The 5 BEST WAYS To Release Yourself From A Narcissist's GRIP! | Dr Ramani

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2022
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @CharletAllshouse
    @CharletAllshouse Год назад +2098

    i found that once I identified a person as a toxic narcissist, the first thing I had to work on was to not need anything from that person. Not money, not time, not acceptance, not positive regard, not anything, and really work hard on getting free of those needs. Getting my needs met elsewhere.

    • @wendygraves7129
      @wendygraves7129 Год назад +46

      Same

    • @DulceN
      @DulceN Год назад +138

      You can do that easily when you have not already invested your life and health on the narc, but many of us don’t find out what’s going on until after we are left to pick the pieces, too late for the kind of total freedom you write about.

    • @halfbreed4life62
      @halfbreed4life62 Год назад +20

      So dang true

    • @donttreadonme2
      @donttreadonme2 Год назад +92

      @@DulceN Agreed. 28 years in. I've been trying to do the "radical acceptance"- and keep trying to think i can live on "the devil you know" premise. Easier said than done, as ya all know, it entails having a completely feeling less relationship with the person you live with. Which, I guess it was already that way on his side anyway. However, with both of us this way, it's just a house 2 people inhabit. When there were still feelings being put out there from my side, it felt like a home at least part of the time. So now the question is: which is gonna be more difficult? Staying with him and living this "lifeless /
      loveless" life. Or go out on a limb, terrified, and be on my own? Ugh. They both sound terrible. I believe I'm gonna try to slowly get out... somehow acclimating myself to the thought of being alone. Building strength. Move anything of sentimental to me, and whatever i can, discreetly, into a storage unit, and MOST IMPORTANTLY, continue to educate myself daily by listening to Dr. Ramani as well as all the amazing people on here that share their stories and advice in order to try and help others. Thank you again DulceN. Take care.

    • @alicialevesque2451
      @alicialevesque2451 Год назад +22

      What if you dnt want him to get over you? I want him to want me and love me. I want him to change. Is something wrong with me?

  • @supergrover17
    @supergrover17 Год назад +853

    10 Ways To Be More Resistant To Narcissists
    1. Own your truths and reality 2:10
    2. Stop falling for charisma and charm 3:00
    3. Being smart n educated is not a virtue 4:04
    4. Don't get snowed by rich and successful people 5:13
    5. Watch How They Treat Other People 6:16
    6. Learn the narcissist's tells 7:03
    7. Become ok with setting boundaries 7:50
    8. Dump the enablers 8:46
    9. Stop giving second chances 9:46
    10. Surround yourself with good people 10:57
    11. BONUS - Start getting comfortable with taking the less popular path 12:30
    12. BONUS - Have meaning n purpose in life 15:08
    Hope this helps everyone……

  • @hapal1975
    @hapal1975 Год назад +165

    Dr. Ramani, You saved my life two years ago. When I was suffering from a toxic realationship with a covert narcissist. Thank you God bless you. You are an amazing human being.

    • @peterrichards00
      @peterrichards00 5 месяцев назад +9

      Yes you really are a life saver. Your helping me so much.

    • @sueknight5525
      @sueknight5525 4 месяца назад +1

      How do you stay sane
      I’ve been married 47 years
      So much toxicity
      He turned my children
      Against me
      I fought so hard
      And anger got the best of me
      I’m dying
      My soul is ripped apart
      How do I fix this life
      This miserable life

    • @FoodieExplorerr
      @FoodieExplorerr 3 месяца назад +2

      She just saved my life today too … :( Thank you so much for sharing this detailed information

    • @clarecollins2547
      @clarecollins2547 Месяц назад

  • @mariamacamara7412
    @mariamacamara7412 8 месяцев назад +29

    My heart goes out to all those suffering from this toxic people😭 It is easier said than done especially if you are in a place with no family members.

    • @CarronBarry-yy3jn
      @CarronBarry-yy3jn 4 месяца назад +1

      No family support is really tough. I feel you.

    • @babettealtman1551
      @babettealtman1551 3 месяца назад

      It’s comments like that to the person who said no family is tough. That is not encouraging or emphatic or compassionate. The person who is hurting is looking for support.

    • @clarecollins2547
      @clarecollins2547 Месяц назад

      😢

    • @nicholecornes1915
      @nicholecornes1915 21 день назад

      Omg its miserable

  • @InaZap
    @InaZap Год назад +72

    Letting go isn't really about learning to let go, but realizing that there's nothing left to hold on to.

    • @nicolesmith923
      @nicolesmith923 Год назад +5

      I feel this statement deeply. It saddens me.

    • @c.p.6028
      @c.p.6028 Месяц назад

      Great though and very true. Sure that it will help me to get over my narcisist ex. Thanks for sharing 😊

    • @digitalversatilediscjockey3465
      @digitalversatilediscjockey3465 Месяц назад +1

      Talkin in circles. I like it tho

  • @user-hw6kq4ne2t
    @user-hw6kq4ne2t Год назад +245

    “Stop falling for charisma ..
    , it’s covering something else” the best advise

    • @ImNotaRussianBot
      @ImNotaRussianBot Год назад +5

      Grew up with a narc father who people said was handsome and funny and charismatic.
      Now, if I see someone who is very attractive or very smooth, it freaks me out. I get like physically repulsed.

  • @debyyeaney279
    @debyyeaney279 6 месяцев назад +28

    This is truly a lonely walk for me, Thank you for the kind words. I am 66 and no longer trust anyone. I love my own company. You have helped me more than you will ever know. Keep up the loving work.

    • @JulieBullard-zc5gv
      @JulieBullard-zc5gv 6 месяцев назад +4

      I'm 57 and after22 years of marriage finally learning about this.
      I feel alone and embarrassed.
      I'm stuck and can't get away

    • @dgvfsa66
      @dgvfsa66 6 месяцев назад +4

      As I read through the comments, i actually thought yours was something I wrote. It's exactly where I'm at right now. Best Wishes 🎉

    • @debyyeaney279
      @debyyeaney279 6 месяцев назад

      I just read this. and I am so sorry. I understand. I am not married to one. I was raised by one and then encountered many on my life path. Keep trying to heal and understand how they work. The one in my life has been violent so no contact is now my only choice. Best wishes Be well and be safe!
      @@JulieBullard-zc5gv

    • @jenniferg6818
      @jenniferg6818 3 месяца назад +2

      Me too, I am going to start going to alanon because they have all recovered from narcs. I have been isolating and it's making me worse. Sending blessings.

    • @idunno6480
      @idunno6480 3 месяца назад +1

      For the NCIS fans, being like Gibbs is the way to go.

  • @tijeraslack3
    @tijeraslack3 8 месяцев назад +43

    My parents are pissed that I watch all of your content. I have become stronger, especially in the current situation I am in. I just need to figure out my next move. Thanks again for all that you do! 💕

    • @Stubbornclarity
      @Stubbornclarity 2 месяца назад +1

      I remember my mother getting really pissed that I was on the computer and getting smarter 😂. Do it anyways, and take your power back from them. Be aware that they could be using parental monitoring software on your devices if you're still living with them or left your phone there/ alone. People who are controlling get stalkerish. Good luck with everything 🍀.

    • @jackiep5009
      @jackiep5009 25 дней назад +2

      My Narc Mother in Law saw Ramani’s book sitting on the table and her face went to disgust. Lol
      Take their hate as a sign you are on the right path

  • @TheLeedeerod
    @TheLeedeerod Год назад +104

    Walking away helped me realize how little affect they had on my life. They ignored me, weren’t there consistently when I needed them, were cruel, critical, etc. I don’t miss THEM… I miss the familiarity of family & what we COULD have had. I’m MUCH better, now! 🙏🏾🥰💃🏾

    • @catpaladin1
      @catpaladin1 Год назад +8

      Now you get to create your own family with the friendships you build

    • @donttreadonme2
      @donttreadonme2 11 месяцев назад

      If you don't mind me asking... how long were you with that person?

  • @yellowbird2157
    @yellowbird2157 Год назад +835

    Dr. Ramani saved my sanity and gave me strength to get out of the grip of the narcissist physically. Now I am mentally healing and ready to thrive. Thank you - also - for this amazing community. Your comments are so helpful and validating. I am often brought to tears as I read our shared experiences. ♥️ Love you all. ♥️

    • @buffster948
      @buffster948 Год назад +21

      @Yellow Bird - congratulations! Beautiful. I wish you every happiness. :)

    • @suzanne4396
      @suzanne4396 Год назад +37

      @Yellow Bird. Yes. Dr. Ramani also saved MY sanity, when I felt that I was on the edge of shattering into pieces. Her validation and empowerment --- literally saved Me. Onward and upwards!!🦸‍♀️👊

    • @KT-jk1ik
      @KT-jk1ik Год назад +5

      @@buffster948 /m. 00000000

    • @jenniferrivera1265
      @jenniferrivera1265 Год назад +16

      Same here!

