Heal NPD

Mark Ettensohn, Psy.D.
Heal NPD
Latest episode

61 episodes

  • Heal NPD

    Internal Absence: Emptiness in NPD

    26/05/2026 | 15 mins.
    Dr. Mark Ettensohn examines the experience of emptiness in narcissistic personality disorder and other forms of personality pathology.

    Rather than approaching personality disorders as collections of traits or behaviors, the episode frames them as disturbances in identity. Dr. Ettensohn outlines how the sense of self is constructed through early relational experience and how disruptions in that process can lead to unstable, fragmented, or underdeveloped self-experience.

    The discussion focuses on the role of dissociation and splitting in shaping identity, and how different self-states may become organized around incompatible relational experiences. In this context, emptiness is not simply a feeling, but reflects aspects of the self that were never fully recognized, mirrored, or integrated in development.

    Dr. Ettensohn also addresses a common misunderstanding in public discourse, where narcissism is equated with observable traits such as arrogance or entitlement. He explains why these descriptions capture only one part of a broader system involving both grandiose and vulnerable states, and how focusing solely on behavior obscures the underlying psychological structure.

    The episode concludes with a discussion of clinical implications, emphasizing why treatments that focus only on behavior often fall short, and why effective work with narcissistic pathology requires attention to identity, relational process, and the integration of dissociated aspects of self-experience.

    Additional Resources
    Website: https://healnpd.org
    Newsletter: https://healnpd.substack.com

    Purchase Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life: https://amzn.to/3nG9FgH

    LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/cklpum
    LISTEN ON GOOGLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/fotpca
    LISTEN ON AMAZON MUSIC: https://rb.gy/g4yzh8

     

    About Heal NPD
    Heal NPD is a clinical practice specializing in the assessment and treatment of pathological narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, and related personality difficulties. We offer comprehensive diagnostic assessments, individual psychotherapy, and consultations for partners and family members.

    Learn more or inquire about services: https://healnpd.org
  • Heal NPD

    Living with Pathological Narcissism: What Loved Ones Reveal

    26/05/2026 | 58 mins.
    This episode continues the Heal NPD Seminar Series with Dr. Mark Ettensohn, joined by his associates Deanna Young, Psy.D., and Danté Spencer, Ph.D.

    In this session, the group discusses the paper “Living with Pathological Narcissism: A Qualitative Study” (Day et al., 2020), which examines narcissistic personality pathology from the perspective of partners and family members.

    Unlike most research on narcissism, this study does not rely on self-report or clinician ratings. Instead, it draws on qualitative descriptions from over 400 individuals in close relationships with someone exhibiting high levels of pathological narcissistic traits. These accounts provide a window into how narcissism is experienced interpersonally, particularly in intimate and long-term relationships.

    The discussion focuses on the study’s central finding: that pathological narcissism is best understood as a system characterized by the co-occurrence of grandiosity and vulnerability. Loved ones described patterns of entitlement, arrogance, and need for admiration alongside insecurity, hypersensitivity, emotional instability, and chronic feelings of emptiness. In the majority of cases, these features were not separate “types,” but fluctuating states within the same individual.

    The group explores how these findings challenge common assumptions about narcissism, including the tendency to equate it with overt grandiosity or interpersonal abusiveness. Particular attention is given to the limitations of DSM-based models, which emphasize observable traits while underrepresenting the internal dysregulation and vulnerability that define the disorder.

    The conversation also examines broader relational and developmental themes, including:

    The oscillation between grandiose and vulnerable self-states

    The role of dissociation and splitting in personality organization

    The impact of early attachment trauma and “empathic failures”

    How narcissistic dynamics are expressed and amplified within close relationships

    The tendency for polarized, dehumanizing narratives to emerge in response to relational injury

    Finally, the group discusses the concept of “narcissistic abuse,” noting that while experiences of harm in these relationships are real and often significant, the term itself is not a well-defined clinical construct. The discussion emphasizes the importance of distinguishing between lived experience and explanatory frameworks, and of maintaining a nuanced, non-reductive understanding of personality pathology.

    Key themes include:

    Pathological narcissism as a dysregulated self-state system

    The interdependence of grandiosity and vulnerability

    Limitations of categorical and trait-based models of narcissism

    The relational expression of personality pathology

    The role of trauma, attachment, and development in narcissistic adaptation

    Clinical implications for assessment, formulation, and treatment

    This series is intended for clinicians, trainees, and viewers seeking a nuanced, clinically grounded understanding of narcissism beyond popular discourse.

