12 Common Traits of Adult Children of Narcissistic Parents

Each individual's journey as an adult child of narcissists is unique, encompassing a range of personality traits shaped by their upbringing. While not all may exhibit the same characteristics, common themes emerge from research and professional observations. These traits include negative self-perception, marked by low self-esteem, chronic self-blame, difficulty with boundaries, and insecure attachment styles, leading to emotional challenges such as people-pleasing tendencies, hypervigilance, emotional dysregulation, and struggles with trust and intimacy. Yet, amidst these adversities, positive attributes often emerge, cultivated through resilience and growth. These include empathy, resilience, independence, and heightened intuition, reflecting their capacity for understanding, strength, autonomy, and emotional attunement forged through overcoming challenging experiences.
Daniel J. Fox, Ph.D., is a licensed psychologist in Texas, international speaker, and a multi-award-winning author. He has been specializing in the treatment and assessment of individuals with personality disorders for over 20 years in the state and federal prison system, universities, and in private practice. His specialty areas include personality disorders, ethics, burnout prevention, and emotional intelligence.
He has published several articles and books in these areas and is the author of:
The BPD Card Deck: 50 Ways to Balance Emotions and Live Well with Borderline Personality Disorder. Available at: www.shorturl.at/jBHJV
Complex Borderline Personality Disorder: How Coexisting Conditions Affect Your BPD and How You Can Gain Emotional Balance. Available at:
rb.gy/hdyqyy
Antisocial, Narcissistic, and Borderline Personality Disorders: A New Conceptualization of Development, Reinforcement, Expression, and Treatment. Available at: tinyurl.com/2anv8dww
The Borderline Personality Disorder Workbook: An Integrative Program to Understand and Manage Your BPD. Available at: goo.gl/LQEgy1
Antisocial, Borderline, Narcissistic and Histrionic Workbook: Treatment Strategies for Cluster B Personality Disorders (IPBA Benjamin Franklin Gold Award Winner): goo.gl/BLRkFy
Narcissistic Personality Disorder Toolbox: 55 Practical Treatment Techniques for Clients, Their Parents & Their Children (IPBA Benjamin Franklin Silver Award Winner):: goo.gl/sZYhym
Dr. Fox has given numerous workshops and seminars on ethics and personality disorders, personality disorders and crime, treatment solutions for treating clients along the antisocial, borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality spectrum, emotional intelligence, managing mental health within the prison system, and others. Dr. Fox maintains a website of various treatment interventions focused on working with and attenuating the symptomatology related to individuals along the antisocial, borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality spectrum (www.drdfox.com).
KZread: / @drdanielfox
Dr. Fox’s website: www.drdfox.com/
Dr. Fox’s Blog: www.psychologytoday.com/us/bl...
Facebook: / appliedpsychservices
Twitter: / drdanieljfox1
LinkedIn: / drdfox
Instagram: / drdfox
Amazon Author’s Page: amazon.com/author/drfox
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00:00 Introduction
00:36 Self-esteem and self-doubt
01:17 Chronic self-blame
02:15 Difficulty setting boundaries
03:04 What is a narcissistic wound?
03:43 Insecure attachment ACONs
04:49 People pleasing tendencies
05:51 Hypervigilance (always on alert)
07:16 Emotional dysregulation
11:03 Empathy and compassion
11:58 Resilience and strength
12:37 Independence and self-reliance
13:54 Heightened intuition and sensitivity

Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @GorgieClarissa
    @GorgieClarissa3 ай бұрын

    living with a narcissistic parent is like living in a nightmare you can't wake up from.....

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    It can be incredibly challenging to live in such a situation. Remember, you are not alone.

  • @theMelGibsonator

    @theMelGibsonator

    3 ай бұрын

    Perfect description of what it feels like to be trapped with an abusive, crazy making "caregiver" whom you depend on financially. My mother kept haunting me in my dreams for years after I left home. The good news is that eventually you wake up from the nightmare and can begin to heal your trauma.

  • @SuzkaMares

    @SuzkaMares

    3 ай бұрын

    Truth!

  • @carolnahigian9518

    @carolnahigian9518

    3 ай бұрын

    Mother was a Roller Coaster;( needy 2 year old); Father serial cheat.. no filters! Both Folk score 100% on Narcisism

  • @LosAngelesLaura

    @LosAngelesLaura

    3 ай бұрын

    @@theMelGibsonatorBoth my sister and I still have nightmares to this day! Please know you are not alone in this! I’m glad you have moved past this stage (hopefully)!❤

  • @nonawolf7495
    @nonawolf74953 ай бұрын

    Narc Mom teaches you from day one that you are not allowed to have boundaries, and your primary purpose in life is to please her. This sets you up for disaster when you start dating - I allowed men to treat me badly because that's what I was trained to do. Thanks mom.

  • @vanillawaterfae

    @vanillawaterfae

    2 ай бұрын

    Exactly! The same thing happened to me. I haven’t had contact with her for 10 years and now she is besties with my narc ex husband. 🤡

  • @wms72

    @wms72

    2 ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @mr.r2362

    @mr.r2362

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm a son raised by a covert narc mother, so this annoying crap isn't just a girls-club issue.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    My mom combined her narcissism with toxic feminism (a match made in heaven) so I was raised to be a pleaser to her and all women and never to ask for ANYTHING out of relationships with women or to have any boundaries (boundaries were brutally punished)-they completely set their children up to be abused.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    I also have narcissistic uncles who were very violent, so I was not allowed to have PHYSICAL boundaries, i.e., I was supposed to let grown men hit me without showing any visible reaction starting at 7, I would be shouted at and expected to RUN to them from across the house and up the stairs, to grab something just out of reach for them. Etc

  • @Sojourner927
    @Sojourner927Ай бұрын

    The common theme = nothing you do is good enough. No matter how you are is not good enough. Devastating as a child let alone adult.

  • @hcmangs3634
    @hcmangs36342 ай бұрын

    But when you’re a child, you think their behavior is ‘normal’ and it’s our fault

  • @Bea_Rosy

    @Bea_Rosy

    2 ай бұрын

    Yep, having my own child changed everything I thought was normal from my own upbringing

  • @catherinagutierrez7226

    @catherinagutierrez7226

    2 ай бұрын

    Thats So True As A Child ; Children By Nature ARE Immature And Do Not Have The Know-With-All Inside TO Process. Eventually When Children Get Older They Do Begin TO See And Realize Things , Much Differently; And Even Can Experience Delayed Anger ; Sometimes Implosions Even Happened From All The Unprocessed Stuff Within 🥹💔

  • @lindanorris2455

    @lindanorris2455

    2 ай бұрын

    right on!

  • @rosehiver6262

    @rosehiver6262

    2 ай бұрын

    I don’t agree. When you’re a child, yes you think it’s normal but no, nothing is your fault because there is NO fault since everything is normal. If you think you are guilty of something, it means you know that the situation is not normal.

  • @TheMazinoz

    @TheMazinoz

    2 ай бұрын

    Nup, I realised at an early age my mother had a problem. Catholic school nuns were better!

  • @planetgannet
    @planetgannet2 ай бұрын

    Such evil evil people, they ruin your whole life. Love to all survivors.

  • @TopperPenquin

    @TopperPenquin

    2 ай бұрын

    You didn't mention: Then put the blame on you.

  • @planetgannet

    @planetgannet

    2 ай бұрын

    @@TopperPenquin yes that too

  • @NikkaKriss

    @NikkaKriss

    2 ай бұрын

    Understatement…. I’m 47 and struggling so badly. Sometimes I think I’ve survived but l was robbed of a happy childhood and well rounded life and that truly breaks my heart.😢

  • @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    2 ай бұрын

    @@NikkaKriss Give yourself a happy adulthood. Go ahead and do some childish childhood like things. Think of your parent(s) while doing it and say something akin to "so there! Can't stop me now!" Go to the beach and play with the sand. Or the park and play on the swing. Or with it if you feel silly on it. I never felt like I fit in so I went into the military as enlisted and went through basic combat training. It is the sergeant's jobs to make you fit in and tell you that you do at the end. Maybe you prefer a team sport. Pick one that is easy for you like volleyball. I even coached it and made sure everyone played. Adult leagues for fun get to do that. You can work at healing those hurts from childhood by "parenting" yourself. I taught some simple crafts. At the library. You cannot change the past but you can round out your present.

  • @WalburgisLuppus

    @WalburgisLuppus

    2 ай бұрын

    ❤ so true ​@@JoyPeace-ej2uv

  • @lisadoidge1034
    @lisadoidge10343 ай бұрын

    I was never allowed to have any boundaries.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experience. Setting boundaries is crucial for our well-being.

  • @ElizzzaB

    @ElizzzaB

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm afraid to set boundaries that others will become violent as narcs in family did to get their own way.

  • @YouMessedUpDude

    @YouMessedUpDude

    3 ай бұрын

    Same here. Now it’s so hard to set boundaries with anyone for anything.

  • @rockstarofredondo

    @rockstarofredondo

    3 ай бұрын

    Same. It’s horrifying. And whenever I tried to enforce any I would get added abuse hurled at me. So tired of the injustice.

  • @rainydayz7

    @rainydayz7

    3 ай бұрын

    I tried to advocate for myself when I felt my feelings were being dismissed--I was called "argumentative", "difficult", "selfish." I always had to apologize just to keep the peace in the house.

  • @swimmerfish34
    @swimmerfish343 ай бұрын

    I'm 29 and just realized two weeks ago that my mom is narcissisistic. Man, everything makes so much more sense now.

  • @Black_Swan_Rider

    @Black_Swan_Rider

    3 ай бұрын

    You wont realise fully until you try to pull away. Be careful.

  • @donnarobbins4316

    @donnarobbins4316

    3 ай бұрын

    OMG just realized all of this regarding my narc parents at age 65. Desperately trying to recover while I still have some years to enjoy life and realize I am not the defective person that needs to constantly please others.

  • @jds6964

    @jds6964

    3 ай бұрын

    Glad you realized at an early age. I am 59 years old and only know have I finally figured out that my mother is a narcissist.

  • @discodirk48

    @discodirk48

    3 ай бұрын

    Totally! I theorize that they are really just demons who took over our loved one invited in through trauma which makes me feel sad for my mother and I don't think it was a curse. I feel I had the mother I needed and while it was fraught with many ups and downs. I'm no mama's boy and don't take shit from anyone and true freedom was growing up in the 70's with a narcissist parent haha just be home when the lights come on. Sex drugs and rock and roll were quickly discovered at 13...

  • @ordered_saddle5

    @ordered_saddle5

    3 ай бұрын

    Im 27 and found my mom is a narc and our dad is an enabler... and have 6 siblings with manipulative roles and I was the escapegoat it's been 3 month since I found out... Here my dear while I found my bro crying and confused, I have make the mistake of telling my little bro about this narc/dysfunction in our family and our mother is a narcissist and he told everyone what I told him and the whole family made a campaign on me... So please dear don't ever tell anyone that you know this shit. I know you want to tell everyone and say hey I got the answer ... But no you'll be doomed and may never stand up again... But if you feel the urge to tell someone talk to a psychologist/therapy , I repeat never tell any family/relative that you found out about narcissism keep yourself safe❤

  • @UnderstandingDarkness
    @UnderstandingDarknessАй бұрын

    Living with narcissistic parents is to dream about feeling loved.

  • @vessela7484
    @vessela74842 ай бұрын

    I used to say I need to go to the bathroom even though I didn't, and just sit there with my eyes closed and experience 5 minutes of peace. Highlight of my day.

