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If you are dealing with narcissism, let’s all help each other.

(62 Posts)
Sago Wed 15-Apr-26 09:23:35

Narcissism has raised its ugly head again in a recent thread.

I realised reading through the posts there are a lot of us who have dealt/dealing with a narcissist.
It’s so hard as so many stories are unbelievable and narcs are so clever at making out it’s all your fault and they are the victim!

I am out the other side as my Mother is now dead so I do have peace however I am still very scarred by my experience of being raised by a Mother with severe NPD.

It would be good to share some positive experiences of surviving a narcissist and to offer support to those living with a narcissist.

Wyllow3 Sat 11-Jul-26 12:28:12

No, a good psychologist is as qualified as a psychiatrist in practical terms. I know because I had one support me. The Psychiatrist would accept her recommendations as to using the label.

But these days we are so short of NHS psychiatrists that the number of people actually diagnosed as one is tiny.

I'm speaking as someone who is trained as a psychotherapist but I would not diagnose, tho I might notice.

The problem with all personality disorders is that they are very very hard to actually diagnose. Take a huge amount of time.

Personality disorders are not only extremely difficult to make

- but some lazy professionals slap a diagnosis of BPD (borderline personality disorder) -

(^I advise looking it up to see if the person you are concerned about show symptoms of inability to be empathic and selfishly only talks about themselves and cant^ "see" ^the other person - but isn't out to actually destroy others^):

when a situation is complex and the person is "difficult" and unresponsive to therapy
But doesn't do the damage a true Narcissist can.

Unless its crystal clear - and there are some clear examples above its probably better to say on the Narcissist spectrum, as the term is now so heavily used its in danger of being used for more trivial situations

My first marriage, happily, was with a man where we both had difficulties that eventually drove us apart amicably and fortunately my son was with him: we have both done a great deal of therapy and now are good friends and hopefully grandparents.

Then I met someone who has not only been diagnosed as on the spectrum but also hiding a lifelong diagnosis of Bi-Polar 1.

This is another possibly mistaken "narc" because in the very high mania if bi-polar if untreated the grandiosity and "using" others can also take place.

Oh my, he hid it well.

All the Narc spectrum stuff and at first of course the love of my life - at 60 -amazing fun, amazing sex, the lot, the gaslighting, the destructiveness as time went on, he liked it when I was depressed as he had control - the lies (3 different versions of his life events - found out afterwards from a friend of his you never ever lent him money...the hell of the year of the split up, some unbelievable stories - defrauding his mother, police in, police in to keep me safe:
I was classified as an adult on the SSD safeguarding register - I started making sound recordings of all events after police said you need proof.
Threats of suicide from him, leading me to have to act to get him accommodation as I knew the MH system - after chucked out of mums and the defrauding - police round with search and arrest warrants for me as accused of hiding him.

My ace card was that I owned the house, it was in my name and had been my money, so a deal was done under then just new divorce laws.

Looking back, I can see each Narc trait trick in the book - but subtle for so long.

It took over a year to extricate myself and I found out much later he was telling people (no one who could affect me in any way) that he was an abused husband. You cant make it up, because that was exactly what he had told me of a previous relationship he had had.

You should have seen the building manager of the supported flats he is in when I had to go round - and I had taken the precaution of taking my Safeguarding letter official proof - he was busy being Mr Charming again.

Bear with me. There has been cruel repeat of a kind.

After all this I fell into a depression, not surprisingly: when I sated coming out to me, I came back to a religious group (mild, everyday, not a cult) and cautiously saw several people for coffee out of the group - known from before of course.

and up comes another wolf in sheeps clothing. An elderly but in good health man decided he was attracted to me and did the Narc trait stuff, thoughtful, listening - tho nothing that would alert me seriously - and after one meeting 3 months later sexually assulted me . I had no interest in him whatsoever and had not shown any interest in him except as one amongst others who were kind as I returned.

I had had no idea he was going round other people saying how lonely he was after being a widow, getting with Mr charm lots of women who were fond of him and later could not believe me. Very, very manipulative

I had WhatsApps from significant people that it could be true, that I was provoking hostility, etc etc

He was one of those men who is a hero in th outside world but different personally, so again, people found it hard to think he could have done it.

So police again but Safeguarding in the organisation didnt know what to do, it was so unheard of..long story short - after months of agonising as I wanted him to really own what he had done in order to forgive and move on (went through Police Restorative Justice to try to get it)

But should have known better - people with these personalities are incapable of challenges to their egos, as under the ego is fragility....

Anyway more recently at last he was banned from the group.
the lack of support from Safeguarding was enormous, it never need have happed the way it did, and now policies being changed nationally so local Safeguarders have support and a blue print.

As you can imagine I am now full on Narc Trait alert. but as all have said, they can be so convincing, which is why we often find them in positions of huge power. but just be aware there are other P disorders that my appear to have Narc Traits but are not. Like someone who pesters you with them, them, and can't listen to you, but that doesn't necessarily make them have Narc Traits.

