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Episode: Narcissists: Are We Surrounded?
Author: Spotify Studios
Duration: 00:51:33
Episode Shownotes
The internet tells us that narcissists are everywhere — and that the problem is only getting worse. It’s like narcissism is oozing out of our celebrities, politicians, partners, parents, maybe even ourselves?? So today, we’re taking a long look in the mirror to find out: are we all a bunch
of narcissists? And what should we do if we think someone in our life is a narcissist? We find out by talking to a real narcissist, Lee Hammock of the social media platform “The Self Aware Narcissist” as well as psychologists Prof. W. Keith Campbell, Prof. Kali Trzesniewski, and Dr. Craig Malkin. We want to hear your ideas for new episodes of Science Vs! Tell us via: Instagram at science_vs X at @sciencevs Bluesky at sciencevs Email at [email protected] Voicemail at +1(774) 481-1238 This episode does mention depression. Here are some crisis hotlines: United States: US National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Dial 988 (Online chat available); US Crisis Text Line Text “HOME” to 741741 Australia: Lifeline 13 11 14 (Online chat available) Canada: Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention (See link for phone numbers listed by province) United Kingdom: Samaritans 116 123 (UK and ROI) Full list of international hotlines here Find our transcript here: https://bit.ly/ScienceVsNarcissism
In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Lee’s Ratatouille Moment (07:06) The Narcissism Test (15:53) Are We In a Narcissism Epidemic? (25:41) It Kind of Sucks to be a Narcissist (31:55) Narcissists in Therapy (35:11) How to Deal With a Narcissist in Your Life This episode was produced by Rose Rimler, with help from Wendy Zukerman, Michelle Dang, Meryl Horn, and Ekedi Fausther-Keeys. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell. Mix and sound design by Sam Bair. Fact checking by Erica Akiko Howard. Music written by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger, So Wylie, Bumi Hidaka, and Bobby Lord.Thanks to all the researchers we spoke to for this episode, including Dr. Igor Weinberg, Dr. April Ilkmen, Dr. Jennifer Gerlach, Dr. Betsy Edershile, Prof. Brad Bushman, Prof. Brent Donnellan, Prof. Chris Barry, Dr. Glenn Geher, and Winkie Ma. Special thanks to Rachel Humphries for editing help. And big thanks to everyone who helped us this season! Jack Weinstein, Hunter, Chris Suter, Oscar, Elise, Dylan, the Zukerman family and Joseph Lavelle Willson. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Full Transcript
00:00:01 Speaker_05
Hi, I'm Wendy Zuckerman, and you're listening to Science Versus.
00:00:03 Speaker_05
Today is our last episode before we go on a little break to work on new episodes, which means that if you have an idea for us, something you want us to versus, we would absolutely love to hear it.
00:00:16 Speaker_05
There's an email, a phone number if you're in the US, there's social media accounts, it's all in the show notes. So just have a look at the show notes, get in touch with us, and tell us your great Science Versus idea. We always love hearing from you.
00:00:29 Speaker_05
Okay, but now, it's time to start the show. This is the show that pits facts against inflated egos. Today, we are talking about narcissism. So of course, I've invited senior producer Rose Rimmel, tell me all about it.
00:00:54 Speaker_10
Hey. Well, because you did the research. Fair enough. I have been doing the research. And, you know, what I quickly realized diving into all this is that on the Internet, there's all these caricatures of what a narcissist is.
00:01:10 Speaker_10
But the reality is a lot more complicated and actually a lot more interesting. So to start, I want you to meet someone. This person is an actual narcissist. Oh. He's a social media influencer. And that touche, that jump sounds very appropriate.
00:01:27 Speaker_10
Could you start by introducing yourself to our audience?
00:01:30 Speaker_11
Hey, everybody. My name is Lee Hammack. I'm a clinically diagnosed narcissist. One of my monikers has become like the self-aware narcissist.
00:01:37 Speaker_10
And Lee wasn't always self-aware about this, but something happened about eight years ago that changed his whole world.
00:01:43 Speaker_17
Mm-hmm.
00:01:46 Speaker_10
So Lee is a dad, and on this particular day, he was home alone with his six-month-old son. The baby was crying, and Lee was feeling really annoyed that the baby was fussing while he was trying to get some of his own work done.
00:01:59 Speaker_10
And he found himself raising his voice at the baby. And then his wife walked in, heard this, and she's like, what the hell? You're yelling at an infant. And they got in a huge fight about it.
00:02:11 Speaker_11
So I told her to get the hell out. And of course, she's like, OK, I'm leaving. And on the way out the door, she says, you know what? It's so damn hard living with a narcissist.
00:02:21 Speaker_10
She said that kind of like tossed over her shoulder as she walked out the door.
00:02:24 Speaker_11
Yeah, super insult. It's so damn hard to live with a narcissist slamming the door. I was just like, wait, what?
00:02:29 Speaker_10
Cause he's like, why would she say that? Right.
00:02:32 Speaker_11
Why did she call me that? So I sit down on the bed and I'm, you know, don't, don't angry Google. I was angry Googling. So I typed in a narcissist in Google and it said, did you mean narcissistic personality disorder?
00:02:45 Speaker_10
That is the medical term for someone who is diagnosed as a narcissist.
00:02:49 Speaker_11
Mm-hmm. I didn't mean that, but, you know, I got time on my hands now, so let's go down the rabbit hole. So I clicked on it, and literally, it was like, boom.
00:03:04 Speaker_11
And I started reading the signs and the symptoms and things like that, and I was like, oh, damn.
00:03:10 Speaker_10
It was really a huge moment for him because he's reading all these descriptions of what makes a narcissist, at least according to Dr. Google.
00:03:17 Speaker_17
Right.