  • @blueskiesforever114

    @blueskiesforever114

    2 ай бұрын

    I did too!!

  • @vessela7484

    @vessela7484

    2 ай бұрын

    @@softsophisticate wow that’s mad. Yeah some people are just built different and have very little respect for others.

  • @nnnnnnnnnnn7292

    @nnnnnnnnnnn7292

    2 ай бұрын

    I was screamed at for caughing and taking deep breaths (I must have suffered from some sort of autoimune stuff, which made me gasping for and not being able to inhale enough air). Also I was screamed for drinking water often. And wanting to pee several times at night. So I had to find excuses to leave the room and try to get some air in. It was painful. I also peed in my toy little cups at night and tried to empty them unnoticed in the morning. Once I forgot to empty them. She almost destroyed me with her screams and remarks about me being a psycho.

  • @katharinatrub1338

    @katharinatrub1338

    Ай бұрын

    terrible experience but please do congratulate yourself for having discovered and put your creativity to work!

  • @1chipchap

    @1chipchap

    Ай бұрын

    The toilet was my safe space too

  • @99rylee
    @99rylee2 ай бұрын

    You've described me. My mother won't allow me to have boundaries, can't defend myself, can't talk about things that interests me, never has my back, never admits to being in the wrong, gaslights me, no empathy and compassion, argues, but she's always right, lies, manipulates etc..

  • @pickledpepper6576

    @pickledpepper6576

    2 ай бұрын

    I could have wrote that exact same thing. It’s amazing how they are all cookie cutters of each other.

  • @illssolution5720

    @illssolution5720

    2 ай бұрын

    Is your mom named Peggy?

  • @kristeneichhorn6913

    @kristeneichhorn6913

    2 ай бұрын

    I understand completely because I live this same nightmare everyday.

  • @sallybutler1005

    @sallybutler1005

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@kristeneichhorn6913same ❤

  • @heatherunicorn-sparkles1724

    @heatherunicorn-sparkles1724

    2 ай бұрын

    LOL. Youre my soul person.

  • @690169016901
    @6901690169012 ай бұрын

    I think the worst part of being raised by a narcissist that when you grow up you are most likely to date or marry someone who will treat you the same way and you will accept it.

  • @fionaforbes6100

    @fionaforbes6100

    10 күн бұрын

    It has taken a long time but I see the flags now but I definitely have trust issues because of it.

  • @lmsteller9736

    @lmsteller9736

    4 күн бұрын

    That’s your normal, you don’t know any other way.

  • @user-kc2xn3lu5k

    @user-kc2xn3lu5k

    3 күн бұрын

    Absolutely!

  • @user-lt6te8bd6i

    @user-lt6te8bd6i

    Күн бұрын

    Truth

  • @Eric-fg6fr

    @Eric-fg6fr

    Күн бұрын

    Or if you date someone who tries to protect you from the parent, the parent will go full crazy against your would be partner

  • @melodyc4064
    @melodyc40642 ай бұрын

    There is no “free will” in a relationship with a narcissist.

  • @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    2 ай бұрын

    Sure there is learn a little self defense and say no. Get out of the relationship you are an adult now I presume.

  • @oliviachipperfield6029

    @oliviachipperfield6029

    2 ай бұрын

    @melodyc4064 soooo true. Just listen to Robert Supolsky.

  • @lulumoon6942
    @lulumoon69422 ай бұрын

    *By the time you figure out the rules of the game, it's too late to play!*

  • @nadineelizabeth195

    @nadineelizabeth195

    2 ай бұрын

    You can't and don't want to play with a narcissist. Dissociating yourself from them is the only way

  • @ambabambiful

    @ambabambiful

    2 ай бұрын

    Yep complete and utter life destruction, and society just goes...what are you talking about? Oh well...!!!

  • @NikkaKriss

    @NikkaKriss

    2 ай бұрын

    There are no rules, they are constantly shape shifting and move the bar. Part of the problem of the chaos and mayhem they create is a lack of healthy rules and consistency.

  • @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934

    @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes I’m turning 70 in a month or so yet I’m only learning these last few years how much I was cheated out of..way too late in my case.

  • @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934 Never too late to be kind to yourself and close out hurtful people.

  • @odiechan
    @odiechan2 ай бұрын

    I sometimes try to dismiss my experience growing up with a vulnerable/covert narcissistic parent as ‘not that bad’. And then I sit down and listen to someone validate my experience and I’m suddenly in tears for the child version of myself who deserved a mother with compassion and empathy and who deserved to have boundaries observed and respected.

  • @iamsarahlee79

    @iamsarahlee79

    Ай бұрын

    I was in my 40's before I realized my mother was a covert narcissist & I was not the crazy one. I did not have a horrible childhood but there was a lot of instability and no sense of unity even though we were homeschooled and had very few friends. I always felt it was strange that we weren't closer than we were, but mother did not cultivate an atmosphere of closeness. It was worse for my 2 youngest sisters, though, they were scapegoats, my Dad was as well, until he passed away. I did not understand it at the time.

  • @Bucephalus84

    @Bucephalus84

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@iamsarahlee79Mom did her best to triangulate me and my siblings. We fought with each other constantly bc of her lies and manipulation. Even when you realize not to feed the beast, it doesn't mean others do.

  • @WellnesswithMeliss

    @WellnesswithMeliss

    18 күн бұрын

    I’m almost 40 and now finally seeing the truth! Mom is a covert it was always about her and her emotional issues growing up! She triangulated the relationship with my father which I regret having lost him 6 years ago. From a young age I would have to listen to her crying and complaining about my dad hence making me have a hate towards him! (This was unjustified) Growing up I had very traumatic relationships allowing others to disrespect me! Finally I do see that I am a people pleaser … thank god I have discovered the reality. Working out the negative consequences and love seeing videos like this they help me understand

  • @TheTracyshay

    @TheTracyshay

    9 күн бұрын

    Amen

  • @TheTracyshay

    @TheTracyshay

    9 күн бұрын

    The parent will never see it. Everyone else is the problem. And the negative responses. The verbal attacks never change. I ended up leaving a 20 yr marriage because my spouse is a narcissist who was mentally and emotionally abusive. Empaths suffer the most when they’ve become a people pleaser which at 51 I’m still trying to work on.

  • @firefeethok_tui2355
    @firefeethok_tui23552 ай бұрын

    My mother is also a narcissist. What I have finally realized does anytime they dismiss anything that you want to try to communicate to them, it’s because they don’t have any respect for you. They don’t actually love you respect you and they mostly want for you to fail so that they don’t feel so bad. This is how you know you’re dealing with a narcissist, in my opinion.when it’s your parent and they treat you like someone they don’t like and it doesn’t bother them that they hurt you? That’s a narcissist.

  • @LR-yu3mx

    @LR-yu3mx

    2 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Looking back, I realise that my nRc- psicho mom would have enjoyed killing me, the onlý daughter

  • @TRJE114

    @TRJE114

    2 ай бұрын

    Perfectly stated

  • @user-cz5lj2vx1f

    @user-cz5lj2vx1f

    2 ай бұрын

    So very true!!!

  • @smokingcrab2290

    @smokingcrab2290

    2 ай бұрын

    They use guilt and shame to keep you spinning on their little performance based hamster wheel.

  • @Bi0NiCwoman

    @Bi0NiCwoman

    27 күн бұрын

    Thank you for stating that so clearly. I feel exactly as you do.

  • @freesiasage
    @freesiasage3 ай бұрын

    Oh man, yeah being too aware of other people's emotional states can be so overwhelming. On the other hand I'm starting to feel like it's becoming a bit of a super power to be able to accurately sniff out people and their motives.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    I can detect a narcissist VERY fast because of this. I was on a trip and had to be forced to walk around and spend all day with one for multiple days as a tour guide, it was torture.

  • @b_cuziwant2

    @b_cuziwant2

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, it is a superpower but can also be overwhelming. Balance in all things 🙏🏽

  • @cassiejob

    @cassiejob

    2 ай бұрын

    This is so true about the superpower 😊

  • @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    @JoyPeace-ej2uv

    2 ай бұрын

    You can be aware of their states without being responsible for them. MAKE sure you tell them THEY are responsible for them. Be wary of phrase like "you make me crazy" "You make me happy when" and correct them. People are responsible for their own responses and feelings. "well that's nice it makes you happy but I don't have to do that for you." "Sad it makes you crazy but I have the right to do that walk away".

  • @user-lt6te8bd6i

    @user-lt6te8bd6i

    Күн бұрын

    I like how you described this as a Super Power.

  • @alkismith4577
    @alkismith45772 ай бұрын

    Narc father endlessly told me "Don't touch that, you'll break it". He would pull things out of my hands as he said it. Accused me of breaking things I hadn't broken. Anything I wanted to do he'd tell me "Don't do that, you'll fail." Also told me there was no money for college, so I should learn how to type so I could always get a job as "somebody's secretary". Refused to go to my HS graduation because it would be "boring". Told me I wasn't interesting anymore. And that's just off the top of my head. To this day, I'll still surprised people like me and want to spend time with and I'm 62.

  • @lizg.8626

    @lizg.8626

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m so sorry you had to go through that. That is horrible.🥺

  • @TinaHemphill

    @TinaHemphill

    2 ай бұрын

    Your story is so similar to my own and I’m 63. I felt like I was destined to disappoint him from birth.

  • @alkismith4577

    @alkismith4577

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@TinaHemphill Ugh, I'm so sorry. I just watched this video on Chronic Invalidation and it was like "Finally! Someone has given it a name." kzread.info/dash/bejne/anaFl7irkdXWYco.html

  • @katharinatrub1338

    @katharinatrub1338

    Ай бұрын

    Well your Father sounds like out of a Horrormoovie. I dearly hope you could mend yourself! and between you and me, I'm 72 ; )), so You're still young at 62 ; ) !

  • @nostramomus5317

    @nostramomus5317

    Ай бұрын

    @@alkismith4577 Yes, did not even ask about my college graduation (a good very college)! Main message was, "don't think too highly of yourself" but then criticism if we didn't hold respected positions on things like student council. Heard that they were so disappointed that I didn't run for Daffodil Princess, yet I was taught it was not good to seek attention for self. Plus my teeth were crooked but not crooked enough to get braces, in their minds, though my bro and sis got braces. I got whipped too, for things I didn't do...but the brother and his friend just had to learn to repair the broken window they broke on purpose. I'm almost 67 and it is still hard to know I tried to be a really great kid ( I have 3 sons) so I KNOW I was an easy to raise kid....but too compliant and just internalized the pain and criticism...still trying to heal now reading about narcessistic parents.

  • @andersondexter
    @andersondexterАй бұрын

    It’s amazing how much you can learn about yourself on KZread

  • @DSAfgv

    @DSAfgv

    22 күн бұрын

    I know. For a second, I forgot it was a video. It was so on point I thought he was talking directly to me. 🤯

  • @stephbowler3141
    @stephbowler31413 ай бұрын

    This is spot on! I grew up with a narcissistic mother and this describes me perfectly. I have poor self-esteem, blame myself for everything and am constantly hypervigilant. It's comforting to know that even though this was my upbringing, there are positive traits like empathy and having sensitivity. I never thought about having resilience but since I survived such a crazy environment, I definitely am pretty resilient.

