7 Things a Narcissist’s Demonic Spirit Does When it FEARS You
There’s something about your light—yes, your light—that causes a storm inside the narcissist. They’ll never say it out loud; they won’t wear it on their sleeve. But deep in the shadows of their soul, they feel it: that fire in you, your peace, your purpose, the unshakable glow of someone walking in truth. It rattles them. It doesn’t inspire them; it doesn’t humble them. No, it enrages something unclean inside them.
You see, they don’t kneel and seek growth; they scheme, they hiss, they try to snuff you out. But here’s the miracle: they fail, time and time again. They fall short, and every failure eats at them. So what do they do? They don’t rise; they slither. They reach for the lowest, filthiest tools in their spiritual toolbox: mockery, manipulation, or chaos, because that’s all they’ve got left. When your spirit keeps shining, make no mistake—you’re not just dealing with a person; you’re confronting something working through the narcissist. That thing can’t stand the thought of your awakening, so it uses them like a puppet, trying to shut you down before you rise too far.
But here’s what they don’t know: you’ve already seen it. You’ve caught the flicker behind the mask, and once you see it, you can never unsee it. Let me tell you what that evil does when it’s shaking in fear of your becoming. They mock your faith; that’s the first thing they do. They take aim at your spirit—not your clothes, not your job, not your habits—your soul. The moment you begin to connect with something higher, something pure, something sacred, they lash out. Not always with violence; sometimes it’s a joke, a smirk, a dismissive laugh at your prayers. But that mockery isn’t innocent; it’s war.
The narcissist sees that you’re no longer easy to control, that your spirit is anchored in something bigger than their games, and that scares them more than anything. They don’t laugh because it’s funny; they laugh because they’re trembling. They don’t understand the peace that comes from walking with God. They don’t know what it means to be held by grace, led by wisdom, protected by truth. And because they don’t understand it, they try to desecrate it. They want to make your faith feel like a joke, like a weakness, like something shameful. That’s how darkness operates: if it can’t destroy you, it tries to convince you to dim yourself.
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