Now That He’s Gone: The State of Public Mental Health He Leaves Behind
By Bandy X. Lee and Harper West
When we published The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump in 2017, we emphasized that, despite its title, Donald Trump was not our main focus. His presidency was more a statement about the nation and its state of public mental health, of which he was a barometer at the time of election and then the chief accelerant and exacerbator of its defects once in office.
Over the course of the last four years, we have witnessed how his “base” remained consistently at more or less 40% of the population despite continuous scandals and policy failures, including vastly increasing the death toll from COVID-19 through malfeasance and misfeasance and even a deadly assault on the Capitol.
We
had warned that this unwavering adherence was not a product of healthy,
rational and well-informed decision-making, but followed more the pattern of
pathological, abusive
relationships.
This does not mean that each follower of the Trump will exhibit abnormal psychology; on the contrary, they will resemble more victims of abuse and members of a cult, predisposed not just because of personal trauma history but because of a state of poor collective mental health.
Societal
mental health is not the same as the sum of the mental health
of individual members, and the themes and conflicts of groups are not the same
as personal struggles, even though they interact.
Some
problems are better conceived of as cultural
disorders, as the World Mental Health Coalition recently labeled
racism and white supremacy. Violence, in general, fits more the category
of a societal
disorder than an individual one—indeed, violence does not
depend as much on individual characteristics, such as individual mental
illness, as it does on social ones, such as levels of inequality in a society.
U.S. Primed for Abuse
It is important to note how the United States as a whole in the last few decades has been primed for nationwide vulnerability to narcissistic abuse, no matter the individual variations in resistance.
After four years of the Trump presidency, many of us who opposed him feel
traumatized and victimized by his emotional abuse. What may be surprising
to some is that his followers are also victims of his abuse.
Donald
Trump has attempted to manipulate reality for all of us, but the millions of
people who support him are deeply under his spell. He even manipulated
them to invade the Capitol, both for his own strategic gain to pressure
Congressional Republicans to oppose Electoral College tallies and to serve his
emotional need to continue the lie that he won the election. Some
insurrectionists may spend years in prison all so their leader
could temporarily perpetuate a self-delusion to feel better about himself.
‘Love
Bombing’
Extreme
narcissists often begin relationships with what is called “love bombing,”
a false expression of affection that frequently involves over-praising and
over-promising.
Trump
actually said in private that he dislikes his followers, even noting about the
insurrection that it looked “low class.”
He likely holds contempt, furthermore, that they have failed—never mind that,
according to an FBI agent, the nation barely escaped a massacre of its
lawmakers by a minor miracle.
Yet at rallies, he praises supporters effusively and in a video after the insurrection told them: “We love you. You’re very special.” This love bombing forms a trauma bond in the victim of enmeshed patterns of dependency or emotional addiction.
Trump followers crave his attention and approval, and he gives
it to them, mainly because they then feed him the attention he craves.
For the victim, it can lead to loss of sense of self, confusion and a
relentless clinging to the abuser.
The extreme narcissist, however, views all relationships through the lens of: “What’s in it for me?” This transactional pattern is revealed in Trump’s abrupt abandonment of those he perceives to be disloyal to him or even fails to “win” on his behalf.
If the former president is convicted in the
Senate and barred from
running for office in 2024, his followers may be surprised at
how immediately his need for their attention and financial support
disappears. Those who understand abusive personalities will not be
surprised at all.
‘Flying
Monkeys’
Cult
leaders use “deluded dupes” for their own purposes, mostly to generate narcissistic
supply or attention. Also, a priority is harvesting
assets for personal use, as we see from the hundreds of
millions of dollars Trump raised after he lost the election and
monetized his presidency as never before.Local state Rep. Justin Price who attended
the Capitol riot
Another way abusers victimize is by recruiting others to unwittingly do their dirty work. A popular psychological label for them is “flying monkeys,” who are the “henchmen” and “henchwomen” surrounding abusers to support their warped view of reality and self-centered behavior.
Manipulation, intimidation, or opportunism and corruption may
have caused their collusion with the extreme narcissist, but they serve to
legitimize and maintain the abusive status quo.
Those in the population who are narcissistically wounded and insecure like to feel “in the know,” or part of a secret “in group,” which makes them feel powerful with a sense of belonging.
As a result, they are attracted to conspiracy
theories and cult-like
organizations, a pattern that those at the Jan. 6 insurrection
embodied, through membership in groups such as QAnon and Proud Boys.
When
a society is made psychologically
vulnerable through relative deprivation, then large segments of
the population come to be drawn to narcissistic abuse or even “shared
psychosis.” Sometimes called “folie à
millions” or “madness among millions,” shared psychosis refers
to the infectiousness of severe symptoms when a highly symptomatic individual
is given an influential position.
Delusions
Worse than Lies
When
“mistruths” are not just strategic lies but delusions, for example, they spread
much more rapidly.
We can see this in how dramatically polls changed: only a small minority of
Republicans thought in early November that Joe Biden did not win, but in
a recent poll three
out of four do not believe Biden won the election legitimately.
Removal
of the highly symptomatic person from influence and exposure, such as
from social media
platforms, have already dissipated much of Donald Trump’s influence
and ability to incite violence.
Further accountability, prosecution,
and limit setting will
help discredit and “deprogram” his stronghold on his hitherto steadfast
followers. We have learned how powerful the spread and reach of mental
pathology can be—to the point of almost losing our democracy!—but we must also
recognize that these are well-known dynamics throughout
history that are preventable. Next time, we can do better
through greater mental health awareness and by holding our leaders to a mental health
standard.
Harper
West, M.A., L.L.P. (harperwest.co)
is a licensed psychotherapist, award-winning author and developer of
self-acceptance psychology. Both she and Dr. Lee (bandylee.com)
have participated in town hall series that are available here and here.