Skip to main content

Author Topic: Discussion Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?

  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 1793
  • Gender: Male
Discussion Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
OP: December 01, 2019, 08:23:28 PM
I'd do a poll but I don't know how......

I started watching videos on YouTube about Narcissist people after remembering that term come up a bunch in the past.
Really got me thinking as there are many behaviors that my W has which lines up but I don't think she is one (well, not before that is..... she is one to some degree while in MLC).

So my question is:
Is your MLC'er a Narcissist? And were they one before MLC?

Listening to what a "regular" Narcissist is and does is horrible..... and it seems so close to what a post BD MLC'er looks like: Attachment issues, emotional black hole, a taker not a giver, manipulator, looking for emphatic partner,  unable to generate love or happiness themselves, "it's all about me".... the list goes on.

It makes me wonder if a majority of MLC'ers fall into this? It doesn't sound like a Narcissist can be "fixed" but a temporary MLC Narcissist can. Both are not emotionally mature, but at least the MLC'er should have a chance a growing up (that's what it's all about)..... the "Regular" Narcissist never grows up, it's just who they are.
Another thought/question is: Why do MLC'ers have these Narcissist tendencies? Is it just a symptom of MLC? Or was it always there just suppressed?

Oh... for me:
Lessor Narcissist now..... yes...... And not one before (during our M) but yes one before the M (during her trouble years).

How about your MLC'er?

-SS
  • Logged
« Last Edit: December 02, 2019, 03:21:04 AM by Thunder »
W - 43
M - 47
Together 28 years, M 25
No kids
BD - 27th April 2019
Start of Shadow - Feb 2012

  • *
  • Mentor
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 4540
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#1: December 01, 2019, 09:50:31 PM
I considered mine more BPD (borderline personality disorder ), but both BPD  and NPD  are cluster B disorders.Cluster B personality disorders are characterized by dramatic, overly emotional or unpredictable thinking or behavior.  It took me several years to figure out his mother, and that is when I first came up with BPD. I'd never seen anything like it before, had no idea what projection was. I think my MLCER has become his mother, although I believe he has always had BPD traits. They just rarely manifested because I kept everything running. I find it fascinating that as soon as I could no longer run everything (illness with my mother tipped me over the too much to manage scale), and he had to step up, that's when he fell apart.

Mind you, that is only my opinion.
  • Logged
When life gives you lemons, make SALSA!

b
  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 2224
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#2: December 02, 2019, 04:36:43 AM
Mine definitely suffers from some sort of PD that I'm sure falls on the narcissism scale somewhere greater than just an average degree, though I do not believe him to be a full-blown case.  Which, is pretty much my opinion on many of these men and women.

Something in their brains is not wired correctly, to say the least.  Couple that with other mental disorders such as any form of depression, bipolar, etc, FOO issues, it's easy to view them as a narcissist because the behaviors and traits become indistinguishable at this juncture.   I think you'd really have to give a thorough and honest look (not through the rose colored LBS glasses) at each individual's behavior over the course of the M to say whether the narcissism was always there or if it was just triggered by the midlife meltdown.  Either way, it's there now and honestly, I'm not sure there's much that can be done to "fix" it.
  • Logged

W
  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 5670
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#3: December 02, 2019, 05:30:36 AM
Yes mine is definitely cluster B personality disorder with NPD and BPD high on the scales. Honestly there were traces of these elements throughout our 31 yr history.

I either willingly chose to ignore it or it never amounted to the point where our marriage was in jeopardy. IDK. Maybe there are just some things I can live with as everyone is not perfect.

However, she is off the charts on NPD and BPD since BD and it's only getting worse IMO with no end in sight. Reallistically there maybe no end.

Now I understand that these individuals are usually damaged in childhood. My W was sexually abused at the age of 5. Also, her mom is most likely a full fledged Narc IMO and she always berated her daughter over her appearance. She still does. Constant criticism and put downs.

