Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
1 2 3 4 5
Wow I'm glad I came back and read more. I just recently "divorced" my mother, sold the car she "gave" me for a 7 year lease of guilt feelings about "all she's ever done for me" and while I'm not moving across the country (refuse to give up the life I've built) I am emotionally detached, making no contact initiative at all. Coming back and reading what everyone else has said has given me great comfort.

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.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

GraceH, I actually love that there is not a limit to the message length. For example, check out HaveFaithinGod on 4-14-14 -- I have printed that out and am reading and re-reading it, have passed it to my husband and to my sister. This person shared what will take most of us a lifetime to even begin to explore. Her talent and insight could not have been captured in a one-paragraph email. Others who may have been reluctant (like me) jump in like off a diving board and aren't sure we are doing the right thing and can only ramble and ramble, and I am grateful to the people on this thread for allowing it and tolerating it. Because of the richness of the responses, I will come here diligently time and time again to read and re-read, like visiting Stations of the Cross. The messages, long or short, deserve respect. I feel the same as you -- how can I ever read all this and keep up. There were 10 people today I wanted to respond to. But I can't. So I'll just come back when I can and maybe resurrect my interaction if I ever can. But these folks have shared the best of themselves. Journalistic inverted pyramid not the goal, just expression, and I really, really appreciate reading all, I have found especially the long ones, the multi-responders, most helpful because you come to see them better unlike I can see myself. In those words, a lurker like me gets grounded. Perhaps pass over those that seem too long? Nothing wrong with that. I appreciate that you don't have time. I suspect the lengthies will remain for you whenever you might want/need or be inclined to read like a book. Bless them for sharing. They reaffirmed my existence!
Helpful Answer (15)
Report

I am so sorry that I was misunderstood. When I said I live by the golden rule, I was actually referring to good Karma really, and how I hope that it comes back to me if I ever need help in my life.

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.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

This is a sensitive subject for all of us - and since we were all raised with the fact that we have to jump at a moments notice to "fix" something about ourselves that we become very defensive - and I mean this in the kindest way. I am so very guilty of this - and have to catch myself all the time from apologizing or taking something wrong. One thing I have learned is to take a step back and breath first - not react. I am sure that no one meant any harm and we should all support each other - as really this is where we can come together and get ideas. Had it not been for Emjo last year - I would have never even thought of my mother as narcissistic - just a raging alcoholic that had a tongue as sharp as a snake. She could whip out a jab faster than you have time to react. That's why when the stroke affected her speech - it was kind of a Karma for her. But now instead of that - it is "blame and shame" and violence and talking like an old sailor. Honestly - I never knew my mother could talk this way! I have never been so verbally abused in my life until the day I told her to the dentist last September. That day she really pushed me too far.

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!
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

MizVic and sad1daughter,
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.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

50sChild, I totally agree. I am very new to this blog and I have re-read many posts. Yesterday, after a not so great phone call with my mother, I re-read several posts here and they made me feel better. Nobody can really understand how we feel, unless they have been raised the way we have. Hugs to all.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Thanks Rena58.

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.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Mizvic, when I first started posting comments on this site I was attacked a few times. Didn't mean any harm. And some times I did the attacking. It is all part of growing. Now I am not so prickly nor am I so sensitive because I realize that a lot of what I hear and say is slanted by the abuse I received as a child. But because of all of the nice people on this site and all of the helpful books I have read, all of the discussions I have been involved in and just read about, I have changed a great deal in the past four or five years. I see things a little differently now and realize some people take offense because that is what they have always had to do to survive. It just takes time and understanding.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I found this article today while my mother was on the telephone with her sister (that also has dementia and NPD) delivering her daily dose of negative talk about me.
thenarcissistinyourlife/psychologically-controlling-and-invasive-narcissistic-mothers/
Its horrible being a caregiver to a mother with Dementia and NPD.
I am now seeing how physically distancing myself is the only way for me to save myself. I haven't figured out how I can get just a few hours just a few days a week as my mother refuses to listen to her doctors and also refuses outside help to come into her home.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

