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Before You Call Someone a Narcissist, Read This

Admin
June 17, 2025
Reviewed by: Rajnandini Rathod

You’ve probably heard someone say it, “I think she’s a narcissist” Maybe you’ve even said it yourself after a tough argument or when someone acted selfishly. These days, the word narcissist is everywhere, from casual conversations to social media reels, and it’s often used to describe anyone who hurt us, disappointed us, or didn’t meet our expectations.

But before you slap that label on someone, it’s worth asking: Is it really narcissism or something else?

In this blog, we’ll break down what narcissism actually is, how it’s different from just being self-centered or difficult, and why misusing the term can do more harm than good.

Why Everyone’s Calling Each Other a Narcissist

In the age of social media and pop psychology, “narcissist” has become one of the most overused words in everyday conversations. Scroll through any relationship advice post or breakup story online, and you’ll likely find someone describing their ex, friend, or even a parent as a narcissist.

What was once a clinical term used to describe a specific personality disorder is now often used to mean “someone who hurt me” or “someone who thinks too highly of themselves.” It’s become a shortcut for labeling people we find difficult, toxic, or emotionally unavailable.

While it can feel validating to name and identify patterns in relationships, using the word too loosely can blur the line between genuine psychological insight and casual blame. Not every person who is self-involved or lacks emotional maturity has Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) and throwing the term around can lead to misunderstanding, stigma, and emotional harm.

Narcissism vs. Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD)

It’s common to see people showing traits like arrogance, self-importance, or attention-seeking, especially in high-pressure or competitive settings. These narcissistic traits can show up in many of us from time to time, especially when we’re stressed, insecure, or trying to prove ourselves. But that doesn’t mean someone has Narcissistic Personality Disorder.

According to the ICD-11 (International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision) people with NPD typically show:

  • Persistent self-centeredness: an exaggerated sense of self-importance, entitlement, and a strong need for admiration or recognition.
  • Low empathy: difficulty understanding or caring about others’ feelings, needs, or perspectives.
  • Fragile self-esteem: they may appear confident but are often deeply insecure and hypersensitive to criticism.
  • Problematic relationships: frequent conflict, manipulativeness, or emotionally distant behavior in close relationships.

To meet the ICD-11 diagnosis, these patterns must be stable over time and across different situations, lead to distress for the person or others, and result in problems in functioning, in work, relationships, or daily life.

Note: It’s important to remember that making a diagnosis like NPD is a complex clinical process, it requires careful psychological assessment by a licensed clinical psychologist or trained mental health professional.

Why Mislabeling Can Be Harmful

Calling someone a narcissist might feel like an easy way to make sense of painful behavior but using psychological labels casually can cause more harm than good.

It Can Damage Relationships

Labeling someone a narcissist can shut down healthy communication. Instead of addressing how their actions made you feel, it becomes an attack on their character. That makes it harder to resolve conflict or rebuild trust.

It Dismisses Complexity

Human behavior is rarely black and white. Someone might act selfishly in one situation and be deeply caring in another. Mislabeling reduces a person to a diagnosis, ignoring context, intention, and their capacity to change.

It Contributes to Mental Health Stigma

Throwing around terms like “narcissist,” “bipolar,” or “OCD” as insults reinforces harmful stereotypes. It minimizes the struggles of people actually living with these conditions and creates fear or misunderstanding around real diagnoses.

It Can Block Self-Reflection

Sometimes, labeling others helps us avoid looking inward. If we focus only on what’s wrong with them, we may miss an opportunity to reflect on our own boundaries, communication patterns, or emotional responses.

It’s Not Trauma-Informed

Many narcissistic traits stem from deep emotional wounds or early life experiences. When we reduce someone to a label, we miss the chance to understand what might be driving their behavior and to respond with compassion and appropriate boundaries.

Understanding the Roots of Narcissistic Traits

It’s easy to see narcissistic traits like arrogance, manipulation, or a lack of empathy and assume someone is just selfish or toxic. But psychology tells us that these behaviors often have deeper emotional roots.

In many cases, what looks like self-importance on the outside is actually covering up deep feelings of shame, fear, or inadequacy. These traits often develop as a way to protect the self from emotional pain.

Childhood Neglect or Inconsistent Care

Children who grow up without consistent emotional support may learn to rely on praise, control, or performance to feel seen or valued. Over time, this can lead to a pattern of needing admiration to feel secure.

Early Experiences of Criticism or Shame

If a child is harshly criticized, they may build a false self that appears perfect, successful, or untouchable. Underneath, there’s often a fragile self-worth that feels too unsafe to reveal.

