Psychopaths are not interested in friendship. They cultivate what researchers call simulated friendships, relationships that look caring on the surface but exist only to satisfy their hunger for power and control. Female psychopaths are especially skilled at this tactic. They may shower a prospect with flattery, exaggerated kindness, or dramatic tales of hardship to invite sympathy. Every gesture is calculated to place them at the centre of attention and to secure a loyal audience for their needs.
Once trust is won, the psychopath’s sense of entitlement emerges. Gratitude is absent; demands escalate. Because these individuals study social cues, they can switch seamlessly between charm and self-pity, whichever keeps others compliant. Detecting them is hard – even trained professionals are often misled, yet victims frequently recall a fleeting moment when “something felt off.” Honoring that intuition, setting firm boundaries, and slowing the pace of new relationships remain the safest safeguards against a predatory bond.
Peer-reviewed study – Abell L., Brewer G., Qualter P., & Austin E. (2015). Machiavellianism, emotional manipulation, and friendship functions in women’s friendships. DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2015.09.001
Across two samples of adult women, high Machiavellianism, often overlapping with psychopathy, predicted frequent emotional manipulation of close friends and poorer friendship quality.
Review article – Forouzan E. & Cooke D. (2012). Psychopathy in women: theoretical and clinical perspectives
Provides evidence that female psychopaths deploy indirect, relational aggression rather than overt violence, making them harder to identify.
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