    • @bodymindsoul60
      @bodymindsoul60 Год назад +11

      Blessings 🙏❤️

  • @theblackbrazillian76
    @theblackbrazillian76 Год назад +27

    Now I realize that my mother was a malignant narcissist! Now I understand why and how my father put up with their toxic relationship for 52 years and why he taught his children with good moral values and why he taught us to love, be kind to others and always treat people the way we want to be treated! He also taught us that our word was everything and we had to be the person we professed to be. It's ok if people take advantage one or two times but there comes a point where we can detach and stay detached when people try to continually use and abuse us! Thanks Papa for saving us with your wisdom and guidance❤

  • @brindageorge701
    @brindageorge701 Год назад +16

    My experience in how not to aget ducked in by narcissists: 1) Don't be too accommodating, even in body language. Drop the excess smiling.😊2) Limit your compliments, and before giving them examine whether you're being sincere or schmoozing up. 3) If they drop names of people, places, or things ( e.g. professional degrees) arbitrarily
    , run! 4) Be harder to get. Don't extend your friendship or kindness to freely. 5) And repeating Dr. Ramani, something that gets me everytime, stay away from enablers ( people who 😊are groupies to charismatic or noxious personalities).

  • @juliaparker9461
    @juliaparker9461 Год назад +593

    I decided to treat myself the way I treated him. To support myself the way I supported him and to forgive myself the way that I forgave him. I’m now at a point in my life where I totally accept myself “flaws” and all.
    Thank you Dr. Raman. I am going through my divorce feeling strong and powerful and no longer traumatized or scared.

    • @cristinamariapescarinigreg1279
      @cristinamariapescarinigreg1279 Год назад +14

      I can totally relate

    • @theforensicbadass
      @theforensicbadass Год назад +14

      I love that!!!
      How beautiful. ❤️👑❤️

    • @margarethodges6689
      @margarethodges6689 Год назад +19

      A lovely and positive way of facing the future,I will remember and apply this to myself thank you.♥️

    • @LeahIsHereNow
      @LeahIsHereNow Год назад +23

      Good on you!
      I truly believe that falling in love with yourself the way you fell in love with the toxic, disordered person is the key to freedom from abuse forever.

    • @massimo7219
      @massimo7219 Год назад +5

      Hang in there !

  • @reneebaginski9647
    @reneebaginski9647 Год назад +214

    Don't make excuses for their bad behavior. I did for 29 years!

    • @angiehayes7397
      @angiehayes7397 Год назад +12

      30 years here, so I feel ya. After so long, we have kids & grandbabies & so much more to lose. It's hard, painful & heartbreaking 💔

    • @elmojohnson793
      @elmojohnson793 Год назад +10

      35+ years of her abuse. Everything has always been hers.. my car, my bedroom, my house. My you name it. I feel like I was her slave. Not her husband. She rarely worked at any job for long, but spent money like water. No remorse for anything she did or said. She lived for confrontation.

    • @aoliver515
      @aoliver515 Год назад +3

      29 here

    • @marcellusrobinson1465
      @marcellusrobinson1465 Год назад +4

      I haven’t been with mine nearly as long but we do have a kid so it’s so hard to leave

    • @belasani3346
      @belasani3346 Год назад +4

      @@marcellusrobinson1465 same here 8yrs I have two kids with him and it’s hard!! Because I give him all of me and he keep hurting me over and over and over again and it hurt so bad

  • @Livingingratitudeforever
    @Livingingratitudeforever Год назад +102

    Honestly, bodybuilding helped me get through so much. I'm now 6 years sober from alcohol and I just left my narcissistic ex in Dec 2022 (married 10 years) after I decided to get back into it. It helps me feel, not just physically stronger, but mentally stronger. It made me realize I can lift more than I think and I am stronger mentally than I thought too. AND finding your videos helped me so much too! Thank you for all you do, Dr. Ramani!

    • @mg79277
      @mg79277 9 месяцев назад +5

      I’ve cleaned up my treadmill and taken out my weights that I haven’t used in about 15 years. I figured I needed my mojo back my health and mental wellness. So happy to read your comment. I am even more resolved to doing this

    • @MJ-qb5ph
      @MJ-qb5ph 6 месяцев назад +3

      I found it incredible that after joining a cool gym to complete the final chart of my healing - quite a few members totally got it or had been there!

    • @Livingingratitudeforever
      @Livingingratitudeforever 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@MJ-qb5ph absolutely! It’s so nice to find likeminded people!

    • @aaronlayton494
      @aaronlayton494 6 месяцев назад +5

      Me too. It took me realizing that drinking is how I found myself in a relationship with a narc to quit and I haven't thought about drinking since (tried 2x before). I used my drinking as an excuse to excuse her bad behavior. Then slowly found myself drinking, not for fun, but to escape the hell I was in. The narc ex attempted to use the alcohol as a way to get me arrested and drag my name through the dirt. Going to the gym and making a big to do list is a major step in changing your life. Jordan peterson and others have helped me reprogram my mind. One blessing from all of this, is when I ended this relationship it was the first time in my life I actually wanted to be alone and relationshipless. I've been able to accomplish so much and figure out what I want in life. Meeting her was a blessing and a curse.

    • @chantellefoeshoe4707
      @chantellefoeshoe4707 6 месяцев назад +4

      🥲🙏🏼 your comment really spoke to me, love the correlation between physical pursuits and metal pursuits strengthening together. I just left my covert narc of 7 mths, and he despised body building bc his ex was involved, he used the excuse it was a bad example for his 4 kids, and I was punished by neglect and a devalue/discard each time I attempted to better myself in this way. Going to do it now that im free to grow and evolve. So grateful I saw this comment tonight. Thank you 💖🙏🏼🥲🤗

  • @x-2954
    @x-2954 Год назад +90

    The only way to take control from a narcissist is to get yourself from their domain first. You wont be able to figure out anything until and unless you are out of the hellish world. I will tell you one of my favourite stories. Once a King was too disturbed by everything that was happening around him. He felt as if no one was loyal to him and he was always afraid of his kingdom being attacked by perpetrators. He lost his sleep and his life had become hell. So he thought of taking a brief sojourn in the countryside. He passed through lush green fields and picturesque landscapes. The silent breeze that brushed through his hair filled his heart with joy. That is when he saw a farmer who was putting fence around his farmland. But his farmland had weeds all over and they hardly had any crops. This intrigued the King. He asked the farmer as to why was he putting a fence around the farm when the farm itself was covered with weeds. To this the farmer said that the farm was his own so he could get rid of the weeds whenever he liked. But he cant stop the stray dogs from running over his fields and destroying them. That is why he was putting the fence. To stop the stray dogs from venturing into the field. Once he was very assured about the security of his fields he can work on clearing the weeds and planting crops. On hearing this the King somewhat got the answer which he had been searching for. The human mind is also like the field. You cant control assholes from fiddling with your mind or saying bullshit. But you can definitely put a fence ( figuratively) so that these assholes cant influence you. And until and unless you dont put a fence you can never work on yourself. Once you have distanced yourself from toxic people then you can work on the healing process. Same is the case with narcs. Narcs are these stray dogs who suck your energy emotionally. They play mind games for fun because their mind wants melodrama. They hurt the very people who love them. So total isolation from these narcs is absolutely essential for the well being of your Mind. Once you are out of their mind games you can take decisions rationally. Narcs try to drain you emotionally. So everytime you respond to their low vibrations you tend to come to their level. But when you react confidently without panicking and without responding to their negative vibrations that is when you Win. When someone realises that you arent being influenced or being manipulated by their actions they will get tired of it. And after cutting them off completely from your lives you should work on your healing process. Work on clearing your mental clutter and keep yourself preoccupied. Read books and most importantly try to find your Purpose in life. When you find your Purpose you will be able to bear any pain in this World. Most importantly help others in need. When you find someone else who is stuck with a narc help them to get out of that. I feel this is the way to take control from a narcissist. P.S: I hardly find people around me who know about emotional abuse. But I think everyone should read and know about it. In today’s mean world you will find a lot of people who try to influence you or demoralise you using the sweetest of words. Its about identifying these covert manipulators and distancing yourself from them. I have immense respect for people who have survived narcissistic partners. They happen to be the most strongheaded and emotionally stable people you can come across. I learn a lot of things from them. Truly the broken will always be the most beautiful. Additionally, Here's a clue for anyone of you that think your spouse might be cheating, but you think they are just too clever to be caught, your feelings of being cheated on are not facts and your intuitions are bullshit unless you find out for sure. So before you bring your sickness and blame into the relationship get some fucking proof and some mental help consult a private investigator today Metaspyhub@gmail. com for the purpose know where you stand in your relationship...

  • @nickibleigh
    @nickibleigh Год назад +356

    Dr Ramani is that therapist for most of us that cannot afford trauma informed therapy or therapy at all due to financial strains . Im still struggling from cPTSD and trying to navigate the trauma almost a year after discard…but these videos validate all of us struggling and I don’t know where a lot of us would be with out Dr Ramani and her compassionate guidance

    • @Corrans
      @Corrans Год назад +7

      And where I live, there aren't even that many therapists, let alone great ones! I have been through a few and they are all so wishy washy! It's frustrating.

    • @thefabsindore5170
      @thefabsindore5170 Год назад +2

      How much did you suffer?? Physical??

