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ยป Home ยป Facing The Darkness

19 Signs You Were Raised By a Narcissistic Mother or Father

by Aletheia Luna ยท Updated: Sep 9, 2021 ยท 398 Comments

Raised By a Narcissistic Mother or Father image
Narcissistic mother and father

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 weโ€™ve 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 isnโ€™t done to condemn them or to victimize yourself.

Instead, this process is done to help you understand the root cause of any pain youโ€™re 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

Image of a narcissistic mother sitting down with no face

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 


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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 โ€œoffโ€ 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 youโ€™ve 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:

  1. 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 donโ€™t respect your boundaries or acknowledge you as a separate person.
  2. 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:

  1. They tried to control you through codependency
  2. They laid on the guilt thick
  3. They only loved you when you did what THEY wanted
  4. They liked to โ€œget evenโ€ with you
  5. They never respected your boundaries
  6. They competed with you
  7. They โ€œownedโ€ your accomplishments
  8. They constantly lied to you
  9. They never listened to (or cared) about your feelings
  10. They constantly insulted you
  11. They exerted explicit control over you
  12. They gaslighted you
  13. They โ€œparentifiedโ€ you
  14. They had a โ€œfavoriteโ€ or โ€œgoldenโ€ child
  15. They reacted intensely to any form of criticism
  16. They projected their bad behavior onto you
  17. They never displayed any empathy
  18. They were infallibly correct and never wrong
  19. 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, โ€œDonโ€™t leave me. I need you. I canโ€™t 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, โ€œIโ€™ve done so much for you, Iโ€™ve sacrificed everything for you.โ€ As a result, you felt indebted to them and as though you โ€œowedโ€ 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 โ€œget evenโ€ with you

When you didย something โ€œwrongโ€ or against their will โ€” even in the smallest way โ€” they made sure they punished you. This petty and childish way of โ€œgetting 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 โ€œprivateโ€ 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 โ€œout-doโ€ you.

7. They โ€œownedโ€ 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, โ€œYes, 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 โ€œrealโ€ 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 didnโ€™t obey them, they would punish you. The message was very clear, โ€œObey me, or Iโ€™ll 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 โ€œparentifiedโ€ you

As a child, you were expected to โ€œparentโ€ your parent, or behave as a surrogate parent to cater to their needs, instead of them catering to yours.

14. They had a โ€œfavoriteโ€ or โ€œgoldenโ€ child

In your family, there was the โ€œgoldenโ€ child and the โ€œscapegoatโ€ 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€œ How dare you talk to your mother that way. Go to your room. Weโ€™ll 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 Youโ€™re the Child of a Narcissistic Mother / Father

Raised By a Narcissistic Mother or Father image

After reading through this list of symptoms you might still be unsure of how to define your parent/s. Thatโ€™s normal. Your narcissistic mother and/or father wouldnโ€™t have exhibited all of the signs above (but if they did, pay attention).

If youโ€™re 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 โ€œnoโ€
  • 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 youโ€™re quite sure that one, or both, of your parents, was a narcissist, itโ€™s 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, itโ€™s 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, itโ€™s still possible to heal and reunite with that source of unconditional joy, wonder and love inside.

I hope this article supports your healing and growth. If you want to share your experience growing up with a narcissistic mother and/or father, please comment below. You’re welcome to keep your comment anonymous (by using our website’s comment system). Your email is always kept private.

Three paths to inner transformation โ€“ hereโ€™s how I can help you go deeper:

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About Aletheia Luna

Aletheia Luna is a prolific psychospiritual writer, author, educator, and intuitive guide whose work has touched the lives of millions worldwide. As a survivor of fundamentalist religious abuse, her mission is to help others find love, strength, and inner light in even the darkest places. She is the author of hundreds of popular articles, as well as numerous books and journals on the topics of Self-Love, Spiritual Awakening, and more. [Read More]

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  1. eklatea says

    March 01, 2017 at 5:38 am

    I think that my mother is a narcisst, most of the 19 signs fit to her. I’m 15 now and I’m still with her. People told me to get help, but I don’t know if I’m able to do anything against my mother and my father. I don’t know if I can, it feels like betraying. Has someone an advice or something? My friends don’t understand why I can’t just get help from authorities or someone else …

    Reply
    • Pradnya says

      July 19, 2017 at 10:03 pm

      Hello dear!
      I totally understand the things you are going through.
      Be strong and trust your instincts. You have to be incharge of your own life. Do what you feel and decide where you want to take your life to. Act upon it. Because after few years from now you will find yourself in peace. And yes they will be angered if you don’t listen to them, they will do everything to put you in their control. But you have to fight for yourself. No one else will! Believe yourself and stay positive. Friends or people won’t believe you because they don’t experience this kind of childhood. They always have an ideal image of parents. Best wishes to you dear!

