Does anybody out there have a parent or in-law that acts like this? This came from an article I read about the spoilt brat / narcissist behavior. Please explain to me how you deal with this behavior and how much do you allow it to actually control your life before either just putting your foot down and saying enough and calling their bluff or backing away from the situation. I realize that they are our parents but when is enough just enough?
Things I did not elaborate on were the fact that she did not teach me or nurture me to grow into a good person. Neither of my parents were good at parenting, they were both very selfish people and their own needs came first.
I was blessed with a mentor in my mid twenties, as I was heading into a bad life, this woman...this Angel focused on me for ten beautiful years (she was a supervisor) and she turned my life around, and taught me integrity, honesty, morals, and what empathy and compassion meant. She is the one who taught me about the golden rule.
I now know that a lot of what my mother did with us kids was for show, not because she was a good mother, but to impress others, she was competing with her sisters in everything she did. That's why we were clean and neatly dressed.
I wonder why I didn't turn out vain and greedy like that? Another blessing from God!
I am in therapy, and a twelve step program for my addiction. That is what keeps me sane and heading in the right direction.
Thanks for your kind words, they are much appreciated.
I feel blessed that I have found this site and we are all in this together. I'm sorry if I hurt anybody's feelings. We can all overcome our problems and feel better. MizVic, you are a compassionate person and wherever you go, you will have good karma. Hugs to all.
Emjo - you are absolutely right - the relationship will never be good - and when she goes - it still won't be with a kind word - I will make sure I am not there with her - and I know that sounds callous and selfish - but I don't want the last words out of her mouth be hateful towards me. she threw me bones once in a while - to keep me around and groveling looking for the mother I thought I should have - but clearly - never to be. So instead - my daughter and I can share a special bond that is cherished. So looking this over the use of "I" makes ME feel narcissistic! good grief!
This forum is a Godsent and full of insightful, intelligent beautiful women with great ideas and suggestions. I am thankful to be part of it - and lets band together and take back our lives!
If any of you thought I meant suck it up, I apologize. I would never think or say that. I can empathize with everything I have read here. Please forgive me not wording my comment better.
We are all doing the best we can faced with such difficult health issues in our parents and our own lives.
Good luck to all of you. God bless.
MizVic - when I read your initial post I, too, thought, wow, how insensitive to such a sensitive topic. The way I read it was as though you were telling the rest of us to suck it up and be a good daughter and take care of your mother. Apparently you weren't saying that, and while I'm sorry that you were relating your own story, I'm glad you weren't calling everyone else out on theirs.
You said my comment was hurtful, but I meant it to be kind toward my mom, it was not about you. I can say that you are wrong when you say that a narcissist cannot be a good mother, because my mom had motherly instincts toward my sister and me. She kept us clean and fed, and took care of our basic needs, but she was definitely a narcissist.
A year ago I was told about the website, not knowing what a narcissist was, and when I read the traits I was blown away because she fits each one.
A person with Narcissistic Personality Disorder:
1. Has a grandiose sense of self-importance,
2. Is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love,
3 Believes that he or she is "special" and unique,
4. Requires excessive admiration,
5. Has a sense of entitlement,
6. Is interpersonally exploitative,
7. Lacks empathy,
8. Is often envious of others or believes others are envious of him or her,
9. Shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes.
If you were around her for a few hours you would agree, she definitely has NPD.
She has 2 sisters who also have NPD, which explains everything I endured as a child. You think I am not wounded or traumatized? Think again. I am an emotionally unstable woman who is morbidly obese, something she insults me about daily.
I am sorry you took my comment personally, when it was not meant towards your situation, it was meant to explain mine.
Yes, there are many of us on this board and elsewhere. Good luck
In the meantime,i'm sure I'll be the "bad daughter' who moved out and abandoned her, never mind that she has a husband caregiver plus now outside help.
Take care all, didn't realize so many of us are in the same boat!
sad - the relationship does not get better because one half of it is a very sick person, so a healthy relationship is impossible, but you can stay healthy. Walking away does not necessarily change her, though it might for a while, but the most important thing it does is change you. It is helping because you are taking steps to be subjected to less abuse. She is the same but you feel better. Good for you!!!
hearttoheart - I agree that families are being pulled apart. It happens for various reasons in society now, and the saddest being that family members do not get along, or are abusive to one another. I have tried for years to get along with my sister and slowly have had to accept that it isn't going to happen. I think there is a picture (fantasy) out there about the perfect family - as we see in the movies or on TV. That sets us up to expect/work towards accomplishing that fantasy, often against impossible odds. All the families I know have some problems. The only one we can change is our self. I have been in denial about my sis off and on, as I wanted a sister with whom I could share. Didn't happen and isn't going to happen, unless there is a miracle. What I am doing is getting on with my life, making sure I have as good a life as I can have, and if the miracle happens, it is icing on the cake.
Blessings to all and do something good for you today - you are worth it! (((((hugs))))
Since I know that being in a nursing home is her greatest fear, this calm, gentle "threat" is usually enough to shut her up for several days. Since she has dementia, she will forget about it, but when the complaining starts again, I gently offer to find her a care facility again.
I shared this approach with my sisters, who also take turns with the caregiving, and they do it too, so there is a consistency in the approach. When the time comes that this is not enough, we will escalate. I already have the informational packet from the best nursing home in their area, so I will hand it to her and tell her to give them a call. My sister has already handed her the phone book open to their yellow pages ad. That kept her docile for a whole week!
My mother had very little filter before the stroke, now none. The AL owner said to me when she met me - first I'm sorry, then I haven't in 25 years ever dealt with anyone like my mother. That was certainly telling.
