaviors.
- Attention to the narcissist’s use of narrative (puppet-master, permission, creator, imitation) can guide therapeutic confrontation and restructuring of delusional self-schemas.





