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anita
ParticipantLOVE, that 4-letters L word-
So much suspicion around this, that word.
So much distrust.
Not surprising, being the experience of it all.
It takes so much to earn the trust of the disillusioned.
A wrong word I say, wrong time saying it, and…I lost you
Yet, there is no other way toward Love but TRUST-
Nothing without Trust.
anita
anita
ParticipantExcuse the typos and extra emoji I didn’t mean to send (using my phone)
Anita
anita
ParticipantDear Mei:
I would like to reread your post in the morning (evening here). It will help me understand better if you explain a bit the nature of the physical intimacy problems, in general I’d not in detail. I’d you feel comfortable
Regardless, I will be back to your thread in the morning, and I hope you will feel better soon!đŚšââď¸đ
anita
Participant“The bridge behind me, burned not in anger, but in graceâŚ. There is no fairy tale here, no gleaming ever-after. Just this:
a quieter self, a steadier breath, a life that is new, not because it is perfect, but because it is mine.”-I see the image of my mother’s face at about 40 years old, more than 40 years younger than she is now. I feel no anger. I feel a quiet, contained sadness. A dead wish for things to have been different.
A true goodbye to that wish, the hope. Placing that hope in the ground, to rot and nourish new life.
Knowing the fairy tale will always be a tale.
I am owning my truth, the truth.. oh, how very refreshing, really living.
The constant self-doubt.. that was torture.
The Truth: LOVE, that 4-letters L word.
anita
anita
ParticipantDear Peter:
Yes, healing isnât about finding a perfect life, a fairy taleâitâs about choosing a life thatâs truly my own. That quiet grief is real, but so is the strength it takes to step forward. Thank you for sharing thisâit speaks to the heart of change đŚ.
anita
May 29, 2025 at 12:47 pm in reply to: Trying to heal from possible narcissistic mother + build own life #446406anita
ParticipantContinued:
“telling myself that my Mum is vulnerable, could be easily taken advantage of, needs my protection”- You are vulnerable and have been easily taken advantage of by your mother. You need protection from her.
“I realised that she was actively lying to me… she lies to manipulate me”- Hereâs another suggestion for rebuilding your identityâroot it in honesty, straightforwardness, and justice. Let these values guide you, leading you to distance yourself from those who are persistently dishonest and manipulative.
“I also think she weaponises her autism when she wants to get me to do something”- if her autism diagnosis is correct, then the part of her that weaponizes it against you is not the autistic part.
A mother should protect and nurture her daughter, not use emotional weapons against her. Parenthood should be built on care and support, not manipulation or control.
“I think, for me, the nail in the coffin â this time â has been that my Mother has started reaching out to my husband directly.. I donât want my husband sucked into her vortex”- seems like sheâs trying to pull him into the same dynamic, extending her reach beyond just you. I am guessing that if you had children, she would try to pull them too into the same dynamic.
“When I think about having no contact myself, where I always fall down is â not so much that I feel guilt that she would be sad about this, because I truthfully donât think she would be upset in that way, because I just donât think sheâs capable of it â itâs more the conditioning that, if something happens to her, it would be my fault or responsibility. Thatâs what I struggle to make peace with. I just have this little nagging voice in my head thatâs constantly saying, âsheâs in danger, if you donât step in⌠something terrible will happen. Sheâll die and itâll be your faultâ.”-
I, too, was terrified as a child that my mother would die. I saw how fragile and needy she was, and I feared for her. She spoke of suicideâdescribing how she would end her lifeâforcing me to carry the weight of that fear.
A child needs a strong, stable parent. When a parent is too weak and suicidal, it becomes deeply traumatic for the child, who, in an attempt to cope, takes on a parentified roleâconstantly trying to support, protect, and strengthen the parent, hoping that one day, the parent will finally be able to care for the child in return.
It’s interesting how, even as adults, we continue to operate from that perspectiveâstill waiting for the parent to become the parent they never were.
“There is a part of my brain that tells me that â if her behaviour is caused by her autism… then thatâs not her fault and so surely I should be more understanding and accommodating… Equally, if it is some kind of personality disorderâŚshould I not be understanding of this too, because thatâs also not her fault?”-
I donât believe your mother behaves the same way with everyone in every circumstance. It seems she takes advantage of those she perceives as weak and accommodating, while withdrawing from those she views as strong and self-assured. If thatâs the case, then her behavior isnât entirely beyond her controlâthere is an element of choice. Unlike a psychotic episode, which removes a personâs ability to make rational decisions, a personality disorder may still allow for selective behavior, particularly when it benefits the individual.
