Signs & Signposts
in a Narcissistic Society
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© June 12, 2014
Foolish men mistake
transitory semblances for eternal fact and go astray more and more.
Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881), English essayist, historian and philosopher
When the millions
applaud you, seriously ask what harm you have done; when they censure you, what
good!
Caleb C. Colton (1780 – 1832), English clergyman
To attempt to do for
others what they best do for themselves is to weaken their resolve and diminish
them as persons. The same holds true of
ourselves.
James R. Fisher, Jr., Meet
Your New Best Friend (2014)
Normality Defied
What is the normal experience of a child of its time? From the beginning that child is programmed
to assume the collective biases, values, orientation, and history as interpreted
by the times, which includes religious and intellectual orientation.
From that basis, the child takes on the veneer of the
pleaser, accommodating the world it enters.
It develops an obsession to belong with an edginess to be included. The level of acceptance is the barometer of
anxiety. The motivation to please leaves
little energy to discover the person’s own essence or to please self. As covered earlier, an empty vessel craves
attention and affection; a full vessel overflows with kindness and caring –
just the reverse of the myth perpetuated.
A content person can become an enabler helping others help
themselves. Conversely, a pleaser can
misconstrue its role and attempt to carry other people’s burden. It can’t be done. The nature of life is that strength and
resolve comes only from enabling others to find their own way, and carry their
own baggage.
Warrick Dunn was an African American football player in the National Football League. Mr. Dunn created a program where he built
houses for the needy, paid the construction and closing costs, and the house
payment for one month. At that point, he
turned the house over to its new owners who assumed the mortgage and took
responsibility for its care and upkeep.
This is quintessential enabling. This is not charity. This is not flaunting one’s celebrity: See
how generous I am? This is enabling
where the giver takes no responsibility for the burden of others. Sadly, this is too often the exception rather
than the rule.
The fundamental requirement is first to meet our own needs
before we can assist others to meet theirs.
The paradox is the generous appearing person often is needy, and
therefore self-seeking approval and affirmation of others. See me?
I’m a good person! Neediness
represents an elemental state of emptiness, whereas a person in the fullness of
being has no need to own other people’s problems. He is more likely of a mind to enable others
to meet theirs.
The whole problem of a narcissistic society is to look good
doing good. Narcissist believe everyone
is like them in neediness, and therefore of the mind to desire what they have
and are. So, in a self-aggrandizing
manner, they share their wealth unaware of the damage they do. Many parents fall prey to narcissism and
wonder why their children never catch hold in life.
Packaging Damaged Goods
The other day a mother came to me about her ten-year-old son
being taunted at school. He is a big boy
for his age, quite intelligent, but at the same time, not nearly as mature as his
eight-year-old sister. “Kids pick on
him, girls tease him, and much smaller boys play pranks on him that get him in
trouble with his teacher. I don’t know
how many times he has come home crying.
What should I do? I’m at my wits
end.”
Looking at the mother, obviously distraught and expecting me
have a ready solution, I said, “Can I tell you a story?” Her eyes glazed over. It was clear that she was in a hurry and
desired only McWisdom. “If you think it
will help,” she conceded.
The story I told her was about my first week in a new school
at the age of eight. I, too, was a boy
big for my age and immature. I had come
home crying to my mother about a boy in my class two years older than me who
was the class bully. “When it came my
time to bat at recess, he took the bat out of my hands, and said ‘I’m batting
now’.” I started to cry again
remembering my anger and humiliation.
My mother wrapped her arms around me and told me she would
talk to my nun at school. My da hearing
the conversation came over to me. “Your
mother is going to do no such thing. It
is not your teacher’s problem. It’s your
problem. Now, what are you going to do
about it?”
I studied the distraught mother’s face to see the impact of
my story.
The mother looked at me aghast, “That’s it?”
“That’s it.”
“You expect me to go back to my son and tell him that?”
“I don’t expect you to do anything. I expect you’ve done too much already. Don’t you think it’s about time he start
fighting his own battles?”
