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How to Protect Your Children from Your Narcissist Spouse

Published on The Huffington Post 3/14/2017 7:56 p.m. ET. Perhaps you have known for a while that your partner is narcissistic, or perhaps you are just waking up to this reality. If this is new to you, read everything you can about narcissism so you understand what you’re dealing with. Seeing a therapist can be very helpful in dealing with your narcissist spouse provided you find someone who is well-acquainted with narcissism. A therapist unfamiliar with the pathology of narcissism can be invalidating and give dangerously bad advice (read more about why you can’t afford the wrong therapist).

It is important that you understand that with a narcissist parent your children are at risk for lasting emotional and physiological trauma. The more you can do to support them and buffer the harm the better.

Stop Blaming Yourself

To start, let go of self-blame and regret. These are natural feelings of people once they come to understand the true nature of their narcissist spouse.

Chances are when you got involved with your partner you had no idea what you were getting into. Narcissists are skilled at drawing people in and hiding their true nature, for a while. Or perhaps you believed you could heal the narcissist, not understanding that they are by and large “unfixable” because their personality disorder is so ingrained and they are rarely open to changing. Possibly you were raised in a narcissistic home yourself and are repeating the pattern as an adult.

Whatever the reason you involved yourself with a narcissist, wasting energy on regret and blaming yourself will only make matters worse for you and your kids.

How to Support Your Kids

The most important thing you as the healthy adult in the family need to do is respect and protect your kids as much as possible. You can’t change the fact that their other parent is a narcissist. That is something they will have to come to terms with. But you can do a lot to improve the situation for your children and help them develop coping skills.

Validate Their Feelings

A crucial thing to do for your kids is to validate their feelings. Since the narcissistic parent routinely invalidates others through various means such as denial, shame, ridicule, and projection, your kids are especially in need of acknowledgement that their feelings are real, that they matter and are valid. Particularly for the child who is scapegoated (constantly targeted by the narcissist parent), it is vital to validate that their feelings of hurt and anger are justified and that they don’t deserve the treatment they are getting.

You may be tempted to try to “protect” yourself and/or kids by denying the truth at home. But denying a child’s rightful feelings protects no one, and it will destroy your child’s trust in you.

Help Them Resist Blaming Themselves

Narcissists are masters at blaming others, often for their own bad behavior. If a narcissist throws a temper tantrum it is because you did something to drive him/her to it. The narcissist’s mantra is, “You made me do it.” Narcissists must believe they are above reproach to shield themselves from unbearable deep-seated feelings of vulnerability and inferiority. For the narcissistic personality, blaming others, particularly a scapegoated child, is as natural and necessary as breathing.

Helping your children understand that their narcissistic parent’s blame is unfounded, unfair, and not their fault is critical to their sense of an accurate reality, as opposed to a highly distorted one engineered by your narcissist spouse. Seeing that they are not to blame will also relieve your kids of a heavy burden that should not be theirs to carry.

Tell the Truth

The fact about truth is that you need to see it and acknowledge it yourself before you can help your kids do the same.

Telling the truth is tricky terrain in the narcissistic family. The narcissist thrives on lies and hiding, and s/he insists on keeping it that way at home. Telling your kids that their father or mother is a narcissist and giving them details can backfire disastrously if they tell the other parent what you said.

Children are able to handle different levels of “truth” depending on their age and maturity level. You have to use your best judgment about when and how much of the truth about your narcissist spouse and family life to talk about with them. You may want to reserve using the term narcissist, for example, until your child is older. For younger children, explaining that their mother or father is very sensitive to criticism or perceived rejection (read: is pathologically defensive) and overreacts (read: behaves like a caged wolverine) is an approach you could take. Emphasize that your narcissist spouse’s anger (read: rage) is extreme and not your child’s fault or responsibility.

As with many things, kids are usually your best guide to what they are ready to hear. Waiting until your child asks about something often is the right way to introduce information. How you speak with your children will evolve naturally over time as they come to better understand the family dynamics.

Don’t Demonize Your Narcissist Spouse

Be careful not to demonize your narcissist spouse (even if s/he acts like a demon), as this can lead to intense confusion and ambivalence in your kids, who, especially when young, will love and seek approval from their other parent no matter how badly s/he behaves. Tempering your own feelings about your spouse, who may be highly abusive, can feel next to impossible. But resisting your desire to cut loose with your own hurt, resentment, and anger is imperative in maintaining communication and trust with your kids, who are literally stuck in the middle. As your kids get older you will be able to talk about things more openly and perhaps share information and resources with them about narcissistic personality disorder.

