Narcissistic Parents: Harsh Truths About Them You’re Blind About

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июн 2024
  • In this video, I discuss the harsh truths about your narcissistic or dysfunctional parents that you're blind to and that are causing you endless emotional pain.
    Seeing these truths will allow you to finally break free and detach from the fantasies that are keeping you stuck!
    If you're finally ready to get your dysfunctional, narcissistic family out of you and enjoy a life free of their toxic grip, here's how I can help👇🏼
    🔥Access my FREE Training - ‘Build the Self You Were Never Allowed to Have!’ jerrywise.ewebinar.com/webina...
    🔥🔥🔥 Join the 'Road to Self' Program
    program.jerrywiserelationship...
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    www.jerrywiserelationshipsyst...
    🌐 More free resources available on my website: www.jerrywiserelationshipsystems.com
    ➡️ Recommended Playlists: Outgrowing Dysfunctional Family Patterns - • Outgrowing Narcissisti... Break Free from Narcissistic Parents & Families - • Breaking Free from Nar... Adult Children of Alcoholics: Heal & Change the Pattern - • Alcoholic Narcissistic...
    ➡️ You can also find me on: Instagram: / jerrytwise Facebook: / jerrytwise Twitter: / jerrytwise Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/3DKjGLp...
    Jerry Wise, MA, MS, CLC, has helped 1000s of people in the same situation as you. As a family and self-differentiation coach, he uses his 45 years of experience to help clients get permanently unstuck from family-of-origin dysfunction, cultivate healthy relationships, and build a true sense of self.
    DISCLAIMER: This video is not intended to serve as a substitute for professional counseling. Be sure to consult a professional to help you integrate and utilize these concepts.
    🔥Access my FREE Training - ‘Build the Self You Were Never Allowed to Have!’ jerrywise.ewebinar.com/webina...

Комментарии • 362

  • @jerrywise
    @jerrywise  Месяц назад +29

    Get your narcissistic dysfunctional family OUT OF YOU with my ‘Self-Differentiation Program: 'Road to Self’.
    Join here>> program.jerrywiserelationshipsystems.com/welcome/

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Месяц назад +153

    "If you can't handle their abuse and craziness then you are healthy"- absolutely correct. My system cannot take it.

    • @FreedomAboveAll4
      @FreedomAboveAll4 Месяц назад +4

      So true.

    • @anaibanana
      @anaibanana Месяц назад +1

      This applies to all relationships

    • @dr.muhammadamin1554
      @dr.muhammadamin1554 Месяц назад +1

      Wow.

    • @dr.muhammadamin1554
      @dr.muhammadamin1554 Месяц назад +3

      I tried to obey. Accepted the abuse of of my narc mom. But she becomes more worse, wild, ohhhhf.

    • @jackilynpyzocha662
      @jackilynpyzocha662 Месяц назад +1

      I have been no-contact with my narc dad since Easter, a literal re-birth for me, I won! I am using Easter as an anology, not to be disrespectful of my faith, Catholic or taking the name of the Lord in vain, or sacreligious.

  • @dyliane
    @dyliane Месяц назад +215

    They don't put your needs last, they completely ignore your needs, for them you don't have any needs. What needs?

    • @julieann777
      @julieann777 Месяц назад +10

      Amen!!!

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +22

      Or in my case and many other survivors' cases, you have a sibling that gets all the attention. They get what should have ALSO been given to you. So it's not like the narc parents don't know what they're doing or how to care for others, they've chosen to give it to someone more "worthy."
      And it's all toxic anyway. Ugh.

    • @julieann777
      @julieann777 Месяц назад +11

      @@spacegirl226 I am also the scapegoat that got nothing but abuse and blame. I had to buy everything that I wanted. My parents bought both of my siblings bikes and my sister got a cat. I wanted a bunny rabbit desperately but never got one even though I was hyper-responsible. I ended up taking care of the cat.too. I feel for you and hope you are healing from the neglect and trauma.

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +10

      @@julieann777 Man, I am sorry you went through all that garbage. It's not fair, and you didn't deserve to be mistreated. Do you have the ability to get a bunny rabbit as an adult? Because you should totally do that now that you can! Give yourself all the things you didn't get as a child, especially the love and respect that was demanded from you and never reciprocated.
      Have an internet hug from me. Healing is slow going. I'm unfortunately stuck living with the narc parent and golden child sibling and rebuilding my life from scratch after hitting rock bottom three years ago. I can't go no contact yet, but that is my ultimate goal so I can finally heal fully after I've gotten out of the abuse that ruined me so long ago.

    • @julieann777
      @julieann777 Месяц назад

      @@spacegirl226 I pray your day of no contact is soon. I wish I hadn't waited so long. I was too darn loyal and accustomed to taking care of everyone but myself. It was a terrible mistake. I walked away at age 50. I am determined to live my BEST life now. I do not tolerate Narcissits any longer. I found it was impossible to heal while having relationships with my toxic family members. Please take care of yourself. ❤‍🩹❤❣

  • @connie9492
    @connie9492 Месяц назад +40

    They won't change because they cannot be wrong!

  • @malwads1836
    @malwads1836 Месяц назад +121

    "Nobody is supposed to deal with abuse and craziness and remain healthy."...Thank you so much for saying that.In my own opinion 1 of the best signs of healing is when you CAN'T deal with this dysfunction anymore, you just can't be around it anymore... It's like a foul odor that you simply can't stand.

    • @somedumbozzie1539
      @somedumbozzie1539 Месяц назад +9

      or even be in the same room as them ever again, or in my case the same city for three to four decades.

    • @alicecoleman5532
      @alicecoleman5532 Месяц назад +8

      As the family scapegoat, I began looking forward to the day I was grown and could move out. Those thoughts began when I was 9 or 10.

    • @malwads1836
      @malwads1836 Месяц назад

      ​@@somedumbozzie1539Smart choice🌞👍🏻👍🏻.

    • @malwads1836
      @malwads1836 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@alicecoleman5532Sounds like you were quite the wise child🦉.The REALLY observant kids will tend to start questioning a narcy parent/sibling by the time they're around 10-12, something just won't seem right about them....I started questioning my sociopathic narc father at around the same tender age, by the time I was around 15 I basically needed a close pin on my nose because I couldn't stand the screwy behavior.No healthy person will EVER be able to thrive around them, no matter how educated & how healed we may become.

    • @malwads1836
      @malwads1836 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@somedumbozzie1539Wise choice🦉.You'll never 👀 a healthy person thrive around them.The more healthy a person is...The faster they run from narcs.

