Does anybody out there have a parent or in-law that acts like this? This came from an article I read about the spoilt brat / narcissist behavior. Please explain to me how you deal with this behavior and how much do you allow it to actually control your life before either just putting your foot down and saying enough and calling their bluff or backing away from the situation. I realize that they are our parents but when is enough just enough?
Yes, I have had several times discussed with my mother (and brother) "heart to heart" about their behavior too. Most of the time, they never did this or said that, or it was not their fault; one time after my brother had an enormous and scary narc rage during which he spoke badly of my husband (who wasn't even present), then he proceeded to cry like a baby and say he was sorry in general. Of course there were hugs and kisses as I was leaving for the airport. And last year after my mother exploded on me over the phone and said terrible things, I stopped calling her for a week or so. She called and left me a message that she is sorry for whatever she has done that upset me. Of course, I called her back even though I know this was not a real apology.
As several of you, dear blog friends, have advised, it is best to leave my husband and adult children out of this and let them decide on their own how to act without interfering. It means a lot when advice comes from people who have been through similar circumstances and I so appreciate being part of this blog. What a Godsend! Blessings to all adult kids of narcs.
I also need to remind myself that if she made even a small gesture to approach my husband and mend her relationship with him, he would be there for her. I've read that narcissists are behaving like very young children; if so, don't they need guidance? Should I suggest to my mother to write a note to my husband telling him that she understands that she has done this and that bad things, to write she's sorry, and she wishes to see him? Or should I not interfere? I know it hurts her feelings that he's not speaking to her for the past two years. I also know that this might be best for my husband's well being, I mean to not have any contact with her. Yet, my mom is so old. Blessings to you too.
Keep in mind that a narcissistic person doesn't see things as 'normal' people do. They live in their own fantasy world and maybe they aren't as unhappy and scared as you think. They are oversensitive to criticism and easily injured; but somehow they are convinced that they are the most wonderful, wise, honest, giving folks alive and that, if they don't have many friends it is because they are envied or because their friends are just ungrateful people.
Dear friend, even if we think that our moms were so unlucky to suffer from this disorder, still we have been even more unlucky to have been raised by them.
It is good to forgive our moms, it is good to accept them they way they are, but it is also good to forgive ourselves, to love ourselves, to protect our mental health and nurture our spirit. It was a sad and difficult thing to be r
http://www.nami.org/Template.cfm?Section=By_Illness&Template=/TaggedPage/TaggedPageDisplay.cfm&TPLID=54&ContentID=44780
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/borderline-personality-disorder/index.shtml
to get a sense of how difficult this disease can be for the afflicted. Many of your statements are simply untrue.
Babies die from abuse, children do not mature, youth brains are neurologically altered, and adults can be tragically disoriented, disordered and tormented for life. You may have found a path and answer you can cling to like a bedrock, but others here have not. Others may believe you have denied and suppressed the pain and destruction of your past abuse for expediency, and are playing devil’s advocate here as a projection means to relieve your own guilts and pain. But psychological terror will come out in other ways, it has a way of haunting even if you deny it. Somehow you feel you have achieved perceived permanent psychological peace. I wonder why you are here on this message thread if you are beyond it. Perhaps you aren’t 100% “over it.” I experienced your posting with humiliation, shame and sense that I was scum of the earth for not being is “well adjusted” as you. I then had to “deny” you and put distance from you, much as I did with my own Mom. I had to write this in spite of my inner voice that says “let it go … keep suppressing yourself and hiding” -- because I am trying hard to put out there what I feel in this supportive forum. I ramble, but I wish I was emotionally mature enough to reply to you without hurt and anger -- and in fewer words. So I do feel that I wish you well, I just am going to have a hard time with your denial of what others are attempting to work through, at great cost to themselves. I value their struggles highly. They help me more than they will eve know. So thank you Anonymous for any reveal you can give us.
You're feeling guilty because you're worried about what people will think about you. Stop feeling guilty. You do the best you can, take care of you (so what if you mother dies and you don't get to see her again?). As one very famous political person said, "What difference does it make!".
I say 'what difference does it make?' You will see her this month for one week (way too long as far as I'm concerned in this situation)
To stop the pain you have to stop letting other make you feel guilty.
One thing that made me feel a little better is that she asked me to contribute to her monthly income and (my husband and) I responded right away and set up a way to do that; I guess I feel better because I was able to help her in this way. Of course, when she recently was complaining about her finances and I offered my help, she told me she'd rather die than accept any help from me! Still she asked for it and still I feel good that I was able to help.