  • @ladennayoung2939

    @ladennayoung2939

    3 ай бұрын

    I pray that things get better for you. I pray your strength in the Lord IN JESUS' NAME. AMEN. ❤❤❤

  • @darcymarwick5434

    @darcymarwick5434

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too! 😞

  • @donnarobbins4316

    @donnarobbins4316

    3 ай бұрын

    Amen! I am identifying with everything you have experienced and pray for all of us to heal and be the people we truly are.... Not what we were told we were, sadly...unless we kept pleasing

  • @isaq7202

    @isaq7202

    3 ай бұрын

    Amen

  • @BigHeartNoBS

    @BigHeartNoBS

    2 ай бұрын

    You had no choice but to be resilient.❤

  • @kathypariso6102
    @kathypariso610225 күн бұрын

    It’s like walking on eggshells every minute of every day waiting for “the other shoe to drop”, never knowing when the next rage or outburst is going to come or what will cause it. Spending all your time rehearsing your words in your head over and over in case one of those words unleashes a torrent of nastiness. It is hell on earth no matter whether you’re an adult or a child.

  • @helnbak9372
    @helnbak93723 ай бұрын

    Oh my goodness You just described me - I’m a 57 yr old who has had a lifetime of issues. Thank you

  • @domif.b.7657

    @domif.b.7657

    2 ай бұрын

    I am turning 50 this year, and I can subscribe to basically all of those behaviors, people-pleasing, hyper-vigilance...yep, but finally, slowly getting over that.

  • @pgpc6448

    @pgpc6448

    2 ай бұрын

    But keep in mind many of these traits are societal too

  • @sunsetsees

    @sunsetsees

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m 41, I’m recently earning too. I’ve he’s to after getting into so many problems out of people pleasing and self doubt. 😞

  • @user-qo7zp4pq6x

    @user-qo7zp4pq6x

    2 ай бұрын

    Same here… I’m 67…

  • @susiefairfield7218

    @susiefairfield7218

    2 ай бұрын

    Ikr? It does affect one for all of their lives... Couldn't figure out why... Good to know, now.. finally

  • @shadowpoet4398
    @shadowpoet43982 ай бұрын

    I tell myself "it's over, she's dead" but it won't stop. Thank you for making this video

  • @ShintogaDeathAngel

    @ShintogaDeathAngel

    2 ай бұрын

    It can take a while, hopefully you will get to feeling more at peace, though.

  • @amyjay2619

    @amyjay2619

    Ай бұрын

    PTSD

  • @r3sfernjbb

    @r3sfernjbb

    20 күн бұрын

    True. I can hear her in my head blaming me for having “an egg sandwich while your brother and sister have nothing”. That was her analogy for guilting me for working hard and succeeding. They really don’t like that.

  • @eastcoastmusicmachine7989

    @eastcoastmusicmachine7989

    12 күн бұрын

    Same, and I’m sorry. I feel like for me and mine, I’ll have to go on being her daughter for a long time, even after she gets to leave this planet and stop being my mom

  • @thinktwice-me7ie

    @thinktwice-me7ie

    5 күн бұрын

    same. What helps me is to look at a photograph of myself being 3 years old several times a day and just like myself. Sometimes I ask the photo what would you like to do? What would you like to have right now? And then I try to give it to myself. I feel the painful and repetetive inner dialogue with a narcissistic mother is a neurological pathway that gets more damaging the more often I drive along involuntarily. It can help to notice what is happening to me: Ah, here I go again and to not just be swept over by it unconsciously. And it can slowly be replaced by a loving dialogue with the child I was back then and the person I still am right now in some ways. I wish you the best for your healing journey.

  • @bekkibuenviaje9680
    @bekkibuenviaje96802 ай бұрын

    As the oldest child, I got blamed for everything and I still do. I don’t even argue about it now

  • @Spaced0ut000

    @Spaced0ut000

    2 ай бұрын

    As the oldest child who was parentified, I also got blamed for everything. My parents would blame me if my siblings would act up saying “they learned it from you, it’s your fault they’re misbehaving” bc I didn’t “parent” my siblings properly as a 9-17 year old child. No contact and therapy changed my life. i still struggle , but im much better off without them in my life. I hope you are able to find peace friend, no one deserves to feel the way narcs make their kids feel.

  • @Kate98755

    @Kate98755

    2 ай бұрын

    middle child…oldest was golden….my little sister was 5.5 years younger, i was told i should know better when we were both doing something wrong…i grew up to resent her, i’m 66, we finally are forming a friendship…they just brought this golden baby home and i became yesterday’s news…resentment, acting out, told so many cruel things, like diarrhea of thr mouth….my effort to be noticed, last spring my little sister said she didn’t remember being played with, read to, hugged, even just talked to…same experience i had, i was in my own silo trying to survive in this lackof fun, unloving childhood. they didn’t take us on vacations…but once we were gone they traveled the world, and then expected me to listen to the vacation stories.

  • @cindyolney6543

    @cindyolney6543

    Ай бұрын

    I was the baby but the only girl. You can imagine the nightmare of being told I had to be just like her but the again, 😢I would never be good enough. It is a horrific way to grow up, the issues from this abuse take us our whole life to resolve. I even became a therapist looking for my answers. Self love and reparenting myself has been my healing

  • @Detroittruckdoctor55

    @Detroittruckdoctor55

    Күн бұрын

    My kid sister would smoke skunks in the house and my mom would threaten me with homelessness. I would never smoke in the house house , I saved it for doing the work around her house. Yet I was blamed. No ironically my mom smokes pot now...

  • @Kate98755

    @Kate98755

    22 сағат бұрын

    @@cindyolney6543 me too cindy…i’ve been my therapist….my daughter also is my therapist….we have talked it all out, salf love, personal boundaries…just doing this I can see why when things trigger me.

  • @ciennelson1514
    @ciennelson15142 ай бұрын

    I am on the autistic spectrum but also have narc trauma and was bullied. I have difficulty picking up social cues yet I am hyper vigilant about negative emotions in others. Makes so much sense now.

  • @ann-mariegavette7669

    @ann-mariegavette7669

    2 ай бұрын

    God bless you! I grew up with a narcissist and I am parenting two boys with Autism....I admire people on the spectrum. So strong and brave...I wish you all the best in your future and relationships..

  • @lovelyenglishnature3277

    @lovelyenglishnature3277

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m also on the spectrum with two autistic sons and a narc mother. I did have a break from her for a while and I did lots and lots of research on all things autism and narcissism although it took me years to realise and accept that she’s narcissistic….I thought for ages that she was borderline. Now (because of chronic fatigue caused by all these issues) I have to live with her!!!😫. She can be nice (hence the confusion) but I am chief entertainment provider…everything revolves around her days out and I can only go out alone unless I’m going somewhere she doesn’t want to go. But what I want to say is that I’ve made a lot of progress and I’d never let any other narcissists into my life because I can spot them very easily. It’s something that sets you off on a self development journey and it can be very tough but ultimately I’m an empathic person and my mum is an empty shell.

  • @evil1by1

    @evil1by1

    Ай бұрын

    Autism is just socially acceptable selfishness. There are rules, follow them. The sun, food, wind and noise exist..cope

  • @ericapoe
    @ericapoe3 ай бұрын

    This topic is important. Not many people are discussing Narcissistic parents and how they damage the family. Thank you

  • @ace6285

    @ace6285

    3 ай бұрын

    There is a site called Adult Children of Narcissistic Parents on line. It’s great, free, lots of information and opportunity to ask questions about own situation. Check it out if you need it.

  • @ladennayoung2939

    @ladennayoung2939

    3 ай бұрын

    A LOT of people is discussing it now. By the grace of GOD. They weren't discussing it years ago. That is why the abuse, dysfunction, and toxic patterns and cycles were able to continue.

  • @AmericanPendetta

    @AmericanPendetta

    3 ай бұрын

    I fear that it’s a common feature of people from the 20th century that is normalized, and people don’t notice or they romanticize it. I think narcissistic parenting styles has been encouraged up until recently. Millennials are going nuts and it’s waking people up. These poor younger generations come from generations of traumatized vampires, it’s no wonder they’re “soft” and dependent. But luckily people are starting to become aware, and hopefully we’re seeing a correction begin. I come from a narcissistic father/family but instead of being submissive I just rebelled - too much - and was a bull in a China shop in society for like 20 years. Huge ego, mad at the world, identity issues, high anxiety, alcoholism. But now I know why and have peace, and I know exactly how NOT to parent. I know how to respect kids as their own individuals, support them in their interests, make them feel safe and self-secure, foster their strengths and love them unconditionally and guide them around dangers as they do their own thing. I’m 30 and not a father yet but I’d like to be one day.

  • @joey5816

    @joey5816

    2 ай бұрын

    I am so glad I found out about all the other people who suffered with a narcissist parent. I thought it was only me. Thank God we all survived!!!

  • @patriciacampbell7883

    @patriciacampbell7883

    2 ай бұрын

    It is very necessary.

  • @michelekurlan2580
    @michelekurlan25803 ай бұрын

    My tummy hurts as i watch this. My abuse history growing up was manifold.

  • @joanfinch7992

    @joanfinch7992

    2 ай бұрын

    My tummy hurts too

  • @CorePathway

    @CorePathway

    2 ай бұрын

    Big hug to you. Because I know you didn’t get enough hugs back in the day. Ask me how I know…

  • @peachberryblue295

    @peachberryblue295

    2 ай бұрын

    Like corepathway said, here's a virtual hug 🌷

  • @michelekurlan2580

    @michelekurlan2580

    2 ай бұрын

    @@joanfinch7992 ❤️💔❤️

  • @michelekurlan2580

    @michelekurlan2580

    2 ай бұрын

    @@CorePathway thankyou

  • @HelpfulHerbs
    @HelpfulHerbs2 ай бұрын

    Yes, why my nursing 'career' only lasted 8 yrs. Always second guessing and waiting for the other shoe to drop. I did connect with the patients well but i fell into major depression and never felt validated that i was doing a good job. Was afraid of the doctors/authority figures. Today i work on my own business ventures where i feel i can validate myself and am more in control of the environment.

  • @Janelegant

    @Janelegant

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow! This is so interesting...I am also a nurse but left clinical about 7 years ago because I was a very anxious nurse and I never thought to connect how I was feeling with how I was raised. Thank you so much for your comment as you have really given me something to ponder :)

  • @SMElder-iy6fl

    @SMElder-iy6fl

    2 ай бұрын

    I've always had a problem with authority figures and I am sure this is the reason.

  • @hannahpemarose6474

    @hannahpemarose6474

    2 ай бұрын

    fellow nurse here…I’m a hospice nurse on top of it while healing from an abusive narcissistic father…and I’m also breaking free from bedside nursing to go into nursing research with more autonomy and more accomplishment. Blessings to you

  • @PertNearFedUp-bj1tx

    @PertNearFedUp-bj1tx

    2 ай бұрын

    That's the way. Be strong!

  • @user-cz5lj2vx1f

    @user-cz5lj2vx1f

    2 ай бұрын

    Good for you that you figured out alternative career and took the risk to start your own busines! BRAVO!

  • @bereal6590
    @bereal6590Ай бұрын

    I realised I was giving my parents empathy and validation, compassion and understanding. Not triggering their sore spots, I thought they loved me, then I woke up! To who they are what they've done and what they're about! They're selfish, inconsistent, cruel, thoughtless, angry, contemptuous, disdainful, moody, incapable, manipulative, bullying, secretive, demanding, closed minded and messed my whole life up. Once you wake up, the reality is stark

  • @maryjohammons8905

    @maryjohammons8905

    22 күн бұрын

    I’m happy you’re here now go live a unfettered life☺️❤️

  • @bereal6590

    @bereal6590

    11 күн бұрын

    Thank you Mary, I wish I could. I didn't wake up until I got seriously ill, now I'm stuck living close by. I'm working on it though. Getting ill is how I saw it all in technicolour, very painful. All the very best to you 👋✌

  • @maryjohammons8905

    @maryjohammons8905

    11 күн бұрын

    @@bereal6590 Some of the most tender hearted folks have had terrible experiences in their lives! Sending upLifting comfort and love, my friend!

