Narcissism and metamors.

sonyablu

New member
I've been looking for resources on narcissism and poly relationships. What I find focuses on the immediate relationship: if you are currently with someone who has narcissistic tendencies. What I'm interested in, though, is the experience of being in a situation where your meta is the one who is exhibiting narcissistic behaviors. Being in a non-monogamous situation, other relationships do impact the immediate relationship. However, it seems to be an area of poly that doesn't get a lot of attention, from what I can tell.

I'm interested in hearing from people who have been in this situation.

How did you deal with those moments when you saw your SO being treated in a way that you personally felt was devaluing them as a person, or when you saw your meta behaving in a way that appeared to be inconsistent or manipulative?
Did you try to talk to your partner, or your meta?
Did the situation lead you to question yourself in some way, such as your identity as a poly individual?
Did you distance yourself from that relationship in some way?
Did you establish ground rules to try to protect the immediate relationship?

I'm interested in people's thoughts and experiences.

I'm aware that the label 'narcissist' is often abused. I am, however, asking about experience dealing with individuals who exhibit traits in line with those found in diagnostic criteria, such as the DSM-IV. In this context, I'm not trying to vilify those that fall into this category, as I think these people are often behaving from a place of hurt, fear, and self hate.
 
Not the same thing, but when I first started dating Blue, he was in a relationship with a woman who I suspect was Borderline. Her behavior was consistent with clinical criteria and her sister as much as told me that she was.

Blue and I both prefer kitchen table style poly. We tried doing that, but it didn't work.

She called and texted me all hours of the day/night. When I blocked her, she called my work. Crazy Town.

It eventually devolved to the point that I felt the need to step away from my relationship with Blue for my own safety and sanity. Shortly afterwards, he broke up with her, and Crazy Town ensued.

She has broken relationships with almost everyone she was close to, including her children and other family members. I do have empathy for people with these disorders, but that experience has changed my opinion. I will no longer be in a poly network with someone with a serious mental health issue if they are not actively working on it. If that means walking away from an otherwise great relationship with a shared love interest, so be it.

Honestly, aside from loving and supporting your partner and maintaining your personal boundaries around the situation, there's not much you can do.

This blog has a lot of info about being in a relationship when your meta has a serious mental health issue.
 
So I've been looking for resources on Narcissism and poly relationships. What I find focuses on the immediate relationship: if you are currently with someone who has narcissistic tendencies. What I'm interested in though is the experience of being in a situation where one of your metas is the one who is exhibiting narcissistic behaviors. Being in a non-monogamous situation, other relationships do impact on the immediate relationship. However, it seems to be an area of poly that doesn't get a lot of attention from what I can tell. I'm interested in hearing from people who have been in this situation. How did you deal with those moments when you saw your SO being treated in a way that you personally felt was devaluing them as a person?

My bf Punk's mother was a narcissist. He has been in therapy to learn how to create boundaries so she has less opportunity to abuse him emotionally, and attempt to constantly use him to gratify her momentary desires, gaslight him, lie to him, etc. It's not my place to be his therapist. Is your SO aware he is being abused by a narc? Has he sought therapy?

Punk's mom just died of cancer a week ago, so now he's dealing with the aftermath, sort of PTSD feelings.

Moments when you saw the meta behaving in a way that appeared to be inconsistent or manipulative. Did you try to talk to your partner, or your meta?

I would listen to Punk when I thought allowing him to vent would help. I tried to offer a rational opinion on the subject, since he was too deep in it to see it. I also treat him in kind and nurturing and consistent ways, unlike the way his mom was doing. But he's aware I am not his therapist and I am glad he has a professional to talk to.

No, I didn't speak to his mom. There is no point in talking to a narc, because they think they can do no wrong. (Donald Trump *cough*)

Did the situation lead you to question yourself in some way, such as your identity as a poly individual?

No. Does it make you question your poly nature, if your SO has a partner you don't approve of? How?

If your bf refuses to see how he is being abused and manipulated, and it's spilling over too much into your nice time together, you have choices. One is to pull back a little, and tell him why. Another is to tell him you are not his therapist, you'd wish he'd seek one, and until then, you want your one-on-one time to be just about you two, not to spend time complaining about his OSO. If he can't do this, pull back and see him less, or take a break altogether. These would be good consequences, which might make him more proactive about his willingness to be abused by his OSO.