When I remember the hurtful things both mom and brother have said about me, my husband, and my children, when I remember the lies etc., when I remember the dread I feel when I'm about to talk to them, I feel that talking on the phone 3 hrs/week and visiting her one week a year is good enough. Yet, I still feel so guilty.
Another issue I'm dealing with is that my husband ad one of my adult children have gone no contact with my mom and brother; the other two adult children have decided to be low contact. Somehow, I blame myself for this! If only I had kept the situation secret, if only I didn't reveal what my relatives were doing to me. Guilt, guilt, guilt. Is there an end to this pain?
As for having a psychiatrist make a diagnosis, the best one can hope for is for the victim to see such a doctor (hopefully one well versed in NPD) and diagnose her from afar; because narcissists seldom agree to see such a doctor and when they (rarely) do, it is for other reasons like depression for example.
As for narcissist fathers, they are as bad. Unfortunately, my brother - the golden child - is one, and I've seen how he has mistreated his children, now adults.
Sometimes I'm thinking that if I had set boundaries early on, if I had confronted her head on every time she mistreated me maybe she could have learned to be a bit more careful, a bit more ...palatable. But this notion is again guided by the idea that it is my fault my mom is the way she is!!! I should have been a better "parent" to her and teach her better!!! Instead all my life I was scared of her and all my life I tried to appease her, please her, make her happy; and to this day my arms get icy cold, I have palpitations, my palms get sweaty before, during, and several hours after I talk to her on the phone.
But educating ourselves about this, seeing a good therapist, having a spouse/adult children/good friends that can understand us, being participants in a blog such as this one help a lot. I feel I have a long way to go to heal my wounds (and maybe I 'll never be totally over this), but I have come a long way and I feel a lot better. I try to speak to my mother and brother with respect, I help financially and make sure she, at 94, is well taken care of, I talk to her on the phone 3 hrs a week, and I stay with her two weeks each year; when she says insulting, hurtful things to me or she rages or she accuses me or my husband or children for things we've never done, I try to get off the phone or leave the room without getting mad. And after a while, when things are calmer, I get back and talk about her favorite plants or a recipe or the weather...
Blessings to all children of narcissists.
MIL had it out with my FIL who is completely and utterly tired of her bossing him around and controlling every situation that he does and is trying to get back to living of which she has kept him from doing for 40+ years. She told him that She hopes he’s happy for leaving her, of which he hasn’t but he knows that the nursing home is the safest and best place for her as he is too old to care for her alone at home any longer. Her feeling is that if he can do all the other things around the house that he wants to do then he can also take care of her. Well he’s in his 80’s so he really can’t and all of the things that he does has a lot of help from the caretaker that she doesn’t see. But then again she really doesn’t care how much she hurts her husband in reality or her children as long as she gets her way then she is happy. She is the MOST selfish, envious person that I have EVER met and she has crushed my spirit and I’m having a very difficult time trying to find that happiness again. I have tried to be there to support my husband through all of this and have tried to get the ball rolling with things to help them out but it has gone unappreciated and all she ends up doing is giving us the preverbal slap in the face and I now say Enough is Enough!!
You are not a child and not being forced to stay. You stay for your own reasons, whatever they are. But when so angry at a parent, how good is that for your health or theirs?
Only a psychiatrist can diagnose this, and een then, I wonder at some of the diagnoses.
Type A has nothing to do with Narcissism. That term came along years before and mean people who are very active and goal oriented versus Type B, more laid back ... much more to it, but it is not diagnosis, in and of itself.
two cents ¢¢
Myself personally, I am ok with how things are, I can always go downstairs if mom gets too annoying. But then, she is nowhere near what she was when I left many years ago because of her antics.
She wasn't the best mother, not by a long shot, scale of 1-10 I would have to put her around 6. (10 being the best). Many of us are too damaged to go anywhere else, the rubbish is just too deep. We just endure and eventually, it will end. For others, it is simply too scary to plunge out on our own. (Again, I did that back in 1977. It was not easy, I had many lean times but I survived.)
It might take a good shrink to get the real reasons but, we cope.
two cents ¢¢
Lynne - I find having anything to do with mother or her things/business is very stressful for me. The old tapes which are negative, still play.
music lady - impossible for most who do not have this kind of parent to understand. I found that out early in life. So important to find people who do understand.
looloo - I had three crazy phone calls a day for several months last winter. It was awful. Haven't had one since mother has been hospital (February). It helps. Has she ever called to say Hello, how are you? No, I don't think they are capable of thinking of others, beyond what it will accomplish for them.
Sorry about the broken/ repeat posts. Seems to happen sometimes.