I've done pretty well, all things considered, with balancing my mother's need for increased oversight with my own need for more distance. Having said that, though -- just yesterday, I called for my now regular 5 minute, twice monthly phone call, and scheduled a daylong visit with her in the next several weeks. I'm noticing already that I'm going into that pre-visit funk. I'm doing all this mental planning and list-making in order to make it the most productive use of my time, knowing that it will be SO stressful and unpleasant. The odds of my making a positive difference in her life are very slim. I'm anticipating her moodiness, her digs, and my own impatience at her attempts to appear "with it" when she is so clearly NOT. Sigh... the AL facilities that I visited late last year contact me from time to time, asking how things are going, and all I can say is that everything re: moving her out of her home is on hold until something catastrophic occurs. I'm on pins and needles, waiting for that moment.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Dear MizVic, thank you for the hug and I sent you one too. =) I now understand what you meant. I also see very clearly that you are a wonderful, warm, caring, and sensitive person.
I am so glad you found this mentor. I had my dad for a short while; he died very young, but he really cared for me and loved me. Then I met my husband when I was very young, only 16. And I met his parents who were wonderful people; and that has helped me a lot. Last but not least, my maternal grandmother was a source of wisdom and love for me.
Take care and lets keep helping each other. Hugs
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

How much is enough? Any amount is too much. Be prepared for the biggest brattiest hissy fits imaginable when you put personal boundaries in place and won't cave in. It will be spectacular fireworks (narcissistic rage), so just be prepared but don't react and don't give in! I just start laughing and do things the way I need to anyway. That really cheeses mom off.

I would see my own NPD/BPD mother in the street than take her into my home again. 3.5 weeks last October was ENOUGH. All of us were nearly suicidal. Our peaceful refuge from the world was upside down with this mean, petulant, demanding bully in it. We moved her into her senior apartment, and I have not let her set foot in my house again. I won't do that to myself, my husband, or my children because she is so toxic. I *still* can't get the smell of her White Shoulders cologne out of the carpet. That smell makes me want to barf because it's associated with her and her crazy stunts.

She was an over-pampered child due to an illness in the early 1940s, and has expected the world to carry her around like Cleopatra ever since. She has a medical file a foot thick and also used to change doctors frequently if they told her to lose weight, exercise, or basically do anything proactive to better her condition. If they didn't cater to her delicate flower persona, and let her flirt and act like a coy little girl, then she wouldn't see them again. I felt so icky after I figured all this out because it's a total lack of adult dignity. It's embarrassing to watch in person. She really puts on a show.

Now, she is a filthy old woman who choses to be this way, but she is in a safe facility. I won't go over there to cook or clean up after her, or clean her person. It's her security deposit that will be lost, not mine. I guess her outsides are finally reflecting how rotten her insides have always been.

I think the guilt we feel as the children of these people is guilt that comes from an imaginary parent we never actually had. The mother I mourn and grieve never existed. If I had that mother, and did things the way I do them now, I would definitely have cause to feel guilty. But I don't have that mother and I don't have anything to feel guilty over. Living my life my way, being my own person, validating my own needs and limits is not bad. If you give away your individuality to these narcissicsts, you will become a hollow shell of a person. They will use you up and spit you out when you're no longer valuable. Even if they are your mother. So understand the deal - you don't have to give. They don't have to get from you. There's no contract here. There is no reformation. There is no rehabilitation or changing of ways. I see that mom's bills get paid out of her account and that she has groceries & laundry gets done. That's all I'm in for. No more. I'm thinking of giving up the grocery runs in favor of a delivery business we have locally.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

I see a lot of people basically asking a common question - how do I get myself out of this? Here's my two cents & how I did it. I dropped the guilt, ripped the bandaid off, and all the bad stuff that was predicted to happen did not happen.

You have to start making decisions about what is good for YOU, not necessarily mom. I put my mom in an AL facility because it was bad for ME for her to live with us and she certainly couldn't live alone anymore. It was not up for her approval or readiness. The decision she got to make was which apartment do you want - the one on this side or that side? She was not asked if she wanted to move or where she wanted to move into because it was not a choice. It sounds heartless, but I didn't really care if she was ready. It's happening and she's paying. I picked out the place, did the paperwork, and she got to see it after.

