The Dark Psychology of Envy

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#envy #jealousy #selfimprovement
Based on "The Laws of Human Nature" by Robert Greene

Time Code:
The Innate Nature of Envy - 0:00 - 1:15
The Dark Inner Narratives of Envy - 1:16 - 3:36
Why Your Closest Friends are The Most Dangerous - 3:37 - 6:15
Signs to Spot Someone Who is Envious - 6:16 - 9:26
Catch Yourself Feeling Envious of Others - 9:27 - 10:40
Moving on From Envy - 10:41 - 11:40
Outro - 11:41 - 12:15

Envy is an emotion that is largely unconscious in most people, but it can come from being focused on other people’s successes and wanting to bring them down because of it. If you’re a receiver of an envy attack, you’ll pretty much feel really bad about yourself, but without knowing why. It can be so subtle that you may end up questioning whether you have just imagined it.

Envy is a word that is often used interchangeably with jealousy, but there are distinct differences between the two emotions.

Jealousy generally involves three people. You may be in relationship with someone, and you fear that someone else might steal your special person away. You can feel jealousy when you see them whispering to one another, or having special conversations that don’t involve you. Jealousy is fairly active and conscious, and it can be a result of feeling insecure.

Envy, on the other hand, tends to be shadowy and unconscious. It can act passive-aggressively and be hell bent on destroying what it can’t have. Envy generally involves two people. The envious person may deeply want what the other person has, and feels frustrated at not being able to have it. The envious person can then act on that frustration and may then subtly (or sometimes obviously) attack the other person.

Envy is often rooted in low self-esteem – sometimes from very early unmet childhood needs where the person feels inherently not good enough. An envious person may frequently ‘compare and despair’ and find themselves wanting. And so they seek to bring down the object or person who they perceive is making them feel that way. It’s almost as though the other person is responsible for the envious person’s happiness – because their self-image is dependent on things outside of themselves. They feel deficient in themselves and have a constant hunger to fill that deficiency.

By denigrating the thing that makes them feel ‘less than’, the envious person can make the other feel bad, so they can ultimately begin to feel ‘more than’. It’s a shaky way of building self-esteem, but it’s as though the envious person needs to absorb some of the other’s energy in order to feel whole and functioning. Except the ‘feel good’ effect never lasts, and they may need to up the ante to continue to feel better about themselves. Envious people can be competitive. More than that, they can seem to take pleasure in another’s misfortune. We see this kind of envious attack carried out on social media daily, where celebrities’ looks and behaviors are criticized – and the tiniest slip is magnified and vilified.

An envy attack can involve:
Putting you down – either overtly, or subtly.
Provoking a reaction in you, from anger to sadness to outrage – then standing back and watching sparks fly.
Undermining your opinion or stance so you begin to doubt yourself.
Showing off about their own achievements, or the accomplishments of their children or other family members, even when rather modest.
Using sarcasm – disguised as ‘humour’– to poke fun at your achievements and mock what you believe in. This can feel humiliating.
Copying you – or pre-empting you beyond the limit of simple flattery. You invest in a new kitchen, they’ll get an extension and conservatory. You buy a new car, they’ll buy a bigger and better one.
Passively waiting until you slip up, and they’ll be gleefully ready to say” “I told you so”.
Generally just making you feel bad about yourself
Category
Psychology
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