Maybe it's a shared British sense of humour, Portia - but you had me 'laughing in the aisles' there as I read your last post (and not at the expense of any individual either).
You know, Guest, what I find difficult about the posts you make is that -
1. To my mind, you seem to have missed the point of most of the posts to which you have responded (negatively?).
2. You don't seem to see the humour in the posts you read and you react to them, shall we say : in a serious way (but it comes across as a put down).
3. In fact, 'Guest' appears to present herself as such a cardboard cut-out of an 'N' that I wonder if she's real. At one stage I felt that I could have gone down a DSM list on narcissism and checked off just about every one of the items off against the posts that she's made - are you just having a game with us, Guest??? Or testing out the narcissism that's been perpetrated on yourself to see how we handle it in order to learn from us??
If you're not having a game or testing, may I suggest that a little more awareness of your own actions may bring you a more positive response from the people posting on this forum (if you would find that helpful).
I have my own 'N' traits - and I know that when I get all 'hoity toity', on my high horse, all superior and 'knowing' that I've 'fallen off the wagon'!

I think those 'N' traits were a gift from my mother. You live with one, have to survive one, and you become one. That happens for spouses of Ns as well as ACONs.
The thing that saved me and made my life better was marrying a man who, although having his own N traits, had many non N traits, who gave me a kinder way of thinking about the world (and then a kinder way of thinking about myself) and finally led us both to discover 'abundant thinking'.
I moved from YOUR FAULT to nobody's 'fault' and, following my own path, discovered that :
"Everyone is doing their very, very best - even tho clearly they aren't"
Think about it. It gave me a way to understand my own son - and a way of handling the hurts that other people give us on a daily basis (which we receive just because, in our modern lives, we're brushing up against busy semi-strangers all the time) as well as a way of handling the frustration of dealing with people like my mother.
The people I love best in life are the ones who are honestly forgiving. They are always happy people, they make me feel better about myself, I strive to do better for them, and I end up being 'just great' in their eyes. And the results for everyone is always 'abundance'. The closed-in ones give out sh**, get sh** back and end up with sh**.
I think that the forgiving ones are probably the ones who see 'half full' and plenty of cake for everyone. The closed-in ones are the ones who see 'half empty' and 'too little cake for too many people so I'd better grab mine while I can'.
I think many N victims see that there's plenty of cake but know that the Ns want it all and have given up hoping for their turn!!!
But it's OK to get and it's OK to give and it's also OK to give to get if everybody's honest about the deal. THe problem with Ns is that they can't do any of that without manipulating the hell out of everyone else.
R