13 Demonic Traits All Narcissists Share
You see what I’m saying? Now this isn’t just behavior; this is possession—not in the Hollywood way, but something deeper, something that inhabits puppets. These people, these husks, aren’t operating from a place of truth or empathy; they’re moving through life using a human face to carry out destruction. And you? You were just in the blast zone. But you made it out. And if you’re reading this or nodding your head, maybe wiping away tears or shaking from the memory, that means you’re still here. You’re still standing, and that thing? It didn’t win.
So don’t you dare believe the lie that it was your fault. Don’t you dare believe you were the only one. You saw what you saw; you felt what you felt. And it’s time to call it what it is: that was spiritual warfare dressed up as a relationship. And you, my friend, are waking up.
Sometimes you sit in silence and think, “No one else saw what I saw; no one else lived what I lived.” And that right there, the creeping isolation, is how the darkness wins. Because the narcissist doesn’t just attack your heart or your trust; no, the real battle is for your clarity. They want your sense of reality, your grip on truth shaken and shattered until you’re standing in the ruins, thinking it was all just you. But friend, let me say this loud: you’re not crazy; you’re not alone. What you went through wasn’t some isolated nightmare; it’s a pattern, a spiritual blueprint masquerading as personality.
Maybe you’ve heard all this before; maybe you’ve been soaking up videos, podcasts, articles—just trying to piece together the wreckage like a puzzle with missing edges. But let me offer you something different: clarity fast. A crash course in recognizing what lies behind the narcissist’s mask. Here’s one trait that ought to shake you: pleasure in deception. Yes, sure—not regret, not guilt. The narcissist doesn’t stumble into betrayal; they delight in it. They take joy in pulling the wool over your eyes. That’s the game—not love, not partnership, not honesty. The game is to fool you. And when they do, when they cheat, lie, steal, or disappear emotionally right when you need them most, they wear it like a badge of honor.
Let me break it down: they cheat and smile while doing it, not because they’re swept up in passion like a tragic novel, but because they’re watching you trust them while they do it. And that makes them feel powerful. That’s not heartbreak; that’s sadism. That’s spiritual rot. A decent person might stumble, fall, and come back with remorse, but the narcissist? They feast on the secret. They sit across from you at dinner with that same smug grin, knowing you don’t know and loving that you don’t.
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