Hi,
I find that a helpful advice. Drawing the boundaries and sending clear STOP signals can put the Psychopath into their place. Not all of them, of course. For some of them assertiveness is either a challenge or a button they seek to push because every upside has its downsides, too. That was an eyeopener for myself, as I hadnīt considered my strengths to be weaknesses at the same time, so when analyzing my weaknesses / needs / fears / self-doubt / shame / relations or network / blind spots to assess my vulnerability towards the Psychopath I included that upside-downside aspect. That way I find it easier to understand myself and draw a line that nobody should overstep undetectedly.
Sometimes it is difficult of course to draw that line especially if youīre in a situation or position when your main goal is to help others, be it volunteering or being a mom or friend or colleague / boss etc. In that case trusting your instincts and developing your ability to read between the lines and see patterns can go a long way. It wonīt tell you the whole story but your mind can pick up from there to put it into perspective. Even when looking at a normal situation: how often have we fallen for someone and in the end realized that we knew it all along that that person wasnīt a good match. Our instincts had picked up on it but our education, traditions, intellect, needs and desires tried to convince us of the opposite. Thatīs why I made it a rule of thumb for myself to keep the order I find suitable for myself: first instinct, then thought, if I come in a tie situation between the two.
Best,
Pat