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The Narcissistic Family: Cast of Characters and Glossary of Terms

“A family is a tyranny ruled by its weakest member.” George Bernard Shaw nailed the truth with this quote, and no better example is the narcissistic family.

The Narcissistic Family Playbill

The narcissistic family can be understood as a play with characters that serve the lead—the demanding, reactive, and delusional narcissist (usually a parent). Narcissistic families have uncannily similar patterns from one to the next, with basically the same unspoken rules and roles for family members. If visible to the outside world, the performance would appear to be a tragically sick and cruel farce. To the family players burdened with their roles, often since birth, the act is their painful normal.

The Narcissistic Family Cast

The narcissist is the family tyrant.

Narcissist This is usually a parent or parents but may be a child/sibling. The narcissist is the family tyrant, whom everyone else revolves around trying to avoid criticism, conflict, or outright attack. There also may be a hive of narcissists as grandparents or other relatives.

A person with narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) experiences disrupted attachment with caregivers in childhood that impedes healthy emotional and moral development. The child is unable to establish secure self-esteem, an individuated sense of identity, or a trusting and empathetic connection with others. S/he compensates with ongoing assertions of superiority, entitlement, control, exploitation, and antagonism, which may be overtly or covertly expressed.

As parents, narcissists invert the parent-child relationship by putting their needs before those of their children. They may be neglectful, engulfing, parasitic, and/or outright bullying and abusive.

Enabler/Codependent The primary enabler in the narcissistic family is usually a partner/spouse, but may be a parent or child. Codependent enablers support narcissists by complying with their entitlement, denying their abuse, accepting their narratives about the family, and acting as apologists for the harm they do. Narcissists typically manipulate enablers through alternating abuse and special treatment. Enablers are perpetually avoiding attack while also seeking rewards such as affection, praise, or money. The enabler is often under the delusion that s/he is the only one who can truly understand the narcissist and meet his/her needs. Enablers commonly experience trauma bonding with the narcissist, becoming emotionally and physically addicted to codependent abuse cycles.

Enablers may be a complex mix of codependent and narcissistic, or they may be covertly narcissistic. A common pattern is for a covert narcissist to partner with a more overtly dominant narcissist.

Flying Monkeys Children, other relatives, and/or friends, flying monkeys are enablers who also perpetrate the narcissist’s abuse on targeted victims, most often a scapegoated child. Like the flying monkeys in The Wizard of Oz, they assist in the narcissist’s dirty work and carry out abuse by proxy. The most manipulable members of the family become flying monkeys, who may be narcissistic themselves.

The golden child is trained to please.

Golden Child The golden child is the narcissistic parent’s idealized favorite, bestowed with special status and privilege. Narcissists project their delusional ideal self—what they want to believe about themselves—onto the favored child and engulf the child’s identity into their own. Roles and rules in the narcissistic family can be fluid and changeable, and narcissistic parents may reassign the part of golden child to another if it suits their shifting agenda or if family circumstances change.

Scapegoat The child targeted as scapegoat functions as a projection of the narcissistic parent’s repressed shame and self-hatred. Blamed for family problems and disappointments, this child is fair game for abuse from the enabler and flying monkeys too. Oftentimes the scapegoat is different from the family culture in some way. This child may be the strongest, most aware, and/or most empathetic child, the one who questions the family system and perhaps stands up to the narcissist in defense of others. Unlike the golden child, the scapegoat is least invested in upholding the family system because s/he recognizes its injustice and benefits least from it.

The Narcissistic Family Glossary of Terms

Gaslighting This is a form of psychological abuse that involves undermining another person’s mental state by leading them to question their perceptions of reality. The narcissistic manipulator uses denial, dismissal, distortion, and other forms of lying to erode victims’ belief in their own judgment and, ultimately, their sanity. The term comes from the 1944 Hollywood film Gaslight, a classic depiction of this kind of brainwashing.

Hoovering Cruel and prone to splitting (seeing others as all good or all bad), narcissists often alienate or discard those around them. If sources of supply pull away, narcissists may attempt to hoover (as in vacuum-suck) them back. Or they may try to hoover previously discarded people that they see as valuable again.

Narcissistic Rage A defining feature of the narcissistic personality is emotional dysregulation and reactivity, including hair-trigger rage about anything perceived as an insult or threat. Far beyond normal anger, narcissistic rage is terrifying and may include physical violence. It can be overt or cloaked in passive-aggressive behavior such as guilt-tripping, silent treatment, or smear campaigns.

The scapegoat sees things from a different angle.