Did you distance yourself from that relationship in some way, or establish ground rules to try to protect the immediate relationship?

I have been seeing Punk nine months, and he never had me meet his mother. He lived with her, doing hospice care, but didn't invite me to come there, and I am glad.

Starting back in 2012, I dated a narc for 2 1/2 years myself. The first year, he was all sweetness and light, and I loved him madly. My live-in partner Pixi also liked him a lot as a friend. At the one year mark, his true nature started to come out. Pixi supported me as the relationship got worse and worse, and finally ended. Since they knew each other, she did get involved in a couple "relationship talks" I had with this guy, but it was pointless. Narcs are slippery characters. Nothing you say or do really helps. They are completely lacking in empathy, and are only out for themselves. I hope your bf can extricate himself from this relationship.
I'm aware that the label 'narcissist' is often abused. I am however asking about experience dealing with individuals who exhibit traits in line with those found in diagnostic criteria such as the DSM-IV. So in this context, I'm not trying to vilify those that fall into this category, as I think these people are often behaving from a place of hurt, fear, and self hate.


Yes, I don't throw the term around lightly either, though I have been accused of doing so. Punk's therapist told him his mother was probably a narcissist. I mean, it was screamingly obvious she had all the traits. And I also determined my ex was treating me in ways only a narc could.

Look up the website Psychopath Free. It might help.
 
Hi sonyablu,

From what I've heard, narcissism is very hard to treat. In order to treat a mental illness, the patient has to know they have a problem and want to get better. Narcissism, by its very nature, gives the narcissist the idea that there is nothing wrong with him/her, that all the problems lie with other people. Given that, you can imagine it is impossible to try to help the narcissist improve without a therapist. I hope I don't sound cynical, I don't mean to come across that way.

Your best bet, probably, is to distance yourself as much as you can from your metamour. Ask your SO to spare you the blow-by-blow of your metamour's behavior. Don't be in the same room as your metamour if you can help it, not even the same house. At least, that's what I would suggest. I realize there may be reasons why you can't do these things.

Sympathetically,
Kevin T.
 
Yes... I wrote about my experiences here: http://www.polyamory.com/forum/showthread.php?t=20910 and here: http://www.polyamory.com/forum/showthread.php?t=22752

I think it was about another 4 months before he broke up with her. It was all very weird, and the whole break-up process reinforced what I thought about her in the first place. I have had quite a few narcissists in my life, including my mother (now deceased), and I'm only really now getting better at not enabling them or being drawn to them.

To echo what others have said, no, there really isn't any point in talking to them. I don't think it hurts to point your SO at resources that may help inform them about narcissism. But ultimately, most people in abusive or semi-abusive relationships have difficulty seeing or accepting what is happening, so you may not get a particularly favourable response.
 
Polyamory, narcissism and SO metamours

I know this is an older thread, but I wanted to leave my experience in case someone is still looking for information on the subject. There have been times when this has assisted me when in a similar situation.

At the time my partner proposed starting a poly relationship leading to long-term commitment, he had:
- Apple, a wife he shares a home and one child with, but no sexual or intimate relationship.
- Cherry, a 7-year partnership with his wife's ex-best friend. She is married and lives with her husband and another male partner in a different US state. He was seeing her monthly or every other month, but this changed.
- Maple, a 4-year partnership with a recently-divorced woman who is 10 years younger. It started as fuck buddies and friendship via online dating while she was married and not poly. She lives in his city.

I identify as ambiamorous. This was my first poly partnership. He and I had been friends/colleagues for two years prior to dating.

I'd been in a relationship with a narcissist in the past, so was aware of warning signs and typical traits. About six months into our relationship, I suspected my partner's SO Cherry was a narcissist, based on the specific language being used, and the way she treated him. He either made excuses for her, or transformed the story into something positive and dropped it.

Observing her behavior over a course of a year convinced me there was a pattern. I brought this up as gently and non-judgmentally as possible as I knew they had a long history. He categorically dismissed anything I said, saying it wasn't possible. I've since learned that much of his own identity is fused with hers: he changed his diet to match hers; he began being poly because of her; he uses some of the same products she does.

