A narcissist of that magnitude could not resist parading his phiz on television. |
|
The narcissist objectifies people and treats them as mere instruments of gratification. |
|
It's a chance to show that he can believably play an older character, and he makes a decent fist of the hateful narcissist made good. |
|
He's a self-involved narcissist who cares only about whether he's on a coin or not. |
|
The truth is, I generally just focus in on myself, the narcissist that I am. |
|
The stricken look on his face tells us that the narcissist has no answer and never will. |
|
Certainly, this latter-day political narcissist has already made up his mind what he's going to announce. |
|
She's a narcissist, striving to impress her tawdry wannabe high-brow friends. |
|
It makes him look like a narcissist, a guy who's just doing what he wants to do. |
|
She turned around and became a mother who was a complete narcissist because she had never had enough attention. |
|
For the narcissist, his or her internal world is more real than the external world. |
|
As a true narcissist, did Rutherford consider himself to be above the law against adultery? |
|
Or he could be a narcissist, motivated by the glory of seeing his name in print. |
|
Of all the disorders, the narcissist is the most invested in discrediting anything that he perceives as an insult. |
|
Not everyone who exhibits narcissist tendencies is a narcissist. |
|
Is photography what happens when a voyeur meets a narcissist? |
|
Lacking a sufficient basis in experience about what constitutes a realistic, good relationship, the masochist is vulnerable to the larger-than-life promises that the narcissist makes. |
|
The narcissist defends against feelings of catastrophic failure by resorting to a fantasy of specialness, an illusion of mastery and control. |
|
Invisibility is a central terror of the narcissist, and in our world of hyper-individualism, the competitive pursuit of attention produces winners and losers, those who painfully feel passed over and excluded. |
|
In other words, groups of people initially preferred the narcissist over others as their leader. |
|
|
Even with wild schemes, the charismatic narcissist can whip up enormous enthusiasm. |
|
In brief, Lasch argued that the average American is a narcissist, obsessed with external approval, material acquisition, and power. |
|
Like their narcissist leader, they have no truck with empathy. |
|
Good thing there is no chance of this baby becoming a narcissist. |
|
All we need do is look among political aspirants for the one who is a bully and a narcissist, ignorant and narrow-minded, power-hungry and hardhearted to find its current possessor. |
|
But the ministry can also be an attractive career for a narcissist. |
|
This is never truer than in the case of a narcissist personality. |
|
Your communication with a narcissist should be based on self-preservation. |
|
And just a few days ago I was castigating someone else for being a thin-skinned Narcissist. |
|
A few weeks ago, City would have been hotter favourites than Ronaldo in the Narcissist of the Year Award. |
|
Swithin owns and operates her own consulting business, Tina Swithin, LLC, which came to fruition as a result of her personal custody battle with a Narcissist. |
|