Learning how to understand and make peace with your childhood is one of the most healing and empowering experiences you could ever go through.
When we were children, we looked up to our parents for support, encouragement, nurturing and love.
But when we were denied these things, we developed a variety of beliefs, behavioral patterns, and coping mechanisms to help us survive in such a difficult environment.
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As adults, we often play out these same coping mechanisms, often to our own detriment.
The thing about being the child of a narcissistic mother and/or father is that it often contributes to something known in shamanic terminology as soul loss.
Soul loss is the inability to contact or experience our souls due to the unresolved wounds, traumas, and fears weโve accumulated over the years.
The first step in healing this soul loss is to be willing to explore what you went through as a child.
This process of exploring the narcissistic actions of your parent isnโt done to condemn them or to victimize yourself.
Instead, this process is done to help you understand the root cause of any pain youโre still experiencing, to learn how to release it, and to move on with your life. This becomes a strengthening and rejuvenating process.
19 Signs You Had a Narcissistic Mother and/or Father
The thing about having a narcissistic mother and/or father is that you have been taught to believe that you are the crazy and imbalanced one, instead of them. This causes you to constantly doubt yourself and any feelings you have about them.ย
Another major sign of being raised by narcissists is the constant guilt you struggle with. In other words, while you might suspect that there is something โoffโ with your parents, you feel ashamed to think about them in such a way, and you tend to start beating yourself up instead.
But there is a very good reason why youโve come to this article. And while you may still have lingering doubts, I hope the following information can clear your mind.
Firstly, you should know that there are two main kinds of narcissists:
- Engulfing Narcissists โ these are parents who see their children as extensions of themselves. In other words, engulfing narcissistic parents become obsessively involved in your life to an extreme extent. They donโt respect your boundaries or acknowledge you as a separate person.
- Ignoring Narcissists โ these are parents who have very little interest in their children. Ignoring narcissists clearly see the boundary between themselves and their children. As a result, they neglect to take care of their children or show an active interest in their lives.
Depending on what type of narcissistic parent you have, you’ll struggle with slightly different (but similar) issues.
So …
How does a narcissistic mother or father behave?
Here are some of the main signs:
- They tried to control you through codependency
- They laid on the guilt thick
- They only loved you when you did what THEY wanted
- They liked to โget evenโ with you
- They never respected your boundaries
- They competed with you
- They โownedโ your accomplishments
- They constantly lied to you
- They never listened to (or cared) about your feelings
- They constantly insulted you
- They exerted explicit control over you
- They gaslighted you
- They โparentifiedโ you
- They had a โfavoriteโ or โgoldenโ child
- They reacted intensely to any form of criticism
- They projected their bad behavior onto you
- They never displayed any empathy
- They were infallibly correct and never wrong
- They liked to present a perfect family image to outsiders
Keep in mind that there’s a difference between narcissistic behavior (which only comes out every now and then) and narcissism. We all have a tendency to be narcissistic given the right circumstances (such as high stress). But narcissism is ongoing, chronic, and pathological.
I’ll go into these nineteen signs more in depth below:ย
1. They tried to control you through codependency
In other words, you were told by your parent/s, โDonโt leave me. I need you. I canโt live without you.โ This made it impossible for you to live an autonomous life or establish independent priorities other than catering to the needs of your parent/s.
2. They laid on the guilt thick
Another method of controlling you was to constantly guilt trip you into doing what they wanted. They may have told you, โIโve done so much for you, Iโve sacrificed everything for you.โ As a result, you felt indebted to them and as though you โowedโ them complete obedience.
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3. They only loved you when you did what THEY wanted
Your parent/s withdrew love very easily. If you failed to do what they wanted, they would either punish you severely or give you the silent treatment. You had the impression that they only loved you when you PROVED your worth to them.
4. They liked to โget evenโ with you
When you didย something โwrongโ or against their will โ even in the smallest way โ they made sure they punished you. This petty and childish way of โgetting evenโ may have been subtle or very obvious. For instance, they may haveย deliberately sabotaged something you cared about, broke something of yours, or hid something to get back at you.
