What Happens When A Narcissist Goes To Therapy?

Do you have a narcissist in your life that you would like to see get help?
Maybe you even believe they could change if they just went to therapy.
In today’s video, I share my point of view, as a therapist, when a narcissist goes to therapy.
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This video was created by Barbara Heffernan, LCSW for educational purposes only. These videos are not diagnostic and provide no individual consultation. Consumption of these materials is for your own education and any medical, psychological, or professional care decisions should be made between you and your primary care doctor or another provider that you are engaged with. Barbara Heffernan is not available for individual consultation via KZread, social media, or email, and provides services only in the manner mentioned above.
Edited by Video Editing Experts
#Narcissist #NarcissisticRelationship #HealingFromNarcissists
☀️☀️CHAPTERS☀️☀️
0:00 Intro
1:47 NPD Traits
8:45 The Motivation for a Narcissist to Come to Therapy
11:56 Concluding Therapy with a Narcissist
14:27 What If I Am a Narcissist Who Wants to Change?
15:47 People Who Are in Relationships with a Narcissist

Пікірлер: 243

  • @georgeedward1226
    @georgeedward12269 ай бұрын

    Does anyone else get the impression that the profession of politics was invented and designed specifically for narcissists?

  • @44manm

    @44manm

    9 ай бұрын

    But public service, on the other hand, belongs to empaths

  • @mikaelapapazyan6411

    @mikaelapapazyan6411

    9 ай бұрын

    Totally!!

  • @Chapps1941

    @Chapps1941

    9 ай бұрын

    No. There is a need for that type of work to be done. However Narcissists are looking for the opportunity to fill their insatiable need to dominate underlings and be made to feel good about living off others adulation. They see it as their natural domain. Big business is another realm for them.

  • @Sunrise.111

    @Sunrise.111

    8 ай бұрын

    @@44manmThere’s a kind of narcissist who actually serves a community to feel a sense of superiority out of this service.

  • @Chapps1941

    @Chapps1941

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Sunrise.111 my brother

  • @Ra_vee9132
    @Ra_vee91329 ай бұрын

    When I went to couples counselling with a narc, the counsellor was actually very good and saw through it. The counsellor (who was male) took me aside and told me there was no point in counselling to improve the relationship and it was a matter of either accepting the narc would never change or leaving the relationship altogether. He said if I chose to leave, he would choose me over the narc in regard to further therapy, as it was a conflict of interest to continue to see both of us. So refreshing to have someone tell you like it was. I left soon after and never once regretted it.

  • @Medietos

    @Medietos

    9 ай бұрын

    Glad for you. could you heal? And how did the NPD fare afterwards? Could you advise me on my family , please? I took them all (we were 5, Father dead now) to family counsellor for 5 sessions, of which I was the only one to turn up each time. She said to me that I was the only one really wanting change and that she couldn't talk to them. I still haven't got therapy to heal, am severely burnt out from searching , egtting mistreated instead(CPTSD, HSP, Co-Dependnecy (adult child of dysfunctional family) w Aspergers and bad Autoimmune D.) I haven't been able to assert myself among tehm, have recently stopped my crazy helping-caring but don't know what tpo do. am too sick and tired to help myself with the mistreatment from helathcvare going on. And I can't leave my family and we do belong togehter beyond our disturbances and wounds. I don't have any strong friends or social network to count on for assistence/real support. I have never got a big enough therapist, need extra spiritual maturity and competence.Do you have mirroring or advice, please? That would be good of you and I very grateful and glad.all the best to you!

  • @Ra_vee9132

    @Ra_vee9132

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Medietos I would focus on counseling just for yourself as that’s a lot to deal with - don’t try and fix people who are not open to change. My heart really goes out to adult children of NPD, it is far worse to experience it as a child.

  • @emeselovey1713

    @emeselovey1713

    6 ай бұрын

    I had the very same experience!

  • @deirdrehelms5958

    @deirdrehelms5958

    Ай бұрын

    Wow thank God for that counselor

  • @user-fk8rb8ue5h
    @user-fk8rb8ue5h9 ай бұрын

    I went out with a narcissist who got herself in trouble at work and went to counselling has a condition of keeping her job. She bragged to me that she went through the motions and told the counciller exactly what she wanted to hear. Says it all. To the narcissist, it's a game.

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, exactly! Thank you for sharing.

  • @mioara8169

    @mioara8169

    9 ай бұрын

    Which empathy ? They don't have any . They only "mimic" empathy.

  • @beaglerescue5281

    @beaglerescue5281

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, my daughter manipulated the therapist. I quit but glad she’s still going because it was a victory for her. Hoping the therapist will see enough to realize.

  • @Medietos

    @Medietos

    9 ай бұрын

    @@BarbaraHeffernan (Oh, sorry for capitals below..very tired..)When you answer "exactly", it sounds as though you agree with the the easily done generaklizTION OF npdS, WHICH IS DANGEROUS. eVERY HUMAN IS UNIQUE AND WE DO HIM WRONG BY LIMITING HIS POTENTIAL. eVERYBODY CAN GET BETTER, IF THEY GET THE RIGHT TREATMENT (PROFESSIONALLY AS WELL AS SOCIALLY) AND IF THEY want TO. wHAT WOULD YOU SAY ABOUT rUSSELL bRAND'S HEALING FROM npd? beING QUIL´TE AWFUL AND HARMING PPL ? sEE HIM NOW, WHAT loving helpfulness HE gives. Do you find it right to point out sick ppl as the only faulty onwes, but never the therapists, - and what about yourself? This trend is harmful and hurtful, stop it! Do and teach shadowwork instead, and the NPDs won't get hold of us/others anymore, and some f´good cabn be done instead of wallowing in the evil of NPDs..

  • @BitcoinNewsTodayLive
    @BitcoinNewsTodayLive9 ай бұрын

    My ex female covert narcissist has gone to therapy for years which really threw me off until I realized the therapist was just another form of supply weekly.

  • @hormetichealth4102

    @hormetichealth4102

    8 ай бұрын

    oh yikes. Maybe this is what i'm getting out of it and not realizing it

  • @theguynextdoor4978
    @theguynextdoor49789 ай бұрын

    They can be pretty emotionally draining. Very few narcissists will even go to the therapy office. Do they make lasting, sustainable change? 95+% of the time no. Some narcs even became more aware during therapy, and ended up being more effective manipulators. Personality disorders on the dark triad typically have a low prognosis of change. Don't get your hopes up if your partner is a true narc.

  • @johnkosi6798
    @johnkosi67988 ай бұрын

    Sometimes they are good·liers because they genuinely believe their own false narrative, not because they are good at being deceptive.

  • @streaming5332
    @streaming53329 ай бұрын

    My toxic sister goes to a counsellor. She hasn't changed one bit. The counsellor sympathises with her and tells my sister exactly what she wants to hear. I'm sure the counsellor never challenges her. She's been hostile towards me all my life.

  • @beaglerescue5281

    @beaglerescue5281

    9 ай бұрын

    Some therapists are all about 💵

  • @laurapavone3513

    @laurapavone3513

    9 ай бұрын

    I wouldn't want a sibling like you around. What a lack of compassion. 'Lost case'? I wish you to live a life apart from each other 💚

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    My cover narc ex-friend LOVES going to therapy. It's guaranteed supply, and she's admitted to me that she lies in therapy and/or omits the truth. As Barbara mentioned in this video, when narcs lie convincingly even therapists can't tell because they're not telepathic.

  • @tanyathorvilson

    @tanyathorvilson

    8 ай бұрын

    Sometimes a therapist will validate their feelings of being the victim as to create a safe place for them to share so they can help them. The narcissist will seize on that validation sometimes and stop all attempts to make a change.

  • @leekennedy337

    @leekennedy337

    8 ай бұрын

    They lie to the therapist

  • @stella4977
    @stella49778 ай бұрын

    Oh my god! That’s how my mother responded, who I suspect has a narcissistic disorder - she started questioning my therapist’s license, knowledge, everything just because the therapist didn’t say things my mother wanted to hear.