Help Your Kids Develop Resilience

Our most important job as parents is to foster resilience in our children so they can face life’s challenges on their own two stable feet. This is especially true for children in a narcissistic family. The best thing you can do for them is to model and nurture resilience by providing

  • unconditional love (of which their other parent is incapable);
  • an empathetic response to others;
  • encouragement of hard work and accomplishments, without false praise;
  • support for an earned sense of competence; and
  • reinforcement of confidence in and respect for their own instincts.
Don’t Take Your Kids’ Anger Personally

It’s not fair, but your kids may at times vent their worst frustrations at you. This is because they can not be honest with their narcissistic parent, and they trust you enough to act out and show their real feelings. They need to exorcise the pain and trauma they are dealing with, and although it is a double bind for you as someone who already may be taking the brunt of the narcissist’s rages and manipulations, you will be called upon to rise above the madness and be strong for your children. This does not mean, however, that you should put up with abuse from your kids. Your steady devotion and nondefensiveness is a lifeline for them, but you also need to model self-respect and strength as much as possible.

Dealing with the nightmare of trying to coparent with a narcissist ex? Read The Dos and Don’ts of CoParenting with a Narcissist.

Helpful? Buy me a coffee.

Julie L. Hall is the author of The Narcissist in Your Life: Recognizing the Patterns and Learning to Break Free from Hachette Books.

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

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Image courtesy of The People’s Prodigy: BOYCOTT ‘The Weight of Blood’, Creative Commons.

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View Comments (1)

  • My NPD mom assigned to me scapegoat before I was born and at the moment I was conceived.
    I've been through approximately 10-11 years of therapy and stick to my mental health basic daily focus and balance with some days of deeper introspection as the recovery is life-long. I've been supportive actively for others healing the torture. I'm saying this to say I have a lot of recovery under my belt. Enough to have realized for a decade now that there is still something I am not seeing that keeps me blind to something though I wasn't sure what. It finally surfaced over the last two years in bits and pieces. But three days ago now the whole picture is revealed and it is breaking my heart all over again. It's so bad. I have searched to see a precedent to no avail.
    My mother sawthat she couldn'tpunish my dad enough to her satisfaction because she couldn't hide it well enough to not affect his professional life and her income, status, public image. Her solution was to hurt me to punish him. I have known she hurt me (duh!!!). In fact before I could walk she had burned my whole body dumping hot grease impulsively because my dad "didn't watch me close and keep me out of the kitchen" I was 10 months old. It was December 1954, I was in diapers and plastic covers so the grease as it slide down my head and body sort of pooled in the diaper and some down my legs. My grandmother took some picture, I was wrapped like the mummy for months with frequent painful dressing changes. A photo in June of 1955, I was down to my left leg and left arm bandaged up. She doesn't hesitate to this day to blame my dad and me for her violence. She poisoned me, she beat me and if dad wasn't around she would use trickery on a toddler to give her a reason to harm me. Anyway seeing what this had to do to my dad's mental health is heart wrenching. To realize that when he realized he was being blamed and she was setting it all up to be how she hurt me coincided with the level she thought he should be punished, has dialed back to the days before I went to a therapist as a last resort to go on living. She had at that time continued to make my life a living hell in blind sided ways I can't even express here. But what brought me to the end of my rope to go on was beyond cruel and I'm feeling all this again I had married a psychopath with NPD traits that was extremely violent ie broken bones in hand, bulged 3 vertebrae, beat, emotionally tortured me cheated all that a horrible man. She helped him via malicious misuse of the law and gone out of our county to a circuit judge and had a notarized paper full of lies about me having mental disease and was violent toward the child, they projected everything they did onto me to a judge who had no clue of the history and he granted them an ex parte' order to suspend parental rights until a court hearing could be scheduled. Just to punish me because I was thriving away from both their toxic pathological selves. I went to pick her up from the weekend visit to her dad and new wife (married a month after our divorce)and they threw the court documents out the door that they had stolen custody. They would not tell me where she was how she was what they told her NOTHING. I got her back and less than a year later they did the same thing again. They mom, him the wife were sueing me twice a year I know to run my savings down to zero which they did. So they ex parte' again and six week again of torturing her by separating her suddenly from me, patronizing her in harmful ways, I worked in a professional role and had just got an advancement when they did the last ex parte' and I couldn't pay an attorney and they stole my child completely. She is punishing me now with my child like she did my dad with me only he was present and had to experience my pain with me. Needless to say I am reeling from this reality I finally see. I had no where to say it. I don't know who to tell. I'm trying to find my old therapist who I know would help me. I just wanted to add this because I'm not sure it's documented in any professional papers as specific as this is. The abuse has not stopped, it's become more covert and deeper damaging to me professionally and really in all aspects of my life. I could just scream and if there ws a reason to want to beat someone this would be it. I won't ever do that, I fear jail too much haha.

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