    • @stephanieluvinski4637
      @stephanieluvinski4637 11 месяцев назад

      I'm not divorce from the Narcissist yet, but we are under separate roofs. I have block his phone number and block him from all social media platform. I have also remove most social media apps from my phone. Listening to Dr Ramani for a couple hours a day has help me tremendously. I need to gain some form of emotional stability and strength because I know my divorce will be another battlefield. I have a small child with this person, and I know he isn't going to make it easy for me. He already voice that he would never sign Divorce papers

    • @juliagorton2594
      @juliagorton2594 9 месяцев назад +9

      Yes. I’m three years into escaping a controlling husband after 30 years of being together. I just hope that Dr Ramini can advise the Uk government and change our laws to support the abused rather than the abuser.

    • @ChantellEsbend
      @ChantellEsbend 8 месяцев назад

      Yes absolutely. I'm on my husband's medical aid, but I would never use it because he will still have control over me.

  • @RoyalKnightCurly
    @RoyalKnightCurly Год назад +404

    For me, another one of the best ways to release yourself from the grip of the narcissist is to realize how real the abuse you experienced really is. People may demonize you for doing this, but you are never wrong for acknowledging that your narcissistic relationship is unhealthy. It’s better to see an ugly truth, than a false reality. They may say, “Well, life is hard”, but your relationships shouldn’t be.

    • @ivana5240
      @ivana5240 Год назад +17

      Why may people demonize you for recognizing family or relationship violence? Nooo!!! But I did hear some words like: Yes, nowadays people don't have the strength and perseverance to stay in relationship. 😬👀🤮 But I knew. I had one friend who understood and this was helpful enough. And I learned who my real friends are, who listen and feel me, and who those are who only parrot their parents' toxic sayings and beliefs.

    • @RoyalKnightCurly
      @RoyalKnightCurly Год назад +22

      @@ivana5240 Yeah, if not demonize you for calling out your unhealthy relationship, they will more than likely gaslight you to believe that your perspective of the whole situation is off or something. It’s great that you had a friend to stick by you and help you in those difficult times. It’s always important to surround yourself with the right people😊

    • @redeem372
      @redeem372 Год назад +7

      Nailed it!

    • @rhondaconnelly2884
      @rhondaconnelly2884 Год назад

      @@ivana5240 y UI y😅yy the

    • @rhondaconnelly2884
      @rhondaconnelly2884 Год назад +1

      @@ivana5240 h yy it😊hl😊

  • @dm3144
    @dm3144 Год назад +115

    My strength was learning about narcissism, going “no contact “and moving forward🦋
    Best decision I’ve ever made! 🎉
    I am an empath, and my home life was horrible. When I moved out of my house, I thought I was OK. 😅
    When I had my next experience with a narcissist, I was done!
    I’m too old for that crap!I I want to live the rest of my life, happy, joyous, and free!🎉.
    Yes, I’m grieving, but I’m 65 and at this point in my life, I desire healthy love. After 40+ years , I lost health, all the things you mentioned Yes, I am grieving, but I’m happy and learning Thank you Dr. Ramani for all your help, I sure wish you were closer to me❤
    🦋SURIVOR🦋 with a brand new life.

    • @tinagustafson3949
      @tinagustafson3949 6 месяцев назад +8

      I too am 65 and finally left mine after 45 years. I’m on the mend thanks to people like Dr Ramani.

    • @karencox8699
      @karencox8699 6 месяцев назад +11

      I am 76 and left 8 years ago! Peace is priceless! ❤

    • @karencox8699
      @karencox8699 6 месяцев назад +2

      I am in the process of weaning my N son away and setting boundaries and keeping the boundaries! I own my part in this and now: when I talk to him or rather‘listen’ to him tell me about all his exploits that day or week! I turn most of what he says to give the attention to someone else or I am silent and I limit time on phone! I am hoping he turns to other suppliers and not all just me! Thank you Dr Ramani ❤

    • @dm3144
      @dm3144 6 месяцев назад

      @@tinagustafson3949 keep going so worth it🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋

    • @brandylee6030
      @brandylee6030 6 месяцев назад

      You all are empowering to me, I am thankful for
      Your comments here!!
      I’m Going on almost 4 years w a narc (and living together) and can no longer sustain.
      I have no job(I used to work for him) and I don’t have my own income (bc he swayed me I didn’t have to pay bills etc bc he would take care of me. He Gave me a credit card in my name to 1) help rebuild my credit and 2) to control me. If I disagree w him on anything and or set boundaries, he will turn it off and then I have no access to money).
      He had become a massive turnoff to me with his abusing ways. He points out my faults (which are more bc of him!! And the stress and put downs he does towards me!) to others in front of me in public. Can be friends, family or perfect strangers to me that I am meeting for 1st time. It’s so belittling and I told him he never has my back.
      He thinks otherwise. I have told him nicely and boldly/firmly that I am done with his act. And he knows I can’t leave rn due to the above mentioned (that, and I will be taking my 5 rescue cats with me-- so that is another deterrent in me getting away from him. Nobody lets you rent hardly anymore bc of pet(s).
      I have a good friend o could go live with but I really do not want to move away out of state away from my family and friends. And unfortunately I don’t have any options with any of them. The only one is out of state. I have 2 very dear friends in different states I can move to with my cats. But I don’t want to move. 😔😓
      Thank you for anyone reading this storybook long comment. Sometimes I just need to vent and am hoping others can be of help of support or can relate so I don’t feel or look crazy. 😔🙏🏽♥️🙏🏽

  • @firecat5338
    @firecat5338 Год назад +16

    "Charisma is like heavy perfume or cologne that someone wears when they don't take a shower." From my experience, this is very true. A lot of charismatic people either lack the proficiencies they claim to have or dehumanize those around them.

  • @beverlypawsat6529
    @beverlypawsat6529 Год назад +187

    My mother's funeral was just yesterday. Today my narcissistic husband 'devalued, and tore apart', all the arrangements my siblings and I had made. He criticized the funeral home, funeral director, cemetery, eulogy, graveside service, even the drive to the cemetery. OMG, No wonder I'm worn out. Thank you for helping me realize why I'm so exhausted. Ugghhh, lots of scary changes coming in my life, but Thank God for you Dr Ramani. I can see a brighter future ahead.

    • @wendysimpson6395
      @wendysimpson6395 Год назад +10

      Good luck.

    • @zibratesmom-giftsforlife8751
      @zibratesmom-giftsforlife8751 Год назад +17

      I’m so sorry about your mom and how your husband treated you. Revelation brings an amazing feeling of freedom. Praying for strength and grace for you to take the next steps needed.

    • @traceywilliams6225
      @traceywilliams6225 Год назад +4

      ​@Michelle well done to you

    • @ImNotaRussianBot
      @ImNotaRussianBot Год назад +11

      I think this is why I am so exhausted mentally even as a kid I was. The rants the rage. It's so, so, so crushing. Like, I literally have been squeezed dry.

    • @sarahh4394
      @sarahh4394 Год назад +16

      They just have to ruin everything. I remember when my dad had a massive heart attack and I didn't know if he was going to make it. He was in the hospital for a month, in very bad shape. I was crying constantly, heart broken, driving back and forth to the hospital every day while trying to take care of my son and my younger siblings. Found out my husband was having an affair with a married coworker the whole time I was going through all this. He blamed me and never showed remorse, though I did get a half assed apology once.
      Dad pulled through but we lost him five years later. It was two days before Christmas and my husbands entire family was coming to stay which is stressful enough. I asked him to cancel because I couldn't handle the stress of company on top of my grief. Well he acted like I was being over dramatic (invalidating, as usual) and insisted we carry on with plans as usual. So I was trying to grieve my father while shopping, cooking, cleaning etc.. I still can't believe I let him steal my time to grieve away from me. I can't wait to be free of this man. 🙏

  • @gotinogaden
    @gotinogaden Год назад +26

    1. No Contact
    2. No Contact
    3. No Contact
    4. No Contact
    5. No Contact

    • @buffster948
      @buffster948 Год назад +4

      @ThePSXHive You're right, but...What if you're trapped? Scenarios: What if you have children and nowhere to go? What if you might lose your children to the narcissist, and you want to protect them? What if you ARE the child, with no extended family? What if the elderly parent controls all the finances of the family and has already 'pre-conditioned' the extended family to be flying monkeys, if ever needed?
      I realise No Contact is the best method, but, it's not always easy to for people to escape.

    • @gotinogaden
      @gotinogaden Год назад +3

      @@buffster948 I get it. Stuff happens. You can get stuck. My point(s) pertain to the best method. I've said nothing about any situation in particular. For example, the fact that some people have to (for various reasons) drive anything other than Bugatti doesn't change the fact of Bugatti being one of the best brands of cars out there. Just an example, hope you get my point. Btw, I sort of escaped from the situation of "elderly parent controls all the finances of the family and has already 'pre-conditioned' the extended family to be flying monkeys, if ever needed?". No easy feat, as I had to drop out of college in order to maintain a stable employment that would allow me to maintain freedom from parental expectations.
      It's not going to be easy or happen for everyone, but if they do find an opening... they should go for it.

    • @McSpaddenator
      @McSpaddenator Год назад +2

      @@buffster948 it's not easy to get out. I had a narcissist sibling and my mother died and my father is 78. I go back and forth on taking care of him, and how I should have been protected.

