JusticeMe wrote:Dalloway wrote:
Well, I feel like I won a math competition because half of the other kids answered: potato.
Thanks for your comment.
Sorry, but I'll have to take that prize from you.
NPD and SPD can absolutely coexist! Here is just one excerpt from one article (Google is your friend, people!):
Intuitively, a connection between SPD and the Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) seems plausible. After all, narcissists are people who self-sufficiently withdraw from others. They love themselves in lieu of loving others. Lacking empathy, they regard others as mere instruments, objectified "Sources" of Narcissistic Supply.
The inverted narcissist (IN) is a narcissist who "projects" his narcissism onto another narcissist. The mechanism of projective identification allows the IN to experience his own narcissism vicariously, through the agency of a classic narcissist. But the IN is no less a narcissist than the classical one. He is no less socially reclusive.
A distinction must be made between social interactions and social relationships. The schizoid, the narcissist and the inverted narcissist all interact socially. But they fail to form human and social relationships (bonds). The schizoid is uninterested and the narcissist is both uninterested and incapable to due to his lack of empathy and pervasive sense of grandiosity.
Narcissists, Inverted Narcissists, and Schizoids
http://www.healthyplace.com/personality ... schizoids/
Narcissism with Other Mental Health Disorders (by Sam Vanknin)
http://www.healthyplace.com/personality ... diagnosis/
I will take the prize and give it back to Dalloway. Sam Vaknin doesn't understand SPD. He thinks that having less contact with others is already schizoid. Narcissists and schizoids are fundamentally the same (True Self / False Self), but the PDs themselves are opposing PDs.