Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personality disorders is not mental illness. Mental illness can be treated. Personality disorders cannot. I see where the OP is coming from.
THIS.
Anonymous wrote:Personality disorders is not mental illness. Mental illness can be treated. Personality disorders cannot. I see where the OP is coming from.
Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
+1
Instead OP wants to single them out for isolation. Maybe we can get them all to wear armbands or a badge with a picture of a narcissus flower, just so everyone knows to stay away. Terrible idea, OP.
You understand we are talking about people with narcissistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, borderline personality disorder? Not people who have been Tik Tok diagnosed with an online quiz but people with serious disorders that actually do make them a danger to other people, right? This is not some unfounded prejudice -- it's a reasonable concern.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
+1
Instead OP wants to single them out for isolation. Maybe we can get them all to wear armbands or a badge with a picture of a narcissus flower, just so everyone knows to stay away. Terrible idea, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The narcissist in your life may be a horrible abuser to you but they may be that charming hospital executive that “everyone” admires. They’re chameleons, shapeshift with their environment. Someone who’s a tyrant in the office may be a saint at home. Best people inform themselves of signs to watch for and proceed from There, don’t need handmade signs.
This is true of someone I knew who was a complete AH in work situations and with people he didn't know well. As years have passed he is still a scary AH but to me he's a total warm and compassionate person. I don't understand how he can be such a dichotomy versus a spectrum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
+1
Instead OP wants to single them out for isolation. Maybe we can get them all to wear armbands or a badge with a picture of a narcissus flower, just so everyone knows to stay away. Terrible idea, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
+1
Instead OP wants to single them out for isolation. Maybe we can get them all to wear armbands or a badge with a picture of a narcissus flower, just so everyone knows to stay away. Terrible idea, OP.
Anonymous wrote:The narcissist in your life may be a horrible abuser to you but they may be that charming hospital executive that “everyone” admires. They’re chameleons, shapeshift with their environment. Someone who’s a tyrant in the office may be a saint at home. Best people inform themselves of signs to watch for and proceed from There, don’t need handmade signs.
Anonymous wrote:Wow when I read the title I thought it was going to be some kind of screening for early detection and treatment so that their lives and the lives of those around them could be better. Silly me.
Anonymous wrote:Personality disorders is not mental illness. Mental illness can be treated. Personality disorders cannot. I see where the OP is coming from.
Anonymous wrote:Screening isn't the way, but more education is. Imagine if Trump were behaving obviously like a schizophrenic, we would totally spot that and get him some treatment and off social media. But people like him (and other dictators throughout time) have hidden mental disorders that we haven't been trained to spot yet.
Anonymous wrote:Personality disorders is not mental illness. Mental illness can be treated. Personality disorders cannot. I see where the OP is coming from.
Anonymous wrote:Screening isn't the way, but more education is. Imagine if Trump were behaving obviously like a schizophrenic, we would totally spot that and get him some treatment and off social media. But people like him (and other dictators throughout time) have hidden mental disorders that we haven't been trained to spot yet.