A very insightful and courageous post written by a woman who once identified only as a narcissistic abuse survivor with a case of “fleas” who later discovered she had NPD herself. She started a blog and is working hard to change and find real happiness.
My first partner, Cyranny’s Cove!

I’m proud to announce that Lucky Otters Haven has its first partner! And so soon! Cyranny’s Cove is a blog written by a Danophile (a person who loves Denmark and anything Danish), but she also writes about many other things too. She’s frequently very funny. There are also gorgeous photographs on her blog, which you’ll appreciate, if you’re a photography lover, as I am.
Cyranny’s Cove is a breath of fresh air, and she’s also been a frequent “liker” and commenter on this blog. So, please mosey on over to the “Cove” and see what she’s up to. Welcome to the partnership, Cyranny!
https://cyranny.wordpress.com/
From Cyranny’s About page:
It seems some people want to know more about me, so I made a list of relevent facts that will help you understand the author of all the shenanigans you are about to read. Special you, you’ll probably be disapointed, since you are already aware of most (if not all) of it, but I’ll try to surprise you another time, if you still like surprises that is…
- I LOVE Denmark. If you think you know someone who loves Denmark more than me, please let me know… I’d like to battle him/her in any kind of way (except physically… yeah, meh… I’m kind of a wuss)
- If you can’t stand the use of the word “dang”, you’re in the wrong place…. Get out! Dang you!!
- There will be some occasional French posts… French being my mother tongue. Feel free to skip… They don’t make more sense than the English ones, especially after going through Googgle Translate!
- Did I mention my interest in Denmark? No? I LOOOVE Denmark, if Denmark was a man, I’d marry him. But to my knowledge, it is not legal yet to marry a country. Not just yet…
- You might come across a certain man while making your way around… Wearing a black t-shirt and kaki pants, standing in a James Bond kind of “I’m-spying-on-you” circle thing. He might look as if he’s running towards you to give you a hug. Don’t worry, he’s not dangerous. He’s silly at times, sometimes hard to follow, but always welcome in my Cove. I just ask one thing, please don’t feed him!
- There are some tales about wild animals… Consider yourself warned.
- I am training to become a Valkyrie. So be nice in your comments, or don’t leave any… You wouldn’t want me to come and get your soul when my training’s over, would you?
- Denmark rules! (that’s it!)
- I don’t trust the Internets…. So since you found me here, you might want to consider not trusting everything you read!
- You need a Google browser open and ready to go if you want to experience my blog to the fullest… Yeah, I’m interactive like that! Sometimes, I go the easy way and give up a link, but most of the time, I don’t… It’s called “Google with me!”
Deconstructing Cluster B stereotypes.

This is a cute drawing circulating Facebook depicting the “typical” person with each of the four Cluster B personality disorders (I cannot give credit for it since I have no idea who drew it or where it originated). While I understand it’s meant to streamline the overall feel of each of these disorders, they’re still stereotypes. Stereotypes certainly may have a grain of truth behind them, but it’s important to realize they are convenient shortcuts at best, and quite negative and damaging at worst.
Obviously, not everyone with these disorders is going to act the way they’re depicted in the cartoon. Human beings, even those with personality disorders, are complicated creatures, and just as there are many variations in the general population, so there are many variations among any group of people with one of these disorders.
Here’s another cartoon (which I have used in several posts) that also depicts these disorders in much the same way as the above drawing.

ASPD:
I think it’s interesting that in both of these cartoons, the person with Antisocial Personality Disorder is a criminal type of individual making threats, either with a weapon or he is already in jail. Both wear a sadistic expression. Both are also male figures. The reality is, not all people with ASPD are criminals or in prison. They aren’t all serial killers. Some have never committed a crime (or at least have never been caught). In fact, the other group of people statistically most likely to have ASPD (or psychopathy) are the very high functioning CEOs of big corporations. Many people with ASPD are in high profile careers like politics or entertainment. Their lack of conscience and guilt feelings, coupled with a nearly non-existent lack of empathy (even narcissists have more empathy than a person with ASPD), make it easy for them to rise high in their fields and have no compunctions about firing people or “downsizing.” Other people’s feelings are much less important than the “bottom line.” Many high ranking people with psychopathy or ASPD are actually women.
It’s fascinating to me that the two groups of people most likely to have ASPD/psychopathy appear at each extreme of modern society: the low functioning ones locked up in prison and/or running from the law, and the high functioning ones running everything from giant companies to powerful countries.