  • @mlynn2161
    @mlynn2161 Месяц назад +42

    "What we want to do is focus on our self-healing; not on becoming a Harvard or Oxford expert on narcissistic personality" Excellent, Jerry!

  • @user-cb2fk5yo1m
    @user-cb2fk5yo1m Месяц назад +14

    Not one genuine fond memory. No support no love - no contact

  • @coralmccrystal4606
    @coralmccrystal4606 Месяц назад +52

    I love the reassurance that if you can't handle their craziness and abuse it's because you're healthy. Yipee! I never thought of that before. I kept trying to understand but the reality is I'm healthy and they weren't.

  • @1Marflowa
    @1Marflowa Месяц назад +13

    They love to see you struggle by them dismissing your needs

  • @nilaja-itsmylife
    @nilaja-itsmylife Месяц назад +61

    The healthier you get the less you can STAND being involved with these people.
    It took me so long to understand the apprehension I started feeling before interacting with these folks.
    My body literally didn’t want to go.
    Thank you No Contact 💯

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад

      Truth. ❤️
      I inadvertently went low contact because they had expected me to do all the emotional labor or connection. So when I stopped because it wasn’t reciprocal, they got angry and started harboring resentment because I wasn’t doing all the work for them.
      Narcissistic behavior.
      I reconnected with my parents after years and while they had not changed, they were at the stage of looking to peacefully resolve their lives. I was able to have some quality conversations with my Father. Still marked by his self-importance, but I was glad he realized he hadn’t made any effort to connect and that’s why he had not heard from me for years.

    • @BlueJeansandJellyBeans
      @BlueJeansandJellyBeans Месяц назад +3

      Same. I had to leave the entire narcissistic family unit.

    • @dnk4559
      @dnk4559 Месяц назад

      Same, I started to feel physically ill before holiday gatherings with my family of origin and when I found out my father was moving back to the area where I lived the reaction in my body was visceral. That’s when I started back to therapy but this time with a therapist who practices EMDR and had knowledge of trauma.

  • @Preciousjames88
    @Preciousjames88 Месяц назад +119

    1. They won't change
    2. Can't give you the approval you're looking for.
    3. They will always put your needs last
    4. You inherited their dysfunctional emotional reality
    If you can't handle their abuse and craziness then you are healthy.......
    5.They were not able to move you
    6. They cannot heal your trauma, your emotional wounds or need to love
    Self differentiation tips
    1.Don't try to change them and don't change for them
    2.Stop pursuing their limitations
    3. You don't need them to understand for you to move on and self differentiation
    4. Learn about narcissism and focus on you

    • @amarbyrd2520
      @amarbyrd2520 Месяц назад +9

      Thank you for this ❤

    • @sunnyadams5842
      @sunnyadams5842 Месяц назад +7

      Thanks for writing this out. ❤

    • @Anson7777
      @Anson7777 Месяц назад +4

      Thank you 🎉

    • @Agameda1
      @Agameda1 Месяц назад +5

      I learned about narcissism years ago through reading and intellectual curiosity, and then with horrible practical lessons in the world, until I realised very recently that the problem was closer to home. Literally.

    • @warrenbradford2597
      @warrenbradford2597 Месяц назад +4

      Thank you!

  • @neommutle8033
    @neommutle8033 Месяц назад +77

    ❤ Man your accurate. My mother is 70 ,her lying is getting worse,but she doesn't see that she aging and slipping up, not as sharp with her lies. Wow, now that I know what it is, I can protect myself.

    • @joseenoel8093
      @joseenoel8093 Месяц назад

      Hi hon, get ready to there'll be past crap, stories which will probably come out of the closet, hope you're taking it all with much salt and find peace in your own mind, mine got hauled away with a Section 10, a danger to herself and others, call Adult Protection, get yourself or her a social worker, power of attorney would be great, next of kin works too, still powerful, feel sorry for anyone who must deal with her, mom went down while covid, even survived it, they'll the devil 😈 to pay and he keeps them around a long time!

    • @AC-jg2dg
      @AC-jg2dg Месяц назад +12

      You need to stop communicating with her. The lasting damage will further ruin you. My narcissistic mom died at 70 and I don't communicate with anyone in my narcissistic family/relatives.

    • @grammiekats8771
      @grammiekats8771 Месяц назад +12

      ​@@AC-jg2dgI am on the same path. The hardest part is the guilt.

    • @AC-jg2dg
      @AC-jg2dg Месяц назад

      @@grammiekats8771 Start slow cutting contact and you can get to the path of self-healing. For me, that's not the case. I went cold turkey and blocked them all. You can also change your number.

    • @trying2survive602
      @trying2survive602 Месяц назад +6

      Just remember, they have no guilt for the way they are treating you. You shouldn't have guilt for loving and respecting yourself! Make sure you have support for when you need to get over those guilt humps. Stay strong ✨️ 💪🏻

  • @gertrudewest4535
    @gertrudewest4535 Месяц назад +23

    The harsh truth is they are incapable of loving me. It’s harsh, but accepted it and mobs on with my life.

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Месяц назад +29

    You definitely won't get their support. My experience is this: If it is not somehow going to benefit them, you can forget their support. It's sad that that's the case, that these are actually our parents that we are talking about, but that's the hard reality about it all.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад

      You are right. Their narcissism comes before any maturity like caring for children. That said, at least in my experience, they do the best they can. My parents were not evil. Even though their capacity was deeply flawed. My golden brother and other family members were.

  • @amarbyrd2520
    @amarbyrd2520 Месяц назад +37

    I think one of the biggest challenges here is that the whole world seems to fully expect us to tolerate this abuse -- from employers as well as aging parents -- and they will excoriate and ostracize us when we refuse ... at which point it becomes nearly impossible to find support for healing. I keep bringing that up to narcissistic abuse professionals but everyone seems awfully reluctant to look that social monster (the near-glorification of narcissists & their accompanying abuse) in the face abd wrestle w7th it 😮❤

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +11

      Yes! I worked in retail for many, many years and that whole "The customer is always right." is some of the most pervasive BS garbage. If the customer is always right, do I have to stand here while they shout at me for something that wasn't my fault or my problem? Can the customer speak to me in a mostly calm tone of voice and explain what happened so I can help them, or do I have to let them blow up at me because they can't control their emotions?
      Yeah, screw all of that. Abuse is abuse, and just because of some ridiculous mantra from the prehistoric age doesn't mean ANYONE has the right to yell at me. You get as much respect as you give.

