Great post Orion. You broke it down very well, and I can relate to a lot of what you wrote.
Ironically, what you said about the NPD is not as recognized as it should be. For instance, if you look at the NPD forum (the books it recommends, the posts...etc), you will notice that it is very destitute of the full scope of NPD. Not much is said about the specific language the NPD uses (yet the NPD's language is one of the core components professionals use to study the pd and to help those with the pd make improvements with their communication models).
I think searchfortruth (if my memory serves me correctly) learned a lot of language techniques to make a lot of improvements in his life.
It cannot be emphasized enough that language is HUGE in relation to NPD.Furthermore, the male cheaters, the drug addicts, the people with drinking problems...none of these things are specific traits to NPD (one can simply check the DSM...but even a more extensive search will produce the same conclusion). True, these things "could" be traits of an NPD-just like an NPD "may" happen to be a smoker-but a nicotine habit simply isn't a trait of NPD.
Funny how you mentioned the models and actors, and how you mentioned that IYO they were the most beautiful of the pd's. I feel the same way, and that this specific sub type of NPD is entirely in love with themselves. They are more higher functioning than the HPD, and this combination enables them to put even more into their appearance than an HPD could. For instance, the somatic NPD is more high functioning, which means they can make more money to put into plastic surgery, etc. There can be a lot more said about the somatic NPD you mentioned.
I think they are often a representation of the covert NPD. I have for years been fascinated with covert NPD's-perhaps because they are so high functioning that they can fly under the radar. In fact, when I had first begun lurking this board, I found a poster who I believe was a covert NPD using the exact type of language you mentioned: "I", "Me", etc. It is obvious she is a covert NPD:
"Remember what "I" do for a living"...
"Remember I did this for you..."
"Your counselor said the same thing "I" said..."
"So your shrink agrees with what "I" was saying in the beginning..."
"'I' already heard that story a long time ago..."Anyway, you can tell
she is starving for recognition. Her fragmented identity is revealed through so much of the language she uses, and your post is so spot on about their use of pronouns! Once you learn this, it is easier to spot a covert NPD.
I think another problem with so much of the watered down information of NPD is that
many people are so intent of making the NPD a pd that is congruent with male behavior (they REALLY try to make sure the man gets the NPD label). As a result, when a man cheats on a woman,
"He is an NPD!"
Yet, no where does it say, "A man who cheats on his wife/girlfriend is an NPD". If it were true for the man, then it would need to be true for the woman also. And if it were true for both of them, there would be a LOT of NPDs!! After all, there are a lot of cheaters out there

.
But there is a name for it...how about:
Unfaithful
Infidelity
Etc...
Nevertheless, in the NPD forum (and many places), a man who cheats gets the 'N' card.
Another thing is a man who watches porn:
"And my ex "n" spent like two hours every night just sitting there watching porn...".But there is a name for this too...how about:
Porn addiction
Nevertheless, they continue to attach this to NPD-even though psychology labels it as porn addiction, the wounded woman will label it as NPD.
Then, there is the physically abusive man...
"My ex "n" hit me".But there is a name for physically abusive behavior too:
Violent behavior
Dangerous Behavior
Etc. (consider the term 'anger management')
NPD's, as you mentioned, seldom break the law (this is the common consensus at least), and being physically violent is breaking the law. Plus, it is not a trait they use to diagnose NPD, yet wounded women continually use this as a trait to diagnose their exes as an "n"...then their friends agree with them.
A man who beats his ex is certainly:
A jerk
An as*hole
Unreasonable
Unfair
And he may be:
A drug addict
An alcoholic
A gambler
But this alone does not make him:
An NPD
True, the woman beater
may be an NPD...but violent dangerous acts are simply not traits of NPD so they would need other traits that are actually authentic traits of NPD to diagnose him as NPD.
You were also spot on about the type of NPD being white collar professionals. A lot of NPD case studies talk about:
Lawyers
Doctors
Counselors (the helping profession is loaded with them, and what better place for the covert 'n'? A perfect place to hide their true self so they can portray a false identity by masquerading as a counselor of some sort).
