14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Sam Vaknin
Question:
Is the Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) more amenable to
Cognitive-Behavioural therapies or to
Psychodynamic/Psychoanalytic ones?
Answer:
Narcissism pervades the entire personality. It is all-pervasive.
Being a narcissist is akin to being an alcoholic but much more
so. Alcoholism is an impulsive behaviour. Narcissists exhibit
dozens of similarly reckless behaviours, some of them
uncontrollable (like their rage, the outcome of their wounded
grandiosity). Narcissism is not a vocation. Narcissism resembles
depression or other disorders and cannot be changed at will.
Adult pathological narcissism is no more "curable" than the
entirety of one's personality is disposable. The patient is a
narcissist. Narcissism is more akin to the colour of one's skin
rather than to one's choice of subjects at the university.
Moreover, the Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) is
frequently diagnosed with other, even more intractable
personality disorders, mental illnesses, and substance abuse.
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies (CBTs)
The CBTs postulate that insight – even if merely verbal and
intellectual – is sufficient to induce an emotional outcome.
Verbal cues, analyses of mantras we keep repeating ("I am ugly",
"I am afraid no one would like to be with me"), the itemizing of
our inner dialogues and narratives and of our repeated
behavioural patterns (learned behaviours) coupled with positive
(and, rarely, negative) reinforcements – are used to induce a
cumulative emotional effect tantamount to healing.
Psychodynamic theories reject the notion that cognition can
influence emotion. Healing requires access to and the study of
much deeper strata by both patient and therapist. The very
exposure of these strata to the therapeutic is considered
sufficient to induce a dynamic of healing.
The therapist's role is either to interpret the material
revealed to the patient (psychoanalysis) by allowing the patient
to transfer past experience and superimpose it on the therapist
– or to provide a safe emotional and holding environment
conducive to changes in the patient.
The sad fact is that no known therapy is effective with
narcissism itself, though a few therapies are reasonably
successful as far as coping with some of its effects goes
(behavioural modification).
Dynamic Psychotherapy Or Psychodynamic Therapy, Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy
This is not psychoanalysis. It is an intensive psychotherapy
based on psychoanalytic theory without the (very important)
element of free association. This is not to say that free
association is not used in these therapies – only that it is not
a pillar of the technique. Dynamic therapies are usually applied
to patients not considered "suitable" for psychoanalysis (such
as those suffering from personality disorders, except the
Avoidant PD).
Typically, different modes of interpretation are employed and
other techniques borrowed from other treatments modalities. But
the material interpreted is not necessarily the result of free
association or dreams and the psychotherapist is a lot more
active than the psychoanalyst.
Psychodynamic therapies are open-ended. At the commencement of
the therapy, the therapist (analyst) makes an agreement (a
"pact" or "alliance") with the analysand (patient or client).
The pact says that the patient undertakes to explore his
problems for as long as may be needed. This is supposed to make
the therapeutic environment much more relaxed because the
patient knows that the analyst is at his/her disposal no matter
how many meetings would be required in order to broach painful
subject matter.
Sometimes, these therapies are divided to expressive versus
supportive, but I regard this division as misleading.
Expressive means uncovering (making conscious) the patient's
conflicts and studying his or her defences and resistances. The
analyst interprets the conflict in view of the new knowledge
gained and guides the therapy towards a resolution of the
conflict. The conflict, in other words, is "interpreted away"
through insight and the change in the patient motivated by
his/her insights.
The supportive therapies seek to strengthen the Ego. Their
premise is that a strong Ego can cope better (and later on,
alone) with external (situational) or internal (instinctual,
related to drives) pressures. Supportive therapies seek to
increase the patient's ability to REPRESS conflicts (rather than
bring them to the surface of consciousness).
When the patient's painful conflicts are suppressed, the
attendant dysphorias and symptoms vanish or are ameliorated.
This is somewhat reminiscent of behaviourism (the main aim is to
change behaviour and to relieve symptoms). It usually makes no
use of insight or interpretation (though there are exceptions).
Group Therapies
Narcissists are notoriously unsuitable for collaborative efforts
of any kind, let alone group therapy. They immediately size up
others as potential Sources of Narcissistic Supply – or as
potential competitors. They idealise the first (suppliers) and
devalue the latter (competitors). This, obviously, is not very
conducive to group therapy.
Moreover, the dynamic of the group is bound to reflect the
interactions of its members. Narcissists are individualists.
They regard coalitions with disdain and contempt. The need to
resort to team work, to adhere to group rules, to succumb to a
moderator, and to honour and respect the other members as equals
is perceived by them to be humiliating and degrading (a
contemptible weakness). Thus, a group containing one or more
narcissists is likely to fluctuate between short-term, very
small size, coalitions (based on "superiority" and contempt) and
narcissistic outbreaks (acting outs) of rage and coercion.
Can Narcissism be Cured?
Adult narcissists can rarely be "cured", though some scholars
think otherwise. Still, the earlier the therapeutic
intervention, the better the prognosis. A correct diagnosis and
a proper mix of treatment modalities in early adolescence
guarantees success without relapse in anywhere between one third
and one half the cases. Additionally, ageing moderates or even
vanquishes some antisocial behaviours.
In their seminal tome, "Personality Disorders in Modern Life"
(New York, John Wiley & Sons, 2000), Theodore Millon and Roger
Davis write (p. 308):
"Most narcissists strongly resist psychotherapy. For those who
choose to remain in therapy, there are several pitfalls that are
difficult to avoid ... Interpretation and even general
assessment are often difficult to accomplish..."
The third edition of the "Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry"
(Oxford, Oxford University Press, reprinted 2000), cautions (p.
128):
"... (P)eople cannot change their natures, but can only change
their situations. There has been some progress in finding ways
of effecting small changes in disorders of personality, but
management still consists largely of helping the person to find
a way of life that conflicts less with his character ...
Whatever treatment is used, aims should be modest and
considerable time should be allowed to achieve them."
(continued)
About Author :
Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is
a columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, and eBookWeb
, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East
Europe categories in The Open Directory Bellaonline, and
Suite101 .