    • @theripper1705
      @theripper1705 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@spacegirl226'the customer is always right in matters of taste' is the full saying. It just means if they want to buy unflattering clothes, let them, it's their taste. It is maddening that abusive bosses have altered it and mal-adapted it.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад +3

      It’s starts when children are young, even as the Christian thing to do. If someone is socially damaging or awkward, that person may be a threat to the other’s survival. But Christians are taught to be extra kind even to those who make us feel a bit uncomfortable. This is solid advice but the line is rarely drawn that some people make us uncomfortable on purpose to cause us discomfort or distress.
      Thank you Jerry for teaching us and using discernment.

    • @s.s.8029
      @s.s.8029 Месяц назад

      @@pearpo The "Christian" way is what got me stuck in the destructiveness for so long. While I am still a Christian, I went no contact with my in-laws because I couldn't deal with the craziness any more. I was rarely fully comfortable in their presence and I should have trusted my gut a long time ago. Thankfully they are largely out of our lives, but it definitely changed our marriage forever.

    • @littledroogy
      @littledroogy Месяц назад

      The customer saying I understand because I am a good Mgr and will not allow my employees to be abused. They just get me and I take care of things. Which is huge conundrum personally as I am unable to do the same
      For myself w mommie dearest. I get triggered by the,"she's your MOTHER!"...
      Kills me!! That thing is an evil demon not my 'mother"
      Love to everyone here trying to figure out why we are trying to get out of a deep hole❤❤❤❤

  • @om617yota7
    @om617yota7 Месяц назад +33

    Realizing my parents are who they are and will never change was one of the key points that got me to go no contact. No contact has been the best years of my life. If you can get away, do so. So very worth it.

    • @vintage6346
      @vintage6346 27 дней назад +1

      I agree. I went no-contact when I was 23 years old. To the best of my knowledge, she was still plotting revenge against me right up until months before her death at 85 years old.

  • @nilaja-itsmylife
    @nilaja-itsmylife Месяц назад +19

    I went no contact almost 2 years ago. They could care less. Typical 😒

    • @steelearmstrong9616
      @steelearmstrong9616 Месяц назад +5

      Same. Both my parents are 72 and I hate them for what they’ve got away with. I don’t wish them well. I’m not a victim though. I accept this for what it is

    • @nyxcole9879
      @nyxcole9879 Месяц назад +1

      Congratulations ❤

  • @MrMasterDebate
    @MrMasterDebate Месяц назад +23

    “You never told me what I did wrong!”
    Is the most infuriating thing I can possibly imagine

    • @AlvinKazu
      @AlvinKazu Месяц назад

      "I didn't know....."

    • @BlueJeansandJellyBeans
      @BlueJeansandJellyBeans Месяц назад +1

      So true. It is the ultimate craziness!

    • @muma6559
      @muma6559 Месяц назад

      yeah, i went through that craziness for years

    • @vintage6346
      @vintage6346 27 дней назад

      Narcissist parents' rule number 1 is:
      NEVER tell us we've done something wrong.

  • @indianasunshine833
    @indianasunshine833 Месяц назад +9

    Spot on. The truth is ugly. But, the truth is the ticket to freedom.

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Месяц назад +41

    I don't need them to be happy, period. I don't need them to be safe. I don't need them to be okay. I don't need their financial assistance. I don't need their emotional support. I don't need them to have a productive life. I don't need them.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад +2

      You should want them to find happiness, be productive and safe.. otherwise you are the crazy one.
      Why wouldn’t you want this for yourself and for others?
      The point is you shouldn’t have to sacrifice yourself because of someone’s emotional damage where they claim that if you hurt yourself that THAT will make them happy, secure, prosperous..
      It won’t.
      It cannot.

    • @meeeka
      @meeeka Месяц назад +1

      After I learned who I was, my strengths and weaknesses, when I was faced with the decision to care for my abusive parent in his dementia, I knew that I could because I knew who I was and could be as well as who he was and wasn't. And I knew I wasn't about to change and didn't expect him to change.
      It was one of the best emotional learning experiences of my life. I'm glad I didn't miss it. No abuse was accepted or even projected because he had become an emotionally small child and he was different.
      The entire experience helped me later, become a good mother (as my daughter now tells me and asks how I became one!)

    • @Kittiesinclair5
      @Kittiesinclair5 Месяц назад +2

      @@pearpoSometimes we have to know that its ok to NOT want good things for ppl who just didnt or dont give a sh*t about us. Ppl who SHoULD have cared (parents). Ppl who worked very hard, their whole lives, in disregarding others and not caring. Sometimes its ok to say ‘ppl deserve to get what they give out’ and if they insist on living like that I am fine with it. It’s ok to NOT reward that kind of behaviour by ‘wanting them to be happy’.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад

      @kittiesinclair I understand the perspective you are sharing very well, but it comes from your unresolved pain. Everyone deserves to be healthy, happy, secure with their needs met. It doesn’t mean it is your job.. AT ALL. But wishing hatred on others is about your pain and projecting that around. That’s a totally valid point of view as long as you don’t take actions to harm others.
      And people do seek Justice, of course. Vengeance always backfires. Always.
      Better to focus on your own healing. It’s a relative or someone from childhood and you heal and grow more you may understand my perspective.
      Best of Luck in your healing and meeting your own needs.

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад

      @meeeka
      Totally. Or “Totality” in the OSHA Zen Tarot Card Deck. I felt robbed of that experience by people who blocked me due to their greed. I did experience a sliver of what you described so well via phone conversations during a brief period of time when my Dad was free from his Gold Digger.

  • @marietellen246
    @marietellen246 Месяц назад +26

    They're very selfish, it's like your job to take care of them, like an emotional caretaker, you can't have needs, choices, preferences, we have no problems and no pain, etc.. and you become invisible, especially if your siblings pick up their narcissistic personalities. Unfortunately I became the scapegoated. They're so controlling and manipulative, then when you realize what's going on, it's too late, there's no changing it and you know you've got to walk away because you can't change them, and they will always want to put you in the same place/roll, even after not seeing them for years 😥🙏🏻 They don’t change, they don't see anything wrong, because you're always the problem. And don't tell them they're narcissists to bring awareness to the dynamics, in hopes that things might change because you love them, don't do it, it just makes things worse for you, better to just let them go and move on. It's hard because it's your family but they will never see you any other way, then they always have. Sometimes it's better to allow yourself to be invisible to them, it's more peaceful 👍🏻

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +6

      100% truth bombs

    • @SvitlanaKamenska
      @SvitlanaKamenska Месяц назад +2

      so true!

