Years ago, my cousin Sue found herself in desperate financial straits. She was over extended and needed a consolidation loan to sort it all out. But our local lenders had turned her down for such a loan and she was looking bankruptcy in the face…until she spotted an ad in the classified section of our local newspaper that promised loans to people who had been turned down by more conventional lenders.
She answered the ad but soon found herself in a quandary:
there was a $600 “loan origination fee,” and she didn’t have the $600—I found
out about this because she asked me to loan her the money, promising to pay me
back as soon as the loan came through. She came by my house to pick up the
money and in her hand she had a FedEx envelope and in my head the red flags
began waving furiously.
I pointed out to Sue that the “lender” wanting the fee was
suspicious, the lender wanting her to send the money via money order or
certified check was suspicious, the use of FedEx rather than the regular mail
was super-suspicious. But Sue explained it all away, attempting to allay my
fears in the same way she had allayed her own: loan origination fees were not
uncommon (even though wanting the money up front was unheard of), why would a
lender trust a check from a person who is desperate enough for funds to answer
a classified ad, and the FedEx was just a way to expedite things, not a way to
avoid being arrested for mail fraud.
Well, you probably guessed it—it was a scam, Sue lost the
$600 and the so-called lender was never heard from again. I sent her to a debt
counselling service that helped her dig herself out of the financial hole she
was in and she lived another 20 years in much better financial health due to
the lessons she learned.
We have all heard tales of people who lost their life
savings in various scams: the Nigerian scam, Ponzi schemes, even putting money
down to rent a property at an incredibly good price, only to find out on moving
day that twenty other people also think they have rented the property. We have
heard of young women going out with someone they met on the internet,
only to end up beaten and raped or worse. There are now epidemics of completely
avoidable diseases circling the planet because some parents trusted wrongly and
did not vaccinate their children and now not only are they paying the price,
but some of their innocent children are ending up blind, deaf, crippled or even
dead.
What all of these people have in common is gullibility…and
we are all susceptible to it. And being gullible doesn’t mean we are stupid,
either. In fact, “‘Intelligent people are more likely to trust others, while those who score lower on measures of intelligence are less likely to do
so,’ reports a just-released study from Oxford University.”
Intelligence, however, is no match for greed or desperation.
Our ability to rationalize, to engage in confirmation bias, to believe what we
want to believe leaves us vulnerable to predators of all kinds. To my way of
thinking, gullible people fall into three basic categories:
1) Greedy: these
are the people who get involved in “get rich quick” schemes;
2) Too trusting: those who see the world through rose-tinted
lenses, unwilling to admit that people are not what they seem to be on the
surface; and
3) The desperate and hopeful: these people, while they may
know better on a deep level, are so despairing and hungry that they ignore the
warnings from their subconscious, desperately hoping the illusion they are
ascribing to is true.
Many ACoNs fall into the last category because 1) they so
badly want something to be true that they fool themselves into believing it
and/or 2) they simply do not trust their own judgment, their own critical
thinking skills, and so they go along with something that sounds plausible…or
that fits with what they want to believe. A University of Leicester study found
that “People who have experienced an adverse childhood and adolescence are more
likely to come to believe information that isn’t true—in short they are more
suggestible, and easily mislead…they might succumb to peer pressure more
readily…The majority of people may learn through repeated exposure to adversity
to distrust their own judgment; a person might believe something to be true,
but when they…read something in a newspaper that contradicts their opinion, or
they talk to someone with a different view-point, that individual is more
likely to take on that other person's view…This is because the person may have
learned to distrust their actions, judgements and decisions due to the fact
that the majority of the time their actions have been perceived to invite
negative consequences...there is already evidence to suggest that there is a
relationship between intensity/frequency of negative life impacts and degree of
vulnerability. Experience of adversity may have a knock-on effect on a person’s
mindset—they may come to believe that ‘they are no good’, or ‘nothing they do
is ever good enough’…”
As people who had negative, abusive childhoods, we are at
particular risk for this vulnerability. According to the same study “…parents
who cope with stress/negative events in a more stressed manner (raging, acting
out, drinking, expressing a pessimistic view of the world)…may in turn transfer
that way of behaving onto their children.” It’s no surprise that we might learn
certain behaviours from our parents…they are our primary role models during our
most formative years…but those of us who grow up as the family scapegoat may
well be the ones who experience the knock-on effect mentioned above while our
GC siblings emulate the narcissistic parents and learn raging, acting out and a
host of other negative behaviours.
Growing up as a scapegoat is anxiety provoking. According to
Christina Valhouli in a Columbia University publication “Psychologists
agree that all belief systems—astrology, Objectivism,
religion—ease anxiety about the human condition, and provide the illusion of
security, predictability, control, and hope in an otherwise chaotic world.” One
of the things that powerless people like scapegoats crave is a feeling of
security or predictability in their lives and, like the anorexic who seizes on
food as a way to have at least some
sense of control in her life, we are susceptible to accepting and believing
things that give us that same feeling of control, including things that we
would reject if we viewed those things critically, trusted our own judgment,
and did not feel such a pressing need for control…any control…in our lives. This leaves us vulnerable to exploitation
by everyone from New Age nonsense to manipulative narcissists both inside and
outside of our families.
