Shalev is Silent
Malignant Self Love Narcissism Revisited
After the Rain How the West Lost the East
A World in Conflict and Transition
Shalev's ample back is propped against the laundry dryer and
he is keeping silent. It jerks, he jolts, eyes downcast, his short-sleeved
T-shirt defenseless against the arctic ambiance.
"Shalev, say something" - I mutter. He only
smiles. It is my daybreak plea, repeated each morning since he quietened.
By way of responding, he turns to face the glass eye of the coinless
Laundromat, his stooping shoulders focused upon the swirling garments. He
motions to me to lay my wash on a truncated soggy wooden slab.
The laundry room is high ceilinged. Rags decomposing hang flayed on oxblood
iron juts, stabbing four walls coarsely mortared by the inmates. Pipes
conjoined with moldy tape drip onto the twin
contraptions - the malignantly oversized washer and dryer.
Shalev is average height but way obese. His wild
stubble and wire glasses accentuate his burliness, the towering machinery, the
vaulted chamber. "The Cyclops's Cave", I call it and well-read Shalev just chuckles. He casts a longing glance at a pile
of books and snacks awaiting in his "Promised
Corner". But he wouldn't say a word.
I occupied one of the twin armchairs in the ironing parlor
and set the backgammon board to play. Shalev was
preceded in this job by a transvestite whose nocturnal off-key strains of
yearning were still evoked. Forced to sequester him away from virile lust -
both others' and his own - the prison authorities allowed him to import his
shoddy furniture into the concrete monastery that later became the washroom.
Shalev slept in his predecessor's bed and kept his
munchies in his metal bureau, coated with peeling sepia paper cuttings. Now, he
sank into the matching armchair, arranging his limbs gingerly, as though
preparing to inventory them. He smoothed his feral moustache with two stubby
stained fingers and studied the board alertly.
He then rose from his seat, swung shut the door but
didn't bolt it (regulations). To fend off the gloom, I stretched over and
turned on the milky lights above his bookshelf. His wife got him some of the
volumes and others he borrowed from the prison's library, my workplace.
Shalev inclined and smothered a round piece with a
bulky fingertip. He drove it to a screeching halt next to a corner of the
patterned board. Then, content, he fisted the yellowed dice and hurled them at
the table. Six-six. His eyes aflame, he basked in this
auspicious opening.
I waited with bated breath for an exclamation of his evident exuberance - but Shalev just proceeded to conjure his pieces into and out of
existence in a whirlwind of clattering dice and scraping moves and sweaty
palms. He suppressed even his customary snickers at my clumsiness. Perhaps
chortling was too akin to speech.
"Shalev," - I said - "why have you
stopped talking? Why don't you laugh anymore? Why the
silence?"
He flings a pair of agitated dice at me. I groan as I pick them off the gooey
floor.
"Listen" - I persisted - "I have an idea". An involuntary
twitch betrayed his interest.
"Why don't you write what you have to say? We will prepare a stack of
small cards here and you could jot on them to your heart's content."
"What cannot be said in words, can sometimes be expressed in letters."
Shalev froze and for a minute there I thought I lost
him. Then he nodded his head excitedly. I abandoned him and his victory over me
and bolted outside, into the graying drizzle. I
crossed two lanes muddied by steamy kitchen waste and absconded with a pack of
printing paper from the library. Hiding them under my tattered blemished coat,
I hasted to the laundry room.
Shalev arranged the pieces in two equidimensional
towers of alternating black and white. I proudly presented my paper loot. We
used a ruler and scissors to divide them into squares. And all that protracted
time I prayed that Shalev will not devolve from
verbal to written taciturnity.
Shalev held the ordinary pen I gave him as though he
never handled a writing implement before. He scrawled his tortured letters
excruciatingly:
"I want to ask you for a big favor"
The dryer banged spasmodically and ceased.
"I want you to explain to my wife why I am keeping silent."
The hush was broken only by the sounds of his labored
scribbling.
"I have a feeling that no one loves me anymore. She is distancing herself
and I am losing my daughters. When on vacation, I am a stranger in my own home,
with no authority or recognition. It feels so helpless. I cannot hold on to
them. Tonight I dreamt that I am screaming as they retreated, eerily oblivious
to my pleading, to my words. So I decided to keep quiet. Tell her all that for me, will you?"
I nodded and he lifted himself from the crumbling armchair, hugging my soiled
clothes, and trotting towards the rumbling, cornered appliance.
The following morning, at six o'clock, the warden bawled our names, marking
those present. Ensconced in dreary blazers, we fended off the chill. Shalev, wearing his semipternal
T-shirt, leaned on the barrack wall. "Stand straight" - the warden
barked and cast an evil glance. Shalev recoiled
dreamily. "Who's missing?" - our sentinel
demanded and, not waiting for an answer, invaded our windswept accommodation.
"You, come with me." - he motioned to Shalev - "The staff complained yesterday. Clothes were
amiss. What happened?"
Shalev kept mum.
"He doesn't talk" - somebody volunteered - "He is on a
strike." And wicked sniggering.
"What is it that I am told?" - the warden
shrilled - "You are not talking? With this scum" - his outstretched
hand enclosed us all, a brown effluence - "you can do whatever you want.
