Someone suggested I post something about my situation. My mom is handicapped and in serious pain. She's been like this since she turned 50. At that time I moved back home to help dad take care of her. He confided in me he couldn't take it anymore. She is now 87 and dad is dead. My situation is complicated in that, I have a narcissistic parent, but she is in serious chronic pain. Her doctors have confirmed it. The situation has ruined my life in more ways than I want to expound on. Please don't suggest I find resources. I've been through all of that. I am currently reading books that discuss having a narcissistic parent, and they are helpful in reflecting back what you're feeling, but I have yet to find anything that reflects the incredible damage a narcissistic parent can do. I saw one film entitled "Jaffa" (2009) about a family that falls apart after the black sheep of the family gets killed. There was a talk after the movie and the discussion focused around the "narcissistic" mother. I was shocked and speechless because I couldn't even tell the mother was self absorbed. I don't think anyone yet knows how growing up in a home with a narcissistic parent can be so completely and horribly complicated. I have yet to see anyone really define it well, or come up with a solution that the affected child can actually come to hold onto as a way out and still be intact. What I wish for now-a-days, maybe strangely, is acknowledgement. The way bullying is in the spotlight now. I wish parental narcissism was in the spotlight. I wish people would wake up to it. Thanks for reading. Please share your experiences if they are similar.
Being around more normal people, once I figured out who they were, helped me turn a corner, and I realize what a mid-life lucky streak I had. The trick for those of us raised by a narcissistic parent is to find someone different. I was widowed in 2006 and dated someone "difficult." One day my mouth dropped open when I realized that some of his behavior reminded me of my mother. I almost married a narcissist! He sucked me in the same way my mother sucks people in, and that's scary. I think because we have a pattern of reveling in any good at all from childhood, we may be more inclined to accept good from someone else at face value, which allows becoming a victim again entirely possible. I suspect that's how our non-N parents were similarly seduced. Thank God for a good psychologist! I have learned to be a more cautious optimist. My dad just left one day, and I didn't blame him a bit for this courageous act of self preservation. He told me years later that he might have left earlier, but he was not going to leave me alone with my mother, so he waited until I was well away from home. He really blossomed once he was away, and we have a very close relationship. My mother is still alive, but I just feel sorry for her now. She will never be happy, but that doesn't mean that the rest of us have to be unhappy. If she's lucky, there will be an afterlife that provides understanding to her and a chance to do better. And if there isn't, it's not my fault.
http://daily.psychotherapynetworker.org/daily/trauma/the-ace-studies-calculating-the-effects-of-child-abuse/
If the link doesn't open, just Googe Ace Studies and Child Abuse. We are different, perhaps like Brad Pitt's Tristan in Legends of the Fall -- between worlds. I saw Carrie (the movie) as a role model because actually went to a prom. Thank you all for sharing, I wish you lived in my town and we all knew each other!
At 51 I am just realizing that I can choose to no longer be a victim, as a child and young adult that was not possible for me. Narcissism is complex and hard to deal with, my Mother started when I was 3 or 4 telling me how she almost died giving birth to me, I have heard that story countless times, she has always said she was dying with some ailment or other and threatened to kill herself numerous times ... being an only child and adoring my Mother made me feel so insecure.
Now at 82 she is still the same, I am all she has so I do visit her regularly and do everything I need to do for her but to be honest I am looking forward to the day she passes away, and i will be free,caring for someone like this is exhaustive.
Keeping one's life in an even keel after first growing up with a narcissistic parent, then establishing and maintaining healthy boundaries takes a great deal of energy. I didn't get it right the first time......nor the 30th time...and it will be a work in progress for my entire lifetime. As a child I would often escape into the world of books: I wasn't allowed out of the house, no one was allowed to come into our apartment and I had no friends or anyone to confide in. My days were highly structured to go to school, look after two siblings (one her favorite, the youngerone was a punching bag for the first, and, he and usually were scapegoats for all that was wrong in our family) to take care of the household chores she didn't feel she "should have" to do, nor assign responsibility to my younger brothers for anything either. My complaining to my dad or grandfather only got me more misery so I learned early to just shut up, take the verbal and physical abuse while vowing to get out of there as soon as I could. I moved out on my 18th birthday and never returned home even for a night.
My mother and I "would get along" (her term) as long as I didn't bring up things from the past - things that I was still working through with a therapist and attempting to have the much needed dialogue with her. Those attempts always ended in escalating arguments, accusations, threats etc until we just didn't talk to each other. Then we would go for years without communication or very limited short phone calls a few times a year. Periodically we would attempt to re-establish some in-person communication but it was always superficial and emotionally draining for me to maintain a relationship that didn't begin to meet any needs for me.