00:03:18 Speaker_10
And he's nodding along. So it's like you think you're special, which he definitely does think that. He's always believed he was destined for greatness. Another one is you are preoccupied with yourself. Yep. He keeps reading. Lack of empathy.
00:03:33 Speaker_10
That one definitely felt right. Was there an example that flashed in your mind? You're like, oh, that was the time when I was being unempathetic.
00:03:39 Speaker_11
I don't know if you've ever seen the movie Ratatouille. So there's a scene in Ratatouille at the end when, like, the food critic eats the ratatouille and it took him back to his childhood. Yeah.
00:03:47 Speaker_11
That's what happened to me when she said that, like, when I started looking up narcissism and a lack of empathy, it took me back to my childhood when I was like in first or second grade.
00:03:56 Speaker_10
He was on the playground in school. He was watching this kid named Tony climbing on a jungle gym. And he saw that Tony was going to try to hang upside down by his legs. And he had a bad feeling about this.
00:04:07 Speaker_10
He didn't think Tony was strong enough to go upside down. So he told Tony to stop. But Tony did it anyway.
00:04:14 Speaker_11
Then listen, bam, he falls, snaps his arm. And everybody's like, oh my goodness, Tony's hurt. I'm screaming. I'm angry at Tony now. I don't care that he's hurt. You know, I'm angry as hell, man. I'm crying angry.
00:04:25 Speaker_10
What were you thinking as a kid when he broke his arm?
00:04:28 Speaker_11
That he had inconvenienced me. Because now we all had to go inside and now this is the time we get to go outside and play. Now we have to go inside because you made a decision not to listen to me.
00:04:40 Speaker_10
Little Kid Lee was so angry and upset in this moment that he actually remembers the teacher looking at him and saying, what's wrong with you? And at the time, of course, he didn't know.
00:04:49 Speaker_10
But as an adult, on this day in his bedroom after the fight with his wife, he's like, wait, now I know.
00:04:57 Speaker_11
I was like, damn, wow, this is it. I remember texting my wife. I was like, you're right. I am a narcissist. Really? Yeah, that night. I was like, you're right. I looked it up. I am a narcissist. I was like, you are 100% on it.
00:05:13 Speaker_10
And now today as an influencer, Lee talks a lot about narcissists like him and how to live with them, deal with them. And he's part of this huge trend where people cannot stop talking about narcissists.
00:05:25 Speaker_10
There are even people saying that we're in a narcissism epidemic. And I'm hearing about narcissists just like coming out of the woodwork. You know, our bosses, our parents, celebrities.
00:05:36 Speaker_00
Let's turn to Nick Cannon, who says he needs help after being diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder.
00:05:43 Speaker_01
There is a self-importance in me. I believe I am not ordinary.
00:05:48 Speaker_06
One in six people are narcissistic.
00:05:50 Speaker_01
The rates of narcissism are rising. In Trump, you literally have the most narcissistic person I think anyone can name in our lifetime. He is a consummate narcissist.
00:06:02 Speaker_11
How do you deal with these people? How do you live with these people?
00:06:07 Speaker_10
It's even become, like, something that comedians joke about.
00:06:10 Speaker_00
I don't know what narcissist means, but if it's about me, it's gotta be good.
00:06:15 Speaker_01
Yeah, we're in an epidemic of narcissism. We should be raising awareness. Should be like, wear a little mirror for narcissist stuff.
00:06:23 Speaker_18
I mean, today, today is Narcissist Day for us, right?
00:06:27 Speaker_10
Yeah, so we'll put on our little mirrors because today on the show, we're gonna find out what's really going on here. Is the world truly overrun with narcissists? Are they hosting science podcasts? Beloved science podcasts?
00:06:43 Speaker_10
How do you know if you're one or your boss or her partner is one? And if you're stuck with a narcissist in your life, what do you do about it?
00:06:52 Speaker_07
Science vs. Narcissism is coming up just after the break.
00:07:07 Speaker_05
Welcome back. Today on the show, narcissism. It is blowing up right now. We're going to dive into the science of it. And we're here with Senior Producer Rose Ribbler. All right, Rose, question number one, is the world overrun with narcissists?
00:07:24 Speaker_10
So people tend to throw around the word narcissism pretty willy-nilly. But first you have to know there is some different types here. So there's pathological narcissism.
00:07:33 Speaker_10
That's a trait where people constantly put themselves and their own needs above other people and their needs. And it's often associated with this lack of empathy.
00:07:42 Speaker_10
If that describes you, you could get diagnosed potentially with narcissistic personality disorder. And Lee actually did get that diagnosis.
00:07:51 Speaker_05
Oh, wow. From that argument that his wife just sort of threw out, you're a narcissist.
00:07:56 Speaker_10
But she was absolutely right. Yeah. And we are going to get more into the details of that later in the episode. But there's also what's considered basically normal narcissism, where, you know, you're like a little focused on yourself.
00:08:09 Speaker_10
You're quite confident, maybe to the point of being arrogant. Maybe sometimes you think you're better than other people.
00:08:14 Speaker_05
Uh-huh. And so to science, there is this distinction. There's a personality disorder narcissism and then just regular old garden variety narcissism.
00:08:24 Speaker_10
Yeah, and there's a spectrum. When it comes to the garden variety narcissism, that's usually what scientists or the media are talking about when they talk about a narcissism epidemic.
00:08:35 Speaker_10
This question of whether lots of us are moving farther and farther up this narcissism spectrum. Okay. So, are we? So, to answer that, we got to go back to where this all started. We are going back to the late 90s, early 2000s.
00:08:52 Speaker_13
OK, so this is the historical. Holy smokes. Just let me get my history face on.
