Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Healing childhood trauma responses from narcissistic abuse then to navigate narcissists now


Hello my friends. Today on my path to recovery from narcissistic parent abuse, I'm exploring how healing childhood trauma responses to abuse then helps me navigate narcissists safely now. What I've learned from parent enmeshment and harm, informs my interactions with arrogant, ruthless, entitled people I deal with today. 

What not to do with narcissists, was learned the hard way

A lot of things I discovered about dealing with narcissistic abuse, came too late to prevent brain damage from narcissists parents. Children are bonded to their parents naturally and abused children are trauma bonded. They do not know that their parents are mistreating them, till the gaslighting of mistreatment is already firmly rooted in fawning trauma responses that just make them more vulnerable to parental bullying and endangerment. So we develop unhealthy behaviors which we unconsciously bring with us into adulthood and which make us prime targets for other bullies.  These are things I learned by trial and error, having already made these mistakes. 

Gaslit reality causes betrayal blindness

Children take parents at face value. They believe, trust, try to please and love unconditionally. So if the parent is loving, trustworthy, safe, pleasable and nurturing, children accept that. BUT if the parent is unsafe, unloving, demanding and exploitative the child also accepts that as "normal" without questioning the parents. Then the parents use that agreeableness against the child. They take advantage of her. They create a narcissistic fantasy world with role reversal, FOG (fear, obligation and guilt), parentification, shaming, blame-shifting, DARVO and endless impossible demands placed on the child. The child doesn't see that this is parental abuse and betrayal. All she knows is that  try as she might, she can never get it right. 

Fawning, self-blame, hoop-hopping and people pleasing

Because the child can't see the Machiavellian agent provocateur parents machinating against her, she blames herself.  They have hypocritically scapegoated, and gaslit her so successfully that she never sees their culpability. They distracted her from reality. They set themselves above common rules and then made up complicated shifting double standards for the child. They've kept her so busy jumping to their ever-changing whims that she cannot see them for who they really are: malignant narcissists. 

Blinded and Blindsided by betrayal

Not only do the parents blind her to reality, they blindside her with it. They weaponize her trauma and her trauma responses of kowtowing, tolerating intolerable things and people pleasing. They have her so confused with passive-aggressive mixed messages, their chaotic irresponsible behavior and enmeshed role reversal parentification that the child does not know which end is up. She only knows that something is very wrong and since it can never be her "bulletproof" parents, it must be her. And that lets us in for a whole new hell as we get older and encounter other pushy narcissists. 

What not to do with narcissists: pretty much all we've been doing

Children of narcissists developed a whole tool kit of coping skills for surviving our abusive parents. We humored, danced attendance, waited on them, stayed silent, kept secrets, and allowed them to hurt us to placate them. But these were for emergencies at best. They were not meant for daily interactions. Actually, we shouldn't have had to any of them in the first place. They were all dysfunctional and only served to see us  more harmed. So now that we are not in those situations, pretty much all we've done to get by, is now failing us. Here are a few of the things we've learned to do that haven't served us well. These may have been survival skills then but they harm us now. 

  • Fawning
  • humoring and placating
  • letting people get away with harming us
  • "obeying" their commands
  • giving them their way
  • going along to get along
  • loving unconditionally
  • fulfilling contracts we never signed
  • not expecting reciprocity
  • letting others call the shots 
  • being loyal to disloyal people
  • respecting disrespectful people
  • abiding by transactions that the other person is violating
  • letting others dictate terms
  • letting them tell us "how it is" for us
  • not calling irrelevant what it is
  • letting people think they have buy in on things they don't
  • complying with others' expectations 
  • giving intel they use against us
  • providing them narcissistic supply 

Decoding the trauma and rewiring the responses

We can't undo what was done. Arguably we can't even entirely rewrite our dysfunctional trauma responses. But we can decode it so that we read it correctly. And then we can use it to trauma inform our interactions going forward. Where we automatically go into placate and soothe mode whenever anyone intimidates us, we can now decide with full autonomy what to do. We now have the power and the voice to set boundaries and to set consequences for boundary crashers. 