    • @randalltobin77
      @randalltobin77 Месяц назад +3

      Omg yes. I'm currently living through this, as my counselor finally diagnosed my mother to me. It shattered me to learn the truth but it's setting me free. It's blowing my mind to see how twisted things have been for years and how conditional all the "love " has been.

    • @jennifergriffin5467
      @jennifergriffin5467 Месяц назад +3

      So true. You get punished for trying to express your own needs.

    • @dnk4559
      @dnk4559 Месяц назад +2

      Thank you for this reminder! I sometimes wish I had a support group of other scapegoats so that anytime I’m tempted to send a video like this to my siblings(narc father has passed and so has mentally ill alcoholic mother), I will pause and call a SG friend to remind me to not bother. They may love bomb and pretend momentarily they have the capacity to see you but they simply do not!

  • @PiscesSun24
    @PiscesSun24 Месяц назад +45

    So true. The last time I spoke to my parents they lied brother. I was told the truth prior to seeing them and acted dumb to hear what they had to say. I could not believe the blatant lies. They act like they have so much integrity.

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +10

      The false self and their delusions are quite powerful. It's sickening.

    • @malwads1836
      @malwads1836 Месяц назад +3

      It's (AMAZING) how badly these people will shoot themselves in their own foot if you just simply smile & play dumb while letting them talk....😳Their extreme arrogance is their undoing every single time ultimately.

    • @user-vp7kn3js4x
      @user-vp7kn3js4x Месяц назад +5

      Same here. I couldn't believe it!!! I was like 'who are you and what have you done with my parents?' 😱 You can only truly understand the devastation of it all if you've experienced it.
      Love and strength to everyone here 💛💪🙏✌️

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад +3

      Thanks everyone. My brother the lazy golden child and his CCP wife scammed me out of reconnecting with my aging parents to scam me. My brother only contacted my parents with his hand out. Needed in money or cars. He killed my Mom.

  • @spacegirl226
    @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +12

    Jerry, you're making it hurt today. But this was a necessary reminder.
    Internet hugs to you survivors.
    Thank you, sir.

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      You're very welcome

  • @sylviagonzales1680
    @sylviagonzales1680 Месяц назад +8

    I honestly thought there was something wrong with me for running the other way and avoiding my narcissistic parents. I say this because my 2 other siblings seem to put up with them like nothing, I’m the runner 😂

    • @Hereforthelove
      @Hereforthelove Месяц назад +2

      Same. I’m the only one that ran out of 6 children 😅

  • @debbiejahnke8724
    @debbiejahnke8724 Месяц назад +12

    I miss my parents, but when they passed it gave me freedom from the need to break away.

  • @sharonbice7490
    @sharonbice7490 Месяц назад +16

    I was in the hospital 3 times, not once did my mom come to see me. But she went to see my cousin, and she said she couldnt drive herself to come see me, I was there for 2 weeks, she was 15 min away, straight drive. Come and find out she drove herself 4 hours away to the casino, when I was in hospital. She called me once, during 2 weeks each time. I have taken her to all her dr. Appts, stayed with her at the ER, waited and stayed with her. 😢

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +9

      Unconscionable. I'm so sorry. You deserve a lot better than that, and I hope you find it.

    • @BlueJeansandJellyBeans
      @BlueJeansandJellyBeans Месяц назад +1

      Never again, hopefully.❤

    • @dnk4559
      @dnk4559 Месяц назад +1

      I’m so sorry! This is so familiar with these types of parents. Sigh

    • @deemaysie6568
      @deemaysie6568 Месяц назад +2

      Such a painful, relatable story. You deserve so much better! Sending lots of support.

    • @kelli2643
      @kelli2643 27 дней назад

      Right,they hate when we're sick,they don't acknowledge it,and if they do, they talk mess,and it bothers them😢

  • @jasminasinanbegovic6225
    @jasminasinanbegovic6225 Месяц назад +26

    Even if somebody apologizes it doesn't change the damage done. It takes a whole change of behavior and time to make things up. It's not that simple as I'm sorry

    • @michelemiktus2312
      @michelemiktus2312 Месяц назад +5

      A narcissist is NEVER truly sorry for how they harm others or even destroying them. In fact, the opposite is true, they actually ENJOY it! NEVER, EVER believe a narcissist that apologizes. THEY DO NOT MEAN IT!

    • @randalltobin77
      @randalltobin77 Месяц назад +2

      Exactly. I think they are more sorry for having to experience the taping part of what they've sewn for so many years... they want to treat you however they want and you just empty yourself out for them and jump through hoops all in search of their love and approval. It's sad and disgusting

    • @randalltobin77
      @randalltobin77 Месяц назад

      The **reaping

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад +2

      They do crime over crime and are only concerned with getting caught. They big mad if you have a different experience or point of view.

    • @jennifergriffin5467
      @jennifergriffin5467 Месяц назад +1

      ​@michelemiktus2312 It took my narc spouse 34 years to use the words, "I'm sorry," after all their crazimaking, and that was only under the threat of divorce. They were only worried about losing their supply.

  • @user-wz4bz2fn6s
    @user-wz4bz2fn6s Месяц назад +28

    I dont care about nor desire their approval anymore. This has changed in the last year.
    Yes, I learned traits amd worked hard to get rid of

    • @sunnyadams5842
      @sunnyadams5842 Месяц назад +4

      Isn't it so awesome when you learn you Can Change? Lasting change. I can now pick an unhealthy tendency in me and initiate the process and within a short time I notice I have stopped one behavior or thought pattern or things I say, and am automatically responding in the few way....
      Life is to much better healthy🥰

    • @sunnyadams5842
      @sunnyadams5842 Месяц назад +1

      New-not few. Oops! Have a Good One

    • @malwads1836
      @malwads1836 Месяц назад +1

      Learning how to actually emotionally validate ourselves & no longer seeking approval from dysfunctional people is a BIG milestone, it's something to be really proud of🌞👍🏻.

  • @nilaja-itsmylife
    @nilaja-itsmylife Месяц назад +22

    My mother was evil when she had to provide for my needs. I dreaded school shopping. Imagine that 😔

    • @montena369
      @montena369 Месяц назад +6

      Yup I remember crying in footlocker 😢

    • @sharonbice7490
      @sharonbice7490 Месяц назад +5

      Try wearing what your mom picked out for you, without being there. 😢 Also having three daughters one year a part that was all the same size, and picking the exact same thing for all of us. Uhhh ☹️ Didn't mind when I was younger, but notbas a teenager. 😢

    • @pearpo
      @pearpo Месяц назад +9

      When they get angry at you for being a five year old who has needs.

