Abstract
Current paradigms for understanding Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD)-including psychoanalytic, cognitive-behavioral, and neuroscientific approaches-offer valuable insights but remain fragmented. They largely fail to explain the deep motivational structure of narcissism, particularly the co-existence of grandiose and vulnerable subtypes and the disorder's profound resistance to treatment. This paper proposes an integrative meta-theoretical framework, the Existential Fracture model, to re-conceptualize NPD not merely as a cluster of symptoms but as a fundamental crisis of meaning arising from a systematic dissociation between primary lived experience and secondary symbolic representation. Drawing on Jaspers' phenomenological psychopathology and Heidegger's existential analytics, the model posits that narcissistic pathology originates from a collapse of ontological security and the individual's world-picture (Weltbild). In response to existential "boundary situations" (Grenzsituationen), such as the awareness of mortality, the individual constructs a rigid, performative "idealized self" as a defensive fantasy of special exemption. This paper further integrates the Buddhist critique of "self-grasping" (atma-graha) to illuminate the narcissistic attachment to a fictional self-entity and the instrumentalization of others. The analysis reveals that both grandiose and vulnerable narcissism represent divergent defensive strategies against the same core existential anxieties, rooted in a fractured relationship with time, death, and intersubjectivity. The clinical implications call for a paradigm shift from symptom correction to ontological transformation. Therapeutic practices informed by phenomenological reduction, death awareness meditation, and mindful non-attachment are proposed to facilitate the move from a performative existence to an authentic one by rebuilding the capacity for symbolic integration of primary experience. This theoretical synthesis provides a robust platform for future research and humane clinical intervention, bridging subjective meaning-making with objective clinical observation.