9 things we grieve as we heal from narcissistic relationships.

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  • @DoctorRamani
    @DoctorRamani3 ай бұрын

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    @AutismMattersOnline

    3 ай бұрын

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    3 ай бұрын

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    3 ай бұрын

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  • @OzFun4Life

    @OzFun4Life

    Ай бұрын

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  • @marcella272
    @marcella2723 ай бұрын

    It's also the embarrassment that you've been played multiple times. and asking yourself "How did I not see this??"

  • @windyday85

    @windyday85

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @miltonselimos8512

    @miltonselimos8512

    3 ай бұрын

    Omg I feel so stupid when I look back at my life. It's a relief to know that It Wasn't Me!!!!!!!!

  • @katjongeward7155

    @katjongeward7155

    3 ай бұрын

    YUP.

  • @amandahunter4034

    @amandahunter4034

    3 ай бұрын

    Definitely. I was married to a narcissist for 27 years and now, looking back, I can see how he played me all the time, but I couldn't see it when we were together. Not that I'm really stupid, even though I now feel I must have been, but I just wouldn't have been able to comprehend the possibility of him behaving towards me in that way. But, just have to live with it.

  • @gordonanderson3111

    @gordonanderson3111

    3 ай бұрын

    When the bizzarre sexual 'abuse'/violence/display/entraping? in public got so weird police showed up, i would ask 'Do you know what is going on and maybe can help me figure this out?" the sherriff or cops would look worried and speed away - as if their life depended on it. And so I had to accept "justice will not be served" and take their advice - all said the same thing, coast to coast, "Just get the hell out of here!" and i would reply 'Works for me!'

  • @pinkmeadows
    @pinkmeadows3 ай бұрын

    I grieve lost opportunities, lost time, lost youth, lost confidence, lost healthy mentality, and lost innocence. Recovery is sometimes more painful than the abuse itself. Edit: I thank you all for the ❤️’s and well wishes! Means a lot to me and much blessing’s to you all as well 🥲🙏

  • @kristinl.b9741

    @kristinl.b9741

    3 ай бұрын

  • @tamaramarie1

    @tamaramarie1

    3 ай бұрын

    Luv, you got this, past can’t change thankfully, future can be!! 🫂 Acceptance gave me so much peace, which is what I’ve always wanted really

  • @elizabethalexander6528

    @elizabethalexander6528

    3 ай бұрын

    So important tho.and friends make life bearable. Find a 12 step program and go.

  • @MyPrimeone

    @MyPrimeone

    3 ай бұрын

    Same here sadly I lost time I never will get back

  • @dianaschramer5065

    @dianaschramer5065

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, it is. But I think of recovery as "clean" pain because it's healing and redemptive. The "dirty" pain of abuse is debilitating and destructive. Clean pain is life-giving; dirty pain is life destroying.

  • @Heather-xz8fk
    @Heather-xz8fk3 ай бұрын

    I grieve the wasted time, energy, lost peace of mind, lost community and the loss of what I believed I had. I grieve that I didn't pay more attention to the red flags and not get involved in the first place. I grieve that I stuck it out for so long and let myself be taken advantage of and taken for granted. I grieve that I refused to see the truth.

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    😞😿❤‍🔥So much, but maybe after the intense self-forgiveness goes on a while we will remain in the pure truth. 💖

  • @user-lg8zr9gn1j

    @user-lg8zr9gn1j

    3 ай бұрын

    It's so important to not blame yourself for what you didn't know then. I stopped blaming myself. Best wishes.

  • @CTHou13
    @CTHou133 ай бұрын

    9-things we grieve or have to give up to heal 1. Hope 2. Healthy childhood and a soft place to land 3. Time (lost time) 4. Grieving a future (it may look empty) 5. Sense of family and belonging 6. Stability(consistency) 7. Narratives (stories about our lives - or that some day justice will be served) 8. Loss of innocence 9. Loss of any sense of justice

  • @miltonselimos8512

    @miltonselimos8512

    3 ай бұрын

    NAILED IT!!!! Thank you for sharing!!!

  • @diggitydank1083

    @diggitydank1083

    3 ай бұрын

    Real MVP❤

  • @aprilesandefur1827

    @aprilesandefur1827

    3 ай бұрын

    The grief is overwhelming. You nailed grief that occurs.

  • @rebellaire55

    @rebellaire55

    3 ай бұрын

    This 💯💯💯

  • @RealityRecovery

    @RealityRecovery

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @jokendrick2124
    @jokendrick21243 ай бұрын

    And there will be no justice. For me injustice is the hardest pill to swallow.

  • @jessicaabbott10

    @jessicaabbott10

    3 ай бұрын

    YES!!!!!!!! And a lot of things you will never, ever get closure on.

  • @jokendrick2124

    @jokendrick2124

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jessicaabbott10 Exactly. Its better not to expect otherwise. Won't dwell on it.

  • @TheBlondiekitten

    @TheBlondiekitten

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes because they move on to the new supply who think they’re great.

  • @illuminata8097

    @illuminata8097

    3 ай бұрын

    There is no justice within the narcissistic systems… But there is always justice with GOD. Our New Beginning is here. The support system we have here for each other on Dr. Ramani’s Channel is our “New Family”. Together, we will heal, empower, and liberate our spirits and souls. The Truth shall set us free. Justice is here.

  • @sonyaalyoshkin8485

    @sonyaalyoshkin8485

    3 ай бұрын

    My opinion is that the justice is that narcissists will never be “truly” happy. They are shallow shells of human beings who cannot bear to be alone. They spend their entire lives running away from themselves and the burden they carry upon their souls

  • @laurachowanski9933
    @laurachowanski99333 ай бұрын

    I’m in the grieving phase of my healing and it is excruciating. Somewhere along the line I realized the abuse was worse than I remembered. I grieve the inability to see what was really happening and stand up for myself all these years thinking I was the problem. I’m 56.

  • @windyday85

    @windyday85

    3 ай бұрын

    Same here

  • @Myway165

    @Myway165

    3 ай бұрын

    I am really sorry. So sorry for your pain. Please , know that life gets better from now on, educate yourself about it, get help , allow yourself to heal . ❤❤❤

  • @carolinelaronda4523

    @carolinelaronda4523

    3 ай бұрын

    Whenever I’m grieving the end of a relationship, I think about the fact that I previously grieved the last relationship and the one before that and the one before that and I think back at how stupid those people were and how much I no longer miss them and can’t believe I even gave them the time of day. It will be the same for you looking back on your last narc. You will get better and you will not only survive. You will thrive once those demons are detached from your mind and soul. 🩵

  • @Spiritual36

    @Spiritual36

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too. I feel like I gaslighted myself regarding some family members bad treatment of me. Felt like I had to put up with things to have a relationship with them. It just got worse and was made to feel guilty when I stood up for myself. Happy now to step back and be boundaried. Dealt with far too much chaos and drama over the years that was not of my making.

  • @kathys8899

    @kathys8899

    3 ай бұрын

    I feel the same. I'm 58. 11 years and he cheated on me right after I moved in. Was there for weeks. Leaning town aa it's just too painful to be around them. I just think that something good has to come out of this, right?

  • @TimetoWonder222
    @TimetoWonder2223 ай бұрын

    The grief has been so overwhelming that I cannot imagine returning to the status quo. I can't unsee what I've seen/ learned.

  • @sushmayen
    @sushmayen3 ай бұрын

    We should first give up all hope that some day things will get better. They cannot and will not change..that's what we grieve

  • @christinelamb1167

    @christinelamb1167

    3 ай бұрын

    Ironically, giving up hope was the beginning of healing for me. Now that I know for sure they will never, ever change, I am free to move ahead with my life. But with healing there does come so much grief. We have lost a lot, and it's sad!

  • @wellinever1558

    @wellinever1558

    3 ай бұрын

    Agree. Once you relinquish hope you get clarity to leave the relationship.

