People with a superiority
complex have an inflated view of themselves and tend to think they are smarter,
cleverer and better than others.
Often people with a superiority complex will make us feel bad about
ourselves but caught up in the power of their complex they would not be
concerned about this. They become too identified with their own superiority to
think too much about others except that is for wanting other people to see them
as superior.
Is the superiority complex covering something up?
When working with someone who has a superiority complex, ask yourself:
is this attitude working to throw people off the scent of something else or of
more vulnerable feelings?
If we feel we are in the company of someone with a superiority complex
we should ask ourselves ‘what is the person compensating for?’
- A superiority complex is often an
attitude that develops out of a need to conceal feelings of inferiority
and vulnerability.
- When we believe someone is
overcompensating, we should wonder what is it about the person that they
do not want us to see?
Overcompensating
and trying to blindly cover up feelings of inferiority is unhealthy and
sometimes dangerous:
- the superiority complex is difficult
to live with, it alienates people and ultimately means that the
relationships they have are based upon false feelings.
- the superiority complex is covering up
weaknesses and vulnerabilities in the person that needs to be explored and
attended to before more serious problems develop. Ignoring your
vulnerability can put you in risky positions.
If the
covered-up experience or feelings of vulnerability and inferiority is left, not
explored and seen for what it is, then there remains the possibility that the
complex will suddenly collapse and leave the person in a state of a nervous
breakdown.
Whenever we
detect that someone’s psychological mood or persona feels unbalanced, we should
wonder what is really going on?
Superiority complex - when it suddenly goes wrong!
These kinds
of complexes sometimes play out to tragic effects in the case of sudden deaths
and suicides.
Out of the
blue, we hear that a person who had always presented themselves as strong,
reliable, powerful and confident has taken their own life. When this happens, we are
faced with painful questions:
- what was really going on?
- how did we not see it coming?
They always
seemed so strong and confident… now we discover they were not. Behind all, that
superiority and apparent confidence lived a vulnerable person. These cases are
tragic and not uncommon.
How do we find a way to intervene before we end up with a tragic or dire outcome? Can we become better at spotting the tendency to a one-sided development in ourselves or in others before we are completely unbalanced, crashed and broken down?
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