5. They never respected your boundaries
There wasn’t any โprivateโ space to call your own growing up. Your narcissistic mother or father would go through your room and private belongings, without a thought, sometimes even using what they found against you.
6. They competed with you
If you ever got something nice, they took it from you or got something nicer to โout-doโ you.
7. They โownedโ your accomplishments
Whenever someone complimented your achievements, your parent/s would instantly jump in and shift the attention to themselves. For example, if someone congratulated you for winning a soccer trophy, your parent/s would butt in and say something along the lines of, โYes, she gets it from me. I was always athletic as a child.โ They love the spotlight and frequently stole it from you.
8. They constantly lied to you
Your parent/s lied to manipulate, control and take advantage of you in some way, shape or form. You never knew what you could trust was โrealโ or truthful around them, or whether they were setting up a hidden trap for you to fall into.
9. They never listened to (or cared) about your feelings
You felt that you could never share your feelings with your parent/s because they would either make fun of you or talk about themselves instead. Somehow, whatever issue you faced as a child was spun into a pity party for them, not you.
10. They constantly insulted you
Your narcissistic mother or father berated, demeaned and harassed you on a constant basis. They may have even latched onto an insecurity of yours and used it to humiliate you.
11. They exerted explicit control over you
In other words, when you didnโt obey them, they would punish you. The message was very clear, โObey me, or Iโll punish you.โ You were punished through emotional or physical abuse including emotional blackmail, hitting or beating.
12. They gaslighted you
In order to control you, they used a psychological manipulation tactic known as gaslighting. What this means is that they would deliberately make you feel crazy, or cause you to doubt your sanity, in order to gain the upper hand. This led to the development of constant self-doubt during your childhood, adolescence and present life. Read more about gaslighting.
13. They โparentifiedโ you
As a child, you were expected to โparentโ your parent, or behave as a surrogate parent to cater to their needs, instead of them catering to yours.
14. They had a โfavoriteโ or โgoldenโ child
In your family, there was the โgoldenโ child and the โscapegoatโ child. In other words, one child was seen as perfect and capable of doing no harm. The other child was seen as the black sheep and the cause of all issues (this is also known as an identified patient). These roles could have also switched frequently.
15. They reacted intensely to any form of criticism
Did you ever criticize your mother or father? What was their general reaction? If your mother and/or father was a narcissist, they likely reacted in an extreme way. They would scream at you and likely physically hurt you through smacking, or some other method.
16. They projected their bad behavior onto you
For example, if you were in an argument, your narcissistic mother or father would hysterically scream at you, โ How dare you talk to your mother that way. Go to your room. Weโll talk after you stop screaming at me.โ
17. They never displayed any empathy
They never asked about your feelings, sympathized with you, or cared. They seemed to be solely interested in their own feelings.
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18. They were infallibly correct and never wrong
Even when they made a mistake or treated you in an unfair, or unjust way, they never apologized for their mistake. When you confronted them about it, they denied all accusations and tried to spin the blame onto you.
19. They liked to present a perfect family image to outsiders
Your parent/s went to great lengths to ensure that others perceived you as a loving/successful/enviable family. Likely, you were very aware of this ploy but kept silent for fear of wrath from your parent/s.
How to Confirm That Youโre the Child of a Narcissistic Mother / Father

After reading through this list of symptoms you might still be unsure of how to define your parent/s. Thatโs normal. Your narcissistic mother and/or father wouldnโt have exhibited all of the signs above (but if they did, pay attention).
If youโre the child of a narcissist, you will likely struggle with these problems:
- Codependency in other relationships
- Weak sense of self
- Poor personal boundaries and inability to say โnoโ
- Chronic guilt or toxic shame
- Self-loathing
- Emptiness
- Trust issues
- Inability to express or handle emotions (resulting in emotional numbness)
- Anxiety or depression
- Being a people-pleaser
How many signs can you relate to? Obviously, the more issues you can say ‘yes’ to, the more likely you can confirm (without a doubt) that you were raised by a narcissistic mother or father.