    • @buffster948
      @buffster948 Год назад +1

      @@gotinogaden Thanks for the thoughtful and heartfelt response. I'll reflect on your insights. Much appreciated.

    • @buffster948
      @buffster948 Год назад +1

      @@McSpaddenator The 'see-saw' of narcissistic abuse...I see people flipping between love and hate..."Oh, he's/she's awful to me, but, I would feel so guilty not to help."...it's not real love, or real hate, I think. It's just the turbulence of the dynamic in these types of relationship...that's my theory, anyway.

  • @Kaypoo3947
    @Kaypoo3947 Год назад +51

    Yes, I had that euphoric recall a lot. I would forget the abuse at times and get caught up in the trauma and love bombing. Thank God I am not with the narc it has been 4 years. I think about him off and on, but not as much anymore, which just means that I am healing. I give all praises to God for delivering me and setting me free from narcissistic abuse 🙏🏽 🙌🏽

    • @candyhumpf6267
      @candyhumpf6267 9 месяцев назад +2

      Interesting to see you say “ I forgot the abuse at times.. got caught up ..” I feel the same. Like living in a fog. How did you quit?

    • @princepesa
      @princepesa 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@candyhumpf6267 you have to pair the good memories with the bad. That's what I read in a book. It's called Never go Back by Henry cloud

    • @nikkibumbum7316
      @nikkibumbum7316 5 месяцев назад

      @@candyhumpf6267 Stay strong in your boundaries around that person, even if you forget why you set them

    • @Stubbornclarity
      @Stubbornclarity 2 месяца назад

      Please pray for me. I have two and am not free yet. It's been beyond difficult. Need protection and ppl on my side.

  • @Kyg1kek2
    @Kyg1kek2 3 месяца назад +4

    having a strong sense of self worth and value separate from the narcissist is a huge weapon

  • @peacerun
    @peacerun Год назад +425

    Strategies that are helping me get stronger: Listening to Dr Ramani at least once a day (so I know Im not crazy). Therapy every 2 weeks with an outstanding therapist. Reading about narcissism particularly Dr. Ramani’s new book and books on maternal narcissism. Journaling daily. Occasionally watching mindless hallmark movies to let my mind rest. Having TRUE friends who care and have similar experiences. Distancing from the flying monkeys, enablers, and the narcissists using gray rock and soul distancing (still a work in progress). When I feel sad about it I let myself cry and hug my dog. I remind myself that oddly some of the severe narcissist boyfriend stuff had a positive side because it helped open my eyes to a lifetime of narcissism and become SMART about it all and stronger (being grateful for the bad stuff). Distancing myself from the waves of feelings and taking a perspective that lets me not be engulfed in it but still aware and honoring it. Also I’m not giving up hope that now that I know not to fall for those dazzling charming men that treat me like a queen until I’m snared - now I can find a normal person and actuallly have a healthy boring relationship with a regular guy. All this and I”m 67 years old - it took me a while. Smile😊

    • @kf4722
      @kf4722 Год назад +14

      I volunteer every Sunday morning for a few hours. It is very healing .

    • @jessicajoyhardee6668
      @jessicajoyhardee6668 Год назад +16

      YES, to all of this! You have such a great capacity to love and be loved! I am excited about your journey! @peacerun

    • @svpann12
      @svpann12 Год назад +6

      Omg I hear you

    • @donttreadonme2
      @donttreadonme2 Год назад +20

      May I find your strength to leave.... I'm happy for you. I'm 54 and have been with this man for 28 years. I like my alone time, but not enough to be alone 24/7. I'm afraid I'm to old to be desired by anyone else. You're 67, and you did it:) I love your strength... thank you.

    • @evaaro1603
      @evaaro1603 Год назад +2

      I also listen to Narcdaily on RUclips...

  • @deadroomeyes8965
    @deadroomeyes8965 Год назад +82

    Too tired tonight. I just want to say to those who are hurting. It gets better. It really really does. Even for you it will. You aren’t a special case with a special situation where you are doomed to feel this way forever. If you put the work in, you will see the results. Study study study, and then emotionally integrate what youve learned. Its all in you. Always was always has been and always will be. They can never take that from you.

  • @KB-ih5gf
    @KB-ih5gf Год назад +20

    My grief doesn’t manifest so much during movies but in bitter sweet moments with my adult daughter’s young family. I am so happy for her because she has broken the cycle of choosing narcissistic partners in our family - my mom, her dad, my most recent ex, my sister - she has got it right. She has a wonderful caring husband and two sweet little boys. She has a successful career and with counselling she has risen above her dysfunctional family of origin. It’s the most amazing success story (and she dealt with a lot of stuff, she didn’t get away Scott free - by the time she was six she no longer had a dad in her life) and I see her life and weep for what I never had. But I’m blessed to have a second chance as a grandma to her sons ❤

  • @tamradasilva2102
    @tamradasilva2102 7 месяцев назад +19

    Thank you Dr. Ramani for these videos. 3-4 days ago I left my narcissist. I wouldn’t have been able to do it without the information from your videos which has given me the courage and confidence I needed. The heart break is very real and would be worse if I believed the toxic person’s opinions about me. I will continue to watch your videos to remind myself that I never deserved the hurtful rhetoric and threats that kept my self from being me and kept me from focusing on what’s important and good for me. I appreciate you.

  • @marymcceney1
    @marymcceney1 Год назад +240

    My dad taught me when someone is toxic in your life, recognize it, don’t blame yourself and ask yourself “is this individual giving me value?” If the answer is no, walk away as quietly as you can. It’s hard but it’s the right move.
    What’s hard is when someone is intellectual, has surface kindness but rotten at the core. Actions speak volumes. Love you Dr. R! ❤

    • @user-qt9lw1hk8g
      @user-qt9lw1hk8g Год назад +2

      Wow what a comment u must be a real winner in life

    • @user-qt9lw1hk8g
      @user-qt9lw1hk8g Год назад +2

      And a very good person

    • @leonab545
      @leonab545 Год назад +15

      Surface kindness : I call it fake nice. They pretend to be kind to hook you in, feel guilty if you don’t forgive them their horrific actions - because they seem pleasant for some moments in between … and you wish to see more of the ‘smiles’ and avoid their naked faces without the facade.

    • @heathercooper2958
      @heathercooper2958 Год назад +10

      Your dad is a smart man. Thank you for sharing

    • @NHorsford
      @NHorsford Год назад +5

      Wow, what a wise father you have! My father's behaviour when I was younger contributed to me accepting many things that my narc husband did. As I became more aware of narcissistic abuse I started to see the connection. I have now started to teach my teenage son about toxic relationships and having value for himself. I feel like I must make him wiser.

  • @flightydancer
    @flightydancer Год назад +61

    Grieving the loss of what/who you believed in is one of the most heartbreaking feeling...

    • @beeman7711
      @beeman7711 8 месяцев назад +4

      Yes, it certainly is, it took me close to a year☹

    • @cindybates6633
      @cindybates6633 4 месяца назад

      It is heartbreaking. Lost hope..but…you are loved!!! And lovable!

    • @daniellucas6831
      @daniellucas6831 2 месяца назад

      Absolutely. I'm grieving.

  • @josiahlewis5838
    @josiahlewis5838 Год назад +14

    For me, living with a narcissist parent, trying to form an identity of my own away from them is the main way I release myself from them. Finding supportive friends has been huge as well, but the largest one is standing in my own feelings no matter how much the narcissist yells at me or anyone looks down on me. Someone once said, My self worth is non-negotiable, in this life there is no ultimate judge so what my mom tells me has no weight on who I am. ( I still cry and mourn at how much life I've lost sometimes but that's ok too)

  • @plumduff3303
    @plumduff3303 3 месяца назад +4

    My sister mum and dad all narcissists these films saved my life.

  • @smlnsgd4u
    @smlnsgd4u Год назад +333

    Just did this recently! So much healing right now!!! 64 days no contact and this past week I see the light! Anyone going through this, YOU are worth it! Love yourself MORE! YOU GOT THIS!!! 🥰

    • @smlnsgd4u
      @smlnsgd4u 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@natemoncur9333 You got this! 🥰

    • @cherylbear15
      @cherylbear15 8 месяцев назад +13

      I’m in my 2nd week from leaving my husband after 48 years of marriage.
      I didn’t know he was a narcissist I just lived it.

    • @yaritzaurbina6835
      @yaritzaurbina6835 6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you!

    • @gailgamble6558
      @gailgamble6558 5 месяцев назад

      Yep. My husband is taking care of his mom. He is trying to get me to take care of her. I won't. He wouldn't let me see my friends and family in my home town. Seeing him 3 hours a week is more than enough.

    • @AAXS-op1vo
      @AAXS-op1vo 4 месяца назад

      Keep up the press. No contact is a POWERFUL weapon AND shield for you.
      Take it step by step and move ALL of your focus and energy to self-healing and growth.
      I have gotten more positive things done in the last five years than I did during the 25 years of marriage. That is because I am no longer using my energy for supporting and/or managing all the drama and CHAOS involved in trying to plan and partner with a narc. It cannot be done.
      The most you can do is poorly manage THEM and neglect Yourself because all your energy is getting sucked up with impossible partner management! It is total and useless chaos.
      You will be AMAZED at how your life will upgrade once you get that CHAOS OUT of your orbit.
      Stay the course, do NOT retreat or look back!