    • @Imissyoulou
      @Imissyoulou Месяц назад

      @@pearpo right

    • @BlueJeansandJellyBeans
      @BlueJeansandJellyBeans Месяц назад +2

      Same here it was awful.

  • @MillicentAspinet
    @MillicentAspinet Месяц назад +4

    Jerry Wise, "If you can't handle their abuse and craziness, than you are HEALTHY!" My oldest son wanted to emotionally abuse me like his father did. I just couldn't take it, and had to go no-contact (not easy to do for a mother).

  • @tundeakinrolabu9464
    @tundeakinrolabu9464 Месяц назад +3

    Wow. "If you can't handle their craziness and dysfunction that actually means you're healthy, and not the opposite. " That one is going to stick!

  • @aylagwenarther2738
    @aylagwenarther2738 Месяц назад +5

    I so needed to hear "f you can't handle their abuse and craziness then you are healthy." I feel like a burden was instantly lifted. Tension was released. My heart opened some more. That will be the phrase I sit with for the next few days. Thank you Mr. Wise.

  • @Czarinederella
    @Czarinederella Месяц назад +7

    They will change but the tactics and manipulation will be very very harder. My mom can't use her tone with me anymore because I was avoiding her. She felt she's losing control. So she sort out to desperate plan of love bombing me and giving me unnecessary attention. It's literally the worst human form that i ever have to deal with in my life.

  • @stereotypespecialist
    @stereotypespecialist Месяц назад +5

    Narcissists are always in this world where they think they are in control or have the power. The sad thing for them is when it gets towards the end of their reign and they are in their death throes and they lash out and threaten you by saying this is your last chance. They never realize that it's actually theirs...until it's too late.

  • @user-kv4eb8pr3w
    @user-kv4eb8pr3w Месяц назад +11

    Great video! There’s a lot of hard pills to swallow on the way to recovery.

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      Just keep going!🤎

  • @nilaja-itsmylife
    @nilaja-itsmylife Месяц назад +10

    We have to separate their ability to love us from our loveableness.
    We are loveable. They stink! Lol

    • @Imissyoulou
      @Imissyoulou Месяц назад

      more like an inability to love.

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Месяц назад +7

    My father was a deadbeat so we know how that be? My mom reared us, but, emotionally speaking, we were put last. Barely, if any, emotional support and nurturing. And add emotional, verbal, while she will disagree, some physical abuse, we were basically neglected all of our young lives.

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +1

      My father said, "I let your mother raise you." But the sad part was that she didn't raise us. She screamed at us and resented having to do the difficult parental things for us, just like he couldn't stand having to get involved AT ALL in his children's lives. My mother wanted to play house, and she thought having a family would magically heal her deep, deep trauma without her having to do much of anything at all.
      Then my father had the nerve to complain that my mother didn't care about him when he didn't bother getting involved in our lives and being a parent or a husband. He still complains about that neglect to this day and then turned around and neglected and still neglects his adult children. Oh boo hoo. Sadly, I married a man just like him who did the same complaining crap while also doing nothing to contribute to the relationship.
      Demons, all. I'm sorry you experienced such horrific neglect. Been there, done that, trying to heal.

  • @BlckJack123
    @BlckJack123 Месяц назад +10

    Brilliant. I wish I had known this decades ago.

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 Месяц назад +8

    Absolutely correct. The haven't and hadn't. I was gone nearly 30 years, returned for almost 5 before relocating back to Tennessee, and it was just like it was before I entered the military and started making my own way. They had just gotten older. I am no contact now. No contact means no conflicts.

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +3

      I was gone for a decade. Nothing at all changed in that decade except my parents and sibling got older and WORSE. I simply cannot imagine not changing at all in ten years or even three decades. How is that possible? The mind boggles.

    • @BlueJeansandJellyBeans
      @BlueJeansandJellyBeans Месяц назад

      ​@@spacegirl226I was not contact for 30 years went back to try to make amends because friends suggested...it was a disaster but it did cause the ultimate no contact, move away, never to return again response.😊❤

  • @YOUTHEPEOPLE-cj8oh
    @YOUTHEPEOPLE-cj8oh Месяц назад +15

    At 80 years my mother has proven good and well everything stated in this video is completely accurate to the t.
    As a matter of fact shes getting worse,she has driven everyone away including friends.......

    • @Agameda1
      @Agameda1 Месяц назад +4

      Oh lord, I'm in that place of epiphany. She drove me away then my aunt - we were doing our best to help her... Then an enabler brother had to step up, and he recently suffered a heart attack, so he's now out of the picture, she has no-one - my father is in a home dementing, so she has no more targets, scapegoats...

    • @amarbyrd2520
      @amarbyrd2520 Месяц назад +4

      They seem to get worse with age and they'll try to isolate us as completely as we let them - I read the other day about a woman whose mother fully expected her to give up her job, leave her husband, and let her house go into foreclosure to come take care of her ... my father expected that from me too and I've paid a pretty steep price so far trying to avoid that fate, even though I took care of him in his bouts with sarcoma when my mother refused to and gave up a promotion to do it, and he promised to pay me back for the career-building time I gave up and he never did follow through on that empty promise

    • @Agameda1
      @Agameda1 Месяц назад +2

      @@amarbyrd2520 i get it. I feel deeply troubled that I'm a terrible daughter, despite stepping up to the plate and living with both of them during covid and my brother's not once speaking to me to see how I was doing. That has continued to this day.

    • @shihtzuluvrtwo6386
      @shihtzuluvrtwo6386 Месяц назад +1

      MIL/hubby's monster is the same.

    • @randalltobin77
      @randalltobin77 Месяц назад +1

      My mother has gotten so much worse with age as well. She recently had a heart attack and u was the only family member who showed up... coming from 8 hrs away. She barely spoke to me and only called me once since she arrived home bc she knew my dad was listening. I have basically gone no contact but she's stonewalling me anyways so it's been a real fun time. 🙄🙄😑😑😑

  • @theveganmenu8571
    @theveganmenu8571 Месяц назад +4

    With me, they wanted me to be subject to their approval.

  • @LR-yu3mx
    @LR-yu3mx Месяц назад +10

    I always believed my dad loved me. Very narc mother. I was staying with him in his last days He was not in a coma. Not once did he showed in any way that he saw me or said anything to me,

    • @jamesrutter4100
      @jamesrutter4100 Месяц назад

      Then he did not care in the least about you. And probably hated you for NOT allowing him to cover up the abuse of the families narc.

    • @tjd7964
      @tjd7964 Месяц назад +1

      That must have been awful. Sorry you had this from him. My dad is my narc mom's enabler and he is like that. Selfish and distant.