Five months after this, there was an incident with his other metamour, Maple. He was coming to my city for business reasons. She had invited herself on this trip with his knowledge, under the assumption I would not be home. When he found out I would be home, he tried to stop her, but she claimed to have already booked her flights. No one knows if this is true, because she has access to his calendar and can see which flights to book without his involvement.

We then began to make plans to see each other one-on-one for a few hours during his visit to my city. But then, a few days later, this also became inexplicably impossible. His language was, "I can't abandon my partner in a strange city." He repeated the "abandoning" phrase many times, saying this was his choice. If that's true, why did the option to see him one-on-one exist prior to him talking to her?

This is not the first time a questionable incident has come up. Right after my partner officially introduced me, Maple started dating other men for the first time in 4 years, not waiting until her career became established several months in the future (her original plan), in addition to a weight-loss program. I could see he was unsettled by this. (His wife and metamour Cherry also got color contacts, same as me, but that's a different story.)

When I brought up these "coincidences" and requested a closer look at possible manipulation, my partner again dismissed them.

In the end, I left this relationship.

My now ex-partner began exhibiting signs of being a covert narcissist himself - whether he is one, a legendary narc via a parent, or heavily influenced by his SO Cherry, or all three, I'll never know.

Whenever I attempted to compassionately discuss concerns, or work with him on healing, things would get better, but it wouldn't last, because everyone else in his life enabled his behavior. On top of being defensive and refusing to own his shit (which is pretty basic poly), he is also passive aggressive. I saw it was going to be an uphill battle without professional intervention, as kdt26417 said above, and (likely) the collapse of his life as he knew it.
 
Thanks for resurrecting this thread, katicon. That was a tough situation for you!

It made me recall that, when my relationship with my narc, Ginger, was starting to go south, he took up with a married MF couple. They were new to poly. I met them a few times. I soon determined the M of the couple was also a narc. We were at a party, and every time someone said they had done something, made something, gone somewhere, he'd done something better, made more of something else, traveled further and deeper. It was almost funny as I observed him blowing his own horn, having to be better than everyone else.

My ex had a terrible dynamic with them. The woman was head over heels in NRE for my ex, Ginger. But the 2 men manipulated the shit out of her! She once snuck away for a date with Ginger, even though her husband had told her all sex and dates had to be threesomes. So, then SHE got in trouble for the secret date, when her husband found out. She was put in a kind of "time out." She could no longer see, date or fuck Ginger, but the 2 men (who were bi) could see, date and fuck each other! Even though Ginger was just as guilty of that secret date as she was. It was so sick. Their disgusting dynamic was the last straw for me, that made me break up with Ginger. And boy, was he pissed when I did!
 
I'd been in a relationship with a narcissist in the past, so am aware of warning signs and typical traits. About six months into our relationship, I suspected his SO Cherry was a narcissist based on specific language being used and the way she treated him. He either made excuses for her or transformed the story into something positive and dropped it.

Observing her behavior over a course of a year convinced me there was a pattern, and I brought this up as gently and non-judgie as possible as I know they have a long history. He categorically dismissed anything I said, saying that's not possible.

If Byron (my XBF) saw this, he might think I wrote it. This is exactly why I broke up with him. His behavior in the time since I broke up has often made me wonder how much narcissism is going on in one or both of them.

My feeling is: (warning, do NOT take this as a blanket statement about all poly people--) that someone like Byron's wife is doing poly in the first place to 'get her needs met,' so it's not surprising that her behavior screams, 'I'm all about myself. I'm the most important one here.' I.e., she's a narcissist.

From my reading over 7 years, I think there are many, many metamour situations like the one you describe, and therefore it's a very good thing to resurrect a thread on it.
 
Also, this:

At the time my partner proposed starting a poly relationship leading to long-term commitment, he had:

- Apple - a wife he shares a home and one child with, but no sexual or intimate relationship

- Cherry - a 7-year partnership with his wife's ex-best friend; she is married and lives with her husband and another male partner in a different US state. He was seeing her monthly or every other month, but this changed

- Maple - a 4-year partnership with a recently divorced woman who is 10 years younger, which started as f!ck buddies and friendship via online dating while she was married and not poly, and she lives in his city.

My narc ex also had a wife of many years, and 2 kids with her, but they only had sex about 4 times a year.