  • @wagfinpis
    @wagfinpis9 ай бұрын

    Fairley certain my mom has vulnerable narcissistic disorder, she constantly says things like "I didn't say that", "I didn't do that" and "I don't remember...". I don't understand if she believes this stuff or if she is cognitively using these defenses. We can be having a very significant conversation where significant things are being decided and then a little down the road she is like 180° to what was said or "that's not what I ment" type of stuff.

  • @Medietos

    @Medietos

    9 ай бұрын

    How many years have you studied physiology, organ function, trauma, nutrition, biochemistry, psychology, stress, psychiatric diagnoses ? The examples of your mother's utteraances are no proof or even signs of NPD, it is dangerous and harmful the way laymen nowadays narcissistically allow themselves to be judges of other people's states and think themselves fit to judge by some tiny little reading etc. Please stop or do a proper, responsible job of it! There are other possible causes for her behaviour, for God's sake.And if you can truly ave significant talks with her, it doesn't sound in line of NPD. They can do that with starngers, playing roles, but not with close ones.

  • @wagfinpis

    @wagfinpis

    9 ай бұрын

    @Medietos Pretty sure you are just trolling/gaslighting. You don't come across as any help at all.

  • @futz1656

    @futz1656

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Medietos just out of interest how many years have you?

  • @RonSafreed

    @RonSafreed

    2 ай бұрын

    My narc. father would constantly say, "I never said that" & lie about so many things!!

  • @kathiejl1
    @kathiejl19 ай бұрын

    Oh my gosh Barbara, you nailed it! I want to thank you very much for this video! When you talked about the narcissist coming to therapy and how it would end, it so validated what happened with my husband. He would get three sessions in and come up with some excuse why we shouldn’t see the therapist anymore. And then, just as you said, he would tell me that it was more me that needed to go individually. We tried three times, each time of course it was up to me to find a therapist by myself, even though he was the one that seem to have strict criteria on who we saw. During the conversation the day he was ending our marriage of 12 years, I brought up couples counseling, and he said that you have to work on yourself before you can go to Couples counseling. Insane!

  • @SuzannaLiessa

    @SuzannaLiessa

    9 ай бұрын

    You have to work on yourself before couples counseling? Dunno about doing it before couples counseling, but you're going to have to work on yourself while you're _in_ couples counseling, for sure. He was projecting onto you and then using it as an excuse.

  • @pjmackall
    @pjmackall9 ай бұрын

    When the therapist made a suggestion for change to the ex narcissist, he stood up, shot the therapist the bird, screamed at her, and huffed out. 😂

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Yup! Been there :)

  • @amarbyrd2520

    @amarbyrd2520

    9 ай бұрын

    I have a feeling there is more than one of us who wishes the therapeutic profession at large was BETTER EDUCATED about narcissists and their infliction of narcissistic abuse on the people AROUND them@@BarbaraHeffernan

  • @johannajorgensen6416
    @johannajorgensen64167 ай бұрын

    Wow. I went through therapy with my ex-fiance and literally had the exact experiences you described here. He was angry, accusatory, dismissive, insulted the counselor's credentials, insisted that all our problems were entirely mine alone, and when confronted about his NPD, angrily stormed out never to return.

  • @RonSafreed

    @RonSafreed

    2 ай бұрын

    My Narc brother was like that, he was right & everyone else was wrong!! A therapist homed in on him & he ran-away like hell!! He told my baby brother & my sister-in-law, he had anti-social behavior!!

  • @carolina.rentes
    @carolina.rentes9 ай бұрын

    I'm married to someone who gave me a lot of heartache in our years together. My father has NPD (diagnosed) and his mother is too. My partner was incredibly egocentric and hurted me a lot, specially in our first couple of years together. When I decided I was done with everything, he went to therapy (2 years and counting) and a little after we started couples therapy (1 year ago). He changed so much that sometimes is hard do think about how he behaved before. Still, he thinks he's narcissistic, despite all the changes and his self awareness, and our couple's therapist thinks he has traits. When he's stressed out, he's still goes back to being really defensive and egocentric, but nothing like he used to be. He tries to be mindful every waking hour so he doesn't hurt me, but sometimes he still do (changing important agreements we made without talking to me, or doing things behind my back that he knows will hurt me - but nothing major, not like in the beginning), but I know he's been working really hard in the last year. Can he be narcissistic? If not, in those are just traits, do you think it's possible that he becomes a somewhat healthy person eventually? Or he will always hurt me in the same ways, from time to time? It's really confusing for me this "narcissists don't change" thing, because it is a spectrum, right? If so, those who don't fully qualify for the disorder, but have some traits, those people can be more "normal"? I'm sorry for the long question, but I never saw anyone talking about this, the correlation between the severity and the possibility to change. Thank you so much for your videos. I'll be waiting for the one about couples therapy

  • @taom9004

    @taom9004

    8 ай бұрын

    Oh sweetie. It's possible. Narcissistic traits are on a sliding scale. [good book on this is Rethinking Narcissism, by Craig Malkin, and he's here on KZread] Elinor Greenberg has written a book and she's on Quora. She has a lot of narcissistic clients. Raw Motivations, here on KZread, claims to be a self-aware, reformed narcissist. It's possible, but it's just rare. I went to sooo many therapists with my ex over the years, but after 34 years, in the end, when he had supply cut off at work, he went straight back to lying, cheating, and treating me horribly. It was like NONE of the HARD work and money and time we spent over those decades had made any difference at all. But we never knew what narcissism was and my ex was never confronted with this probability. He got worse with the years, more difficult. Individual therapy in his late 50's [I insisted on] was instantly turned into a source of supply and he became a monster at home. I remember an older woman once telling me, regarding marriage, that however things are starting out in a relationship, that's pretty much how they will be at the end of that relationship. My big tip? Watch what he DOES, not what he says. My ex could fake anything, would say anything, and sometimes for long stretches things seemed to be working out. Even for years, sort of. But it never lasted. Also, an older woman therapist asked me, at the end of the marriage, "Does he love you?" "Of course he does," I replied. So she asked, "Do you feel it? Do you FEEL loved? " I had to think for a long few minutes when I had to say, "No. I don't. I don't feel loved." She looked at me with kindness and said, gently, "Because if someone loves us, we can FEEL it." This was a revelation to me. I was 57 years old. Ugh. Good luck and big hugs.

  • @futz1656

    @futz1656

    8 ай бұрын

    I think on that spectrum there’s definitely room for possibilities of change, and learned behaviour is hard to break.I think we all have traits of many things, I can be a very unpleasant person when big changes occur because I crave certainty as the adult child of an alcoholic. It’s about being aware enough to recognise it in the moment and change course. Those few ways he is hurting you, he should be working on them hard.

  • @loveemotion4080

    @loveemotion4080

    8 ай бұрын

    I think he is one of those people with narcisistic traits, but not necessarily a narcisist. The fact that he, himself, thinks he might be a narcisist, shows that he is self aware. He even works on trying to better himself for you. Narcisists usually don’t do that. They dont even admit they are narcisistic. They think of themselves as pillars of virtue. The rest of the world is wrong.