Hold your mother accountableânot for her emotions, but for the choices she makes in how she treats you and others.
“Also, truthfully, there is still the little inner child part of me that desperately wants a mother. Looking back, I think I got myself into this pattern of.. if I just fix this one thing (and it was always one more thing), then MAYBE, just MAYBE, we can have a ânormalâ mother/daughter relationship and everything will be okay.”-
It will take grieving the reality that you never hadâand never will haveâthe mother you needed in her. Only through this acceptance can the longing begin to quiet, freeing you from chasing someone who was never truly there.
This kind of grief isnât easy, but it is necessary. In letting go of the hope for a relationship that cannot be, you create space to nurture yourself in the way you always deserved.
* I wrote the above before I even read your words: “definitely a kind of grief for a relationship that can never exist.”
“sometimes, I would be physically unwell â and I would worry that my manager at work wouldnât believe me if I called in sick, or that I was actually making it up, because I was so used to having my own feelings and needs minimised, that I couldnât even trust myself to know and accept when I was actually physically ill.”-
Same hereâI used to second-guess my own reality constantly. Only recently have I started trusting my understanding of myself and my life more and more. The difference in my mental state is profound, to say the least.
“I just have to find the strength to see this through and to prioritise myself. Truthfully, I donât know if I can do it⌠or where even to begin. But I desperately want to try.”-
Think of prioritizing your values as the first stepâhonesty, straightforwardness, and justice. Let these principles guide you as you begin choosing yourself.
“Added complication for me is that I have ADHD”- me too, similar responses to similar mothers, I think.
“Maybe the inevitable outcome is no contact. I donât think I am there, yet, or that I can be until I know everything is in place for her to be okay.”-
I think her ânot being okayâ is, consciously or not, a way to keep control over youâto keep you attached and under her influence. She may be continuing behaviors that work for her, even if she isnât fully aware of it.
Ironically, I believe thereâs a greater chance for her to be as âokayâ as possible if you choose to cut contact. In stepping away, you free both of you from this unhealthy dynamicâgiving her the space to navigate her own life without relying on you as a constant emotional crutch.
Can you imagine, Sophie, that ending contact with her might be the right choiceânot just for your own well-being, but for hers as well?
anita
May 29, 2025 at 10:58 am in reply to: Trying to heal from possible narcissistic mother + build own life #446404anita
ParticipantDear Sophie:
Vanilla ice cream with hot, melted chocolate on topâI know for sure now. See? Healing is possible!
You and I, and our mothers, share much in common. If our discussion is helpful to you, we can continue for as long as youâd like. There are members in these forums with whom Iâve communicated regularly for months, and with some, on and off, for years.
Iâd like to reply to you in this post by quoting parts of what youâve shared, responding to each, then quoting again, and so on, starting with your initial post. I imagine this post will end up being quite long.
“I grew up with a mother”- I didnât truly grow up or outward. Instead, I grew inward, hiding within. My identity remained hidden, unknown, lacking the safe and loving environment it needed to develop.
She, my mother, was too volatile, too unpredictable, accusatory, aggressive. I was scared. I froze and remained frozen for a long, long time.
“To complicate matters, she DOES have an autism diagnosis”-
From So Special Too/ autism and motherhood: “Autistic individuals often experience sensory sensitivities, social difficulties, and heightened emotional responses, which can affect how they interact with their children and handle the everyday demands of parenting… Despite these challenges, autistic moms bring unique strengths to their parenting. Their heightened attention to detail and deep empathy often translate into an ability to tune into their childrenâs needs profoundly and meaningfully…
“Autistic mothers tend to be incredibly focused, attentive, and dedicated to ensuring their childrenâs well-being. Because they may see the world differently, they often approach parenting from a fresh perspective, emphasizing structure and predictabilityâtraits that can be beneficial for a childâs development.. Their heightened empathy often means they understand their childrenâs needs even without words. The analytical thinking that comes with autism may also make them excellent problem-solvers when faced with parenting challenges.”
Back to your initial post, Sophie: “she lacks any form of empathy at all.”- this contrasts with the above. lack of empathy is not a characteristic of people on the autistic spectrum.
“When I was younger, she would look at my achievements and compare them to her own, she would blame me for breakdowns in her relationships, she would tell me that I was jealous of her life”- these behaviors are not characteristics of autism. Autistic individuals may struggle with understanding social cues, expressing emotions conventionally, or adapting to changes, but these traits do not lead to the kind of behaviors you described, Sophie.