And somehow your ex/narc is in a relationship with his wife's EX best friend. Sounds sketchy, like he was triangulating them, had idealized his wife, but then devalued, demoted and has nearly discarded her in favor of her best friend. Hitting the wife where it really hurts. Most "good" polyamorists have a list of "messy people" they agree not to date. Best friends, and siblings are almost always on the list.

And to top it off, his third partner was a married non-poly, cheating woman. Awesome! :rolleyes: And he probably started seeing Cherry less when he found this local cheating gal to bang and get his "narcissist supply" from.

He was just leaving a trail of women in his selfish wake.

It sounds like you got out before he was able to harm you too much. The devaluation and manipulation and gaslighting had just begun. Good for you! How is the healing going?
 
Poly, narcissism and SOs

My feeling is: (warning, do NOT take this as a blanket statement about all poly people--) that someone like Byron's wife is in poly in the first place to 'get her needs met' and so it's not surprising that her behavior screams 'I'm all about myself. I'm the most important one here.' I,e., she's a narcissist.

From my reading over 7 years, I think there are many, many metamour situations like the one you describe, and therefore it's a very good thing to resurrect a thread on it.

Thanks so much for sharing that. It was validating to receive your response, though I'm sorry to hear that a similar/identical situation happened to you.

I've met a lot of wonderful people who are poly and been witness to healthy, happy poly relationships.

I understand there's a huge difference between a narcissist who is operating under the guise of poly to generate supply and get their needs met, and a genuine and ethical person who is honest and loving with their partners and metamours.

Because this was my first poly relationship, I did not know what typically happens or how much support/responsibility/care the experienced poly person takes for the newish person. I'd read More than Two and a host of other books and resources to learn as much as I could without depending on my partner. I trusted that he would guide me when appropriate, answer questions and be an ethical partner who would own his shit, communicate often and directly, and extend care when I asked for what I needed. That's not quite what happened.

I was often left on my own, ranked in comparison to others, and deemed unworthy of any care or attention I requested, excluded by him and his SOs, but asked to be inclusive of everyone, and told that I "often misunderstood," despite asking direct questions to get explanations, and repeating back what I heard.

I now know I was gaslighted, mistreated, manipulated and disrespected.

This was difficult to believe, because we were friends for years prior to starting a personal relationship. I didn't understand that this was a narcissist who showed me a charming and upstanding faux self, and then revealed his true self as we grew closer.

Also, this:

And somehow your ex/narc is in a relationship with his wife's EX best friend. Sounds sketchy, like he was triangulating them, had idealized his wife, but then devalued, demoted and has nearly discarded her in favor of her best friend. Hitting the wife where it really hurts. Most "good" polyamorists have a list of "messy people" they agree not to date. Best friends, and siblings are almost always on the list.

And to top it off, his third partner was a married non-poly, cheating woman. Awesome! :rolleyes: And he probably started seeing Cherry less when he found this local cheating gal to bang and get his "narcissist supply" from.

He was just leaving a trail of women in his selfish wake.

It sounds like you got out before he was able to harm you too much. The devaluation and manipulation and gaslighting had just begun. Good for you! How is the healing going?

The healing is better on some days, and some days are harder. I appreciate you asking and for the encouragement, support and care. :)

Reading your response opened my eyes to a couple things I once thought, but had discarded:

1. The third partner - She was married to a bisexual man while using online ads to find men to have sex with, and my ex answered this ad. He describes how they met as "through normal dating." He met her husband after the second date, and he intro'd her to the wife and kids as a "friend" after they'd been out or banged a few times, so I assumed she was in an open marriage. I do not know when it's ethical to start being poly, if not previously, but still in a relationship.

She is significantly younger, and this is (as I understand) only her second relationship. My ex pointed out that "he did not pressure her to be poly." Um, ok. When I questioned why he would say this, he said he was only being clear; I would later find this even more strange because he was often unclear on more important matters.

He started seeing less of Cherry because she moved to another state with her husband, where they live in houses owned by Cherry's second partner; my ex is her third.

Maple and Cherry dislike each other, and Maple disliked me also. I hear that my ex began effing another local woman after I left; it sounds like there may be a power struggle between my ex and Maple. Read on.