  • @melaniecopeland5131
    @melaniecopeland5131 Год назад +97

    I found myself crying in Walgreens while picking out a birthday card for a family member. Reading through all the loving sentiments, I realized I will never have that with my narcissistic husband who I recently separated from. The grief is heavy. 😢

    • @determined5987
      @determined5987 Год назад +10

      It really is but keep going… I’m on day two

    • @NikkiBNice
      @NikkiBNice Год назад +9

      Omg same with me. I always found myself picking cards that were sort of plain and writing messages that were about the ups and downs, etc. so sad!

    • @donttreadonme2
      @donttreadonme2 11 месяцев назад +8

      I'm so afraid of the grief you're speaking of. That's why I'm still here. Isn't the reality though, that I'm already grieving, with the person right there in front of me? I know what I NEED to do... ita just a matter of doing it. Your story gives me strength. Bless you and stay strong!

    • @lcflngn
      @lcflngn 11 месяцев назад +6

      More generic cards are needed! Usually find one “Happy Mothers Day” That really all I want.

    • @classxptube
      @classxptube 9 месяцев назад +6

      I can relate to the card selection dilemna!!

  • @deepderp9957
    @deepderp9957 11 месяцев назад +18

    Being as physically fit and healthy is a good way to deal with these relationships. I’ve been dealing with health issues for a long time now and I’ve seen particular relationships shift in relation to what I thought they were, and has made me question and highlight certain narcissistic traits in a few people close to me (turns out when you don’t have energy to give people attention you get to see what that friendship is really about). Some days I feel a bit defeated and stressed (one on particular is a work relationship). One day last week I felt so low and powerless and anxious. The next day I felt better (I offloaded a lot to my therapist that night and got a much needed good nights sleep). My point being that your mood and energy levels play into how you see these relationships and how much in control of yourself, your thoughts, you are. It’s so important. Easy to let self care slide if you’re overwhelmed. Get active and look after yourself, as a priority.

  • @livinggood6876
    @livinggood6876 7 месяцев назад +11

    I found some narcissist abuse survivor support groups on the meet up and met some very interesting and supportive people. Some were even further along in their healing journey. I reconnect with them every couple of weeks, and we discuss specific topics and patterns. We break it down like you do. It forces me to understand this narcissism in a structured format and help myself rather than ruminate.

    • @carolinechebet9088
      @carolinechebet9088 3 месяца назад

      Hello,can you give me a shoulder to lean on,I need someone who can guide me break this bond

    • @jenniferg6818
      @jenniferg6818 3 месяца назад

      Good for you. Was the meet up narc survivors or something like that?

  • @terrirobson9043
    @terrirobson9043 Год назад +190

    I cry at simple things like eye contact and a hand touch, little meaningful gestures between two people (character roles) who love each other , regardless of the reason, when that chemistry is so real that I can feel it~~see it. It hits me hard. Thank you Dr. Ramani. This video is so valuable to healing. I am 66 and I am walking through this kind of grief holding onto your teachings and your sharing ❣️

    • @drn2359
      @drn2359 Год назад +6

      That’s totally me!

    • @dianezielinski1735
      @dianezielinski1735 Год назад +9

      64 here & trying to figure all deez crazy narcs out!!! Should cut em all out at 1st offense!!

    • @carolgonzales4262
      @carolgonzales4262 Год назад +18

      Yes. I watched Where the crawdads sing. Loved it! Made me yearn for a person that could really love me. I'm 65...spent my whole life with narcissist. 6 yrs free now, and not interested in any relationships at all. I'm happy by myself. I regret putting my son through a lifetime of narc abuse. He's strong though and knows his father is not capable if love or kindness.

    • @racheljensen938
      @racheljensen938 Год назад +4

      I have the same feelings come up when it comes to making eye contact, or touching another's hand. Those are such intimate moments to me, and make me very uneasy when I am pushed to move faster in a relatively then I like.

    • @zibratesmom-giftsforlife8751
      @zibratesmom-giftsforlife8751 Год назад +4

      This is where I am right now. Been crying a lot lately, getting emotional, tearing up - at the most random things - I’m finally letting my heart soften again from being so hardened and angry - now I’m just an emotional mess still living with him - can’t decide - do I want to live like this for another 20-30 yrs? But feeling the emotions is good and let’s me know I’m healing regardless of daily contact with him. Counseling is helping and adult children support.

  • @sunnyadams5842
    @sunnyadams5842 Год назад +52

    The Moment I suddenly realised, 'Why would I WANT to be friends with someone who treated me like that!!'...it ALL STARTED COMING CLEAR!

    • @coyote5735
      @coyote5735 Год назад +10

      I had the same epiphany I asked myself can I deal with this person's behaviour for the next 20-30yrs the answer was no, and that's when the worm turned.

    • @SophieBird07
      @SophieBird07 Год назад +5

      Right! It’s always the most minimal bang for the buck (as the saying goes). I simply can’t afford him on any level!

    • @samwebb1014
      @samwebb1014 Год назад +5

      Yes 🙌🏻 I asked myself this. Then I realised, with help from a counsellor that it’s not really about them. It was about me and my fear that I would be alone and not able to form new (healthy) relationships. This past year I have grown and I have cut them off and blocked them on everything. I finally realise I deserve better

  • @samanthadaroga4811
    @samanthadaroga4811 11 месяцев назад +7

    A narcissist repellant for me is focusing on being grateful for the simple blessings in life - whatever that maybe. Example - solving a problem at work, getting up 1 hr earlier, committing to working out and actually sticking to it. Basically committing to yourself. So I invented this concept for myself called Positive Distractive Activity (PDA)
    As I get engage in such activity over time, I am learning to recondition my thought-flow and soon enough I feel really good. I love making small achievements daily because it gives you motivation for tomorrow.

  • @MargaretJEllis
    @MargaretJEllis Год назад +11

    Well, my father was a narcissist. Once I got married he lifted most of the crazy treatment. Unfortunately, yet not surprising now, he had narcissistic behaviors/characteristics. Wish I had known empaths are magnets For narcissists. Now, my sister is worse than they were. Thank you Dr. Ramani. You're TEACHING ME HOW TO SURVIVE !

    • @MargaretJEllis
      @MargaretJEllis 3 месяца назад

      I'm in the same situation.
      Yet, dad in long term care now & sis has purse stings/ POA/executor.

  • @angelamossucco2190
    @angelamossucco2190 Год назад +103

    ❤Being smart is not a virtue. Nor is charisma. Nor is wealth. Nor fame. Soooo true. Virtue is in the *authenticity and decency* of the minutia of every daily interaction.

    • @heart3752
      @heart3752 Год назад +6

      My husband is 100 % a Narcissist, one thing that I actually dislike is when he Maliciously tries to make me look bad and then he just doesn’t speak to me for long periods of time then he starts talking again out of frustration because he thinks I’m not going to ignore him. I actually Now prefer him not to talk to me because it’s easier for my mental health as it’s short lived.

    • @Greenawareness188
      @Greenawareness188 Год назад

      Very Wise !

    • @donmaharaj3258
      @donmaharaj3258 11 месяцев назад

      My story exactly, sending you much love and strength

  • @rachelshep8497
    @rachelshep8497 Год назад +142

    Videos like this are so validating. I cry the most when I feel validated. Allowing myself to feel the grief.

  • @AbnerChamate
    @AbnerChamate 9 месяцев назад +5

    I was almost a soul for sale. I am now a soul on itself. Thank you

  • @gracielaloera3031
    @gracielaloera3031 8 месяцев назад +5

    Dr Ramani, you are the first professional that calls out those who use their education and success to expect people to see them as kind, and that feel entitled ... that I know of.

  • @coyote5735
    @coyote5735 Год назад +63

    I was with a woman for 30 yrs and I always knew there was something really wrong with my partner, I learned what a narcissist was, and then I realised that described my wife; gaslighting, and compulsive lying; she would deny reality she would twist events making me feel I was losing the plot, she isolated me from my friends and I let her, but thankfully I didn't lose them completely. I gave her supply because I was too easygoing until eventually, I started to question my reality, that's when it started to fall apart, she left when I said no more, she had an affair and left, and now I'm dealing with the divorce. My biggest regret is all those lost years and opportunities to grow as a person and succeed.

    • @JaneDoe-pr1bl
      @JaneDoe-pr1bl Год назад +7

      Story sounds so familiar.

    • @CJ-hz1uj
      @CJ-hz1uj Год назад +9

      And yet you have grown as a person. That’s seems like some success right there. Kind of know what you mean though.

    • @sandramunoz6300
      @sandramunoz6300 Год назад +6

      You have grown and gave yourself a new chance in life, hugs

    • @sandracaezza7234
      @sandracaezza7234 Год назад +3

      Our stories are so similar. For all of us they find new supply. Trauma based therapy really helps.
      Rumi : the wounds are where our new light enters. It’s true.

    • @mandiesballoons6421
      @mandiesballoons6421 Год назад

      I’m so happy 😊

  • @TheGeekMonster
    @TheGeekMonster Год назад +61

    I love listening to Dr. Ramani. Her voice is so calming. She has such a thoughtful and intelligent way of communicating. She speaks slowly and eloquently. Most of all, she's *on point* about these unhealthy relationships. So worth listening to.