  • @c.p.507

    @c.p.507

    26 күн бұрын

    I used to think exactly what you wrote about my situation even down to the 2 years of therapy on his own and it really took taking some time to get educated in therapy myself about the things that would have happened in our early relationship, to go back read the old messages seeing how they 100% matched the textbook superficial lovebombing and then watching the specific patterns in our relationship and learning how 2 identify his specific patterns for me to understand that he is probably a hybrid of a "Neglectful Narcissist" and "Covert narcissist". That he doesn't want to be a narcissist but that he is still driven by the disorder. I learned to notice when he's being hurtful. Oh, dismissive, extra rude, breaking agreements, being mean, being some form of abusive again ... started predictably seeing the pattern of how what would trigger the nice lovebombing/idealization to end & the abuse/devaluation to restart... usually it would be within days after me putting my guard down or being really extra close to him again or from him being extra frustrated about something and being mean /abusive to regulate ...I think it's really going to take you looking at your relationship with him and really starting to journal and document the relationship to see whether where/when/why love bombing and idealization of HIS specific flavor is happening. And then when/why the kindness is ending with HIS current version of abuse coming back with any type of pattern. I would strongly recommend that you get into a narcissistic abuse recovery support group, cluster B/toxic emotional abuse recovery support group or individual counseling for guidance on what is happening and to have a second set of ears help you sort through it. I really wish you the best. Please be safe.

  • @ktryushi4744
    @ktryushi47449 ай бұрын

    I think they can change. But the problem is they don’t want to change. It’s how they were rooted this way. I really empathize with narcissists, I really do even they have major issues. Because we don’t know what they had been through as a child….Childhood trauma can affect your personality, especially when they get triggered by young age. But they have no right to abuse innocent people and wreck their lives. Their hearts are so dark they can’t get out this hatred and anger circle. Nothing you can do about, just leave them, period. Narcissists are complex individuals. It comes from deep insecurities, projecting their anger and hatred. Narcissists hate themselves, they don’t deny it but they really do hate themselves….Thanks for the video lovely Barbara.

  • @user-lq8xg

    @user-lq8xg

    2 ай бұрын

    I want to change. Thats not true for everyone. I want to change and to become a human being and a better person that makes a good impact on people. I feel so ashamed of myself and my life and everything i did. I cant take it back. If i could start all over again i would. But i would rather not have lived at all.

  • @thecuriousoutsider
    @thecuriousoutsider9 ай бұрын

    The narcissist creates a narrative about himself that soothes his feelings of inadequacy. Then he feeds this narrative to everyone in his life with the objective that they will either give him validation, agree with the narrative, or at least not object to the narrative. If someone objects to his narrative, the conversation becomes a court of law and the objector must prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the narrative is false. The right thing of course would have been for the narcissist to be humble, self reflect, wrestle with the feedback, and try to change if it would make him a better person. Telling phrases that the narcissist has donned his lawyer cap are "what do you mean by that?" or "when have I ever done that?"

  • @nolankylie
    @nolankylie9 ай бұрын

    The narcissist I know stood over the therapist ,verbally attacking the them when the they pointed out her behaviour , then told the therapist she wasn’t qualified and stormed out- exactly like you said!!

  • @laurapavone3513

    @laurapavone3513

    9 ай бұрын

    Of course they are not qualified to cure a NDP! Life is going to cure them, giving them pain and restrictions as time goes by, to the point that their solid shell will crack open 💔❤️‍🔥🫂

  • @Medietos

    @Medietos

    9 ай бұрын

    But shouldn't a therapist receive them in theoir woundedness firts, provide stress reduction, safety, etc? Pointing out someone sick's behaviours and faults like that doesn't seem very therapeutical or professional, not even non-NPDs fare well by that...!? I mean, piercing someone's defence attempts before them feeling secure and calm and ready...?

  • @RonSafreed

    @RonSafreed

    2 ай бұрын

    My narc. brother did the same thing, ran like hell away from a therapist who homed in on his anti social behavior & told me, my baby brother & sister-in-law, he would go to where his craziness was accepted & get a sailboat to go & live in Ecuador & he was serious about this but never did it!!

  • @relaxedandhappy1161
    @relaxedandhappy11613 ай бұрын

    My ex-partner probably had narcissistic personality disorder and paranoid personality disorder. We were in couples therapy (only once or twice) and I knew I'd need to talk to the therapist alone because otherwise I wouldn't be allowed to say the truth. But at the same time, I also knew that I couldn't ask for one-on-one meetings because he would've exploded on me later. Thank God we broke up soon after.

  • @risingeagle6332
    @risingeagle63323 ай бұрын

    You are absolutely right about the Narcissist w/ NPD. I went to therapy with my wife (w/NPD; not diagnosed) it was a total waste of time and a mind altering experience. I would always leave therapy with her….”Worse off, and always asking ‘What just happened.” She would play the therapist like a fiddle, and I would always be confounded. She had therapist coming to the house for women time. Therapy does not work on Narcissist w/NPD; to them its their favorite playground to toy with everyone. ******* Note: I figured out my ex-wife was a Histrionic Narcissist w/NPD after our divorce and I found myself in Crisis Shelter for months trying to recover from the emotional and psychological abuse for months. I have been diagnosed with MDD, CPTSD, Sever Anxiety and Anhedonia. I am also still struggling with the aftereffects of the Narcissistic Trauma-bond……Sucks!!!!!

  • @tiraluvr941

    @tiraluvr941

    Ай бұрын

    😢 I'm sending many positive hugs and healing energy you way. I hope you are getting the help you need . No one deserves this abuse 😔

  • @shadymaru309
    @shadymaru3099 ай бұрын

    A really useful distinction that resonated with me: There is a huge difference between being at fault and being responsible for a situation. In this case, you are NOT at fault for what the narcissist did to you. That is absolutely on them. However, you ARE responsible for getting your life sorted out and healing from it. They won't/can't help, so that part's on you. This concept has broad applications. Another example: I got bullied a lot as a kid. That was NOT my fault. But I am responsible for getting my head back on straight and healing from those experiences.

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes! This gave me chills it is so true! And thank you for sharing as I think it can be helpful for others. So sorry you had to live through the billing… wishing you healing and happiness

  • @safrew1

    @safrew1

    Ай бұрын

    I appreciate your comment. It was an enlightening perspective for me. Thank you

  • @hormetichealth4102
    @hormetichealth41028 ай бұрын

    I've felt like I have NPD for a few years due to how I am in relationship with my partners and ruining some relationships with great people. The part of the video at 14:28 was so helpful for my understanding. I went through an extreme pharmaceutical injury 10 years ago and went completely within myself (possibly dissociated). I shut down completely and haven't been the same since. This helps to understand why I basically beg my therapist to acknowledge me as a narcissist while he wont accept it. I don't hurt people for fun, it's crushes me that I have hurt others. So this helps me understand that this is a trauma response and maybe I have hope. I struggle to show care or empathy in relationship. I truly want to, but it's like its blocked.

  • @SusanBSketchy
    @SusanBSketchy9 ай бұрын

    I made the mistake of trying couples counseling with a narcissistic ex. He completely manipulated the situation, and convinced her that he was wonderful and i was the problem. Idk who needs to hear this, but if peace was never an option, couples therapy or mediation is just a thunderdome for the narcissist to have their way in. Prioritize your own healing and get as far away from that person as is safely and humanly possible.

  • @LilyFisher4

    @LilyFisher4

    7 ай бұрын

    It definitely sounds like something a narcissist would do. That sounds terrible. Yes get away.

  • @Charlie-bc6yg
    @Charlie-bc6yg4 ай бұрын

    My wife, who I suspect has NPD, went to therapy for a couple sessions. Came back and literally told me she got her validation and the counselor agrees with her and I'm wrong. I mean, I don't believe her and maybe I should have expected it. But it still made me shake my head.

  • @djspecialk1

    @djspecialk1

    Ай бұрын

    Been there!

  • @jennywager6228
    @jennywager62289 ай бұрын

    Whats clear is they can become very extreme in denials and then dangerous. Run!!!!!

