7 Ways Narcissists Put Others Down
Have you ever walked away from someone feeling smaller, doubting yourself, or questioning your worth — even though nothing openly cruel was said?
That’s often how narcissistic behaviour works.
It isn’t always loud, aggressive, or obvious. In many cases, it’s subtle. Quiet. Hidden beneath jokes, comments, comparisons, or dismissive reactions that slowly chip away at confidence over time.
For narcissistic individuals, putting others down is rarely random. It’s often a way to maintain control, protect their ego, and reinforce a sense of superiority. When someone relies heavily on external validation and struggles with deep insecurity, lowering others can become a way to temporarily feel stronger themselves.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are seven common ways narcissists put others down — and why recognising these patterns matters.
1. Subtle Criticism
One of the most common tactics is criticism disguised as harmless feedback or backhanded compliments.
Statements like:
- “That’s actually pretty good for you.”
- “You look nice today… you usually don’t.”
- “I didn’t expect you to do that well.”
At first glance, these comments may seem insignificant. But underneath them is a quiet message: you are still beneath me.
Because the criticism is subtle, it becomes difficult to confront. If you react, they may accuse you of being overly sensitive or “taking it the wrong way.”
Over time, these small remarks can slowly erode self-esteem. You begin second-guessing yourself, wondering whether you’re overreacting, while the narcissistic person maintains plausible deniability.
That’s what makes this tactic so effective.

2. Public Undermining
Narcissists often put others down in front of people rather than in private.
They may:
- Make jokes at your expense
- Point out your mistakes publicly
- Reveal embarrassing details
- Interrupt or dismiss your opinions
The goal is not always direct humiliation. Often, it’s more subtle than that.
They want to appear witty, intelligent, dominant, or superior while lowering your status in the room. And because it’s often disguised as humour, others may laugh along without recognising the deeper intent behind it.
If confronted, they may say:
- “I was only joking.”
- “You can’t take a joke.”
- “Everyone else found it funny.”
But repeated public undermining creates imbalance. One person becomes elevated while the other is gradually diminished.
Healthy relationships don’t require someone else to shrink in order for one person to shine.
3. Dismissing Achievements
When you achieve something meaningful, supportive people celebrate with you.
Narcissistic individuals often do the opposite.
Instead of encouragement, you may receive minimising responses like:
- “It’s not that impressive.”
- “Anyone could do that.”
- “You just got lucky.”
- “That’s not a real accomplishment.”
Sometimes they may immediately redirect attention back to themselves:
- “Well, when I did it…”
- “That reminds me of my success.”
Why? Because your success can feel threatening to someone who constantly needs to feel superior or important.
Rather than allowing you to enjoy your achievement, they reduce its significance so the spotlight returns to them.
Over time, this can condition people to stop sharing good news altogether because every moment of pride becomes emotionally deflated.
4. Constant Comparison
Comparison is another powerful way narcissists create insecurity.
They may compare you to:
- Friends
- Siblings
- Colleagues
- Ex-partners
- Strangers online
Statements like:
- “Why can’t you be more like them?”
- “They handle things better than you.”
- “Other people wouldn’t react this way.”
The purpose is not constructive growth.
It’s emotional positioning.
Comparison keeps you chasing approval while reinforcing the idea that you are somehow inadequate. It shifts your attention away from your own strengths and onto an endless cycle of measuring yourself against others.
Healthy people inspire growth through support. Narcissistic behaviour often motivates through insecurity and emotional pressure.
And no matter how much you improve, the comparison usually never ends — because the goal was never fairness. The goal was control.
5. Labeling You
Repeated labels can become deeply damaging over time.
Narcissists often assign negative identities to others:
- “You’re too sensitive.”
- “You’re dramatic.”
- “You’re selfish.”
- “You’re difficult.”
- “You’re the problem.”
When repeated consistently, these labels can start to shape how someone sees themselves.
This is especially harmful because it shifts attention away from the narcissist’s behaviour and places blame onto the other person instead.
Rather than addressing harmful actions, the focus becomes your reaction to them.
Eventually, you may begin questioning your own reality:
- Maybe I am too sensitive.
- Maybe everything really is my fault.
This is one reason emotional manipulation can become so psychologically exhausting. It slowly disconnects people from their own instincts and self-trust.
6. Highlighting Flaws While Ignoring Strengths
Everyone has imperfections. Healthy relationships allow room for both strengths and weaknesses.
Narcissistic individuals often focus almost entirely on flaws.
They may constantly point out:
- Mistakes
- Weaknesses
- Insecurities
- Failures
- Things you haven’t done well enough
At the same time, your positive qualities may be ignored completely.
You could accomplish ten things correctly, but the entire focus becomes the one thing you did wrong.
Over time, this changes how people see themselves. Instead of recognising growth, capability, or progress, they become hyper-focused on flaws and deficiencies.
This creates emotional dependence because the narcissistic person slowly positions themselves as the judge of your value.
The more insecure you become, the easier you are to control.
7. Withholding Validation and Encouragement
Sometimes the most painful put-down isn’t criticism.
It’s silence.
No encouragement.
No recognition.
No emotional support.
You may work hard, achieve something meaningful, or make a genuine effort — only to receive indifference.
This withholding of validation can feel deeply diminishing because human beings naturally seek emotional connection and acknowledgment from those close to them.
Narcissistic individuals may intentionally withhold praise or warmth because they fear giving others confidence, independence, or emotional strength.
In some cases, they only provide validation when it benefits them or when they feel they are losing control.
This creates an unhealthy cycle where people begin chasing approval that rarely comes consistently.
And the absence of support slowly becomes its own form of emotional control.
Final Thoughts
When someone constantly puts others down, it reveals far more about their internal struggles than your worth.
People who genuinely feel secure in themselves do not need to belittle, diminish, or undermine others to feel important. Healthy confidence allows room for other people to succeed, shine, and feel valued too.
Narcissistic behaviour often stems from deep insecurity hidden beneath superiority, criticism, and control.
Recognising these patterns matters because awareness helps break emotional confusion. It reminds you that repeated put-downs are not an accurate reflection of your value.
You are not defined by someone else’s insecurity.
And you do not have to shrink so someone else can feel bigger.
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.