NPD:
The person pictured with NPD is also a male in both cases, and both guys are dressed up in business suits. One is holding a wad of cash, and the other is just arrogant, with a PhD (of bullshit!) on his wall. Both are wearing arrogant expressions. The reality is, many women also have NPD–females may constitute as much as half of all people with NPD, and I think it’s becoming more common (why else would there be so many narcissistic mothers and websites about them??)
Also, not all narcissists are of this grandiose, arrogant, showoffy stereotype. Many narcissists are the fragile, vulnerable or covert type, and use their “altruism” or “niceness” to get supply (or put others on a guilt trip). Or they present themselves as pathetic, put-upon victims who never take any responsibility for themselves and blame others for their miserable lives and failing relationships. Granted, the vulnerable or covert type of narcissist is probably more likely to be a woman, but this isn’t always the case. My mother was quite grandiose and arrogant, and so are many women you meet in business.
HPD:
Histrionic Personality Disorder (HPD) and BPD are both depicted by women in these cartoons. In both cases, the woman with HPD is a femme fatale, exuding sexuality and demanding attention using her body and come hither expression. Some histrionics are men though, and just act dramatic and over the top for attention. It’s not always sexual attention they’re after. I’ve seen many men with what appears to be HPD in the gay community (this is in no way meant to disrespect gay men, it’s just something I’ve noticed). HPDs do tend to be more extroverted than the average person.
BPD:
The BPD women in the cartoons vary the most. In the first drawing she is crying; in the second, she is split between devaluation and idealization. The emotional instability of a borderline is a fact; but not all borderlines are female. Males with BPD can act a lot like men with ASPD, due to their tendency to act on impulse and have hair-trigger tempers and fly into violent rages. Borderline males are more likely to be imprisoned or have a criminal record than men with NPD, who prefer to keep their hands and reputations clean. BPD women with this disorder can also be abusive toward others or even criminally-minded. Or they can be codependent, or primarily self-destructive (this is probably the more common type in females). There are so many manifestations of BPD that it’s a hard disorder to diagnose, probably harder than the other three. Many people with BPD have addiction issues or eating disorders and hurt themselves more than they hurt others. .
Would you like to become a Lucky Otter Partner?

I borrowed this idea from Danny at Dream Big (I don’t think he’d mind but I did just DM him to make sure). I would like to help promote other blogs (the type of blog you have does not matter, unless its content is offensive). I’m especially interested in recruiting bloggers who write about mental health but this isn’t a requirement.
I feel like I’m in a position now to help others get seen and help boost their Google rankings.
If you become a Lucky Otter Partner, I will display your logo in my sidebar (you can email it to me and I will resize it so it will fit) linking to your site, which will bring you more hits to your blog. If you have no logo, no worries. I can design one for you and of course, will make sure it’s acceptable to you before I post it.
As a partner, I will also promote your blog in various ways — sharing posts on Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, and StumbleUpon, and reblogging selected articles of yours that I think would be appropriate for this blog.
I’ll also write an introductory “welcome” post about your blog when you become a partner. I might even ask you to write a guest post (you are always welcome to say no).
I haven’t decided yet how many partners I can accommodate, but the slots would be limited. So act now!
Send me an email (otterlover58@gmail.com) if you are interested in this opportunity to grow your blog and I will send you the details.
I’m looking forward to hearing from you and hope you decide take this opportunity to grow your blog and gain greater visibility!
If you’d like to help spread the word, please reblog this post or share it on your social media. Thanks so much!
My cats stole my bed!
Here are my two cats, the half-Maine Coon, BabyCat (actually my daughter’s cat), and in the bottom photo is Sheldon, my tuxedo cat. (The lumpy part you see in the second photo is actually me!) Bed thiefs!


When is narcissism a good thing?
Originally published on November 23, 2014
Narcissism has become a dirty word. But the kind of narcissism that’s such a hot topic all over the media and the Internet right now is the the type we call malignant narcissism–or at the very least, NPD. Narcissism isn’t a bad thing itself, but like most good things, it becomes bad when it becomes extreme or there is too much of it.
Why do we always hear about “malignant” narcissists, but never “benign” ones? Do they exist? This was a topic that was brought up in the comments section of one of my posts a few days ago.