      Reply
    • Rick says

      January 28, 2023 at 8:31 pm

      Hi Eklatea,
      I felt the same as you, many years ago. I believed that any negative feelings toward my parents were the problem. Even after years of the insidious abuse by them. Actually, that was a symptom of their domination over me. As far as getting help from authorities, from what I have read, there is not even a consensus among those in the psychology community about Narcissism. Society does not like to judge parents negatively, particularly mothers. I crunched some data and came up with something like 1 out of 300 households have a Narcissistic mother, like mine was. with all of the meddling into children’s lives by the educational system, you would thing they would give some instruction about dysfunctional families. But apparently the topic of bad parents is taboo and political suicide for any legislation that works for children. I only discovered all of this less than 5 years ago (I am in my 60’s). I find my greatest comfort on boards like this. There are also many online counseling services if you prefer.

      Reply
  2. The_Celeste says

    February 24, 2017 at 2:05 pm

    How can I see what other people have commented on my comment? I got two fb notices of people commenting. When I clicked it it redirected me to this page.

    Reply
    • The_Celeste says

      February 24, 2017 at 2:08 pm

      I don’t even see my own comment here (I only post under the names The_Celeste, TheCeleste or Kim).

      Reply
    • Mateo says

      February 27, 2017 at 5:36 am

      This is the disqus commenting thread, if you received facebook notifications it means they are for the Facebook comments thread which is right above this section on the page.

      Reply
  3. Matty says

    February 24, 2017 at 11:39 am

    My parents pretty much fit 1,2,3,4,5,9,10,11,12,14,15,16,17,18,19 especially father.They also made me feel bad even about things that were out of my control.If I got sick it was MY fault because I didnt put warm enough clothes when it was cold.If I got injured it was MY fault because I wasnt careful enough.Also my father had this very strange sleeping pattern.He had to go to bed at 10 PM every single night even when he didnt need to wake up early the next morning and if someone woke him up it was the end of the world.So it doesnt matter if its weekend or holiday he always goes to bed no later than 10 pm but even the smallest sounds wakes him up.I can open the door as quietly as I can and it can still wake him up and then he would immediately get off his bed raging.I was litetally afraid to go to bathroom after 10 pm so I dont wake him up and if I did he would yell at me saying why I always have to stay up so late and that every “normal” person goes to bed at this time.

    I feel extremely lonely bevause I have no real friends,no girlfriend and I have no emotional support.Other people without friends have at least emotional support from their family but I dont even have that.If anything they just make me feel worse especially when I need it the least.If I have a bad day they would critisize me for most trivial things and make my day even worse.When I broke up with a girlfriend and had a depressing time they just made me feel like crap when I needed it the least when if anything I just needed some emotional support just like anyone after breakup.I just dont understand that some strangers who could give zero crap about me have more empathy for me than my own parents.

    Reply
    • Melinda says

      June 24, 2017 at 3:02 pm

      I could never share my feelings with my mother, she would always say “I was like that too” then change the subject. Recently, my one year old granddaughter had to have a liver transplant and not once did I get a phone call or any message of support.
      I always felt I must have really pissed her at some stage of my life

      Reply
  4. Rachelle Porter says

    February 04, 2017 at 4:29 am

    Whats sad is I grew up with a NM and never knew what that title was. I knew she was awful but now I get it! That woman has given me so many problems in life as an adult and it disgusts me that she still has that ‘mental’ grip on me even though we have no contact for the past 10 years. What I am struggling with is my beloved step son (with whom I am deeply close to in a normal mom-child healthy way) has a horribly NM that he has to see and stay with 3 times a week. Trying to counter act what she is doing led me to this page. I get why him and I bond so much, not only kindred spirits but I can at least fill the empty ‘mom’ hole in his heart. But still, its hard to fix something that you can only ‘medicate’ and not prevent with his mom. Oh the problems people have to deal with in this world!

    Reply
  5. Trauma Specialist says

    January 28, 2017 at 3:31 pm

    On January 2nd, Xjuan Dominion wrote “o
    god w the narcissism victims let it rest. did you know narcissism is
    spiritual bankruptcy? have some compassion and stop being a victim of
    other people.”

