FaultyWiring wrote:My problem is in dealing with the damage I've already done, and the nagging doubt that I cannot express genuine empathy. I am in a spiral where I cannot trust my mind. I feel like I'm in Memento, where I have a Polaroid of my own face with "don't trust his lies" written on the back of it. So I am constantly unsure of whether I don't have the ability to feel, or I do have the ability to feel and have just cut myself off from it.[2]
I completely understood what he meant even though I haven't seen the movie Memento in years.
Today I referred to the movie twice[1] as examples of the "inner dialogue" (or narrative) as a mission, the pragmatic choice to preserve it. I thought I should watch it again since I only remembered it generally. (I found it free to watch.).
Wow. The ending is like what goes on inside my head. (I'll discuss that below in case you dont' want it spoiled.). I also related to bits and pieces throughout the movie. A lot of sub-themes I could identify with if you take the character as a representation or exaggeration of the coping process:
- Lack of trust; looking to others for identity (when you don't know who to trust).
- Not just lack of trust, but losing trust due to object constancy issues. (repeatedly testing)
- The energy put into keeping notes, hyper vigilance.
- Hyper organized.
- Uses repetition to cope.
- Single-minded goal to beat his affliction.
- Ruminates on the loss which drives him. (Like the "noise" or "presence" which contributes to the "narrative.").
- Exists completely at the whim of others even though he believes he's managing, beating his affliction.
- As @FaultyWiring noted, when you're self-aware and realize how this process works, you want to take a picture of yourself and write "don't believe his lies." You develop these coping mechanisms because you can't trust anyone else. And then you learn you can't trust yourself. It's like the first order of business is to question rationalization that occurs.
(SPOILER ALERT.).
(SPOILER ALERT.).
The ending nailed it for me. This is where all the reality-fragments come together. E.g. The first scene of the movie is the last scene. That's how fractured the plot is. But, I see it as representative of how the NPD "inner dialog" is maintained. There's a lot of selectively reaching back into history, forgetting certain "scenes." Reality becomes fragmented.
- Lenny believes he's about to revenge the killing of his wife. In reality it's a drug dealer named James who Teddy (the cop) wants killed. Lenny and the victim talk past each other. The victim proclaiming his innocence. Lenny certain he's lying. (making him fit the narrative. No empathy. Single-mindedly locked into his "narrative.").
To me, this is an analogy to the "narrative." Something happens in the background. I get a mood or critical viewpoint (I call it a narrative). It seems to come from a presence. (Some call it a "noise" or "tension"). Some part of my mind gives action to, or accommodates that narrative and presence. It's like it rises out of the floor. If I'm monitoring myself, I'll interact with people in my normal daily affairs through that kind of "lens." Treating them like they're part of this background thing I have going on (which isn't pleasant). It's like we're talking past each other. I'm confident they're part of it. They're like, "wtf?" - After Lenny whacks the drug dealer, Teddy (the cop) shows up. Teddy is forced to disclose to Lenny that Lenny whacked the correct person months ago. But, because Lenny has no memory of it, Teddy just kept feeding him more bad people to whack so Lenny could lead a satisfied life. It's what Lenny needed. Otherwise he would live with the memory of his murdered wife, never remembering justice had been served (or, in Lenny's mind, justice couldn't be served because Lenny did it.).
I thought that was powerful. It explains the repeating patterns. - Lenny gets angry at this news, blames Teddy. (Blame shifting.).
- Teddy reminds Lenny he wanted it. He was eager. Teddy mocks him:
- "The drug dealer was the wrong guy -- but he was the right guy to you. Enjoy your revenge while it lasts." (supply)
- Teddy forces Lenny to confront himself about the impossible task he's faced with: overcoming his affliction, having peace when he has no memory. Lenny goes into denial, insisting he can make it work, it's not an impossible mission (refusal to accept reality, clinging to the narrative at all costs.)
- Teddy makes fun of Lenny: "You killed many times and it never stuck." Teddy even shows him photos of the previous kills. Dismissively tells him to wait a few minutes and this unpleasant dilemma will end. "Why do you think this time will be different?" (keep doing what you always do. It's easier.).
- Teddy tells Lenny "you make up the truth. The police file was complete when I gave it to you. Do you ever think about who removed those pages? Who blacked out all those lines? You did. Because you have to a puzzle you can't solve." (The active participation in the narrative's adaption. A solution with no end.).