  • @wimsylogic65
    @wimsylogic659 ай бұрын

    My mom went to a few therapy Meetings with me, Throughout my life. Any time the focus came to her She was not honest. And she pushed her perception as more valid than my own experience. Ever since I was a kid to tell me my dad was brain washing me. As an adult I think it was her that was brainwashing me. How else would it be that she's never been physically abusive to me I have no memories of her yelling at me. But she's the one I'm naturally afraid of. My dad was physically abusive and emotionally. But I still got the sense that he cared about me. He put in the effort to want to be with me. I could be myself around my dad. And I knew where I stood with my dad. I didn't with my mom. She would lie to me, As a joke. She would gasolite my experiences and memories. And she would invalidate my trauma. I have no memories of receiving any nurturing from my mom. When my dad would hug me it was a real hug with love. And my mom ruined that for me, Made it so that any form of physical affection from anybody became repulsive and wrong to me. Because she put me in therapy and her in the Past. The therapist listened to my mom, And they both disregarded me, And with no actual proof Of witnessing anything. So when someone doesn't sexually abuse you those little normal signs of love and affection like hugging your child, Become wrong. Any kind of physical touch becomes wrong. I very rarely felt loved by my mom. And I think she was jealous that I like my dad more than her. Even though due to my dad's neglect I've almost died more than once. For example, My dad learned that 1 of his friends was stalking me or did anything to me, He'd get p***** off and probably go to beat up or go to jail for something. He would get angry over it. After he died, One of his creepy friends actually did try something with me. He became obsessed with me and stalked me. My mom completely invalidated it. Said I wasn't being stalked that I just didn't realize he was pursuing me. That he and other dad's friends used to hit on her back when she was with my dad and they were partying together. WTF. And when itWhat's happening to me, She didn't get angry, or show signs of wanting to protect me. She didn't even show concern for my well-being. But my dad was the one who brain washed me yeah. No mom it was you. At least will my dad broke me down He did it to build me back up. You just broke me down and continue to do so, And made it my fault. Dad was Willing To hear me, See me, Acknowledge how he affected my life even if he didn't remember. He believed me. He apologized and he really looked like he regretted it. And he spent the rest of his life trying to make it up to me. F*** y** you b**** for telling me he doesn't care about me. Dad died, I'm a 35 year old woman what the h*** was the point of that. Yeah this is still fresh.

  • @matthewwozniak9138
    @matthewwozniak91382 ай бұрын

    I do my best to not blame myself if someone else doesn't take any of my suggestions/advice and sufferers ill consequences.

  • @hopet201
    @hopet2018 ай бұрын

    You are so intelligent and well spoken. Thank you Ms Barbara!!!

  • @nancybartley4610
    @nancybartley46109 ай бұрын

    You made an interesting comment about narcissism existing on a continuum. It would be interesting to know more on that topic. Also, it would be particularly helpful to differentiate how narcissism influences the life of a child as opposed to an adult in relationships at work, with friends and with mates. I suspect kids raised by a narcissist have a more difficult road to recovery because they did not have the capacity to recognize the toxicity of the childhood experience and therefore experienced the damage in the formation of their life views, etc.

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Hi: I have two videos that might be helpful here. This one talks about the continuum: kzread.info/dash/bejne/Y5d7l6-rd9q0XdY.html This one has details on how it is diagnosed: kzread.info/dash/bejne/eYCu28qahLeefrQ.html And I have a playlist on what it is like to have a narcissistic parent:kzread.info/head/PLhEK7JY7zF9kyySYogk4G614ylZMkkFN6 Hope that is helpful!

  • @Wilfoe
    @Wilfoe7 ай бұрын

    I came across the term "narcissistic parent" Earlier this year and have been doing a bit of research. I'm wondering if my parents might be narcissistic. Among other things, they seemed very resistant to family therapy...They would sit in on one, maybe two sessions, then it would be back to one-on-one sessions with me and the therapist.

  • @soniaparchet444
    @soniaparchet4448 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for your videos- they really helped me. Especially hearing about a covert narcissist helped me letting go of the pain, anger and guilt. I am much stronger on putting up my boundaries but I am still healing (which takes much longer than I thought it would). Just talking about it all here is rather difficult as I still question if I do my soon to be ex husband (of 20 years) injustice

  • @nga672
    @nga6726 ай бұрын

    Excellent clarification!

  • @sagesufferswell
    @sagesufferswell8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this. My partner and I both have CPTSD and narcissistic parents. We both have learned behaviors and trauma that keeps things really challenging.

  • @jennywager6228
    @jennywager62289 ай бұрын

    Marriage guidance highlighted the narcissism. It was hell!

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes… wishing you healing and health

  • @Persona-mt9dc
    @Persona-mt9dc3 ай бұрын

    As a psychologist with a private practice who also taught psychology at a major university I always told my students that when entering therapy, if the therapist did not tell them their credentials upfront, then they should ask about their credentials and their experience with your specific type of problems (Ex: eating disorders ).

  • @swampholler

    @swampholler

    5 күн бұрын

    My experience has been credentials don't mean everything. Had horrible, horrible experience with PhD/MD level practicioners. One, a crisis counselor, head of the team, screamed at my second grader because my sweetie said he didn't know why he was crying. Pounded the table. "You do too know!" I took my guy and said, "We're leaving. " He huffed and said, "You would." Then had social work therapists that I loved. I said somewhere else, I do wish there was a way that if someone claims to specialize in Narcissism, that there is fairly uniform, comprehensive, training.

  • @nancybartley4610
    @nancybartley46109 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your expertise. Very helpful.

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm so pleased this was helpful. Thank you for letting me know!

  • @danavitolo
    @danavitolo3 ай бұрын

    I have a toxic family member with consistent narcissistic traits and personality patterns for decades (still has these patterns), and the weird thing is this person just got a Ph.D. in Social Work. Doesn't surprise me because this person always felt the need to "one up" everyone.

  • @lustertone8587
    @lustertone85879 ай бұрын

    NPD in couples therapy is definitely what I am interested in as one who is concerned that this is the dynamic that I am dealing with in my relationship.

  • @c.p.507

    @c.p.507

    26 күн бұрын

    If you decide to take the risk of going to couples' therapy with someone who has very strong artistic tendencies, then please hear this... it is super super super important that you only agree to go to a therapist who is deeply trained in cluster B personality types, including narcissistic personality disorder... ...Otherwise everything that you've seen the video, in these comments, etc is likely to happen. Without an expert helping see thru their mask, then they are very...vapable of AND LIKELY TO manipulate the therapist.... If that happens then it could turn into something that makes the abuse much worse for you... then you end up having not just them, but them and the deceived therapist telling YOU that YOU should be doing a better job of regulating this entire other Adult human toddler... instead of THEM regulating their own self with basic integrity & self-control just like all adults need to do.

  • @adamlamparello8701
    @adamlamparello87018 ай бұрын

    Barbara is excellent. She is spot on in her analysis

  • @fionameredith8787
    @fionameredith87878 ай бұрын

    Psychologist/Somatic Psychotherapist with 22 years experience here. Agree with everything you have articulated. Oh, and boundaries - a go to quality that I also focus upon 🙏

  • @goldeegreene5023
    @goldeegreene50238 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much, Barbara. Your explanation of "taking responsibility" for narcissist abuse is a game-changer for me!

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, taking responsibility for the HEALING from narcissistic abuse (once you are an adult) is not taking responsibility for the abuse! This comment of mine has definitely been misinterpreted by some - so thank you for letting me know it was helpful for you! Wishing you health and healing.

  • @sunbeam9222

    @sunbeam9222

    8 ай бұрын

    Secure people understand that self accountability is power. People pleaser get offended by the thought.

  • @jamilgotcher365
    @jamilgotcher3656 ай бұрын

    Therapy seems like the ideal environment for a narcissist to do what they love best, carrying on about themselves.

  • @Cod12Osc
    @Cod12Osc5 ай бұрын

    This was a very informative video

  • @leslieweber724
    @leslieweber7248 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much. You are exceptional

  • @mailill
    @mailill9 ай бұрын

    This is the best explanation of NPD I've seen.

  • @pcat1672
    @pcat16729 ай бұрын

    My sons partner insisted on couples therapy. Didn’t go the way she wanted..phoned the counsellor and had a go at her and then punched a photo of her and my son so hard she needed surgery in her hand!