  • @Bella-fz9fy

    @Bella-fz9fy

    3 ай бұрын

    If only people gave up hope sooner,it always takes years and by that time you are destroyed inside.

  • @user-lg8zr9gn1j

    @user-lg8zr9gn1j

    3 ай бұрын

    They not only won't change, they become worse.

  • @ColinKuan
    @ColinKuan3 ай бұрын

    I grieve more for my narcissistic partner more than myself, I grieve for the life we could have had, I grieve for the fact that I couldn't save my partner from himself, I grieve that all the love I gave to him wasn't enough to break out of the hell he made himself, and I grieve that I can no longer be a part of that life.

  • @Neresdipity

    @Neresdipity

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm going to gently suggest that you work on flipping that, you need to put yourself first.

  • @ColinKuan

    @ColinKuan

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Neresdipity thanks but grief is never rational, that's the whole point.

  • @evangeliakaratza-styliara4413

    @evangeliakaratza-styliara4413

    3 ай бұрын

    I too grieve about that …. And pity comes in and confuses me … I am just about ready to move out …. And I often cry « HELP »….

  • @Indyghurl

    @Indyghurl

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@evangeliakaratza-styliara4413well done in getting ready to move out. Our feelings are just that, they're ours. Just because you still have feelings towards that person(I dont mean that you're still in love with them, but even if you are, that's your feelings no one elses) doesn't mean you should stay and take anymore of their bs. My ex got cancer after I left him, I didn't not believe him but was very aware that they will say and do anything to hook you back in. This is your journey, make it whatever way helps you. My ex passed away nearly a year ago now, I was with him through radiotherapy, chemotherapy and a heart attack. Considering how he treated me over the years, a few friends have said they dont know how I was able to do that, but like everything else I have learned about abusive relationships, it's about how we grow and deal with situations more than being about them and if they are going to change. This was my way of getting me back, cos I know I would have hated myself if I hadn't cared for him.

  • @Neresdipity

    @Neresdipity

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ColinKuan I hear what you're saying. Obviously you and the other person commenting are good hearted people. We need more people like you in this world, all the best to both of you.

  • @nilaja-itsmylife
    @nilaja-itsmylife3 ай бұрын

    He who increases wisdom increases sorrow

  • @Wb-is8wi
    @Wb-is8wi3 ай бұрын

    I grieve the dream I thought I lived….

  • @elizabethsprecher2141
    @elizabethsprecher21413 ай бұрын

    I am grieving who I used to be, my carefree self, my trust in others, my not knowing so much, my love for friendships and close connections. Someone took all of that away and I don’t know if I’ll ever get it back.

  • @cymbolichuman433

    @cymbolichuman433

    3 ай бұрын

    You will get your happy self back. Be patient with yourself.

  • @piku8700

    @piku8700

    3 ай бұрын

    You can always return to your old self.. it may take some time

  • @KLh-sj4iu

    @KLh-sj4iu

    3 ай бұрын

    Over 5 years since I removed myself from my home..had enough of the verbal abuse, shaming, devaluing, sexual coercion, manipulation, rape, intimidation, guilt tripping… And it still continued after I moved out..because my kids are living at home. The divorce mediation is still ongoing..actually stalled bc his lawyer dumped his arse… Yet he continues to play Puppetmaster with my parents who are financing legal bills rn, and my lawyer…they just want to get it done…just agree to his terms…don’t aggravate the beast..’cause we all know “Pigs LOVE to play in the MUD”.. The courts favour the narcissist in their “no fault” system where the victim never gets Justice. I don’t even know if I will ever trust a man with my heart again….

  • @bingoandtoto

    @bingoandtoto

    16 күн бұрын

    You will get back your mind towards people who DESERVE. What is gone is them who did not deserve, not your sincerity

  • @Ominous89
    @Ominous893 ай бұрын

    After 19 years of trying to cope with a narcissistic mother, I got framed, blackmailed, betrayed and ditched on the street. I lost my family and girlfriend at the same time. The grief was so overwhelming, it caused a high functioning depression that lasted for over a decade, alcoholism and self medicating with MJ. The depression caused a decade of hoarding. And the decade of hoarding resulted in 30K debts, homelessness, more family conflict, and ultimately also cutting ties with my father's half of the family after brutally betraying me while I was homeless. I was reborn as an orphan. Once I came home, I woke up to narcissistic 'friends' and also cut ties with them. And while I was at it, I also completely quit alcohol over a year ago after a few years of fading it out. Next year my debts are done. I'll be 36 years old then. Only the last 3 years I have been been able to live a somewhat normal life. I just took out the trash and started with a clean slate. It was a long way coming.

  • @user-qy2kd8os1y

    @user-qy2kd8os1y

    3 ай бұрын

    I hope you are very proud of yourself for creating the healthy life you deserve.

  • @Ominous89

    @Ominous89

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-qy2kd8os1y In a structurally clean and organized home with a sterile backyard? Definately! Every day again! It was worth every single tear I had to shed. :'-)

  • @richkothbauer52

    @richkothbauer52

    3 ай бұрын

    Praying for you! Your past does not dictate your future.

  • @gobigirl1

    @gobigirl1

    3 ай бұрын

    This may sound really warped, but you give me hope. I'm sorry that you went through all of that, that sounds so hard, but it sounds like you've come out on the other side. I am still rather stuck in the depression, ruminating and hoarding, though I have recently taken big steps toward decluttering. Here's to kindness, safety and sanity going forward :)

  • @Ominous89

    @Ominous89

    3 ай бұрын

    @@gobigirl1 you can do this! Keep going until your home is what it's supposed to be: a place to heal and recharge yourself. Decluttering is one thing. After doing so, you have to learn yourself to keep it clean and organized at all times. Promise yourself: don't ever let this happen again! Developing a structure in your household is essential. Develop your own ritual. So you prevent yourself from cluttering again. Be consistent and structural in your household and chorusses. Doing dishes every day really does a great part of the trick. Because most hoardings start in the kitchen by forgetting or not wanting to do dishes. Same with the trash: if the bag is full, get it out. If the bag stinks, even if it isn't full, get it out. Or else you have to go through the flies a couple of days later. When your kitchen is dirty, you can't use it, so you order your meals instead. Wich continues the hoarding. It's way more expensive than cooking your own meals. Cluttering is a preventable trap. Decluttering and keeping your house clean is actually great victory in your depression. Decluttering and keeping the house clean afterwards actually became a healing ritual in disguise. In some way, keeping it clean, is the ritualistic way how I fight back depression, by not giving clutter a chance. It feels good take care for yourself like that. Your home literaly represents your mind. So it's actually a game, a fight, a war between you and the depression. You and your depression/demons are fighting to the death for your home. The game is simple: When the home is cluttered, the demons win, and you lose! When you keep your house clean, you win! The demons lose. Just promise yourself not to clutter again. I promise you, it's way more easier for yourself to just keep it clean. Cooking for yourself is the other way to fight back depression at home. It's how you celebrate the victory on your demons. You deserve good tasting and healthy food. Especially after bad times. You deserve to be spoiled by yourself with good and healthy food. Every day I'm proud of myself for cooking my own meals. It's the way how I became my own friend. Again; you can do this! Keep going!

  • @beverlypawsat6529
    @beverlypawsat65293 ай бұрын

    'Being a good person is (not always) rewarded'. 'Loss of any sense of justice'. A lot of grief to process, but smiling just the same. It makes so much sense.

  • @SparkleAndShine-hh5vv
    @SparkleAndShine-hh5vv3 ай бұрын

    I’m grieving my lost childhood my lost opportunities as a child and my identity(I still am) my hijacked soul(I still am) the little girl inside of me is literally crying 😭 so much right now. I don’t know 🤷‍♀️ who I am in today’s world and it’s the most terrible feeling in the world for me 😭😭😭.