Click on any of the linked articles in the list above to gain further guidance.
How Do You Deal With a Narcissistic Mother or Father?
What next?
If youโre quite sure that one, or both, of your parents, was a narcissist, itโs likely that they still have some kind of involvement in your life. Many narcissist support groups recommend cutting off contact from such parents or interacting them in small, measured ways (such as through a phone call, or text message).
To begin your process of soul healing, you might like to do the following:
- Stop hoping that your narcissistic parent will change โ you can never change them.
- Allow yourself to grieve the parent you never had.
- Understand that you have been raised to suppress and deny your feelings. Now is a good opportunity to slowly open up to those years of repressed feelings. You can do this by seeking traditional psychotherapy that focuses onย shadow work, or alternative methods such as shamanic healing, hypnotherapy, holistic remedies, etc.
- Learn to take care of your own needs through the practice of self-care.
- Learn how to love yourself.
- Reconnect with your inner child and learn how to care for it in a way your parents never could. This is called inner child work.
- Keep an active daily journal in which you self-reflect. This will help you become more self-aware. Learn more about how to journal.
- Explore soul retrieval, which is a vital part of inner work.
- Express your emotions in a healthy way, particularly any anger you have inside.
- Join a support group and connect with others who have experienced similar childhood experiences. You can find many on Facebook, or you could search the internet for local groups.
- Arm and empower yourself with knowledge by reading books such as “Becoming the Narcissist’s Nightmare” and “Disarming the Narcissist.”
While you may feel broken, itโs important to remember that you are not broken. Your soul can never be broken. It is still there, waiting for you to access. This experience only serves to show you that everything you need is within you. No matter what your childhood was like, itโs still possible to heal and reunite with that source of unconditional joy, wonder and love inside.
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You are both doing a wonderful work. Am so grateful for your advice.
I was raised by Narcissistic Mother still am and now am suffering from emotional trauma and I can’t remember my childhood.
This is a really wonderful article. And my “raising” or growing up experience with this behavior…. was not as much from my parents, as from my only sibling. So my sib was the power or influential figure in my life that behaved this way, and I adored him for the longest time. I mention this because most discussion of this tends to either cover a partner/lover who is acting from a place of narcissistic abuse or regarding parents. Certainly, my parents did not help nor intervene, but that shaping experience came from interacting, living with and feeling bounded to my sibling.
You are both doing such amazing work and reaching so many souls. THANK YOU.
Iโm appreciative that thereโs people like you out there. Iโve read and studied this for years. But never seemed to be able to go no contact until recently. Although I do still have to work on being just ok. I donโt miss my family, my siblings were raised by the same narcissistic mom, so they are of no help , I fact theyโre a hindrance too, they dont see it for what it is. Iโm the problem, because I refuse to go around the utter dysfunction. The golden child in my family is dangerous, destroys property, will try to get you fired..itโs craziness..so Iโm pretty much on my own…it hurts but I am healthier…
I must say I cant even remember my childhood – just glimpses here a nd there – no feelings comes up. It is like I have never been a Child, but still I know I have because of the glimpses and the fact I had a mother and have a father – that I donยดt see because I donยดt like him.
Thank you for this article. I am turning 65 later this year and am still dealing with this issue. While I spent my adult years away from my family, I recently moved my 84 yr old mother to the same town and in my home. I had thought I had “gotten over it”, but inside was afraid. Six months later I had to get her to move to my younger (and her favorite) sister’s home in the same town. Almost every point you made here hit home. I’ve been limiting contact because I just don’t want to live like that. I was happy with my husband, children, and the things I liked to do – but even talking to her is a complete drain on me. I am empathic, feeling it right in my stomach every time. It has always been this way. I felt at my age it just shouldn’t be this way but it wasn’t as easy to put off as my husband, who is also my best friend, said it should be. Now I understand I still have work to do, but I know I’ve done the right thing. Thank you from my heart.