    To learn more about our work, visit:
    www.HealNPD.org

    Additional Resources:
    Newsletter: https://healnpd.substack.com
    Assessment and therapy inquiries: https://healnpd.org/contact

    Purchase Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life:
    https://amzn.to/3nG9FgH

    LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/cklpum
    LISTEN ON GOOGLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/fotpca
    LISTEN ON AMAZON MUSIC: https://rb.gy/g4yzh8

    Citation:
    Day, N. J. S., Townsend, M. L., & Grenyer, B. F. S. (2020). Living with pathological narcissism: A qualitative study. Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation, 7(19). 

    Full Text Link: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles...

    About Heal NPD
    Heal NPD is a clinical practice specializing in the assessment and treatment of pathological narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, and related personality difficulties. We offer comprehensive diagnostic assessments, individual psychotherapy, and consultations for partners and family members.

    Learn more or inquire about services: https://healnpd.org
  • Heal NPD

    The DSM's New Model of Personality Disorders: The Good, The Bad, and What's Missing

    26/05/2026 | 58 mins.
    This episode continues the Heal NPD Seminar Series with Dr. Mark Ettensohn, joined by his associates Deanna Young, Psy.D., and Danté Spencer, Ph.D.

    In this session, the group examines the Alternative DSM-5 Model for Personality Disorders (AMPD), a dimensional framework introduced in Section III of the DSM-5 and retained in DSM-5-TR. The model was developed in response to longstanding limitations of the traditional categorical system, including diagnostic overlap, heterogeneity within disorders, and the absence of a clear framework for assessing severity.

    The discussion focuses on the two core components of the model. The first, Level of Personality Functioning (Criterion A), assesses impairments in identity, self-direction, empathy, and intimacy. This portion of the model reflects a structural approach to personality and aligns with psychodynamic and developmental perspectives on personality organization.

    The second component, Criterion B, introduces a trait-based system organized around five domains: negative affectivity, detachment, antagonism, disinhibition, and psychoticism. These traits are derived from dimensional personality research and represent an effort to describe maladaptive personality features in a standardized way.

    The group explores the strengths of this combined model, as well as its limitations. Particular attention is given to the tension between structural and trait-based approaches, and to the question of whether personality pathology can be adequately captured through trait descriptions alone.

    Using narcissistic personality disorder as a focal example, the discussion examines how the model emphasizes grandiosity and attention-seeking traits while underrepresenting vulnerability, shame, and fluctuations in self-state. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding pathological narcissism as a system of self-esteem regulation rather than a fixed set of traits.

    Key themes include:

    The shift from categorical to dimensional models of personality disorder

    The distinction between personality functioning (structure) and personality traits (style)

    Limitations of trait-based approaches in capturing dynamic, state-based phenomena

    The role of self-esteem regulation, vulnerability, and oscillation in narcissistic pathology

    Clinical implications for diagnosis, formulation, and treatment

    Throughout, the discussion situates the AMPD as a meaningful step forward in personality disorder classification, while also identifying areas where the model remains conceptually limited. The session emphasizes the value of structural and developmentally informed approaches in understanding personality pathology.

    This series is intended for clinicians, trainees, and viewers seeking a nuanced, non-moralizing understanding of narcissism and personality disorders.

    To learn more about our work, visit:
    www.HealNPD.org

    Additional Resources:
    Newsletter: https://healnpd.substack.com
    Assessment and therapy inquiries: https://healnpd.org/contact

    Purchase Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life:
    https://amzn.to/3nG9FgH

    LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/cklpum
    LISTEN ON GOOGLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/fotpca
    LISTEN ON AMAZON MUSIC: https://rb.gy/g4yzh8

    Citation: 
    American Psychiatric Association. (2022). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed., text rev.).

    Link to alternative model:   https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1...

    About Heal NPD
    Heal NPD is a clinical practice specializing in the assessment and treatment of pathological narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, and related personality difficulties. We offer comprehensive diagnostic assessments, individual psychotherapy, and consultations for partners and family members.