New behaviors to practice with now narcissists

  • Radical acceptance. Name the problem, to yourself. Accept that these are difficult people, that you can't change them. 
  • Leave "Mrs. Fix-It" hat to home. No matter how someone may pressure to fix what you didn't break, resist the urge. 
  • Say "no" and "I can't" to things that aren't your problem. No self-defense. They may browbeat, find fault, question and undermine you. Ignore them. You don't owe them an explanation. This was never your battle or burden. 
  • Detachment. Unstick from stuck places where the narcissist has dragged you in. He wants to pick a fight? Side step it. Don't give him the satisfaction. Again, give no reasons. He'll figure it out or he won't. 
  • Observe, don't absorb. When people spiral into narcissistic rage, I always thought it was my job to soothe and support them. That got me only kicking for my trouble. You can't "bear a bully's problems." He doesn't want a friend, he wants a victim. 
  • Leave uncomfortable situations. Its perfectly okay to walk away from toxic people and places. If you have children relying on you, take them and go. When my mom threw a pie in my face at her company party, I wish I had cut contact with her then, and saved us all the hassle. 
  • Say what you need. But be careful. Narcissists use needs against you. They future fake, lie and tell you one thing, break the promise, gaslight you that they never promised it. Then they attack you for being so "needy" "clingy" "attention-seeking" "overreacting" and bossy. If possible, meet your own needs and don't rely on them for anything. 
  • Set boundaries but don't tell the narcissist. This is a red rag to a bullying narcissist. When they boundary crash, let whatever consequences you've decided on, take place. You've decided if she pitches a narcissistic bitch, you'll ask her to leave. Do it. 
  • Don't shield them or take consequences of their behavior on yourself. Remember who owns the problem and who doesn't. 
  • Keep mum on personal details. Narcissists are intel harvesters. They store up details to use against you. Having relationship troubles? Don't tell them. Find a safe person. 
  • Listen with half an ear. Narcissists say a lot of antagonistic word salad (crap). They goad, pick fights, hint, use sarcasm, make cutting remarks, insult and do all manner of low blows. Don't let them hit the mark. Don't rise to the bait. Just know it's nonsense. 
  • Keep your cool. When she makes provocative statements, pretend you didn't hear her. Then casually say, "what was that?" Like you're completely unconcerned but just being courteous. If she repeats it, just say "oh." And move on. 
  • Float above it all. Imagine yourself just wafting along on the breeze when you're with them. You don't let anything pull you down. If he wants to say dumb stuff, let him. Don't validate it with a response. Suddenly be engrossed in what someone else is saying. He'll either have to repeat his nonsense and make a fool of himself or sit there sulking because he was all ready for a fight and no one gave it to him. Either way, he looks the fool. 
  • Do. Not. Engage. No. Matter. What. Even if he's dredging up old stuff from the past to humiliate you, just stay calm. More than likely, you've made your apologies. If you even did what he accused you of. They're very good at rewriting history to suit their version. He's just trying to leverage your fawning, because he's feeling small. But he can't hurt you. What happened, happened. If you can't change the past to undo what as done to you, you can't change the past to undo whatever he says you did. Works both ways. 

The short "pocket-sized" edition

Here's a little checklist to keep with you and remind yourself when interfacing with a narcissist. 

Reframing the Past "We can't undo what was done. Arguably we can't even entirely rewrite our dysfunctional trauma responses. But we can decode it so that we read it correctly. And then we can use [it] to trauma inform our interactions going forward."

⚠️ The "Survival" Paradox "Children of narcissists developed a whole tool kit of coping skills for surviving our abusive parents... But they were for emergencies at best. They were not meant for daily interactions.... Pretty much all we've done to get by, is now failing us."

🛡️ The "Protective Shield" Checklist

  • Observe, don't absorb: You cannot "bear a bully's problems." He doesn't want a friend, he wants a victim.

  • Float above it all: Imagine yourself just wafting along on the breeze... Don't validate [their nonsense] with a response.

  • Do. Not. Engage: If you can't change the past to undo what was done to you, you can't change the past to undo whatever he says you did.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Blog Archive