  • @randytessman911
    @randytessman9119 ай бұрын

    I'd like to see a video on NPD when it's a part of BPD. Maybe include a warning that abuse has to be documented because, as I was told by the abuse center in town, men can't be abused because it can't be proven in court.

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    What a disgusting thing for them to say to you. I'm sorry you've experienced that.

  • @simonakhaven7744
    @simonakhaven77448 ай бұрын

    Thank you so very much for all your talks. I allowed a covert narcissist move in after she super showered me with love but after a year it was clear her issues were NPD and once she realized I knew she had NPD and I stood my ground she left and I feel I was super lucky. But I have to figure out why I didn’t see it before and now I miss the non NPD version of her. Now I am super cautious. Many thanks again.

  • @bartlevenson7851
    @bartlevenson78518 ай бұрын

    I'd Love to see this video from you. I am with a priveliged, controlling person, and dragged her to therapy 2 years ago for several months. She kept complaining about me over and over and the therapist wanted me to always bend to please her. In the end she gave up and wished us well as my partner kept up the complaints and never looked at her part, which was extreme rage that sent me into freeze responses. Small things give her permission to vent so much that I was leaving and going to a hotel just to get away from her.

  • @PeterShaw-ne1yq
    @PeterShaw-ne1yq7 ай бұрын

    My one had a glaring lack of empathy and could not tolerate even a misconstrued hint of criticism upon which she would instantly rage and implement silent treatment for months !

  • @susieboothby3487
    @susieboothby34878 ай бұрын

    I’m cratered right now by a narc sibling. Through the years I have gone along, praised, listened to those who dare to seem strong & might self advocate & then the grudge begins. unfortunately I made myself codependent financially so I’m feeling pretty low. After being gaslit to death for years today things were revealed in an interesting way. On one hand I feel better to know I’m not crazy. But, I have to step away no matter the consequences & that’s sad to me. However, I’m free! I’ll grow in that feeling alone!

  • @lonilonelony8419
    @lonilonelony84194 ай бұрын

    My narcissist mother told me the psychiatrist told her he doesn’t understand why her family abandoned her when she did nothing wrong. I offered to forward her texts and emails to the doctor to help. Dead air. I had to go no contact.

  • @danielaedlevednav7782
    @danielaedlevednav77827 ай бұрын

    I have a sister who has a very difficult relationship with her twin daughters. She was diagnosed with PTSD last year. When I read about PTSD, I came across NPD. Then I thought she must have a covert NPD too. In this video you talk about the consequences of extensive trauma. And now I understand that my sister does not have NPD. She manipulates people, but not for fun. (She has a lot of trauma, I assume she has complex PTSD). She has no idea what goes wrong between her and other people. Being in her company is not pleasant. Although she is terminally ill, her children rarely visit her anymore. It is very sad and difficult for all of us to deal with this situation. Could you make a video about growing up with a mother with complex PTSD versus a covert narcissistic mother? Thank you for your enlightening information

  • @Poppy-yx8js
    @Poppy-yx8js3 ай бұрын

    I did not go into therapy with anyone who has NPD but I was smear campaigned by people who were trying to simulate an intervention for NPD even though I’m actually a survivor of multiple pathological people- not a person with the disorder. Questioned about every detail of my life and interrogated on many things that were invented. I’m traumatized.

  • @sharigirardeau3367
    @sharigirardeau33676 ай бұрын

    I feel like this is a trick question. A narcissist? Agreeing to therapy?! Preposterous!! 😅

  • @bandonart
    @bandonart7 ай бұрын

    Outstanding. I must sdmit, the scenario made me smile. Is the couples video available?

  • @AnneHebden
    @AnneHebden4 ай бұрын

    I was asked to look after my grandchild regularly when employment began again for the mother. But although it seemed great, and on the face of it, a lovely opportunity for me to spend time as a grandparent, rules came in right from the get-go, and then criticism, unending, behind my back. My own child, the father, was sometimes around, and that was lovely, but criticism of me continued to come from the wife, at work. I decided to stop, and she could not cope with that, and has not spoken to me again since. So 6 years ago now. My contact with my grandchildren has also been prevented. Because of her. It is very hard, but I can clearly see that she has NPD.

  • @jfk226
    @jfk2267 ай бұрын

    Your videos are amazing because you explain things so thoroughly. I appreciate how you take the time to explain concepts from the point of view of both parties. I have a question about the times when the videos become black & white. I get distracted and loose focus when it happens trying to figure out the purpose. I'm guessing you use b&w to let the viewer know that those statements are not true or controversial? Could you please explain that in your description?

  • @SM-tl9ls

    @SM-tl9ls

    3 ай бұрын

    The black and white portion is when the presenter presents the point of view of the narcissist. Hope this helps.

  • @cjbird7121
    @cjbird71213 ай бұрын

    My experience with going to couples therapy w/my probable narcissist ex was a little different than what has been mentioned in your video. He subtly flirted w/the therapist. He defected conversation that he didn’t want to have easily. We had been together for 28 years at this point. I know his behaviors well. In the past I would’ve chocked the getting off track to him, and/or myself having ADHD. Through learning how to support people with ADHD in order to care for our son who was also diagnosed I learned ways to help w/executive dysfunctions. Interestingly none of those things helped my ex or he was extremely resistant to trying them. Like recording or taking notes when we had discussions regarding important decisions. Back to the therapy sessions when he would reroute conversations. I would try and steer the conversation back to what we had been talking about. The therapist seemed to not catch on to his manipulations and would continue w/the topic my ex had guided us too. He even made joking innuendos about a three-some w/us & therapist. She would laugh uncomfortably but just tell him to behave. At the time I felt like I was drowning from everything I was responsible for and felt responsibility to. Like helping our son who was having severe depression, anxiety & suicidal ideation at the age of 12! My husband dismissed it as normal adolescent things. The therapist at one point told me “enough about putting more on your plate, we need to focus on new forming new habits”. Things like “date night”, me making place cards/labeled pictures in the kitchen to put where I like things located in the kitchen. One of my complaints was him making a mess in the kitchen when I had it set up in a way to make using it w/adhd easier & more productive. I had no time to even call my sister but I had to make labels to help him help me! My resistance to me being the one making them had me told I need to do my part to help him do better. After about 5-6 sessions and there being no follow through from him on actually implementing things we talked about in session. I tried to bring up that session for the next several sessions. He successfully deflected the topic every time. Around session 9-10, we had a review to discuss if we were happy with our progress or wanted to continue. My answer was that I was unhappy with/progress but I didn’t want to continue. My ex was all for continuing so we can fix things. When she pressed me for more information, she seemed surprised that I felt like nothing had improved & that I felt worse than before we started couples therapy. Myself & my son were both in individual therapy, this is where I learned that ex’s behaviors were toxic and in line with/traits of narcissism. Of course they didn’t Dx him, and were clear about that. It just helped me to see things more clearly and to stop feeling that I was going crazy, not interpreting things correctly etc etc I strongly believe that if we had continued couples therapy & ex didn’t have a heart attack that he would’ve had sex w/our therapist and tried to convince she & I to have a threesome. That was one of his pattern 2 times in our relationship when we were much younger. As always when I discuss this I can’t believe I stayed with him as long as I did

  • @arniep740
    @arniep7408 ай бұрын

    I don't know if my ex is a covert narcissist or not, but she does have many, though not all, of the traits. When we were together, she convinced me to go to couples therapy with her therapist whom she had been seeing for quite a while. Big mistake for me to agree to that. Looking back, I think it was terribly unethical for the therapist to suggest it. My ex had totally convinced the therapist that all of our problems were my fault, my doing and my responsibility. After a few sessions, I finally realized what a mistake that was to go to HER therapist and expect unbiased help. In any event, my ex started the divorce in the most cruel and vicious way. I have come to realize that she did me a great favor by divorcing me, though I am still dealing with some of her flying monkeys, which continues to traumatize me. Working on it.