00:08:59 Speaker_10
That is W. Keith Campbell. He's a professor of psychology at the University of Georgia. But back then he was a postdoc at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, along with another social scientist named Gene Twenge.
00:09:13 Speaker_13
We were in a basement office. They shoved three of us in there. We had a little bit of light that came through the Cleveland window that we had cut into the basement. And we'd talk in our swivel chairs.
00:09:25 Speaker_10
And a lot of what they were talking about was how the culture seemed to be changing.
00:09:30 Speaker_13
We were in a period culturally in about 2000 that was just the most over-the-top self-promotional kind of culture you could imagine with the reality television show culture and other things along those lines.
00:09:47 Speaker_13
So it was just a very, it's kind of a very in-your-face cultural moment.
00:09:51 Speaker_05
Yeah, I mean, I remember it well, but I don't think we've moved away from the cultural moment of self-promotion.
00:09:59 Speaker_10
I know, but I think right around then, a lot of people see that as an inflection point for certain things like reality TV. So Survivor debuted in 2000. Right around there is when American Idol started, America's Next Top Model.
00:10:13 Speaker_10
It's like fame, fame, fame, being on TV, being special. So Keith and Jean were like, something's changing here and it seems like people are changing in some fundamental way.
00:10:26 Speaker_05
Interesting.
00:10:27 Speaker_10
So they really wanted to find this out and they really wanted to get some data behind this idea that we're becoming more narcissistic. And luckily there is this test that measures some narcissistic traits.
00:10:38 Speaker_10
It's called the Narcissistic Personality Inventory. And what it's meant to do is to measure these grandiose narcissistic traits. Basically, how great you think you are.
00:10:48 Speaker_05
Can we take it? Can I take it? Yeah. Gosh, when I just said, can I take it? I was like, is that a sign that I'm a narcissist?
00:10:56 Speaker_10
Don't you want me to take it too? How special I am on the narcissism scale. Before we take it, do you have any... Do you have any guesses who will be higher on the narcissism scale?
00:11:08 Speaker_07
Oh, I am totally going to be more of a narcissist than you are. There's no doubt in my mind.
00:11:14 Speaker_10
You never know. You never know. OK, so the instructions are to read each pair of statements below and place an X by the one that comes closest to describing your feelings and beliefs about yourself.
00:11:23 Speaker_10
You may feel that neither statement describes you well, but pick the one that comes closest.
00:11:28 Speaker_05
It's like a BuzzFeed quiz where just a photo of Senator Palpatine is going to show up on the screen.
00:11:35 Speaker_10
It's not the Nerd Personality Index. Lack of empathy, Rose! Oh no! Okay, let me put the link in the chat.
00:11:46 Speaker_03
Okay, I'm in, I'm in, I'm in.
00:11:48 Speaker_02
Okay. Alright, I'll read the first one. I have a natural talent for influencing people. I am not good at influencing people.
00:12:00 Speaker_10
I'm gonna say not good.
00:12:01 Speaker_18
I'm gonna say I have a natural talent.
00:12:04 Speaker_10
Mm-hmm. The thought of ruling the world frightens the hell out of me versus if I ruled the world, it would be a better place. I think about this a lot. It's number two. If I ruled the world, it would be a better place. Yeah, yeah.
00:12:17 Speaker_07
It's not a hard bar right now, is it?
00:12:22 Speaker_10
I am no better or no worse than most people or I think I am a special person.
00:12:27 Speaker_05
I really like to be the center of attention. It makes me uncomfortable to be the center of attention.
00:12:32 Speaker_10
I just want to be reasonably happy or I want to amount to something in the eyes of the world.
00:12:37 Speaker_05
Everybody likes to hear my stories. Sometimes I tell good stories.
00:12:44 Speaker_10
Yeah, I feel confident in this one. The other day I told someone this story, I was like, oh, the other day I had a bunch of pineapple. It was really sweet. And then I had a bagel and the bagel was really sour in comparison to the pineapple.
00:12:56 Speaker_10
It was like, great story. So that is a sometimes good storyteller. I actually think everybody likes to hear my stories. People sometimes believe what I tell them, or I can make anybody believe anything I want them to. I wish.
00:13:15 Speaker_05
I wish, right? Oh my gosh. Wouldn't the world be a better place if everyone believed everything we said on Science Vs.?
00:13:23 Speaker_10
Give her a point on the narcissism scale for that.
00:13:32 Speaker_04
Okay, okay, so before you reveal how narcissistic we are, tell me what is the average on this test?
00:13:42 Speaker_10
So when they have used this test in sort of a general sample, just so you know, is in college students. That's kind of how it's been normed.
00:13:50 Speaker_05
Okay.
00:13:50 Speaker_10
The average score is about 15. Yeah. Do you want to hear about standard deviation?
00:13:56 Speaker_05
I do want to hear about standard deviations, yes.
00:13:58 Speaker_10
Okay, that's about 7 points on either side. So, you know, 8 to 22. So that's like you're in like the middle chunk of the population. Okay, got it.
00:14:10 Speaker_10
Less than 8, you're really on a tail end of like, you're kind of a shrinking violet Okay More than 22, you're getting up there in your narcissistic traits Alright, how did we do?
00:14:22 Speaker_10
You got 17 And I got 10 Okay, so we're in, we're both normal You're a little higher up than normal Okay, okay Also, I just have to tell you this, Wendy I found this paper published by Dr. Drew from Loveline Do you know him? No, no, I don't. Oh, OK.
00:14:43 Speaker_10
It was this radio show where they answered sex questions. It was like big in the 2000s. They always had celebrity guests come on. And it turns out this whole time, Dr. Drew was giving the NPI to celebrities that came onto the show.
00:14:56 Speaker_10
And he published a paper to see like, are celebrities more narcissistic than other people? Which kind of celebrity is the most narcissistic?
