Copyright Forbes

Anyone who’s known a narcissist can recognize their classic criticism, demeaning tendencies, gaslighting, blame shifting, exploitation and other manipulative behaviors from a mile away. However, some narcissists — like covert or vulnerable narcissists — operate stealthily. These are the kinds of individuals that can leave you more confused and damaged than when they found you. The following are four secrets that a narcissist does not want you to know. Knowing them will assist you in regaining your power and recovering your identity, should you or someone you love ever become a victim of narcissistic abuse. 1. People Who Stay Calm When Provoked Narcissists compulsively seek emotional reactions from others. When they insult, accuse or even emotionally provoke someone, it can be their way of trying to find evidence for the power they hold on their emotions. In this sense, a calm or neutral reaction can truly loosen a narcissist’s self-assured grip on their victim’s emotions. In other words, keeping calm when they try to get a response out of you is enough to damage their need for control. This means that the less emotion you express, the less successful the narcissist’s strategies will be against you. They may even intensify their tactics in an attempt to squeeze out a response, but they lose every time they don’t receive one. The “gray rock method” uses this very logic as its foundation: one simply has to become as boring as a stone, and the narcissist will lose interest. MORE FOR YOU If a narcissist, for instance, tries to trap a potential victim into an argument or wring an emotional response out of them, the most effective response would be a terse and indifferent one, especially when it isn’t accompanied by disclaimers or justifications. If you find yourself stuck with a narcissist in an environment you cannot escape, such as the workplace or a family gathering, the gray rock technique can be the savior you need. It keeps you grounded in the present, while reminding the narcissist that they do not have the authority to determine how you feel. 2. Being Questioned Or Challenged Narcissists often have a pronounced fear of tarnishing their self-image, one that they have probably refined over years and, therefore, cherish above all else. They’re often willing to go to extreme and unreasonable lengths to protect this near-perfect image. This is why interrogating or challenging their actions and intentions can feel like a threat to their fragile superiority complex. A 2023 study published in Personality Neuroscience reports that narcissists are hypervigilant toward ego-threatening stimuli, and often use cognitive avoidance to repress awareness of personal faults or errors. This double-blinded duality protects their idealized self-image through distortion of facts, projection of blame and rewriting historical fact. Accountability is often replaced with defensive hostility and denial of fault, as narcissists perceive even neutral-sounding discussions as humiliating attacks on their handcrafted superiority. This is why mild criticism or even accountability may easily lead to an extreme response. To them, inquisitiveness is betrayal, and the truth is an assault. 3. Not Being Admired Or The Center Of Attention Admiration fuels a narcissist’s ego, and indifference starves it. For this reason, narcissists will require a constant flow of affirmation to maintain their inflated ego. Once that supply is exhausted — if people no longer glorify or pursue them — then they begin to fall apart. People who are low in narcissistic traits can also occasionally exhibit this tendency. For instance, a 2024 study published in Memory & Cognition found that people often accept weak or poorly justified arguments when they happen to align with what they already believe. This was true even for people who scored high in intelligence or scientific literacy. The only factors that reduced this bias were scientific reasoning and active open-mindedness. To a narcissist, who probably invests heavily in their self-serving worldview, the need for constant validation reflects the same resistance to challenge or contradiction. But in their case, it’s a compulsion. When admiration stops, they lose the psychological reinforcement that protects their self-image, forcing them to face truths they’re wired to avoid. Ironically, the more attention they seek, the more insecure they feel. When their victims stop perpetually feeding their ego, the narcissist has to confront the truth that in the absence of admiration, they lack a stable sense of self. 4. Accountability And Genuine Love True intimacy requires at least a certain degree of vulnerability. This is why narcissists, given their inability to self-reflect, naturally struggle with intimacy. They are afraid of people who recognize their defense mechanisms and demand honesty. Love can scare them in the same way, as it demands emotional fidelity, empathy and responsibility. A 2022 article in Personality and Mental Health discovered that narcissistic partners tend to swing between idealization and devaluation as a means of coping with their fear of intimacy. And when intimacy challenges their power, they default to tactics like by blaming or retreating. The study suggests that accountability and true affection provoke strong shame in people with weak self-esteem. To avoid this, pathological narcissists use antagonistic and confrontational behaviors in order to avoid having to feel this sense of shame. To a narcissist, admitting to their flaws or wrongdoings is akin to sacrificing their ego altogether. In this sense, genuine and healthy love — which demands constant accountability and vulnerability — can be a waking nightmare for them. It threatens parts of themselves that they might have been defending their entire life.