This paper explores decision-making as a form of existential loss, specifically as the “death” of unchosen alternatives. Building on existential and phenomenological approaches to choice, I argue that making a decision is fundamentally about leaving possibilities behind rather than embracing a single path. Healthy decision-making requires the capacity to mourn these losses and to tolerate the coexistence of unchosen alternatives in the world. By contrast, the narcissistic personality exhibits a pathological relationship to decision-making characterised by the need to annihilate rejected options and those who represent them. Contemporary research has identified various subtypes of narcissism, including grandiose and vulnerable presentations (Pincus Miller et al., 2011), though this paper focuses on the fundamental structural features common to narcissistic pathology rather than its diverse phenomenological manifestations. This analysis has implications for both philosophical practice and psychotherapy, suggesting that our ability to make generative life choices depends on our capacity to relate constructively to loss and limitation.
Aleksandar Fatic (Thu,) studied this question.