Of course they do. Not everyone with narcissism is malignant. Narcissism, like autism, runs on a spectrum from practically non-existent to mild to moderate to severe. Most of us have some degree of narcissism, especially those of us with blogs! Studies have shown that people who post lots of photos on Facebook or Twitter or are very active on social media, who take a lot of selfies, or keep online journals or blogs where they talk about themselves are narcissistic, or at the very least, vain. Well, vanity is one aspect of narcissism.
Benign narcissists are lower on the spectrum than malignant narcissists. Some in the middle of the spectrum or close to the middle may be self-centered, can act like jerks, talk about themselves a lot, and may be overly concerned with their appearance, likeability, athletic prowess, or some other quality. Think of the popular kids you knew in high school, the cheerleaders and the overconfident jocks on the football team. (Of course, some of the “mean girls” and boys are probably malignant narcissists). Even farther below the annoying jerks on the spectrum, a benign narcissist is just a normal person with high self esteem.
Benign narcissists don’t normally use or manipulate others to get what they want, they have a conscience, and they can feel remorse, guilt or empathy. They can feel genuine love or care for someone else. They can be moved by beauty or truth. They can be happy for you. They can weep tears that aren’t of the crocodile variety. They may be annoying at times and seem full of themselves, but they are not generally dangerous to others. A malignant thing, whether it’s a tumor or a narcissist, is a threat. Something benign will generally not hurt or kill you.
Benign narcissists do not have NPD. Not all people with NPD are malignant narcissists, but they are still above the midpoint on the spectrum and can be manipulative and make other people suffer. They are more malignant than benign narcissists, who populate the entire lower half of the spectrum. In fact, most bloggers probably “suffer” from benign narcissism, at the very least.
Benign narcissism has evolutionary advantages. A woman wanting to look beautiful and who preens in the mirror or takes time choosing an attractive outfit is more likely to attract a mate than one who is slovenly and doesn’t take care of her appearance. A man who works out at the gym and takes pride in his appearance is likewise more likely to attract a beautiful woman than a flabby man who sits in a La-Z-Boy all day munching on hot wings and drinking beer. On the evolutionary level, attractiveness and beauty signify fertility and good health. Even if we don’t want children, we are unconsciously more attracted to people who appear fertile and healthy–which means a good looking person. Wanting to feel good about ourselves is healthy–and narcissistic. So reasonable levels of narcissism are healthy and have advantages in propagating the human species. A person without narcissism at all is a person who thinks they’re worthless and deserve nothing. That can be just as “malignant” as a dangerous narcissist, the difference being that person is more likely to hurt themselves instead of others–and are likely to suffer instead of making those around them suffer. Benign narcissism is good. It’s only when it overtakes other qualities necessary for survival that it becomes malignant and dangerous.
There’s even an increasingly popular theory stating that malignant narcissism (psychopathy) is an evolutionary strategy that was adaptive before we became sentient and civilized. Malignant narcissists and psychopaths normally fear commitment but have high sexual desire and like to have many sexual partners. They may be “serial monogamists” (keeping one lover at a time, but will callously leave one lover for the next) or they may be promiscuous, having several lovers at the same time.
For a man, being promiscuous or bedding many women can result in having many children (even if having children is not consciously desired). There are many male mammals that use this strategy–they don’t stay with the female or care for the young. They will mate with the female, impregnate her, and move on to the next. This strategy results in more offspring, which helps propagate the species. Of course, many of the young will die, but overall, the strategy works. Think of male lions: they are terrible fathers and “husbands.” Male lions are lazy and spend most of their days sleeping and lounging around while the female does all the hunting, caring for the cubs, and defending the pride. Male lions insist on being the first to eat a kill, even though the female was the one who did all the work and brought the kill back to the pride. A hungry male lion will aggressively cuff an upstart cub or a female who dares to eat before him (the male lions in the movie “The Lion King” are anthropomorphized and are atypical of real lions). Male lions are also known for killing unrelated cubs of a female he wants to mate with. This is to ensure she can only devote herself to his cubs, once she gives birth to a new litter. This isn’t far off from the psychopathic stepfathers we hear about in the news who abuse or even kill babies and young children that don’t belong to them.
