The Law of Narcissism
Most people orbit themselves. Even their generosity often has a mirror hidden inside it: “See me. Approve of me. Confirm that I matter.” This is not a flaw in a few; it’s a spectrum in everyone.
Narcissism becomes destructive when the inner world grows so loud that other people become props—useful, annoying, invisible. Then relationships turn into transactions, and every disagreement feels like an insult.
The antidote is not self-erasure; it’s outward attention. Empathy is trained perception: the ability to step outside your own story long enough to feel the reality of someone else’s. When you can do that, you become rare—because you stop demanding to be the center of every room.