  • @VioletRosesmith
    @VioletRosesmith5 ай бұрын

    Hi I'm a woman who grew up with a mother who had NPD and would love if you would give your thoughts about couples therapy where one or both parties are dealing with relationship problems stemming from that parental narcissistic trauma rather than when a partner has NPD. Thank you love your videos!

  • @nadiah3664
    @nadiah36649 ай бұрын

    Background: I had a very lousy chiildhood, massive physical and psychological maltreatment from my father and narcisistic abuse from my mother. Both me and my brother got the brunt of it. We both struggle with mental health issues and so my brother broke down in his early 20s and tried comitting suicide. Luckily, he wasnt successful. But here is the kicker. When the psychiatrist invited my narcisistic mother to the hospital to talk about my brother and mentioned, that our crappy childhood massively contributed to his mental breakdown and that we all as a family need therapy, my mother went absolutely balistic on her, screamed at her all kinds of things, among other also, that imcompetent idiots like her should NOT be allowed to work with patients. Its absolutely unacceptable and also, we DONT HAVE ANY PROBLEMS in our family, none at all and all would be great, if everybody just behaved the way we are supposed to, then everything would be perfect. I only heard what happened from my mother, I wasnt actually there. But I have seen scenes like that from my mother before, I can so picture it, how she blew a fuse and pretty much confirmed to the psychiatrist what she thought already. I also felt sorry for the doctor, that she had to wtiness that. And nothing changed obviously since then. Also, both of my parents deny that the abuse took place at all. My mother is capable of very convincingly claim, that my father DID NOT break my hand, because he beat me so savagely. But then couple of years later not only she remembers it happened, she even remembers for what I was beaten. So, there is that.....

  • @stephanielu7694
    @stephanielu76948 ай бұрын

    My narcissist husband got kicked out of therapy. The therapist didn't feel safe.

  • @robray6630
    @robray66306 ай бұрын

    I have literally wondered, at times, if maybe I black out and act like a jack and I don’t remember. I know that isn’t true, but it has crossed my mind.

  • @Cooltreevr
    @Cooltreevr7 ай бұрын

    Pretty much nailed it

  • @redwalla
    @redwalla8 ай бұрын

    My experience with my NPD spouse was that she accused me of “manipulating” the therapist into believing only my story and turned the therapist against the spouse. 😂😅 OMG! She was there in therapy with me for 3-4 sessions but I manipulated the therapist right there in front of her, not to mention a therapist has an ethical duty to remain neutral. I had one alone session after that with the therapist, and stopped. 😢 Only recently did I awaken to her suffering from NPD. 😮 I was so naive and tried so hard to meet her manipulative needs.

  • @bikimajic9610
    @bikimajic96106 ай бұрын

    I’m a parent of a young adult narc. And I’m an empathetic person in general. My life is hell right now. There’s not much info for parents on how to deal with this. It’s sooo hard. I’m manipulated, used & abused daily and am on the verge of ruining my relationship, with my other child who loves me, cares, is supportive and wants the narc sibling out of our lives. The logical part of me understands that the narc needs to go and that I need to support my suffering good child but the paternal part of me can’t let go of narc child because I do see their pain (or am I just so deeply manipulated?) I’m a parent to both & im heart broken 💔

  • @liziegarcia6928
    @liziegarcia69286 ай бұрын

    8:51pm EST My husband and I are doing a couple retreat for 4 days. I’m really anxious and actually scared going into this. He agreed to go and likes the idea of vacation with a purpose, like I put it. However, a few days ago, I told him how important it was to not allow pride and ego into these therapy sessions. Maybe a mistake but I wanted to let him know that I hoped we could both come into this not afraid to place all our cards on the table. To allow ourselves to be vulnerable. That I loved him and wanted both of us to help each other become the best versions of ourselves. He started to reverse blame and get defensive. It is utterly exhausting emotionally and psychologically to be in a relationship with someone who has narcissistic tendencies. Here I am again. My first husband had narcissistic tendencies. I have low self esteem and confidence. I am an empath. I tend to look within almost too much. I sacrifice myself, my feelings, my wants to keep the peace. I want to feel empowered. I want to create boundaries, etc. I just don’t know where to begin. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge and experience!!!

  • @ScuzzBunny
    @ScuzzBunny9 ай бұрын

    Had a relationship for the past 18 years with somebody I suspect has covert narcissism. He's been thru 4 therapists in the past 2 years because they will ask what he'd like to work on with them and they injure him by laughing when he tells them, "I expect you to fix what's wrong with me." His most recent therapist frustrated him during their first session by mentioning he looked over my partners records and noticed there seems to be a strong current of depression that my partner refuses to take medication/accountability for. He spent the entire weekend pouting because I've been telling him that for years. He also complains that therapy is exhausting and makes him cry, and he never knows what to talk about. I have the opposite experience with therapy and it makes me sad that it challenges him so much, especially while he's unemployed and has all the free time he needs to work on himself.

  • @joellegavin1760
    @joellegavin17606 ай бұрын

    I believe it's ALL complex trauma. I think what we all have in common is complex trauma. Also, I think a good way to start is looking at a model of healthy relating. There are some clear rules/guidelines. Talking about responsibilities may be accurate but, I feel it is triggering for both the victim and the narcissist. That means both can feel unsafe and their nervous system activated. Not good for therapy. And the last thing I would say is that I have noticed that practically every trait that a narcissist can have, the victim can have as well, but for completely different motivations. For example, the narcissist can criticise unfairly, the victim can criticise to set boundaries. I believe this phenomenon feeds into the narcissist being better able to Project. I don't know what the solution is, but I can sense that there is one. I enjoy your videos but, in this instance, I can see how this approach would be less likely to work. I'll keep looking for other approaches. If I find something more helpful, I'll share that here

  • @joellegavin1760
    @joellegavin17606 ай бұрын

    As a client this is an idea I had for approaching therapy with a narcissist. starting with a combination of effortless mindfulness, internal family systems and polyvagal nerve Theory could shift the focus. Emotionally focused therapy might then be more possible. And then guidelines on respectful communication, empathic listening, expressing appreciation and conflict resolution skills would be easier to do. The behavioural change coming after the attitudinal change.

  • @luv2jazz
    @luv2jazz9 ай бұрын

    Yes. Sadly.

  • @Reneemfenn
    @Reneemfenn9 ай бұрын

    Grace humor and hypnosis works for me 🎉

  • @abva56
    @abva564 ай бұрын

    Spectrum means, covert and vulnerable narcissism. It's narcissism nonetheless even though it's not malignant or overt. Also, NPD is usually comorbid with BPD, Bipolar, Avoidant and Dismissive Disorders to name the most common.

  • @Moggy458
    @Moggy4583 ай бұрын

    My cousin has bipolar, and doesn’t take the medication, but has been addicted to prescription medication from an early age, and drinks and takes copious amounts of ketamine/ cocaine, drinks vodka which doesn’t agree with her , and gets nasty, she says she has 1 kidney+ heart condition which effects 1 in 8 million people 🙄 we met up a few years ago I moved to the area after my parents died. I was the best thing ever to start with, and then out of nowhere I was shunned by her and the village so I moved away. About 3 years ago she messaged me and apologised profusely and we seemed to be close again. However behind the scenes she was mischief making, defamed my character. Short version is, I’ve been scapegoat for her drug addiction and projected on me to cover her tracks and I once again I am the villain. There’s a lot more to situation. I found 2 days ago what had been happening. Could you please advise me. I’m devastated and I feeling terrible, but I haven’t done anything to deserve this , please help me

  • @Moggy458

    @Moggy458

    3 ай бұрын

    There is a established friend group( 5 years ) that she introduced me to and then went on to tell me that I wasn’t liked . But they all take the same thing and I didn’t fit in. So I stopped going to the gatherings. She always states that she is empathic and everyone confides in her which I thought was great, but then over time It was clear she was telling everyone everything about different people in the group very personal and private details. Which I didn’t think was empathic at all. But at home when it was just family a lot of nasty things were being said. There has been in group arguments, but other people were getting blamed. And it seems that it is my turn. I have been blamed for having a fictional drug habit ( I haven’t) but it is cover up her tracks for substantial amount of money out of her joint account with her husband. There is so much more to say but I am sure you get the jist of the problem

  • @SarahlabyrinthLHC
    @SarahlabyrinthLHC9 ай бұрын

    Went to counselling with my ex narcissist, she told him he was too controlling, he told her she didn't know what she was talking about and walked out. That was the end of the counselling!