A lot of senior transition advice says to let the senior have decision making ability and exposure to choices so you have their buy-in all the way through. Well that's fine for normal people working with a rational grown up, but it doesn't work with an NPD parent because this will turn into a drama that never ends. If you wait for a change to be OK with mom, you'll be dead first.

You get yourself out of this situation with planning and decision making. It's harder with siblings who may have been designated as the "good ones" who never see this side of mom, but if they aren't going to step in and take over 100%, they can jolly well butt out.

If you don't have Power of Attorney, then the sibling with POA can deal with mom. In this situation, remove yourself. Just go. Drop mom off on the front step of the person with POA and drive away. Seriously. It sounds theatrical, but a lot of life with a NPD is very theatrical. I'm lucky that I don't have any siblings, but there is an awful lot of drama posted on this site that involves them.
Maybe one is used to having all the power, but doing none of the work. The only way to change things is to change them. It can't be some long drawn out gradual journey that waits on everybody involved to be 100% ok with every little thing before the next thing can happen. Rip that bandaid off. Everybody will adjust. Or they won't. So what. What's the worst thing that can happen to you? Everybody has a snit and doesn't speak to you for a while? You get to claim your life back? You get to rest? Maybe go out, find a hobby, see friends, have a clean house for once? Get a good night's sleep perhaps.
Helpful Answer (12)
Report

I just came to read the forum and sandwich42 I can't believe what you just wrote. Reason being, is I just came back from visiting an AL place and it was beautiful. I never knew how bad off I was until I sat down with the director, and she asked me what brought me here. As I explaining to her the water works begin. She and her whole staff were super sweet and just let me pour my heart out. But my husband just said the same thing you did does she want a 1 bedroom or studio, not does she want to go there - it does seem heartless in a way and I feel guilty but yet I know its the right thing. The ladies at the AL sat with me and told me after 4 years of caregiving for both my parents by myself it was time for me to take care of me. They said they would take care of my Mom, my Dad is across the street in the nursing home so this is ideal just walk across the street and she can visit with him whenever she wants to. But you are right this is the only way, I just hope my Mom will see that I love her, and worried about her and only want to help her instead of abandon her. I am hoping if she will not do this for herself she will do it for me - maybe in time she will know that I only wanted to help her. I also know I need to help me too. I took alot of posters advice and just picked up Karyl McBrides - "Will I Ever Be Good Enough" I only read 2 pages and begin to cry so I know it will be a box of kleenex book! The AL wants me to bring my Mom by tomorrow morning, they think if we all sit down that they can help me convince my Mom she will love it there. I pray for strength and guidance in the morning!
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

@Emjo, This is true in my case: "They count on that they will drive you to tears or on the defensive." Responding to my mother only makes things worse in my case. I just have to say nothing. Engaging her only adds fuel to her need for whatever it is that drives her narcissistic self. We have tried reasoning, talking calmly, and giving her a piece of our minds. We now realize that she has always been this way and will go to her grave this way. As her dementia progresses, this behavior will most likely get worse.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

@New2Dementia, @Emjo, you are absolutely right. My mother and my brother try their best to throw me off balance. The best case scenario is if I get angry, but making me cry is second best. Also, both say extraordinary lies! And both are passive aggressive. Keeping your calm is the best and then, try to get out of the room or off the phone ASAP. Hugs.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

@Sandwich42 hit the nail on the head with this post "Living my life my way, being my own person, validating my own needs and limits is not bad. If you give away your individuality to these narcissicsts, you will become a hollow shell of a person. They will use you up and spit you out when you're no longer valuable. Even if they are your mother. So understand the deal - you don't have to give. They don't have to get from you. There's no contract here. There is no reformation."
Thank you.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Being a caregiver to a narcissistic parent with health issues is a thankless job.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

If I say nothing with my mother, she walks past me and like the last time - flicks my necklace and said "is THIS NEW??" and gives me this accusatory look. If I just say simple comments, she railroads over me, if I try to reason, she goes over the same thing over and over and over again. Now that I have said " this isn't going anywhere I will come back when you are in a better mood" it's now WHATS wrong with you?? Ugh.