Narcissistic Supply Like a parasite, the narcissistic personality is highly dependent on others for emotional sustenance, demanding attention, agreement, and adoration. Anyone the narcissist can exploit—a partner, child, relative, employee, student, or friend—is a potential source of supply. Without others to demean or draw validation from, the narcissist is an empty husk.

Projection We all project from time to time, but the narcissist does so compulsively and often with little awareness. When narcissists project, they direct their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors onto others so they don’t have to take responsibility or carry painful emotions. Because they lack self-awareness, don’t respect boundaries, and cope by externalizing their feelings of anger and emptiness, narcissists project as a matter of course in all of their relationships. If the narcissist lied, you are the liar; if s/he is childish, you are immature; if s/he insulted you, you are mean; if s/he demanded reassurance, you are insecure; if s/he ate food off your plate, you are a selfish pig.

Helpful? Buy me a coffee.

Learn much more about narcissistic families in Julie’s book The Narcissist in Your Life: Recognizing the Patterns and Learning to Break Free from Hachette Books.

Need support? Julie offers specialized narcissistic abuse recovery coaching to clients around the world.

Related Articles by Julie L. Hall

Goat image courtesy of Eva Rinaldi and kkirugi, CC.

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View Comments (28)

  • Thanks for these, Julia. It's such a balm to have a vocabulary to put to these experiences and thereby to get a little space to differentiate "me" from "them."

  • Adult Children of Alcoholic sessions have a similar family "mobile" that also includes the lost child, the child that is not the over achiever or troublesome one...just tries to blend in the background to survive. Consequently, as adults they gravitate towards familiar characters and repeat the dis functional family dynamics in their next family nucleus.

  • I’ve stumbled upon this info and find it so helpful. It exactly describes my childhood & helps put words to why I struggle so much as an adult. I was the golden child, then became the scapegoat when I started asserting my own values and goals for my life. I’m still the scapegoat today and am essentially outcast from the family. That’s not a problem, really, but the guilt it creates because I “should” be a better daughter, etc, is often overwhelming. Thanks for writing

    • You're welcome, Christen. Yes, you broke the golden child contract by asserting your needs—the only way to break free.

  • Thank you so much for this article. As the "scaoegoat" I am at a point in my life where I'm just being able to put a name to the way I've been abused all my life. I wish I've known that I wasn't crazy and then maybe I would have been long gone. But where does one go.

  • Another interesting dynamic that unfolds in the narcissistic family involves a 3rd generation. A narcissistic grandparent making the scapegoat’s child the new golden child and turning that child against their scapegoated parent.

    I’m living this right now. I have a second child that is ignored by his narcissistic grandmother and grandfather. His grandfather would regularly mail his older sister gifts while he received nothing. So I started mailing him things myself and pretending they were from my dad.

    When we see this dysfunction and begin to understand our pain, we realize that we are the carriers and transmuters of our family karma and that we are being called to heal it.

    • Yes, narcissism so often is the gift that keeps on giving across generations. Being called to heal the family karma indeed. Very well said.

    • I'm dealing with this same thing. It's absolutely ridiculous to see it manifesting between my children and their grandmother. I'm considering going no contact because she favors my oldest and treats my little one harshly, he's only three.

  • Love your comment on being called to heal the family karma for our children. I recently left a business I founded with my father and stepped way back so my family and I could heal. Since then my parents (dad's a narcissist and mom is co-dependent) have tried all sorts of attempts to access our children and taint their relationship with us. It got so bad that my husband and I blocked their numbers to protect our girls. Sadly, my brother and his family and my sister and her family have taken sides with my parents and have cut us out of their lives until we meet my parents on their terms. I find it disgusting that my brother and sister have stooped so low that they are not only not speaking to me but not one of them called my daughter yesterday on her 9th birthday. It's the lowest form of yuck to treat sweet and innocent children like they don't deserve kindness and love from their own family. Anyway, sorry for the rant - just wanted to explain how much your comment hits home for me and just when I really needed to hear!

  • I wish, i knew all this when I was a kid. I'v been the scapegoat all my life and now realize that I'm dealing with an NPD colleague. I've walked away and now, I'm being ''hoovered'' back in. I have to stay strong and busy. BTW, thank you, thank you, thank you for this invaluable information.

  • In response to LT, yes, definitely, siblings can be NPDs. I have two older sisters and both they and their daughters are NPD sufferers. I ran the other way from one sister and haven't spoken to her in two years and must deal with the oldest, now 82 and in assisted living. Nice lady, horrid malady. I watch myself which I have since a small child on the farm with a mother who raised NPD to a high art.

  • By simply reading your words, I feel better. Knowing there is a 'Science' to this personal hell is giving me hope. Gotta get to HEAVEN asap. ~Ace. 🎲♠️

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