Lack of Secure Attachment

Without a safe, attuned caregiver, it’s harder to develop healthy empathy, self-regulation, or a stable sense of self. Some people then use narcissistic behaviors to try to feel in control or superior.

Cultural or Social Reinforcement

In some environments like highly competitive schools, toxic workplaces, or fame-driven industries, narcissistic traits can be rewarded. Over time, people may adopt these patterns just to survive or succeed.

Understanding Narcissistic Abuse vs. Everyday Conflict

Let’s be clear: narcissistic abuse is real. Many people have been deeply hurt in relationships with someone who consistently manipulated, gaslit, devalued, or emotionally harmed them. Naming that experience can feel empowering and validating and it often plays a key role in the healing process.

Not everyone who behaves selfishly is a narcissist

Sometimes people act out of immaturity, insecurity, burnout, trauma, or poor communication skills not a personality disorder. When we label any difficult behavior as narcissistic abuse, we run the risk of:

  • Overgeneralizing a serious term,
  • Ignoring the context of the relationship,
  • And potentially misrepresenting someone who may be struggling in ways we don’t fully understand.

Misuse of the term can silence real victims

When “narcissistic abuse” becomes a buzzword, it can dilute the meaning for those who are genuinely experiencing long-term patterns of psychological harm. Real narcissistic abuse involves a consistent pattern of emotional manipulation, lack of empathy, control, and disregard for others’ needs and it often leads to deep confusion, self-doubt, and trauma.

It’s possible to hold both truths –  Some people do experience narcissistic abuse and need support, validation, and boundaries and not every argument, breakup, or emotionally painful moment is abuse or narcissism.

What to Say Instead

You don’t need to call someone a narcissist to name how their behavior affects you. In fact, using more specific and personal language can be far more empowering and lead to better clarity and boundaries.

Instead of labeling, try describing what you’re noticing. For example, rather than saying “They’re a narcissist,” you could say, “I don’t feel heard when I talk to them,” or “They often avoid taking responsibility.” This shifts the focus from diagnosing the person to recognizing your own experience.

Using “I” statements is another powerful tool. Saying things like “I feel drained after our conversations” or “I struggle to feel safe when I’m constantly being blamed” makes space for honesty without blame. It helps you stay grounded in your truth.

You can also name the impact of someone’s behavior, even if you’re unsure of their intent. For instance, “Whether or not it was meant that way, it left me feeling dismissed.” communicates clearly without making assumptions about their motives.

In short: you don’t need to reduce someone to a label to express your hurt. Speaking from your experience is enough and it allows for more compassion, better boundaries, and meaningful change.

When to Seek Support

If someone’s behavior consistently leaves you feeling confused, drained, unsafe, or doubting your own reality, it’s a sign to reach out for help. You don’t need to be sure whether it’s narcissistic abuse or just a toxic dynamic. What matters is how it’s impacting your mental and emotional well-being.

Talking to a licensed therapist can help you sort through your experience, set healthy boundaries, and rebuild your self-trust. If you’re in a relationship that feels manipulative, controlling, or emotionally harmful, you deserve support, no diagnosis required.

Conclusion

Before you call someone a narcissist, it’s worth pausing to reflect. While narcissistic abuse is real and can have lasting impacts, not every difficult or hurtful person has Narcissistic Personality Disorder. This blog explored the difference between narcissistic traits and NPD, the risks of mislabeling, the deeper roots of these behaviors, and how to talk about our experiences more accurately and compassionately. The goal isn’t to excuse harmful actions but to approach them with clarity, empathy, and a focus on healing rather than blame.

Sources:

American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596 

Bressert, S. (2016). Narcissistic personality disorder. Psych Central. https://psychcentral.com/disorders/narcissistic-personality-disorder 

Campbell, W. K., & Miller, J. D. (Eds.). (2011). The handbook of narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder: Theoretical approaches, empirical findings, and treatments. John Wiley & Sons. 

International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision (ICD-11). (2019). Personality disorder, specifically narcissistic. World Health Organization. https://icd.who.int/en 

Kohut, H. (1971). The analysis of the self: A systematic approach to the psychoanalytic treatment of narcissistic personality disorders. University of Chicago Press. 

Ronningstam, E. (2005). Identifying and understanding the narcissistic personality. Oxford University Press. 

Stines, L. (2017). Narcissistic abuse: Understanding what it is and what it looks like. The National Psychologist. https://nationalpsychologist.com 

Twenge, J. M., & Campbell, W. K. (2009). The narcissism epidemic: Living in the age of entitlement. Free Press.