Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) can affect how you see yourself, relate to others, and cope with emotional stress, often in ways that are difficult to recognize from the inside. While the term is widely used, its clinical meaning and the impact it can have on daily life are often misunderstood or oversimplified.
To help you gain clarity, we explore common traits, warning signs, and related substance use conditions that can shape how these patterns develop and persist over time.

What Is Narcissistic Personality Disorder?
NPD is a mental health condition that affects how you see yourself, relate to others, and manage emotions. It is more than confidence or self-focus. It involves long-standing patterns of thinking and behavior that can cause problems in relationships, work, and emotional well-being.
If you live with NPD, you may:
- Feel a strong need for admiration or validation
- Have difficulty handling criticism or rejection
- Struggle to recognize or respond to other people’s emotions
- Experience intense reactions such as anger, shame, or withdrawal when you feel disrespected
NPD is classified as a personality disorder, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR). Individuals with NPD exhibit patterns that are persistent over time and usually begin by early adulthood.
Common Traits and Behavioral Patterns
If you live with narcissistic personality traits, the way you think, feel, and act may follow consistent patterns over time. These patterns are not about being confident or self-assured. They reflect deeper challenges with self-image, emotional balance, and relationships.
Common traits and behaviors may include:
- Strong need for validation – You may rely on praise, attention, or recognition from others to feel secure or valued.
- Sensitivity to criticism – Even mild feedback can feel threatening and may trigger anger, shame, defensiveness, or withdrawal.
- Difficulty with empathy – You may struggle to recognize or respond to other people’s emotions, especially when those emotions conflict with your own needs.
- Grand or inflated self-image – You may view yourself as more important, capable, or deserving than others, even if this doesn’t match your lived experiences.
- Control or dominance in relationships – You may try to steer conversations, decisions, or dynamics to maintain a sense of power or stability.
- Emotional swings under stress – When you feel rejected, ignored, or criticized, your emotions may shift quickly, leading to anger, anxiety, or emotional shutdown.
These traits often serve as coping mechanisms. They can develop as ways to protect against deep feelings of insecurity, shame, or fear of failure. While these patterns may help you feel safe in the moment, they often create ongoing conflict, isolation, or emotional exhaustion over time.
It’s also important to remember that traits exist on a spectrum. Not everyone with these behaviors has NPD. A diagnosis depends on how persistent, rigid, and disruptive these patterns are across different areas of your life.
How Narcissistic Personality Disorder Affects Emotions and Relationships
Even if you look confident on the outside, NPD can make emotions feel intense and hard to manage, especially in close relationships.
How it can affect your emotions
When your self-worth feels “on the line,” everyday situations can hit harder than they seem.
- You may react strongly to feeling disrespected or criticized – What others see as “feedback” can feel like a personal attack, which can trigger anger, shame, or sudden shutdown. Research on NPD describes how shame and threat sensitivity can drive strong emotional reactions and defenses.1
- You may avoid vulnerable feelings instead of working through them – People with NPD may use protective coping strategies to reduce painful feelings (like shame or low self-esteem), which can keep emotional avoidance high and make emotional regulation harder over time.
- You may feel emptier or more unstable than people realize – Clinical reviews describe NPD as involving a complex mix of outward self-enhancement and underlying insecurity that can affect mood and stability.1
How it can affect your relationships
NPD doesn’t just change what you do; it often changes the pattern your relationships fall into.
- Closeness can feel risky – In a close relationship, you may feel more exposed to rejection or “not being enough,” which can lead to pushing people away, controlling situations, or pulling back emotionally.
- Conflicts can become power struggles – Disagreements may turn into “who’s right” instead of “how do we fix this,” which makes repair harder after arguments. Studies on pathological narcissism describe relationship difficulties that can include devaluation, control, and aggression.2
- Empathy can break down during stress – You might understand someone’s feelings in theory, but in the moment, especially when you feel threatened, you may not respond in ways that help them feel seen or safe.
- People may feel “close one day, distant the next” – Loved ones can experience the relationship as unpredictable, especially if your mood or sense of safety shifts quickly after conflict or disappointment.
Over time, these emotional and relational patterns can become overwhelming, which is why some people begin relying on unhealthy coping methods to manage distress, tension, or emotional pain.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder and Substance Use
This doesn’t mean everyone with NPD will develop a substance use problem, but research shows a clear link between NPD and elevated risk for substance misuse. 3
Higher rates of co-occurring substance use disorders
Research from large clinical studies indicates that people diagnosed with NPD often have higher rates of substance use problems than those without personality disorders. In some community surveys, many people with NPD also meet criteria for an alcohol or drug use disorder during their lifetime.3
Alcohol and drug dependence are common
Both alcohol and drug dependence occur at elevated levels among people with pathological narcissism and narcissistic traits. This includes associations with both alcohol misuse and other substance use behaviors.
Substance use may be used to manage emotions
Scientists have found that some people with higher levels of narcissistic traits may use substances to cope with intense or unstable self-esteem, feelings of inadequacy, or emotional distress. This pattern is sometimes described as “self-medicating” because alcohol or drugs can temporarily numb negative feelings or provide a false sense of confidence.4
Traits and addiction can interact both ways
Studies on personality disorders and addiction generally find that personality features like impulsivity, emotional vulnerability, or self-regulation difficulties can contribute to substance misuse, and ongoing substance use can then worsen emotional and interpersonal problems tied to NPD traits.5
Because substance use and narcissistic traits can reinforce each other as time goes by, effective care often needs to address both the underlying personality patterns and any substance-related behaviors together, rather than treating them in isolation.
Treatment Approaches for Narcissistic Personality Disorder
With the right support, meaningful change is possible.
Common treatment approaches may include:
- Psychotherapy (talk therapy) to increase insight, emotional awareness, and coping skills
- Emotion regulation strategies to help you manage anger, shame, anxiety, or emotional shutdown
- Support for co-occurring conditions, such as depression, anxiety, trauma, or substance use
- Long-term care planning, since personality patterns develop over time and improve gradually
Medication is not used to treat NPD itself, but it may be recommended if you also experience mood disorders, anxiety, or other mental health symptoms that affect daily functioning.
Care is often most effective when it is personalized and coordinated, especially if you’re dealing with complex or overlapping challenges.
Mental health treatment and recovery programs, such as Oceanrock Health and South Coast Counseling, support individuals facing personality-related and mood-related difficulties by offering structured, evidence-based mental health care tailored to each person’s needs.

Sources:
- Weinberg, I., & Ronningstam, E. (2022). Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Progress in Understanding and Treatment. FOCUS, 20(4), 368–377. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.focus.20220052
- Day, N. J. S., Townsend, M. L., & Grenyer, B. F. S. (2021). Pathological narcissism: An analysis of interpersonal dysfunction within intimate relationships. Personality and Mental Health, 16(3). https://doi.org/10.1002/pmh.1532
- Eaton, N. R., Rodriguez-Seijas, C., Krueger, R. F., Campbell, W. K., Grant, B. F., & Hasin, D. S. (2017). Narcissistic Personality Disorder and the Structure of Common Mental Disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 31(4), 449–461. https://doi.org/10.1521/pedi_2016_30_260
- Jauk, E., & Dieterich, R. (2019). Addiction and the Dark Triad of Personality. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00662
- Morera-Fumero, A. L., García-Gómez, M. N., & Jiménez-Sosa, A. (2025). Clinical Personality Patterns in Alcohol Use Disorder: A Study Focused on Sex Differences. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(14), 5062–5062. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14145062