However, narcissistic tendencies or unresolved emotional strugglesâcould contribute to such behaviors. While autistic mothers may face unique parenting challenges, they often exhibit deep care and commitment to their children, even if their expressions of love differ from neurotypical norms.
“The pattern that I have experienced with my Mum is that she bounces from drama to drama â falling out with relatives, neighbours, friends and partners, repeatedly.”-
Again, While autistic mothers may have unique parenting styles, While autism can affect emotional expression and social interactions, they typically do not exhibit manipulative or self-centered behaviors as a defining trait.
Some personality disorders that could align with the behaviors you mentioned include:
* Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) â Characterized by a grandiose sense of self-importance, a need for admiration, and a lack of empathy. Individuals with NPD may compare themselves to others, blame others for their problems, and struggle with emotional reciprocity.
* Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) â Marked by intense emotional instability, fear of abandonment, and difficulty maintaining relationships. Some individuals with BPD may blame others for relationship breakdowns or struggle with self-image.
* Histrionic Personality Disorder (HPD) â Involves excessive attention-seeking behavior, emotional overreaction, and a strong desire for validation. People with HPD may feel threatened by others’ achievements and seek to maintain control over relationships.
“I am the only one of my siblings who still has any contact with my Mum”- I suppose theyâve given up on herâbut you havenât. Maybe they find comfort in knowing she has you, allowing them to step away from her life.
“I only really exist when I am helping to fix a problem in some way.”- This is your identityâher helper, the fixer of her problems. If you were to cut contact with her, you would lose this part of yourself.
“I am in my mid-30s, I feel like I have no sense of self, no identity of my own, I donât know what my hobbies are, and I donât trust myself or my feelings at all.”- With so little sense of identity, letting go of the part that does existâbeing the fixer of your motherâs problemsâwould be especially difficult.
“He is such a kind person â my safe space and someone who I trust completely.”- I wish you would shift your loyaltyâfrom the person who provided you with an unsafe place and is not worthy of your trust (your mother)âto someone who does offer you a safe place and is truly deserving of your trust.
“He says he feels like I disappear into a black hole for weeks on end, before re-emerging.”- Your mother creates and recreates these black holes for you, overwhelming you emotionally and leading you to withdraw in an effort to protect yourself from emotional collapse.
“Whenever I try to go no/have less contact, I inevitably cave, feel guilty/like a bad daughter, worry, etc. Particularly, also, because she does have an autism diagnosis… Whatâs the autism, whatâs the narcissism?”-
it is possible for someone to be falsely diagnosed with autism, as autism spectrum disorder (ASD) shares overlapping traits with other conditions, including personality disorders, ADHD, and anxiety disorders. Misdiagnosis can occur due to the complexity of autism and the lack of a definitive medical test.
I am reading that In the UK, autism diagnoses have increased significantly, with a 787% rise between 1998 and 2018. While this suggests better awareness, it also raises concerns about potential overdiagnosis.
In general, mental health misdiagnosis is surprisingly common, with studies estimating that up to 66% of patients with certain conditions are initially misdiagnosed.
“I have been conditioned my whole life to believe that she is a victim and that I am responsible for what happens to her”- In reality, you have been her victim, and she is fully responsible for having victimized you.
“I also do want her to be okay. But I also want myself to be okay”- but she isn’t okay, is she?
* You wrote earlier in your initial post: “I become unwell (physically and mentally) â meanwhile, she will then be completely fine after a week or so, before moving on to the next thing and we start the whole cycle again.”- meaning, she is okay before she is yet again not okay.
This reminds me of my motherâshe would temporarily unload her angst, hurt, shame, and anger onto me, finding brief relief. But each time, those feelings returned, and she had to do it again, perpetuating the cycle.
“I donât think itâs okay that I sacrifice my own life for someone else”- for someone else’s temporary relief.
“how do I find the strength to put myself first when itâs not something Iâve ever done before?”- I believe it comes down to identityâwhat you, Sophie, truly value. If justice is something you hold deeply, it could become a defining part of who you are, replacing the role youâve played until now as the temporary fixer of your motherâs problems.
Justice would mean no longer sacrificing your own life to provide fleeting relief for someone who has repeatedly mistreated you.
“Sometimes I just feel like a passenger in my own life”- Iâve often felt like a passenger in my own life, drifting without control. I keep picturing myself moving to the driverâs seat, finally taking charge.