What I do now is when she starts to get "like that" I just say, ok well it's time for me to go, and I leave. She has chased me down the hall saying, what's wrong with you or FU. I just keep walking. I can't saw that it is helping - but I stopped taking the abuse. My relationship with her is definitely not better...she hates that I am no longer her whipping post and I feel much better!
I apologize if I hurt your feelings. I read your two comments on the subject very carefully. Though you write that your mom has dementia and is narcissistic, you also write that she was a good mother. This tells me that your mother is not narcissistic. Sometimes people with dementia say and do hurtful things, but they are not narcissistic. Or sometimes, we all might have one narcissistic trait or two, especially if we are under stress and we are copying learned behaviors since childhood. Apparently, your mother was caring enough and raised you to be a compassionate person. Even a difficult mother is not a narcissist. I have a close friend with dementia and she is hard to deal with. But when I remember the warm and caring person she used to be, I don't mind visiting her and giving her daughter a little break.
Daughters of narcissistic mothers are wounded and traumatized. We have an excessive sense of guilt; we feel that if mother is not happy, it is our fault. If mother didn't have a good Christmas, it is our fault. If mother has gained weight, it is our fault. If mother broke her nail, it is our fault. We blame ourselves for everything. If golden child brother had an extramarital affair, it was the scapegoat daughter's fault because she didn't buy him the right gift for his birthday and he was feeling down! We also suffer from low self esteem and we feel we are worthless. Our mothers lie all the time and they say things to purposefully hurt us. They lie about important things and they portray other beloved members of the family in a bad light. They create an alternate reality to suit their needs and when they have their way, it is so easy for them to deny everything. "Who me? I never said that! How can you accuse me of such a thing? Your own mother! Shame on you!" Also our mothers are anything but caring and luck empathy. My mother refuses to see her 70 year old nephew, who asked to go visit her, because he had one leg amputated and she would be very sad if she saw him! My brother told me: "I have a big favor to ask: please don't tell mother when your husband travels. She loves him so much, she is upset that the plane might fall and she can't sleep at night because of that." My sister-in-law told me: "please don't tell your mother any of your children's successes. She comes over and puts my children down and makes them feel that they don't measure up."
I am happy for you because you had a good mother; and it is good that, no matter how hard it is now, you are there for her. I feel that my mother really hates me. I have a serious health issue and when I hinted about it to her, she had my brother call me and say: I forbid you to tell anything unpleasant about your health to our mom, because she loves you so much, she gets upset.
So now my mother asks:how are things? Everything good? to which I reply: Oh yes, mom. All is great.
I don't mind caring for the old and I know that every single daughter of an NPD mom feels the same. Every single one of us wishes to have a normal relationship with her mother. We all crave a mother. Even a mother with dementia! At the beginning of my road to healing, I thought I could change my mother; I thought that we can sit down like two adult women who care for each other and talk about our problems. And I wouldn't even mention the childhood, the teen, the old wounds. Just resolve the current issues. I so wanted to have closure. I realized that this can't happen.
I know you didn't mean to cause any pain and I am sorry if I upset you.
But when I read your post, I felt: I am a bad daughter. My mother was right when she told me that she is ashamed of me. Look at this other daughter; though she has suffered like me, she still is taking care of her mom.
I hope you can see how a daughter of a narcissistic mother feels. We are ready to move in and shower our moms with all the love we want to give, we need to give, we crave to give. But it can't happen.
Her manipulative and narcissistic behavior is right there under the surface. One day she is sweet as honey, the next she is raging, bullying and critical. No one stands up for me when she cuts into me in front of people, tearing me down piece by piece. They all look shocked of course but no one defends me. Then after they all tell me not to take it personally because its her disease talking not her. WRONG again. Its her alright. Now its her without a filter.
I found myself feeling very anxious, tense and controlled. My insomnia is back and I can't eat. If I stay, I will be on a therapist's couch before long. This is not healthy for me. I spent decades cultivating self esteem and even liking myself and thats all being torn down again.
So,I've made the decision to move. I know others told me to do this a little while ago so I took their advice and got myself a little place close by. Now, when it gets unbearable, I can leave and distance myself.
But, honestly, I don't know why I bother. Many times I've been seriously ill myself or my children have and not once did she rush to our side to help. I am sacrificing everything I had to help her yet when push comes to shove, I know in my heart of hearts she would not have been there to help me.
How does everyone deal with the narcissist's cutting tongue when you are the one with the bullseye on your back?
Crazzzzzzyyyyyy people.
I'm thinking I'll just drop everything off at the admin office for them to take to her and tell her I can't visit as I have a cold. That lets me out for a few weeks - until I have something else that's catching {evil grin} - as, after visiting, I slide backwards and feel quite ill for a day or two.
After reading the post I don't feel so alone now, knowing that there are others that have had similar experiences out there.
I am glad that this is a place to come to share and vent.
Let's keep sharing.
I have struggled with a complex web of people with Narcissistic Personality Disorder, and am now throwing 2 parents with Alzheimer's into the mix. I have researched and written a lot about NPD and am sharing these links in the chance that someone may find them helpful. Here’s the links to the three PowerPoints I have compiled:
http://www.slideshare.net/jenimawter/red-flags-to-narcissistic-personality-disorder-compiled-by-jeni-mawter
http://www.slideshare.net/jenimawter/narcissistic-victim-syndrome-a-powerpoint-by-jeni-mawter
http://www.slideshare.net/jenimawter/moving-on-from-narcissistic-abuse-compiled-by-jeni-mawter
I wish you all the very best and thank you for sharing your experiences and insights.