But with the authorities of this facility, you hear, you will respond!
Clear?"
Shalev just nodded absentmindedly. This far from
innocuous acquiescence infuriated our guardian.
"It is not the last you hear of me" - he spat and trotted towards the
management's stone parapet, splashing jets of mud on our rubber boots. Shalev grabbed my arm and navigated me towards the
prisoners' public phone. Today was his turn to make use of it, his ten minutes
with the outside world.
A big, uniformed, crowd surrounded the booth. Everyone knew by now about Shalev's weird protest. They came here to loot his minutes,
to scavenge the carrion of his allotted phone call. When they saw me, they
hummed in disappointment and dispersed, only to perch on the nearby benches,
just in case.
Torrential rain volleyed the butt-scorched and graffiti-tattooed plastic shell
with itinerant orange leaves. I held on to the scarred receiver and dialed Shalev's home, his family.
His wife picked up. I recalled her deceptive fragility and her two
well-attired, well-mannered offspring. She always carried baskets with her -
one with food and one full of reading material. They did not bother to inspect
their contents at the gate anymore, that's how predictable she was.
"Hello, this is Shmuel" - I said and read
the note to her.
Silence ensued, chased by defiant sobbing:
"This is not true. We do love him." - whimpers.
"Shalev" - I hesitated, distressed, under
the shadows cast by his hirsute skull - "Shalev,
please, she is crying ..."
To the receiver:
"I am giving you Shalev".
Shalev held the handset in his plump hand and
listened attentively.
"Are you there?"
He kept mute for many minutes, digging a moat of silence against the verbal
onslaught of his wife. He listened to his daughters, head tilted, eyes moist, lips clenched.
Then, gently, he replaced the mouthpiece in its cradle, stifling his children's
whining.
There he stood, bent, broken, brow kissing the frosty metal, reluctantly driven
away by the minacious grumblings of his fellow inmates. He mournfully dragged
his feet along the silt-spattered road to our barracks. Sometimes he stopped
and kicked a gravel listlessly, watching its
trajectory transfixed, until it hit the rustling bush and vanished.
"Hey, you!" - it
was the warden, materializing with the grayness of an
impeccable camouflage.
"The chief wants to talk to you about your silence."
Shalev's eyes shifted in the manner of a hunted game.
A muscle pulsed wildly in his cheek.
"He doesn't speak" - I ventured, head bowed, eyes locked on the grimy
shoes of our custodian - "I can accompany him. He corresponds with me and
..."
"You do what you are told to do" - the words awhipping,
eyes socketed in bloodshot red - "or you will
end up just like him, in the solitary!"
Bad winds thrashed Shalev's flimsy summer shirt as he
descended towards the patched glass door at the entrance to the headquarters.
Back in the barracks, I sat cross-legged on Shalev's
bed, eyeing his neatly folded blankets, clean smelling, flower-patterned
sheets, the mound of books under his night lamp.
I got up, tucked my shirttails into my cord-held trousers and crossed the
square between the barracks and the management. Shalev
was seated, overflowing, on a tiny stone bench, studying his fingers as he
crossed and then uncrossed them. He rubbed the sole of one of his boots against
the other. His lips, tightened pale, contrasted morbidly with the inkiness of
his beard and whiskers.
"Go away" - ordered the warden offhandedly.
"Shalev" - I said but he did not react -
"I have an offer to make. Give me your silence. I want to buy it from you.
Let me be the one to go to the chief and then refuse to talk to him. You tell
him that everything is fine, that it was all one big misunderstanding, that you
had a fight with your wife, with your family. Apologize profusely. After we
exit, I will give you back your silence, I swear to you."
Shalev exerted himself and raised his head, watching
me intently. But then his chin drooped and I chastised myself: "you lost
him, you lost him" and I wanted to beat myself unconscious.
The warden shook his head in mute disdain.
The silence was broken by the smoke-drenched curses of prisoners and staff, as
they crossed the linkchained paths. A woman staffer
exited, banging a wooden frame behind her portly figure. She scrutinized the
warden questioningly, a sooty cigarette hanging from the corner of a lipstick
smear:
"This is Shalev?"
"That's me" - said Shalev - "I am
ready now. I will talk to you."
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Narcissism and Other People's Guilt
The Spouse / Mate / Partner of the Narcissist
Narcissists - Stable or Unstable?
The Two Loves of the Narcissist
Acquired Situational Narcissism
QUESTIONS TO PONDER
This part is meant only to provoke thoughts. It is not a substitute to independent thinking, criticism, and analysis.
Shalev gives his nearest and his dearest the "silent treatment". How does the narcissist use language and silence to abuse others?
What is the role of jealousy and envy in the narcissistic pathology?
Shalev is using me to communicate with his family. Why? And why does he ultimately speak to his wife?
Narcissists are control freaks. Like an infant, the narcissist feels that things and people stop to exist if he can't see them with his own eyes and manipulate them. This is called deficient object constancy. How does Shalev cope with it?
Read these:
The Narcissist's Object Constancy
Inner Dialog, Cognitive Deficits, and Introjects in Narcissism