I respect you experience you were abused badly but not by someone with narcissistic traits.
Trying to take this conversation somewhere constructive - can you pull this statement in particular apart?
Narcissism is about being in love with yourself. Putting what you want ahead of other things. Priortising what is going to make you feel good, without regard to other considerations. That’s my personal interpretation of the adjective “narcissistic”. (Based on diction, rather than psychology, because I’m not a psychologist and have no training with how to use those terms correctly).
Abuse simply means ‘to misuse’. As a deliberate act.
So, any person who is routinely
abusing another person - almost by definition the abuser is likely to be narcissistic.
Spinning that back to where you and me were before - see how that word tells me nothing about your experience? Because if a person was abusing you -
of course they were putting themselves, and what they wanted, above other things that should have had importance, like your well-being.
Just following along your replies here, you’ve responded in a way to a fairly straight forward opinion of another poster as though these labels are directly linked to how you understand your abuse. When someone challenges these labels, your emotional response to that is “my suffering is being challenged”.
That’s not the case, though. Because the labels you’ve used about your abuser tell us nothing about what you’ve been through, or what was done to you.
Perhaps it might be helpful to pull that apart with your T? Healing from our trauma means healing from our suffering. But what I’m personally seeing in your posts is (I think unintentional - usually this stuff is) avoidance of your actual suffering, by attaching emotional significance to (unhelpful) adjectives for your abuser, rather than attaching emotional significance to what
you actually went through.
Healing isn’t about our abuser’s personal qualities. It’s about our suffering. Identifying my abuser was “tall, softly spoken and interested more in himself than me” - tells you nothing about what I went through, and actually doesn’t bring me any closer to recovery. So, why attach so much emotional significance to those words?