Hi Scott,
Your question wasn't to me but I'd like to add my answer to it, please.
I hated her for a very long time. I hated her for living, for what she did to me, for dying before I could get her to say why, to recognize her behavior, to do something that validated my pain, pain that she had a lot of responsiblity for. She died in 1997. I came to terms with the pain that was driving my anger sometime in the last couple of years. I read a series of books (I read a lot) on narcissim to help me understand narcissim, not from my experiential perspective, but from the perspective of someone who'd studied narcissim; someone outside my own head. Once I understood more about what it was I as dealing with intellectualy and emotionally, and not solely emotionally, I was able to begin working through this aspect of my recovery.
I learned, amongst many many other things on narcissists, that they are not capable of empathy.
Empathy is "...the skill or ability to tap into our own experiences in order to connect with an experience someone is relating to us." Brene Brown -
I Thought it was Just me (but it isn't) Telling the Truth About Perfectionism, Inadequacy, and Power. Or in other words, to walk in someone else's shoes.
Which led me to the question, if she was unwilling or unable to imagine what her actions were doing to me, if she can only experience her behavior without consequence, solely from her own perspective, then how can I realistically expect her to acknowledge or validate my pain? Or my Dad, too, for that matter?
A large part of my healing process was learning to let go of the things I could not control, and I couldn't, and can't control my parents. It hurt a lot less after I came through the fire that exploded when I first willingly touched this place of pain. I may not have been able to do anything about their treatment of me when I was a little girl, but I'm not a little girl anymore. I was, though, until I went through the fire and cried out a lot of the pain that was keeping me small and afraid.
The narcissism books were:
- Children of the Self-Absorbed, a Grown-Up's Guide to Getting Over Narcisstic Parents, by Nina Brown
- The Wizard of Oz and Other Narcissists, by Eleanor Payson (Highly Recommended)
- Disarming the Narcissist Surviving and Thriving with the Self-Absorbed, by Wendy Behary
As always, wishing you peace. If your Yeti dies and it brings you peace, that's a good thing.
Nilly