She was obsessing about wanting an iPhone, then it was a toaster oven, now she's back to going home, why, why, why. It it so much worse than when my kids were little. And somehow when I set up her iPad to email - now she just figured out how to see my shared stream of photos...I have no idea how that happened! I think the only way to adjust that is to get back on her iPad and make adjustments. I hadn't synced them. Of course she saw a picture of our new big dog at her house - outside - and is flipped out.

I don't know how any of you cared for these narcissists either in your home or theirs! There truly is a special place in heaven for you!
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Sandwich...I think I have said this before - not sure - but I think our mothers are the same person! Omg! When you said flirting with the doctor I just cringed! My mother was so ridicules when we went to her cardiologist. She put on such a good show too that he asked me what it was going to take to send her home! I was so angry! I told him when she stopped firing people and he was welcome to take her home with him! She went on and on saying HE wants her to go home. I never took her back to him.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Anybody with a NPD parent of any degree, needs to start every day with these reminders:

1. I am entitled to my own feelings and thoughts. They are real and valid because I am real and valid on my own.
2. I am allowed to be tired, angry, frustrated, and grumpy.
3. I don't have to change to make my NPD parent happy, satisfied, quiet, grateful, or anything else.
4. I am entitled to happiness without anybody's permission.
5. I am going to express myself however I like, be it the way I dress, what I eat, where I go, and who I associate with - without anybody's permission.
6. I will leave the house/room/phone call when I feel uncomfortable, threatened, irritated, mad, put down, criticized, or anything that is not positive.

Reminding yourself of these things to start with *will* make a difference in your thoughts, your approach, and your ability to protect yourself from harm - mental/emotional harm as well as physical harm. The more often you can successfully detach and protect yourself (what I think of as winning), the more confidence you gain in yourself.

Have a plan in mind every time you have to have an interaction with your NPD person. For me, to visit my mom - which I dread every time - I leave all extra personal belongings in my car trunk. The less I take in there, the less I have to gather up in a hurry. I have had to turn and walk out more than once. I don't stand there and give her warnings. When she starts in, out I go. I also have a time limit on how long I'll stay, and it's never more than 15 minutes or so. It sure would be nice to have long lunches and reminisce together over cookies & tea with old pictures, but that is wishful thinking and ridiculous on my part to expect it.

I hope this is helping. We have to stick together to keep it together!
::hugs::
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

My N mother (Parkinsons, stroke & dementia) has been in a NH for 18 months but that didn't stop her getting at me on a daily basis. Since changing my phone number and going low contact I'm a couple of months into recovery. I've felt quite ill over the winter, not done much of anything and slept a lot but I'm slowly getting better.

Today is her birthday (88). Increasingly filled with dread at the thought of visiting, I decided to get it over with and yesterday visited with flowers, along with two shopping bags of chocolates and specialty cookies. She was delighted with all the stuff and was quite pleasant. That lets me out for a while. Next time, depending on how I feel, I may just drop her stuff at the admin office for them to deliver as "I have a cold coming" {evil grin}.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

New2Dementia...especially when they don't remember what you've done for them :(
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

When your parent wants conrol of all the decision making in their lives, but expects you to assume all the responsibilities on those choices. When you are completely emotionally drained by a mother who has always been emotionally immature and just keeps wanting to suck you dry. When you look at your parent with such contempt and disgust for their lifetime negative behavior and all you feel is anger and hatred. When a parent attempts to make you the choosen one because it is easier and more convenient for them. When no matter what you do, your parent will never be happy and has no consideration for your feelings and only concern for themselves. When no matter how many boundaries you put up or distance yourself, your parent keeps attempting to dig their talons into your throat in their endless neediness. These elderly parents belong in a place that will keep them safe, but cared for by strangers who have no emotional attachment to these self-centered abusive behavioral individuals.
Helpful Answer (27)
Report

Debralee, you said it! I am so frustrated and stressed out over what you described - "...parent wants control of all the decision making...but expects you to assume all the responsibilities..." I have a somewhat prepared speech just in case it becomes necessary, where I graciously offer to rescind all involvement and let her ask my brother and his wife (who she views with even more contempt than me) to take over. I know she would not agree to it, but it would feel SO GOOD to say it, and it may stop the digs and insults, albeit temporarily.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