Successful Businesspeople
Again, as we fully consider this and attempt to synchronize these same personality types being described on the typical 'n' forum...we simply rarely see it.
Now, what you said about
the HPD's extreme idealization and devaluation really stood out to me as being a distinct cluster b trait that described the HPD much more than the other pd's. I thank you for pointing it out the way you did. I never thought of that, that this behavior is a classic HPD tactic. I feel the way you described it too, that this idealization/devaluation phase is an HPD signature.
BPD can be looked at from two entirely different perspectives:
1) What BPD does to the nons
2) What BPD does to the one who has it
Each perspective is an entirely different. For example, when I visit the BPD forum from time to time to read what the posters are saying, it doesn't seem like BPD at all to me. Why? Because they mainly describe what its doing to them. If I was in a non BPD support group, or on a non forum, I would be hearing of the covert nature of how the BPD emotionally abuses people, how the BPD split, etc.
A lot of stories I read here on the BPD forum sound like they are describing bi-polar or manic depression and not a pd (again, they are telling the story from a different perspective). Plus,
it is factual that BPD is often mistaken as manic depression/bi-polar, and vice versa. This means that many BPDers are misdiagnosed as having manic depression, and that many people with manic depression are misdiagnosed with having BPD.
Of course, this must also mean there are many similarities between BPD and bi-polar/manic depression-provided the BPD perspective is solely focused on the person possessing the disorder.
Anyway, what you said about the BPD being smothering is true, and there is a certain softness of the BPD that does make one wonder if the BPD has empathy. It is for this purpose, IMO, that
men have a more difficult time leaving the BPD than the other pd's (when it comes to long term relationships...not just sex), because the BPD woman has this wonderful side, this romantically deep side that is hard to explain. It is so easy to connect with them emotionally...so easy, and I feel it makes it harder for a man to leave them. We always 'hope' that there will be remission, or that they will get better with age. The thing is, I think these are some of the reasons the BPD is so toxic.
I feel they seldom do have empathy (although more than the other pds), yet they have a counterfeit way of representing themselves that is PERFECT for making it appear that they have empathy. Sometimes they look so fragile, lost...and these are some of their features that cause us to put our guard down, to read more into some of their apologies and gestures than is really there.
In the end, they emotionally tear people apart just like any other pd-they just have their own unique way of doing it. They drive people nuts (this is more often than not referred to as "the crazy behavior making pd"), they emotionally drain you, they wear you down, they split, they gaslight, they covertly try to employ control tactics...and yet it is often difficult for a person to leave them.
The HPD I went out with was certainly gorgeous on the outside...completely flawless, extremely attention grabbing, fashionable in every sense, but it was easy for me to leave her once I realized who she was...how empty she was. I didn't shed one single tear. Instead, I got angry and hated her. I felt she was a loser, a bum, a moron, a complete nobody beneath her appearance (and one day her beauty will begin to fade...it only takes a few extra pounds or her having a child...a few years older perhaps), and she was uneducated.
The BPD I felt was my best friend. I loved her so much. She was like my family. She was more than family to me, as she was a part of me. I loved her more than I loved myself, and I loved her because I wanted to. I wasn't tricked. I wanted to love her. I wanted to spend the rest of my life with her, to build a future with her, to grow old with her. I could sense something was wrong with her, and within myself I began to feel she was emotionally or mentally handicapped somehow, but I told myself that a handicap would not ever stop me from loving her. Then, her emotions began to turn on "me". Rages began, splitting began...as it became more pronounced the closer we got to each other.
I knew to keep her meant losing myself. So, I ended the relationship (together almost four years...four years of trying reduced to nothing), and unlike the HPD...I did shed a tear. I cried and cried and cried...just like a little baby.
So, I guess this is one of the differences of the BPD and HPD...I miss the BPD, and I hope she is doing well. I had no choice to end it, and when I did she raged anyway...so I no contacted her.
The HPD had far more power to capture a man's attention, but the BPD had way more power to capture a man's heart.