Children of narcissistic parents often inherit a uniquely destructive legacy. If you had a narcissistic parent, that legacy may still affect you in ways that can be hard to spot.
A key step in letting go of an unhealthy upbringing lies in breaking connections between how you were raised and your present-day unwanted behaviors.
The following are behaviors common among narcissistic parents. Identify any that you may have experienced.
When you were growing up, did one or both of your parents:
- Bestow gifts with strings attached?
- Tell you to trust them, then disappoint or betray you?
- Dominate conversations or hog the family spotlight?
- Seem rarely satisfied with you?
- Criticize or undermine your decisions and choices?
- Seem to take delight in spoiling your good moods or big moments?
- Seem emotionally immature or clueless about others’ feelings?
- Rarely apologize, admit they were wrong, or take responsibility?
- Need to win, even at your expense?
- Forbid you to disagree with them, or punish you for doing so?
- Use guilt or pressure to make you put their needs first?
- Sow disharmony, gaslighting, and drama in your family?
- Act like a martyr and pull for attention or sympathy?
- Discount or ridicule your emotions, wants, and needs?
- Leave you feeling helpless, trapped, unloved, or hopeless?
- Become punitive, distant, or withdrawn when displeased?
- View situations in black-and-white, all-or-nothing terms?
- Act magnanimously to outsiders but ignore your needs?
- Seem hypersensitive to real or imagined slights?
Parental behaviors like these have lasting effects
For example, if your parent used, manipulated, or shamed you, how could you not sometimes find it difficult to trust others even years later?
If you weren’t consistently seen or valued for who you were, doesn’t it make sense that you might feel triggered when you feel discounted or misunderstood as an adult?
If you have difficulty making decisions, perhaps it’s connected to a parent ridiculing or second-guessing your choices.
The following are examples of unhealthy patterns you may experience in adulthood, along with possible connections to your childhood.
As an adult do you sometimes…
1. Find it difficult to let go, laugh, or be spontaneous? Possible connection: Your parent’s controlling, self-absorbed, or unpredictable behavior kept you on high alert for self-protection.
2. Feel undeserving? Possible connection: Your parent treated you as a second-class citizen or made you feel small.
3. Get uncomfortable when good things happen? Possible connection: Your parent spoiled good moments with selfish behavior, or gave you attention or gifts with strings attached.
4. Initially idealize people you meet, then inevitably feel let down by them? Possible connection: Your parent acted magnanimously to outsiders but ignored your needs.
5. Feel anxious about confrontations with others? Possible connection: Your parent prohibited dissent or punished you for speaking up.
Struggle to feel close to others
6. Struggle to feel close to others even when you want to? Possible connection: Your parent regularly withdrew or rejected you for no apparent reason.
7. Please others at your own expense? Possible connection: Your parent forced you to put their needs first, or made you feel guilty for having needs of your own.
8. Feel drawn to turmoil rather than harmony in your relationships? Possible connection: Your family was a model of drama, scapegoating, and disharmony.
9. Judge yourself harshly? Possible connection: Your parent was often critical or dissatisfied with you.
10. Self-soothe through excessive drink, food, shopping, or other compulsive behaviors? Possible connection: Your parent’s behavior left you feeling unloved, trapped, alone, or hopeless.
11. Trust others unwisely or, conversely, find it hard to trust even when you want to? Possible connection: Your parent convinced you to trust them, then betrayed you.
12. Believe that dysfunction in relationships is normal or unavoidable? Possible connection: Your parent lied, stonewalled, held grudges, or never took responsibility for their actions.
13. Feel numb or struggle to identify your feelings? Possible connection: Your parent minimized or ridiculed your emotions, or attacked you for having emotions they didn’t like.
14. View other people as fragile, or view yourself as too much to handle? Possible connection: Your parent acted like a martyr or became unhinged by your healthy independence.
15. Feel extra-sensitive around entitled, arrogant, or manipulative people? Possible connection: Your parent’s desperate need for attention took up the emotional oxygen in your family.
Human Behavior
Human behavior is complex, and it would be a simplification to say that just because your parent did A, you will automatically do B. But years of being on the receiving end of narcissistic parenting can take a toll.
As children, acknowledging family dysfunction when we have little power to do anything about it can feel devastating. As a result, we may ignore unhealthy patterns, believe what we see to be normal, blame ourselves, or seek means of escape.
Such coping strategies may help us emotionally survive a difficult childhood—and it is important to honor whatever helped us survive in childhood—but those same coping strategies may later manifest in self-defeating ways like some of the 15 patterns listed above.
However, a difficult upbringing does not mean you are irreparably damaged or that your life will always be difficult.
If you notice yourself falling into one or more of the patterns listed above, the following steps may help:
Recognize that the past has come alive in the present. Troubling feelings or counterproductive behaviors such as the 15 listed above can serve as a signal that your parents’ narcissism from decades ago is trying to reach into your present life. Your parents might like their legacy to continue forever. Don’t let it.
Furthermore, place responsibility and accountability correctly. Narcissistic parents may have blamed you for their problems and taken advantage of you for their own gratification. But let’s be honest: Your parents were adults and they were accountable for their actions, no matter how much they may have avoided taking responsibility. At the same time, you’re the adult now, and you are accountable for what you do with your life.
Seek Support
Seek support. There are countless resources to help you move on. Psychotherapy excels at identifying and breaking unhealthy connections with the past. Support groups and 12-step programs provide a community of support and offer opportunities to see how others handle similar situations. Self-help books allow you to explore deep issues at your own pace.
Ask yourself empowering questions such as:
- “What is the best way to take care of me in this situation?”
- “Is this how I want to treat myself or view others?”
- “Who do I want to be, and what do I want to stand for, right now?”
However, if all else fails and you are unsure of what to do in any given situation, simply ask yourself what your parents might do in the same situation, or may have told you to do.
Then do the opposite. Chances are you won’t go wrong by doing the opposite of a narcissistic parent’s self-serving advice or put-downs.