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Tombo’s episode “the-other-n-word” is a straight-up gut-check on narcissism—not as a buzzword, but as a control problem that shows up in everyday life.

He opens with a “healing question” meant to take your emotional temperature: “Are you a narcissist?” Your knee-jerk reaction is the point. If you instantly feel offended or snap to “NO,” he argues that defensiveness can be a sign you’re higher on the control/narcissism spectrum. If you can honestly say “maybe” or “yeah, I’m pretty sure,” that self-awareness is actually a healthier place to be—because awareness is where healing starts.

Tombo frames narcissism as a spectrum (like a scale), and connects it to manipulation, dark psychology, and emotional instability—not always because someone is “evil,” but because they’re protecting something fragile underneath. He explains that many control behaviors are survival strategies built early in life when a kid doesn’t get enough safety, affirmation, or consistent love. Without that inner “reserve” (he describes it like a battery, shelter, or fuel cell), criticism feels like a death blow, so the person lashes out, denies, deflects, or controls the conversation.

He gets personal, sharing pieces of his own story and how certain childhood dynamics shaped his need for control, and how he still notices “hot spots” today—sometimes showing up as comfort-seeking (like food) or trying to steer conversations away from sensitive areas.

He also flips it into a challenge for parents and mentors: kids need adults who build that inner reserve—affirming their worth beyond performance—so they can handle mistakes, receive feedback, and grow without collapsing or exploding. He warns that “perfect-looking families” can hide heavy control, and when kids finally get free, they often explode because they’ve been managed instead of nurtured.

Tombo ends with a blunt but caring call-out: if “How dare you” is your default response to criticism, treat it like a flashing warning light—not for shame, but to start doing the work, because unchecked control crushes the people closest to you. The hopeful throughline: you have value outside of what you do, and healing is possible once you can look at yourself honestly.

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