  • @DesertSessions93
    @DesertSessions93 Месяц назад +5

    I've always known they won't change. I've always known the only way my life will be worth living will be to leave them behind. I have tried to escape them time and time again, and they have thwarted my efforts every time. But not this time. I'm finally escaping them once and for all. Soon...

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      You deserve that freedom 🤎

  • @b8akaratn
    @b8akaratn Месяц назад +8

    "I'll tell you how my Mom messed me up, if you tell me how yours did, you!" is a conversation i was willing to have (and have with my own child), but No Way would my adoptive Narcmom have deigned to such a thing.

  • @sunnyadams5842
    @sunnyadams5842 Месяц назад +8

    Jerry! U R The GOAT when it comes to helping us with the passage through this advanced and SO ESSENTIAL leg of The Healing Journey.
    I'm not opposed to MIRACLES either😂 but you are So Right- they do not happen almost EVER...nearly never with The Narc parent.That is so hard to accept.
    What IS a miracle is how every flipping time I hit PLAY on your vid when it pops up in my Notifications, which isn't every one (I'm often otherwise occupied at the moment they pop up and i rarely go backwards in my life to pick up something that is past now) so, it is a sort of Miracle of The Random Universe, every time.
    PreciousJames, below, outlined the main points and we👍 all just watched the same video, in theory, so I'll just say- Listen to this WISE man. He has worked out his salvation from the Family Entanglement aspect of Narcissistic Abuse and Negiect...he knows WHAT HE is TALKING about and can help SO MUCH!!
    Thanx Jerry. ❤

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      Thank you so much. Please share these videos with others. :)

  • @nicselectronics81
    @nicselectronics81 Месяц назад +3

    My mom still believes in some good part of my dad, she doesn't realize the guy she married never existed

    • @oppressednolonger1497
      @oppressednolonger1497 Месяц назад

      ught, this happened in my foo, reverse the roles), so sorry you had to watch that :(

  • @user-qs6yh1ln1k
    @user-qs6yh1ln1k Месяц назад +4

    They dont change. I'm 59. I've decided not to go back. I don't have money, i had an operation that affected me and brought back childhood trauma, so I'm waiting on social housing to move me away from them. Bad neighbours also 😢 I'm very isolated. I'm standing up for once and not apologising for something I didn't do. This time, I'm not going back. Please pray that God blesses me with a fresh start. Thank you 🙏

    • @oppressednolonger1497
      @oppressednolonger1497 Месяц назад +1

      I will keep you in prayer for healing and a new start, Godspeed, dear one 🙏 best best wishes!

  • @user-wz4bz2fn6s
    @user-wz4bz2fn6s Месяц назад +14

    Wonderful teaching video

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      Thanks for watching!😊

  • @eq2092
    @eq2092 Месяц назад +7

    3:15 is profound. I feel guilty when my mother text or calls with FOOLISHNESS at 5am that I get angry about it.

    • @annettemarie353
      @annettemarie353 29 дней назад

      Hello.. i totally understand.
      for me i had to talk to mum like she was a young child yes, because emotionally that's all she could be, and then move on about my own life. ❤☘☘

  • @amberfuchs398
    @amberfuchs398 Месяц назад +5

    Jerry's got bars! He's spitting facts! These are the bitter pills we need to take in and process. I always appreciate your candor, Jerry. You're speaking from experience. You're saving us steps.

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      Happy to help! Appreciate all the kind words ❤️

  • @wayneelliott1180
    @wayneelliott1180 Месяц назад +1

    Their habit of twisting our brains with chaotic logic. Their habit of dismissing our serious life issues, claiming we're 'weak,' or 'dramatic' or it's all our fault somehow. When I sought help for the mental torment resulting from being the scapegoat to a narc parent, that parent scoffed at it - then stated that I must be mentally ill if I was bothering to seeking help.

  • @MarisaPaola-um5yb
    @MarisaPaola-um5yb Месяц назад +2

    There is a hierarchy in narc parents minds, they of course are at the top, most empaths are seen as pathetic and will ALWAYS be at the bottom..you can never change your 'label'. My older sister is my elderly father's Golden Child, she has lied and stolen from him..his reaction 'she got me this time, shes wyly not stupid like you' 😲 I didnt realise this was a 'thing' until my father was diagnosed in hospital after his stroke..my father blocked me legally from knowing his medical records, even though i was his carer, and he gave all power to my narc sister, who would visit once a week, nurse let it slip when he screamed at me that i was 'stealing his house'..my sister had talked to him and lied, how do you steal a house. they used shame and threats of disinheritance to force me back. Thank you Jerry ❤️

  • @decipher8057
    @decipher8057 Месяц назад +5

    Yeah I got nothing for them now. Forget about me please. It's for the best.

  • @TheMrsMills
    @TheMrsMills Месяц назад +15

    I really needed this. Thank you

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      You're so welcome!🙂

  • @Ukisgreat
    @Ukisgreat Месяц назад +3

    It's true narc adults won't change try asking them the same question they won't answer or walk away or ignore emails

  • @miriam100ful
    @miriam100ful Месяц назад +5

    you are spot on Jerry, if only I had know about this may years back, I could have protected myself somehow from the narc parent. I have realised that the commandments and the bible says nothing at all about us having to spend any time with the narc parents . To honour one's parents does not mean you have to spend time with them.

  • @bridgettetraveler658
    @bridgettetraveler658 Месяц назад +2

    My parents never loved bombed me. They always showed me they didn't care the least bit about me or my children. In my late 20s I showed my whole family I was no longer going to put up with their abuse of me or my children. Some ppl believe u get lonely without family. I say u can't miss what u never really had. I feel so free without those ppl around me. With GOD u are never alone!!!

  • @s.s.8029
    @s.s.8029 Месяц назад +2

    This is such a sad reality for more families than we realize. Up until the day my fil passed away, my husband was trying to impress him and seek his approval (he always mentions that he didn't get to show his dad his "new" used car because we purchased it just days before his dad passed). Additionally, his mother would go away for weeks/months at a time and he would take care of her animals/house and she would "buy" his affection upon her return with a gift card, rather than spending some quality time with him. His mom has since moved across the country and I think he feels relieved. She moved because she "couldn't handle being back here" (where the rest of the family lives). She has dealt with anxiety (likely from her traumatic childhood) and doesn't really live in reality most of the time. While my fil took care of the family financially, the rest of it was placed on my husband's shoulders. It is hard to watch, but I am glad to be out of those toxic clutches.

