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Narcissistic Mothers & Toxic, Alcoholic Parents: Our Proof That Monsters Do Exist PDF

108 Pages·2015·0.67 MB·English
by  Halo
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Narcissistic Mothers: Proof That Monsters Do Exist By Percy Halo, Rebecca Rivers, Linda Johansson ©2013 Percy Halo, Rebecca Rivers, Linda Johansson Table of Contents Introduction Chapter 1: Meet Percy’s Monster Chapter 1b – Welcome To My Monster Mom Chapter 1c – Apples and Arguments Chapter 1d – An Unforgettable Christmas Chapter 1e – Beginning of The End Chapter 2: Meet Rebecca’s Monster Chapter 2b – Living With The Grandparents / The High School Years Chapter 2c – The Engagement Chapter 2d – Wedding Bell Bliss / The Final Nail In The Coffin Chapter 2e – Mom Moves Home Chapter 2f – Closure Chapter 3: Meet Linda’s Monster Chapter 3b – Our Mothers’ Sins Chapter 3c – Poor Mummy Chapter 3d – Isolation and Loneliness Chapter 3e – Misguided Hope Chapter 3f – Freedom at a Price Chapter 3g – Two To Tango Chapter 3h – The Worst Was Yet To Come Chapter 3i – My Life Now References Introduction Publisher’s Disclaimer: This ebook is being published for casual information and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended to be, nor should it be used, as a professional manual of any kind on any mental health issues – including narcissism. Any information or recommendations you use from this book you agree to do so at your own risk, and without regard, blame or consequence to the authors or the publisher of this book. If you feel that you or someone you know needs help with mental health issues, we recommend you see a licensed mental health professional. Publisher’s References: Don’t forget to check out the other “Narcissist In My Life” books in this series, also! (Just click the ones that interest you!) Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD): When Narcissistic Parents Lose Their Children – A Social Worker’s Perspective Narcissism In My Life (Series): Jen’s Story – How I’ve Coped With a (formerly) Close, Toxic, Narcissistic Friend Narcissist In My Life (Series): Gerald’s Story – How I Coped With a Life Sucking, Narcissistic Family Member Narcissism In My Life (Series): Lina’s Story – How I Coped With a Controlling, Narcissistic Father and Ex-Husband Narcissist In My Life (Series): John’s Story – How I Coped With a Toxic, Narcissistic Church Leader Narcissist In My Life (Series): Helen’s Story – How I Coped With a Married, Narcissistic Lover Chapter 1: Meet Percy’s Monster Chapter 1a – Let’s Start With Catharsis The narcissists in our lives (and I have no doubt that we have all met one), are irritating, manipulative, unprofessional, and often just plain difficult to try to build our lives around. They make absurd demands, throw tantrums and are riddled with insecurities that we have to work around, smooth over or pander to. It’s like trying to have a logical, adult relationship with a three-year-old, and it can be one of the most stressful things in your life. So my sympathy goes out to those of you who, like me, have to deal with your narcissist on a personal level – in my case, my mother. Her increasingly erratic behavior and wild acts of self-destruction have had an overwhelmingly negative impact on my life. The stress has broken down my relationships, interfered with my ability to work, and at times hit me quite hard financially. I’ve rolled into work late and tired because she just had to be reassured, at 3am, that she was the best mother in the world and that I loved her. I’ve lost partners because not only is she too difficult to deal with, but they cannot stand to see me torturing myself trying to set her straight (and because, of course, those late-night phone calls affect them too). I’ve been screamed at for my disloyalty, and I’ve been told I am a complete and utter bitch that she wishes she’d aborted because I didn’t give in to her every need. I have spent countless hours worrying, fretting, crying, arranging and fixing things in response to the actions she has taken or the things she has said. I started counselling my mother through her life, being her advice guru, life coach, mentor, shoulder to cry on and frequent verbal punching-bag when I was twelve. I’ll let that one sink in a minute, yes, twelve years old, a little girl who had just started high school, as we call education from ages 11-16 here in England. Now, twelve years later, at 24, I am tired – too tired to carry on. There’s only so long you can live on a roller-coaster, and more than a decade later, I have decided to finally get off. It took four suicide attempts, umpteen rows, scratches, screaming, a car crash, several broken relationships on my part, that caved under the weight of her insanity, numerous emails that still, years later, bring me to tears to try to read, dozens of late-night phone calls, gallons of gin, one attempt to section her, and finally she has pushed me to my limit. I have cut her off and can only hope that from this distance she can do no more harm. Some, like my dad (who has been divorced from my mother for 9 years), think I should have done more, that I am bowing out early and shirking my responsibilities. I mention this because to me, this is one of the big reasons it took me twelve years to sever such a cancerous relationship (the other biggest reason I consider far more idiosyncratic, and will mention later). When your narcissist is someone closely related to you, others consider that they are your responsibility – they are your relative, so you should fix them. My dad was especially good at this sort of guilt-trip, as he not only made it my problem, and mine alone (since she clearly couldn’t sort out her own issues, nor in his opinion should be made to; a fact I found baffling considering she was 53 and should have been left to clean up her own mess years ago); but he made me out to be