Lousy mother, lousy wife, lousy no good daughter. Unaccomplished. A downright embarrassment. I heard all of these comments just last November 2018.

She will dump the divorce on her daughter, eventhough I'm really dumping her parents and maybe it will give her some motivation to do the same for her sake.

So it gives me a glimpse to her abusive upbringing. How does that help me ? It really doesn't. Yes I have compassion for her however she got rid of me and kept her tormentors/abusive parents.

She began to break in 2013 when her parents moved into our home. I dont see how she can recover if she cannot get rid of her mom. So she may just go down in history now being a Narc.

She has a lot of hurdles to overcome and I just don't see it happening. The damaged child rules the day.
  • Logged

t
  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 816
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#4: December 02, 2019, 07:36:14 AM
Also, her mom is most likely a full fledged Narc IMO and she always berated her daughter over her appearance. She still does. Constant criticism and put downs.

Lousy mother, lousy wife, lousy no good daughter. Unaccomplished. A downright embarrassment. I heard all of these comments just last November 2018.

She will dump the divorce on her daughter, eventhough I'm really dumping her parents and maybe it will give her some motivation to do the same for her sake.

So it gives me a glimpse to her abusive upbringing. How does that help me ? It really doesn't. Yes I have compassion for her however she got rid of me and kept her tormentors/abusive parents.

She began to break in 2013 when her parents moved into our home. I dont see how she can recover if she cannot get rid of her mom. So she may just go down in history now being a Narc.

She has a lot of hurdles to overcome and I just don't see it happening. The damaged child rules the day.

Quoting because this resonates. My h grew up with and is still subjected to similar abuse.

I’d caution against deciding an MLCer is NPD or Cluster B anything, as these diagnoses are perceived as untreatable and therapy-resistant. If your spouse was more or less good prior to MLC, a Cluster B assignation is really throwing the baby out with the bath water. I understand it can help to label or “name it to tame it”, but just — continue to be aware and honest with yourself about whether your spouse was ok prior to MLC. My sense is that if they weren’t, or if they were always displaying Cluster B or narcissistic traits, you’d probably have divorced them early on.

My h definitely comes off as narcissistic and with his Masters and brief counseling practice, claimed Borderline Personality some short time before the EAs and PAs started showing up. Not sure which is chicken and which is egg. With my own clinical training and therapy work, it looks more to me like he is trying to fit himself into some defining label, even if it is a bad one. The overall impart being that this is a person who doesn’t know exactly how to define or like himself, largely because his upbringing taught him absolutely not to do either of those things.

This isn’t NPD or BPD. It’s the failure of caregivers to give care. That’s attachment trauma, and also child abuse, or just abuse, period. And maybe we can’t fault the MLCer’s parents, but if your spouse is still in contact with those parents, they are still getting those messages. That they shouldn’t define themselves and that they can’t be liked or loved.

It’s a sh!t way to live, and it’s deeply rooted. Clearly the love you showed your spouse was a healing. But midlife kicks all of us into life review, and a spouse who was never allowed to self-realize is going to have trouble doing it safely now.

Or maybe not; these are just my thoughts as formerly abused, very much therapized, and clinically trained in whatever relevant areas.

I will say this, though — if you think your spouse might be NPD or Cluster B, consider whether they are taking any medications or drugs that might be contributing to it. Benzodiazepines will absolutely diminish empathy over time. I was horrified to learn it but that has been the one common factor in every example I’ve personally known. There are other meds with this side effect also and of course any dependency or addiction is going to make a person behave differently and in ways we don’t like.

The thing about labeling NPD or other Cluster B is that then you’re faced with sort of eternal monstrosity. If you really have an NPD spouse, the common sense advice is to GET OUT of that marriage, because living with it will eventually wear out your health, physically as well as mentally, and there will never be safety enough for you to trust. The sadism and lying never ends.