  • @mdbleecorporan3624
    @mdbleecorporan3624 11 месяцев назад +6

    Healing is a process and I'm learning to renew my mind. No more feeling guilty-self-blame- failure all at the same time.
    I realize how overwhelmed and unnerved I felt. Now I can breathe, walk freely and learn who I am. I'm discovering ME at 53 years young.
    Jesus Christ is a living healing loving God and he saved my life. I thank him each day for delivering me from the evil that was hiding inside my husband. It's been 9 months since he was arrested for aggravated assault on me. I'm still seeing a Neurologist and more physical therapy. My eye sight is getting better.
    Dr. Ramani videos helped me move out of the brain fog and left the state of Georgia!!! I'm looking at farmland walking around the rolling hills of Kansas. This channel and Jesus Christ himself have helped me move forward to a new beginning.

  • @Rickettsia505
    @Rickettsia505 Год назад +7

    Trauma bonding and love bombing were the signature moves of my ex. Grief, especially feeling that I failed In my marriage, was very hard. I used a lot of her techniques to help me recover. I'm proud that my daughters have healthy relationships.

  • @mikefragomeni8908
    @mikefragomeni8908 Год назад +82

    Hi I’m Mike I’m a new survivor of a narcissistic abusive relationship. I really didn’t understand what I was in until I started watching your videos and I just wanted to say thank you. I’ve just began the grieving process I’m 18 days in. Thank you for educating me and empowering me and giving me the strength courage so I can move forward. Knowing is half the battle. I couldn’t ever put my finger on why the person acted the way they did but now I know exactly why they acted the way they did and it’s helped me move on. Thank you again.

    • @sandramunoz6300
      @sandramunoz6300 Год назад +6

      Hugs, Dr Sam Vaknin Is also a great reference ⭐ he has great videos for víctims in RUclips

    • @sandramunoz6300
      @sandramunoz6300 Год назад +6

      You seem like a great and sweet man, there is much life ahead still without the stress they cause. Their mental illness is not your fault, they act the same way with everyone.

    • @1948rambo
      @1948rambo Год назад +7

      Hang in there. It’s tough I know but you’re worth it!!! You got captured / chosen because you were good! You definitely deserve better! ❤

    • @mg79277
      @mg79277 9 месяцев назад +2

      I’ve watched dr Sam Vaknin and yes he is also very good but in the end I personally relate more to dr ramani for her empathy and kindness but definitely yes he is a self proclaimed narc and informative.

    • @lynnbonney8172
      @lynnbonney8172 9 месяцев назад +3

      I’m thirty days in from being discarded by my ex narcissist. I am grieving being a partner to someone but just realized I don’t miss him . He was so empty inside and so critical of others . He abandoned me in Mexico while in the hospital a
      Nd pouted that I ruined the vacation .
      I’m in therapy and am starting to understand who he was or wanted people to believe .
      Thank you all for being out there . I will make it through with the help of friends family and therapy

  • @susielee8101
    @susielee8101 Год назад +60

    What helped me to be free from my narcissist in the last three years was getting back my self respect and remembering I’m a child of God and I deserve to have a good man ! Also I finally believed I’m good enough on my own without him. Years later when I looked back he isn’t that big a deal after all. I am confident I can do better. Believing in myself gave me the power to stay away from the toxic type of guys.

    • @romute1123
      @romute1123 Год назад +6

      Absolutely relate. Somehow they make you believe that they are “ a catch” and when you eventually unpack the picture is very different. It’s surreal how people can manipulate your thoughts and beliefs

    • @user-mf1kv4lk2m
      @user-mf1kv4lk2m 24 дня назад

      My ex convinced me I was the problem even though he cheated, lied, used manipulation and was awful to me in general. I went to rehab and met a counselor that from our first session understood me and got through to me that I mattered. Told me how loving, brave, and caring I am. I listened to everything he was telling me and really took it in. Nothing was keeping me from getting well and succeeding except for my own lack of trust in myself. Last 4 years I've been listening to Dr. Ramani as well as doing my talk therapy and healing and growing. I left my ex 9 months ago and it was painful and a relief. I told myself and others I would be taking a year to heal n improve from that relationship and I'm so grateful to my fellow empathic humans ❤ ill be going back to school bc I want to help others especially the women to learn all I have about loving yourself first!!

  • @HalfGodHalfDevil2018
    @HalfGodHalfDevil2018 Год назад +18

    Once again Dr Ramani is saving my soul. I've said it once and I'll say it again. She deserves a Nobel Peace Prize!
    She not only helps me regarding my own life experience and things I'm trying to heal from, but also helps the clients I see as a therapeutic counsellor.
    I am grateful for her sharing her expertise so I can learn and add to my knowledge of narcissism and trauma. What an amazing knowledgeable woman.

  • @conniedonner
    @conniedonner Год назад +19

    thank you Dr Ramani, this piece on grief resonates with me soooo much. It's not only the loss of the family member but your whole loss of your emotional investment, what you had hoped for and the family that you wished you had or had been able to create with others in your family. It's incredibly painful and even more painful and sustained than what i felt when my parents passed away. Not having others understand makes it even harder. I feel like you are speaking directly to me on this. I'm really appreciative of this session and all of your sessions.

  • @youtubelover381
    @youtubelover381 Год назад +27

    Not a movie but a beautiful moment I witnessed between a father and his young daughter of about 12 years old walking down the street yesterday. The daughter stood there in her flowy skirt and the father stood with his hand out hailing a cab looking at his daughter with a proud and empathetic smile. The daughter was just taking in the world and enjoying this moment with the protection and love of her father close by. I started crying.

  • @tinaralls3936
    @tinaralls3936 Год назад +28

    One of the last scenes in Robin Williams's movie What Dreams May Come: he is losing his wife and he gives her a list of all of the things he has loved about her throughout their lives, and apologizes for every time he failed her in their marriage. It is so real and I think it hits me because he really sees her and loves her for who she is.

  • @jesusc2403
    @jesusc2403 10 месяцев назад +2

    Knowledge is one of the best tools against a narcissist.

  • @divinecreation1981
    @divinecreation1981 Год назад +10

    The moment I decided to pour into myself and loving myself, that became the moment when I started to heal and see clearly! Over 22 years of abuse and making me question my own reality. I mean hiding things from me and making me think I moved it! I remember when I felt myself getting stronger, and it's like he sensed it and came to reel me back in! So now that I'm strong enough thanks to the Universe and meditation, loving myself and healing my inner child, I'm filing my divorce! So please stay encouraged and stay strong!❤

    • @dm3144
      @dm3144 Год назад +2

      You go, girl! Be proud of yourself.
      You deserve it!
      🦋SURVIVOR 💜🦋

    • @divinecreation1981
      @divinecreation1981 Год назад +2

      @@dm3144 Thank you so much! I'm so proud of myself! It took so long, but I know the Universe was given me strength and courage. Blessings to you ❤️✨🙏🏽

  • @angrynoodletwentyfive6463
    @angrynoodletwentyfive6463 Год назад +24

    I'd say for the whole "watch out for charismatic people" there is an important caveat that you have to watch out for superficial charisma and not necessarily charisma itself. I know a lot of people who can absolutely take hold of a room who are wonderful caring people who are just very engaging and high energy, but with them it is not in this showy "look at me, look how great i am" way that you see in narcissists it is just a genuine love for life and being around and interacting with peoplethese types of people also are usually perfectly fine with being overshadowed because attention isn't necessarily something they are after, it is more of a natural byproduct of their personality.

    • @daynapeterson9033
      @daynapeterson9033 Год назад +4

      Charismatic people often make me cringe. Almost like "what do you want"? Worked with a lady who would come to my desk and lay on the compliments, then ask me to do this and that for her. Now, when I get compliments I always expect a request behind them.

  • @sasto65
    @sasto65 Год назад +22

    When I hear the words spoken to me, "You're the only one who understands" or, "You're the only one I can talk to," it's a big red flag that I'm about to be held responsible, and stuck to someone else's issues. It's always dishonest, even when the person talking believes it. No one person can be everything another needs. I certainly can't. They use that need to isolate you, keep you on call and away from your support system. They'll praise you for harming yourself in this way. I have to remind myself in these, "Only one" situations (Lies) that if I died tomorrow, the world would not end, and the narcissist would get someone else to manipulate. I ain't that important. So when I hear, "You're the only one I can depend on" or "The only one who can cook this entire meal," or "The only one who can ...." I know I'm being manipulated and it's time for me to make an exit. As you said, "No," is a complete sentence."

  • @allisoncrandall1184
    @allisoncrandall1184 11 месяцев назад +3

    I wasted eight years before the light finally came on. I left in 2020 and went back after a year, foolishly, i know now. Spent two more years in misery.... I left again, recently, this time for good, and this idea of grief over it is real. Im so angry at myself for staying so long, but I feel surprisingly sad. It's definitely a process that I must be in the middle of. You are helping me. Thank you.