00:15:04 Speaker_10
And just for fun, I'll tell you that they found a celebrity that had the highest score was Radio hosts Reality TV stars Reality, of course, reality TV stars, yeah Reality TV stars got on average 19.5 Which is so funny because that is like part of what kicked us all off for Keith and Jean Okay, so with all that in mind
00:15:27 Speaker_07
that 19 is a reality TV star from the 2000s.
00:15:36 Speaker_05
Punked exactly normal.
00:15:37 Speaker_07
So I'm exactly in between the average person and a reality star. You know what? Science podcast host. That fits. That feels exactly where I belong.
00:15:48 Speaker_10
Yeah, it checks out. I mean, that's that seems like just narcissistic enough. But to take this all back to Keith and Jean sitting in their basement.
00:15:57 Speaker_02
Oh, yeah, that's that's why we did this. I have completely forgotten about Keith and Jean, by the way.
00:16:03 Speaker_10
Yeah, that's the whole point. That's why we took this test. Yes, of course. So the scientists think that people are getting more narcissistic, right? Yeah. And so what they do is they find all these studies where people have taken this test.
00:16:15 Speaker_10
So they were able to find data on more than 16,000 college students taking this personality test between 1979 and 2006. Mm-hmm. So then they crunched the numbers and they found that, on average, narcissism seemed to be going up.
00:16:30 Speaker_13
Yeah, we found an increase in narcissism, and I looked at the data about 25 different times to make sure, and that's what we found.
00:16:39 Speaker_05
Those traits. You see more and more Wendy's, less and less roses.
00:16:43 Speaker_10
Yeah, I guess you could say that. And not only that, Keith and Jean also looked at all the stuff that was going on in the culture. So besides the reality TV stuff, stuff that they thought was evidence of people getting more narcissistic.
00:16:57 Speaker_10
So they pointed out that more people are getting cosmetic surgery. Parents have begun giving their children more unique names. And so they concluded we are in a narcissism epidemic.
00:17:11 Speaker_10
Gene Twangy published a book called Generation Me, and all of this just blew up. It became huge. There was a ton of media attention on this.
00:17:18 Speaker_14
This particular group of young people heard a lot of things growing up like, believe in yourself. Everybody thinks they're going to be a reality star by posting their selfie online, their video online.
00:17:28 Speaker_14
A generation more narcissistic, materialistic, naively entitled.
00:17:34 Speaker_05
Do you remember this? Yes, I remember all of this. And it felt, I have to say, it felt very old man yelling at clouds to recall a meme that was probably around back then.
00:17:50 Speaker_05
There was, as someone who was a young science journalist hustling her way to success,
00:17:59 Speaker_10
hustling your way up the narcissism spectrum. Exactly.
00:18:02 Speaker_05
But a lot of the talk did feel like kids these days. Yeah. I was just seeing a pattern of criticizing the younger generation as opposed to necessarily a pattern around a narcissism epidemic.
00:18:16 Speaker_10
Well, OK, what you just said is exactly what this other academic I spoke to felt like at the time, too. Her name is Kali Treznewski. She's another psychologist. She's currently a professor at the University of California, Davis. Mm hmm.
00:18:28 Speaker_10
So when she first saw this paper, back when it came out, it made her really uneasy for a lot of the reasons you just said.
00:18:35 Speaker_08
This idea of, you know, everybody is increasing in narcissism and like this generation is just going to end up in an awful place because they can't take criticism and they're all just full of themselves, out for themselves and don't care about anyone else.
00:18:52 Speaker_08
Those are quite strong statements to be making that leads to these stereotypes like, oh yeah, there you are, there's that lazy youth again.
00:19:01 Speaker_10
So Kali, I mean, at this time, she, because she was, you know, a little skeptical, but you know, also just like, if this is true, we need good, we need a lot of data behind it because we are so prone to this confirmation bias where we think the younger generation sucks.
00:19:16 Speaker_10
So she found this other data set, it's called Monitoring the Future, and they survey high school seniors every year. They've been doing it since the mid-70s.
00:19:26 Speaker_10
It's not the NPI, but they do ask questions about things like, how do you see yourself compared to others? How satisfied are you with yourself? How competent are you? So questions that could be related to an inflated ego.
00:19:42 Speaker_10
So she and her co-author looked at students' answers to those questions between 1976 and 2006.
00:19:47 Speaker_05
And what did they see?
00:19:50 Speaker_10
They saw no narcissism epidemic.
00:19:53 Speaker_08
Yeah. So we found that most things didn't change.
00:19:59 Speaker_03
Oh.
00:20:00 Speaker_10
Yeah. The high school seniors in 1976 were just as likely to say, like, I'm not that special or I'm kind of special as the high school seniors in 2006. So she didn't find any evidence in this data of kids really changing.
00:20:16 Speaker_05
Interesting.
00:20:17 Speaker_10
And so basically, ever since, there's been back and forth in the literature about what was actually going on over this time period. Yeah. Fast forwarding, what's really interesting is about what's happening today.
00:20:30 Speaker_10
Scientists have kept doing these analyses since this.
00:20:33 Speaker_09
Yeah.
00:20:33 Speaker_10
You know, that data was up to 2006. It's 2024. Yeah. And so we do have newer studies where they've done something similar, looking at newer crops of college kids. Right. And actually, what they're seeing now is that narcissism has been going down.
00:20:49 Speaker_04
Wow.
00:20:50 Speaker_10
Even Keith, who was on Team Narcissism Epidemic, remember? Yeah. He was like, yeah, it's going down. At least what the NPI can measure, that grandiose narcissism.
00:20:59 Speaker_13
I mean, right now, what it looks like is that grandiose narcissism is going down.