  • @tamara4677
    @tamara46778 ай бұрын

    After the second couples therapy appointment, the therapist cancelled the third appointment and wouldn't schedule anymore appointments but wouldn't say why. Felt ghosted by the couples therapist!

  • @JB-sw8db
    @JB-sw8db7 ай бұрын

    My ex with NPD convinced her therapist, that I was the one with NPD. At the time I didn’t really know what it was. I sure do now.

  • @JustaLittleMystic
    @JustaLittleMystic8 ай бұрын

    My mom is cold shouldering me because I won’t go to therapy with her. She’s has shown up in our relationship in a way that lines up with those traits, the lying and blame shifting in particular. She’s not safe. I’ll take the cold shoulder.

  • @DHW256
    @DHW2568 ай бұрын

    I'm not aware that our mother was ever officially diagnosed, but there were obvious problems. Following her suicide attempt when I was 8 years old, Mom and Dad were temporarily much more involved in our lives. They must've been under scrutiny, but the only advice we kids had was we were to blame for her rage and other abuses Meanwhile, Mom's earlier life was kept secret from us, and I'm sure the scrutinizers were never told what they really needed to know, otherwise I'm sure she would have lost custody. I cannot imagine treating my children the way she treated us. I was the only child who would confront Mom so, when I was 14, she marched me and Dad into therapy to talk to a counselor about my problems. It took a few weeks for the counselor to suggest she was the problem. As you said, she dismissed the counselor as "unqualified", and the sessions ended. She remained a most difficult person, a cunning chameleon, to her dying breaths.

  • @betsyny1
    @betsyny18 ай бұрын

    My sister. I recently had a supervisor get me fired for no reason and she had all these traits too.

  • @Shadowman...
    @Shadowman...6 ай бұрын

    My brother in law went to therapy with my narcissistic sister years ago ~ He talked about how the therapist had him express his view and then stopped him midway and asked my sister ~ What did you hear him say about you? He later told me *" She got it wrong every time"* I told him " Your actually living with someone who's detached from reality. She refused to go to anymore sessions ~ like he didn't see that coming~ right

  • @ebony41441
    @ebony414413 ай бұрын

    They turn the therapist against you. One gal I knew was unhappy in her marriage and the therapist questioned her on her behaviour and he quit bad mouthed the therapist

  • @brendabeans4986
    @brendabeans49866 ай бұрын

    My brother is married to a narc who has been seeing the same therapist for 15 years. She’s tried other therapists, but this is the one who tells her what she wants to hear (which is that she has to cut off most of our family from their lives, leaving my brother completely isolated with her as his only “support system”). Her behavior has only gotten worse. Thoughts?

  • @oceanlife7
    @oceanlife79 ай бұрын

    What I said to the worst one I ever met was that she was some form of Narcissistic Sociopath and the only difference between her and the others was that they function at varying degrees of aggressiveness, and that she was either a Narcissistic Sociopath with Psychotic tendencies or she was an outright Psychopath who by her own childhood grooming and self-grooming over the years, by the many-layered game she plays, appears to be a Sociopath but isn't. Less stigma to be a Narcissistic Sociopath than a Psychopath because who hasn't run into a Narcissistic Sociopath? That was 2016, and in 2018, I found out about the Cluster B diagnosis and psychotic tendencies. She tries to take over your life arenas and destroy you in the eyes of people who know you-including those who don't so she can pretend your neighbors, co-workers, etc., wants her to be in their life instead. She doesn't want them, just wants to pretend that everyone wants her instead because she was abandoned and molested as a child. She's evening the score to the extreme for what I had in childhood-a family that loved and wanted me-and goes after our kids-including sexually-to make us pay. She looks for males in position of authority that are likeminded with no problem breaking the law either, offers sexual favors to then use their big boy job titles to cover it all up so they can have sex with her again. She makes sure they understand her currency. She hates every mother ever born as we are surrogates for her prostitute mother who abandoned her. The story is too long and too vile, but I unmasked a legitimate monster and she knew it after our final conversation. She went after my daughter again despite my warnings just to show me she could. I told. Nothing happened just like she tried subtly telling me nothing would happen. By the time I figured out what she was, she was so prolific as a prostitute herself, I was already extremely triangulated using them to keep tabs on me and help her set me up as the bad guy to her pretend victim roles. She needs constant attention to the point it's beyond a sickness. She preened at me many times with her secrets of what she was doing that I had no clue about yet. I told her it would take a profiler for her full diagnosis and to catch her.

  • @SexySqueekr
    @SexySqueekr5 ай бұрын

    My husband is a narc I believe and he had a moment of vulnerability and is willing to go to therapy. Can it work? He was able to admit his affairs, feel bad for it, and self reflect

  • @liziegarcia6928
    @liziegarcia69286 ай бұрын

    You said to mention ideas for other videos…if you have any experience with blended families and narcissism, could you please share? I am a mother of 3, (now 24, 22, and 16) married someone with an only child (16). We’ve been together 10 years. There is a lot of self-centered/narcissistic tendencies that my husband and his daughter exhibit. My youngest son is treated almost like Cinderella and there are a lot of double standards in the household. I am beyond frustrated and am about to snap. Please share any advice, thoughts, experiences…

  • @nickwalker9943
    @nickwalker99438 ай бұрын

    Please please do I'm very ver interested in a video on when 1 person ina relationship has NPD

  • @nid2598
    @nid25989 ай бұрын

    Hi Barbara, i have a question. Can a narcissist be depressed? Have you ever seen a narcissist being diagnosed with major depressive disorder? Can these two things go together?

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, they definitely can go together.

  • @nid2598

    @nid2598

    9 ай бұрын

    @BarbaraHeffernan but I haven't seen people who manipulate being depressed. They are usually successful in manipulating others and so are usually happy.

  • @SimonWorlds
    @SimonWorlds9 ай бұрын

    Yeah wow, I have a mother (and a few other female family members) who went to therapy with my sister without my knowledge, but was a bitch session about me (anti men in general is a theme in my family from a few generations ago from very bad abuse to my Grandma and I can see how the generational pain has progressed to the younger people of the family). This went on for months before I found out, my sister rang me and told me what was going on and she felt very uncomfortable that I was not involved in the sessions, let alone apart of them. I was furious, i also confronted my mother, told her how disgusting this was and said if you want to actually get counselling, i'd be more than happy to attend. Lets just say, 5-6 sessions in, the counselling was aborted by my mother and no repair took place and I am still just navigating my own road of self discovery in how to overcome it and essentially become so much more spiritually evolved where I can exist without caring what other people, think, say or do. This is the only place I can see a place of acceptance and see it as a massive lesson for learning self evolution to myself. In a way, i am using my narcissist mother and other family members as a catalyst for self improvement (though a very hard road) and a way to hopefully lead by example without defensiveness and also never having expectations of change from within my family will happen. But I can change myself and achieve my own life of happiness.

  • @giorgianapaun6500
    @giorgianapaun65007 ай бұрын

    Hi! I would love some recommendations for a therapist in the Dallas, TX area that can help the spouse of a narcissist while going through divorce. Thank you!