  • @latinalife2458
    @latinalife2458 Год назад +2

    When I finally I said to myself I had enough.
    I told a councilor am tired of lying to myself that am ok that things will get better

  • @mattandersen8749
    @mattandersen8749 Год назад +182

    I'm a 52-year-old man and a 20-year marriage with 16 and 17 year old children. I understand through your videos what is going on and why I have been so confused and suffering so much at trying to make it work. I have an example for every single term that you have talked about in your glossary, dozens for most of them. This video about grief is the hardest hitting. I know I'm going to leave. I have already begun grieving the relationship and knew that I was doing so on a certain day in the gym when I was working out. I tried to put on cheerful songs that I had always liked in the past. Then they start coming up automatically. The song Big Girls Don't Cry by Fergie came up and started playing. It was very cheerful at the beginning but I realized it was about people separating. And that wasn't too bad. At a certain point in the song, it gets to where she is singing about childhood on the playground. At this point she talked about the boy holding her hand. It was so idyllic. I realized that I had such hopes for the relationship with my narcissist when it started and for years it did seem to go amazingly. I realized that was gone. Right on the gym floor I was undone. I was crying and I had to leave. I knew many things in just a moment. I knew I would be destroyed if I stayed. I knew that the entirety of it was lost. Your video is helping me so much. You have saved me. We have six other grown children that are out of the house who have progressively become estranged from their mom and tried so many times to reconnect with her. Until now, none of us have known the pathology, I guess you could call it. Perhaps you will save us all. I'll never stop listening. Thank you.

    • @CedroneTravels
      @CedroneTravels 8 месяцев назад +8

      So sorry you went through that. Powerful story. I am struggling so badly right now and scared to death to leave.

    • @Ray-fx2np
      @Ray-fx2np 7 месяцев назад +2

      I’m scared to leave too..we have a son with emotional needs and I fear the breakup will harm him.

    • @lialenore2997
      @lialenore2997 6 месяцев назад

      6:21 yup Gemini

    • @lialenore2997
      @lialenore2997 6 месяцев назад +3

      It's awful my husband has his hands on my 2 oldest... It's breaking my heart 😢

    • @lilyr6755
      @lilyr6755 6 месяцев назад +1

      Hug. I don't even listen to my face 80's etc music. & Big girls don't cry yeah was from old group, but idk if I'm the modern newer version. I had to check to recall. That is one thing out of are a few forgotten, but I never forget the evil or things said or done or not done to me.

  • @britta3733
    @britta3733 Год назад +34

    While my therapist recognized the trauma, she hadn't worked with narcissism. 8 months later, she thanked me for all she learned working with me. She listened. She did call in a colleague to help her with my case, but i would also send my therapist your videos to help explain what I was experiencing, and for her to understand where I was at in certain points of the healing process (i.e., your videos on forgiveness). I'm 1.5 years out. Still ruminating, still grieving, but grateful for my new life. TY Dr. Ramani. ❤️

  • @TheFieldGuide1
    @TheFieldGuide1 6 месяцев назад +7

    This popped up at the right time. Very weepy lately and it occurred to me it's grief. It sucks but will pass. Thanks for explaining all of it! ❤

  • @artisanhillfarm5053
    @artisanhillfarm5053 Год назад +3

    I was privileged to have a therapist diagnose my mother without mother’s knowledge. This therapist knew NPD very well and suggested I ask my mother to come so she could “help the therapist” with my treatment. (Mother was iffy about having a flawed kid in therapy to begin with, but once she told herself that I discuss my father in those sessions, she leaped into a hyper vigilant “helper” and dressed up, diamonds, full face of makeup. You’d have thought they were filming! (Of course… we were in Beverly Hills, so you never know!) The performance was jaw-dropping, the revision of history and blah blah blah… and the following week when I went to my session alone, my therapist greeted me at the door with a giant hug and gave a very certain diagnosis from which we worked on my recovery. That was in 2008. But none before that were very dialed in. Not in NY. Maybe LA is the incubator of Narcissism! ThNk you for the work you do. Recovery is never “finished.” At times when I struggle, your videos give me great soothing.

  • @landunlocked2423
    @landunlocked2423 Год назад +27

    Your work is saving the world

  • @Kat-mq4rf
    @Kat-mq4rf Год назад +30

    Once I misplaced my wallet on the street when my daughter was a baby. I went into total panic, mostly over the sh*t storm that awaited from my narcissist husband. I returned to a shop where I found my wallet, it was given to me by the shop keeper, a very kind man who insisted that I, the new mother I was, sat and drank a glass of water to recover from the scare. This small act of kindness - of humanity, made me cry. It still makes my cry to this day. Many years later this video had made me understand it's significance and why it affects me so much and vow to give myself space to grieve. Thank you for this amazing content.

    • @katherinekelly5380
      @katherinekelly5380 Год назад +2

      That’s telling - I hope you are in a position where ‘how is he going to take it?’ Is no longer the first thing you think of when something happens 🤗

    • @Kat-mq4rf
      @Kat-mq4rf Год назад +1

      @@katherinekelly5380 Thanks you so much for your week-wishes. I'm indeed in a better place now where what he's going to think is not always my first concern. But it is many years of conditioning, decades, even, raised in a very dysfunctional family, and it is also part of my healing path to be patient with myself and not beat myself up for those times I still revert to my old ways

    • @katherinekelly5380
      @katherinekelly5380 Год назад +2

      @@Kat-mq4rf It is so important to be kind to yourself - I have a New Year Resolution that I keep renewing which is to treat myself with same kindness and patience I would show to someone else - it has really helped me silence the negative self talk in my head - I’m glad you are in a better place now - we are all just works in progress 🤗

    • @Kat-mq4rf
      @Kat-mq4rf 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@katherinekelly5380 That's beautiful!

  • @kathiejl1
    @kathiejl1 Год назад +4

    There seems to be many of us in our 60s here.
    Thank you Dr Ramani for saying that I am grieving the life I thought I was going to have. Not the one I had.
    This was my second marriage and I could never put my finger on what was wrong. I just knew I cried a lot and prayed for it to be different. I couldn’t figure out when we had been so happy and had fun when we first met what had gone wrong after we got married. I am a strong woman and he said he liked that. But it seems that that was a lie. Our relationship was always a competition. I should’ve known better when he had such awful things to say about his first ex-wife from 20 years prior. And every girlfriend he had since. I don’t know why I thought I was going to be different. The one to love him enough. The one to understand his trauma from the past.
    So after 12 years when he said we needed to end this, I simply said, if that is what you want. I had had enough and was emotionally exhausted.

  • @Cleomauser
    @Cleomauser 8 месяцев назад +2

    Look who does s th for you when you are in need and remember them and help when they are in need helps building positive relationships

  • @cindyflorez4422
    @cindyflorez4422 Год назад +115

    Yes, I have been crying watching Christmas movies. Not all but a few of them. It feels like I am letting something out. The narcissist in my life could ruin every holiday, birthday. He was just negative about everything. I am On my way to healing, feeling good! Thank you for all you do Dr Ramani!

    • @tiffcat1100
      @tiffcat1100 Год назад +1

      ‘November Christmas’ is lovely ❤

    • @sandramunoz6300
      @sandramunoz6300 Год назад +3

      Yes they aré super negative, its draining!

    • @rasdpaulo1
      @rasdpaulo1 Год назад +2

      It's been a year since I realised I was married to one after18 years.soo draining but I feel enlightened.

  • @UrbanxArtistry
    @UrbanxArtistry Год назад +56

    YOU ARE GOD SENT !!!!!! I love you and thank you for being apart of my healing journey

  • @skybluegarza2353
    @skybluegarza2353 5 месяцев назад +1

    I cried when I watched the. scene of Encanto movie where the main character told her grandma 'no matter what I do is never going to ve enough for you' I felt like that many times with my mom.

  • @velvetfox11111
    @velvetfox11111 Год назад +2

    My latest very toxic relationship with a covert narcissist only lasted 5 months because he was telling a lot of lies that didn't add up. I became suspicious after 5 months, but also completely miserable, loosing myself slowly, doubting my judgement, becoming addicted to him because of the games he played. At a point I said that I don't like the person I'm becoming next to him. One day I saw a short clip about narcissism. Then I started looking for more information and I was shocked to understand that I was raised by two narcissist parents, having a chain of relationships with narcissist friends and partners...basically my entire life I was drawn to them and surrounded by them. And I didn't know. I wasn't aware. I just suffered a lot and kept being kind and patient with people who kept using me and discarding me and coming back. I learned to forget and forgive. I told myself that people struggle with mental health and daily life, no one had really bad intentions. But it seems that I was just making up stories to excuse their behavior. My whole life. While I became less and less confident, more introverted, alone, sad, sometimes depressed, anxious, silent...But I kept hoping that one day, someone will see me, someone will care about me and will love me. I just had to continue to be kind and loving and supportive. So, as I said, the day I connected the dots and figured it out, I was shocked. My entire reality crumbled, my entire life felt like a lie. It was hard and it still is hard. I had to learn what healthy boundaries are and how to protect myself. But I became more and more alone as I distanced myself from all the people who were mistreating me. At first I tried setting boudaries but most of them became angry and judgy, they tried to gaslight me and called me overly sensitive. That's when I became sure. How someone reacts to your boundaries it's very relevant. I also reduced contact with my mother. At the moment, the only person who I only talk to is my sister although she is my mother's enabler. It's hard...Sometimes I 'm thinking about contacting some of them and reconnect. But I can't. I can't do it just to be used and discarded again and again. I need human contact but I don't trust people anymore...I have no idea what the future holds for me. I'm affraid of meeting narcissists again and not being able to see it from the get going.

