7 Ways Narcissists Disguise Cruelty as “Jokes”
Some narcissists will insult you… then laugh.
They will say something hurtful, watch your reaction carefully, and then quickly dismiss your pain by claiming you “can’t take a joke”. Over time, this behaviour creates confusion, self-doubt, and emotional exhaustion. You may begin questioning whether you are being too sensitive, overreacting, or misunderstanding their intentions.
But genuine humour does not repeatedly humiliate, shame, or emotionally wound another person.
One of the most common ways narcissists avoid accountability is by disguising cruelty as humour. The insult is real, but the “joke” gives them a convenient escape route whenever they are challenged. This allows them to criticise, belittle, and emotionally control others while maintaining plausible deniability.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are 7 ways narcissists often use humour as a form of manipulation.
1. Mocking Your Appearance
Narcissists often target personal vulnerabilities under the disguise of playful teasing. They may repeatedly make comments about your body, clothes, hair, weight, or appearance and then laugh as though the interaction is harmless.
At first, the comments may seem subtle:
- “You’re really wearing that?”
- “You looked better before.”
- “I’m only joking.”
Because the criticism is wrapped in humour, it becomes difficult to confront. If you express hurt, they may accuse you of lacking confidence or being unable to “take banter”.
But repeated humiliation disguised as humour slowly chips away at self-esteem. Over time, you may become increasingly self-conscious, anxious about your appearance, or overly focused on how others perceive you.
Healthy relationships do not rely on embarrassment for entertainment.
2. Attacking Your Intelligence
Another common tactic is sarcastic criticism aimed at your intelligence, ideas, or mistakes.
Narcissists may mock your opinions, dismiss your thoughts, or speak to you in a condescending tone while pretending it is all “just playful”.
You may hear comments such as:
- “Use your brain.”
- “You really don’t get it, do you?”
- “Wow… brilliant.”
- “I can’t believe you said that.”
The sarcasm creates emotional confusion because the insult is obvious, yet they present it as harmless humour. This allows them to maintain superiority while avoiding responsibility for being openly cruel.
Over time, repeated sarcastic criticism can make you doubt your abilities, second-guess your decisions, and feel increasingly insecure about expressing yourself.
You may even begin staying quiet simply to avoid becoming the target of another “joke”.
3. Making Fun of Your Emotions
When healthy people see someone they care about feeling hurt, anxious, upset, or overwhelmed, they usually respond with empathy and understanding.
Narcissists often do the opposite.
Instead of comforting you, they may mock your emotions, imitate your reactions, or laugh at your vulnerability. If you cry or become upset, they may accuse you of being:
- dramatic
- sensitive
- emotional
- unstable
This creates a damaging emotional dynamic where your feelings become something to feel ashamed of rather than something worthy of care and validation.
Over time, many victims begin suppressing their emotions altogether. They stop expressing hurt because they fear ridicule, dismissal, or humiliation.
This emotional suppression can slowly disconnect people from their own needs, instincts, and emotional safety.
4. Exposing Your Insecurities Publicly
Some narcissists enjoy turning private insecurities into public entertainment.
They may bring up sensitive topics around friends, family members, colleagues, or even strangers in ways designed to embarrass you while maintaining the appearance of humour.
This could involve:
- joking about your fears
- exposing personal struggles
- mocking your past mistakes
- humiliating you in social situations
Because other people may laugh along, the experience becomes even more confusing. Instead of recognising the cruelty underneath the behaviour, you may begin wondering whether you are simply “overreacting”.
Public humiliation often serves two purposes for narcissists:
- gaining attention from others
- establishing dominance over you socially
The more uncomfortable you become, the more powerful they may feel.
5. Using “Humour” to Avoid Accountability
One of the clearest signs of manipulative humour is what happens when you confront the behaviour.
Rather than acknowledging the hurt they caused, narcissists often hide behind phrases like:
- “I was joking.”
- “Relax.”
- “You take everything personally.”
- “You’re too sensitive.”
The focus quickly shifts away from what they said and onto your emotional reaction instead.
This tactic is extremely manipulative because it allows them to avoid responsibility while simultaneously invalidating your feelings.
Instead of discussing the original cruelty, you end up defending why you felt hurt in the first place.
Over time, this can train people to ignore their own emotional instincts and tolerate increasingly unhealthy behaviour.
6. Slowly Damaging Your Confidence
Repeated criticism disguised as humour has a cumulative emotional effect.
Even when individual comments seem “small”, the long-term impact can be significant. Narcissistic humour often creates chronic self-doubt that builds gradually over time.
You may begin:
- doubting yourself socially
- feeling embarrassed easily
- overanalysing your behaviour
- becoming more insecure
- avoiding attention altogether
The emotional damage becomes harder to explain because there are rarely obvious moments of direct abuse. Instead, the harm develops through repeated “jokes”, sarcasm, mockery, and subtle humiliation.
This confusion is exactly what makes the behaviour so effective.
Many victims struggle to explain why they feel emotionally drained because, on the surface, the narcissist can simply claim they were “having fun”.
7. Making You Feel Guilty for Reacting
Eventually, many people stop focusing on the original insult and start focusing entirely on whether their reaction was “too much”.
That is how manipulation works.
The cruelty becomes minimised while your emotional response becomes the problem.
Instead of asking:
“Why would someone say something so hurtful?”
you begin asking:
“Am I too sensitive?”
This emotional reversal protects the narcissist from accountability while leaving you trapped in self-doubt and guilt.
Over time, this can seriously damage emotional confidence and make it harder to trust your own instincts.
Final Thoughts
Healthy humour brings connection, safety, and mutual enjoyment. It does not repeatedly humiliate, shame, belittle, or emotionally wound another person.
When someone constantly disguises insults as jokes, the damage often runs far deeper than the laughter makes it appear.
Real humour does not require another person’s pain.
And if cruelty always arrives with a laugh, manipulation becomes much easier to hide in plain sight.
Check these out!
Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist
15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.
Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future
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Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.