DSM diagnoses are often very subjective and so you may have one diagnostician who says Yes, that’s NPD — while the one beside it will say No, that’s something else but with narcissistic tendencies or traits. We all have and display those to whatever degree. The bottom line is whether your spouse’s traits are ones you can live with or not, and then maybe the question becomes not “what’s wrong with them” but more “can I live with this and why or why not?”

I do my best to keep a high standard and to be that, with my h. Something is wrong with him and it’s a core issue; I know it’s painful for him. I know he is without tools to attend it properly, and/or the sh!t behaviors that he learned in childhood and onward still “work” for him. They don’t work for me. And although there were glimpses of these traits from the start, I would say he is now 95% different from the man I first loved. The real sweetness of him now all but gone, and in his place this bragging nervous lying cheat of a guy, less honest than just manipulative.

I can’t live with it. So maybe that’s one of the blessings of him being gone and living instead with ow, who he tries to cheat on constantly with me. The man he is now doesn’t seem to understand that I can’t live with that either, or else he simply doesn’t care.

If I think of him as NPD or Cluster B, that’s when I get terrified. You have to understand, these labels are commonly last resort and they stick maybe for life, even if they aren’t true or like anything else in the DSM are later overhauled, modified, or absolved. I have to think more along attachment trauma, generational sin, addiction of any type, or I will end up with one of these untreatable labels myself.

If your MLC spouse was basically good before MLC, there’s hope they will correct course and be good again in time.

If your MLC spouse is NPD, that’s never going to be ok or safe. Look to see if there are medications or addictions that amplify the MLC behaviors or traits, and know that those things can be adjusted, even if it is not your job or even your right to adjust them. Know that it isn’t your fault. But know also whether these traits are something you can live with, and if you find you can’t — DON’T. That’s about setting your boundaries, which is about your right to self preservation, and in the course of you correcting your environment, with luck it will lead ultimately to their understanding that it is time and necessary for them to course correct as well.

I’ve been through a lot in my life and “should have been” a candidate for a really outrageous MLC myself. His pitched me into pure survival mode and so maybe part of why I am not in MLC is that I absolutely cannot afford to go there.

Across the board, I want to say if you are married to NPD, don’t stay married to it.
  • Logged

  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 12740
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#5: December 02, 2019, 09:23:24 AM
Lots of good common sense in what Terra posted.
I think the behaviour of ex/spouses in crisis mirrors quite a lot of possible diagnostic labels.
And it is the behaviour that makes them largely impossible to deal with normally.

I think all LBS doubt their own memories of the ore-crisis person for a while. Seems to be part of the process. Maybe bc the MLC version is so noisy it drowns out the old. Maybe bc it is all so insane that we lose trust in our own judgement for a while. Idk.

I am pretty sure that as Terra says my h was pretty normal before this. And then became 90% completely different. He had FOO stuff that made him prone to a 3/4 year cycle of mild depression, lacked a strong sense of self-worth and was always a bit conflict avoidant. But all within a kind of normal range for a normal imperfect human. He was kind, happy, funny, trustworthy, generous and loving. He became afraid, angry, venomous, irrational and deceitful. I wasn't the only person who was completely shocked by it and even now no one who knew him or us has ever really been able to make sense of it. No one sidled up to me afterwards and said 'well actually, I always thought...."

But part of dealing with it does require accepting the reality of what they are now and deciding what you can live with or can't doesn't it? And I guess accepting too that they may or may not stay this way bc what happens to them is not predictable in terms of recovery.

I'm just not sure the labels help much beyond a way to frame the current behaviour so you can minimise the personal damage you take from it.
  • Logged
T: 18  M: 12 (at BD) No kids.
H diagnosed with severe depression Oct 15. BD May 16. OW since April 16, maybe earlier. Silent vanisher mostly.
Divorced April 18. XH married ow 6 weeks later.


