Read “How Narcissists Steal Your Personality, According To An Expert” on SmartNews: https://l.smartnews.com/p-ZaG91/DS97hM
This type of “mirroring” is vastly different from interactions where we naturally mirror others due to empathy, attraction, or trying to establish a social connection – it includes a driving force of malicious envy, resentment, and trying to sabotage others or even take over their lives.
Note that the “identity theft” we talk about in this article refers specifically to the mirroring behaviors and motivations of narcissistic and psychopathic individuals and does not refer to any other conditions. It should only be read in the context of emotional abuse and malicious intent.
I mean this in every way shape or form, theft, identity theft like some other person is trying to take over my life and become me. They don’t wanna suffer like I do, be treated as I do and still persists but they want what truly makes me who I am. It sickening beyond words. Makes me sick everyday. While I am busy trying to strengthen my life, they are busy trying to destroy it.
It is evil. It is harmful. It is toxic. My readers, think for a second, in a world where intelligence truly exists, how can two people get to be called RIL in the same database? The theft is total except for my being and suffering. Malicious envy is not new to me. I experience it only too well. I only work harder so they have more reasons to envy and less avenues to destroy me. As for me, I am too busy suffering and working to let envy into my life. Here is what Ralph Waldo Emerson says about envy:
There is a time in every man’s education when he arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance; that imitation is suicide; that he must take himself for better, for worse, as his portion; that though the wide universe is full of good, no kernel of nourishing corn can come to him but through his toil bestowed on that plot of ground which is given to him to till. The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.
Ralph Waldo Emerson