I will continue with your second post next.
anita
anita
ParticipantNew Life:
Q: Where does it take place?
A: In the distance between my two ears.
Q: What does it mean?
A: It means, first and foremost, that I am not a bad person.
Surprise! I didn’t know.
I thought I had to correct my 5-year-old bad person
And Earn the Good Label.
Now, I am the one to give little-girl me the label she deserved all along, that of being a good, loving little girl.
And then, I take this little, good girl into me. I integrate her into my once disintegrated, fragmented self.
I want to use this opportunity to thank Alessa for her unending capacity to express empathy for others. Sincerely, I have never come across anyone with this ability, skill and talent.
And I want to thank Peter for having been persistently, reliably, so honest and peaceful: never confrontational, never threatening, no-exceptions. Thank you, Peter.
And of course, I want to thank Lori Deschene, the owner of this website and these forums for giving me this space for over ten years. Thank you, Lori!
And I want to thank all the people who have come and gone, throwing appreciation and kindness my way- Thank You, each and every one of you.
… Sounds like I am leaving, going somewhere else?
No, not my intent.
There is no online format that works for me better than this precious tiny buddha, May 2015- May 2025 and still going and going.
anita
May 28, 2025 at 7:02 pm in reply to: Trying to heal from possible narcissistic mother + build own life #446390anita
ParticipantI should add a bit about my personal experience, Sophie:
My mother fit the combo of Paranoid Personality Disorder (PPD), Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), and Histrionic Personality Disorder), with a touch of other personality disorders.
I was very, very, very enmeshed with her- way past childhood.
I would say the vast majority of my adulthood was taken over by what she meant to me, in my mind, E V E R Y T H I N G.
There was nothing I wouldn’t have done for her, if I could, and I did all that my diminished-self was able to do for her.
Emotionally, she was my child, and I was her mother (I was indeed a parentified child).
When I finally cut contact with her (I was fifty years old), I thought she would fall apart, that she would collapse, that she would seek me out, that she couldn’t live without me. I projected my love for into her: it was me who couldn’t live without her.
To my surprise, she sent me one card following my decision, and that is all.
I didn’t mean that much to her because she wasn’t able to .. love me.
I mean, she didn’t even see me. How could she love me if she didn’t even notice me as a person, as an entity separate from her, as not an extension of her. She wasn’t able. She was too sick. And there was nothing I could have ever done to change this sad, very sad fact.
As an adult, I felt like a ship in a stormy sea, not able to guide my way, a subject to the wind, any which way the wind would take me.
When asked in an ice cream shop which ice cream flavor I would like, I couldn’t answer. I didn’t know. My identity was that diminished.
This is what a dominant, loud, personality-disordered mother would do to you.
I’ve been on the healing path since sometime after I cut contact with her and I am very happy that I am on this path still.
anita
May 28, 2025 at 6:15 pm in reply to: Trying to heal from possible narcissistic mother + build own life #446389anita
ParticipantDear Sophie:
First part of my post, about what you shared- your words paint a clear picture of enmeshmentâa lifelong pattern where your motherâs emotional and practical needs have consumed your own, leaving little room for personal identity and autonomy. From childhood, you were placed in a parentified role, carrying responsibilities far beyond what was appropriate, shaping your instinct to fix and rescue her, even at the cost of your own well-being.
This enmeshment has led to a diminished sense of self, where your own identity, desires, and ambitions feel secondaryâalmost nonexistentânext to the constant demands of managing your motherâs crises. Your life has often been dictated by her cycles of conflict and instability, leaving you feeling like a passenger in your own journey, always on high alert, always prioritizing her needs over your own.
The emotional weight of this has seeped into every part of your life, including your marriage, where your husband notices how you disappear into your motherâs dramas for weeks at a time. You recognize that this dynamic is unsustainable, yet the guilt of stepping awayâpaired with deep conditioning that you are responsible for her well-beingâmakes setting boundaries incredibly difficult.
Second part, about your mother (and I am not a professional either, so not diagnosing)- you described her as manipulative, lacking empathy, and seeing you as an extension of herselfâwhich are common traits of narcissistic personality disorder. Her intense emotional instability, volatile relationships, and impulsive behaviors could align with borderline personality traits. People with BPD often experience rapid mood swings, fear of abandonment, and difficulty regulating emotions, which could explain your motherâs frequent conflicts and emotional outbursts.
