Narcissism is a personality disorder (NPD) that affects nearly one in six individuals meaning that we encounter people with NPD far more often than we might realize. For the most part these encounters are fairly benign, but for some of us they are far more impactful.
I was
raised by a narcissist, have worked with narcissists at various times
throughout my career and had the misfortune (luck of the draw) of raising a
narcissist. Being raised by, and having
raised, a narcissist is the most difficult thing to wrap one’s head around because
of how much you love them. Despite
everything my parent put me through during my childhood and well into adulthood
I still love that person very much.
However, despite my best efforts, even with the help of a therapist, that
relationship ended about fifteen years ago.
Having
a child with NPD is the hardest because you love them so much and you know that
they will struggle their entire lives to navigate their way while they leave a
wake of emotional destruction in their path.
Upheaval they don’t intend, broken relationships, missed opportunities
and difficulties getting along with others are often their future. Even harder is the fact that there is nothing
you can to do to help them or fix it and you have to accept that.

I have found this book tremendously helpful
Radical
acceptance is the only way to survive NPD, but once you do you are able to effectively
move forward with clarity, understanding and the tools to love and deal with
that person. It is a lot of work, but it
is possible. Having a good therapist
with NPD experience is extremely helpful.
When
you work with someone with NPD you have options. You can either gather the tools and use
techniques to be able to work with them and accept all the bumps along the way
or you can change jobs and get away from them.
Because of the varying degrees of NPD, moving along and changing jobs is
typically the only way to survive a narcissist in the workplace. Family members and spouses however, make it
much harder. That is where professional
help becomes even more important.
Narcissists
can be absolutely brutal. They are
highly manipulative and emotionally abusive.
Some are physically abusive too. One
thing I can tell you is that dealing with and recovering from NPD abuse requires
outside professional help. It really isn’t
something we can do on our own. You also
need clarity about what narcissism really is.
Once you have clarity you are better able to make practical decisions. From there you can also begin to heal.
It is
completely okay to say “I can’t continue to be in this situation anymore”. It is completely okay to maintain minimal
contact. It is also completely okay to accept
our limitations and to walk away if that is what needs to happen. It is okay too, to still love that person. It is hard, very hard, but at the end of the
day we need to make sure we don’t sacrifice ourselves. We need to make to love ourselves too. I will all my best to those of you that find
yourselves in this same situation.






Thank you for posting . Very helpful
ReplyDeleteInformation. Sorry you had to deal with family members being narcissists. Hugs, Janie
Thank you Janie. I'm glad you enjoyed this post. :)
DeleteWow, 1 in 6 are narcissists? Well, we know that figure is not from self-reporting, because narcissists don't self-identify as such! Because it would never occur to them to question if they were or not.
ReplyDeleteMy MIL and FIL were quite the narcs. I tried to avoid them for the most part, and set up clear boundaries when I couldn't. I never let my children be alone with them in the same room, and they never once babysat. I witnessed too many mentally (never physically) damaging interactions with their other grandchildren to know that they were not safe people for vulnerable children to be around. Hell, even when I was right there they'd try stuff and I had to shut them down--and I wasn't always quick enough. I was certainly their least favorite in-law, I can tell you that. That was my badge of honor... ;^)
Their passing ultimately solved all those problem for me. I don't miss either of them; there was nothing in the relationships for me to miss.
My DH knew that his parents were problematic, but he was mostly unable to confront them. Due to his childhood, I'm sure. Bad parenting does damage, but it seems like the damage wrought by narc parents is much harder to overcome.
I've probably said too much here, but I wanted to honor your post, which I'm sure was hard to write, with some sharing of my own. Hugs to you!
Sue
And so we keep moving on...
Thank you so much Sue for sharing your story. It means a lot. Yes, we keep moving on... :o)
Delete