00:21:06 Speaker_05
Whoa. Huh. Huh. So what do these researchers make of that?
00:21:15 Speaker_10
So the debate here, I mean, it's funny. At this point, lots of scientists seem to agree. And it's not just Kali, it's not just Keith, but also there's another group from the University of Vienna. They just put out this big meta-analysis.
00:21:28 Speaker_10
All these different researchers in this space agree that there is currently no evidence that narcissism is up compared to a few decades ago. If there's a controversy, it's whether there was a bump for a while.
00:21:40 Speaker_05
Hmm. So maybe there was something about that inflection point, reality TV coming online.
00:21:49 Speaker_10
Well, it's hard to say because not everybody agrees that there was this bump. That's still controversial. And Keith now says, like, look, at this point, it's an archaeological question because it's over.
00:22:05 Speaker_05
So, so we are not in a narcissism epidemic. We may never have been. Yeah.
00:22:14 Speaker_10
But so far what we've been talking about is this test that nerds use to measure, you know, kind of normal levels of narcissism. We haven't been talking about pathological narcissism, which is what Lee has. Right.
00:22:26 Speaker_10
And people with this can be really self-centered, hurtful, manipulative. So after the break, we are going to turn back to that darker type of narcissism to talk about what's going on in their heads.
00:22:40 Speaker_10
And if you've got someone like this in your life, how can you deal with them? Ooh, coming up.
00:22:53 Speaker_05
Today's AI Bytes is presented by Google Gemini. For anyone new to Gemini, it's an AI assistant you can have real conversations with. Whether you want to brainstorm something or prep for a presentation or interview, Gemini might help you do it faster.
00:23:07 Speaker_05
You can download the Gemini app for free on iOS or Android. Must be 18 plus to use Gemini Live.
00:23:15 Speaker_05
Dr Sarah Webb at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne uses artificial intelligence to help us understand the stars, and in particular, flare stars.
00:23:26 Speaker_16
Yeah, so flare stars are stars that release bits of energy that spew out into space. And they release enormous, enormous amounts of energy that could power whole cities for millions of years in theory if you were to be able to harness it.
00:23:40 Speaker_06
Wow. And it's really cool. And so you recently wrote a machine learning algorithm using AI to help us understand these flares better. Tell me about it.
00:23:50 Speaker_16
Yeah, one of my favorites that I've written recently was actually a clustering algorithm.
00:23:56 Speaker_16
It's almost like pattern recognition and an analogy might be if you're playing with a deck of cards and you're trying to find all of the cards that have the heart suit.
00:24:06 Speaker_16
You're trying to put all of them together, all of the spades, you're trying to put all of them together. You're trying to find the like with the like.
00:24:12 Speaker_05
And so what did you discover? Something fun through the clustering?
00:24:16 Speaker_16
We did. So we discovered really fast flare stars, some of the fastest flare stars in our galaxy. And it was possible thanks to AI helping us sift through the data.
00:24:26 Speaker_05
If you didn't have the power of AI, like if we were in the... Dark ages. Not even like 10 years ago. How long would it have taken you to cluster all of those?
00:24:36 Speaker_16
I did the math on that. I would still be sitting at a desk 88 years later, minimum. Are you kidding me? No. Isn't that insane?
00:24:45 Speaker_05
88 years later. And how fast were you able to do that? Because you used machine learning.
00:24:50 Speaker_16
I used machine learning. The actual clustering itself took minutes. And then it took months of my time to look through and analyze everything. But the actual computer doing the hard work for me was minutes.
00:25:02 Speaker_05
So now you have time for podcasting. Now I have time, I know. Isn't it wonderful? That's amazing. Today's AI Bytes was presented by Google Gemini. Using Gemini is as easy as having a conversation.
00:25:17 Speaker_05
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00:25:41 Speaker_05
Welcome back. Today on the show, narcissists, we're wearing our little mirrors to spend a day focusing on them, which they would love, wouldn't they, Rose? So where do we go next?
00:25:55 Speaker_10
Yeah, so we're moving to this pathological narcissism that goes way beyond us just kind of being our most arrogant selves. And I talked about this with psychologist and narcissism specialist Craig Malkin.
00:26:08 Speaker_12
Really, the core of pathological narcissism is this drive to feel special.
00:26:13 Speaker_05
Feel special.
00:26:15 Speaker_12
It's sort of an addictive, compulsive need to turn to that feeling of feeling special at the expense of everything else.
00:26:23 Speaker_10
It's about being so self-centered, so consistently, that it actually interferes with your relationships, your ability to work, and can translate into some really crappy behaviors. Craig calls them the triple E.
00:26:39 Speaker_12
Exploitation, which is doing whatever it takes to feel special, no matter the cost to others. Entitlement, which is acting as if the world should bend to our will because we're so special.
00:26:51 Speaker_12
And empathy impairments, that's getting so caught up in that need to feel special that you lose sight of the needs and feelings of others. That, triple E, explains all of the worst behaviors in narcissistic personality disorder.
00:27:09 Speaker_10
So to be diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder, the DSM, which is like the psychological Bible, says you need to display a pattern of grandiosity, need for admiration, and lack of empathy.
00:27:21 Speaker_12
All right, this is somebody who's so focused on themselves that they wreak havoc in relationships. It's pervasive.
00:27:31 Speaker_10
And this disorder, it's not super common. It's estimated that in the U.S. maybe 1% of the population has NPD.
00:27:37 Speaker_10
So to go back to Lee, who we heard from at the start of the show, this was the guy that had this big fight with his wife after he yelled at the baby and he got diagnosed with this. Okay.
00:27:46 Speaker_10
He told me that this desire to feel really special and important is a major thing that has driven him for years.
