Your entangled relationship with a narcissist is littered with lies, broken promises, shame, guilt, blind alleys, and perhaps even moral and legal obstacles. You’ve thought about leaving so many times, you feel like an emotionally shattered soldier fighting to survive, and, perhaps also, to help your kids survive.
In your most honest moments, you also may crave your partner’s intensely seductive attention and attraction, qualities of the narcissist that are classic hooks.
Your relationship with the narcissist is hell in a hamster wheel. You keep running to stay alive and avoid the daily abuses, but you never actually get anywhere, only more trapped and exhausted.
That is because you are caught in the narcissist’s alternative reality, a distorted place built around his/her need to feel superior, omnipotent, far and above the little people like you.
The Narcissist’s Developmental Deficits
Narcissists as children experience disrupted attachment with their caregivers that is rarely repaired. As a result they have developmental deficits in emotional connection and regulation that leave them in a childlike state as adults—intensely insecure and needy while also lacking in self-awareness, self-control, and empathy for others.
The narcissist needs you far more than you need her/him, but s/he will never let you know that. Narcissists are so defensive, so fearful of being vulnerable, and so invested in their self-aggrandizing narratives that they will dismiss, deny, blame-shift, unleash rage, and/or possibly abandon others if feeling judged, rejected, or simply not accorded sufficient adulation.
The Narcissist’s False Allure
It’s easy to get in thick with a narcissist. They are masterful at turning on the charm faucet with premature intimacies and promises, adoring attention, sexual interest, and big dreams.
Narcissists study you to identify your needs and vulnerabilities, and they work to deliver what they think you want. Often this is because they are infatuated, caught up in unrealistic idealization that will inevitably collapse under the weight of reality. Afterward, you will be inevitably treated to mounting criticism, and perhaps outright rejection and discard. It’s not personal. It’s the narcissist’s way.
The Bottom Line
Narcissists have profound cognitive distortions and a simplistic view of themselves and others. Through their eyes, things exist in extremes of perfection or worthlessness. One day you’re the apple of their eye, and the next you’re the discarded core on the compost pile.
Narcissists really just don’t give a damn about you or anyone else, while at once demanding acceptance and love for themselves. In the relationship with a narcissist, there is no genuine intimacy, reciprocity, compromise, or fairness.
You can do what the narcissist can’t: Love yourself enough to stop spinning the wheel and break out of the cage you’re living in.
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.
Related Articles by Julie L. Hall
- Your Relationship with a Narcissist Is Hell in a Hamster Wheel
- The Narcissistic Family: Cast of Characters and Glossary of Terms
- Healing a Sense of Foreshortened Future in Adult Children of Narcissists
- The Narcissist’s Caretakers: Caught Hook, Line, and Sinker
- Narcissist Parents Are Hurt Machines to Their Children
- Identifying the Covert Narcissist in Your Life: A Checklist
- How to Protect Your Children from Your Narcissist Spouse
- Why Narcissists Will Never Love You and It’s Dangerous to Love Them
- Horrid and Shocking Things Narcissists Say and Do
- The Overt Versus Covert Narcissist: Both Suck
- Seven Things Narcissists Will Never Do
- The Hidden Trauma of Neglect in the Narcissistic Family
- Enabling the Narcissist: How and Why It Happens
- How Narcissists Torture Others and Believe They’re Right to Do It
- Seven Sure-Fire Ways to Spot a Narcissist
- Maddening and Bizarre Things Narcissists Do Explained
- Behind the Narcissist Mask: The Bully, Coward, Liar and Fraud
- Why You Should Not Feel Sorry for the Narcissist
- Adult Children of Narcissists Face Trauma-Induced Health Risks
- Raised by a Narcissist? 11 Healing Things to Do for Yourself Right Now
- The Dilemma of the Golden Child in the Narcissistic Family
- Narcissism 101: A Glossary of Terms for Understanding the Madness
- The Narcissism Disease Cluster in Families and How to End the Cycle
- A Daughter’s Story of One Hell of a Narcissistic Mother
- The Narcissist Parent’s Psychological Warfare: Parentifying, Idealizing, and Scapegoating
- Raised by Narcissists? Why You Can’t Afford the Wrong Therapist
- 4 Insidious Ways That Narcissistic Abuse Isolates the Victim
- It’s You and Me Baby: Narcissistic Head Games
- The Strength of the Scapegoat in the Narcissistic Family
- Life in the Fun House: Narcissistic Mirroring and Projection
- The Paradox of the Narcissist’s Unrequited Self-Love
- 9 Best of the Worst Narcissist Mothers on Screen
- Understanding the Narcissist’s Disrespect, Envy, and Contempt
- How and Why Narcissists Are Highly Skilled Abusers
- The Narcissist Parent’s Psychological Warfare: Parentifying, Idealizing, and Scapegoating
- 7 Defining Traits of the Narcissist
- The Narcissist as Human Parasite: Are You a Host?
- The Challenge of Setting Boundaries with Narcissist Parents
- Understanding Narcissistic Rage and Why It Is Not Your Fault
- What Raging Narcissists Break: A Damage List
- The Dos and Don’ts of CoParenting with a Narcissist
- What the Narcissist Fears Most
2 Comments
This is the first time I have read about something happening in their childhood. I have left. It took me a long time but I finally figured that out about my husband. Everything I have read..its like reading about how him.
Hi Roxie. Good for you for getting away.