We seek and develop or accept beliefs that make us feel
secure, that give us a feeling of control or comprehension of a world we have
heretofore experienced as chaotic, regardless of their objective truth and
effectiveness. Columbia sociology professor Herbert
Gans says “People believe in things like astrology because it works for them
better than anything else…Your own system is the most efficient one, whether
it's a guardian angel, a rabbit's foot, or a God watching over you. And if it
doesn't work, there's always an excuse for it.” This is how we end up
with perfectly intelligent people spouting nonsense about guardian angels,
protective crystals, magic cures like EFT and a host of other pocket-picking,
common sense hijacking exploitive panaceas: we need to feel protected or in
control so badly we sacrifice both money and good judgment to anything that
makes us feel better.
“Dr. Robert Glick, head of the Columbia
Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research,
calls belief systems ‘societal pain relievers.’ ‘People will recruit anything from their environment that will
ensure and protect their safety,” he says. “It gives you a sense that you're
not alone, and helps ease feelings of being powerless.’ Power—whether an
increase in a person's perceived power or an abdication of it—is a major
component of pseudoscience, and Glick explains people's relations to power in
Freudian terms. He describes belief systems as a metaphoric representation of
our parents, providing a release from authority and responsibility. ‘People
have a built-in predilection that wishes for assistance and support. This is an
extension of childhood, where there were always people around us who control
our life. Beliefs like astrology and even religion are a projection that there
are forces in the heavens that are like your parents.’”
Some of us may think this is not really a problem, that if a
person derives comfort from these beliefs, that it all that really matters. And
while I can see why someone might think that way, my point of view is much
different. I think it is dangerous, not only because it encourages a
vulnerability to the predators out there, but because as long as we are seeking
magic fixes for our problems we are not actually fixing them. I liken it to a
cancer patient who, fearful of chemo and radiation therapies, seeks quack
remedies that ease her mind but allow the cancer to grow to unmanageable
proportions. Quack therapies, whether for physical or emotional problems, are
good only for their purveyors, lining their pockets and/or boosting their egos.
They ultimately do nothing but harm to the believer by keeping the believer gullible
to other quack remedies and preventing the believer from getting real,
effective help.
So how do you know if you are gullible? And what do you do
about it?
Do you eschew mundane, ordinary solutions to things,
especially if they might take a long time and/or cause you to feel pain? If you
do, you are vulnerable to quack remedies (it doesn’t mean you will fall for
them, only that you are exactly the kind of person the promoters of such
quackery are looking for). Do you distrust the government, modern medicine, or
the scientific process? Do you believe that magic is or “might be” real? Do you
think that the ancients knew more than we do now? Do you think there is a way
to change another person through meditation, potions, prayer, or other forms of
manipulation-at-a-distance? Are you superstitious about anything? If you
answered “yes” to even one of these questions, you are at risk: somewhere out
there lurks at least one charlatan who specializes in your particular
vulnerability and s/he has a magical, scientifically-bankrupt scheme intended
to either separate you from your money or inflate his own sense of importance
by drawing you into the fold…or both.
The question you must ask yourself, before you buy into one
of these quack theories is whether or not it is scientifically valid. Not junk
science, but bona fide, real
science…has it been independently studied, have the studies been published in
bona fide scientific or medical journals like Nature or Lancet? Can you
access these studies through sites like PubMed or NIH? Because if they are only
available through a website, if they purport to be a “secret” or something
“known by the ancients,” it is virtually certain that you are looking at a scam
disguised as something beneficial.
We who have narcissistic parents have spent our lives living
in fantasy worlds constructed by someone else and for their benefit. Most of us “drank the kool aid”
as part of our upbringing: to be safe, we had to go along with the craziness
that was our narcissistic parent. But as adults, unsure of our way and not
trusting our own judgment, we are vulnerable to those whose voices ring with
authority. I can remember second guessing myself…wavering on my own memories…because
my narcissistic (now ex-) husband was so absolutely certain that he was right…his
confidence was so strong...that it made me question my own. We are vulnerable to
that voice of authority because we have been conditioned to not trust our own
senses or thought processes but to accept what others…those to whom we allow authority
over us…tell us.
So how do we overcome this vulnerability, how do we stop
being gullible? The short answer is “critical thinking.” It means depending on
scientific method and healthy scepticism. It means analysing something and
throwing out what we want to believe in favour of what is rational…and
sometimes it means believing things we don’t want to believe. It takes time and
it takes self-education and sometimes it takes being willing to embrace ugly
truths instead of the pretty lies that we want to believe. Start by learning
how to differentiate between “junk science” (like the anti-vaxxers rhetoric)
and real science, then move on to learning how to differentiate between valid
and specious logic. Learn what the “scientific method” is and then apply it to
claims from various sources for miraculous or instant cures for your ills, both
physical and emotional. Learn to be sceptical of fantastic claims…the more
fantastic the claim, the more likely it is to be untrue.
By becoming sceptical you not only begin to protect yourself
from the scammers and cultists and manipulators out there, you begin to acquire
the skills to protect yourself from the narcissists in your life. They depend
on your gullibility and vulnerability to succeed in having their way with you.
When you start being sceptical, you stop believing their every promise, spoken
or implied. You start pulling away from the games they play that inevitably end
up hurting you or those you love. As you gain clarity about how people hoodwink
each other and how your own subconscious desires play into it and allow you to
be the mark yet again, you will start seeing the game before you get sucked in and hurt, not after. It is all about forcing
yourself to see and recognize the truth…the real, ugly, hard truth.
And that truth will ultimately set you free.
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I don't publish rudeness, so please keep your comments respectful, not only to me, but to those who comment as well. We are not all at the same point in our recovery.
Not clear on what constitutes "rudeness"? You can read this blog post for clarification: http://narcissistschild.blogspot.com/2015/07/real-life-exchange-with-narcissist.html#comment-form