00:27:53 Speaker_11
Kind of like the movie, I always get the kids movie references. Like when I watched the movie Coco, I always wanted to end up on the ofrenda, not just buried and gone and just forgot about.
00:28:04 Speaker_11
You want to be remembered as somebody who changed the trajectory of your family. You want to have the portrait of yourself in the family house, right? Well, that's Grandpa Lee right there. He changed the trajectory of the family right here.
00:28:18 Speaker_11
What more can I do to leave my mark on the world? What more can I do to, so I'm just not a normal person. Normalcy being average is, it's like painful, it's like death, it's almost like dying. I want my tombstone to be a statue.
00:28:31 Speaker_10
That's a hard mark to hit. And so it turns out that this drive to feel special doesn't always feel good. So one thing that might surprise people is that a lot of narcissists are not happy people. Mm, that is surprising.
00:28:46 Speaker_05
It is, because I guess there is this assumption that if you were a person in the world that lacked empathy, that didn't give a shit about anyone else, you could just do whatever you wanted, and that
00:28:59 Speaker_10
That somehow makes you freeing. Right, exactly, exactly. But that's not what we find?
00:29:05 Speaker_10
No, I mean, one study found that a third of people with NPD have major depressive disorder, a fifth have generalized anxiety disorder, which is much higher than the general population.
00:29:17 Speaker_05
Yeah, that really is surprising. I mean, it's just not how you picture a narcissist, I don't think.
00:29:22 Speaker_10
Yeah, but that's the case, and it's actually something that Lee can really relate to, because he's also been diagnosed with depression and anxiety alongside NPD.
00:29:32 Speaker_10
And a thing that Lee told me that really helped me see why you'd be so miserable as a narcissist is that his ego really can't handle any criticism. This is pretty common with this disorder, by the way, being very sensitive to any criticism.
00:29:46 Speaker_10
And so when this happens to Lee, it just eats and eats at him.
00:29:51 Speaker_11
Criticism feels like a truly, like a wound. Like it just doesn't go away. It's just like, sometimes it gets healed up. It's kind of like a scar, right? It gets healed up, but sometimes it'll randomly just burst open.
00:30:03 Speaker_11
Like literally stuff that I forgot about will pop into my head that somebody said to me in the club when I was 21 years old. And it'll hurt my feelings now. I'm like, but it's hard. It's so hard just to kind of let stuff go.
00:30:17 Speaker_10
And so he's always on the lookout for his ego getting dinged and, like, preemptively getting ready to fight.
00:30:24 Speaker_11
Like, when I first meet people, always try to find a way to take them down, just in case. If it's not physical violence, of course, it might be like, hmm, what about you can I hurt your feelings with? Just in case you're gonna hurt my feelings.
00:30:35 Speaker_11
How can I hurt your feelings?
00:30:36 Speaker_10
You're looking for weaknesses in case you need to exploit them later?
00:30:39 Speaker_11
Yeah, just in case. Just in case. Just in case. Just in case they insult me or joke on me. How can I joke on you back to hurt your feelings or get the attention back on you? Because that's how my mind works. It's always like attacking and vengeance.
00:30:51 Speaker_10
This is a pretty miserable way to live.
00:30:53 Speaker_05
Yeah. And hearing that, I could really see how Narcissism can manifest as anxiety because you just have these ruminating thoughts of anger over and over again.
00:31:07 Speaker_10
And that's not all. I mean, there is a review paper that found that they often suffer from feelings of meaninglessness. They're very critical of themselves and they struggle to express their emotions.
00:31:22 Speaker_05
So is there a way to help them? Because this feels like it's kind of the worst of both worlds. No one is happy. The people around them aren't happy. They're not happy. Can we do anything about it?
00:31:33 Speaker_10
Yeah. I mean, so Lee, of course, had that question right after he he had his moment of revelation, because like the next thing he Googled was like cure for narcissistic personality disorder. Right. And the results were disappointing. None.
00:31:47 Speaker_11
There's no medicine. There's no pills or anything like that to take. There's no cure, go to therapy. So I was just like, well, I guess I have to go to therapy.
00:31:56 Speaker_10
So that's the treatment we have, therapy, talk therapy. Therapists might do things like try to help their patient be more aware of triggers that lead to narcissistic actions.
00:32:08 Speaker_10
One paper described what you can do as a therapist is move a patient from me mode to we mode. Okay, I mean, did Lee end up trying therapy? Yeah, he did start therapy. It was several months after the big fight with his wife.
00:32:22 Speaker_10
And when he went to see this therapist,
00:32:24 Speaker_11
She was like, okay, so what are you doing here at 32 years old? I was like, oh, shit, okay. And I just started crying, because I know it's like, I was just like, literally just started crying, yeah.
00:32:35 Speaker_09
Uh-huh. Was that unusual for you, crying?
00:32:39 Speaker_11
Yeah, it was, yeah.
00:32:40 Speaker_09
Did she ask you why you were crying?
00:32:42 Speaker_11
I was like, I feel like I don't have any emotions. I was like, I just feel like I'm empty inside. And I started crying. She's like, no, you don't. You're crying, so there's something there, you know. There's something in there.
00:32:53 Speaker_11
You're definitely crying, so there's something in there. It's just there's something blocking it. We got to figure out a way to kind of lower down the gates. She's kind of described it like a castle.
00:33:03 Speaker_11
You got to figure out a way to lower down the gates because you can't walk around just like sealed up all the time.
00:33:08 Speaker_05
And did he, was he able to lower the gates?
00:33:11 Speaker_10
Yeah. I mean, there is no magical transformation. He says he's still a narcissist, but over the years, it has helped him learn to put some space between his thoughts and his actions.
00:33:22 Speaker_11
My very first thought is typically the narcissistic reaction. It really, really is. It's kind of like, pow. The first thought is probably gonna be self-serving, super defensive, and egotistical, whatever it is. So I have to take my time to respond now.