  • @bereal6590

    @bereal6590

    11 күн бұрын

    @@maryjohammons8905 thank you Mary, I needed that today. The same back to you, and your kindness 🤗

  • @maryjohammons8905

    @maryjohammons8905

    11 күн бұрын

    @@bereal6590 May you continue to heal and leave behind this chapter of your life! Whatever mistreatment you experienced may it only be a distant memory 😎✌️😘

  • @isabelleb.1270
    @isabelleb.12702 ай бұрын

    You started make me cry when I heard we were allowed to respect and love ourselves... I am on my way, but still not there... still thinking it is pretentious.

  • @janekollmann9167

    @janekollmann9167

    Ай бұрын

    A social worker once told me that I was entitled to a spot under the sun. I could'nt believe my ears an almost felI of my chair. Never knew that, but it changed my way of thinking about my self worth.

  • @jenniferklopman2557
    @jenniferklopman25573 ай бұрын

    He is 100 percent correct about the intuition piece. I met someone at work a little over a year ago and became involved romantically. When we first met, I was so triggered, I was shaky and sad, waking up in the middle of the night crying, stuff like that. My body knew and I ignored it. Never again. I endured alot of uniquely terrible emotional abuse from him that I could have just avoided. Your body is smart! Listen to it! ❤

  • @katharinatrub1338

    @katharinatrub1338

    Ай бұрын

    This is a very smart comment. Thanks for reminding me! Yes the body never forgets. Luckily.

  • @mscraig5147

    @mscraig5147

    28 күн бұрын

    Well said

  • @SunflowerHeliotrope
    @SunflowerHeliotrope2 ай бұрын

    I knew as a child that something about my narcissistic dad was “off” but I didn’t have the language for it; I just knew he wasn’t affectionate and supportive like my friends’ dads. Then I heard the word “narcissist” for the first time. Curious, I looked up the criteria according to the DSM-5, and it was eye-opening. I finally had a word for it, I had the language, and this helped immensely in therapy on my road to recovery. I’ve been diagnosed with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and I have just about all the traits listed in this video (I’ve gotten better about setting boundaries, still need to work on the people-pleasing). But most importantly, I’m *fighting back* whenever Dad’s narcissistic behavior starts up. The look on his face every time I stand up for myself is priceless.

  • @maryjohammons8905
    @maryjohammons89052 ай бұрын

    I was voted friendliest girl in my small all girl high school. When I came home I told my mom, she said “if they knew what a phony you are they’d never vote you that “!

  • @lindadee34

    @lindadee34

    2 ай бұрын

    How awful!

  • @nancymorris3286

    @nancymorris3286

    27 күн бұрын

    She couldn't stand for anyone else to give you positive feedback. It conflicts with the negative, shame filled narrative she is trying to foist on your self-worth.

  • @maryjohammons8905

    @maryjohammons8905

    27 күн бұрын

    @@nancymorris3286 Poor girl was jealous of anyone who had any kind of relationship with dad, even his own mother.

  • @bsinsight3097

    @bsinsight3097

    24 күн бұрын

    i am so sorry this happened to you!!!! I have always been a kind person and seemed to be liked by people and when my mother would hear how someone liked me, she would say "they don't know you" i know how this hurts.

  • @maryjohammons8905

    @maryjohammons8905

    24 күн бұрын

    @@bsinsight3097 Hugs my friend 🤗 Somehow I think it made me more compassionate, you know?

  • @pigeonhawk4832
    @pigeonhawk48322 ай бұрын

    It's even worse when you have narcissistic siblings who are exactly like the narcissistic and abusive mother and grandmother. This was my childhood and teenage years, and it was Hell on Earth. Thank God Im the total opposite of their vileness.

  • @farzanatarana4876

    @farzanatarana4876

    2 ай бұрын

    Omg same..my grandma and mother are both narcissistic and emotional abusers lately my sister is becoming just like them

  • @pigeonhawk4832

    @pigeonhawk4832

    2 ай бұрын

    @@farzanatarana4876 , I'm thinking it's a combination of genetics and environment. And just their innate, nasty souls.

  • @lizg.8626

    @lizg.8626

    2 ай бұрын

    I don’t know anyone else who has had this experience. My mom & sister are narcissistic beyond belief. I have two other sisters, who make excuses for my mom & sister. No one other than me & my dear friends (who have met them) acknowledges they’re narcissistic. Despite witnessing some awful emotional abuse, even my extended family says nothing. It’s like living in the twilight zone. I’m so sorry you’ve had the same experience. It’s so lonely & disorienting. Take care. 💕

  • @pigeonhawk4832

    @pigeonhawk4832

    2 ай бұрын

    @@lizg.8626 , it was awful growing up in that environment. Luckily my dad was the buffer to that toxicity. He could be firm and even hard at times, but at least he encouraged me to seek my own direction in life and just to be myself. My brother, who was kind of in the middle of these toxic and dysfunctional dynamics was ultimately swaded by my mother and sisters Narcissism and toxicity. He is now deceased, bad health, bad diet and was too caught up in their vileness. My my parents and grandparents are now deceased, so it's just me and the narcissistic, toxic sister. She still defends the toxic and abusive behavior and personality of my mother and grandmother.

  • @lizg.8626

    @lizg.8626

    2 ай бұрын

    @@pigeonhawk4832 wow. Same in my family. My dad was so grounding for me. He was my biggest cheerleader. Unfortunately, he passed away 17 years ago. So, now it’s just my narcissistic mom and sister, and the two other sisters enable them. I’ve done a lot of therapy and the best thing to do is just love them from afar. Don’t share a lot of personal details about your life because it will be exploited by your sister, or you will get demeaning comments. I had to learn over a long period of time that narcissist really don’t care about anyone but themselves.

  • @cindybrown9898
    @cindybrown98983 ай бұрын

    happy to report i haventseen my mother or father in ten years!! whoo. hoo. life is wonderful

  • @r_and_a

    @r_and_a

    3 ай бұрын

    congratulations! going no contact with parents can be so difficult & beyond flying monkeys, just well intentioned others who understandably can't comprehend how that can literally be necessary for the well being or even survival of adult children therefore they often question & even invalidate your choice but it's absolutely awesome you've lasted a decade & feel so good about it! 💚 thank you for sharing!

  • @ceraroberts2691

    @ceraroberts2691

    2 ай бұрын

    I walked away about the same time and I will second your statement "life is wonderful." It was so crazy how much better my life got once I went no contact. It's so fantastic these days, I shutter when mommy dearest sends my birthday cards ..... I don't know why she would want to remind me of my birthday.....big dummy!!!

  • @wavyybabyy

    @wavyybabyy

    2 ай бұрын

    Good for you girl!

  • @mycharieamor

    @mycharieamor

    2 ай бұрын

    Your parents won't live forever. Don't wait too long. Forgive them, for they know not what they do. ❤

  • @wavyybabyy

    @wavyybabyy

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mycharieamor no.

  • @njdevfan20
    @njdevfan203 ай бұрын

    I have found that my parents were not born wanting to harm or hurt their children. They are human beings with flaws. I have come to forgive those flaws. It felt to me they themselves are the broken ones. I am a survivor and am stronger because of their flaws.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    We all have to use radical acceptance in order to look at our parents, but also many other people in our life. I applaud you for the insight.

  • @tigermomsmith1478

    @tigermomsmith1478

    3 ай бұрын

    Love the sinner hate the sin.

  • @tigermomsmith1478

    @tigermomsmith1478

    3 ай бұрын

    I have a parent who is a narcissist and my husband is one too. He’s a covert narcissist so I didn’t see it until I became a different person bc of his abusive behavior and I received help for counseling and from God.

  • @fparkes5781

    @fparkes5781

    3 ай бұрын

    A lot of people forget this.

  • @pollynunnally5863

    @pollynunnally5863

    2 ай бұрын

    Intentional by my mother and three narcissistic sisters and older brother..they called me a whore at age 16 but they lied about me my whole life..jealousy and being different from them..

  • @Kyrgizion
    @Kyrgizion2 ай бұрын

    I'm 40 years old and only recently started realizing and accepting that my loving mother is in fact a hardcore narcissist, and that her upbringing, though well meant, damaged me forever. I've been trying to heal for the last few years but with very little success.

  • @nonawolf7495

    @nonawolf7495

    2 ай бұрын

    It's a long road back, but you have an amazing tool set! Children raised by Narc Moms tend to be VERY resilient. (They had to be - their survival depended on it!) Chances are you also developed the gift of empathy, are able to read emotions, and are very independent. Children who live with a narc parent develop keen survival instincts... instincts which become very useful later in life. Yes, we were damaged. But like a broken bone, we heal stronger. Much love to you, my friend.

  • @yvonneherdman4951

    @yvonneherdman4951

    2 ай бұрын

    Kyrgizion: I well remember the day I realized that my mother's treatment of me my entire childhood was Verbal Abuse. I had thought it was Me...because I was told that I was the cause of all the problems in the family! I was almost 50 years old when I came to understand that she had verbally abused me. It was all about her...not me. It isn't easy to get free from parental programing, but by God's grace I believe what He says about me now, and I believe in His love for me and I live now with a quiet heart. I pray you will look to God through His word for your way out of the darkness of lies into the light of truth and life.

  • @nonawolf7495

    @nonawolf7495

    2 ай бұрын

    Amen!@@yvonneherdman4951

  • @nicole8511

    @nicole8511

    2 ай бұрын

    Hi, here is a book I loved and a suggestion for you. By Lindsay C Gibson: Recovering from Emotionally Immature Parents. It was really awesome. She has free articles and videos too. I am rooting for you and send best wishes ✨️

  • @neva.2764

    @neva.2764

    13 күн бұрын

    With very little success because of your mindset. It starts with your language: "damaged me forever" isn't exactly productive as you set the outcome that is opposite of what you need.

  • @jds6964
    @jds69642 ай бұрын

    I am 59 years old and only in December of 2023, did I finally figure out that my mom is a narcissist. She can never accept responsibility for anything going wrong. I wish that I had known about this years ago. I would have such a better life.

  • @karmasutra4774

    @karmasutra4774

    2 ай бұрын

    That's what made you you.. but now you have time to do the things you want without anyone criticizing it ❤

  • @tammybagwell1741

    @tammybagwell1741

    Ай бұрын

    I feel you. I just figured it out this past year and I'm 52 years old Hugs to you

  • @mimibaker2022
    @mimibaker20222 ай бұрын

    Common symptoms of adult children of narcisstic parents 0:34 negative self perception - low self esteem and self doubt 1:17 chronic self blame 2:17 difficulty setting boundaries 4:41 emotional challenges - people pleasing, prioritizing needs of others 5:51 hypervigilance- anticipating negative feedback 7:16 emotional disregulation - anxiety, depression anger 8:45 difficulty with trust and intimacy 10:36 positive traits - empathy and compassion 12:00 resilience and strength - tolerate highs and lows 12:34 independence and self reliance 13:52 heightened intuition and sensitivity

  • @jazziew2148

    @jazziew2148

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you!!

  • @nadineelizabeth195

    @nadineelizabeth195

    2 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this because i don't want to watch the video rn

  • @justmemother2

    @justmemother2

    2 ай бұрын

    Thanks for taking notes!