    • @oppressednolonger1497
      @oppressednolonger1497 Месяц назад +1

      theres not much on toxic, narcissitic, abusive in -laws. they are as awful and evil as the FOO, imagine having it on BOTH sides, you deserve to heal, hope your hubby does too

    • @s.s.8029
      @s.s.8029 Месяц назад

      @@oppressednolonger1497 Thank you, and I agree, there isn't much out there on in-laws. I think my husband was attracted to my "normal" family because we were consistent, where as his family wasn't. I was actually the last person he met in my family. He was friends with my brother and his youngest sister and my sister were good friends. I was extremely young when we got together and didn't know any better. I tried to get out, but was love bombed back in. Had I been more open with my parents, I might have been able to get out before we got married. However, I am using my experience to grow and help others!

  • @t_nels
    @t_nels Месяц назад +5

    #5, is it, we seem to be expected to (handle) live at a much higher standard than they lived!

  • @graveyardghost2603
    @graveyardghost2603 Месяц назад +2

    My stepmom cant love me, and as a child I tried so hard to get that women's love. I understand the truth of that now. But still at times I find myself grieving about what could have been. Great video, thx Dr. Wise ❤

  • @3rdStoneObliterum
    @3rdStoneObliterum Месяц назад +5

    Yes this is genius. We should not have to handle craziness. It can be a virtue if you are out in public and there are some craziness happening and you can handle yourself. I have found that it did prepare me well for those kinds of things. But it was not my parents intentions I'm pretty sure to prepare me for craziness in the world. They never said anything like that and so it wouldn't make sense that they just treated me with craziness hoping that it would prepare me for dealing with craziness in the world. It happened in advertently. But the point is we should not have to handle it. And how can we ever count on the abuser or the ones who neglected us to be the ones who heal us? Yes it's an infantile immature hope that people have but it can never be true. Somebody who consistently abused you for 18 or 21 years is not going to wake up one day. And even if they woke up after 21 years wouldn't that be a little bit too late for the apologies? Would those apologies really cut the mustard for you at that point? We have to work this out ourselves. They probably couldn't even help us if they tried.

  • @EMunaBee
    @EMunaBee Месяц назад +1

    My great grandmother just looked at her son and daughter-in-law, without npd or bpd ever discussed, and told their child "They. Will. Never. Change." That's from the most intelligent, kind, delightful, "everything is possible with love, strength, determination" person I've ever known. You just have to look at the narcissists and not be fooled or be played for one.

  • @muma6559
    @muma6559 Месяц назад +1

    thank you... "if you can't handle their abuse and craziness, you are healthy"

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil Месяц назад +4

    - 00:28 🔄 Narcissistic parents generally won't change.
    - 01:16 🚫 Narcissistic parents can't give the approval you seek.
    - 01:42 🥈 Narcissistic parents will always prioritize their needs over yours.
    - 02:25 📉 You inherit their dysfunctional emotional reality, not necessarily narcissistic personality disorder.
    - 03:16 🤷‍♂ If you can't handle their abuse and craziness, you're likely healthy.
    - 04:47 💔 They are incapable of loving you genuinely.
    - 05:41 ❌ Narcissistic parents can't heal your trauma or fulfill your need for love.
    - 07:01 🚫 Don't try to change narcissistic parents or yourself for them.
    - 07:33 ✋ Stop pursuing their limitations and accept their emotional incapacity.
    - 08:21 🚶‍♀ You don't need their understanding to differentiate and move on.
    - 08:42 📚 Focus on learning about narcissism and dysfunctional families but prioritize self-healing.
    - 09:10 🔍 Emphasize your own healing and inner bonding, rather than becoming an expert on narcissism.

  • @michaelgpartridge2384
    @michaelgpartridge2384 Месяц назад +4

    Terrific points! I appreciate your mention of healthiness as a factor in NOT being able to handle their madness. I just knew “no contact” as a grade schooler would be my future. To them I am a stubborn ingrate. For me, I don’t let lies and manipulation be used on me - the ultimate betrayal - for them. Keep up the excellent work!

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      Thanks for sharing!!

  • @joseenoel8093
    @joseenoel8093 Месяц назад +4

    Not blind got super head's up on humans, totally sink or swim, sucks to be them!

  • @JohnnyWrongo-b9l
    @JohnnyWrongo-b9l Месяц назад

    Complete and total rejection is THE way to deal with a narcissist. They believe you can't do that and will never get over the wound created by clear straight up rejection.

  • @pinkroses135
    @pinkroses135 Месяц назад +3

    3 is so good to hear. That's part of inheriting their mess/programming imo.

  • @ricalina4371
    @ricalina4371 Месяц назад +10

    Excellent points! thank you! 🙏

  • @evemayo8939
    @evemayo8939 Месяц назад

    Additionally! My in-laws, with their own narcissistic traits, THOUGHT they were successful in their tactics with my side knowing all about it. All this did was help my husband discover their traits & now the healthy boundaries are in place. Nothing will ever separate the Love that God has for me even before I was married 25 years ago!

  • @anonymousprivate6814
    @anonymousprivate6814 Месяц назад +1

    I have cut my parents off emotionally for my own sanity and deal with my own pain with outside support. I have minimal contact with them physically. They resent me changing, what a surprise! (not).

  • @cwells7285
    @cwells7285 Месяц назад

    "nobody is supposed to deal with abuse and craziness" holy shit that blew my mind

  • @SS-qo3nt
    @SS-qo3nt Месяц назад +2

    On the flip side, id like to dedicate your video to my aging narc supervisor......it's been awhile but the leopard never changed his spots at work, he just ran out of supply when he got blamed for something and harassed me from all different kind of angles this morning. He didn't care that he was interrupting my mentor session with another employee either. No boundaries. When he saw I was unflappable he finally accused me of threatening him. You could see he was trying hard to re write all the stories to fit his warped reality

  • @warrenbradford2597
    @warrenbradford2597 Месяц назад +5

    I heard art can heal me. I need to understand why.

    • @jt5792
      @jt5792 Месяц назад +1

      It can be very relaxing and fulfilling. It can grow our confidence, potentially meet new poeple, but even at home alone, it makes us present (mindfullness) and we can make something beautiful, or even process our trauma directly through the art we make. Ive made art since childhood, it was always my sanctuary and when i find a medium i love its a lovely feeling. It can be as simple as play, time for ourselves, a calm place where our brains can rest

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад +3

      A book that all trauma survivors need to read is called "The Body Keeps the Score" by Bessel Van Der Kolk. In one chapter he talks about how trauma completely destroys imagination and creativity. Getting involved in artistic pursuits helps rewire those neural pathways in our brains that got squashed by constant abuse and neglect. So not only is it good for creative and relaxing purposes, but it also heals your brain to engage in the activity.

