I'm definitely not a professional mental health worker, but I've done a lot of research on NPD because of my experiences with people with NPD and ASPD.
Short answer to your OP? If you are worried that you might have NPD, you don't. A narc or a psychopath would never, ever worry about that. As I understand it, a Narc doesn't have the insight for it, and a Psychopath would consider it a strength, never a weakness.
I think living with one of these disordered types is like living with a fire breathing dragon. If you are going to survive it, you get used to living in armor. Sometimes that armor can make us look like we might be similar, but we just became what we had to become to survive.
When I was with the sadistic psychopath (that was his psychiatrist's official diagnosis of him, not my own), I had to learn how he thought. I had to get to know how his mind worked so that I could anticipate what to do, so that I could make it out of that situation alive. I'm damn lucky I did. When I get scared, I revert back to thinking like he did because it saved me before, if that makes any sense? I'm definitely not a psychopath, however. I feel incredible guilt if I hurt someone, even if they deserved it. I rescue shelter animals, I doubt myself continually and I've had the same doubts but came to the conclusion that I'm not a monster, I just learned to mimic one because I had to.
Sorry that was so long.
Short answer to your OP? If you are worried that you might have NPD, you don't. A narc or a psychopath would never, ever worry about that. As I understand it, a Narc doesn't have the insight for it, and a Psychopath would consider it a strength, never a weakness.
I think living with one of these disordered types is like living with a fire breathing dragon. If you are going to survive it, you get used to living in armor. Sometimes that armor can make us look like we might be similar, but we just became what we had to become to survive.
When I was with the sadistic psychopath (that was his psychiatrist's official diagnosis of him, not my own), I had to learn how he thought. I had to get to know how his mind worked so that I could anticipate what to do, so that I could make it out of that situation alive. I'm damn lucky I did. When I get scared, I revert back to thinking like he did because it saved me before, if that makes any sense? I'm definitely not a psychopath, however. I feel incredible guilt if I hurt someone, even if they deserved it. I rescue shelter animals, I doubt myself continually and I've had the same doubts but came to the conclusion that I'm not a monster, I just learned to mimic one because I had to.
Sorry that was so long.