  • @oliviachipperfield6029

    @oliviachipperfield6029

    2 ай бұрын

    @mimibake2022 I have every one of these 😢.

  • @mimibaker2022

    @mimibaker2022

    2 ай бұрын

    @@oliviachipperfield6029 keep going! You’re doing great! Look how far you’ve come! You got this girl

  • @rainydayz7
    @rainydayz73 ай бұрын

    My mother is a narcissist. She also suffers from PTSD and CPTSD. I strongly believe she has these narcissistic traits as "revenge" on her past and "someone owes her." I told my mother something that was true and provable. She dismissed me, I tried to defend the hurt I felt from her, and she then said, "I was never allowed to be right when I was young. I'm your mother and you have no right to challenge me." I was 32 at the time, and I was reiterating medical advice her doctor had given me. She couldn't accept that what I was saying was truth.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    Narc parents NEVER let you grow up because that would mean treating you with respect and a sense of equality instead of acting like a godly figure. One of the reasons I went NC was realizing I would never grow up under their mental domination and infantilization they use as a control mechanism, to destroy your confidence and sense of self.

  • @CorePathway

    @CorePathway

    2 ай бұрын

    Narcs can’t hear it. She is doesn’t want to hear it. She is not a part of your healing; don’t even try to involve her.

  • @w8what575

    @w8what575

    2 ай бұрын

    Omg! This is what people do to me…I call it the curse of Cassandra who was given the gift of prophesy but when she rejected apollo, he cursed her with no one believing her prophecies

  • @TopperPenquin

    @TopperPenquin

    2 ай бұрын

    I am gifted with Julia being my Helen of Troy.

  • @mimibatman2787

    @mimibatman2787

    5 күн бұрын

    Yes! One of the most frustrating things is not being able to speak of reality (truth) without being attacked. Truth is so important.

  • @annabanzon313
    @annabanzon3133 ай бұрын

    Yes, in case u are wondering if someone is narcissistic, pay attention to how they treat your important milestones like graduations, birthdays and getting married etc. They struggle big time because they know they should be happy for u but actually they are seething with anger. Which is so unnatural for a parent to feel and they know that. So they will just smile or be present but they won't actually celebrate or praise you in any way. They will even withhold gifts or money because they are so upset at your progress.

  • @discodirk48

    @discodirk48

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah demons are diabolical and make great actors! I wound up gay from the trauma of being raised with a narcissist mother but anytime I was going through problems she would often go on a trip and avoid dealing and leave me with the stepfather. I had my epiphany when my mother told me that the gay man she had introduced me to on a luncheon date hadn't liked me and seemed to derive great pleasure in telling me why! Ha ha anyways I haven't seen her in over 10 years and they are the peaceful years.

  • @annabanzon313

    @annabanzon313

    3 ай бұрын

    @discodirk48 yes, a zero on a number line is better than a negative number.

  • @SirenaSpades

    @SirenaSpades

    2 ай бұрын

    My experience is that my narcissistic parent uses the milestone to show off and preen. Then behind closed doors, they go back to their nasty ways.

  • @annabanzon313

    @annabanzon313

    2 ай бұрын

    @SirenaSpades indeed. My mom would also get pissed of other relatives or friends gave me any praise or gifts. Hard to tell if it's because they loved me more than she did. Or if she's just plain envious of the attention I was getting at the time.

  • @JessG_20

    @JessG_20

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@SirenaSpades Yeah my dad really did that with my sister. She was the successful one so I didn't get this treatment 😂 He also used his family in general to brag and make himself appear more loved and surrounded by other people than he actually was. Behind closed doors, he didn't actually care about family.

  • @somai_1
    @somai_12 ай бұрын

    This is me. I'm blamed by parents for all of their own issues that have nothing to do with me, constant criticism, nothing I do is ever good enough. No stable relationships, friendships are not supportive, no life partner. Middle-aged now, too late to build a life now. At this point I don't believe anyone would want me or that I can rely on anyone new.

  • @martinadewsnap2337

    @martinadewsnap2337

    Ай бұрын

    it is never too late. Find what your true passion or purpose is by using mediation lie Vision Walk and do it may be in an experiential transformative holiday away. It changed my life.

  • @KeithDart

    @KeithDart

    Ай бұрын

    Not too late. Live the life you have left.

  • @ketherwhale6126
    @ketherwhale61262 ай бұрын

    Petting the narcissist is the fourth “ F” in the trauma response, Flight, Fight, Freeze or Fawn.

  • @OmSelf432
    @OmSelf4323 ай бұрын

    I knew i had to escape when i was 5

  • @l.c838

    @l.c838

    3 ай бұрын

    You were very wise!

  • @r_and_a

    @r_and_a

    3 ай бұрын

    same, one of my few memories of childhood was crying alone at kindergarten feeling like "i want my mommy" but realizing the woman who had that role in my life was absolutely not who i wanted & would never be while grateful i understood that so young & it definitely was helpful, i still took decades to fully go no contact (which honestly happened mostly accidentally as was too depressed to have contact with anyone) i hope you were able to not only escape to survive but have created the sort of life you always deserved & are now thriving 🌈

  • @christabelleblue9901

    @christabelleblue9901

    2 ай бұрын

    I ran away from home regularly from the age of 4, even created my own 'den' by the river as my new home because I knew I needed to get away permanently as soon as I could manage by myself. Eventually left permanently at 15...

  • @ellebee3057

    @ellebee3057

    2 ай бұрын

    At 7 I was convinced my “real Mom” was hidden somewhere against her will and replaced by this woman pretending to be my mother. So I looked for signs of a secret room in the house. Pathetic!

  • @sarahgc434

    @sarahgc434

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow. Thank you for sharing your experiences. I was clipping coupons for when I moved out. I was 5. Imagine my disappointment when I found out coupons expired.

  • @annakrajan
    @annakrajan2 ай бұрын

    As a child and young woman, I always heard that I was unworthy, bad, and stupid. Now I am 54. Nothing changed. I'm still stupid.

  • @Krlowanigu-mg6eg

    @Krlowanigu-mg6eg

    2 ай бұрын

    Nie, nie jesteś.

  • @janetmalcolm6191

    @janetmalcolm6191

    2 ай бұрын

    Bet you are far from that. Don't believe this. It is ingrained in you now. Forget anything you were told before.

  • @cassiejob

    @cassiejob

    2 ай бұрын

  • @nonawolf7495

    @nonawolf7495

    2 ай бұрын

    No - you are a survivor. A stupid person could not have learned the survival skills you needed to survive. Sending hugs your way, Dear @annakrajan

  • @user-qo3jh9mn1t
    @user-qo3jh9mn1t2 ай бұрын

    "When will I be made to feel small?" As soon as you feel good about yourself. I think my mother had a homing device that let her know the second I started feeling okay about myself. She trained my siblings to do the same thing. It's so automatic they don't even realize they're doing it. i have extremely limited contact with them.

  • @GN315-pe6ul

    @GN315-pe6ul

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah, this. The second you feel a shred of positive self-esteem, either the narc or their flying monkeys swoop in to crush it and you, for having the audacity to feel a shred of anything good about your so obviously inferior, bad self.

  • @chrisnstar

    @chrisnstar

    2 ай бұрын

    Exactly. After my mom died my sister stepped up to the role of chief narcissist. Like the wicked witch of the west was worse than her dead sister, my sister was worse than my mother.

  • @stefanegstrup3145

    @stefanegstrup3145

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds like my mother. It truly suck.

  • @margaretsnewtoylynnparks5336

    @margaretsnewtoylynnparks5336

    Ай бұрын

    This is an Inheritance from hell! Mother did not die/ sister got possessed!

  • @r3sfernjbb

    @r3sfernjbb

    20 күн бұрын

    @@chrisnstarright!! What’s with the way they step into the role? Have they been waiting for it like a promotion? I seriously can’t figure it out.

  • @TheMary0831
    @TheMary08312 ай бұрын

    I show a lot of borderline tendencies. I just have discovered that I spent a lot of my life in total dysregulation. I call it going on autopilot. It's horrible. I am only recovering now that I'm 60. I knew I had CPTSD, but didn't know what to do about it. Watching your explanation is incredibly helpful in seeing all of the conflicting emotions and thoughts that cause paralysis.

  • @liquidjackson7172
    @liquidjackson71722 ай бұрын

    I was always made to feel like i was a monster from the smallest mistakes. Anything I did, wasn’t good enough to earn back her “love”.

  • @darcymarwick5434
    @darcymarwick54343 ай бұрын

    My mom (83) still does it to me (53)

  • @Dee-kt7yo

    @Dee-kt7yo

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too 53, 88 yr old mom a d I'm her main caretaker. I can't stand her but I've set my boundaries and try to do my best without getting triggered.

  • @r_and_a

    @r_and_a

    3 ай бұрын

    i hope both of you commenting are being sure to prioritize your self care 💚 there are lots of groups & communities online who can understand & help support you while navigating relationships with narcissists you can't or don't want to go full contact with

  • @MNcoquicoqui

    @MNcoquicoqui

    3 ай бұрын

    I went NO CONTACT. Best decision I made for my mind and mental health.

  • @user-mk5ud8xs2r

    @user-mk5ud8xs2r

    2 ай бұрын

    They never stop. They also think they are still that young beautiful creature who is always better than the next... They are sick in their mind.

  • @khalil010

    @khalil010

    2 ай бұрын

    why do you even talk to her?

  • @sarah.j.777
    @sarah.j.7772 ай бұрын

    My narcissistic "parents" tried to create this self-blame etc in me but I was always very objective. I knew by 5 years old that I was with seriously disturbed people. And by 12 yrs old I was like F you! I'm doing what I want, not staying here with your craziness!

  • @user-lw3ri8us4w

    @user-lw3ri8us4w

    2 ай бұрын

    omg i wish i didnt take till age 30 to get to that point...

  • @MissG8340

    @MissG8340

    2 ай бұрын

    So strong of you well done

  • @johnsorrell1581
    @johnsorrell15813 ай бұрын

    I’m 19yr and I still have a Father who says he doesn’t want to believe he’s the problem but the support of my life even when I lost my birth mother since 3yrs old, he physically punished me, mentally and emotionally abused me and now for the past few weeks I lost my stepmother, I still want him to open his eyes and see that he is still hurting me even though all those years I have been suffering from pleasing him, forgive him and I’m F@&KING SICK OF HIM, that I don’t care what happens to him anymore!!! P.S I apologize for my language.

  • @r_and_a

    @r_and_a

    3 ай бұрын

    i'm so sorry for your experience 💚 your language is completely understandable imo as you absolutely *deserve* your desired recognition, validation & resolution of the mistreatment but unfortunately (as you appear to already recognize) that's *highly* unlikely to happen no matter what you do at least glad you're realizing these things as young as you have so you have more time to create & enjoy your own life worth living full of people who will actually respect & support you rather than continuing to invest so much in someone so unwilling to reciprocate. congratulations on making it this far & best wishes moving forward 🌈

  • @M_SC

    @M_SC

    3 ай бұрын

    Narcissists can’t see it. It’s part of the disorder that they aren’t capable of much self awareness, incapable of learning from consequences. You will Never get this. You have to stop wanting it. Let him prove to you he’s a narc and let that be enough. You are enough without his validation.