She weighed this for a time, and then in a whisper, said,
“He’s my baby, my first born.” Then
thinking about my story, asked, “What happened when you went back to school?”
I laughed. “My da had
told me before that bullies are cowards and have a need to dominate even when
it makes no sense. He also said that
when kids my age fight they always do the rub-a-dub, hitting each other in the
stomach, leaving their face open for a fist.
‘If you get in a fight with this dude,” he said, ‘hit him in the fricken
face. I guarantee you he won’t bother
you anymore.’
And that’s what happened.
I wouldn’t give up my bat the next day, and he said we’d meet after
school. We did. He did the rub-a-dub, as my da predicted, and
I hit him in the nose, giving him a bloody nose. He kept yelling, ‘You gave me a bloody
nose! See what you did?’ Then right in front of all the guys, he
started crying. I never had any trouble
again.”
Genesis of Narcissism
Since the child grows from the outside in, there is a chance
that a point will be reached where he stops looking for signs and signposts to
show him the way to his own personal growth and satisfaction. He waits for a hand or a hand out, for
someone else to fight his battles, or protect him from his folly.
So often such a child finds himself bereft of courage, and
in axiomatic reflects, thinks it is everyone else’s fault. Whenever he encounters difficulty,
embarrassment, or confusion, he looks to someone else to solve his problem, or
blame someone else for his quandary.
Should this occur when the world is opening up to the child with all its
possibilities, the adolescence self may become narcissistic at the expense of wonder
and engagement.
Wonder is introspection and the key to self-knowing. The pain of confrontation with a hostile
world, which is equally narcissistic, narcissistic triggers this
projection. Listen to a child and you
hear this reflect action as if part of the child’s DNA. What stalls nascent development is the
well-meaning but ill-advised intercession of a parent to assume ownership of
the child’s contretemps with another before the child can understand what is
happening and why. The parent intercedes
because the parent has been there before and thinks the parent knows best. No learning is allowed! This may develop in the child a dependence on
second-hand problem-solving, and lead to a second-hand life as spectator rather
than as active participant in the process.
This is not to suggest that introspection is an end itself,
but rather a vehicle to self-knowing through action and reflection. German philosopher Goethe (1749-1832)
advises: Self-knowledge is best learned,
not by contemplation, but action.
Experience is the best teacher, and a child is aware of
experience from its earliest moments of consciousness. That said it never occurs to a complainer
that it is his duty to change his situation, and no one else’s; that life is
about problem solving and no one can solve another person’s problem, but that
person.
Where a person at an early age finds himself, despite all
the woe is me, is where that person, for all intent and purposes, deserves to
be. Otherwise, that person would be
somewhere else. A child can be made
aware of this at an early age, and once learned, it will serve that child
through a lifetime.
There is a teacher I know in a private school. No matter how many months pass between our
visits the conversation is always the same.
She insists she could make far more money in the public school system than
in the private academy in which she teaches.
Now why does she not teach in a public school? Obviously, that never occurs to her, nor does
it occur to her that her complaint is a broken record. She wants more pay, better benefits, and has
no interest in the fact that her little school has limited resources. This does not interest her. She doesn’t see the relevance. She is a narcissistic child in an adult’s
body and wants satisfaction, don’t tell her about limits! She is where she is because a long time ago
she quick growing emotionally, fueling her existence with the hot air of
complaint.
Introspection can be a lifelong self-awareness process
governed by experience and learning, ultimately transforming into
self-acceptance. Without such a mindset,
the person is likely to develop self-contempt expressed in constant complaining
without any action or resolution of the complaint. Life, in such cases, is reduced to a soap
opera on television with the same episode repeated ad infinitum.
Advent of the Pretend
World
Looking for others to solve our problems is a characteristic
flaw of a society that has gone from inner-direction to narcissism, from
self-discipline to permissiveness, from self-awareness to the
over-domestication of instinct. The result
is that we have become spectators to our own lives, and have little sense that
the motion picture in our heads is the same old film that we’ve been playing
forever hoping desperately for a different ending.