@ Debralee: Very well stated and that is why my MIL is now in a nursing facility being cared for by total strangers. We visit but do not have assume responsibility over the situation any longer. Visits are far less stressful even when she guilt trips my husband into being at her beck and call. He has learned that we too have life and she is in good hands and will just need to wait her turn a bit.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

@Debralee isn't that so common in narcissists - make bad decisions, alienate others, stir the pot then expect you to pick up the pieces? Every time I visited my mother would complain that the early morning staff getting her washed and dressed were rough with her. It's a total lie of course. She just wanted to sleep in and be served breakfast (immediately) at a time of her choosing and she hoped I'd go after the staff so she'd get her way. Of course I didn't take the bait and she's shut up about it now.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

I'm still reading through all of the responses but I just printed out havefaithingod's post to read and re-read. So very helpful! I've come to realize in the past two years of taking care of my mother in my own home how very spoiled she was as a child. I've been trying to figure out how she became the person she became.

I was somehow led to believe that Mom had a stroke that affected her in such a way that she could do very little for herself beyond basic living activities. Just last week I had three doctors confirm that this did not happen. The stroke did not occur where such behaviors are located in the brain - such as taking initiative, motivation, decision making. Her not doing these things for 2 years, since dad died, are not from the stroke. They are the way she is. Since I was gone from home for about 20 years, I didn't know this about her.

I couldn't see how her "wonderful loving" parents who still try to help her out financially today and did all her life could have created such a selfish and self-absorbed person. Since I myself was neglected as a child, I assumed her opposite childhood would have resulted in a different person. I am finally starting to understand how they spoiled her.

What gets me and that I don't see mentioned when discussing narcissistic people is that my mother is extremely sweet and nice. She doesn't insult or get in your face or say obviously rude things. So it fools you (or me, anyway) and you don't even notice the manipulation and over-obligation and anxiety that she creates by her words and actions. She does nothing, it looks like, and gets everyone to wait on her hand and foot. It's amazing once you see it! It's scary to know how subtle it is. It's exhausting being around her and resisting the siren song pull. To check the temperature in the room and make sure she gets to go to the restroom before the doctor takes her for the cat scan and ask the nurse again when mom can eat and remind the nurses mom hasn't had her evening pills and... and...and. All things Mom is fully capable of. And is reminding me of when no one else is around. But she clams up when a medical person enters the room.

I am take charge. She is not. It is harder for me to hold myself back than to just do it all. But if I do it all, I will burn out and lose myself.

Again, she is charming and sweet and strangers love to do things for her. The family is wary of her. I always wondered why we were all so distant. Now I know. I always blamed my father (inferior to her in her eyes) for their lives of failure and missed chances, but now that he is gone I see how she really is and always has been.

Thank you havefaithingod for your post.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

@ cmcwrinkl1: You’re quite welcome and I’m glad that my post was able to help you understand your mother better. As I was reading your post I felt as though you were describing my MIL to a T. I especially liked your reference to the “siren song” and trying to resist it. I also am a take charge kind of person and she is not and it is much harder for me to hold myself back as well then to just do things. However since I’m the daughter in law I can only keep the ball rolling so long before my husband and his siblings have to step in. And if they don’t think something is necessary then the ball is dropped and the vicious cycle continues. It’s only been in the last year or so that my husband has noticed just how controlling his mom can be and has even backed away from the situation more. I believe that when I called her out once it really opened up my husband’s eyes to the way she is. I wasn’t even trying to hurt her but wanted her to know how much she had hurt me over the years with things she has said in that selfish, self-absorbed manor.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

It really depends on if one is willing to totally walk out, 'adios mom, dad, you are now on your own.'..
You know something? These people generally find a way to take care of themselves. If they cannot, it all can be turned over to the state and the state can put up with the narcissist.
I am familiar if you manage to catch the narcissist dead to rights, or shine the light on some area where they 'stink'. If you do not get angry, the narcissists reaction is almost funny, if sad. They can never be wrong.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

1 2 3 4 5
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter