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September 17, 2017
COURTROOM INSIGHTS
NARCISSISTIC PERSONALITY DISORDER AFFECTS
PARENTING AND CHILD DEVELOPMENT
Kristine Danback Ph.D
‘Two individuals who once comprised a loving marriage, now bear
titles of defendant and plaintiff, standing before the family court
among a plethora of custody cases. Judges and family relation
officers laboriously examine intimate details of a family,
attempting to make reasonable decisions affecting multiple lives.
Their rulings directly affect the future care and psychological
development of childreniustrations by James Polisky
wwwya
POLISKY.COM
and children who have endured the effects of
narcissistic abuse. I hope to convey clarity to judges and family relation
personnel in order to strengthen their insight.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder and Mentalization:
A psychological diagnosis is the process of determining which
condition explains an individual's symptoms. The symptoms associated.
with Narcissistic Personality Disorder, or NPD, affect the development of
how children mentalize, or in other words, their reflective functioning,
which is a vital psychological function. The Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders or DSM- 5 is the handbook used by health
care professionals in the United States and much of the world as the
authoritative guide to the diagnosis of mental disorders. NPD is one of the
four Cluster B personality disorders characterized by a dysregulation of
emotions, thinking and behavior. Importantly, pathological traits of a
personality disorder are stable throughout one’s life and consistent across
situations. Significant impairments occur in identity as well as
interpersonal funetioning, such as empathy and intimacy, and are not due
to substance abuse or a general medical condition. If court officials can
appreciate this one area of psychological health when trying to determine
ahigh conflict divorce settlement involving custody, children benefit
immeasurably.
Mentalizing refers to the ability to perceive and understand oneself
and others in terms of their own as well as other people’s feelings, beliefs,
intentions and desires. It is reasoning about one’s own and others’
behavior. It is thinking about why they are feeling or reacting in a
particular manner, allowing them to know how their behavior and actions
are shaped by another’s ability to do the same. It involves considering and
understanding why they and other people behave in defined ways. It is
distinguishing inner from outer reality, and pretend from real modes of
functioning. This ability is imperative for successful relationships, the
foundation of our existence. An inability to do so leaves individuals
exposed to meaninglessness, chaos, anxiety and the perpetuation of
additional personality disorders, and consequently, more high conflict
divorces.
Our reflective self develops at the beginning of infancy through
parent-child interactions. It is reliant on the parent’s capacity to provide
accurate mental mirroring which originates from the mother’s or father’s
reflective functioning. It begins simply with the infant's ability to be
sensitive to another person’s gaze or facial expressions, and then
developing into awareness of the disharmony between their affective state
and other persons.At two-years old, children become curious about
others" pain or distress, and begin to show empathy.
At three-years old, children understand others have
differing feelings from their own. It is not until
approximately six-years of age that a child fully
understands other individuals have different
thoughts. Limited reflective functioning ean cause
unhealthy interpersonal relationships. It may trigger
anxiety, and cause aggressive and destructive
behaviors. Parents with low reflective functioning
produce children with low reflective functioning as
well as attachment-insecurity. To break the cycle,
court officials who receive education in Cluster B
personality disorders, can be of service.
DSM-S Criteria and the Ability to Charm:
The criteria receiving the most attention with
narcissistic personality disorder are impairments in:
‘+ Inability to empathize
‘+ Lack of concer for feelings, needs, or the suffering of
others
+ Lacking remorse after hurting or mistreating another
‘+ Exploitation by deceit or coercion; lying
The use of dominance or intimidation to control
others
Judges may believe they have the ability to
recognize these traits in an individual standing
before their bench, however, the pathology is
covered by an inauthentic, competent persona. The
action before the court could constitute covert abuse
if the litigants have a history of multiple legal
actions. Charm, misrepresentation of self,
embellishment, and fabrication are vehicles used by
the NPD parent in their submissions, believing most
of their own lies. Facades are built as the burden of
proof. The NPD parent persists with deceitful hyper-
focus toward the ex spouse, expending energy
continuing the insidious abuse. This is not easily
seen or believed by others, and court officials often
succumb to the fallacious view portrayed by the
NPD parent. This is because the narcissist has an
impeceable ability to blame the victim, and has no
ability for self reflection.
Parents with NPD have common features.
Often they fall on various points of the financial
spectrum, yet it is the NPD parent who exhausts
their counterpart with endless court activity, having
larger incomes or support to continue battling. They
are most effective at hiding the wolf in sheep's
clothing, due to representation. They often remarry
fairly quickly, and create a false image of a secure
home life misleading the court's perspective, thus
mistakenly receiving custody of the children.
Unfortunately, the NPD parent is unable to modulate
the child’s internal world to guide healthy
development and ensure an ability to mentalize. It
cannot be stressed enough how proficient they are at
deceiving others, fabricating an inauthentic lifestyle
hidden from the awareness of their new spouse,
family, boss, coworkers, and even their own
children. Understandably, court officials get misled
and are mistaken in their recommendations and
rulings pertaining to custody.