We have become a society with a mania for super stars and
celebrities to live our lives vicariously through their achievements and
scandals as compensation for our pervasive inner emptiness. Scandal rags, as some newspapers and
magazines were once called, were the only place such stories appeared, now they
appear in The New York Times and Washington Post, on the Internet, while such
stories have become the staple of 24/7 cable news. There is no apparent embarrassment that
society has become obsessively a bottom feeder.
We saturate our waking hours with other people’s
experiences, people who are often living on the edge in the fiction of an
increasingly pretend world. Despite
this, or perhaps because of this, we live a television fantasyland buying what
we don’t need or cannot afford, dreaming that we are living in that beautiful
house with that fabulous automobile in our driveway that appears in the
commercial. It is the sickness of our
therapy as Christopher Lasch notes:
Although he may resort
to therapies that promise to give meaning to life and to overcome his sense of
emptiness, in his professional career the narcissist often enjoys considerable
success. The management of personal
impressions comes naturally to him, and his mastery of its intricacies serve
him well in political and business organizations where performance now counts
for less than “visibility,” “momentum,” and a winning record. As the “organization man” gives way to the
bureaucratic “gamesman” – the “loyalty era” of American business to the age of
the “executive success game” – the narcissist comes into his own. [1]
What counts today is style, panache, presence, and the
ability to say and do almost anything without antagonizing anybody. Personality has come to supersede
performance, making and impression making a difference. Pleasing others who have clout to be going
somewhere has become a full-time job.
The narcissist is a “winning-side-sadder”
who cues on who occupies the power and then seeks the high ground to visibly
bask in that power. Lacking any notable
curiosity or commitment, notwithstanding an inflated estimate of his ability,
his ploy is misdirection. This finds him
depending on others for constant infusion of approval and support. He attaches himself to someone going
somewhere, living a parasitic symbiotic existence. At the same time, his emotional dependence,
together with his manipulative, exploitive approach, makes these relationships
bland, superficial, and unreliable. He
covers his charade and dread with eye-catching scenarios that camouflage his
intent so that the boss believes he is swimming in clover when he is actually
walking through sludge. What makes this
amusing is that he is a pyramid climber when the pyramid has been reduced to a
muddy playing field.
Persuaders as
Puppeteers
Swimming with sharks is the same goal of persuaders
otherwise known as advertisers. Life has
become an electronic billboard of desires with consumers the center of their
synthetic universe. With the constant
psychedelic flashing of tantalizing imagery, the only experiences that have
value, the only accomplishments esteemed, the only claims to distinction are
those cultivated by these persuaders.
These dream merchants are the puppeteers of the narcissistic society.
They have successfully created a superfluous, interchangeable,
disposable, and inconsequential society, one that energizes the lower rather
than the higher centers of being, one that mocks sincerity, spirituality,
innocence, love and wonder; one that denies death and is therefore afraid of
life; and one that subscribes to the formula: garbage in and garbage out.
The dominant characteristic of personality is emotion. When people go to great lengths to appear
happy, healthy and wise, the words of Seneca, the first century Roman stoic
philosopher come to mind: There are no
greater wretches in the world than many of those whom people in general take to
be happy.
Somerset Maugham explores this folly in his novel The Razor’s Edge (1944), where the idle
rich have little more to do than fuel hysteria with paralyzing anxiety on not
being on the guest list of a high-status party.
To be included beatifies the narcissist with being accepted by
“winners,” who have clout. Clout
consists not simply of money and influence but of power, and that power lies in
legacy, which cannot be bought, and thus is a limited reference. Indeed, it has no reference outside
itself.
The new ideal of success has no legacy. Performance, as Maugham points out, means,
“to arrive.” Success equals
success. People with clout today in
business, politics and the entertainment world have arrived and share
“visibility” and “charisma,” which can only be defined as itself for it has no
heritage.
The most important attribute of a celebrity is that he is
celebrated. It elevated Ronald Reagan
from a b-movie actor to governor of California, and then President of the
United States. Again, it has led to
Austrian born Arnold Schwarzenegger becoming governor of California with
aspirations to be president, but not being native born disqualified him. It became a moot question after his scandal.