She may suffer from traits of histrionic personality disorder as well. People with HPD often struggle with emotional regulation, have rapidly shifting emotions, and may exaggerate situations to gain attention.
Comorbidity of personality disorders is common.
Her autism diagnosis can contribute to emotional dysregulation and difficulty with social interactions. Some behaviors you describedâsuch as rigid thinking, difficulty understanding othersâ emotions, and intense reactions to stressâcould stem from autism-related challenges rather than a personality disorder.
Third part of this post- you mentioned that your mother lacks empathy. If she truly does not feel empathy for others, including yourself, then itâs likely that she wonât suffer from the loss of contact in the way a deeply empathetic person would. Instead of feeling heartbreak or loss, she may react with anger, frustration, or dramatic behaviors over the loss of control over you.
I know you care about your mother and are struggling with strong emotional conditioning, so me stating in my first reply that your mother wonât be deeply affected might have felt unsettling rather than reassuring, as in conflicting with your lifelong investment in her, and thinking perhaps that she will be devastated if you step away..?
I hope to read back from you, Sophie and develop this into a conversation with you.
I’ll close with this: your growing awareness of these patterns, along with the steps youâre taking to involve social services, suggest that you want to reclaim your life while maintaining compassion for your mother. The struggle now is finding the strength to prioritize yourself without drowning in guilt, redefining what self-care looks like, and building trust in your own needs, desires, and autonomy.
You deserve to be present in your own life, not just as a caretaker or problem-solver for someone else. The process of stepping back will take time, but even recognizing the need for change is a powerful first step.
anita
May 28, 2025 at 3:40 pm in reply to: Trying to heal from possible narcissistic mother + build own life #446388anita
ParticipantDear Sophie:
It is absolutely okay to post here and at any length
I am using my phone, so this will be short.
First, I wanted to say, as I read your post, I felt that I was reading my own words. The way you express yourself and the content is very familiar to me. My mother was similar to yours.
By the way, did you think of her as fitting the Histrionic Personality Disorder diagnosis as well?
I think that referring her to adult social services resources and having no contact with her is the solution. for your sake and for your husband’s.
As far as you expecting overwhelming guilt, consider this: she doesn’t experience empathy you said that much. What it means is that she will not be losing a person she loves.she won’t have a broken heart. In other words, it won’t be a big deal to her (outside some drama to follow),
What do you think. Sophie?
Anita
May 28, 2025 at 2:55 pm in reply to: Fear knocked at the door. Love answered, and no one was there. #446380anita
ParticipantI understand, Alessa. I didn’t at all expect you to share. Just wanted to let you know that I care and wish you well â¨ď¸
You have interesting thoughts about love and emotional complexity. I agree- it is important to hold space for all of our feelings. â¤ď¸
Anita
May 28, 2025 at 11:09 am in reply to: Fear knocked at the door. Love answered, and no one was there. #446374anita
ParticipantDear Peter:
“Life hurts when we measure ‘love’ and entangle it with attachment, fear, and dependency. Perhaps a cosmic view”- I see why you stay away from getting entangled in attachment and why the cosmic view is attractive. I think that it will do me some good to get more into the cosmic view of love. It’s comforting.
â’Where there is love, there is no pain, no conflict. Pain arises when love is entangled with the self.’ â Krishnamurti”- Untangled Peter is a Free Peter, or freer..?
“As you have hinted it’s possible, if not likely, I hide behind the cosmic view to avoid pain of vulnerability”- hiding is not necessarily a bad thing. Sometimes, it’s a good thing. It’s a good thing to hide from a threat, a threat like getting entangled and losing control, or agency.
“Yet since engaging with the question âWhatâs love got to do with itâ (referred to in other posts) I havenât escape pain and in some ways feel it more deeply if⌠different.”- .. entangled in cosmic love?
I may be talking nonsense, right above, Cosmic No- Sense (CNS). I wrote whatever came to mind, untangling myself from the need to make sense đ
anita
anita
ParticipantYou are welcome, Peter đ
anita
ParticipantDear Peter:
You do not disappoint me. Not at all (I find myself smiling and feeling affection for you as I am type this). I don’t feel hurt or anger. I feel content that I was able to freely express to you my desire to hear your voice, and pleased that you responded the way that aligns with what you need and want. It’s an honest, respectful exchange. Honesty and respect do not disappoint me
I will hear your voice though- Forever and ever, so may it be- In the heart of the One, eternally free.
anita
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