Small frame, enormous sense of her own importance Micheko Productions, Inh. Michele Vitucci/Alamy Stock Photo
Does your child think they are special? Has he or she ever said something like: âWithout me, our class would be much less funâ, or âI like to think about how incredibly nice I amâ, or âKids like me deserve something extraâ? If so, you might be creating a narcissist.
Narcissism is a personality trait consisting of an inflated self-image and a desire for others to recognise your superiority. At the extreme it is a psychiatric disorder, but the vast majority of us fall somewhere on the scale of âeverydayâ narcissism. How narcissistic you are is influenced in roughly equal measure by genes and other factors, the most important of which is parenting.
Last year, researchers including Eddie Brummelman at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands and Brad Bushman at Ohio State University in Columbus, reported that .
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âOvervaluing parents overestimate, over-claim and overpraise their childâs qualities,â says Brummelman. âFor example, they overestimate their childâs IQ, claim their child has knowledge of many different topics â including topics that donât even exist â and lavish their child with praise even if the child doesnât perform well.â Such parents often try to make their child stand out from the get-go by giving him or her a unique or uncommon first name, he adds.
Raising Narcissus
Jean Twenge at San Diego State University in California, co-author, along with psychologist Keith Campbell, of The Narcissism Epidemic, argues that the self-esteem movement that began in California in the 1980s is at least partly to blame. By encouraging parents to tell children theyâre special, it has inadvertently fostered narcissism, she says.
Brummelman believes that when children are overvalued they may internalise âunhealthy feelings of superiorityâ â the core of narcissism. Instead, he thinks parents should aim to cultivate self-esteem or âhealthy feelings of worthâ in their children. His work suggests that they can do this by focusing on being âwarmâ. âWhen children feel loved and cared for, they may internalise the belief that they are worthy as a person â the core of self-esteem,â he says. Twenge agrees. âThe easiest advice for building self-esteem instead of narcissism in children is to say âI love youâ instead of âYouâre specialâ,â she says.
But others are more equivocal. âI donât like using the terms âhealthyâ or âunhealthyâ because many of these traits are mixed blessings,â says Campbell. Indeed, there is growing evidence that some aspects of narcissism increase a personâs chances in life. Meanwhile, psychologists continue to debate the difference between narcissism and high self-esteem. Some believe overblown self-esteem is a scourge, and that generation Y â people born between 1980 and 2000 â is particularly afflicted.
To add to the confusion, studies show that narcissists often score highly on measures of self-esteem.
Emotional deprivation
Thereâs no evidence that overvaluing parenting style leads to full-blown narcissistic personality disorder, notes narcissism researcher David Kealy at the University of British Columbia, Canada.
What evidence there is suggests it is . Nevertheless, given our scant knowledge about how narcissism develops, the link with overvaluation of children has important implications for parenting, he says.
To further explore the link, Bushman has developed a Parental Overvaluation Scale. It asks parents of children aged 8 to 12 to rate their level of agreement with statements such as: âI would not be surprised to learn that my child has extraordinary talents and abilitiesâ and âMy child deserves something extra in lifeâ. Anyone with a child in this age group can find out where they fall on the scale by .
Find out why a little vanity can get you a long way in our cover feature
Find out why a little vanity can get you a long way in our cover feature:
“All about me: How to be a successful narcissist“
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