3 Types Of People Who Are Deeply Selfish (Even If They Hide It Well)

These types of people prove just how well selfishness can be disguised.

Last updated on Sep 04, 2025

Person is deeply selfish. Aykut Aktas | Unsplash
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We’ve all had that moment when someone says something mean and we end up feeling small, angry, and hurt. Someone will inevitably say: It’s not about you. Don’t take it personally.

Easier said than done, and the statement is true: people are often very selfish or self-centered. They do things to prop themselves up or feel better about themselves. If we can take the time to step back, see that what’s going on isn’t about us. It’s really about them and their ego.

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Here are 3 types of people who are deeply selfish, even if they hide it well:

1. The condescending boss

Perhaps your boss talks down to you, or they constantly emphasize how much you need to learn from them. Sometimes they try to disguise it as mentorship. Whatever they call it, you leave meetings feeling insecure and small, and wondering how to prove them wrong.

Why are they doing this? A lot of it could be fear. They could be insecure about their own position and experience. Highlighting your age or newness to an organization helps them feel older, wiser, and in a more secure position.

Another aspect could be your potential. You could be amazing at what you do, potentially outshining them. When people just want to skate by, talent and hard work become a threat. What happens if their younger, more talented employee overtakes them?

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In either case, condescending behavior says nothing about you. It says far more about your boss and their wants and needs. If anything, it shows you have more potential than you realize.

According to a 2022 study, individuals who doubt their own abilities may feel threatened by competent employees. A condescending attitude serves as a protective shield, allowing them to mask their own self-doubt by making others feel less capable and thereby reinforcing their fragile sense of importance.

RELATED: 20 Motivational Quotes To Help You Keep Your Cool When Your Bad Boss Is Driving You Insane

2. The sweetly mean friend

woman who is the sweetly mean friend and deeply selfish Nicoleta Ionescu / Shutterstock

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She swears she only has your best intentions at heart. She says she tells it like it is. She always tells you when that blouse isn’t working. 

Or perhaps she thinks you’re lucky to be able to have a body that distributes weight gain so evenly. You walk away feeling guilty for eating a piece of chocolate. Or you may suddenly see flaws in yourself that you’d never seen before.

We may have graduated from high school, but some haven’t graduated from teenage insecurities. We all know the phrase, misery loves company — it’s true. Some are so unhappy with themselves that criticizing others makes them feel a little better.

You don’t have to believe the mean girl. You can take a breather from the friendship or see if she’s open to a conversation on self-love and body acceptance. Either way, it’s time to opt out of her petty game.

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Individuals with this personality style engage in deeply selfish manipulation to serve their own needs while maintaining a public facade of niceness or humility. A 2023 study concluded that their kindness is often performative.

RELATED: 11 Behaviors That Seem Kind But Are Actually Signs Of An Evil Person

3. The blaming partner

Earlier this year, I started dating a guy. Although we had a physical relationship, I told him my boundaries. He seemed okay with it.

After about two months of seeing each other, I wanted to know what he was looking for in the long term. He didn’t want to become serious. Why? One main reason was my “intimate roadblocks.”

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That’s right: My lack of experience was the problem. This was incredibly painful because he played on my fear. I was afraid that being intimate would make me seem weird or undesirable.

RELATED: If Your Kid Uses This Horrifying Phrase, It Actually Means You're A Great Parent Who Truly Gets It

Yet, I wasn’t the real problem. The problem was not only that he had an issue with it, but also didn’t tell me he had a problem for nearly two months.

In arguments, it takes two to tango. Yet, some people will make you the issue no matter what. It’s never about them. It’s never about what they can or can’t do. Somehow, it’s always your fault. 

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This sinister trick is quite impressive: it forces you to go on the defensive. Picking out and focusing on your flaws (real or imaginary) shuts you up and helps your partner avoid the real discussion.

This trap says a lot about a person. It shows how they don’t want to self-reflect. They won’t admit to having any flaws. In the end, they’d rather hurt you than be wrong.

This behavior can happen with all kinds of people in our lives: family, romantic partners, or friends. The closer the person is to us, the harder it can be to see the behavior.

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The ego is a tricky thing. It’s self-absorbed and primarily cares about survival. We all need a bit of ego. But if we let it have free rein, we begin to believe that life is a cutthroat competition and that happiness is only available for a select few.

Next time you’re about to get run over by someone else’s ego, take a deep breath and remember this: what they’re saying says far more about them. How do you react? Well, that’s all on you.

RELATED: 3 Unconscious Behaviors That Drain 95 Percent Of Your Mental Strength

Katie Simpson is a San Francisco-based writer with bylines in Entropy Mag, Boston Accent, Brooklyn Mag, and Hit Record.

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