---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <anartaxius@...> wrote :

 I think many group behaviours are not necessarily narcissistic, although they 
may parallel or imitate the behaviour of a leader. In the classic study When 
Prophesy Fails by Festinger et al., observed that when a group's expectations 
are not met they tend to circle the wagons and their beliefs if anything seem 
to become even stronger, so perhaps it is some kind of defensive mechanism for 
survival of the ego rather than the psychological narcissism which is 'extreme 
selfishness, with a grandiose view of one's own talents and a craving for 
admiration, as characterizing a personality type'. Perhaps fear of being 
exposed. A real narcissist really would not care about being exposed because 
the idea would just not occur to him/her/it.
 I care about Everything and Everyone

 From: "TurquoiseBee turquoiseb@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:00 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Maharishi: When one starts TM, cruder values 
are replaced by finer values, speech is less sharp
 
 
   From: "Xenophaneros Anartaxius anartaxius@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 
   EMPATHY: the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. If you 
have empathy, then you ought to be able to understand and share the feelings by 
MJ and Turq, and see their point of view as a valid expression of life. 
According to some posters here I have no feelings, so you can skip me.  
see above

If you look at the universe at large, observing how it operates, it really does 
not seem to have feelings either, it just rolls on and on, steam-rolling 
everything in its path. As if it did not know what it was doing.
 

 'Empathy is the experience of understanding another person's condition from 
their perspective. You place yourself in their shoes and feel what they are 
feeling. Empathy is known to increase prosocial (helping) behaviors. While 
American culture might be socializing people into becoming more individualistic 
rather than empathic, research has uncovered the existence of "mirror neurons," 
which react to emotions expressed by others and then reproduce them.'
 

Groups are notorious for lack of empathy when a member of the group begins to 
behave and believe differently from the collective norm.

did i spend too many words on 'this'?






A section from the article/interview about narcissism I posted the other day 
that I found fascinating -- the idea of "narcissism of the group." Article URL 
below, excerpt below that. 

Anyway, I think this is the mechanism that gets triggered when someone who 
strongly identifies with a group hears or reads criticism of that group that 
causes them cognitive dissonance. They hear the trigger words, that pushes 
their buttons and *increases* their levels of identification with the group, 
and they start acting out essentially narcissistic behaviors. And these 
behaviors are the complete opposite of empathy. 

 This is your brain on narcissism: The truth about a disorder that nobody 
really understands 
http://www.salon.com/2014/09/20/this_is_your_brain_about_narcissism_the_truth_about_a_disorder_that_nobody_really_understands/

  

 Is there a chapter that was really surprising?
 

 The one on tribal narcissism. I find that topic terrible and dark and 
fascinating and all kinds of combinations. I’ve written a bunch for Time on 
morality and racism and how tribalism drives those kinds of behaviors. And 
tribalism in this case really is just narcissism, the grandiosity of the group. 
So it wasn’t too hard to find the overlap in the Venn diagram there. So I find 
that topic both compelling and awful.
 

 Do you want to delve more into the chapter for the reader who hasn’t gone more 
into it?
 

 There’s narcissism of the individual and there’s narcissism of the group, and 
in both cases it’s essentially the same thing. We are better, we are more 
entitled, we are different or at least less interested in the people around us, 
or the tribes or nations around us, because we’re worthier than they are. Our 
people are the prettiest, our language is the most musical, our clothes are the 
most stylish. And these people are barbarians or at the very best civilized but 
crude. We are deserving of resources just as I, as the individual, am deserving 
of the raise, or deserving of the job or deserving of the hottest girl at the 
party because I’m better than the other guys around me. Now this has its benign 
expression in sport, except when people are killed, in soccer brawls or when a 
fan of the San Francisco Giants is beaten up in a parking lot by a Dodgers fan. 
Obviously it can get ugly sometimes.
 
 

 But for the most part you go to a game — and I would go to an Orioles game, I 
would paint my face orange and black — and we are literally different colors. 
We are parts of different tribes. And for that kabuki-ish three hours, I don’t 
like you and you don’t like me. But then we go home, we wash the paint off and 
go back to what we’re doing. It’s a good way of bleeding off some of the steam 
and pressure of those feelings and it’s a culturally controlled way of doing 
that. And there’s even a bit of prettiness and pageantry around it. So that’s 
how we contain those feelings and express those feelings in harmless ways and 
have a really good time doing it.
 

 That doesn’t mean you don’t feel lousy when your team loses the World Series. 
Why do we personalize this and feel such a real sense of loss when a game was 
lost that you do? Well, it’s because the tribe has been hurt and you’re part of 
the tribe and therefore the loss is yours too.


 is this a Post or a cut-and-paste of spam?
see, i do care





 


 









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