Dysfunctional, narcissistic families typically feature inequities, and one of the most common forms of inequity is parental favoritism of one child over another. In a survivalist, hierarchical narcissistic family system, there are many reasons parents select a particular child to elevate and another to devalue, including personality traits, birth order, and gender.
Of all the roles children play in the narcissistic family, the favored “golden child” is most likely to develop a narcissistic personality because of the toxic mix of enmeshment, neglect, and entitlement they experience. When the child is male, the entitlement and drive to feel special are compounded by societal male hegemony, low emotional literacy, and normalized male aggression.
Is Your Golden Child Brother a Narcissist?
For siblings, particularly girls, a narcissistic golden child brother can be a profound source of emotional and perhaps physical and sexual trauma. Is your brother a narcissist? Is he scapegoating you? Here are signs:
- Dismisses your feelings and opinions.
- Blames you for family conflict.
- Blames you for your parents’ abusiveness toward you.
- Acts as a flying monkey for your narcissistic parents.
- Doesn’t ask about your life.
- Contradicts and corrects you.
- Insists on being right.
- Constantly competes.
- Interrupts, monologues, and interrogates.
- Projects his antagonism onto you.
- Acts bored or irritated when you speak.
- Expects attention, agreement, and/or caretaking without reciprocating.
- Is reactive to disagreement or perceived criticism.
- Is verbally and/or physically threatening or abusive.
- Is judgmental of your choices and lifestyle.
- Disrespects your partner.
- Respects your partner over you.
- Withholds family information from you.
- Allows your narcissistic parents to triangulate your communication.
- Denies and gaslights you about the family dysfunction.
- Plays the cool rationalist.
- Says or implies you’re too sensitive when you react to abuse.
- Sets you up for sabotage.
- Does not acknowledge your experience, knowledge, and accomplishments.
- Displaces his anger at your parents onto you.
- Participates in your parents’ smear campaigns against you.
One of the most tragic aspects of life in a narcissistic family system is the erosion and loss of sibling bonds. Narcissistic parents deliberately sow division among siblings as a way to destabilize family members, exert control, feel powerful, and feed on drama. Children who adopt their parents’ narcissistic patterns lose or fail to develop empathy and internalize the belief that vulnerability is weakness, love is conditional, and rights and respect are reserved for a chosen few. Often a golden child builds their identity around feeling superior to a subjugated sibling, creating lifelong alienation and cruelty.
Strategies to Protect Yourself
For sisters or brothers experiencing ongoing inequity and abuse by a narcissistic sibling, the safest course is to limit or end contact. If you are not able to distance yourself, here are some strategies to protect yourself:
- Stop seeking validation. Stop looking for acknowledgment, understanding, or fairness from your narcissistic golden child brother. His superior status in the family hierarchy was created by your parents, and his sense of identity and self-esteem are heavily dependent on your inferior status in the family. In other words, to feel special he must see you as beneath him; as a narcissist, that feels like survival to him.
- Don’t make yourself vulnerable. Stop explaining and justifying yourself to your narcissistic brother, and don’t share your thoughts and feelings with him. It’s difficult to accept, but he doesn’t care about your needs, feelings, reasons, or perspective, and he may use your vulnerability against you.
- Let go of your fantasy of resolution. Children, particularly scapegoated ones, often harbor hope long into adulthood that their golden child sibling will someday gain awareness and reach out to offer acknowledgement and make amends. There may be moments when your narcissistic brother discusses the family dysfunction or your parents’ selfishness and cruelty. He may even express vulnerability and seek sympathy or support from you about family dynamics. For people with empathy, it’s natural to feel compassion for narcissistic family members and hold out hope for resolution of family divisions. But it’s important to recognize that although your brother may have moments of insight, he is unlikely to sustain the awareness or look beyond his own experience to reflect on yours.
Having to distance yourself from or let go of narcissistic family members is always fraught with doubt, loneliness, and grief. When it is a sibling you have played with, suffered with, perhaps admired, protected, or taken care of, the loss can bring deep and long-lasting grief. It may be the hardest grief of all.
Listen to Julie’s audio course Understanding Narcissism for half the cost of a coaching session.
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 trauma recovery coaching to clients around the world.
Related Articles by Julie L. Hall
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- 7 Reasons Narcissists Don’t Grow Emotionally
- 5 Reasons for LGBTQ Vulnerability to Narcissistic Abuse
- What We’re Getting Wrong About Narcissism
- 8 Types of Narcissistic Family Scapegoat
- 7 Lies We Like to Tell Ourselves About Narcissism
- The Narcissist’s Antagonistic Attachment: Subjugation, Competition, and Parasitism
- Dear Therapist: You Missed My Husband’s Narcissism and It Devastated My Family
- Social and Performance Anxiety in Children of Narcissists
- Are You Being Bullied By Narcissistic Monologuing?
- 5 Things Children of Narcissists Wish Everyone Would Stop Saying
- The Hidden Trauma of Neglect in the Narcissistic Family
- Why Narcissists Will Never Love You and It’s Dangerous to Love Them
- How Narcissists Torture Others and Believe They’re Right to Do It
- The Narcissist’s Disrespect, Envy, and Contempt
- Why Narcissists Play the Shame Game
- How and Why Narcissists Are Highly Skilled Abusers
- It’s You and Me Baby: Narcissist Head Games
- 7 Things a Narcissist Will Never Do
- The Narcissist as Human Parasite: Are You a Host?
- How to Protect Your Child from Your Narcissist Spouse
- Understanding Narcissistic Rage and Why It Is Not Your Fault
- Seven Sure Ways to Spot a Narcissist
- The Dos and Don’ts of CoParenting with a Narcissist
Image courtesy of Rachel Swallows, Creative Commons.
4 Comments
All I have to say is you got in contact with my oldest brother and have based this entire blog on him.
For me, this is my youngest brother. Covert Narcissist just like my father. He has had EVERYONE fooled( including me until recently). He is very adept at cognitive and performative empathy but there’s no genuine emotion behind his behavior. Been involved with several covert narcs now and getting better at identifying them quickly but I am convinced that this type of narcissist is the most dangerous.
Well, I’d say 14 of the above signs that my brother exhibited are NOW very apparent, even though I did not see them over the years. Another 6 or so probably apply, but he and his mommy were so secretive, I can’t say for sure.
I really used to adore this brother, and I foolishly thought the feeling was reciprocated. Now I see him as he really is – an opportunistic, self promoting, manipulative loser who could not make it without his sugar mommy, and felt that he had the right to steal from 3 brothers. He deserves his bar fly wife that he left wife #2 for (who he left wife #1 for in a “wife swapping” encounter with his loser co-workers). I am happy that he declined the career that I tried to hand him and now lives in a shack in Pennsylvania with his tatted wife and her 5 children, working his crummy jobs. He could have been retired 18 years now with a pension and benefits. I think that it was his Narcissistic mommy’s influence that causes his flawed decision making, so the joke’s on him. I also don’t think it’s too smart to alienate your last living blood relative, but time will tell.
This and other article I’ve read are incredibly on point. I could add more devastation from Golden Boy but taking deep breaths as I type! Excellent explanations of traits, personality and horrors! I was raised by narcissists,each had their own quirks, reading this just truly was spot on! It’s an awful way to be brought into this world, thank you for understanding!