    Learn more or inquire about services: https://healnpd.org
  • Heal NPD

    Narcissism Is Not a Moral Category

    26/05/2026 | 13 mins.
    Dr. Mark Ettensohn examines a growing tendency in public discourse to treat narcissism as a moral category rather than as a psychological construct.
     
    The episode explores why this shift occurs and how misunderstandings about the nature of mental illness contribute to it. While many people intuitively apply a medical model to psychological conditions, most forms of mental illness do not operate in simple cause-and-effect ways.
     
    Instead, psychological disorders are identified through patterns of thoughts, emotions, perceptions, and behaviors that emerge statistically across populations.
     
    Dr. Ettensohn discusses how online discussions about narcissism often move from specific interpersonal conflicts to sweeping claims about an entire category of people. In this process, personality traits, clinical constructs, anecdotal experiences, and moral judgments frequently become conflated.
     
    Drawing on both psychological science and his clinical experience conducting diagnostic assessments for narcissistic personality disorder, Dr. Ettensohn explains why diagnosing personality pathology requires careful evaluation and why many individuals labeled “narcissists” in everyday discourse may not have any significant narcissistic pathology at all.
     
    The episode concludes by distinguishing several different ways narcissism is commonly understood, and why treating it as a moral category ultimately obscures more than it reveals.
     
    Additional Resources
    Website: https://healnpd.org
    Newsletter: https://healnpd.substack.com
    Purchase Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life: https://amzn.to/3nG9FgH
     
    LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/cklpum
    LISTEN ON GOOGLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/fotpca
    LISTEN ON AMAZON MUSIC: https://rb.gy/g4yzh8
     
    About Heal NPD: Heal NPD is a clinical practice specializing in the assessment and treatment of pathological narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, and related personality difficulties. We offer comprehensive diagnostic assessments, individual psychotherapy, and consultations for partners and family members.
     
    Learn more or inquire about services: https://healnpd.org
  • Heal NPD

    Accountability Without Dehumanization

    26/05/2026 | 15 mins.
    Dr. Mark Ettensohn addresses a question that frequently arises in discussions of narcissism and abuse: Is it possible to maintain accountability without dehumanizing? Can someone preserve firm boundaries without abandoning empathy?

    Dr. Ettensohn clarifies a distinction he often sees misunderstood. When he speaks about compassion toward pathological narcissism or narcissistic personality disorder, he is referring to a cultural and societal stance, not advising individuals to remain in unsafe or harmful relationships. He emphasizes that safety must always come first. If someone is being harmed, the primary question is not whether the other person “knew what they were doing,” but whether the situation is safe and what steps are necessary to ensure protection.

    The episode explores the gray area between total innocence and calculated malice. Dr. Ettensohn discusses how dissociation and shifting self states can impair consistent self-awareness in personality disorders, while also making clear that impaired awareness is not the same as blamelessness. He examines how behavior driven by triggered trauma states may later be rationalized from a different organizing center of experience, and why this dynamic is often misinterpreted as deliberate manipulation.

    Finally, the discussion turns to boundaries. Dr. Ettensohn distinguishes kindness from niceness and empathy from permissiveness, arguing that the most empathic stance can sometimes be a firm refusal of access. The episode concludes by asserting that accountability does not require demonization, and that it is possible to reject harmful behavior without reducing a person to a monster.

    Additional Resources

    Website: https://healnpd.org
    Newsletter: https://healnpd.substack.com
    Assessment and therapy inquiries: https://healnpd.org/contact
    Purchase Unmasking Narcissism: A Guide to Understanding the Narcissist in Your Life: https://amzn.to/3nG9FgH

    LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/cklpum
    LISTEN ON GOOGLE PODCASTS: https://rb.gy/fotpca
    LISTEN ON AMAZON MUSIC: https://rb.gy/g4yzh8

     

    About Heal NPD: Heal NPD is a clinical practice specializing in the assessment and treatment of pathological narcissism, narcissistic personality disorder, and related personality difficulties. We offer comprehensive diagnostic assessments, individual psychotherapy, and consultations for partners and family members.

    Learn more or inquire about services: https://healnpd.org
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About Heal NPD
Dr. Ettensohn is a clinical psychologist who specializes in treating narcissism and related disorders. This podcast discusses pathological narcissism from a compassionate and non-stigmatizing perspective. It is for individuals who struggle with narcissism, their loved ones, and the general public.
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