Hi there and thank you for this article… In your experience, how are narcissists created? Aren’t they “victims” themselves, maybe of their own parents? Maybe this is my attempt to understand or make excuses for my own mother…
wooow this resonates a lot with me. I think I came to the right place. Though I’m not 100% sure my dad is a narcissistic because I just learned about this term today and my English is not very good. I’m 28 years old, and I can say since I left my house and started living by myself, now married, I had been realizing some unhealthy habits inside the environment of my family. I imagined there was something wrong because my friends always told me the relationship with my dad was not normal, none of my friends like my dad, yet I love him so much I can’t handle the idea that he might be a narcissistic who never loved me for real. I have suffered so many times with depression, anxiety, I have felt I’m broken and I will never be able to be 100% happy. Whenever something good happens I’m afraid something bad will happen later, as If i need to pay for being happy and there is no way happiness is free. I’m constantly searching for ways to improve myself, thinking I’m bad or not enough in everything professionally and personally. I don’t have a good confidence of my skills, even many of my friends, mother’s family and my husband are constantly telling me I’m enough and I’m great, I can’t seem to believe it… I can hear my dad’s voice telling me I’m disgusting and I will never be enough, I don’t know how to heal and wrase that voice. I know I need help, living with my husband has helped me to heal a lot, but I feel like a burden to him, I’m over emotional, he doesn’t know how to help me and I can see in his face he suffers whenever he sees me Suffering, feeling helpless. I don’t want to be a burden, I want to be a good daugther, sister, wife and mom one day. I don’t want to be like him…. How to know my dad is narcissistic? How to know if that is the problem or other problem in order to heal? I’m very confused… Some days are good, some days are hell… In my mind… I hope everyone who has had bad experiences in their lives find the light they need , as for me I’ll keep searching, thank you so much for this article. I might need to read it many times.
What if you had siblings who did this to you like I did. I still carry the scars of their torment 25 years later
Parents and siblings on my end… I feel ya
Happy Morning to you both! This article really touched my heart. I am the only surviving child now, and the care for my elderly parents fall on me. Mom is 89 and daddy is 93. This is such a long story, I will try to be brief. My world consists of myself, my grown daughter and our little dog. And my parents. I have much inner work to be done. I am growing and learning each day, and I am changing. My parents have guilt tripped me my whole life, and they are both really good at it.
My older sister was a criminal, my little brother was a sweet naughty little boy…always getting into trouble. I was the middle child and was taught daily, that I must learn from my siblings’ mistakes, and I was not allowed to make those, or any other mistakes. I was lied to all the time. Example: I know this is small and petty, but it has caused me a lot of painful memories over my life. My daddy would bribe us kids to get us to church every sunday. His bribe was that we would get to stop at the Ice Cream shop on the way home from church. He NEVER kept that promise, not one single time. My parents do not know “me” at all. I raised myself in silence and pain. My childhood was toxic. I am struggling now, as their care and lives are in my hands with the help of God. I am trying to honor their wish to allow them both to pass at home. Mom has dementia and daddy is bedridden. No matter what I do, how much I sacrifice, no matter how much time I spend with them, no matter how hard I try to help them…..none of it is ever good enough. Ever! I am angry at them sometimes, and then realize that nothing is going to change except how I handle this in my life. The work to be done, is mine alone. I am sad and growing weary.
As usual BINGO! I never thought of them as narcissitic though. I did think they were involved only with themselves and did not understand what love really was. It was truly hell to grow up in my house. Parents who believed others before their own kids and did nothing in the way of nurturing us. Only ridiculed etc. Yes. I see now that’s what they truly were. Shame as they could be incredibly nice people…to everyone else. Oh well I have dealt with everything from my past purged the systems so to speak. Too bad you were not around and computers when I was growing up. So many of us kids back then could have benefited from your work and insights etc. But you have a giant opportunity to save as many people as you can now and doing a fine job of it too!!! Bless you!
Thank you very much for this article. For those who feel they were raised by a narcissistic parent(s), how do you ensure that those narcissistic traits/tendencies donโt show up in your own family and parenting techniques?