  • @carin5767

    @carin5767

    3 ай бұрын

    Hang in there sister. I kept saying to myself that "some days you have to create your own sunshine" and there has been many many such days... it does get easier with practice 🌞 and self forgiveness and patience ❤

  • @SparkleAndShine-hh5vv

    @SparkleAndShine-hh5vv

    3 ай бұрын

    @@carin5767 Thank You for your support! 💜!

  • @carolynkepler2826
    @carolynkepler28263 ай бұрын

    I’m grieving the FACT that I never had a family. It is a fact. As I’ve gotten to know other people where I live, I realize how little actual love I received. I’m alone now; I have two older brothers but I went no contact with the oldest one and seldom talk to the other. I never fit in with any of them. My mother stole my life from me. The brother was that I still talk to invalidates me every time I bring it up so our conversations are superficial. I’ve never had a real relationship with anyone.

  • @daughterofzionministries4938

    @daughterofzionministries4938

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry 😞 I came across this, this morning I woke and I felt strange, I'm healing from narcasstic abuse... I'm listening to this, makes me feel sad 😔 within myself...it us grieving that my life meant nothing to my parents, shame based, always thinking I'm wrong 😔 this is horrible, always thinking I'm wrong...😢 I didn't have a childhood. It was stolen. I've never had love, made me feel like a freak, not normal...list goes on.

  • @Ina-wn7jd
    @Ina-wn7jd3 ай бұрын

    Hope no more. It is difficult to realize that the only best thing to do is to avoid them.

  • @CTHou13
    @CTHou133 ай бұрын

    I love this woman, Dr. Romani you always cut through all the BS and help me sort out the swirl of feelings inside of me like maybe I did something wrong or I could do something better or I should try harder. Radical acceptance has help me understand that he will never change. And I will always live the rest of my life like this if I continue to stay with him. As a matter fact, he’s getting worse, he’s changing from a neglectful narcissist to an abusive verbally and emotionally one. Your clarity helps me see that this is not the life that I want to live anymore. I’ve raised my children, and after 26 years of marriage I’m ready to step out. It’s scary now that my youth is gone, but I cannot see another day with this man. I see no path forward and I deserve more.

  • @carolyn1900

    @carolyn1900

    3 ай бұрын

    yes you do reclaim yourself for yourself ❤

  • @PennyConlan
    @PennyConlan3 ай бұрын

    Initially, I had a heart attack and then it took me a couple of years to fully grieve and accept. I planned to walk away, but they (my son, and only child, and my grandchildren) never contacted me again. It was devastating but I feel so much better without the ruminating and chaos. Prior to this event, a psychologist had given me a heads up but it took over 30 years for me to accept it.

  • @Mands244
    @Mands2443 ай бұрын

    My narcissistic ex left me once i became ill even though we were married over 20 years. I was glad he was gone but i really needed help physically. Im sure the stress of the relationship brought my illness on sooner that it otherwise would. Im happy alone but really feel like my physical self will never be ok and I wasted the best years of my life

  • @e.conboy4286

    @e.conboy4286

    3 ай бұрын

    Same here! No awareness of my needs or concerns throughout 60 years. He wouldn’t even come home to take me to my doctor when I was passing clots as large as eggs! Endometriosis! Fortunately the women friends of mine in the same office ‘got on the case’ and made him come home just as my doctor had advised me to call an ambulance and was arranging my admission. They told me I was in the zeR but I don’t remember it, my doctor ordered a blood transfusion, and a steak dinner for me! He was a wonderful older gentleman doctor who was also Chief of Staff, although I didn’t know that at the time. I’ve had to take the bull by the horns just to exist! Why did I remain on this sinking ship??? I had thought we could improve it with counseling. He went once and was ‘cured’! I continued several years because I needed the contact with and knowledge that is so beneficial. Too much to write about here but I could write a book. Now that we are 86 y/o,I have no more fks to give! Elizabeth

  • @Mands244

    @Mands244

    3 ай бұрын

    @@e.conboy4286 wow they really are so selfish!! I think it takes us a long time to leave because we want to fix things and make everyone happy. Narcissists will never be happy though. I'm glad you got free and I'm glad you don't give a f nowadays too. It sounds like we have a lot of similarities xx

  • @anaislake
    @anaislake3 ай бұрын

    my sons father passed the night after valentines… intense few weeks. he had a seizure, i held him for hours beforethe ambulance and air lift took him to the hospital where he had the gamma knife two weeks earlier. all the difficulties left in those moments. now facing the reality of what he created for my son and the family to work through. you are so on point with grief for my walk in life now. thank you. focus on positive outcome for all.

  • @karenbraddock5738

    @karenbraddock5738

    Ай бұрын

    Was that a brain tumour? My partner died 6 months ago from a brain tumour. I have been grieving him and romanticising the relationship, and the reality of what it was has now hit me in the face

  • @jessicaabbott10
    @jessicaabbott103 ай бұрын

    Most of my life, the recovery process was more intimidating to me than the abuse itself. I grew up in a narcissistic family dynamic, so simply dealing with it was more comfortable, even if I was miserable. Recovery requires strength and a LOT of hard work!!!!!!!

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    I know, sometimes just facing how their (constant) gaslighting and triangulating talk is - really - jut icky abuse is scarier than just what (exactly) they say (when we all grew up with that junk on the TV.) The really sad thing is - (my kin,) seem to be stuck on thinking the narcissistic inversions are "cool," (whilst I try to covertly and subtly influence them to see how spiritually retarded this behavior has to be) - they refuse to change, so I don't visit here too often, usually, unless I want to get 'belittled' by the tongue of their invalidation again! 😥PEACE

  • @bereal6590

    @bereal6590

    3 ай бұрын

    So true. Imo narc parents make us feel so incapable it keeps us stuck. Took me loosing everything including my health, to wake up. I grieve that and what I thought was a mother who was really a jailer and a relationship built on my own distortions she convinced me of

  • @PJean3
    @PJean33 ай бұрын

    Im getting ready to file. Looking at an apartment. Gotta sell my childhood home my Grandpa built. Its kept me in this brutal marriage but time to put me 1st. This is my 2nd time with him after 10 yrs apart. Euphoric recall!!! The very day we moved in the punishment began!! It's time to get my freedom back!!! Covert Narcissism is life crushing. My Dad, ex husband and current husband are all the same. All narcissists. I see why I keep following that pattern. Im in heal mode, a complete gray rock until I escape this hell Im in!!!

  • @hazeleyes6725

    @hazeleyes6725

    3 ай бұрын

    Strength to you!

  • @maevebutler4641

    @maevebutler4641

    3 ай бұрын

    Sending strength & courage your way

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    Ug. I feel ya. You are strong enough, and I'd better act like a rock around my sibling, yes. Peace ... soon as you can create it!

  • @user-ye4tx2bj6s
    @user-ye4tx2bj6s3 ай бұрын

    Sexlessness. Sharing a bed with someone who doesn’t acknowledge you are a sexual being hurts so much. I was in a sexless marriage for years. Being a woman with a high libido, I felt inadequate. Worst I feel invisible. The man who was “supposed” to want me, just didn’t. We talked about it many times, more than I can recall now. It was always me. I wanted too much - once a week was too much for him. I didn’t initiate - he was always complaining of headaches, stomaches, always stressed, always tired. I was too sexual - when being subtle doesn’t work, what is next? Explicitly saying I wanted sex. Oh but then it was not appropriate. Conversations would end up with him saying he didn’t feel desired or I made him feel emasculated because he didn’t want sex as much as I did. Yeah, it was always me. I could never win. While we were dating we would have a decent amount of sex, it was good. The first huge red flag was not having sex in our honeymoon - which I ignored. It rapidly decrease to once a week, then every other week. Years gone by it was months in between, by the time we divorced it was over a year with no sex. I cried myself to sleep more times that I can count. I didn’t understand what was wrong with me. Was I that undesirable? Was I repulsive? After those conversations, I just stopped trying, initiating, mentioning sex. We were still loving - holding hands, hugging, kissing - but sex was off the table. He then cheated on me. Swore he had sex only 4 times in a year (or more) long affair. It didn’t matter. For years my self worth was damaged by him, years of low self esteem, years of feeling less of a woman, the marriage that was more than over, waiting in hospice, really ended. Funny how things are, I asked him for a divorce, he manipulated me into staying, next day his infidelity came to light. I was out as soon as I could. Best thing of my life. Additionally, That feeling when your partner cheated and you don't have the courage to leave him / her so you just death with the pain and live everyday asking questions about your worth. This pain is different from the cheating one_living and seeing him everywhere anticipating when he or she do it again. The best thing is to hire a private investigator Digitalinvestigate@gmail. com to help you spy on their cellphone remotely just like he did for me...