  • @Cyclestopper
    @CyclestopperАй бұрын

    Yes, please create a video with couples therapy and NPD. I am the partner

  • @WallyMahar
    @WallyMahar9 ай бұрын

    This is so sad. I know it’s true…I was just hoping.😢

  • @SuzannaLiessa
    @SuzannaLiessa9 ай бұрын

    I'm definitely interested in hearing about couples counseling with a narcissist. As both a therapist and the soon to be ex spouse of someone with narcissistic traits, my instinct is "don't." The narcissist won't change and you might end up giving them ammunition. Can you keep the spouse safe in a session with a narcissist?

  • @Medietos

    @Medietos

    9 ай бұрын

    Could you tell me: Can a therapist duped by a NPD and married, be of true healing help to sick patients? I mean to heal, not just get some intermittent relief or get a little better?

  • @SuzannaLiessa

    @SuzannaLiessa

    9 ай бұрын

    @Medietos Before I respond, I want to make it clear that I can't offer you any kind of professional help since we don't have a client/therapist relationship. These are personal observations of myself and others. It's not entirely clear what you're asking for. Are you currently in a relationship? Or are you out/preparing to leave? Are you talking about therapy with the narcissist or individual therapy? If you're looking for help to heal, I would recommend individual therapy with a therapist who does not know or work with the narcissist. If you're doing therapy with a narcissist and the therapist seems to have been duped, work with your own therapist to decide what you want to do. You can't change the therapist or the narcissist, so you need to decide what you need/want to do to keep yourself as safe as possible. What do you consider to be "true healing"? That's a pretty broad phrase, and it's something you need to discuss with your therapist. It's hard to accomplish something if you don't know what it is. What a client can achieve with a therapist is hard to predict. Healing is a journey, and it can be a very uneven, uncertain one. It's not an easy one, either. It's different for everybody. People who make progress seem to have several things in common. They get back up on the horse when they fall off. Maybe not right away, but sooner or later, they get up. They learn to mourn the what if's and the might-have-beens and then let them go. They're forward-facing, meaning that their healing is as much about finding out who they are, what they value, who they would like to be, and where to go from here now that they're out from under the narcissist's thumb as it is about processing pain. They want to be whole, and while that might sound obvious, it's not. They learn how to accept help, and they learn how to reach out for it. They learn to set boundaries with toxic people. They learn good self-care. Mostly, they have a lot of courage, they work hard, and they give themselves a lot of grace. To sum it all up, I don't know if a therapist can help you find true healing. But therapy is a good option, and the only way to find out is to try.

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    @@SuzannaLiessa Kudos for the gracious and generous reply. ❤

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@Medietos "Duped" is a loaded way of putting it, but I can report that just watching *videos* (nevermind one-on-one therapy) by therapists who've experienced narcissistic abuse has turbocharged my healing like nothing else. People who really get it can illuminate what "it" is (half the battle), explain why it wasn't your fault in a *convincing* way because they've been there, and give you narc-specific tips for healing others might not think of (e.g. making a list of every awful thing they did to un-gaslight yourself and resist hoovering...). I was a hot mess most of my life, but can now center and soothe myself, recover from upsets more quickly, state my needs and feelings, enforce healthy boundaries, and not be overly concerned if people are upset with me for silly reasons or simply don't like me. Huzzah! I'm also no longer grieving the fact that my mother didn't love me, or secretly hoping that someday she will (she was incapable--no need to take it personally). Now I love and validate mySELF, as well as healthy people who know how to be reciprocal, honest, kind, and loving. That feels significantly healed to me. So does the fact that I can continue learning and healing as a form of self-care without feeling desperate or getting massively triggered. - Some of the therapists who are NPD abuse survivors who helped me get here: Ingrid Clayton, Patrick Teahan, Jay Reid, Dr. Ramani. - Ingrid's videos in particular are a master class on modeling what self-acceptance looks like. - Pete Walker is another healed/healing therapist. His book Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving is a classic. - Same with John Bradshaw and his book Homecoming on doing inner child work. - Patrick Teahan has some great videos role playing inner child work with his mentor Amanda Curtin.

  • @khireebrodie2202
    @khireebrodie22028 ай бұрын

    What’s about the narcissist that want to change

  • @UnacceptableTee
    @UnacceptableTee3 ай бұрын

    Would love to know narcissist with emotion couples therapy. Our therapist eventually let him go and suggested he see someone else as he wasn’t willing to do the deep work. We got there because of his secret life. He was diagnosed with a very very strong DA/ FA. I’m wondering now if he’s covert narc.

  • @relaxedandhappy1161
    @relaxedandhappy11613 ай бұрын

    My narcissistic sister-in-law started therapy to better cope with a chronic illness and talk about her childhood. I don't know what's going on in these sessions, but she's gone completely berserk now. The therapist obviously encourages her sick behavior.

  • @futz1656
    @futz16568 ай бұрын

    My brother in law has all the traits of a covert victim narcissist and when he was out of a job for a while he got very “depressed” and went to see a therapist. He had obviously heard from people in his life that he was a narcissist as his takeaway from those sessions with a psychiatrist was an antidepressant and the announcement that “I’m not a narcissist he said so.” (announced to my husband out of the blue at a very infrequent catch up). He is one of the nastiest, most manipulative people I know and his lack of self esteem magnifies that. Yet out he comes with validation and yet another excuse to treat everyone around him atrociously (I’m so depressed etc).Most of the family have given up on him altogether, we haven’t see him for 3 years. But to get to the point, therapy gave him a ticket to ride.

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    This sounds like a classic narc bald-faced lie. Any therapist worth their license would be highly unlikely to tell someone they're NOT a narcissist, because lying and manipulation are key features of the disorder. I've heard of other narcs using this line though. Glad for you that you haven't had to see him for 3 years.

  • @futz1656

    @futz1656

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bellaluce7088 good point. Sometimes it is just so hard to think like them. Thank goodness I guess. We won’t be seeing him again he’s just been too cruel to so many vulnerable people in their family. Their father is the same. And both such victims, last time my husband saw his father and called him out on a few things he denied all of it “I don’t remember” or “it’s your imagination” blah blah textbook stuff and then got upset because “no one will be at my funeral.” All about him to the bitter end haha.

  • @bellaluce7088

    @bellaluce7088

    8 ай бұрын

    @@futz1656 Ugh. So classic for your husband's father to turn natural consequences of his own misbehavior into a pity party. Eye roll. Glad your husband spoke up though. That's healing even if the other person never takes responsibility. ❤

  • @cloudwalker8266
    @cloudwalker82669 ай бұрын

    Is it NPD if someone repeatedly promises to do something that's part of their professional responsibility but then keeps coming up with excuses for why they haven't gotten around to it yet? Does it matter if the behavior goes on for years? What if the excuses seem legitimate? I'm not referring to personal illness, but more like administrative issues and competing professional responsibilities.

  • @BarbaraHeffernan

    @BarbaraHeffernan

    9 ай бұрын

    Hi: This would not qualify someone for NPD. This video outlines the specifics of NPD: kzread.info/dash/bejne/eYCu28qahLeefrQ.html However, they could qualify otherwise...There are a number of different things that could cause that behavior, but I'm wondering why the diagnosis would matter?

  • @katiethompson4532
    @katiethompson45328 ай бұрын

    What do you think about Lee Hammock? He has been diagnosed with NPD and has been in therapy for years. He has a youtube channel that seems to be helping people by offering advice from the perspective of one clinically diagnosed with NPD.

  • @lindavincent678
    @lindavincent6787 ай бұрын

    And wanna do anything I told my husband that I knew what he was. I told my husband that I knew what he was not even two weeks he moved he moved in the motorhome to a friend in the motorhome to a friend and his wife's backyard

  • @dashag3554
    @dashag35547 ай бұрын

    My husband believes I have an NPD - he is talking about it every single day. He is not a psychologist. And his guessing comes out from the youtube videos. I've agreed to go to the family therapy to get this diagnosis from a real specialist. Unfortunately, such information can be very helpful for the potential victims of NPD persons, but can be used quite opposite by the guys who are the real NPD persons.