How Narcissistic Personality Disorder
Psychologically Harms Children:
In order for children to have successful
interpersonal relations, they need to be aware of and
understand how they and others think or feel. This
development depends upon the presence of a
psychologically healthy caregiver. This growth can
be hindered by the NPD parent if the court grants
them custody. NPD parents devote a hatred or
destructiveness towards others who make any
demands on them, including their children who
unequivocally need their parents for development.
Even without custody, the NPD parent’s character
armor finds expression through chronic superiority,
derisive envious attitudes and contemptuous
behavior. It is directed toward their children, toward
the other parent and toward society, while almost
inconceivably hiding it from the court and people in
the NPD parent’s daily life. The custodial parent
may also need the NPD parent because of court
orders, thus leaving the NPD parent feeling
impinged upon leading to more hostility.In many cases the custodial parent is reliant on the
NPD parent to follow court orders regarding
parenting time, educational orders, pick up and drop
off, and finances just to name a few.
‘The healthy custodial parent can become a
detriment to the children’s psychological health too,
This manifests when the NPD parent does not
adhere to the court’s orders, causing the custodial
arent to become emotionally dysregulated.
create a set of events where cash flow is interrupted
and bills are left unpaid, electricity is tured off, and
oil not delivered regardless of the custodial parent's,
work status. Court orders are created with the whole
picture in mind, with judges under the assumption
that both parties will do what they are told.
Grandiosity, a criterion of narcissism, gives the
NPD parent feelings of entitlement, causing them to
behave as if they are above the law, disregarding
any court ordered financial obligations.
Furthermore, the lack of control the custodial parent
has over finances influences their capability to raise
the children because the NPD parent’s contempt is
felt by all. Psychologically, children start to feel
helpless, inferior, and unimportant as they observe
the NPD parent continuing to withhold from the
custodial parent who seeks the court order as a
means to organize his/her life. This manifests in
September 17, 2017
daily life by the children seeing the cable shut off,
or living in a home that is now cold or in need of
repair. Children see the custodial parent weakened
and distracted, because the focus is on daily survival
instead of their development.
Parents with NPD have little ability to
reflect upon their continual financial, emotional,
and/or physical abuse, as well as the multiple
custody motions they mark ready. The anxiety felt
by the custodial parent trying to financially and
physically support the children, have a career, in
addition to being troubled preparing for numerous
court appearances, can gravely affect children and
their mentalization. This cycle of events diminishes
the custodial parent’s ability to attend to a child’s
development by having difficulty empathizing and
reacting appropriately to a child’s growing social
awareness, Their internal psychological structures
are depleted from multiple stressor from the NPD
parent. The more parents fight in court, the more the
custodial parent’s ability to regulate her/himself
suffers, thus an imbalance occurs in the child’s
sense of emerging self. Consequently, they may
have difficulty knowing the difference between
fantasy play and reality when presented with
challenging emotional material. Children believe
their fantasies are real, leading to inadequate
differentiation between mind of self and mind of
other. Therefore, not having the ability to
discriminate can lead to pathology, such as the child
developing a cluster B personality disorder.
‘The Court Protecting Children:
Significant impairments in personality
functioning manifesting through impairments in
identity, empathy, grandiosity, deceitfuulness, and
hostility, akin to NPD affect children in a critical
area of their psychological functioning; their ability
to mentalize.Child development depends upon the direct caregiver
having healthy psychological structures such as an
ability to empathize, observe societal values, and.
have personal integrity. This requires parents to
understand their own needs, their children’s needs, as
well as a general insight and interest in others and the
greater good. It requires a degree of self
reflectiveness which is integral in promoting a child’s
introspective ability. Mentalization is a fundamental
significant psychological function that facilitates the
formation of a stable sense of self. Ithas been found
to be a stable trait, yet maintains some variability,
therefore, itis possible for psychotherapy to increase
a child’s ability when treatment addresses depression,
sadness, self-blame, shame and guilt. However, the
court could take a positive role in protecting children
September 17, 2017
by monitoring the compliance of court orders to
ensure fewer court motions of contempt or custody
battles are submitted. Judges can also order a
psychological evaluation of both parents by a skilled
psychologist who has an expert understanding of
Cluster B personality disorders.
Family relation officers
could receive more training in narcissistic personality
disorders, and perhaps arrange for the services of a
psychologist to determine if the conflict is due to a
psychological disorder. Finally, it is important that we
keep the discussion about Cluster B disorders open to
reduce misconceptions and mishandling of high
conflict custody cases and divorces.
Kristine Danback is a licensed clinical
psychologist in New York. She conducts
face to face psychotherapy sessions, via
tele-therapy, helping people with various
disorders with a speciality in narcissistic
abuse. She also provides divorce coaching
and has been an OMB advocate since its
inception. She can be reached at her
website: www.kristinedanbackphd.com
Parental Alienation Is Child Abuse and in The DSM Amicus Brief by Scholar Linda Gottlieb Who Was Trained by Salvador Minuchin Endparentalalienation Dot Com