[2] Schwarzenegger understood the pretend status of his adopted country and
exploited its narcissism to advantage.
Narcissism is apparent when your qualifications for a job
are heavily weighted by what university you have attended, not on what you
bring to the job. Given this dubious
indicator, it is not surprising that the quality of education is measured by
the costs of that education.
Consequently, families are known to make huge sacrifices to send their
children to the most status-conscious universities, expecting the investment
worth the cost as brand is everything in a narcissistic society, and no one
manages their brand better than universities that cost $60,000 or more a year
to attend.
Give advertisers credit.
They have successfully created a collective mindset cost is equated with
quality: the more expensive the better anything is. And the better the university the better the
chance of one’s child will make it to the promise land of success and the
comfort zone of clout, privilege and accessibility to the people who
count.
These persuaders are puppeteers selling appearance, and
would agree with the words of American clergyman E. R. Beadle (1812-1879): Half the work that is done in this world is
to make things appear what they are not.
They choose our appetites, and then punish us with them to excess,
while Swiss philosopher Rousseau ((1712-1778) cautions: Temperance and labor are the two best physicians of man; labor sharpens
the appetite, and temperance prevents from indulging to excess.
We beat the idea of excess to death, only to have it become
more of a monster in our presence. How
else can the world know we are successful, happy and fulfilled, the unspoken
consensus goes, lest we flaunt our stuff?
It never occurs to us that we would have less enemies,
experience less hostilities if we kept our excesses to ourselves. The paradox is the greater the flaunting the
emptier we become; the higher we climb the more depressed we feel. This prompted author David Ambrey to write, Finding Hope in the Age of Melancholy
(1999). Ambrey, who suffers from
depression, failed to find relief through Prozac or psychiatry. He decided to take control of his life by
probing for answers on his own. He
concludes that human reason and scientific enquiry, which have become the
primary standards of truth, are insufficient without spiritual nourishment.
Then there is real estate mogul Donald Trump who rides this
spiritual wasteland to celebrity. He now
has his own television program – The
Apprentice – having fun riding narcissism as television’s con king with a
smile. Trump evaluates fawning
apprentices to applause as he declares with the catching cliché, “You’re
fired!” This declaration epitomizes the
pathology of our times, that is, our self-estrangement marked by randomness,
relativism, nihilism, marginality and cultural dislocation.
Trump’s philosophy is that hard work is not enough for
upward mobility. You must be more than a
performer; you must be a “winner.”
Winning is a selling job with you as the commodity. So, what is a winner? Trump is saying that objective references,
credentials, pedigree, are not enough, that making an impression overshadows
achievement, personality eclipses performance, creating a brand than selling it
trumps making a difference. Success is
synonymous with publicity and the Donald is its entrepreneur.
It is difficult to escape this cage, especially when the
core value is success and not contribution and the great betrayal is to find
wealth is not enough, that the Brahmins do not accept the nouveau rich. Thus cultural dislocation leads to melancholy
for climbers as well as foot draggers.
Betrayal is equally so for students who attend Camelot universities at
great sacrifice certain of acceptance only to find that they, too, do not
belong. A cry of “foul” finds nobody is
listening.
Yet betrayal is essentially self-betrayal for buying into a
duplicitous system that has no room for trust.
Deceivers, writes American
theologian George Crabbe, (1754-1832), trifle
with the best affections of our nature, and violate the most sacred
obligations. American novelist
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1803-1860) echoes these sentiments: No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and
another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be
true.
A narcissistic society suffers not only self-estrangement,
but fails to recognize the chameleon that it has become. The source of light is always outside and
therefore it always must adjust to match the colors.
Apologists point out that the twenty-first century has
accelerated, exaggerated, and hyped out of proportion what is significant. As a consequence, nothing is in balance,
perspective is lost, and “what could be” is treated as “what is.” Apologists explain what is not understood.
