From Twins to Narcissism
Dr. Michelle Snyder,
The Symbologist
Today, the word
narcissism usually means an unhealthy obsession with oneself. The idea comes
from the ancient Greek story of Narcissus, a beautiful young man whose name
became tied to vanity and self-love.
Most people know
the version told by the Roman writer Ovid. In that story, the nymph Echo falls
deeply in love with Narcissus. She tries to show him her love, but he rejects
her. Heartbroken, she disappears into the woods until only her voice remains.
Later, Narcissus comes upon a pool of water and sees his reflection staring
back at him. According to the modern version of the myth, he falls in love with
his own beauty, unable to look away. In some tellings he wastes away beside the
water. In others, he drowns trying to embrace the image. Where he dies, a
flower grows, and it is named the narcissus.
Another version
adds an interesting detail. A goddess asks the lake why it cries for Narcissus.
The lake replies that it mourns him because, in the depths of his eyes, it
could see its own beauty reflected back.
Stories change
over time. Cultures reshape myths to fit their own values and beliefs. When we
look deeper into older versions of the Narcissus story, a very different
picture begins to appear.
The Greek writer
Pausanias recorded an older tradition in which Narcissus had a twin sister
named Narcissa. The two dressed alike, hunted together, and were inseparable.
Anyone who has known twins understands how close that bond can become.
According to this older account, Narcissus loved his sister deeply. When she
died, he was overcome with grief. He would kneel beside the water, staring into
it because the reflection reminded him of her. He was not admiring himself. He
was mourning someone he had lost.
Over time,
Narcissa disappeared from the story and was replaced by Echo. The meaning of
the myth changed with her disappearance. What may once have been a tragic story
about grief and memory slowly became a warning about vanity and selfishness.
Some ancient
versions even suggest that Narcissus and his sister were lovers. To modern
readers this may seem shocking, but sibling marriages were not unusual in parts
of the ancient world. Myths often preserve fragments of older customs and
beliefs that later cultures no longer accepted. As societies changed, stories
were rewritten to match new ideas about morality.
This happened in
many myths. Characters were transformed, condemned, or rewritten to serve later
religious and cultural views. Medusa is another example. The original stories
became buried beneath newer versions shaped by fear, morality, and judgment.
The myth of
Narcissus also connects symbolically to mirrors, reflection, twins, and the
constellation Gemini. Water acted as the first mirror long before polished
glass existed. Reflection itself carried symbolic meaning in the ancient world.
The story may once have explored memory, identity, grief, and the mysterious
bond between twins.
But today the
myth is usually reduced to a simple lesson: self-love is dangerous. The older
story, however, may have been far more human. Instead of vanity, it may have
been about sorrow. Instead of pride, longing. Instead of selfishness, the
unbearable pain of losing someone who felt like part of yourself.




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