    Xjuan Dominion is a typical narcissist – using the word compassion but having absolutely no idea how to use it
    in correct context or its meaning.

    Having compassion for any human being and most especially our Children – our future – who have been victimised
    by the most severe and extreme ego psychiatric disorders there are on Planet Earth, Xjuan remains unempathetic.
    This person cannot understand like so many and the lack of Awareness is apparent – the narcissism is apparent,
    the inability to either know or express compassion is apparent, the void of any empathy is apparent.

    Soulful people recognise pain – especially others pain. Soulful people hurt for hurt people even unhealed hurt
    people like Xjuan. Soulful people can’t ever minimise or devalue or disregard or never, ever, putdown any other/s
    pain. Soulful people are here in this world and we are with you ‘in here’ in spirit/soul. We are speaking the truth
    and sharing the truth and expressing truth that many human beings cannot begin to understand.

    Soulful people hear each other and understand each other and support each other and care deeply for each
    other and hope for each other and pray for each other and some of us create websites and articles and write
    books working as hard as we can on Planet Earth against so many just like Xjuan to end the narcissism and
    anti-social/sociopath/psychopath deep and severe disturbances around us.

    We are learning to finally go absolute ‘no contact’ knowing any word and every word a narcissists speaks is
    filled with poison that can strike right to our hearts but never our souls. Our souls are bigger than our losses.
    Our pain is soul-wrenching but not soul-destroying. It is our soul that lights the way out of the darkness instead
    of ignoring it all and burying it all in dissociation and denial and cognitive dissonance. It is likely that this is
    exactly what Xjuan has done to try and pretend it’s not all that bad, it’s just in the past and nobody is supposed
    to be ever speaking about it yet Xjuan was here and trying to enter into discussion clearly demonstrating there
    is a need there – a need that Xjuan has not found and hopefully will before uttering any other words or taking
    any other actions to so harm any human beings let alone human beings who never deserved any harm they
    have already endured.

    Reply
    • Alex says

      August 05, 2017 at 5:53 am

      I absolutely love your reply ”Trauma Specialist”….cried a little bit to be honest just because of how right you are. Thank you for your message on this thread. It’s people like you, that help make this world a bit more bearable. xo

      Reply
  6. Roxie says

    January 07, 2017 at 4:48 am

    Music has always been one of my escapes from my parents and sibs, too. That and reading. You are truly not alone in this.

    Reply
  7. Roxie says

    January 07, 2017 at 4:43 am

    Talk about an article that hit the huge gaping bulls eye in my soul. I grew up with a physically and emotionally abusive mother and a narcissist father. As I was reading this I started tearing up. I’ve been working through the grieving process for the parents I never had. Thank you for the guidance as I now have some resources as I continue this path to recapturing my own happiness.

    My mother was a victim of abuse herself, and while part of me can understand how that affected her parenting, it still didn’t stop me from being hurt. I’ve done as suggested by many and put a lot of distance between myself and my family. While it feels like a burden lifted from my shoulders, it has led to more incidents of phone calls, texts, and instigation as they realize they can’t control me anymore. My parents and a few sibs do this Passive Aggressive thing where they talk about you behind your back and say ‘your sister told your mom who told your brother who told me that you said ‘this’ and I just want you to know that your sister said this about you’. Anyone else experience that?

    Reply
  8. Anon says

    January 04, 2017 at 3:13 pm

    I have narcissistic parents, both of which are the ignoring type. It’s kind of difficult for people to tell as my mum looks after kids. She’s very good at her job but somehow seemed to forget about me. My sisters they care about more. I guess I’m the scapegoat. Thinking about what has happened at home to me (like abuse, ignoring me…) it makes sense that I’m the scapegoat. I’ve never felt like I belong. I have depression, anxiety, panic attacks, ptsd and literally no confidence. I feel like I’m a failure. I was always criticised for everything. I still am. It hurts and I need to leave home but I’m scared.

    Reply
    • Arkay Evans says

      March 12, 2017 at 1:06 am

      Hi there, I hope this finds you well. When I fled the horrible situation I was raised in (which was very much like what you describe), all I had was some clothes, a suitcase of supplies, and a stuffed animal. I went to college to major in clinical psych so I could gain an understanding of what I had endured. My guardians were abusive, neglectful and sick. Somebody had to stop the cycle, and it was gonna be me. Right on time, I had help. A kind family sorta made me a part of their own. While I’d dreamed of it, I had never seen love like that before. It was beyond beautiful.