2. His wife's best friend - It struck me as odd when I heard his longest-running relationship, second only to his wife, was with his wife's best friend. At the same time, I do my best to not be judgmental and I know we cannot help who we fall in love with. I've heard him describe how he fell for Cherry just before her honeymoon, and I've no idea if his wife gave her blessing, or simply had no way to say no, or perhaps didn't care.

I thought this might've been a way for him to be as close to his wife as possible without being with her.

I initially didn't suspect that Cherry was a narcissist, because she described herself as codependent. I now know that there are lots of different types of narcissists-- she exhibits signs of being overt and parasitic, and I've learned that narcissists can also be codependent.

That said, it's clear to me that my ex still loves his wife and had been wishing to restart an intimate and sexual relationship with her, but I do not know if it's true love, or his inability to accept being rejected and devalued.

Shortly after I started a personal relationship with him, his wife's partner broke up with her, and he said he felt sorry for her because she was alone and had no one else to help her get over it. I told him there's no shame in being single, that having multiple partners is not required to ease pain, to be strong or even to be in love.

She has since found a new man/partner, left my ex and has requested little to no contact. (They share a child.) I hear this happened a month after I myself left him, with no warning and no contact.

On a separate but related note, I've also considered the possibility that my ex isn't really polyamorous. He and his wife were not poly previously; his second partner is poly but a narcissist and rarely sees him; his inexperienced third partner was new to poly when they met, and "learned" from him. I am new to poly and he had textbook answers when I questioned him, but in practice he's unethical and doesn't do right. Who around him is truly polyamorous and able to call him on his shit? Isn't it possible he read all the literature and learned the lingo so he can use polyamory to supply his narcissism? :confused:
 
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It looks like I am the next person to revive this thread!

I stumbled upon it while trying to find information about dealing with narcissistic metamours. While this topic can already be challenging to discuss, finding resources on this subject can be even more difficult. Thank you to everyone who has felt comfortable sharing their experiences and perspectives. I'm here to share mine, if anyone else is dealing with something similar, or has feedback or insight they'd be willing to share. If not, writing this and sharing it in a public format feels incredibly liberating, as I have found talking about this experience challenging.

I have spoken about my experience at length with my therapist, my partners, and some friends. I have not felt comfortable being super open with others about what happened to me and my partner, as many people in our community continue to care deeply for my former meta and have seemingly rallied around her. Also, it wasn't "my relationship" that featured someone narcissistic -- it was my partner's relationship. The recurring thought that haunts me is, "Who am I to say anything or speak up about this?" I have learned I have every right to speak up about this; however, I can't expect people to fully understand or support me entirely.

I could go into the details, as there are so many. But, ultimately, I'd rather focus on the question I have.

How do you navigate coping with your community supporting someone who is narcissistic and has caused severe harm to your partner? Specifically, my former meta appears to be a covert narcissist who isolated her emotional abuse on her husband/my partner exclusively.

For the record, I do not think there's anything inherently wrong with people who are narcissistic (or are diagnosed with NPD). I have a lot of sympathy and empathy for people who are narcissistic and firmly believe they deserve help and support like anyone else. They learned an unhealthy coping mechanism that, unfortunately, damages close relationships and invites a whole bunch of negative mental health complications. Of course they deserve help and support!

The problem with my former meta is that she emotionally abused my partner and threatened him when she felt insecure about him having other relationships. She insisted they were practicing non-hierarchal polyamory, but she expected hierarchy from him, based on her reactions. Her deep denial of what she actually wanted and needed really took a toll on their relationship and any relationship my partner has had with another person. (He hasn't had many. My former meta has historically had many partners and is currently in two long-term relationships.)

My partner and his wife were together for about 15 years. They separated 6 months ago, after he tried to deescalate a conversation that was turning into an argument. She did not like that he wanted to stop the conversation, and chose to flip a coffee table in their home, resulting in some items breaking. This was the final straw for my partner, after years of dealing with this toxic relationship. My former meta was in crisis for a while after this happened, making it incredibly difficult for my partner and me to share anything negative about her with each other, or anyone. It took months before he and I could get to a place where we could honestly address our feelings about the damage she caused to our relationship and to us, individually.