  • @cheralyse1352

    @cheralyse1352

    3 ай бұрын

    @@r_and_a So much pain . . . now that you see the picture clearly, you can put distance between you and your "father". Reach out to those who will appreciate your uniqueness and lift you up. I'm glad you found Dr. Fox. He's like the good father we wish we had.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    You're 19, you need to become independent and control and limit your interactions with your father. This is a healthy part of growing up, but critical for the mental health of adult children of narcissists. If he cannot follow healthy boundaries you set for him (it is ok to tell him what these boundaries are), its in your best interest to go low or no contact with him. You deserve better.

  • @Quintessence2045

    @Quintessence2045

    2 ай бұрын

    At 19, I left with little support and forged my life. It is not easy but you will find those that love and appreciate you for who you are. Those people are gems. I pray you find the right path to your peace.

  • @Fenjar4022
    @Fenjar40222 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate that you mentioned the positive traits

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    2 ай бұрын

    Your recognition means a lot to me, thank you!

  • @tenningale

    @tenningale

    24 күн бұрын

    Agree. Especially when all the narc does is pathologize you. My covert narc mom always had ridiculous assumptions and mental gymnastics about how whatever I did or my goal was something "wrong" with me. Always projected her own flaws and behaviors onto everyone else. I stopped sharing information with her, which of course to her meant I was cold, distant, socially weird, don't care about other people, etc. Zero ability to self-reflect or understand how her behavior affects other people.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat57333 ай бұрын

    After that childhood, when you fall in love, you want to give love a chance and give your pleasing devoted best. You repeat that a few times, in a society where narcissistic people look for you. You repeat the bad experiences over and over, pleasing some idiots, until you find the window out, through the same skills they have, of retaliation directed back towards them, by quietly studying their narcissistic behavior. You switch to their rules, giving yourself new permission to be verbally, brutally logical, cold, business-like, non-caring, distrusting, critical, non-forgiving and with a hateful cold flame, which only you, yourself control. They have no effect on your emotions, even when they tell you that they have slept with your best friend, in order to isolate you. Then telling them to get gone, you begin a life again. Distrust, but more wisdom, gets you to a point where can cut off the wrong people quicker and have a decent life. You save you, with self-love. You experience a happy ending and a new beginning to live, however you want. Freedom is a breath of sweet air, compared to a prison cell, with a person whose heart is chained to a narcissistic soul.

  • @and93077

    @and93077

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, my kindred spirit.

  • @stefanegstrup3145

    @stefanegstrup3145

    Ай бұрын

    Spot on.

  • @angierox6964
    @angierox69642 ай бұрын

    Spot on! I’m 2 years 0 contact with mother. Father died 2020. Let the healing commence! But… single for 4 years. Learning to recognize, break patterns and set boundaries.

  • @cheralyse1352
    @cheralyse13523 ай бұрын

    YES!!! This is the video that brings me home to myself and a journey made crystal clear. Thank you for your clarity and generosity. My self-esteem has always been based on helping, fixing, giving to others starting with my mother. Then standing alone often depressed, lonely, lost. I pushed away men that would buy me presents and come at me with enthusiasm. I was attacked by a German Shepard while riding my bike at age 12, ran into the house in shock to tell my mother. Her response _ "oh great, now we're going to have trouble with the neighbors!". I eventually lost my voice - "selective mutism" they call it, as I lost myself. A nun took me before the class, shaming me and slapping me when no sound would come out of my mouth. My mother's response "those nuns are saints" and you're doing that on purpose. Forgive me if I go on. You are the first person who has ever "got me". What I struggle with now is my mother's repeated phrase, "don't ask me for anything!". Plus, I am always looking for people or pets to help, fix, nurture. So, the formula I hear is give "empathy and compassion" to myself. That suddenly makes me cry. How to do it? I've wasted so many years wandering emotionally. The good news is I have connected with one human being here who can effectively guide me out of this lonely life.

  • @fparkes5781

    @fparkes5781

    3 ай бұрын

    I am sorry you went through that and am glad you have found somerone to support you now.

  • @progressivedragon6664

    @progressivedragon6664

    2 ай бұрын

    @@fparkes5781 do you really think this correction of her statement was helpful to this connenter , given the topic??

  • @fparkes5781

    @fparkes5781

    2 ай бұрын

    @progressivedragon6664 It came from a place of concern and care, actually, and was definitely NOT a correction, in any way, and was intended to be supportive. When I re-read, I thought I had probably misinterpreted the OP's meaning. I don't do 'correction' of others. I don't feel your 'correction' of my comment was helpful when my intentions were kind.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh man. I actually experienced the inability to speak a few times as an adolescent. My uncles were so intimidating and aggressive that eventually when they would get in my face screaming and demanding answers when I did NOTHING WRONG, I would open my mouth and physically no sound would come out. I was TRYING to answer to try to satisfy his screaming, but my body failed me. Just complete traumatic stress like a soldier in a war zone thinking you're about to die, except youre 9 years old

  • @melvahampton902

    @melvahampton902

    2 ай бұрын

    😢 WOW! There are so many children that have been neglected and poorly treated with no concern. Parents are supposed to love, nurture, and teach their children to be empathic, caring and compassionate adults. Instead many people have grown up with narcissistic people who can't even begin to see or understand what they are doing to their children, not to mention the broken adults they become. It's so sad. Not everyone are ment to be parents. God bless all those who have gone through this neglectful upbringing. It breaks my heart 😢

  • @lo-ul8nq
    @lo-ul8nq3 ай бұрын

    My mother is a Narcissist, I got C-Ptsd from the abuse. I am 47 female. I am the oldest of five children my parents had. Jesus is our hope. I been a Christian for over 11 years now. God is Love. I know my worth and values.

  • @karenc1733

    @karenc1733

    2 ай бұрын

    You are so right. Jesus is the one who saves and redeems. If we allow it, he will heal all our wounds. For some it’s instant, for others it’s a process. I’m in the process. A lifetime of bad programming is being adjusted, from unhealthy to healthy.

  • @obeyheart3667

    @obeyheart3667

    Ай бұрын

    Amen❤

  • @ellebee3057
    @ellebee30572 ай бұрын

    A plea to spouses of narcissitic parents: Get them away from your kids! My Dad was great and any strengths I have resemble those of a girl raised by an only Dad. But they’re overshadowed by the emotional damage caused by my mother. I would have been far better off with no mother at all.

  • @user-sd4lf6rm7l
    @user-sd4lf6rm7lАй бұрын

    My father was a narc, i remember being taken to a psychiatrist at 7 years old, by my parents and he said his not the problem you are,his learning negative traits from you, i remember my father storming out in a rage.

  • @brightphoebus
    @brightphoebus3 ай бұрын

    Yep, that's me! Dr fox, I had a scary occurrence this evening. I left work early because it was snowing, and nearly had a head-on collision with an oncoming car. We scraped each other's sides at about 50 kph, and she got scratched and my side mirror was broken . I thought I was about to bite the big one, and I didn't want to go. I still have things to do! It made me think maybe I'm trying too hard in life. I should not have gone to work at all today. I should have checked the forecast. How sad and what a waste if my life was lost due to stupid snow, due to trying to measure up, trying to make enough money to be worthy and to not be deemed a failure period to prove to my aunt that I'm working hard enough. But it's not worth it. My child needs a mother. That was a brush with death tonight.

  • @dk3062
    @dk30623 ай бұрын

    My parents didn't seem like they were narcissistic yet I have a lot of these symptoms. They were emotionally neglectful but no overt abuse.

  • @Youtubehandlesaresilly

    @Youtubehandlesaresilly

    3 ай бұрын

    You might want to check out vulnerable narcissism.

  • @TheWTFMatt

    @TheWTFMatt

    2 ай бұрын

    Neglect, being dismissive, gas lighting... these are emotionally abusive

  • @kristeneichhorn6913

    @kristeneichhorn6913

    2 ай бұрын

    I am in the exact same situation!

  • @inbornwanderlust1076

    @inbornwanderlust1076

    2 ай бұрын

    It's worth considering that one or both of them could be on the spectrum. There's a lot of talk about narcissism currently, but there are many autism traits that mirror narcissism also. There has only recently been more medical and scientific focus on autism. It just wasn't considered 40+ yrs ago unless it was a severely autistic male. I'm 44 and dealing with and unpacking all this confusion myself. My father is a narcissist, but my mother, who always showed the traits but still was confusing because she also seemed like she cared so much, turns out she is on the spectrum. Her issues stem from not a lack of caring but the actual inability to be able to see others as autonomous beings who think and behave differently than herself. Very unfortunately, people who are on the spectrum who are not aware of it, are highly susceptible to the influence of narcissists, because the narcissist easily makes them believe that everyone thinks the same way. So what I have is a narcissistic father and a mother who has been under his mind control her whole lifetime of knowing him, but isn't aware of it, so she has never been able to realize or understand that this dynamic is not normal. And of course, she also outwardly acts just like him. Often times also, just two people who are on the spectrum marry and there isn't narcissism actually going on, but it seems that way especially as you get older and become your own independent person because they don't have a way to understand that you may be legitimately different than them with your own desires, preferences and life goals.

  • @dk3062

    @dk3062

    2 ай бұрын

    @@KZreadhandlesaresilly I'm pretty sure my Dad was/is that. I have a lot of those traits that it scares me and I wonder if what I'm dealing with is being a narcissist. I have often presented myself as a victim and as vulnerable in order to recieve sympathy because I feel so horrible. My mother om the other hand was really lacking in nurture. I didn't recieve a verbal "I love you" until I initiated it my 30s. Plenty of cards and letters that ended with, "Love Mom" I think there was just enough to be able to deny that there was a problem. That said my parents have acknowledged there was problems. Unfortunately I am left with the baggage of a very lonely childhood.

  • @l.5832
    @l.58323 ай бұрын

    Fifty years after the fact, I discover from my narc mother that when I was 5 years old there was a mother/child tea put on by the school for the first day. The kids went off to class, leaving the mothers with their tea party. Well, apparently I dashed off with the other kids, happy as a clam. Fifty years later she confronts me "AND YOU NEVER EVEN LOOKED BACK!" Major narc injury. My older sister kicked up such a fuss my mom had to sit in with her for the first few days of classes. Mom refused to give us independence. (My sister stayed living with Mom until Mom's death in her 90s)

  • @mvbigmagic4048

    @mvbigmagic4048

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, I look back on it, and at every stage of my growth, my narcissistic mother tried so hard to sabotage me. :( I'm amazed that I pushed through to finish post-graduate school and have a successful career. I think my only saving grace is I never went back after I graduated from high school, and just kept moving farther and farther away...... I didn't even invite my parents to my wedding, because my dad said, "I don't want to meet your boyfriends anymore." Plus I was a student, and working when we got married. We couldn't afford it. I realize now, my parents crashed my elopement. My mother hates my husband, because he had NORMAL parents. He can see through her and doesn't put up with her bizarre manipulation. He was so patient with me as I navigated understanding the sociopathy my mother displayed all my life. I am sure my mother thinks my husband "stole" me from her. But I am not a possession. I don't belong to her. I don't belong to my husband. I have free will, and she absolutely HATES that. As she ages, and has started developing dementia, she has gotten more and more paranoid and MEANER to the point that she wanted control over my bank account. CREEPY. I never thought she would have devolved to this point. So many delusional behaviors.

  • @airthrowDBT

    @airthrowDBT

    2 ай бұрын

    My mother cant remember something I said an hour ago but can remember in detail, perceived sleights and embarrassing stories about me from when I was 4-8 years old. Most of the perceived sleithts were not even real and were she not a freaking lunatic, would be perceived as healthy childhood development and individualism.

  • @SirenaSpades

    @SirenaSpades

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mvbigmagic4048 I didn't invite my father to my wedding, college graduation, and I avoid him at all costs.

