" wrote:As a psychology major,
Ah, a psych major! You wouldn't happen to dabble about in Jungian/Analytical Psychology would you? I've been reading up on these things for my personal pet disorders. I am currently reading E. Fromm's
Anatomy of Human Destructiveness and C.G. Jung's
Aion and have read quite a few others. Have you read any work in this area? (I should note that I am NOT a psychologist though)
" wrote:...I believe I also show signs of Narcissistic personality disorder....
Aedin! Glad to see you again. Although I must admit that I was hoping you'd be doing better. First off, why narcissism? Are you trying to say that you look at yourself in the mirror and feel a deep sense of awe at your chiseled frame? Or that you view yourself as vastly unappreciated for the gleaming glory you grant the world with your mere existence?
Then why are you making a post that screams, "Please accept me, even though I'm pathetically flawed with five quoted psychological labels and one that I'm afraid to quote with a link! I am evil and hurt people!!!"? Because, if you consider those two concepts (I'm horribly flawed / I'm perfect and godlike), you really seem to be talking about two different things. But there is
something you could be doing that would match up with that most nasty original post -- beating the living crud out yourself.
I mean, I have to ask a question. Why is your self-esteem in the garbage can and why are you kicking yourself on the ground while you're already bleeding to death? Sorry, but nobody has to be mean to you Aedin. From what I gather, you're already your own worst enemy... but you're also your own best friend.
So here is my idea- which is only a hypothesis, but you can tell me what you think.
1) What if Aedin isn't mean and unfriendly, but Aedin has aspects of himself that are mean and unfriendly. After all, you were just downright cruel to yourself in that first post. Brutal in fact. So then, if there is Aedin the cruel, there is also Aedin the victim, who is suffering from an aspect of himself.
2) As noted, we can't call this your "entire self" because the person posting seems to be suffering and not gaining pleasure from it, at all. This aspect is almost repressed completely from the post. So then, would I be wrong in saying that your "cruelty" could be part of your
shadow?
3) Your
shadow in analytical psychology represents all the things about you that you can't accept. So then, if there was an aspect of you that could act sadistic towards others but you actively stopped yourself from acting on this, and couldn't accept your desire to do this as a part of "you", it would be repressed into "your shadow". It is you, but you won't recognize it because you couldn't possibly be that vision of absolute evil. Unfortunately though (In Pascal's theory of psychology) if this repressed portion of your subconscious can't act on others, it might find a new individual to take it's sadistic nature out on... you.*
4) And so begins the path of self torture. It convinces you to hate yourself, then it gets you to write posts that put you down, it even tries to push you to physically harm yourself. It might even slip out once and a while, when you're too weak to fight it, and hurt others while leaving you entirely unconscious of it's activities. And of course, if it were to destroy Aedin... perhaps Aedin fears that it could suddenly hurt others without restraint, that no one would be there to check it's vicious nature from hurting his friends, companions and loved ones.
But if that is true... then there is also within Aedin a second character that we've left out. Unsung, noble and beautiful in accordance to the will of his creator.
This is one who takes the path of the
hero. After all, if Aedin is being hurt by this thing, he must be standing in it's way, and if he's standing in it's way, he's fighting it to defend those he cherishes (including strangely enough, himself), and that is nothing short of those defining moments that characterize all great heroes. His depression then is a symbol of birth, battle death and rebirth, time and time again as he attempts to descend into the darkness and come out tested and true against the evil he finds in his own heart. The depression is the darkness the hero experiences in their journey, like Jonah going in the belly of the whale or Christ's decent into Hell to gain the keys of life and death. Aidin is also a hero, and he is fighting valiantly against a terrible villain of absolute evil that he may never be able to fully vanquish but must continuously submit beneath the power of his own soul.
But this
villain, I believe, also makes a
mistake in this piece, because it writes the word
narcissism (and it is so afraid of this, that it does not even dare provide a wiki-link).
Narcissism, we may recall, inevitably means a perversion of
loving oneself. But of course, if one's innermost villains were to describe something of their bane, they wouldn't present it with flowery words, but with curses and spitting - so he writes
narcissism and not
love of self. But this is perhaps what the shadow in Aidin fears most, that Aedin may one day love himself so greatly that he would be immune to the slings and arrows of his own shadow of self-sadism; that he would be simultaneously capable of repressing his most evil sadistic feelings from others and fully immune from it's self-destruction from within - because a healthy love of self can be the root of both.
Of course, I could be wrong. But I'll provide a curious exercise all the same. Not a sure-fire test, but I think it can tell Aiden a great deal about this whole thing. It is simple really, speak the following out loud clearly and distinctly. Right now. I even encourage my other readers to join him, he could use the support! Now then, yell after me with absolute intent on recognizing the following!
"I am feeling warm and loving toward myself!"
"I am worthy of all the good in my life!"
"I am a child of God, and I have more then I need!"
"I am happy that I always do the best I can with what I know
and always use everything for my advancement!"
"I am forgiving myself unconditionally!"
"I am grateful for my life!"
"I am loving and accepting myself and others!"
"I am treating all problems as opportunities to grow in wisdom and love."
"I am relaxed, trusting in a higher plan that's unfolding for me."
"I am automatically and joyfully focusing on the positive."
"I am giving myself permission to live, love and laugh!"
"I am creating and singing affirmations to create a joyful, abundant, fulfilling life!"
**
Now for something of a possible answer (and note I'm not a psychologist). Supposing you place some amount of symbolic power in words; if you could yell the above phrases out without any twitch on the emotional dial, then you perhaps have a healthy love of self - that's all it will say. But if you couldn't yell them out (even in private), or felt that twinge of pain in reading one, perhaps you've just found your own inner darkness. A narcissist, I think, could bellow these phrases with ease, but someone who suffers from a lack of self worth might even feel a sting from their statement, as though the arrow hit the mark too close to home and one didn't want to speak on the matter. As though they weren't
worthy. And if a phrase strikes you in reading it, now or in repetition, like a bolt of agony, congratulations, you've just stabbed the beast within in it's heart, and have hurt it truly for the first time since it began to hurt you.
That stated, these words are far more then mere vision, they are also a potent initial weapon in subduing your inner force of self destruction. To use them to fight the darkness within, repeat them. Repeat them until you believe them and make special emphasis on those phrases that hit closest to home.
That is what I think. But I may be far off. Even still, I hope all of us that suffer from inner emotional pain will one day be free. Best of luck to you Aedin. Remember, you are the hero of your own story - you mustn't fail, you're life is too valuable to be left dying a thousand small deaths in this misery. Also, please don't "OD" either, if you were to die by your own hand, you would only fulfill this things greatest pleasure, to force you to give your enemies pleasure and your closest loved ones the worst imaginable pain. Please do whatever you can to save yourself - you are the hero of the story!
-Pascal
*On top of this, the original post doesn't really count as accepting your dark side either. You just say nasty things about yourself and say you've hurt others, but qualify yourself as good at the same time by trying to claim it as a mistake, something that really wasn't your intent.
**I've restated these almost verbatim from
Life 101 by Peter McWilliams. I realize that some Christians may find his work rather odd, but I wouldn't hesitate to recommend his books for their keen ability to provide a humorous and often insightful view of many of life's problems. If you like his ideas, keep them for yourself, if not, follow his request and toss them aside.