--- In [email protected], Share Long <sharelong60@...> wrote:
>
> Xeno! You had me chuckling last night when I read this, thank you, and 
> smiling this morning as I reply. And even Ravi has finally noticed how 
> humorous you can be. See how much good a short, snappy reply can accomplish?! 
> I'm just sayin...AND I really enjoy your longer replies too.
> 
> PS Any change in your opinion about NPD not being curable?

As the subject of NPD was brought up on FFL, I was just curious, just as when I 
came across an article on sociopathy; so have been reading something about 
them. The opinion that NPD is not curable is not mine, it is found in the 
material I have read and copied to FFL. It is also the opinion in these 
articles that sociopathy is not curable either; these things seem to be 
baseline ways the brain and its programming interprets the world and the sense 
of self. 

The question that interests me is can a discipline like meditation have a 
significant impact on these people, and what would that impact be? It seems to 
be an unconscious rule in spiritual circles, if you do so-and-so, there will be 
some sort of uniform result. Maybe that is not true. Maybe only certain people, 
or even just a subset of certain people (what sociopaths call 'neuro-typical' 
people or empaths), respond in the predicted way to spiritual techniques.

As research on meditation techniques is in general not very good, finding data 
on population subsets like this would seem to be out of the question at this 
point in most cases.

Mental problems aside, it would be interesting to find out if there is a 
difference in result between people who learn meditation because they want to 
feel better, and people who have strong desire for enlightenment, this latter 
being the historical reason for doing meditation. This does not require a 
scientific definition of enlightenment, since none exists in my acquaintance, 
only that certain people want whatever the word enlightenment means to them.

"Normal people get too bothered witnessing suffering to keep seeing it. 
Narcissists don't care – they are too focused on their own story, judging the 
losers in a way that makes them feel good about themselves, etc. But sociopaths 
can really see the suffering and keep going."

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