00:33:35 Speaker_11
So I take a deep breath. I'm like, okay. I have to ask myself, is that narcissism or is this normal? It's kind of like, I have dual thoughts and I have competing thoughts.
00:33:47 Speaker_11
It's kind of like, it's opened a whole new door up and there's somebody else living up here and they're just like sitting in a room. Like my brain is like, there's a narcissistic part of me and a non-narcissist part of me.
00:33:56 Speaker_11
They're like sitting in the living room arguing, you know.
00:34:00 Speaker_17
All day long?
00:34:01 Speaker_11
All day long. Yeah. I don't, I don't find very much peace.
00:34:05 Speaker_05
Oh, that's so interesting how Lee talks about it, that therapy has allowed him to see a different way of thinking, the quote-unquote, what he says, normal way of thinking, but he's still a narcissist.
00:34:21 Speaker_05
But that, I mean, just that step seems like it's been helpful to him. I mean, do we have any data on other people with narcissism? Like, what's the chance? If a narcissist goes to therapy, they will change.
00:34:36 Speaker_10
We really tried to run this down, but it's very hard to put numbers around it because there are no trials exclusively on people with NPD. Mm. Annoying. Yeah. And, you know, psychologists have said that people with NPD tend to drop out of therapy.
00:34:52 Speaker_10
So maybe that's one reason, you know, we don't have these. We do have some evidence that is promising in people who do stick it out. There are some case studies showing that people with NPD can improve after two and a half to five years of therapy.
00:35:05 Speaker_10
And a lot of therapists that I talked to told me the same thing, that they have helped people with this disorder.
00:35:12 Speaker_05
So that is how narcissists can help themselves. But on the flip side, I mean, if you are living with a narcissist who's perhaps not working on themselves in the way that Lee is, what can you do?
00:35:29 Speaker_10
Yeah, so this question of how do you deal with a narcissist in your life is something that Craig, our psychologist from earlier, he specializes in. He sees a lot of people who come to therapy.
00:35:41 Speaker_10
Oftentimes they come in trying to figure out if someone in their life is a narcissist and then what should they be doing about it.
00:35:49 Speaker_10
And his number one tip is to not focus so much on the other person's diagnosis, but to figure out whether or not the relationship is working for you.
00:35:59 Speaker_12
The one thing people don't do that I often help them get to is just to be in touch with the questions like, am I safe in this relationship emotionally, physically? Do I like how I'm being treated regardless of where it comes from in this person?
00:36:16 Speaker_05
If you decide, I mean, I do like this person, but God, they've got some crappy traits that I'd like them not to have. Can you do anything about that? Or you just have to take them as they come?
00:36:26 Speaker_10
Right. So if you do decide the relationship is worth working on, you want to stay, or let's say it's like a relative or a boss, Craig has a few strategies.
00:36:36 Speaker_05
Right.
00:36:36 Speaker_10
They're based on this observation that you can actually boost empathy in people with narcissism. There's a body of research on this. And Craig has come up with some ways to basically exploit that.
00:36:49 Speaker_10
So the first thing is something he calls an empathy prompt.
00:36:54 Speaker_10
And this is basically in your conversation with this person about why you're unhappy with their behavior, you sort of set it up by priming the other person to feel empathy for you while you're giving them feedback in this really particular way that could get through to someone with narcissism.
00:37:11 Speaker_10
So he gave me an example. Say your partner is someone who can often act very dismissive of your ideas.
00:37:18 Speaker_12
You might want to say... Something like, sweetheart, you're the most important person in my life. And that's why it's so devastating when you dismiss my ideas out of hand. I just feel like somebody I love and care about really doesn't think much of me.
00:37:35 Speaker_12
It's just heartbreaking.
00:37:37 Speaker_09
Wow.
00:37:38 Speaker_12
Right? Anybody who has a capacity for empathy at all, that will melt them.
00:37:45 Speaker_10
Yeah. That's like a gunpowder-packed statement, because it's so much about how much you value them.
00:37:55 Speaker_12
Yes.
00:37:56 Speaker_10
In addition to, this is what I'm not getting from you.
00:37:59 Speaker_12
Yes, exactly.
00:38:01 Speaker_10
Wow.
00:38:01 Speaker_12
So that's an empathy prompt.
00:38:02 Speaker_10
Therapy bomb.
00:38:04 Speaker_05
Rose, it sounds like you just had a revelation. Is there someone you want to try this on?
00:38:08 Speaker_10
Maybe. Wendy, because? You love being the center of attention and you people always love your story. OK, OK. What else? What other tips did Craig have? Craig had different strategies for like how stubbornly narcissistic people are.
00:38:31 Speaker_10
So for someone that's like maybe not going to melt from the empathy prompt, what he suggests is this thing called catching good. So here's what he means by that.
00:38:42 Speaker_12
There's going to be moments where they say something thoughtful or kind, caring, where they appreciate you. You want to catch those.
00:38:52 Speaker_10
He's like, say you think you have a narcissistic boss, but one day they do one nice thing. Maybe they take you out for lunch and they listen to an idea that you had. You can tell them.
00:39:04 Speaker_12
Yeah, I so appreciate that you invited me to lunch. I just feel so much more motivated to get to the finish line on tasks. So I really want to thank you for that.
00:39:16 Speaker_05
Oh, that's great. That's great. You know what really stands out here is the advice that you don't tell your boss, that makes me feel great. Thanks.
00:39:27 Speaker_05
Instead, tell them you're now more motivated to get your work done because the idea is that your narcissistic boss cares about your work. They don't care about your feelings.
