They can be your exes, therapists, nurses, schoolteachers, professors, colleagues, friends, and foes. Female psychopaths may be rarer than male psychopaths, but they still do considerable damage. A 2021 meta-analysis using studies totaling 11,497 people revealed that psychopathy has a prevalence rate of 4.5%, (this rate goes down to 1.2% if using the gold standard Psychopathy Checklist by Hare) with rates being higher in males. However, psychopathy researchers have argued that this gender difference may be attributed to how scales that measure psychopathy were originally designed to capture psychopathy in males in the prison population. Since female psychopaths tend to be less physically violent (perhaps due to their socialization) but also tend to have callousness and lack of emotion as more of their central features according to studies, they may simply fly under our radar. So what do female psychopaths actually look like? How do they behave? If they’re not serial killers or overt bullies, what are the tell-tale behaviors that do give them away? Here are the red flags to look for:

They’re superficially charming and mirror socially acceptable responses to emotions. They are easily bored and like to create chaos for fun.

Much like male psychopaths, female psychopaths are just as charming. They use their cognitive empathy to mirror the socially acceptable emotional responses they observe in others to escape detection. They use their charisma to climb the corporate ladder with ease, even if they lack the skills to truly succeed long-term. They figure out the weaknesses of others that they can exploit to their advantage. They are prone to boredom, so they manufacture chaos, pitting people against one another for a greater sense of power and control. They victimize and bully the innocent, making prey out of the people they feel threatened by or are envious of. They do this in real life as well as on social media.

They enjoy partner poaching.

In a 2022 BBC interview with female psychopaths, one of the female psychopaths described how she took great pleasure in having an affair with a man and when she became bored of the relationship, ended it by sending his naked pictures to his wife, including one featuring herself with her husband. When people asked her why she would delight in doing such a thing with so much nonchalance, she replied that it was her callousness that permitted her to do so. These types of people who go out of their way to engage with partnered men as a pattern and take sadistic pleasure in doing so do exist, and research shows that partner poaching is associated with psychopathic traits in both men and women.

They are cruel and callous; they engage in relationally aggressive behavior and are particularly envious of those they target.

Research shows that both narcissistic and psychopathic traits are associated with malicious envy – envy that drives destructive behavior toward others. If they are not outwardly violent, female psychopaths channel their aggression into their social relationships, particularly their friendships and work relationships with other women. They may not target those who they need: for example, they will likely not be aggressive toward a boss who pays their salary, but they will target other employees who seem to be surpassing them and attempt to undermine them in a way that depicts themselves as innocent. They spread gossip and rumors with malice. They sabotage their talented peers and flirt with their bosses and co-workers in the workplace to get ahead. They interfere in the friendships of others. They steal work and give themselves credit. If they work with vulnerable populations, they may even re-victimize vulnerable clients; for example, a therapist who is also a female psychopath might learn her client’s triggers not for the purpose of helping them heal, but solely for the purpose of manipulating and provoking her client so they remain in therapy. A psychopathic female nurse may administer the wrong dose of medication to watch her patient suffer or bully her colleagues who she deems more attractive or talented than her.

They take sadistic pleasure in mind games and lack remorse for their transgressions.

Whether they’re a relationship partner or friend, female psychopaths enjoy playing mind games. They use diversion tactics to escape accountability for their actions. They love bomb, devalue, and provoke jealousy in their partners and friends so they can be the one who establishes dominance. They cheat on their doting spouses and cheat with the spouses of others purposely. They gaslight after insulting others covertly with backhanded comments, ensuring they capitalize on plausible deniability. They enjoy tearing down someone who is celebrating success or exhibiting healthy pride. They misuse their sexuality to their advantage. They feel entitled to have the attention on them, even if they don’t “crave” the attention like female narcissists do. For them, it’s all about profit or pleasure: if attention alleviates their chronic boredom, they’ll take it and they will do whatever they want without much remorse for any harm they’ve caused.

If you’re dealing with a female psychopath, it’s important to gain professional support and cut ties. If you can’t avoid them entirely, you must minimize contact – do not disclose any personal information to them that can be used against you. Your mental well-being is paramount. You deserve to be free and you deserve to heal.

Source: https://thoughtcatalog.com/shahida-arabi/2023/08/red-flags-of-the-female-psychopath-according-to-an-expert/