  • @4everu984

    @4everu984

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow. Brilliant insight.

  • @lindafogarty3924

    @lindafogarty3924

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m wondering if there are others with narc.mothers who don’t listen? I have to tell her things, especially when it comes to things about myself, over and over again. They never register. It’s like she nods her head but she’s not listening?

  • @lisacalder9323
    @lisacalder93233 ай бұрын

    This man just told my life story!! Wow

  • @WhitePelicansareReal

    @WhitePelicansareReal

    3 ай бұрын

    Ditto ❤

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    Glad you found the video helpful.

  • @kristinmeyer489
    @kristinmeyer4893 ай бұрын

    I grew up in a narcissisticly based family system. I escaped to college. They sabotaged me and ruthlessly have insisted on shoving all the family's dysfunction on me, to the point where they found people to hijack my life, thru a covert course of conduct crime colloquially known as gang stalking (organized stalking and covert harassment, crimes meant to predetermined problem people, and literally push them into expectations). It is a crime against humanity, is and does employ illegal tactics, and uses criminals at times, for the criminal violations of silenced targets, silenced by the very real threat, AFTER this cruel form of antisocial life cancelling, of psychiatric incarceration. After all, the widespread smearing creates widespread fear of targets, having been painted as delusional, crazy boogeymen. So of course there are EXTRA EYES PRIMED AND READY TO "SEE" WHAT THEY'VE BEEN TOLD TO SEE, in order make the lives of those entrapped by these groups a neverending living HELL.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your story. Your resilience is truly inspiring.

  • @thecoyote9866
    @thecoyote98662 ай бұрын

    One of the most shocking yet obvious things I realized. I'm 26 and despite doing well financially for most of my twenties I still feel like a teenager lol. It’s as if I got stunted somewhere down the line

  • @danielapolo7346
    @danielapolo73462 ай бұрын

    9:23 This really impacted me deeply and the worst part is in my african culture if you are a kid they dismiss your feelings entirely till you reach an age where it can get difficult with laws etc. I always wanted to feel seen when i was a little child I wanted them to consider me and my feelings and not being treated like a burden. I never understood why they were so mad and always blame me infront of other acquaintances or people and threatened me. I forgave them a long time ago even now when I am in my adulthood they changed a lot yet it doesn’t dismiss what I went through and how I subconsciously react and cope with life. I feel shameful all the time and in alert

  • @chuchaichu
    @chuchaichu2 ай бұрын

    My father beat me a bit too often on top screaming at me regularly. It took me quite some years/decades to learn to set boundaries, to not curse the world, and to care and to have faith in the good. It’s difficult to quit the blaming game and to focus on making things a bit better, but definitely doable.

  • @ann-mariegavette7669

    @ann-mariegavette7669

    2 ай бұрын

    Keep up the good work. You're very wise and I am sorry you were treated so badly. Sending love

  • @WoundedWarrior77

    @WoundedWarrior77

    10 күн бұрын

    It’s about taking full responsibility.

  • @nnnnnnnnnnn7292
    @nnnnnnnnnnn72922 ай бұрын

    I am stunned! You are 100% correct. I so needed it, because oftentimes I just blame myself. It was like that from early childhood. To make the matters worse, the narcissistic mother keeps saying that if I feel guilt it means I must be guilty.

  • @mmkvoe6342

    @mmkvoe6342

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh my word, I can hear my mom's voice saying this, whether it's a true memory that she ever did say so or not.

  • @victoriam2894
    @victoriam28943 ай бұрын

    Thank you for explaining my life. Dr. Fox. I grew up with 2 narcissistic parents (dx by a psychiatrist). Can finally muster some self-compassion for the anguish i endured as a child and my poor choices in choosing romantic partners in adulthood. The empathy, intuition, sensitivity, and resilience are lasting gifts i intend to put to good use. Thanks again. A lifesaver. ❤

  • @MissG8340

    @MissG8340

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes the gifts of empathy and sensitivity etc is the positive outcome I have that too but sadly still sad and confused deep down and inside from childhood trauma Also just a question do 2 narcissists parents get on or do they clash both being strong willed and wanting things under their control???

  • @victoriam2894

    @victoriam2894

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MissG8340 Please be gentle with yourself and allow all.the time needed to heal. One of the best youtube comments that helped me i will pass along to you. "Get it together and find your worth." I do not know in general if 2 narcissists who marry each other get along. My mother was grandiose. She called the shots. My father was covert (vulnerable). He undermined her efforts via passive aggressive tactics that were subtle, sly, and cruel. They divorced after 32 years of wedded misery. Good luck, you can rise and shine.

  • @MissG8340

    @MissG8340

    2 ай бұрын

    @@victoriam2894 hi Victoria Thank you for your reply I try to be kind to myself but all those thoughts of your not good enough, why are you stupid that I was bought up to think about myself criticise myself over and over It’s like I’m just stuck in a rut where I know im worthy and have value and am aware I was treated badly and wrongly growing up but also I just don’t no how to move forward It’s just trying to have the strength and confidence to be independent and move forward with my life My upbringing was with a dominant narcissist father who controlled every move we made made us feel worthless and disabled us in such a way we were made to feel we couldnt survive without him and also that we owed him our life as he felt he was God and everything that happened was because of him

  • @victoriam2894

    @victoriam2894

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MissG8340 yes, I believe I understand. These discouraging thoughts get implanted when you are small. They get stuck and keep looping in the mind until they seem true. Except they are not the truth. They are your father's lies. To feel better you must decide to leave him behind. It is hard. You are worth it.

  • @MissG8340

    @MissG8340

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you ❤ Yes its exactly that, the mindless loop that just goes round and round and round and believes all the negative thoughts inputted by my narc father It’s terrible I trusted him so I feel stupid for believing him growing up but at the same time your parents are the first ppl you trust 😢 It’s so hard I’m lonely 😞 and although sociable no one would ever understand what I go through It feels like the world is strong but me I was stupid to believe everything and even 42 years later seeing that it’s wrong find it hard to tell my mind that I know think my narc father was prob intimidated by my potential to be successful to be strong to be something in life so he put me down and made sure I never had a chance 😢

  • @kimlawson9869
    @kimlawson98692 ай бұрын

    when I was younger, there were no resources on this topic. it was so hard to find a therapist suited to deal with this so thank you.

  • @REBEKAHJOHNSON-lh6xh
    @REBEKAHJOHNSON-lh6xh2 ай бұрын

    I’ll be 34 in August and I actually grew up with a covert narcissistic mother. I see SO much of this in me. To make matters worse, I went straight into an 8 year prison/slavery to a narc “best friend”. I am now (as of yesterday) a year free. Freedom is possible, but it’s been a damn long journey!!

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your journey. It's inspiring to see how far you've come.

  • @ace6285
    @ace62853 ай бұрын

    I’m one of those. Mom and sister. Double whammy. Very good synopsis.

  • @tessasisson8746
    @tessasisson87462 ай бұрын

    My mother was a beautiful woman who was totally obsessed with herself. Everything was about her. There was no father. I realised at an early age I would have to raise myself, which I did, with varying degrees of success and failure.

  • @petergriffiinbirdistheword
    @petergriffiinbirdistheword2 күн бұрын

    I was raised by two narcissist so I didn't have a chance at a healthy happy life. When I finally got away from them, I fell prey to another narcissist. I now have a restraining order and severe CPTSD.

  • @michedaisy
    @michedaisyАй бұрын

    I’m damaged beyond repair. I forgive but my identity was never lost because it was never allowed to develop in the first place. I’ll never know anything but guilt and people pleasing. I’ll never know what boundaries are like. I’ll never know what kind of person I could have been. I will die oppressed and beaten down. No matter how hard I try to overcome the need to isolate from people and insecurities, I’m stuck with these traits. Thanks Mom. I love you anyway.

  • @user-wz4bz2fn6s

    @user-wz4bz2fn6s

    Ай бұрын

    I understand you. I too need so much real help.

  • @katieg7679
    @katieg76793 ай бұрын

    Love this video! For me, self compassion has been the biggest game changer. So many things fall into place when you can actually start to value yourself. Setting boundaries is getting easier. It used to feel like I was walking into a black hole.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad to hear that self-compassion has made such a positive difference for you!

  • @cheralyse1352

    @cheralyse1352

    3 ай бұрын

    Yep. Narcissists will get so upset when you "call them out", point out their behavior. It shatters their self-centered, warped reality of themself as entitled. Welcome the space she puts between you. You deserve better.

  • @Brian-uy2tj
    @Brian-uy2tj2 ай бұрын

    My dad was horrible narcissist. He was physically and emotionally abusive, when he wasn't being emotionally distant. I have dealt with the issues described in this video my entire adult life. Even recognizing this doesn't make the issues go away.

  • @msfishandchips7204
    @msfishandchips72042 ай бұрын

    Maybe it is a touch of BPD spectrum. That's nothing to be ashamed of. It provides a place to start to understand where to heal.

  • @bluedale6563
    @bluedale65633 ай бұрын

    You just described both my late parents especially my mother

  • @and93077
    @and930772 ай бұрын

    OMG - that’s me! 😂. I was the family scapegoat! I would constantly be twisting myself into a cone shaped spiral because the rules kept changing. Thank God for therapy and going no contact. Maybe I should have more therapy, because you’re telling me about myself…😂 I also thought I was psychic, I’ve been very confused about that. I once told a pregnant mum whom I was getting to know, that we need to go to the hospital right now today and I would come with her and call her boyfriend. She said no (I left it because I could see I was distressing her and as I said I was getting to know her) anyway, days later the baby died. I blamed myself and thought she would blame me too. Psychic things happen about every two weeks; so Dr you’re telling me it’s only a strong intuition? And when I look at my life and how I’ve managed to navigate my way through a series of complicated and difficult situations - I thought I had a guardian angel 😂. No guardian angel then?- just narcissistic parents and being the family scapegoat! Pity. Angels sound a lot more glamorous!😂. Thank Youuu 👍🏽

  • @bonnielucas1941

    @bonnielucas1941

    2 ай бұрын

    I think we all have guardian angels. And as for knowing things psychically, it sounds as though, in the example you shared, there was no way you could have known of the baby's fate. It seems psychic to me. Wishing you the Best!

  • @and93077

    @and93077

    2 ай бұрын

    @@bonnielucas1941 ahh, thank you babes 👍🏽

  • @KeithDart
    @KeithDartАй бұрын

    Astounding. You summarized my entire life in five minutes.

  • @AJR99
    @AJR9921 күн бұрын

    45 years old, and I definitely see myself in almost all of this. The need to please others was so strong for me that it eventually morphed into a desire to stay away from any relationship deeper than "friendly acquaintance." I'm one of those people who is friendly to everyone and friends with no one. Once Mom passed, I had no desire to ever take care of anyone but myself again.

  • @user-ph6dj8db8z
    @user-ph6dj8db8z3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for explaining all this. I feel all these things. I’m an only child and my narcissistic mom is aging making me her sole caregiver. The nightmare continues. Trying to set boundaries, gray rock, but hard to heal when I’m still in the thick of it. I feel both permanently damaged, but also a better human as I never wanted to be like her.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    I understand what you’re saying, and that is a difficult position. I admire you for doing what you feel is the right thing to do. I wish you all the best.

  • @attheranch873
    @attheranch873Ай бұрын

    This is so clear that it’s outstanding!!!!! I’d like to see one on adult children of sociopathic parents, and sadistic parents. I just can’t find any good information on it.