The Great Transformation
To understand this cage is to realize it has no
parents. We see ourselves surrounding
with everything and nothing at all. The
church was once our spiritual nourishing center, but is preoccupied with its
own survival. Life has become a homeless
mind in search of itself and we are its reluctant orphans.
Empty and lost, self-indulgent and self-aggrandizing, the
advertising industry has come to the rescue with the narcotic to ease our pain,
24/7 television’s 24/7 news and weather innocuous dramas on hundreds of
channels with moral updates.
We have transitioned from neighborhoods to gated
communities; from mom and pop stores to conglomerates; from unsupervised
playgrounds to athletics mega-sports centers; from school houses to school
emporiums; from churches of worship to citadels of political intrigue, from
competitive capitalism to corpocracy.
[3]
Old style feudalism has been transformed into Wal-Mart,
which sets the table and manufacturing plays serf to its demands. The world is upside down and bosses look up
to professionals who are looking down at their iPhones, unconsciously texting.
Workers have been transformed from producers to consummate
consumers, working night and day to pay for purchases they don’t need but feel
compelled to buy. It is the new refrain
to the coal miners’ song, “I owe my soul to the company store.” Now, everyone is in hock to a credit card
company that collects $100 billion a year in processing fees for workers’
consumer purchases.
Mothers no longer canned goods and store them in their
cellars. They’ve been convinced by
advertisers that store bought goods are healthier, cheaper and better. They are not.
You can’t find work in most companies now without a college
education. The mania for formal
education represents another control. No
one is asked first about their experience, but what education they have.
Society has been transformed into a managed society which
asserts control when it has little control over itself. Technocrats dictate what is good and bad for
us, what we should and should not value, and what we can and cannot expect from
life. No one finds fault with them when
they change their minds about such things.
These are aspects of a dying culture, which has turned
narcissistic for “personal growth” and “professional development.” We are in a survival mode and call it
reinvention. We have lost our way and
misplaced our moral compass. But that
does not mean it cannot be found again.
The work ethic remains part of our genetic code, as discipline still lingers
in our reptilian memory. What has not
changed is our nature:
We are all
self-centered. We are born egotists,
in which we come into the world believing we are the center of existence, only
to find that we are not. Since our egos
are fragile, we do anything to protect them.
This makes us difficult to deal with or influence.
We are all more
interested in ourselves and what interests us than anyone else. We are inclined to turn the conversation to
what we think, feel, believe, and value away from what is being said. Failing that, we become bored, stop listening
and move on.
We all want to feel
important. This is the dignity of
the self and nascent to us all. Treat
others with respect whatever their station, and respect will return to you
tenfold. Be condescending and you will
have a rival if not an enemy. Kindness
restores balance is therefore the greatest virtue.
We each crave the
approval of others to approve of ourselves. We find it difficult to like much less approve
of ourselves, giving others the benefit of the doubt. Everyone suffers this sizable handicap
despite the posturing or protest to the contrary. That is why we are grateful for simple
courtesy, or straightforward sincerity when complimenting or criticizing.
These aspects of our nature can go a long way to enable us
to be authentic and take charge of our life in an otherwise inauthentic
world. Times may change, but people will
remain essentially the same whatever the age, or whatever the peculiar
predilections. One day reading this some
years hence, when narcissism has faded, you may wonder why people “back then,”
who had so much and were so much enjoyed it so little, and why they were so
uptight and self-concerned, preoccupied with what they didn’t have and weren’t. I look forward to that age because that will
mean this cage has lifted.
* *
*
Notes
[1] Christopher
Lasch, The Culture of Narcissism: American
Life in An Age of Diminishing Expectations, W. W. Norton & Co., New
York, 1970, p. 44.
[2] Arnold
Schwarzenegger admitted in 2011 to having an affair with his housekeeper,
Mildred Baena, which produced a son. He
claims he didn’t know he was the father until he notice when the boy was eight
that he looked a lot like him.
[3}
Corpocracy is a term I use in several of my books to indicate the nature of
corporate enterprise in the complex organization, and how this approach is
antithetical to personal trust and development.
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