"Option A is not available so I need to kick the s**t out of Option B" Sheryl Sandberg

N
  • *
  • MLCer Type: Clinging Boomerang
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 2486
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#6: December 02, 2019, 09:26:22 AM
No
  • Logged

3
  • ****
  • Sr. Member
  • Posts: 337
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#7: December 02, 2019, 10:05:10 AM
I agree that cluster B traits seem to emerge, sometimes dramatically with MLC behaviors. My H currently is operating in malignant narcissist mode - he’s not happy to just move on with his life but he’s seeking to destroy the boys and me.  Did he behave like this for the 18 years we were together? Absolutely not. Did he have some narc characteristics? Yep. Many people do, doesn’t make them a narc. He has significant FOO behaviors, his mom is a narc, always has been. In the weeks leading up to and including BD, I witnessed H have a manic break. Several month later in a episode of rage I saw three distinct personalities emerge in one evening. In the last 2.5 years he at times appears bi-polar, malignant narc, and even split-personalities (only the one extreme example but many other regressive examples where he appears to behave as various ages with accompanying mannerisms).

This has been one of the most frustrating of all aspects - his behavior often mimics a cluster b disorder - but if he were actually any of these things, I believe I would have known something was wrong far earlier than I did. I have a friend with an MLC husband, he had extreme personality changes, was diagnosed bi-polar at 50, got in some legal trouble, they split for a couple of years, he is back home and recovering - his MLC appears to be winding down and the bi-polar behaviors as well.

As others have said, if it’s a personality disorder, it’s a lifetime diagnosis, if it’s MLC, there is a possibility that the extreme behaviors will subside over time. No predictions.

  • Logged
BD End of April 2017
Moved out - kind of, May 2017
Denied affair
Cycled hard April - Oct 2017, my son figured out affair, I confronted husband, we were going away as a family for the weekend - H monsters hard and files for a D end of Oct, 2017
D final Sept 2018
Many touch and goes
He lives in monster, kids haven’t been with him overnight since Jan 2019
Moved in with MOW, a former friend of mine, May 2019

  • *****
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 2718
  • Gender: Female
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#8: December 03, 2019, 03:27:01 AM
I came to this site while researching NPD.

So I fall on the side of mine is probably a covert Narc (who get worse as they age), and he likely suffers from a degree of bipolar though I can't say for sure...but it has been discussed by professionals before he decided to quit going. ::)

At any rate it was all ''milder'' through our marriage, but present in some small degree.

BD it exploded into all it's glory.
  • Logged
You know this is MLC when you have played emotional hot potato with a pair of crotch-less tights.

N

Nas

  • *
  • MLCer Type: Vanisher
  • Hero Member
  • Posts: 3305
Re: Is your MLC'er a Narcissist?
#9: December 03, 2019, 09:12:14 AM
I definitely don't believe my H was a narcissist.  I have thought about this in the past, especially early on, and in therapy in the past we've really dissected some parts of my past marriage to see if I missed any red flags.
I know some people feel that their spouses were narcs all along.  I just have never felt that way.
But what's important is that he's acting like one now, so for all intents and purposes, that's how I view him and will continue to until I have VERY good reason not to.
  • Logged
The desire to be loved is the last illusion. Give it up and you shall be free. ~ Margaret Atwood

 

Legal Disclaimer

The information contained within The Hero's Spouse website family (www.midlifecrisismarriageadvocate.com, http://theherosspouse.com and associated subdomains), (collectively 'website') is provided as general information and is not intended to be a substitute for professional legal, medical or mental health advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. The Hero's Spouse cannot be held responsible for the use of the information provided. The Hero's Spouse recommends that you consult a trained medical or mental health professional before making any decision regarding treatment of yourself or others. The Hero's Spouse recommends that you consult a legal professional for specific legal advice.

Any information, stories, examples, articles, or testimonials on this website do not constitute a guarantee, or prediction regarding the outcome of an individual situation. Reading and/or posting at this website does not constitute a professional relationship between you and the website author, volunteer moderators or mentors or other community members. The moderators and mentors are peer-volunteers, and not functioning in a professional capacity and are therefore offering support and advice based solely upon their own experience and not upon legal, medical, or mental health training.