
Signs Your Boss Is a Narcissist — and Not Just a Difficult Manager
LAST UPDATED: APRIL 2026
Not every demanding boss is a narcissist — but some are, and knowing the difference matters enormously for your psychological health. This post walks you through the key clinical distinctions: feedback that builds versus feedback designed to destabilize, accountability versus chronic blame-shifting, high standards versus moving goalposts. If you’re a driven woman wondering why working harder never seems to be enough, this is for you.
- The Sunday-Night Dread That Never Goes Away
- What Is Narcissistic Leadership?
- The Psychology Behind the Pattern
- How a Narcissistic Boss Exploits Driven Women
- Gaslighting in the Workplace: What It Actually Looks Like
- Both/And: You Can Acknowledge Abuse and Still Love Your Work
- The Systemic Lens: Why Organizations Protect Narcissistic Leaders
- What to Do When Your Boss Is a Narcissist
- Frequently Asked Questions
The Sunday-Night Dread That Never Goes Away
It’s 9 p.m. on a Sunday. You’re sitting at your kitchen table with a glass of wine you haven’t touched, mentally rehearsing tomorrow’s 8 a.m. check-in. Not reviewing your slides. Not preparing talking points. Rehearsing. Calculating what mood he’ll be in. Deciding which version of yourself is safest to show up as. Reminding yourself to have a neutral expression when he takes credit for the Q3 results you spent six weeks building.
You’ve been in demanding environments your whole career. You know what it feels like to have a boss who pushes hard, holds high standards, gives blunt feedback. That doesn’t frighten you. What you’re feeling now is something different — and you can’t quite name it.
Here’s what I want to say clearly, before we go any further: the fact that you’re asking this question — is my boss a narcissist or just difficult? — already tells me something important. Difficult managers don’t tend to make you rehearse your facial expressions on Sunday nights. They don’t make you feel like you’re losing your mind after a performance review you thought you were prepared for. They don’t leave you questioning whether your perception of reality is even trustworthy.
In my work with clients — driven, ambitious women who are exceptional at what they do — one of the most painful and confusing experiences I witness is working under a narcissistic boss. Not a tough boss. Not a demanding one. A narcissistic one. And the confusion itself is part of what makes it so damaging.
This post is about learning to tell the difference.
What Is Narcissistic Leadership?
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Recognize the signs. Understand the pattern. Begin to heal.
A therapist’s guide to narcissistic and sociopathic abuse — and what recovery actually looks like for driven women.
Before we get into the signs, let’s be precise about what we’re actually talking about — because “narcissist” has become a word people use loosely, and that imprecision can muddy the waters when you’re trying to understand your own situation.
A leadership style characterized by an inflated sense of personal importance, an excessive need for admiration, a profound lack of empathy for subordinates, and the systematic use of power to serve personal ego needs rather than organizational or team goals. Ramani Durvasula, PhD, clinical psychologist at Cal State LA and one of the leading researchers on narcissistic personality, describes narcissistic leaders as operating with a consistent pattern of entitlement, exploitation, and emotional unavailability — regardless of how competent or charismatic they appear from the outside.
In plain terms: A narcissistic boss isn’t just hard to work for. They’re using the power dynamic of the workplace to manage their own ego — and you’re the resource they’re managing it with. Your performance, your effort, your success: it’s all in service of how they look, not what you’re building.
It’s worth distinguishing narcissistic leadership from difficult management more broadly. A demanding boss can be impatient, exacting, and hard to please — and still be fundamentally invested in your development. They might give you feedback that stings, hold you to standards that feel relentless, or push back hard on work they think isn’t ready. But when the feedback comes, it’s aimed at the work. There’s a logic to it. You can learn from it. The goal is improvement, even when the delivery is rough.
A narcissistic boss gives feedback that’s aimed at you — at your confidence, your standing, your sense of competence. The feedback destabilizes rather than builds. It’s calibrated, whether consciously or not, to keep you uncertain, striving, and dependent on their approval. That distinction — between feedback that builds and feedback that destabilizes — is one of the most important diagnostic signals I ask clients to pay attention to.
If you suspect your work environment may be affecting your psychological health, working with a trauma-informed therapist can help you begin to sort out what’s yours and what’s been done to you.
The Psychology Behind the Pattern
To understand why narcissistic bosses behave the way they do — and why their behavior is so distinctly different from ordinary workplace difficulty — it helps to understand what’s actually driving them.
Robert Hare, PhD, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of British Columbia and developer of the Psychopathy Checklist, has spent decades studying the psychology of individuals who consistently exploit, manipulate, and harm others in interpersonal and professional contexts. His research points to something important: these aren’t people who are simply bad at managing. They’re people who relate to others as objects — as sources of narcissistic supply, as mirrors for their own reflection, as instruments to be used and discarded when no longer useful. (PMID: 40904581)
In the workplace, this plays out in predictable patterns. The narcissistic boss may be brilliant, charismatic, and even inspiring in the early stages — many of my clients describe being genuinely drawn to their boss’s vision and energy at first. But over time, a different picture emerges. The recognition that felt so meaningful starts to feel like bait. The high standards start to feel like moving goalposts. The collaboration starts to feel like one person doing all the work while another takes all the credit.
Marie-France Hirigoyen, MD, PhD, psychiatrist and author of Stalking the Soul: Emotional Abuse and the Erosion of Identity, describes this dynamic as “moral harassment” — a slow, systematic erosion of a person’s sense of self through criticism, humiliation, isolation, and the consistent distortion of reality. She emphasizes that this kind of abuse is particularly difficult to name because it happens through language, through silence, through implication — through the thousand small moments that don’t look like anything from the outside.