Since then, my former meta has been serious about her mental health and is, supposedly, doing amazing work. I have no way of knowing, as she stopped talking to me a few weeks before she and her husband/my partner separated. She and I were very close. I had a conversation with her not long before the separation, that featured her admitting she is manipulative, controlling, and codependent. She addressed how she wanted to work on these traits, but she insisted most of their relationship problems were my partner's fault. I pushed back on things by focusing on my experiences with my partner, and how many of those experiences were affected by her unreasonable expectations and shaming him during times he was trying to prioritize our relationship.

I am healing from fawning/people-pleasing. This conversation was probably the first time I really pushed back on things she was sharing with me. It makes sense that she wanted to stop talking to me after this. It hurt then and it continues to hurt now (although not as much as it did before). I attempted to reach out to her before an event we were both attending to see if she wanted to talk. She told me she missed me and our friendship, but was not in a position to repair anything. She requested I not reach out to her again... she'd reach out to me. While at said event, I did not make eye contact with her or try to engage with her. I focused on spending time with people I felt comfortable being around. I was later informed she was angry that I did not try to talk to her or engage with her. Since then, we have run into each other at shared events, but she looks the other way, avoiding eye contact with me, and I do the same.

My partner and I have spoken to some people in our community about our experiences, but it seems people continue to support and celebrate my former meta. She has a very fun personality, she is a talented artist, she's a total extrovert, and she's gorgeous. She also comes across as a "strong, independent woman," even though she's incredibly insecure. People have not written me and my partner off completely, but it seems she has been able to successfully play the victim, while also sharing with everyone all "the work" she is doing in therapy. I am guessing people are seeing a woman in need of help and support who seems to be trying to be better?

I recognize the importance of community when people are struggling. My former meta is deserving of community, but so are my partner and I. The piece that's hard for me to accept is that it seems some people my partner and I spoke to about our experiences with her do not seem interested in engaging in conversations with us about her. In fact, they have seemingly gotten closer to her and distanced themselves from me and my partner.

Part of it is certainly due to busy schedules. Part of it is not inviting us to events where it is deemed we not be present (smaller, intimate gatherings that feature my former meta), or she has requested we not be present. Part of it is likely not wanting to reach out to talk or check-in due to a fear of overstepping. Part of it is likely me or my partner not reaching out to talk about this situation due to a fear of rejection as they have gotten closer to her.

Another piece that I think is important to note is that I am married and in a happy, healthy relationship with my husband, and I am still with my aforementioned partner. Due to the circumstances, my partner has been staying with my husband and me part-time. He and his wife are splitting time at their home with their dog. My husband, my partner, and I have a healthy cohabitation situation, as my husband and my partner have become very close over the years. In fact, we are planning on moving in together officially in the coming year. While my former meta has 2 other partners and does stay with them often, it does not seem she is able to have a more stable living situation like my partner does. From what I understand, she is not able to stay more permanently at either of her partner's homes.

I get that when friends break up, social circles have a tendency to pick sides, even if people don't intend to. I also get that people can still be friends with both partners after a breakup, chalking things up to, "they just wanted different things," or, "they struggled with communication." I can also get that people just see me as her former meta. "Sure, you were friends, but it makes sense you can't be anymore because of the breakup," is what one friend said to me. The same friend also shared that people see me and my partner as "fine," and that I come across as "strong" to others, so people are not going to be concerned. But the people I have spoken with know how much distress this caused me, and they have acknowledged my former meta was truly awful to me. Yet they continue to make time for her, and throw her parties, even.

I have felt incredibly hurt, sad, shocked, and angered by the support she has received after the things she did to my partner. These emotional abuse tactics caused severe harm to him and our relationship. We have managed to support each other as we have both been healing from the trauma his former relationship caused. As such, we aren't exactly out in the streets reminding everyone how egregious her behavior was. I think we are worried she will go back into crisis mode, or we may truly face community backlash, if we do.

We are beginning to come out on the other side with much more clarity and confidence about what we experienced. (We were both questioning our reality for quite some time.) I'm hopeful in time we will be able to speak our truths more openly and honestly and we won't feel as isolated from others. In the meantime, though, how do you deal with something like this? How do you maintain a healthy perspective when people you trust and care about seem to rally around someone who has caused so much harm to someone you love? How do you manage having to share the same space as someone who was a close friend who hurt you and tried to sabotage your relationship with a partner?

If you read this far, thank you so much for taking the time to do so. Brevity is not my strong suit.

I welcome any and all feedback.
 