    • @jt5792
      @jt5792 Месяц назад +2

      @spacegirl226 thank you for sharing. I have only heard him talk on youtube but not yet read the book. It makes sooo much sense. Art was a way to hold onto myself and have my own little inner sanctum when being relentlessly brainwashed and bullied.

    • @spacegirl226
      @spacegirl226 Месяц назад

      @@jt5792 You're very welcome. The book is mindblowingly informative, but it's difficult to get through because of all the pain that can come up.
      I wasn't an artist, but I wrote for my escape. It was my therapy and probably the only reason I'm not worse off because I did have an outlet for these strange feelings. Can't draw to save my life unfortunately!
      Internet fist bump.

    • @Hereforthelove
      @Hereforthelove Месяц назад +1

      Art connects your body and mind which is essential because most times in abusive situations we lose connection with body. Look more into mind and body connection and other ways to connect both. Hope this helps.

  • @Amanda.Marie40
    @Amanda.Marie40 Месяц назад +1

    I think I have now accepted my family of origin won’t change but I can’t seem to stop wallowing in it or getting over it!

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      program.jerrywiserelationshipsystems.com/welcome/?_gl=1*k1jtt0*_ga*MTEzOTAwMTU3MC4xNjgyMzc5ODc5*_ga_SLRWVRKZTP*MTcxNzU5MTQ3Mi45MS4wLjE3MTc1OTE0NzIuNjAuMC4w

  • @burchified
    @burchified Месяц назад +1

    Both of my parents fit the bill for narcissism. My mother was diagnosed as histrionic but the comorbidity must have slipped past the counselor. She never has changed, aside from being conditioned to realize that her relationships won't last. So she puts everyone on the fast track to discard. My father changed "for the better" in the sense that he went from an aggressive, overt narcissist to a covert, passive-aggressive one due to some close calls with death from brutal fighting.

  • @MygirlsGJPB
    @MygirlsGJPB Месяц назад +2

    Thanks Jerry. I think I need to watch this every time I think about breaking NC

  • @lindastark8836
    @lindastark8836 Месяц назад +2

    Wow Jerry - this one just nails it - not that your other videos don't - but this one just cuts right through to the truth like a sharp sword - impressive. I love all the points you make - but really feel encouraged by the truth that if you can't handle their abuse you're healthy. I always felt if I were stronger or more reasonable or perfect in some way I wouldn't have had to distance myself so much from my family of origin's toxiicity and then do the real gritty work of getting them out of me. I had to cut off a toxic person recently - someone I was working on a project with - because I could tell I couldn't handle it - it was bad for me. I of course felt like I was weak - but I see now that no - I'm healthy - I can't have that in my life in any significant way. Thank you.

  • @jeankipper6954
    @jeankipper6954 Месяц назад

    I agree with the talk, and the commentary. I also know that they considered our childhood idyllic. Greviously, compared to theirs, it was. I HEARD them say how good we had it. And I have been in levels of therapy, it's different now, for 50 years, off and on. "Depression," it was called, and kids couldn't have it. Now, in my 70's, it's called CPTSD, and lots more is known about it. My brother, 2 years younger, denied the abuse, with tears in his eyes, saying it HAD to have been for out benefit. He was murdered, carried a gun for "protection." Someone took it from him and killed him with it. Victims of this abuse suffer to death.

  • @leslee7059
    @leslee7059 Месяц назад +4

    Good point about "handling" it. ty

  • @curiouscomplex290
    @curiouscomplex290 Месяц назад +6

    "I understand you want to think your parents loved you, but lets look at the facts."
    Mr. Wise you may be right but you're out of line 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      hahahaha

    • @curiouscomplex290
      @curiouscomplex290 Месяц назад +4

      ​@@jerrywise But seriously, thank you for putting these things so bluntly. Facing that reality for myself was one of the most difficult psychological burdens that I've had to overcome. But it also opened the doorway to a new relationship with my own inner-child. Working on raising him the right way (whatever the hell that means) day by day.

  • @kareemmohammed5270
    @kareemmohammed5270 Месяц назад +2

    painful, resonates, much appreciated Jerry for your insights as always.

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      Thanks for listening

  • @bellaminded
    @bellaminded Месяц назад

    Listen....You just hit me in the chest with They don't love you because they can't. I always gave the benefit of doubt.

  • @weylinwebber4180
    @weylinwebber4180 Месяц назад +2

    I just love your videos, I need em. Thank you l. And I hope the rest of y’all have blissful days or nights

  • @fairygurl9269
    @fairygurl9269 Месяц назад

    *Radical Acceptance + Realistic Expectations
    Be Wise ❤ 🐝🦉

  • @jonsnow911
    @jonsnow911 Месяц назад

    2:00 put my needs last, 5:30 accept her not loving you

  • @SKF358
    @SKF358 Месяц назад +1

    Repenting to the Lord is the way, but only occurring in a rare occurrence.

  • @lo-ul8nq
    @lo-ul8nq Месяц назад +1

    So Very True 👍

  • @TheHelenhunter
    @TheHelenhunter Месяц назад

    So so good 👏🏼

  • @andrearush6209
    @andrearush6209 Месяц назад +1

    3:50 - WOW. THANK YOU.

  • @tony2029
    @tony2029 Месяц назад

    Yes, absolutely so True. No contact, grief and reparent my self.

  • @evelynbarton6349
    @evelynbarton6349 Месяц назад +2

    Blessings Jerry❤

  • @MylonMoses
    @MylonMoses Месяц назад +1

    Thank you Jerry!

  • @Alice-ts3vl
    @Alice-ts3vl 4 дня назад

    Exactly!!

  • @dawn5428
    @dawn5428 26 дней назад

    Most important video I’ve ever seen about NPD in so long. Harsh but true

  • @geargail
    @geargail Месяц назад +1

    Understands, this is a Tough Subject to sit through. - Thanks for Posting.

  • @mollyb1983
    @mollyb1983 Месяц назад +1

    Jerry, you’re the best - I’d love for you to do a collab with Dr. Lindsay Gibson, author of Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents. You’re both brilliant and speak each other’s language.

  • @gedankenradio143
    @gedankenradio143 Месяц назад

    This video is a relief, thank you!

  • @ryla781
    @ryla781 Месяц назад +3

    Great video ❤

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад +1

      Glad you liked it!!

  • @tnels5027
    @tnels5027 Месяц назад

    Thank you - so many thanks for your videos

    • @jerrywise
      @jerrywise  Месяц назад

      You are very welcome