Lol.
Chalk it up to working with an almost constant stream of single mothers for several years. They weren't narcissists, they were just going through a lot and needed someone to talk to. For most of them, the fathers were absent or put all the childcare on them, so I got to hear A LOT of stories about... Uh. Things I didn't really want to hear about (for instance, potty training, with every gory detail) but they were going through a lot and needed someone to talk to.
Same thing with men as well. There have been times in my life when I was a magnet for men who didn't know how to talk to women, or weren't used to talking to women -- and once they found a woman they felt they could talk to, they made up for all that lost time of never talking to one! But again, most weren't true narcissists, just the very lonely people our society is conditioning.
Most of us go work where we're a name badge or a number; we care for our families and it's all about what they need; we go to church and it's all about how much we can talk about God and serve others. I'm certainly not saying this is bad or somehow wrong. I'm just saying, no one takes the time to ask, "Who are you? What do you love, and why? Who taugh
I think the majority of people are starved for someone to dig below the surface and discover who they really are, rather than what they always do.
This is why I ask the questions I do in singles -- to try to give people a chance to tell us who they really are.
And I'll be the first to admit that it's hard if you become a one-way emotional dumping ground for someone else. The ideal situation, of course, is a two-way, balanced friendship/relationship -- but like most people, I'm finding it to be extremely rare.