      At college, I had to pay for everything myself and I got myself in debt but I was amazing to be free. When I graduated, no one from my family came and I was so devastated that I didn’t attend my own ceremony. I regret that. See, it takes a long time to reprogram ourselves, even as we take steps forward to emotional freedom. I know you’re scared. It’s ok. Feel that fear and do it anyway – why? Because you matter. Let this toxic cycle stop with you. Life is about having fun and being happy out here on the bright side of life. There are struggles, sure. But you can get help and you can overcome them all. You just have to have faith.

      Take that first step, and DON’T LOOK BACK.

      I’m rooting for you!

      Arkay Evans

      Reply
      • Lisa Fogt says

        April 30, 2017 at 6:13 am

        Wow Arkay, your life sounds incredibly similar to mine. I too was fortunate enough to finally feel loved through my chosen family who took me in with open arms one Christmas after finding out I was going to spend it alone and they would not have it. I kept waiting for the “catch” or what they wanted in return since that was the only “love” I knew– with conditions. That was 11 years ago and have spent every Christmas, birthday, holiday, etc. with them since. They have also accepted my daughter in the same way and shower her with love. That is what I’m most grateful and now my daughter can have grandparents and extended family who truly loves her. I’m almost 40 years old and have never been in a relationship or in love, (my daughter’s father was someone I had spent a few nights with and split once he found out) but I hope after doing some soul-searching that I will one day be able to trust someone enough (besides my daughter) to share my heart. Thank you for your post and thanks to LonerWolf for this safe space to help us on our journeys. With hugs and hope. L

        Reply
  9. Lisa says

    December 14, 2016 at 7:04 am

    Dear friends with truly narcissistic parents, for what it’s worth, take it from someone who took too long to learn this lesson. I had to finally go NO contact. Low contact, such as brief, superficial text messages and other strained interactions seemed to work at first, but without fail my narc mother wormed her way back right in where she had always been. Why? Because going low contact was the equivalent of me setting boundaries with her that I expected her to honor. If narcissistic parents were capable of honoring boundaries, none of us would be here reading this. I know it’s painful, and not to mention, it ain’t pretty, but you must cut these people loose. Change your phone number (only give it to your employer and a few select people you know won’t give it out and briefly state why they can’t give it out– “My mother and I don’t have a relationship by my choice, and I want no communication from her or anyone close to her”), block them on social media, etc. If they send you gifts or cards, take them inside your house, close the door and do whatever you want with them. But don’t send them back. The point is to not, under any circumstances, communicate or respond to them. Any communication from you, good or bad (like refusing their package in the mail) is seen in their eyes as your willingness to interact with them. But you might be wise to save their letters, voicemails and emails and other electronic communication, just in case, but store it in such a way that you don’t have to constantly be reminded of their craziness and your pain. Please know none of this is your fault. They just are incapable of loving anyone, even their own child. If (and when) they track you down again and try to lay you up with a guilt trip, well, don’t fall for it. My situation hasn’t gotten to that point yet (fingers crossed it never does), but if it does, I plan to say, “you must leave immediately and stay away from me and my loved ones.” No matter what they say or try to talk to me about (sick or dead relatives or their own health problems, for example), I plan on just repeating myself, “I said, you must leave immediately and stay away from me and my loved ones. If you don’t leave now, I will call the police.” And yes, I plan to make good on my promise, even if they flee before officers arrive. I’ll tell the officers what happened and see what my options are. At least any complaint I file will be on record. Don’t kid yourself: Narcs don’t need anybody, no matter how much of a good sob story they try to load you down with. They just want you around to fill their narcissistic supply. They aren’t sorry for their past crap, either, no matter what they say. I am fairly confident that everyone here has given their parent multiple chances to change. And guess what? They haven’t, simply because they didn’t have to because you stuck around no matter how horrible they were to you. And you know why you stuck around? Because you’re a wonderful, loving, forgiving human being, but you don’t deserve that abuse. You never did. Pity they lost you. Too bad for them. Release them to God. Only He can fix them. By the way, don’t EVER fall for the whole “let’s go to therapy together” claptrap. No, they can go to therapy by themselves and manipulate the therapist without your withering presence.

    Reply
  10. Metalhead says

    November 10, 2016 at 3:52 pm

    I thought I was weird, my sisters never reached out to me when they all left the house, and I never reached out to them (unless of course they need something).

    Reply
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