I kept my kids away from her once they were in school as I didn't want them to get sucked into the drama with her. Fortunately after she remarried, they moved several hours away so seeing her in person was rare.
My stepfather died a few years ago and I realized too late he was being subjected to her nasty ways but he didn't want me to intervene on his behalf as it "would just make things worse for him". I regret not confronting her then because once the funeral was over she started complaining about how much time energy and effort the last year of his life took from her! She had become more of a recluse in the last several years, highly suspicious of the people living in the small town where she still lives - always on guard to make sure "no one knows her business". As a result she would order him to go to the grocery store, pharmacy etc, even when he wasn't feeling his best. On a couple occasions I had traveled there to accompany each of them to their doctor appointments to get a first hand report of what each of their health issues were, and his was clearly more serious due to the acute nature vs her chronic health issues. We haven't spoken since (fours years now); months go by and she doesn't even cross my mind - I no longer feel guilty that I cut her out for good because my life is so much better without her constant negative energy.
Somehow you need to find the your inner strength to establish and keep firm boundaries with your mother or your own life is very much at risk - I'm not being melodramatic here: there is a very real mental and physical toll that you endure. Is your quality of life/potentially shortened life expectancy really worth maintaining this relationship?
I thought I was weird for a long time, too. But I embraced it. I like my kind of weird and those that matter like it, too. lol I am utterly myself. I refuse to be anything else. You're not a fake. You can be anybody or anything you want to be if you just choose it. It all comes down to choices. You either believe the lies, or you reject them. You either stay down under oppression or you rise above it. You either accept and love yourself or you don't.
What do you want to be? Who do you want to be? What kind of person do you want to be? All that is up to YOU alone, your parents and their twisted views be damned. Let them own the lie. As long as YOU don't. :)
And all the times she told me it was my fault all my life I refused, absolutely refused, to believe it. Even as a young kid I sensed danger around my mom. I remember my mom telling me that she was the way she was because she had to raise me and I 'made' her that way....Yeah. Sure. lol I thought it was funny when I first heard that and I still think it's funny thinking about it now. You don't have relationships with narcissists, you survive them. I survived by never owning what my mom dished out. I placed that responsibility mentally squarely on her shoulders mentally. Complete disassociation with her problems and refusing to accept and shoulder the blame for that mess is what kept my sanity in tact.
Does that mean I didn't experience lingering problems and issues myself dealing with her? Not by a long shot. I'm on my knees, crawling and gasping, scraping and clawing my way uphill out of a dark pit, but I'm on the right path.
I felt sorry for my mom. Even as a kid, dealing with some major abuse, I felt pity at this poor soul that felt the need to do such extensive harm, that felt such an intense need to HURT. One thing is very clear above all else....allow yourself to drown in HATE because of injustice against you and you're a goner. You MUST forgive or you lose. Period.
First, don't wait for the acknowledgement, apology, regret...it will never come. The thank you will never come because "we owe it to them for all they've given us". Yep.
It's sad, and the sooner you come to grips with it, take it from my experience, the sooner you will feel better and move forward. This site is a lifesaver for me and had I not found it these past 18 mo, my life and relationships would have been a mess. So you are at the right place.
WE acknowledge you and feel your pain if that helps.
I still love my mom. She loves me. I don't always like her, but I love her. I've set boundaries with what I will take and put up with. I'm not mean, I've just learned my triggers and leave her be when she is to tough. I ignore her and remove myself from the situ or premises when she starts on the narcissistic behaviors. Because she knows I will leave or not take her calls or visit for awhile following these episodes, she pulls them a lot less, significantly less than she used to.
I've also tried to learn more about her dementia, shrinking world, fears of losing her control and independence and that has helped me be more patient and more importantly, stop taking her accusations, criticism, refusal to take my advice, personally.
It doesn't mean I let her get away with anything, I will tell her when she says something hurtful and tell her now that she is making me feel bad. Then I tell her I need space and she is allowed to have her opinion or perspective and I leave.
I don't live with her.
You need to take care of you and if that means moving out and arranging outside care for your mom, then so be it. Tell her, you will no longer be treated this way and for your own mental health and the sake of the relationship you are choosing to move elsewhere and she should find someone who can "do it her way".
Since her last stroke her dementia has become really bad and I've been finding mail (government stuff re her pension) tossed in drawers so, apart from things like greeting cards, any mail will now be held at the front desk for me to collect.