It's been my experience that the bigger of an asshole/liar/attention whore/etc. someone is, the more people will make excuses for their behavior.

tl;dr It's time to find some new friends.
 
I have been in your shoes, sageraven, and I ended up needing to mostly get an entirely new friend group.

I know (firsthand experience!) how hard and miserable that is, but one of my biggest regrets was how long I tried to tough it out and stay friends with people who sided with/made excuses for the abuser.

What I ended up doing is talking to the few people I knew who really seemed to understand me and fall onto "my side" of things and I let them know that I realized it was really impacting my (and my partner's) mental health to have anything to do with this person, to get an idea of their thoughts on it. Some of those people did make excuses or try to talk me into toughing it out with them in large events. I ultimately dropped those people.

A few people got it, expressed dislike of the overall situation and how people were handling it, and basically split away from the group with us. It took a lot of time (5+ years), but we've built up a small group of friends who really likes and enjoys each other. It helped when we moved (physically) to a different area. Not super far, but let's say we lived on one side of a city, and we moved to the other side of a city. And we started looking for friends on our new side of the city.

It is definitely sad and a bummer to have less friends, and I still, to this day (10 years later) need to talk about it in therapy sometimes. It feels so unfair and shitty, even now. BUT it feels a lot better than that feeling like I had broken glass in my stomach of being around people who support someone who is so absolutely awful and harmful as a person.
 
I can also relate. I've run into narcissists more than once in the poly/kink community. These two stand out:

My personal experience was with a charming narcissist I myself dated. It took me a year (after his NRE faded and his love-bombing of me ended) to begin to realize something was rotten with this guy. He was able to keep me dating him for 2.5 years, until the messed-up shit (devaluation, triangulating, gaslighting, word salad, lies, withholding sex, etc.), just got too obvious to me and I broke up with him. He tried to hoover me back in a month later, and then, even 5 years after our break up, I realized he was stalking me on some social media I'd neglected to block him on! He wished me happy birthday on two social media sites. He used to come here too, and I don't doubt he might still be watching me here, 10 years later...

I wasn't in a close friends group with him, but there was one hobby group he was quite into (a place for him to find fresh narc fuel), that I'd enjoyed, but chose to stop attending. I really had no choice. I couldn't bear to be around him. He just seemed evil to me. Luckily I wasn't the only one in that group who knew he was evil/inhuman/soulless. His inappropriate behaviors could be obvious, and word got around...

He began dating a MF couple towards the end of our relationship. He'd triangulated me (or attempted to) with 2 former gfs of his, and this couple, as well as my own F nesting partner. I kind of wished I could warn the MF couple about him, but the guy in that couple seemed to be a narc himself, so I figured they deserved each other. (Edit: I just realized I was repeating some things I said upthread.)

My own gf wasn't personally harmed by him. She still liked him for his good qualities. I requested, but didn't insist they end their friendship, but it faded soon enough, because she wasn't of use to him.

So... I didn't have a close social circle that needed to take sides with me against this guy.

The other situation was a meta of my gf's. Pixi was dating a guy (let's call him Mike) who had a narc nesting partner (call her Miss X). She was a big (literally and figuratively) Domme and a leader in the local kink community. People, lots of them, worshiped the ground she walked on. Subs fell at her feet (which they pedicured for free). She was also a kink/fetish model, and people would go to her photo shoots as if they were fan events. She arranged munches, etc.

When my gf Pixi started dating Mike, she was supposed to be his to Dom. (He was a sub to Miss X.) But Miss X started parading my gf around as though Pixi were her own new slave. That bothered me!

The outcome of all this was that Pixi only dated Mike for about 6 months. Miss X was always lurking, spying on them during their dates. Trying to control things, of course!

Mike broke up with Miss X soon after he and Pixi drifted apart. He got himself a better gf and a bought a house in the suburbs. He dropped out of the city's kink scene quite a bit... He'd matured out of needing to be a public slave to anyone. Miss X developed health problems and moved to the western part of our state with another sub, and as far as I ever knew, lost touch with the original kink scene, as her health deteriorated. Karma got her.

I'd suggest you get new friends, yeah. Maybe you think they're you're only choice for like-minded friends. But it might be easier to have no friends than to hang around with people who worship your partner's ex/narc.
 
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