  • @BuzzyaBee

    @BuzzyaBee

    3 ай бұрын

    I feel you. I went through a very similar experience. My wife withdrew sex and even making out or anything that could lead there. We were in a same sex relationship and she even told me before that it was because of past trauma that she withdrew. Come to find out that she had been sleeping with one of our very close friends..The worthlessness hurts, and hits so hard. The “why wasn’t I enough?” Yk.

  • @4WallsDesigns

    @4WallsDesigns

    3 ай бұрын

    My sister had this same situation in her 6 year marriage. Turns out he was having relationship with another man! Only she loved him so much that she stayed in the marriage. Now they’re a threesome! I don’t even try to understand this…I just try not to judge! She’ll eventually come around…

  • @ivegotonethatcansee1304
    @ivegotonethatcansee13043 ай бұрын

    I love you so much. At 50, I’ve only recently begun radically accepting having been raised by barcissists, married to a narcissist and then being engaged for 11 years to another narcissist. Even more, I just ended a relationship of three years with ANOTHER narcissist. I had no idea and am grieving all of that so deeply and I’m doing it alone. I’m better off and safer with only my dog. Thank you for validating my feelings.

  • @sharonpollock9543

    @sharonpollock9543

    3 ай бұрын

    You’re here now❤️ I’m 66, just understanding my 92yr old father and husband of over 35yrs are narcissists. Explains so many things. Hoping to heal now❤️ Thinking of you on your journey, kid☺️

  • @bingoandtoto

    @bingoandtoto

    16 күн бұрын

    You have got the present and future finally

  • @carolebarnes2736
    @carolebarnes27363 ай бұрын

    I think justice is a big one. So many if us would love to see the narcissist get what's coming to them, or pay for what they've done to us. Radical acceptance can be difficult to accept when people wait for Karma to it's thing.

  • @user-hb2ex4pm6c

    @user-hb2ex4pm6c

    3 ай бұрын

    I agree. I have started to radically accept my situation…but when I think that justice has no assurance here, it throws me off the hook. I have always known that truth prevails, Karma has its way…but to accept that it might not be the same when it comes to dealing with a narcissist, makes me grieve even more.

  • @MrBigzo0574

    @MrBigzo0574

    3 ай бұрын

    They get justice everyday of there lives we just don’t see it because they hide it we’ll aging to a narcissist is literally hell on earth plus as much as us who have been deceived they actually do miss us because they will never find another beautiful being such as us even though they move on they are constantly thinking about us that why no contact kills them because they live with the pain that they weren’t as relevant as they thought to us and that we may have moved on and bettered our lives while they will remain living a repeated cycle for the rest of there lives

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    The truth prevails and will win in the end, but they think they can invert it, like event 201, they've been taught the perversion of karma - "if you announce it beforehand as altruistic," that sickness can be translated down to your narcissistic mate. The narcissist psychopath I resided with a decade ago told me "Nobody will ever be able to con you again, after I'm done with you."😸 😰🥺🙀@@user-hb2ex4pm6c

  • @cherrybacon3319
    @cherrybacon33193 ай бұрын

    I find myself grieving for all those times I walked away, faced a path that could have taken me one way to happiness, but chose the path that took me further into he'll. I grieve for that person who made so many times the decision to go back, knowing how I betrayed that better pat of myself that could've been. 🍒

  • @RandyBrady2024
    @RandyBrady20243 ай бұрын

    By far, time is what I grieve most. I feel like i never actual lived. I feel like I just existed. At 56, I will now build a actual life and enjoy living, for the first time. My son graduated Hogh School in 2027. I plan to leave USA completely, total separation from my past life.

  • @jeepgirljody

    @jeepgirljody

    3 ай бұрын

    You won't have to tiptoe through the tulips anymore. It will be good!

  • @KLh-sj4iu

    @KLh-sj4iu

    3 ай бұрын

    Tiptoe through the tulips?? You must be mistaken…I would bet many of us felt like it was always tiptoeing past sleeping lions in a minefield🤯😶‍🌫️

  • @naturegirl372

    @naturegirl372

    3 ай бұрын

    Exactly!

  • @jeepgirljody

    @jeepgirljody

    3 ай бұрын

    Most definitely! @@KLh-sj4iu

  • @GypsyJulie
    @GypsyJulie3 ай бұрын

    I have been grieving and healing for 8 yrs. Currently, I grieve that so many life decisions were actually reactions. I left a good job to move thousands of miles away from family. I made a choice to be poor so that I had an excuse to not afford to "go home". At times I didn't have a phone, to protect myself from mothers verbal abuse. I am working on being worthy of financial stability.

  • @vanessaament7185
    @vanessaament71853 ай бұрын

    Time....lost time where we are depressed or exhausted because they are such nightmares so much of the time and we need to recover and cannot take care of what we need to do....

  • @jokendrick2124
    @jokendrick21243 ай бұрын

    Weird this is the topic today. After 12 years I still have an occasional bad dream (last night) about my late husband and he is doing yet another hateful thing to me in the dream. I am so thankful the universe took him. Now I wish my mind/psyche would let him go. His memory is toxic.

  • @karenbraddock5738

    @karenbraddock5738

    Ай бұрын

    My partner was taken by a brain tumour nearly 6 months ago. I am so thankful he was taken as I now have an opportunity to live and be free. But this self discovery hurts so much - it is making me feel ill

  • @shirleybarrett605
    @shirleybarrett6053 ай бұрын

    After he hurt me recently i felt all the 52 years i have been married to him ,had all been for nothing, but at least i did have 4 beautiful daughters.

  • @CTHou13

    @CTHou13

    3 ай бұрын

    It is very confusing when you have beautiful children from such an awful relationship. I have struggled with the same. After 26 years of marriage and raising two beautiful boys, I’m ready to walk out. My narcissist is the neglectful narcissist, and it’s like living with a ghost. However, recently he has become extremely verbally and emotionally abusive And I just don’t think I want to live the rest of my life like this. I like Dr. Ramani’s grief. Mine is loss of family sense of belonging and hope for justice. The biggest thing I will ever do in my life is to walk out of this marriage. Dr. Ramani helps. Keep me grounded.

  • @shirleybarrett605

    @shirleybarrett605

    3 ай бұрын

    @@CTHou13 I wish you peace and happiness.

  • @CTHou13

    @CTHou13

    3 ай бұрын

    @@shirleybarrett605 thank you. I’m working on it. Therapy is helping.

  • @hazeleyes6725
    @hazeleyes67253 ай бұрын

    Dr. Ramani I thought my story was unbelievable. After reading a sampling of comments I am overwhelmed with the toll of this epidemic condition among us. Pure crazy! God Bless you!

