Tag: Mechanism of the False Self

Dissociation (Amnesia) & Confabulation in Narcissism (Intl. Conf. Clinical Counseling Psychology)

Sam Vaknin’s analysis reveals the profound dissociation and complexity at the heart of narcissistic personality disorder. The false self, a grandiose yet fragile construct, dominates the narcissist’s life, suppressing a vulnerable and fractured true self. This dynamic creates a cycle of dependence on external validation, internal conflict, and psychological fragmentation.

Understanding these mechanisms is crucial not only for clinicians but for anyone seeking to comprehend the enigmatic and often painful world of narcissistic individuals. The narcissist’s life is a paradox of omnipotence and emptiness, control and chaos—a dramatic performance with a fractured protagonist struggling to survive within their own psyche. Dissociation (Amnesia) & Confabulation in Narcissism (Intl. Conf. Clinical Counseling Psychology)

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Code-switching Narcissist (False Self)

The speaker argued that the narcissistic false self functions as a form of code switching: it alternates between a desire to belong and a grandiose, godlike self-image, creating an irreconcilable duality. This false self is established in childhood as a protective adaptation but becomes rigid and totalizing, enabling seamless simulation of normality while masking a profound inner void and dependence on external validation. The ongoing code switching produces chronic self-alienation, impostor feelings, anxiety, and an unbridgeable gap between hidden low self-worth and ostentatious public superiority. Code-switching Narcissist (False Self)

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