Short description: People who act on behalf of a narcissist to a third party, usually for an abusive purpose
Flying monkeys[1] is a term used in popular psychology, mainly in the context of narcissistic abuse,[2] to describe people who act on behalf of a narcissist towards a third party, usually for an abusive purpose (e.g. a smear campaign).[3][4] The phrase has also been used to refer to people who act on behalf of a psychopath, for a similar purpose.[5][6] The term is not formally used in medical practice or teaching. The term is from the winged monkeys used by the Wicked Witch of the West in the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (and the subsequent films based on it) to carry out evil deeds on her behalf.[6][7]Abuse by proxy (or proxy abuse) is a closely related or synonymous concept.[3][8]
A flying monkey can be anyone who believes the narcissist's fake persona, including the narcissist's spouse, child, friend, sibling, neighbor or cousin.[2][9] According to popular psychology author Angela Atkinson, flying monkeys are usually unwittingly manipulated people who believe the smears about the victim although they may be another narcissist working in tandem.[4]
the victim's associates – manipulated to side with the abuser
authority and institutional figures – manipulated to side with the abuser
Tactics
The flying monkey does the narcissist's bidding to inflict additional torment on the target.[3][7][10] It may consist of spying, spreading gossip, threatening, painting the narcissist as the victim (victim playing) and the target as the perpetrator (victim blaming).[3][7] Despite this, the narcissist does not hesitate to make flying monkeys his or her scapegoats when and if needed.[9][11]
The flying monkeys may make it seem like the narcissist is not really involved, and they likely have no idea that they are being used.[3][7][11] Multiple flying monkeys act as a mobbing force against a victim.[3][12]
Motivation
Motives behind the narcissist's support group can be multiple. Service providers may be seduced by the narcissist's charm into taking a one-sided perspective.[13] Family members may in good faith attempt to sort out the "problematic one".[14][15] The codependent may seek to participate in the narcissist's omnipotence, or use them as sanction for their own aggressive instincts.[16] Alternatively, others may simply be swept up by force of personality to define the situation along the narcissist's own lines.[10][17]
↑ 2.02.1Carmen Bryant (7 May 2019). Unmasking the Illusion of Perfection: Narcissist Abuse; Abused by the Esteemed!. ISBN978-1973654667. "These people, termed through popular psychology, as flying monkeys (in context of narcissist abuse) and redirect all attention back to the narcissist ..."
↑ 6.06.1Margot MacCallum (October 2018). Healing the Trauma of Psychological Abuse: A Lived Experience Roadmap to a Mindful Recovery. ISBN978-1504315326. "[..] ("flying monkeys" refers to a narcopath's enablers, derived from the seminal story of the "wicked witch" in the Wizard of Oz, who sent winged monkeys out to do her evil deeds for her)"
↑ 9.09.1Cynthia Bailey-Rug (October 2016). It's Not You, It's Them: When People Are More Than Selfish. pp. 55–56. ISBN978-1365313059. "Definition: Flying Monkeys"