  • @savemaca

    @savemaca

    2 ай бұрын

    You are not alone❤

  • @inairby4freedom
    @inairby4freedom3 ай бұрын

    Grieving 😢 After 48 years in cult, knowing finally all the lies I was told. I’m in an abyss of grieving,mom said she’d leave us two kid an inheritance. She gave my narcissistic brother his part and gave mine to the cult. Ugh!!! I left early in the relationship with mom , trauma bond but not the cult. It took time to realize that was mom’s attachment to keep us bonded. Once the cult was cut off, finally able to get out of idealistic “Forgiveness” that was supposed heal my pain from mom. She was never going to forgive me. I couldn’t say I was sorry enough. Same with GOD never going to be able to say “I’m sorry”, enough. I’m grieving normalcy and time. Wasted time. Thank you for your honesty and don’t give up on this content. I’m sure you get your share of backlash for this but know your helping people who would’ve died inside or suicide. My plight possibly the later. My father committed suicide because of this horrible cult and my sister in law. A private soul who had to confess to a group of men to many personal problems. She just couldn’t take it. Part of the cult way, probably my end had I not found your channel. You’ve kept me alive. So grateful 😊

  • @margaritaramos7643
    @margaritaramos76433 ай бұрын

    Still in mine. 7 months since I realized after a betrayal how bad things are. Slow drip of betrayals. Gaslighting denials lies and silence. If I tell you that I sit next to him and it’s distressing how wrong I could be about a person and not know it’s just scary and has made me loose faith in ppl. I’m a caregiver of grown kids that have severe health issues and that has made me not move, fight, argue how I normally would. Friends don’t get me. But my love and fear of how this affects them makes me hesitate. So I wait. Try to gat stronger daily. Build myself. Save/figure out a way out. When I’m desperate I remember my mom’s saying, “he who fights and walks away gets to fight another day.” My fight is the kids. They need more. Healthy parent safe place from manipulation. Biggest grief, this is a kind person. The deceptions, lies and manipulation was ugly and scary. Smile in your face swear it’s all good while continuing doing things he knows would hurt. Nuts. Thank you Dr remind. Anyone out there that needs to read this. If you in it still. It’s ok. You not weak. Nothing wrong with you. Survive. Let yourself survive, by your own rules your own way. When you can. Leave. You set the timeline. You know your needs best. Take care of yourself be gentle.

  • @margaritaramos7643

    @margaritaramos7643

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank Dr Remini. So sorry need glasses as I type this on my phone. Lol

  • @hazeleyes6725

    @hazeleyes6725

    3 ай бұрын

    I feel for you. I am 2yrs divorced & moved to the other side of the country. I am almost 68 and have been with ex since I was 17. We moved far from my family for his job. I did find happiness in my heart again…as long as I don’t answer his calls or texts. I have a lot of painful memories, regrets, and loss but the essence of you is still there. I believe in your happiness and the beauty of your self/heart. The best is yet to be 💚 You will find your way out without compromising your own integrity or commitment to your loved ones. You will heal and be free to love yourself again. Much love to you.

  • @covert_warrior
    @covert_warrior3 ай бұрын

    Seriously???? You post this after HOURS of grief and confusion? I love you.... sorry been up all night and can never get out of bed rn.... these crazy people definitely messed my brain.

  • @user-tb1qt9hn4t
    @user-tb1qt9hn4t3 ай бұрын

    I got it! Radical acceptance the day I left. iIt was like someone was standing beside me when I said I can’t do this anymore,walked out the door and hit the road. Yes I stopped 30 miles down the road and bawled my eyes out but I got my shit together and kept going. Not going back, my life is slowly getting better. Thanking for these tutorials, they keep me going forward and give me hope❤️

  • @elizabethalexander6528
    @elizabethalexander65283 ай бұрын

    So much grief it is suffocating .My childhood. My schooling my jobs my dreams Dr Ramani its a heavy duty topic. I really like your message. The beauty of 12 step programs learning there is comfort in the familiar. We stay for all the right and wrong reasons. God bless us all. I also told my sons that I cannot guarantee fair once they walked out the family room door. The beautiful thing is once on the other side. It is a very good feeling. We can heal. There is hope. We need good people around us.

  • @jokendrick2124

    @jokendrick2124

    3 ай бұрын

    Good momma. Life isn't always fair so you hopefully taught them an important lesson in life. Don't expect fair...

  • @MM-gk5of

    @MM-gk5of

    3 ай бұрын

    I knew I needed to get away from the father of my kids. Grandma said just pack up your kids and come. My relief was immediate. An hour later, my parents called to say I had to stay where I was. All hope was gone. Those two had raised me to believe I was powerless. Grandma knew how it was. She left an abusive alcoholic. Forty odd years on, my kids’ lives are impacted by this. I think I hate my parents.

  • @carolynjaynes36
    @carolynjaynes363 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Dr. Ramani. Giving up hope on narcissistic family members finally freed me. As much as it hurt to let my whole family go, it hurt more to be with them. Thank you for addressing this profound grief that is relentlessly on-going on holidays, birthdays, Mother's Day, etc. I'm living my best life two thousand miles away with a loving dog and cat. No contact with them has worked wonders for my mental health recovery and self-empowerment. No more narcissists!

  • @AlexLouiseWest
    @AlexLouiseWest3 ай бұрын

    I am grieving my lovely cat who died today. She was worth loving and crying over whereas narcissists have not been at all.

  • @carolyn1900

    @carolyn1900

    3 ай бұрын

    i so wish i could give u more than 1 thumbs up cause ‘ain’t that the truth’!!!! I’m so sad for you too ☹️ I love my cat too xox

  • @AlexLouiseWest

    @AlexLouiseWest

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for your kind thoughts. I really appreciate it.

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    I was just healing from the double leo psycho from long ago and clicking cat emogis and there you were. Visualizing you're okay - it's painful to lose such beings. She is in a less crazy place than Earth 2024, however. Peace@@AlexLouiseWest

  • @AlexLouiseWest

    @AlexLouiseWest

    3 ай бұрын

    @@treysmythstunesThank you.

  • @katjongeward7155
    @katjongeward71553 ай бұрын

    grieving the picture of a big happy family that I wanted my whole life. kids, grandkids, hubby that loved me. etc. have to be thankful what I do have. not how I wished it would be.

  • @katjongeward7155

    @katjongeward7155

    3 ай бұрын

    can not just keep kicking myself for being dumb. mulling the shame and stupid choices. have to know that I am strong and worthy. and have done some good things too. if I mull all my stupid things too much, it's really depressing!! and I can not control others at all.

  • @user-im8dt8gd2z
    @user-im8dt8gd2z3 ай бұрын

    I grieve “Dr Jeckyll” 😢 I mean the figure of someone who never existed

  • @Ina-wn7jd
    @Ina-wn7jd3 ай бұрын

    Still a little surprise with the instability. I mentioned a plan to repeat preparing a food and I was happy because I had an amazing time with a relative. My narc mom find all the reason to complain as if everything is so bad. I am happy without her.

  • @raindrops438
    @raindrops4383 ай бұрын

    I started my healing about two years ago with your healing program knowing very little about narcissism. The first round of grief was so strange and surreal, and the pain was deep. Over time, the grief lessened, yet reappeared. As I healed I would develop a new narrative and gried would come again. I eventually came to radical acceptance and grief was present again, yet I was in a different place and that is good. This video brought a validation of my healing journey with each of the nine things you talked about. It entailed every aspect of my journey so far. That is amazing to receive that validation and I wasn't even looking for it. It was just there and a gift. Thank you!