00:39:41 Speaker_10
Yes. He ties it to, like, here's the outcome that will benefit you. Yes. So if that doesn't work, and the empathy prompts don't work, and you can't, you know, this person's still in your life, there is one last strategy that I think we're talking about.
00:39:55 Speaker_10
And especially because this is something that the internet loves talking about. And this is called gray rocking.
00:40:01 Speaker_05
Gray rocking.
00:40:03 Speaker_10
So this is the idea that, like, if you're in a fight with a narcissist, You basically become so still and so boring and quiet that you are acting like a gray rock. Oh.
00:40:15 Speaker_12
It doesn't give them anything to fight with. Gray rock is simply when you respond or interact, you're not emotionally engaged. You're flat. You're not really offering anything.
00:40:28 Speaker_10
We don't really have science here, but Craig says this is a tactic that people have found useful. The key is that you give the other person as little ammunition as possible.
00:40:39 Speaker_12
The mistake people make is explaining themselves or defending. And now you really get things going because the more narcissistic someone is, the more they're going to have to say in response to that.
00:40:50 Speaker_12
So the last thing you want to do is invite more answers or more reactions.
00:40:55 Speaker_05
Yeah, these are sort of helpful suggestions, but
00:41:00 Speaker_07
If I was employing these in a relationship I could get out of, it would really make me question whether that was the best option.
00:41:09 Speaker_10
Yeah, Craig was definitely like, that is something worth considering. And he also really wanted to relate to people that if you feel unsafe in your relationship, your priority should not be on using these techniques to improve communication.
00:41:22 Speaker_10
It should be on making sure you're safe.
00:41:24 Speaker_05
Yeah, absolutely. So I guess the takeaways of this episode are that narcissists are among us. There may not be as many of them out there as the internet would have you believe, but they are among us. Yeah.
00:41:43 Speaker_05
And there are some ways that you can try to deal with them. Maybe not so science backed, but hopefully these tips are helpful. And if you are the narcissist or think that you are, going to therapy is a good idea.
00:42:03 Speaker_05
Rose, how are you walking around the world differently after researching this episode?
00:42:09 Speaker_10
Well, it's just been a good reminder that when we start to focus on ourselves too much, it can be harmful and it can actually like make you less happy.
00:42:19 Speaker_10
And it makes me really want to catch those moments where I'm doing that, where I'm like really spinning around about myself, my own legacy or what people think of me. Noting when that's actually to a point where it's not helpful.
00:42:32 Speaker_10
It's making me less happy than I would be otherwise. I think that's a takeaway that even someone who scored low on the narcissism spectrum, not to brag, can take away.
00:42:42 Speaker_07
Especially low, I would say. Extraordinarily low, I would say.
00:42:46 Speaker_10
Even me can benefit from thinking about narcissism.
00:42:52 Speaker_05
Thanks, Rose. Thanks, Wendy. Alright, since this is the last episode for the year, we're gonna be back. in the new year, have a short break, and work on new episodes. We thought we'd bring in the whole team for a citations extravaganza. Hi, everyone. Hi.
00:43:11 Speaker_05
Whoa, look who's entered the room. It's crazy. How many citations are in this week's episode? 49. Michelle, if people want to find these citations, where should they go?
00:43:24 Speaker_08
To the show notes. Head over to our show notes and click on the transcript.
00:43:29 Speaker_05
And if people want to send us their ideas for next year, Meryl, what should they do?
00:43:34 Speaker_08
Just look at the show notes. We'll also have info there for how you can tell us all your great ideas.
00:43:38 Speaker_05
We want to hear them. Blythe, how did Science Versus change your life this year?
00:43:42 Speaker_15
You know what it did? I lucid dreamed. I realized I could lucid dream. It was a big deal.
00:43:51 Speaker_05
Rose, you changed my daily life this year because I now soak beans. I soaked them and then I boiled them. Thank you to everyone who also emailed me giving me instructions. And I am never going back to canned. I can't. They're too slimy.
00:44:08 Speaker_05
Once you've done it properly, they taste better, less microplastics. Thank you, Rose. I'm delighted to hear that. Michelle, I'm eating, as a result, eating more fiber. Wow. My poos are out of control.
00:44:21 Speaker_17
Amazing.
00:44:22 Speaker_05
Thanks. All right. See you in the New Year! Bye! Happy New Year, everyone! Happy Holidays! Happy New Year! This episode was produced by Rose Rimmler with help from me, Wendy Zuckerman, along with Michelle Dang, Meryl Horne, and Aketi Foster-Keys.
00:44:43 Speaker_05
We're edited by Blythe Turrell. Mix and sound design by Sam Bear. Fact-checking by Erica Akiko Howard. Music written by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger, So Wiley, Bumi Hidaka, and Bobby Lord.
00:44:54 Speaker_05
Thanks to all of the researchers that we spoke to for this episode, including Dr. Igor Weinberg, Dr. April Ilkman, Dr. Jennifer Gerlach, Dr. Betsy Ederscheil, Professor Brad Bushman, Professor Brent Donnellan, Professor Chris Barry, Dr. Glenn Gehr, and Winky Ma.
00:45:10 Speaker_05
Special thanks to Rachel Humphreys for editing help. And a big thanks to everyone who helped us with this season, including Jack Weinstein, Hunter, Chris Suda, Oscar, Elise, Dylan, the Zuckerman family, and Joseph Lavelle-Wilson.
00:45:23 Speaker_05
Science Versus is a Spotify Studios original. Listen to us for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. We are everywhere. But if you are listening on Spotify, then tap the bell icon so you get notifications when new episodes come out.
00:45:38 Speaker_05
And whatever podcast app you are using, we would love it, if you love the show, to give us a five-star review. It helps new people find us, which we love. I'm Wendy Zuckerman. We'll back to you soon.