  • @joelthomastr
    @joelthomastr2 ай бұрын

    Notice, he's saying "narcissistic" not narcissist. He's not saying your parent necessarily had NPD, just that they had many traits of NPD. This means you don't have to wonder about whether or not they would actually be diagnosed, you can focus on what they did.

  • @87solarsky
    @87solarsky3 ай бұрын

    According to Dr. Craig Childress, narcissism is the result of pathological parenting. And, since attachment, whether secure or insecure, is intergenerational, one can expect this narcissism to continue from one generation to the next, until the attachment disturbances are repaired. This is done by remapping the internal working models of attachment, beginning with the primary internal working model of attachment and moving from insecure to earned secure attachment, and then tackling the secondary internal working model of attachment, known as Core Conflictual Relationship Themes, and, finally, resolving any trauma-bonding. A great overview about the aforementioned is found in the de-facto standard book on attachment and psychopathology, "Attachment Disturbances in Adults - Treatment for comprehensive Repair", 2016, by Drs. Daniel P. Brown (†), David S. Elliott, et. Al.

  • @ace6285

    @ace6285

    3 ай бұрын

    That’s a lot of babble for those who are inside the problem not outside with perspective.

  • @87solarsky

    @87solarsky

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ace6285 How exactly do you intend to meaningfully advance my understanding of the aforementioned or anything pertaining to it? I mean: "a lot of words"... Love the specificity!

  • @Kenzi24
    @Kenzi243 ай бұрын

    Thank you for doing what you do and with such compassion. Last summer I told my mom it would be nice if she asked me how I am back sometimes when I ask her how she is. She will always type out a paragraph and never ask about my life, for 10 years. She was so offended by me asking this that she blocked my number and ignored me on our birthday we share. I even apologized and said I wasn't attacking her, I really just wanted to be genuinely closer. She still thinks I'm evil and "dangerous for her mental health" and said horrible things about my dad and brother because they actually love me. I tried for months to make up and eventually asked "do you even want children" and she said "no thanks". That's when I decided to go no contact. That was in mid December so it's only been a couple months. It really sucks because I have sooo much love for her and worry about her all the time, but I know she doesn't feel the same. Sorry for venting, but this is what being an ANP is. But I will say, as I get older and with going to therapy for a few years and having a sane partner with good parents, I am starting to understand the correct way to think and the correct way to treat others. I was in ignorant bliss until 22, realized parents are supposed to be nice and had a ton of anger for for like 5 years, and now I'm getting to the point I can see it all from a larger perspective and know I deserved better, but to live and enjoy my own life. My spirituality has helped me a lot because I truly believe we reincarnate and we have ancient souls. It helps me believe that I am not just my mother's daughter, my soul existed for many lives before I even met her. It helps me feel like she is not a requirement in my life, I don't need her. I also feel like I have some of the bad traits my mom has because that is the only person who raised me and my only example. I also am hyper sensitive to criticism like she is, and I understand she is probably just deeply insecure, which makes me sad for her and have sympathy from afar instead of anger. I see her in myself at times, so I understand her, but that scares me sometimes. When you talked about the narcissistic wound, I almost have that but it's a cptsd wound. But I do feel like I have a self-awareness that she doesn't, so I can work at it and be a better person.

  • @DrDanielFox

    @DrDanielFox

    3 ай бұрын

    I appreciate you opening up and being vulnerable. It takes courage to share personal experiences like this.

  • @thomaspeterson5693

    @thomaspeterson5693

    3 ай бұрын

    I think my son Shane said it best when I was divorcing my narcissistic wife. It's not that she won't Dad , she can't. Don't start to feel sorry for her. Move on and enjoy the good people in your life.

  • @caroleminke6116

    @caroleminke6116

    3 ай бұрын

    You can stay no contact as you work through separating who you are from who your mother wants you to be 😊 you’re not her mother but your own mother now ❤

  • @janeadams647
    @janeadams6472 ай бұрын

    The way he laid out how it shapes your personality throughout your life was spot on. Just found this channel. Really looking forward to learning more and finally healing.

  • @georgenecopprimerenecopprimi
    @georgenecopprimerenecopprimiАй бұрын

    I grew up in a narcissistic household as an undiagnosed neuro divergent. I was the scapegoat, black sheep, it's only at 37 that I realised I have to go alone. They will never love me the way I have to love myself to flourish. I am moving on and going no contact.

  • @andreah6379
    @andreah637916 күн бұрын

    Any young person whose parent barges into their bedroom at ANY TIME day or night, and that same parent tells you to "shut up, stop your whining!" whenever you express your opinions and that parent expects you to do as they say, no matter what--all to adorn their own ego, while ignoring all your emotional needs...YES, you have a narcissist as a parent. Get a job, support yourself, and find your way out of the nightmare. With all sincerity, I wish you luck. I was in your shoes, but once I got away, my life grew exponentially. Yours will, too.

  • @wavyybabyy
    @wavyybabyy2 ай бұрын

    I finally moved out at 18 due to the constant neglect & abuse from my mother, I went no contact unless it was about that one last string attatched as she is controlling & only "cares" when it benefits herself. I ended up moving back in as an adult because I was never taught basic skills or how to be an independent individual... I am extremely disappointed in myself by seeking out a parent that never even existed in the first place... I am practicing self compassion, but, I feel like I trapped myaelf after finally escaping the neglect & abuse after years just because I had fallen on a hard time, but it ended up being harder for me instead...

  • @lindadee34

    @lindadee34

    2 ай бұрын

    I think that's really important, the realization you had that that your 'parent' NEVER EXISTED IN THE FIRST PLACE. You get so used to blaming yourself for everything, you aren't even aware that they've been putting you in a prison cell of emotional/ physical/ etc. torment for so many years, and thrown away the key. You will get out of there, believe me, eventually. Hopefully, ASAP. Remember- It's not you Fault! Because you're subjected to their completely distorted sense of reality, and cruel tendency to want to hurt you- you became brainwashed into believing their lies. It takes time to heal!

  • @susannefitzpatrick9955
    @susannefitzpatrick99553 ай бұрын

    I only cottoned onto the fact I had Narc parents about 18 months ago thanks to videos on You Tube (I’m in my 60’s) and realise now how much my childhood has blighted my adulthood (as two failed marriages can testify). It’s like a slow sui*ide from which there’s little hope of escape. Anyone with similar parent(s), GET OUT as soon as you can so their ‘poison’ doesn’t kill YOU.

  • @denisedevoto5703

    @denisedevoto5703

    2 ай бұрын

    So true! I wish I had got out and stayed out. I finally stopped seeing my family in 2018. I have so many auto immune diseases, and I really blame it on my parents and my second marriage. The key is to get away and stay away.

  • @deeprollingriver52
    @deeprollingriver522 күн бұрын

    As a child, I cannot forget the hundreds of nights, after being yelled at and hit, I cried myself to sleep, praying someone would save me.

  • @alanbirkner1958
    @alanbirkner19582 ай бұрын

    Hi, I'm 74, it took years of therapy to recover from my mother's message. My younger brother recently said, "mom's dead, she can't hurt you anymore". My dad always said don't upset your mother. All the best. Tina, Al's wife

  • @Christinek777
    @Christinek7773 ай бұрын

    This resonates 💯 I wish we could push a button & make all of the hurt go away.

  • @denisa_the_jedi
    @denisa_the_jedi2 ай бұрын

    This opened my eyes to a degree, everything makes sense now. Thank you for the explanations. All this time I thought I was the one who was always at fault, always to blame for every little thing, when mom was the issue all along. I gave up keeping a diary when I was a teen because she'd enter my room and read it all, then confront me about whatever I was writing: my crushes rejecting me, my school struggles (I have ADHD, but didn't know at the time because she wouldn't give me any financial support to go to any doctor except the GP), the way I was bullied at school, and somehow she made it sound it was my fault for all of this. If I would write about the little accomplishments I made, she would make it sound unimportant and say that I haven't won the Nobel prize or something. Everything I did, even in my adulthood, it was somehow always wrong in her eyes. The moments when she made me feel loved and accepted were very few. I'd blame myself and drown in sorrow and despair, asking myself why I am unable to do anything right, even tried to unalive myself a few times because of this. Luckily it didn't come to that. She wouldn't let me go anywhere either, wouldn't let me have friends, or a social life. She liked to micromanage every bit of my life. Fortunately I found a job in another city, so it suddenly got easier for me to distance from her and get some help, as people kept telling me what she does is not normal and I am not to blame. I cut contact with her two months ago when the pressure and toxicity from her became unbearable, and though it broke my heart to stop the contact, I feel so much better ever since. I love her, but I can't be near her.

  • @opheliaelesse
    @opheliaelesse28 күн бұрын

    True. Nearing 60 I am very! proud of myself. I stood up against my father with 4 years. Defending my mother. I get along -now- fine. Alone. I have my own house, take care of animals and raised my daughter, alone. She recently finished her studies and found a job. We are strong!!! If sometimes a bit hyper 😉 🍺 Greetings from Germany

  • @user-kx2xq9wu5e
    @user-kx2xq9wu5e17 күн бұрын

    I don't know who I am. I'm fifty years old and I'm lost. When I was growing up, I was always afraid. As an adult I'm even more fearful and ridden with anxiety.i have some borderline traits on the other hand...there are some dark traits borderlines have that I do not. So many behaviors were learned that I didn't even realize I was not only doing, but, that those behaviors were wrong. As I aged, I started changeling myself. Accepting my insecurities, questioning my inner self and my thoughts, motives and actions..then I met a sociopath. I'm stuck. I'm horrified. I'm alone and hopeless. I'm not going to survive this time around. I'm overly criticized, mocked, belittled, gaslighted, commanded, the water supply gets cut off for punishment. He has a history of torturing animals. I have cognitive dissonance. I don't even feel like I'm a human being anymore. My mother was a malignant narcissistic sociopath and I was her scapegoat.

  • @janeenlopane121
    @janeenlopane1213 ай бұрын

    Wow! You hit the nail on the head. Never have I ever heard such an accurate description of what I was feeling inside. I can’t thank you enough. I saved this video so I can watch it again and again. You explained pretty much every character trait I have, and how that became part of my personality. I am absolutely amazed. I am determined to heal, grow and change my behaviors. This is the video I needed at the exact moment in time that I am ready to receive it. Thank you so much. I wish I could’ve heard these words many years ago.

  • @susanbenson3232
    @susanbenson32322 ай бұрын

    I relate to alll of this! I have been learning boundaries, self-respect & esteem, but I'm 61 yrs old, & after being the scapegoat of a narc mom, I married a narc. I'm grieving so many lost yrs. It helps to be validated by videos like yours. I appreciate you pointing out the positives. Through my faith, & much counsel, I am so much healthier. This video is 1 of the most comprehensive, accurate, & balanced videos I've seen about what we experience, how we function, & what we need to do. Thank you

  • @etaokha4164
    @etaokha4164Ай бұрын

    Moved out at age 21 and got my own place. 5 years no contact my narc mother abandoned us and moved back to Africa to her enablers because we didn't enable her and kept holding her accountable. She's 70 and Grandiose narcissist she has never been in my life growing up I was raised my relatives and she came back when I was 16.

  • @thereisnosanctuary6184

    @thereisnosanctuary6184

    29 күн бұрын

    Go Back To Africa, Mom!

  • @jahbloomie
    @jahbloomie2 ай бұрын

    My adoptive mother was very controlling. I was shamed for feelings of anger or sadness. Then when the put-downs made me express feelings of guilt, my parents showed disgust for my ‘self-pity.’ There was no way to redeem myself. Theses memories go back to the age of three.