Relationships with
narcissists revolve around them – their needs, their entitlement, their vanity,
and their moods. Partners are not seen as separate, whole human beings with
their own feelings and needs.
Because they lack
empathy and think only of themselves, narcissists feel entitled to
control, belittle, and exploit family members in order to boost their impaired
self-esteem and maintain their control.
Maintaining power is their
primary objective because it makes them feel safe and keeps their deep-seated
feelings of shame at bay. Their defenses that are difficult for other people
help them do this.
Unfortunately, partners
also suffer from impaired self-esteem, and in the early stages of the
relationship don’t mind sacrificing their own needs. This encourages the
narcissist to make increasingly unreasonable demands. Partners put the
narcissist first because they believe putting themselves first is selfish and
because they believe it secures the narcissist’s love.
But over time, they
realize that trying to please the narcissist and meet their insatiable
needs is thankless – like trying to fill a bottomless pit.
The narcissist finds fault with their efforts or gives back-handed
compliments so that partners always feel one down.
Even if momentarily pleased,
the narcissist is soon disparaging or asking for more. Underneath, both
narcissists and their partners feel unlovable.
Effects Of Living
With A Narcissist
Narcissists make their
partners experience what it was like having had a cold, invasive, or
unavailable narcissistic parent. Their partner’s needs, concerns, and interests
are of no concern to the narcissist, who in some cases lives his or her life as
if no one else existed, making their partners feel invisible.
Anne Rice’s vampire Lestat
had just such an emotionally empty mother, who devotedly bonded with him to
survive. The deprivation of real nurturing and a lack of boundaries make
narcissists dependent on others to feed their insatiable need for validation.
Partners often doubt the
narcissist’s sincerity and question whether it’s really manipulation, pretense,
or a manufactured “as-if” personality. They wonder, “Can a narcissist
love?” They feel tense and drained from narcissistic abuse, including
unpredictable tantrums, attacks, lies, false accusations, criticism, and
unjustified indignation about small or imaginary slights.
These partners also lack
boundaries and absorb whatever is said about them as truth. In vain attempts to
win approval and stay connected, they sacrifice their needs and walk on
eggshells, fearful of displeasing the narcissist. They daily risk blame and
punishment, love being withheld, or a rupture in the relationship. They’re
unable to effectively handle abuse. They worry about what their spouses will
think or do and become as preoccupied with the narcissist as the
narcissist is with him or herself. Loving a narcissist creates constant
insecurity and disappointment. Often in these relationships, narcissists are
the distancers when more than sex is anticipated.
To a narcissist, getting
emotionally close requires giving up power and control. The thought of being
dependent is abhorrent. It not only limits their options and makes them feel
weak, but also exposes them to rejection and feelings of shame, which they keep
from consciousness at all costs (Lancer, 2014).
Soon, partners begin to doubt themselves and lose confidence and self-worth. Communicating their disappointment gets twisted and is met with defensive blame or further put-downs. The narcissist can dish it out, but not take it. When two narcissists get together, they fight over whose needs come first, blame and push each other away, yet are miserable needing each other. Partners have to fit into the narcissists’ cold world and get used to living with emotional abandonment. Although the narcissist may have pursued them when they were dating, now they pursue the narcissist for crumbs of attention, unconsciously replaying emotional abandonment from their past.
Nevertheless, many
partners stay, because periodically the charm, excitement, and loving gestures
that first enchanted them return, especially when the narcissist feels
threatened that a breakup is imminent. But even when there are no reprieves
from the narcissist’s coldness and cruelty, the trauma bond and intermittent
reinforcement bind the couple.
For these and other
reasons, breaking up with an abuser is harder than leaving a normal
relationship. It first requires that partners reclaim their self-esteem and
confidence.
YOU ARE NOT ALONE
Concrete Angels
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