  • @DD-lr6mm
    @DD-lr6mm3 ай бұрын

    Always nice listening to your channel. Walking in the grief but staying positive for the future with a smile and truly be joyful in myself. Retraining my thoughts to embody self worth and still love outwardly has been a struggle but I noticed that the more I smile and be careful who gets my genuine love has been the most powerful thing in healing. Love your teachings. Thank you for the work you put to helping people heal. ❤

  • @khadraLuula
    @khadraLuula3 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr. Ramani, I had a sudden grief attack after witnessing another narcissistic person mistreating others at work. All the trauma from childhood and narcissistic partners came back rushing to me and I drowned. I literally couldn’t work, think straight or do anything. I had to take time off work to understand what’s happening to me and to deal with it. I was grieving all the things you mentioned in this video . Nothing seems real, or make sense anymore. It’s like my life I lived until now is a big lie or I was asleep and just woke up. Thank you so much for creating this video, I feel less crazy, it’s so hard to believe that I am not making all this up in my head or I am not overthinking again. I tried to explain it to people I trust but no one gets it. I have being lonely my whole life but this isolation cuts really deep. Thank you for staying positive and showing us there’s a bright side to all of this. I don’t know if I will ever believe again in love, family, trust however, I know I will be okay and I believe I will one day give hope to many others just like you do. ❤❤❤

  • @illuminata8097
    @illuminata80973 ай бұрын

    We all deserve to grieve whats been lost, and all the hopes we had for our future dreams. However, there is a divine reason, a “Divine Intervention” that has gathered us all here. Time to take your power back, “It’s NOT YOU.” You are blessed. You are Free. You will heal.

  • @editgyjakab208
    @editgyjakab2083 ай бұрын

    "Being a good person is not always rewarded" - it's so true. But I am trying to be that for myself, for I feel much lighter and happier if I am not so mean, so calculating and so exploiting as the narcissists I could kick out of my life. Congratulations on the new book and a million thanks to Dr. Ramani. ❤ I will hold a ceremonial grief day now, at 52, upon listening to this video... to cry for one last time over all these 9 things (and more). Hugs to All other grievers ❤.

  • @RoyallTALKTV
    @RoyallTALKTV3 ай бұрын

    Hello Dr. Ramani❤❤❤Your videos help so many if my friends or fam heal from these narcissistic relationships. Thanks so much!!!

  • @KAs14521
    @KAs145213 ай бұрын

    I grieve time, I wasted too much time with someone who didn’t treat me right. I grieve myself and how much I changed including my physical appearance. I grieve good health. All the stress wore me down, inwardly and outwardly.

  • @remarkable937
    @remarkable9373 ай бұрын

    YES! #9 they do things just under the radar in such a way they aren't really breaking any rules or laws. Yes, they gallop off unscathed leaving people having to deal with what happened for years. The guy I had would say, "believe me I forget things very easily; I can move on very easily.." and he has. Has already been with 10+ women since me and I am still ruminating and in shock over what took place and that I let this happen to me a year ago.

  • @ep2999
    @ep29993 ай бұрын

    Currently grieving the loss of friends through a smear campaign, I can rationalise that these people were probably never truest my friends if they’re willing to be swayed so easily but I think part of it is them not understanding the depths these people will go to and the sick lies they’re willing to tell, it is hard to believe. Everything I say and do is twisted. I’m just laying low until they get bored and move on. It is that sense of injustice. One day I’ll meet people who “get it” and are safe but right now it’s pretty lonely.

  • @amandahunter4034
    @amandahunter40343 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this video, Dr Ramani. It's 7 years since my n-ex left me and I am still grieving my lost opportunities, lost innocence, and loss of hope. I'm not living the life I would have wanted to live if I hadn't been married to him, and now I never will. The thought that he knew it too, and really doesn't care, and even revels in the thought that he reduced my potential, can be hard to bear.

  • @annedas2726
    @annedas27263 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr. Ramani. I ordered this book from Amazon few days ago and awaiting arrival. Can’t wait to read it. This video about grief came just in time. I am amazed at how well you are able to articulate and put our thoughts and feelings in perspective so we can make some sense of the roller coaster ride we are on when navigating narcissistic and enabling flying monkeys . May the divine continue to protect and guide you and may your own healing journey continue to make you stronger happier person 🌈🌈

  • @neuralmelody4459
    @neuralmelody44593 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this timely video, Dr. Ramani. There is immense grief, and we need to talk about it more. Yes, healing in the absence of justice can be very difficult to digest. I am loving your new book so far, and have been recommending it! 😊

  • @tommartin7506
    @tommartin75063 ай бұрын

    Great video. You mentioned how the narcissist barely stays below the radar. They gallop off. I can relate. Took me years to figure it out. I'm getting there.

  • @thevagabondsageinthewoods
    @thevagabondsageinthewoods3 ай бұрын

    Another way I look at my grief is that when I meet people now and I learn they have experienced narcissism in their lives, I am immediately empathetic and give them an audience with me. I don’t trauma bond over it, but I have a much better understanding of where they’re coming from and it makes me see them more clearly…accepting them more easily. So grief, to me, has a silver lining.

  • @jamesstaplesv
    @jamesstaplesv3 ай бұрын

    me and grief...... totally not figuring shit out

  • @snowarmth
    @snowarmth3 ай бұрын

    01:57 You grieve hope. 03:11 You grieve a healthy childhood. 04:59 You grieve lost time. 05:42 You grieve the future you once imagined. 07:04 You grieve a sense of family and a sense of belonging. 08:47 You grieve stability. 10:21 You grieve your narrative. 11:44 You grieve your innocence. 13:21 You grieve your trust in justice.

  • @anitastadler1584
    @anitastadler15843 ай бұрын

    Same here. Ive been overcome with rage and grief about what I lost of myself over the years trying to make parents happy who will never stop invalidating me, no matter what I did or didnt do.

  • @TheShadyGarden333
    @TheShadyGarden3333 ай бұрын

    Thanks Dr Ramani, The mailwoman just dropped my book off ❤

  • @nyxcole9879
    @nyxcole98793 ай бұрын

    Where justice goes to die...that truthbomb made me laugh 😊

  • @maevebutler4641
    @maevebutler46413 ай бұрын

    I grieved for not having the parents like I heard about when I was in middle school I grieved that my father had to be arrested & carted off to a psychiatric hospital to treat his alcoholism I grieved that my children were living in somewhat similar circumstances minus the malignant ex being carted off He was handed court order to leave the family home I realised I had repeated the pattern of my own childhood & I was determined not to put my children through same Apart from the hovering I didn't repeat it & carved out a happy home with my children I did grieve the lost years

  • @maryellenyork2819
    @maryellenyork28193 ай бұрын

    Leaving when 4 of my 5 children had special needs and my parents encouraged me to leave so they could help "whip them into shape" meant I stayed far longer than I should have. The devastation to my psyche has lasted far too long because too few believed I was abused.

  • @pheebe5729
    @pheebe57293 ай бұрын

    I grieved hope, soooo many years wasted, grieve a father for my son, real marriage, many opportunities, self esteem, self worth, love, attention, friendship, companionship, grieving normal regular life. I planned to leave soon to be with someone else then my new potential partner died of a heart attack at 53. Now I’m grieving the plans I had for my new life with my new partner.

  • @bluegreen9799
    @bluegreen97993 ай бұрын

    I got sick with covid in 2021 on my college campus. I had no food and really needed something to eat, my mother refused to come down. She just "couldn't find a way" to bring me anything to eat. We're poor so I assumed that meant she lacked gas to drive or something. Our home was only an hour and a few minutes from campus for context. I went to the grocery store and with a couple dollars on my credit card (that my mother had used almost entirely btw), I bought myself some ramen to make it through the next two days. Salty ramen isn't a great food to eat when you're battling sickness. So I had to break campus policy to retrieve food at the cafeteria, I felt so horrible about it but I was so sickly and not eating was making it entirely worst. I already emailed the school as soon as I got a diagnosis that I would need food delivered to me. They hadn't gotten back to me. My mother finally showed up after week and left a box of oranges, potatoes, and other canned and boxed foods. We're poor so I could understand why she couldn't bring me healthier foods. However, in those days that I laid in bed in so much despair with nothing to eat, I felt so so alone. This was before I realized that my mother is in fact a narcissist and lacks real empathy for me. I felt I was gonna die, and that I was completely alone. I only got better when I was paid for my previous days working, and could afford some greens in a salad and some fruits. After a week the college cafe began delivering me food, same time my mom was able to deliver me food. I am back home, off campus and it's 2024. I recently got the stomach virus and have been throwing up amongst other things for a night and a day. I live at home with my mother and 7 year old brother. I went to her and told her I might need to be taken to the hospital because of the severe pain. She told me we had to wait 24 hours. I felt I needed to throw up and as I was inches away from her bathroom she yelled at me to use my bathroom. I rushed as fast as I could to mines, but didn't make it in time and threw up in the hallway. She cursed me, telling me that she was upset that she's having to clean up after me while sick. Mind you, every time I walked I felt that I had to either pass out or throw up, and my body was sweaty and cold. She told me that I should be cleaning up after myself, and that when my baby brother is an adult he will be able to do it unlike I. She told me this as I hunched over my own vomit with tears in my eyes. In that moment I realized that my mother truly has never changed. That distance meant nothing, and she never truly cared about my sicknesses, and that I would have to be the one to show up and take care of myself. Disillusionment is one hell of a thing.

  • @treysmythstunes

    @treysmythstunes

    3 ай бұрын

    Isn't that a horrible feeling when they get mad that you're sick, only a full-blown narcissist could be so ridiculous, I've been there. sad feeling.

  • @bluegreen9799

    @bluegreen9799

    3 ай бұрын

    @@treysmythstunes It sure is. I go through a constant process of grief anger and acceptance when it comes to my relations with her. Just have to accept her for who she is but narcissism is persistent and retraumatizing.

  • @Cooperfan54
    @Cooperfan543 ай бұрын

    These relationships are so friggin complicated and confusing. My childhood was filled with terrible narcissistic abuse at the hands of a malignant step father and self righteous mother. 2 years ago I went no contact and it really did start to facilitate healing and immense growth. I continued the cycle in every intimate relationship I went into. But what perplexes me; is how much easier it was to forgive these partners and move forward in a healthy manner. But I still struggle with my childhood abuse. It almost feels like I can more easily forgive my ex partners because I compare the abuse I went through with them to what I endured in childhood. And in the end, the childhood abuse was so bad it “trumps” what I’ve went through as an adult, and by making that comparison I think well it wasn’t as bad so it’s easier to forgive. Would this be a form of cognitive dissonance? I’ve radically excepted but it’s just so complicated and hard. Thank you Dr Ramani for all you do. I’d never be where I am without your guidance ❤️

  • @betty1hope

    @betty1hope

    3 ай бұрын

    The reason the childhood abuse trumps your romantic unhealthy relationships is actually because of the conditioning that was deeply harmful to you that shaped your perception of yourself, of life, of relationships and of your life. Without that conditioning you probably wouldn't have gone through most of the hurt and pain and unhealthy partners that have felt familiar. So give yourself grace for still trying to process your childhood trauma. It is the most complex and has had the most consequences and impact

  • @Cooperfan54

    @Cooperfan54

    3 ай бұрын

    @@betty1hope Thank you so much for the kind words and good guidance. It makes sense and is much appreciated! Yeah, the childhood stuff sometimes feels like a permanent injury. Like a broken leg that never fully heals and causes a noticeable limp. I can walk, move forward, but because of the limp it really “slows me down” and makes the journey feel that much longer. I think a lot of the persisting pain also comes from the idea that I cannot wrap my mind around how a parent could inflict such cruelty and abuse on a CHILD! I have a 10 year old son and I couldn’t imagine EVER doing those things to him. I ruminate about how such horrors can be justified by your parent! What should be a safe space was my own hell. Even as a child, age 9, when my mother married my step dad and the abuse escalated, I was completely aware that their actions were patently wrong. Eyes wide open. But to wrap my mind around it all just feels beyond reach. Thank you again!

  • @betty1hope

    @betty1hope

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Cooperfan54 I totally understand you. Especially from the perspective of narcissistic abuse by parents. And the limp that it causes us to walk with. What I have really come to terms with is that these parents are like walking robots who have a certain programming that probably goes back 7 generations. They look human on the outside, but really, they are their conditioning. Just like a computer e.g. a laptop is not what it looks like on the outside but what programming or operating system is in the hard drive. And they didn't see us as autonomous human beings who needed love and care. They saw us as extensions of them to serve their needs and make them happy. It's crazy that I love and care and appreciate my dogs better than I was loved or cared for. Something within these parents is truly broken and they are disconnected from themselves as well as from humanity. It is crazy to wrap my head around it too and I have given myself permission to feel the anger that comes up every time I face what I have gone through especially through my healing process in order to deprogram. But knowing that they will never control me again is a win for me. And I look forward to turning my pain into purpose and help others. I am proud of you for doing right by your child. You may look at the abuse you went through not just as what caused your limp which it did, but on the other hand, what makes you a more sensitive and better parent to your son. We are all here to make the world a better place and you are already doing that beginning with your own flesh and blood. So you might be limping right now especially through the healing process which is very challenging, but you are a king with a limp. A king with a purpose. Starting with your son and someday your healing will be your power story that you can use to help so many like Dr. Ramani.

  • @reginaocasio3749
    @reginaocasio37493 ай бұрын

    The book is GREAT !!!! Congratulations 🎈🎉 Thank you for addressing the nuances that are important aspects in 😢these relationships…

  • @flz_5848
    @flz_58483 ай бұрын

    Hi Dr. Ramani, have you ever made a video talking about how narcissists seem to respond EXCEEDINGLY poorly to sarcasm, even when it clearly doesn't apply to them at all? It's like they're so incapable of even conceiving the possibility that something isn't about them, that in their mind, everything exists to either prop them up or bring them down.

  • @ro7547
    @ro75473 ай бұрын

    This was one of the BEST videos I’ve watched. Thank you!

  • @hkitty8308
    @hkitty83083 ай бұрын

    Watching this is painful. The pain is so real. I lost 11 years, my youth, my confidence, isolated from friends. Painful memories and reality. I am angry with myself for letting this happen. There’s no one to talk to.

  • @luciarael7134
    @luciarael71343 ай бұрын

    I grieve not having any family. They are all dead except my sister who has always had a history of violence.

  • @alicelindores22
    @alicelindores223 ай бұрын

    the loss of hope that things will change for the better has gotten to me. it's my adult child who is also in a very narcissistic relationship. and i kept hoping for more, for better, for something more . this hope is fading fast and we will always be the bad people. it hurts, it breaks my heart. and, yes, thank to you Dr Ramani, i'm learning to distance myself and try to live my best life.

  • @hamza5106
    @hamza51063 ай бұрын

    Honestly Dr Ramanis videos have been so healing as I go through the process of grieving from these relationships. My covert narcissistic mother emotionally abused me for my whole life and noone from the outside is none the wiser. The truth can be bitter it can feel like you're barely hanging onto life itself, but it also only from the truth that healing and health can come.

  • @carolynflinn9629
    @carolynflinn96293 ай бұрын

    I grieve for my children who will never understand unconditional love and support from their father. Especially having to see them watch their friends who do have a good father.

  • @anyaroz173
    @anyaroz1733 ай бұрын

    just got the book! I am listening to this as I drive home from dinner with my nmom after yet another attempt at reconciliation. the screaming matches. the blame and gaslighting. I keep coming back. need that radical acceptance

  • @howard1beale
    @howard1beale3 ай бұрын

    Loss of innocence, loss of trust loss of trust, knowing that I SHORTCHAMGED MYSELF, loss of hope, and opportunities that I had but couldn't believe in because u CHOSE to be with narcissistic people because that's who I was groomed by

  • @natasham.1558
    @natasham.15583 ай бұрын

    Grieving lost time... yes. I can't get over the fact how much time I've lost hoping my mum would change, apologise and take responsibility for her actions. She never did. In the end it was her who cut off contact, both because of a row she had with my sister (she had threatened before that she won't talk to either of us in case she was angry with one of us) and my not having responded to a message for 12 hours because I had a throbbing migraine (instead of asking me how I was). Now I'm in the process of grieving and coming to terms to things never changing for the better. Took me 20 years to come to this point, and it's hard.