uncaring, lazy, and, most ironic of all, selfish. He pushed the problem onto me, as though she were my teenage child who had gone astray; and all the while, completely deadpan and missing the irony of the statement, he would repeat, “she’s not my problem.” What he didn’t seem to comprehend, what I have only just come to realize recently, is she wasn’t my problem either. She, as any other person, belonged only to herself, as did her problems. I had just acted as her mule, lugging the heavy weight around for a while. Whilst realizing this for myself was the first huge step I took to ridding myself of my narcissist problem, the second, and arguably harder part of the process was trying to convince those around me that I wasn’t being irresponsible, or indeed, narcissistic myself. This has been my greatest challenge so far in my effort to let go, to get rid of this enormous problem, and I’m not entirely convinced I’ve yet surmounted it. However, in learning to let go of the feeling that I am responsible for someone else’s actions, I have also learned to not care if others think me cruel or unkind: they do not know the effort I have made, or the lengths I have gone to. They do not know the emotions I feel, or the strain it has put on me. And most importantly, they do not have to live my life. To me, cutting my mother out of my life was extremely difficult, but also probably one of the best things I have ever done, and I am learning to not feel guilty about it. I have come to realize that I have more than paid my dues, and that at this stage, it is she that owes me: apologies, patience, respect, love. But I’m not asking her for any of those things. All I ask is for peace, and in severing my relationship with her, I realize a very small part of me is taking a leaf out of her book: I am thinking about what I need, and whilst it is far from selfish, it is a healthy step away from the selfless martyrdom upon which my relationship with my mother has thus far rested. But as I say, the most difficult part of letting go is convincing others around you that not only is this the right decision, a good decision, but that it is neither cruel, nor selfish, nor irresponsible. It is in fact the opposite, as you are breaking the narcissist’s gravity, that ability to make the world revolve around them. My dad was by far the worst person for this (in fact, thinking about it, it was only him and my mother herself that thought my decision was in any way wrong – everybody else wondered why it had taken me so long to come to this inevitable conclusion). My break from her was recent, and my father and I talked about it over the phone for some time. It went something like this. “Dad,” I tried to explain, for the fourth or fifth time, exasperated and losing patience, “Dad, I’ve done everything there is to be done, but at the end of it all, she needs to sort out her own life. These are her problems, and whilst I’ve put her in touch with people who can help, and I’ve made appointments and meetings for her, and I’ve told her how to make it better, if she ignores my advice and skips her doctor’s appointments and doesn’t do any of the stuff I told her to do, well, there’s nothing more I can do. I can’t force her to grow up.” “So you’re just giving up? You’re heartless, you know that? She’s your mother!” I wanted to tell him that being my biological mother meant nothing, given that our relationship had been reversed for at least half of my life, and that even in the case of parents, respect is not innate. It must be earned, and she had done anything but. I also wanted to point out that she would never do the same for me, that she had never been reliable or motherly in any way, shape or form, and that I was merely accepting the futility of a situation wherein there was nothing more I could do. But I didn’t say this. Instead, this is what I went on to say. “I am not heartless.” I got very angry at this point, because I knew he had no idea the amount of effort I had put in to keeping her stable over the many years she had been screwing up her life, and my head. “I have spent time and money trying to fix this, but she has to do certain things. She needs to stop drinking, and I can’t make her do that. I can’t afford to pay for her to go to a live-in rehab, and she won’t go to the free walk-in one I arranged an appointment with. Her depression won’t get better, because the pills won’t work if she’s drinking. She keeps spending money she doesn’t have on gin instead of bills or rent or even her medicine,” I pointed out (my mother being severely asthmatic, had two inhalers, plus her anti-depressants to pay for, but she ignored this in favor of buying booze, and, far too often, kitsch little knick- knacks from the charity shop around the corner, as though cluttering her house with more shiny crap would distract from her crippling debt and the eviction notice, which she had hidden, along with a six-month-old stack of final demands, at the back of one of the kitchen cupboards – out of sight, out of mind, un-dealt with). “If she doesn’t stop drinking, then nothing will get better. She knows that. She just refuses to do anything about it,” I said, pointedly. But my dad wasn’t listening. In his eyes, I was trying to pass off my responsibility onto him, the ex-husband, and that seemed inappropriate. “Well, I’m not paying for her to go to rehab,” he said. “I never suggested you –” “And she’s going to end up homeless, more to the point! Can’t she live with you?” he interrupted. This was a major point of contention for him: that I seemed to be fine with the idea of my mother on the street. Truth was, I had called the emergency housing people on her behalf, but because the eviction was undoubtedly her fault, they

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Overview: Is there a narcissistic mother on the rampage in YOUR life?
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