What I see consistently in my clients’ experiences is this: the erosion happens gradually enough that by the time they’re in my office, they’ve often internalized the narrative that they’re the problem. They’re not performing well enough. They’re too sensitive. They need to toughen up. The idea that something has been done to them — systematically, deliberately, over months or years — can feel almost too large to hold.
Understanding the psychological impact of narcissistic abuse is often the first step in being able to see clearly again.
A form of psychological manipulation in which a person in authority uses persistent distortion of facts, rewriting of history, and dismissal of another person’s perception to make them question their own memory, judgment, and sanity. In the workplace, gaslighting frequently occurs during performance reviews, after public criticism, or in response to complaints — as a strategy to protect the perpetrator and destabilize the target. Marie-France Hirigoyen, MD, PhD, identifies this as a core mechanism of moral harassment, noting that it systematically erodes a person’s ability to trust their own experience.
In plain terms: Workplace gaslighting isn’t just about lying. It’s when your boss makes you feel like you’re the crazy one for noticing what they’re doing. You walk out of a conversation that felt deeply wrong and somehow end up apologizing. That’s not a communication style. That’s psychological manipulation.
RESEARCH EVIDENCE
Peer-reviewed findings that inform this clinical framework:
- Hedges' g = 0.73 for behavioral outcomes (PMID: 37333584)
- Cohen's ds = 0.65-0.69 reduction in burnout dimensions (PMID: 38111868)
- n = 28 healthcare leaders interviewed on trauma-informed leadership (PMID: 38659009)
- more than 100 healthcare leaders experienced trauma-informed leadership (PMID: 34852359)
- 61% women in trauma-informed leadership study sample (PMID: 38659009)
How a Narcissistic Boss Exploits Driven Women
There’s a reason narcissistic bosses tend to target the most capable people on their teams. And there’s a reason driven, ambitious women are particularly vulnerable to this dynamic — not because they’re weak, but because of the very strengths that make them excellent at their work.
Consider Maya.
Maya is a VP of product at a Series B tech company. She’s been in the role for three years, has consistently delivered on roadmap goals, and by almost every measurable standard, she’s performing well. But for the past eighteen months, she’s felt increasingly unmoored. Her CEO — her boss — shifts priorities without warning and then references the original direction as though it was always hers to maintain. He presents her ideas in all-hands meetings without attribution. When she raises concerns in one-on-ones, he listens with a patient expression and then, in the next all-hands, describes the exact issue she raised as his own observation. When she pushed back once — gently, professionally — he told her she was being “defensive” and that it was “getting in the way of your potential.”
Maya came to coaching not because she’d named this as abuse. She came because she felt like she was losing her edge. “I used to trust my instincts,” she told me in our first session. “Now I second-guess everything. I don’t know what I actually think anymore.”
This is the particular trap a narcissistic boss sets for driven women: he uses your work ethic against you. Because you’re someone who takes feedback seriously, who believes that effort and skill can solve most problems, who has a deep internal drive to improve — the “if I just work harder” loop becomes your prison. Every time he moves the goalposts, you don’t question the goalposts. You question your own performance. You push harder. He gets more output. The cycle continues.
The differentiators to watch for:
- Feedback that builds vs. feedback that destabilizes. A demanding boss’s feedback, even when harsh, leaves you with something actionable. A narcissistic boss’s feedback leaves you feeling smaller, less certain, and more dependent on their approval — with nothing concrete to work with.
- Accountability vs. blame-shifting. A demanding boss owns their mistakes and expects you to own yours. A narcissistic boss has an explanation for everything — and somehow, the explanation always ends with it being someone else’s fault. Usually yours.
- High standards vs. moving goalposts. A demanding boss is consistent. You know what the target looks like. A narcissistic boss changes the criteria after you’ve met them, ensuring you can never quite win.
- Recognition vs. credit theft. A demanding boss may not celebrate every win, but they don’t actively take credit for your work in public forums while privately minimizing your contribution.
- Discomfort that clarifies vs. confusion that multiplies. Working for a demanding boss is hard. Working for a narcissistic boss is disorienting. If you leave most conversations feeling more confused about your own competence than when you entered, that confusion is a signal worth taking seriously.
If this pattern resonates and you’re trying to find your way through it, trauma-informed executive coaching can be a powerful space to rebuild clarity and reclaim your professional confidence.
You might also find it useful to understand more about the signs of covert narcissism that therapists often miss — because many narcissistic bosses operate covertly, in ways that are genuinely difficult to identify.
Gaslighting in the Workplace: What It Actually Looks Like
Gaslighting is one of those words that’s used so frequently now that it can lose its clinical specificity. So let’s be precise: what does gaslighting in a professional context actually look like, and how does it differ from ordinary conflict, miscommunication, or disagreement?
“The abuser proceeds to destroy his victim from the inside out… until she ends up losing confidence in her own mental faculties.”
MARIE-FRANCE HIRIGOYEN, MD, PhD, Psychiatrist and Author, Stalking the Soul: Emotional Abuse and the Erosion of Identity
Gaslighting in the workplace happens through several distinct mechanisms. The first is the rewriting of history: you have a clear memory of a conversation — a decision that was made, a directive that was given, feedback that was delivered — and your boss flatly denies it. Not interprets it differently. Denies it. “I never said that.” “That’s not what happened.” “You’re remembering it wrong.”


