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marlyn morgan
My kids, all grown up, have a father that is a nasty piece of narcissist. I would venture to say he i...
Imagine this scenario. You come from a family who are people pleasers. You've never been taught to say 'No'. Mother always tried to brush stuff under the carpet and you have lived with the repercussions of this family environment ever since.
You meet people. All sorts of people but its not rocket science to work out you're going to get hooked up, or you're incredibly predisposed to getting hooked up, with a narcissist.
Would you want to carry on like this til the day you die? Would you want to pass this onto to your children too? or would you want to heal this forever in your family line?
I remember my first narcissist. I remember the first time he acted out. I remember the gut churning feeling inside me as I recognised a familiarity and the subsequent thought pattern that I had been taught. I can help this man and calm him down. I have no power in this world but I have power over him.
The next partner was worse.
This was my pattern so don't tell me to leave ! I need to learn. I may as well do just that in the situation I keep getting provided with.
My last narcissist was that way until the day he died. I never changed him but I DID manage to change myself. And HE managed something too. He managed to eventually have power for good in the world at last because he was so broken he had no possibility of doing this for himself but he did it for me. It may be a wonky kindof love but sometimes that is all a broken man can give and a broken woman can receive.
There are devils and angels in the world and if you wont learn your lessons the easy way then you'll have to learn them the hard way. And I am eternally grateful to this man for teaching me to eventually value myself enough to stand up for myself. R.I.P. my greatest teacher. And of course I love myself for taking my medicine and getting better. Totally love myself. R.I.P. my victim.