It’s harder to see how this strategy would work for females, but think of reptiles or fish–or spiders. Non-mammalian females (except for birds, which are very nearly mammals) do not have the capacity to feel love for their young, and evolution has ensured they give birth to many young at a time to ensure that some survive. It’s to their advantage to drop their load of young and abandon them, moving on to finding another mate. In the case of the spider, the female will even eat the male after she mates with him. That’s pretty psychopathic, but the strategy works if you’re a spider.
A person with psychopathy seems to lack the higher, mammalian part of the limbic system of the brain that enables them to feel love or provide care for their young after they are born. They are acting on the reptilian (or in the case of males, the lower mammalian) brain instead, which all of us still possess. The problem is that as humans have become civilized, these reptilian, callous strategies that many animals use to propagate themselves have become maladaptive to civilization. That’s why we’ve developed laws that keep psychopathic behaviors that were once advantageous under control.
But a little narcissism is adaptive, because it helps us attract and keep a mate.
My Philosophy Is…
Wise words from the great actor (not Hannibal Lecter!)
Autumn 2016: warmest in U.S. weather history.
I still had flowers blooming outside in November. Personally, I do believe in global warming. Could this be an indicator?
Autumn 2016: Warmest in U.S. Weather History
By: Bob Henson , 6:10 PM GMT on December 07, 2016
https://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=3521
The autumn of 2016 was the warmest ever observed in records going back to 1895 for the 48 contiguous U.S. states, according to data released on Wednesday by NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). The nation’s average September-to-November temperature of 57.63°F was a full 1.05°F above the previous autumn record, set way back in 1963, and it was 4.08°F above the 20th-century average (see Figure 1). The record-setting margin of more than 1°F is a hefty one for a temperature record that spans an entire season and a landmass as large as the 48 contiguous states. For comparison, the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh-warmest U.S. autumns are all clustered within 1°F of each other, as are the six coldest autumns on record.
Pushing this past autumn to the top of the temperature pack were the third-warmest October and third-warmest Novemberon record, along with the ninth-warmest September. Eight states along a swath from New Mexico to Michigan saw their warmest autumn on record, and every contiguous state except for California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington had a top-ten warmest autumn (see Figure 2).
Read the rest of this article here.
Plumbing nightmare.

I’ve avoided posting about this because it’s been both so infuriating and so depressing I don’t want to “contaminate” my blogging pleasure just to write about it. But write about it I will, because the situation has reached a point of ludicrousness that would be funny if it wasn’t making me feel all ragey and insane. Right now I just feel like screaming and I feel helpless too, because there’s really not a damn thing I can do to get it resolved.
Most of you know I rent my duplex. The house I live in is over 100 years old (it was built in 1908) and has lots of charm and many of its original features. However, old houses (that haven’t been kept up with and brought up to code) have their dark side. The darkest and most irritating thing about this house is the atrocious plumbing.
I don’t think the plumbing was ever modernized or brought up to code. There is no water pressure valve, at least not one that’s easily accessible. There is no accessible crawlspace to access the plumbing, which means if anything goes wrong, the only way to tell what the problem is is to dig up the kitchen floor and get under the house that way.
The water pressure has always been terrible. But over the past two weeks, it’s gotten really bad. So bad you cannot take a shower at all, and it takes me 45 minutes to fill the tub. By the time the tub is sufficiently full to actually get in it to take a bath (about halfway) the water has already turned cold. If you are running any faucet in the house (there are three — the tub, the bathroom sink, and the kitchen sink), you cannot run another one at the same time.
I have been texting and calling my landlord and at first all he did was ignore me. (I do not have a lease; it is month to month–so technically I have no rights as a renter). I’ve been saving all the text messages in case I need them later. I finally lost my patience. After an angry text from me, in which I threatened to not pay the rent until the problem was fixed (and let him know I’d have to buy a gym membership just so I could take showers), he told me to find a plumber myself, one who would do a “cheap” estimate.
I do not know any plumbers, and know zilch about what they charge or who is any good, so I had a friend of my daughter’s who is an unlicensed plumber look at the situation. He said he couldn’t even do an estimate because there is no access to even look and see where the problem would be. He also told me that fixing it would involve several things, including carpentry since the kitchen floor would need to be torn up and replaced.
I texted back my landlord explaining that the problem involved a lot more than just snaking a sink, and contracting would be involved. I also reminded him that as the tenant, researching plumbers and contracting was not something I knew how to do and was not my responsibility anyway. He answered back, saying he’d send his “guy” (a drunk handyman named Roger with a bad attitude) out to assess the situation. Fine. I didn’t care. Let his drunk jimmy-rig something. As long as I got water, I didn’t care if he had to use drinking straws and duct tape them together. And put a piece of plywood or something over the huge hole he’d have to dig in my kitchen floor to access the pipes.