- Teddy becomes even more insensitive: "All you do is moan. I'm the one who has to live with what you've done. Your living a dream: Playing detective, a dead wife to pine for; No responsibility. Enjoying revenge over and over -- because you get to forget." (The comfort of the narrative compared to reality -- at the expense of empathy.).
- Teddy suggests something which you sense earlier in the movie. After the accident which took Lenny's memory, he administered a lethal dose of insulin to his wife. There is no "Sammy." Lenny created "Sammy" as a way to deal with something he couldn't. "Sammy's" wife became an abstraction of Lenny's wife. Lenny could take partial blame (He caused "Sammie's" wife to cause "Sammy" to kill her.). But, that was all Lenny could bear.
I see that as an abstraction of the root/nature of the N's traits. Lenny wasn't so fractured that he completely disassociated from it. He didn't create a new personality to hold it. He just created that "story" which he used to foster the "narrative." To me, his "story" reminds me of the "noise" or "tension" we talk about, which is given life by our mind as something like a background thought. It's something that exists like a siren song. It calls to us to use it. If we don't keep an eye on it, we semi-consciously give it existence as a rational or playbook in the background.
- "The drug dealer was the wrong guy -- but he was the right guy to you. Enjoy your revenge while it lasts." (supply)
- Lenny finds himself at a crossroads. He could write a note that to himself that it's over. That the rape and the death were two different events, and he was responsible for his wife's death as a result of an injury he sustained during the rape -- which now prevents him from remembering his wife's later death caused by him. (That moment when we know how badly something is wrong.).
Lenny chooses to keep his lie going. He snaps a picture of Teddy. He then says to himself:- "Can I forget what you just told me?" and writes "do not believe his lies." on photo of Teddy.
- "Can I forget what you made me do?" and burns the photos Teddy took of Lenny's previous acts of "revenge."
Lenny drives away to have Teddy's licence plate # tattooed to his body. (Another note to the narrative.). The next time Lenny sees Teddy, Teddy will be the person to suffer revenge - for a death which Lenny feels guilty for, but wasn't his fault.
That's a lot like the semi-conscious choice I make to continue the narrative without regard to what it does to others. "It will turn out differently next time. It will fix itself. But, for now, I have to keep doing what I know." (And then losing sight of that jerky narrative. Decades elapsing, never seeing how it wasn't fixing itself. No continuity with reality.) - In the closing scene, Lenny console's himself by thinking: "I have to believe in a world outside my mind. I have to be able to close my eyes and believe it will still be there when I open them again. We all need mirrors to remind ourselves of who we are."
Wow! That explains exactly what goes on in my head. My narrative would become the world outside my mind (avoiding the thing which was too painful to deal with, the thing I thought was my mind. If I faced the thing, there would be no world outside my mind. That's how driven I was to not face it.). Creating an external reality to fit my narrative because that's the only thing I can count on to be there.
It seems like such a depiction of NPD that I thought it deserved its own thread (instead of the "films that remind you" thread). I'm really glad @FaultyWiring mentioned this movie. Watching after becoming self-aware is mind-blowing. There's probably more points to make. I made a few notes, but I'm sure I missed/forgot something.
[1]
Truth too late wrote:it's really hard to compare what we do to what normal people do. There is a basis in truth. It's not completely wrong. But, it knows no boundaries. It has a life of its own. A reality of its own.
That's why it's like that Memento movie I mentioned earlier. I highly advise watching it (you can find it online free). That's exactly what it's like. There is a constant loss of continuity. And yet you feel like you have perfect continuity (the narrative). I lied to myself. The notes were my narrative. Like the subject of the movie, you reach a point where it's too obvious. You have a choice to admit it, or to write another note to keep it going. -- narcissistic-personality/topic163581-40.html#p1693348
Truth too late wrote:Narcissism develops from being unable to trust anyone else. The only person we can trust is ourselves. And then we learn we can't even trust ourselves. It really was like that movie (and still is a little). He only has a 5-minute memory. He has to write notes to himself so he can continue on his crusade to identify his wife's murderer.
The ending is poignant. He finds himself with 5 minutes to choose whether to write a note to himself about who his wife's murder is, or to forget it so he can continue living in his world of notes written to himself, pursuing his single-minded goal which has defined his existence. It's a lot like the choice to face your narcissism or, conveniently continue to do what works. -- narcissistic-personality/topic163647.html#p1693306