 My name is Sam Wacken. I'm the author of Malignant Self-Love, Narcissism Revisited. Can't we just act civilized? Can't we remain on friendly terms with the narcissist? The relationship having broken down, separation having taken place, the divorce having been enacted, can't we simply stay on as friends? Well, never forget that narcissists, at least the full-fledged ones, are nice and friendly only when they need something. Only when they want something from you. Narcissistic supply, help, support, votes, money, or the perennial goody sex. The narcissist prepares the ground, manipulates you, and then comes out with a small favor he needs or asks you blatantly or surreptitiously for narcissistic supply, with sentences such as, what did you think about my performance, or do you really think I deserve the Nobel Prize, and so on. Narcissists also seek out your friendship when they feel threatened, and they want to neuter the threat by smothering it with oozing pleasantries. So, for instance, if you threaten the narcissist with abandonment, the narcissist will try to regain your friendship as a way of countering your threat. Narcissists also become friendly or over-friendly when they have just been infused with an overdose of narcissistic supply, and they feel magnanimous and magnificent and ideal and perfect and brilliant. The show magnanimity is a way of flaunting one's impeccable divine credentials. It is an act of grandiosity on the part of the narcissist. You are not really there, you are a prop, in a spectacle. You are a mere receptacle of the narcissist's overflowing, self-contented infatuation with his own false self and its achievements. This beneficence is transient. Perpetual victims often tend to thank the narcissist for little graces. This is the Stockholm syndrome. Hostages tend to emotionally identify with their captors rather than with the police. We are grateful to our abusers and tormentors for easing their hideous activities and allowing us to catch our breath for any small break in their routine. Some people say that they prefer to live with narcissists, to cater to their needs and to succumb to their whims, because this is the way they have been conditioned in early childhood and have been brought up. It is only with narcissists that they feel alive, stimulated, excited. The world glows in technicolor in the presence of a narcissist and decays into black-and-white or sepia colors in the presence of everyone else. When the narcissist is absent, the world is colorless. I see nothing inherently wrong with this kind of approach. The test is this. If someone were to constantly humiliate and abuse you verbally using archaic Chinese, would you have felt humiliated and abused? Probably not. Simply because you do not archaic Chinese, you don't speak it. Some people have been conditioned by the narcissistic primary objects in their lives, by their parents to treat narcissistic abuse as archaic Chinese, to turn a deaf ear. These people don't hear the abuse. They are not even aware of its existence. To them, it's a kind of background noise and they can survive very nicely with it. They are compensated for this abuse by the thrills provided by living with the narcissist. Living with the narcissist is exhilarating. It's a roller coaster. There are ups, there are downs, adrenaline rushes and colorful touches and tints. This, as far as these people are concerned, this compensates for the background abuse. This technique of turning a deaf ear is effective in that it allows the inverted narcissist, the narcissist's willing mate, to experience only the good aspects of living with the narcissist. His sparkling intelligence, the constant drama and excitement, the lack of intimacy and emotional attachment, which many inverted narcissists actually prefer. Every now and then the narcissist breaks into abuse, but that is, as you recall, archaic Chinese. This abuse is not even noticed by the willing spouse of the narcissist. So what? Who understands archaic Chinese anyway? Says the inverted narcissist to their self. Having said all that, I have only one negging doubt. If the relationship with the narcissist is still rewarding, why are inverted narcissists so typically unhappy? Why are they so ego-dystonic? Ill it is with themselves. Why are there so much in need of help, professional or otherwise? Why do they seek support to start with? Aren't they victims who simply experience the Stockholm Syndrome? Aren't they hostages who identify with a kidnapper rather than with the police? Aren't they people who deny their own torment in order to endure it? In other words, aren't they merely consulate lies?