Sago Sat 11-Jul-26 12:50:07

Wyllow3 You are certainly well qualified to spot a narc.

I agree re BPD and NPD as to how there are some similarities, I have not been exposed to much bipolar disorder so cannot comment.

My Mother was a definite narc, delusions of grandeur, zero empathy, a manipulator a liar and very very cruel.

My father had narc tendencies but he was a violent bully first.

I wish as a teenager I had understood NPD, had I had more knowledge I would have gone NC.

butterandjam Sat 11-Jul-26 12:56:03

Wyllow3

Kindly, I suggest you re-read your post and consider whether it would be best to have it deleted by GN.

What it shows is a long history of personal vulnerability; and that you are still struggling.

In your own interest, think twice about exposing yourself so much.

JaneJudge Sat 11-Jul-26 13:02:21

I wish there was a like button smile

Wyllow3 Sat 11-Jul-26 13:05:33

It's OK butterandjam. I have PM'd you on that point. But to speak generally, if you come out of the situation reasonably intact, you are the stronger for it, as others will attest. And the other point, is to understand that there may be more going on than a straightforward Narc trait - ie complex other MH problems.

As regards Bi Polar, there are many effective drugs and people can live normal and loving lives* ^as long as they own their illness and are willing to seek help, but a person with a PD is more difficult to "Reach in and help"

And however difficult it was, it cannot be compared to being subject to it as a child, by a parent as Sago has described.

And I think its valuable to know that the friend who is constantly talking about themselves is possibly suffering from BPD, in as much as you may want to avoid them, but their intentions are not destructive to you.

Almost certainly many are suffering inside, as their actions turn people away, not to them.

Sago Sat 11-Jul-26 13:15:58

Wyllow3 The terminology is interesting, it has only just occurred to me how we use “suffering”.

I don’t believe for one second that my mother ever “suffered”

I would say you would suffer with bipolar and to a degree with BPD but I’m sure narcs don’t suffer.

Wyllow3 Sat 11-Jul-26 13:23:59

I don't think your Mum suffered Sago from everything you said. She seemed to have a pretty watertight personality.

The only thing you had going for you really as you grew up that her behaviour was so marked, so cruel, so obvious, so appalling

as you got older and she did that somehow you were able to stand back and see it for what it was as time went on, but it left its marks.

I know Ex did suffer, but that was the bi-polar at work. He did have suicidal thoughts in his life. In a way, the Narc tendencies and the grandiosity in self image were an escape from that dark side.

Sago Sat 11-Jul-26 13:34:44

I didn’t see it until about 20 years ago.

I was 40 when it started to dawn on me that it was her and not me then my brother (golden child) to whom she was estranged died and things started to unravel.

I didn’t feel like a whole person until she was dead.

Unfortunately she left a trail of destruction behind and there are still family members that think I coerced her for money, stole from her etc.

Some of her lies were so fantastic, I find it hard to believe people fell for it.

She had the ultimate accessories though, a Catholic priest who was her flying monkey and of course the Church.

Wyllow3 Sat 11-Jul-26 13:56:01

Totally believe you.
Attachment is so powerful. and when you have a Catholic priest at work.

My assailant had/has some flying monkeys but in the end the people that mattered have mostly lost their power for me.

I think in some ways everyone tries to control their lives, and there is nothing wrong with trying to get what you want from the world and other people.

It's how you do it, and to some extent, those things you let happen to you (when you are an adult) if there is a choice. (Easy to say, hard to do)

Labradora Sat 11-Jul-26 18:43:35

BlessedArt

NPD is a clinical diagnosis. I wonder how many people have actually received said diagnosis from an actual psychiatrist since it became so internet-trendy to label everyone a narcissist who we have problems with. Not to downplay anyone’s issues but it does make me wonder.

This is what I think.
Anyone who puts their own needs before those of the complainer is labelled a"narcissist" when it might well be the complainer who simply won't take responsibility for their own decisions or lives and deflects responsibility on to literally anyone and/or everyone else who is/ are of course labelled accordingly.
I sympathise, of course , with anyone dealing with a truly abusive individual.

Copes283 Sat 11-Jul-26 22:34:48

Mimi11 exactly this. My ex husband (I now know) was (is!!) a narcissist, I'm nowsure of it. He isolated me slowly, but surely over the 21 years of our marriage, firstly from friends, belittling me, completely destroyed my trust in my own memory, then tried to isolate me from my parents and sister. Then I got a job working in a school. My colleagues gave me back my self esteem and I plucked up the courage to divorce him. The Judge at the divorce proceedings saw straight through him and made things much easier for me. The divorce cost me a great deal financially. The marriage scarred me for life, but I have not had any contact with him for years, but know through other people that he has since remarried and divorced ... again and had 3 more children! But my life with my new (very supportive) husband is so "normal" and he has encouraged me to enjoy life. I'm so thankful for the kind support of others too. You need all the help you can get when you try to make the break which is why I support women's refuges. If you suspect your partner is a narc, get out as soon as it is practical for you to do so. Honestly, it's worth the effort. Your life will improve 100%. Good luck! X