He said Roger would be out yesterday or today. Well, he didn’t show up either day. I called my landlord (Roger refuses to speak directly to tenants) to ask about this. I was told that Roger had arranged to send out the electric company to look at the wiring for the house, since he’d have to use a backhoe to dig up part of the yard to get to the plumbing. They were supposed to be here this afternoon. I informed my landlord that hadn’t happened.
He told me to call them myself. I called Duke Energy, and was told they didn’t take care of “underground services.” I was given the phone # to a government agency that supposedly takes care of “underground” matters. I only got a menu of options, and finally was asked to submit a “ticket number” to get help.
Huh? A ticket number? I didn’t have a ticket number! I called back my landlord and asked him what the hell I was supposed to do. I couldn’t call Roger either since I don’t have his number and he doesn’t want tenants calling. My landlord assured me Roger was “taking care of it” and he would be in touch with me when he has more information. He also told me that he could evict me if I don’t pay my rent, regardless of the fact I am getting practically no water. Because I don’t have a lease, he could probably actually do this, so I agreed to pay the rent, but told him I’d like it reduced. He said he would consider this.
Meanwhile I have no real solution to my plumbing issue, and tomorrow night is supposed to go down to 17 degrees and the pipes (which are much thinner than standard and are also not insulated) are very likely to freeze. Last winter I was able to avoid that nightmare (I’ve had my pipes freeze before and then burst when it got warm again) by keeping all the faucets dripping when it got cold, but now I don’t even have enough water pressure to run more than one faucet at a time, even at a drip. So I have no idea what I am going to do.
Please don’t suggest moving, because I don’t have enough money to do that. I don’t expect any advice anyway; I just needed to vent.
“The War on Unhappiness” (Harper’s Magazine/PDF)

Meme with a victim-blaming (gaslighting) sentiment typical of the “war on unhappiness” movement.
Following is a PDF file of an excellent (and long) article from the September 2010 issue of Harper’s Magazine tracing the rise of the positive thinking movement, and how it’s been taken to ridiculous and heartbreaking extremes, leading to the victim-blaming mentality and society-wide narcissism so pervasive today. This attitude that we can all be our own gods and have everything we want if we’re just “happy enough” even infiltrates its way into churches, where “Christian” preachers like Joel Osteen are basically telling their flocks that if they only plaster on a winning smile and just be happy all the time, all their problems will evaporate.
Just like magic! Magical thinking saves the day!
Besides being a blatant lie (your problems are NOT just going to go away, but you might be able to delude yourself they don’t exist), the nasty flip side of this is that if you are a victim of any misfortune — illness, financial problems, loss of a job, a divorce, mental illness, any other losses of any kind — that it’s your own fault because you weren’t positive or “happy” enough.
Even worse, such victim-blaming tactics turn even darker: they allow a person to not have to take any responsibility for the way you feel. If they say or did something that hurt you, they don’t have to say they’re sorry, because after all, saying you’re sorry is admitting guilt, and guilt is a Very Bad Thing. No, so instead, they GASLIGHT you by telling you it’s YOUR problem that what they said or did upset you. “I’m not responsible for the way you feel,” they say. “That’s YOUR problem.” Case closed. Door slammed in your face.
My parents, especially my mother, was notorious for projecting blame back onto me, but both of them did it long before it became a thing. And of course, no emotions except happiness were allowed. The sad irony is that no one in our family was happy — we were all fucking miserable. But showing misery was verboten because in a narcissistic family, well, you just don’t show your feelings because no one wants to deal with them!
Now don’t get me wrong. There’s nothing wrong with positive thinking, of course. It’s a great skill to develop and will make your life a whole lot better than wallowing in a cesspool of self pity and marinating in a stew of misery all the time. But taken to extremes, anything good can become bad. This is a perfect example of another of those excesses Americans are so famous (and infamous) for.
The War On Unhappiness: Goodbye Freud, Hello Positive Thinking
By Gary Greenberg
*****
Further reading:
How Positive Thinking “Nazis” Jettison Responsibility
Where I Stand on Positive Thinking