  • @SandraMuller-vs8ck
    @SandraMuller-vs8ck3 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr Ramani for this opportunity to share this podcast. Through these experiences of narcissism have learned to be selective and disconnect from people that serve me no good, this be family included. (Siblings) Through the time frame of this scenario, I was compelled to navigate a path that was tough and bumpy. I kept saying to myself never give up on my goals and always remember that BAD NEWS travel faster than Good NEWS. I have healed and taken on a new leap of faith, understanding that although I genuinely care for my fellow human being, this relationship must go both ways for a healthy outcome. Thanks once again for this educational support. God bless. ❤

  • @user-qv9nw1dq2f
    @user-qv9nw1dq2f3 ай бұрын

    It is such a painful experience 😢

  • @sherandawheeler5819
    @sherandawheeler58193 ай бұрын

    I definitely am in the grieving process as I walked away from my mother and her abusive husband. I know I am worth more and so are my children ❤

  • @Elizabethpepper8
    @Elizabethpepper83 ай бұрын

    Never-ending grief is the hallmark of these relationships. It isnt the reality you convinced yourself of, it is the conflicting world you have to remind yourself of not being the truth.With family, the indoctrination creates a lifetime inner battle of what you know, what you experienced, and what you want. It doesnt matter how much healing or accepting you do, there is always grief being presented. It doesnt end with these people when its the foundation of your life. This is why being told to move on is so enraging and invalidating.

  • @4WallsDesigns

    @4WallsDesigns

    3 ай бұрын

    Ohhh! You sooo speak the truth! I do believe however that while the trauma of the Narc will be with me always… allowing myself to feel embarrassed, angry, and kinda stupid…I’m learning to forgive myself. Bc I don’t think like a Narc and I just didn’t see it coming! I kno better now but I didn’t know what I didn’t kno….cant keep beating myself up for that! Forgive yourself…it’s truly the 1st step to healing… ❤️‍🩹

  • @clairesomero
    @clairesomero3 ай бұрын

    I love this, people always are saying families have to be this or that. Nope. I believed but now I am very much grieving what I thought my family was supposed to be.

  • @howard1beale
    @howard1beale3 ай бұрын

    I dumped my step mother 16 years ago. She died a year ago. I'm STILL seeing how her abuse affected me

  • @profelisa1
    @profelisa13 ай бұрын

    #9 and #10!! Absolutely!! Once I saw it in my siblings, it took me about a year to get to where I wasn't having extreme grief (panic attacks,.etc.). Still working on it, but getting better.

  • @margaretgallacher1793
    @margaretgallacher17933 ай бұрын

    Thank you x

  • @Jessecraft1954
    @Jessecraft19543 ай бұрын

    Yes, hope is #1. I hoped they would metamorphosisize into a human being. Nope. Had to give that up. Freakazoid forever.

  • @wickedwisdom6088
    @wickedwisdom60883 ай бұрын

    I grieve that I will NEVER completely feel that I am worthy of unconditional love, worthy of safety, and worthy of security. 😢

  • @ramsha_nigar
    @ramsha_nigar3 ай бұрын

    for me the grief was 1.the moment it ended, i saw a person's death (a cemetery) that person was my 1st priority in my life. 2. all the promises he made to me (when I'm the person who will be silent for life time but won't lie to someone) making false promises were just beyond the crime for me. 3. the greif was accepting that all those moment we went through together, it'll fade away someday.. and i was fighting with my brain constantly reminding myself so that i don't forget any single detail of him 4. the greif was for letting go of him... the good side the love bombing phase, all those moments where you know that if he gives the same thing to any other girl, she will never ever gonna leave her no matter what. bcz love bombing phase includes every single things that a women would take bullets for. and i had to let those things to the other women he replaced me with. 5. the greif was afraid of being failed in any field... i knew if i failed again , then whatever he said to get rid of me will become my reality and I'll have to accept what he said i am acc to him. 6. the greif was for losing family of his side, accepting that i have to give up on them too and I'll never become part of them now. 7. the greif was for accepting that i had no control, rights or any kind of relation with him. i am no one to people around him anymore to talk to , laugh with, hangout with, or keep connection with. 8. the greif was for losing my innocence completely, knowing that from this day i am the person who will not beleive any person whether its my best freinds since 10yrs ago or a person who gave me birth. i can't help it bcz my brain get triggers everytime from every single thing in day to day life. 9. the greif was accepting that i was wrong all this year .. from a person who never trusted in boys or in relationship to finally chose a single person to be with was the one who planned every single act of this abuse since before i came into his life, everything was scripted. 10. the greif was for accepting that even my ALL was NOT ENOUGH for him to stay. the moment i received a gray rock reaction while breaking my memories of rainbows, i realised that he murdered the person he was and now i don't recognise him who he is... he's dead completely... i can't even get a glimpse of what he remained with me. i mourned for a person who's dead. also i have lost faith in everything from a girl who used to be firm on her beliefs and those from god... doesn't rely on praying for things she wants... i feel like i would rather kill my body tiring up than praying and asking someone else for things i want badly... as bad as it sounds i don't even have faith left in god that in the end he'll do me good and I'll receive justice.

  • @ARMAGEDDONsCOMlNG
    @ARMAGEDDONsCOMlNG3 ай бұрын

    I got my book, and the audio too. I haven't finished listening yet, Thank you for dedicating all the study and intelligence to such an important matter afflicting humanity at this time.

  • @SoGoodWeNamedIt
    @SoGoodWeNamedIt3 ай бұрын

    Spot on as usual

  • @loraneilson1698
    @loraneilson16983 ай бұрын

    I grieve the realization that I have been violated over and over again by my mother and 2 sisters. And now the healing can begin. Stay cool and groovy.

  • @craigmerkey8518
    @craigmerkey85183 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr Ramani! For me having to navigate walking other people/ outsiders through my experience and possibly gently preparing them for an initial exposure and consequences and continued experiences with key family members. Instead of just introducing them like hello this is > fill in the blank... I have to process the trash that will come out of their mouths and the emotions other people will have associated with it!

  • @user-gr6fy7eg2d
    @user-gr6fy7eg2d3 ай бұрын

    I grief the "death" of the person I thought I loved. But he did not exist.

  • @Mikel-ep9nr
    @Mikel-ep9nr4 күн бұрын

    The person I thought she was never existed. But part of me grieves that. I guess I am radically accepting that I have no other choice.

  • @user-zl6vr6sq5h
    @user-zl6vr6sq5h3 ай бұрын

    I feel like I'm dying inside. It's overwhelming. I have good days and bad.

  • @marie22213
    @marie222133 ай бұрын

    I read afew pages of the " free to view preview pages". I want to get the book now I think it's a great read. I like Dr. Ramani because while she is making $$ she's doing it genuinely. She wants people to heal, and I think it's truly here for people.

  • @jenjohnson1747
    @jenjohnson17473 ай бұрын

    This is probably the most significant video I have seen in regard to realizing who exactly my father is after trying to get his approval and acceptance for 52 years

  • @swim10
    @swim103 ай бұрын

    I wrote this down...my hope was in the wrong place. In someone that wasnt meant for my future. Time God will restore biggest one.. God says He will give me a new hope and future. My belonging is in Him He restores this with new family and friends Consistency was in the wrong place Thank God for changing my direction Justice is in His hands. God will renew my youth my strength like an Eagle.

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