    • @JoyOkoroN
      @JoyOkoroN 6 месяцев назад

      Yes, yes, yes, all of this. I truly believed that most people are good or just need to learn differently and then they can be good. I feel like my entire understanding of the world crumbled when I realized that I have been living in a bubble of my own making and that many/most people are actually terrible by choice

    • @velvetfox11111
      @velvetfox11111 6 месяцев назад

      @@JoyOkoroN I'm sorry that you had to go through all that as well. There is hope. Within the last 6 months I learned how to identify narcissists and to stay away from them. I became better at setting healthy boundaries and saying no. Life has brought 3 good people in my life, which are also empaths and helped me a lot through the painful process of losing my 14 yr old dog who has been the only loyal and loving being in my life. I'm not alone anymore and I have genuine people who I can rely on close to me. I guess that when we eliminate narcs from our lives we make space for healthier relationships. Sending my positive thoughts to you.

  • @WaterNymphie
    @WaterNymphie Год назад +55

    This is simply what's worked for me personally: completely internalize your self worth.
    Keep it secret and safe, like treasure, near any narcissists and other high-tension people. Save it for those who treasure you with open kindness and acceptance.
    I have found that externalizing my self worth even to my own work, created a vicious, even mildly narcissist, self-abuse cycle.
    Success to me is being at peace with who I am regardless of anything outside of me.
    The hardest part, for me anyway, was watching a close relative being aware of the Narc but being to financially dependent to escape.
    Your worth isn't attached to you being able to help others. It is natural, birth-given worth.
    This is the hardest lesson for me, as school, family, work, etc. taught me otherwise.

    • @kathyadair8552
      @kathyadair8552 Год назад +4

      Thank you, very* Helpful, to me, anyway! 😂 🇺🇲 ⚖️

    • @lushgreenbean
      @lushgreenbean Год назад +5

      So true. Your worthiness is your birth rights. External factors boost your ego like blow up a ballon.

    • @willabestorms6059
      @willabestorms6059 Год назад +5

      Pure genius, thank you….

    • @WaterNymphie
      @WaterNymphie Год назад +4

      @@kathyadair8552 Glad it helped someone. You're welcome.

    • @WaterNymphie
      @WaterNymphie Год назад +1

      @@lushgreenbean Any balloon can pop with a needle.

  • @junebrezgis1652
    @junebrezgis1652 Год назад +23

    My Narc was great with the waitress how ever if he saw someone in a restaurant he could tear apart he would . He was mostly nice to me but the digs finally got to me. I realized there was a problem when I could barely perform every day tasks , clean my house or accomplish anything. One thing I really noticed was physical pain I never experienced before. Now that he is gone all these things are gone. I blocked him however he is hoovering - I never knew what this was. I am not interested in anyone at this time. What a creep. By the way he is attractive to me but there is nothing in that head of his that is really interesting. He told me everything I needed to know in the beginning had I know about this behavior I would have caught on right away. I would say go into a new relationship with your eyes wide open. If he is asking a lot of question answer in a vague way. This actually would be a big turn off for me today. He gas lighted me on our first date it was kinda funny today I would NEVER let that go. I am aware today and I am never getting into one of these relationships again.

  • @user-my3jw7tz4d
    @user-my3jw7tz4d 6 месяцев назад +1

    I had a therapist who said, “Let’s reframe how you look at him, he’s not a narcissist, he can be selfish at times.”

  • @MelissaPurnell
    @MelissaPurnell 7 месяцев назад +1

    …” your wounds are where the light enters you” ahhhh, so wonderful, what a wonderful thing to say.

  • @anonymousanonymous9797
    @anonymousanonymous9797 Год назад +41

    Happy Sunday, dear people. Sending love and support to all. :) xx

  • @martinfleming326
    @martinfleming326 Год назад +33

    Once you finally realize who and what the narcissist is, no contact is the only way to go. being knowledgable about narcissism, will not protect you from is toxicity-only no contact will!

    • @CJ-hz1uj
      @CJ-hz1uj Год назад +4

      Pretty much true, yet let us leave some hope for those who might not be able to get away just yet. Maybe there’s ways to emotionally and mentally go no contact even while they are in proximity. It’s like getting on a different frequency or wavelength so that they are hardly in ones reality, no matter how insatiable their desire to try becomes.

  • @deborahklinkner1730
    @deborahklinkner1730 8 месяцев назад +2

    This list is good against just toxic people who may only have narcissistic traits without being one. I avoided anyone who tried to dominate my life even in grade school even groups. I was a fighter & think most avoided me. But the destruction happened in my marriage with traits that were which caused fighting for 33 years. Once I finally left & never looked back. Now when I feel my peace become stressed, I do say why blocking then I block permanently & never look back either. I never cherry pick moments based on anyone else. I found peace & if someone upsets that peace even once I remove them from my life. Distance totally at social events.

  • @lynncarter4964
    @lynncarter4964 8 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in 1970, and at the age of 37 I found myself bawling over a scene from Grizzly Adams being kind to his 8 year old daughter. His voice was so genuine and loving, and I couldn't stop crying. I'd been in a verbally and mentally abusive marriage for 15 years, and my dad had also been abusive verbally, and I'd been raised in a high control mentally/emotionally abusive religion since birth. I think I'd just woken up at that point. Now I'm in my 50's, left religion and divorced. I'm ok now I think. I've journaled all my life, which is a huge help.

  • @jasmeensingh8852
    @jasmeensingh8852 Год назад +87

    I am so so awfully glad that I found you because I recently met someone who seems to be a covert narcissist now. But all thanks to you, even though initially I thought I was in love with him, I realised the truth and did not let him in my life. I am studying to become a psychologist and you inspire me everyday. Thank you so much Dr Ramani.

    • @brightpage1020
      @brightpage1020 Год назад +10

      Keep up the great work! Keep studying. Don't let anybody come between you and your goal or you and your joy. Your future will be filled with folks you'll help in your own way line Dr. Ramani is helping us. So grateful you are pursuing it on behalf of the lives you can effect so positively.

  • @forrestdavis6745
    @forrestdavis6745 Год назад +73

    Realizing the roots of my dad and stepmom's behavior is what finally shook me out of this wishful thinking. After not speaking with them for a year, I gave them one last chance to repair our relationship by going to family therapy. Their off-the-cuff, irrational wordsalads and discomfort with genuine connection were difficult to watch. I'm grateful to have had my mom, who showed me what unconditional love was, otherwise I may still be trying to make things work.

    • @sherrymathson1220
      @sherrymathson1220 Год назад +3

      Forest Davis...I'm so sorry for all you've been through with your stepmom and your dad and I applaud you for wanting so much to fix the relationship that you offered therapy... but, and really I know I sound awful but you're better off that they didn't go... my experience has been therapy only works when a person is honest and forthcoming about their behavior & narcissists are absolutely unable to do so you would have wasted so much time and money... Forest move forward with the things your mother taught you about love and direct those things at yourself and you will have a wonderful life!

    • @tammyfitzgerald5336
      @tammyfitzgerald5336 Год назад

      My family also ❤

  • @jees8128
    @jees8128 5 месяцев назад +2

    Hi. One thing I discovered when encountering narcissists is that I like to hear it from other people who are on the receiving end of narcissist treatment because it validates and reassures me that I was able to recognise the narcissists from the rest. It was a revelation that I have become more discerning and lucky for me I didn’t fall victim to their manipulations and I now see the game they play on other people. It’s like seeing with a new filter. It’s amazing and it feels empowering to me. I become immune to them now. And I still retain a couple of friends who are themselves narcissists. But from my youth I now know how to handle them as well and keep them at arms length emotionally and even physically. I also noticed that narcissists are ‘needy’ people and I no longer respond to their neediness. It no longer feels rewarding to pander to their desires. It’s actually quite funny seeing all this. It’s like removing goggles and seeing clearly for the first time. Like watching a play. It’s interesting. Narcissists have become a subject of study rather than desire. Thank god I now see the light!

  • @user-ml7wy1gl7f
    @user-ml7wy1gl7f 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you 35 years living with someone like this hugs to u for validating me as a person

  • @1984red
    @1984red Год назад +14

    I stopped asking how his day was, if he’s hungry, when he’s going to see me. I stopped questioning his actions, I kept myself busy, I started to picture my life without him, I only reacted when he wanted me to but coldly. I GAVE what I GOT. Slowly but productively realizing that I am now in control. - I faced trauma bond head on knowing it’s my only way to healing. Knowledge is healing. Keep on praying. Always know “you are way better than them” … it’s an addiction and go through withdrawals. It’s worth finding a healthy you. ❤

    • @kirjoy991
      @kirjoy991 3 месяца назад

      Would love to know if you are still in the relationship but able to manage and be in control ?

  • @sarasol4677
    @sarasol4677 Год назад +91

    I've found it difficult to find a competent therapist in my home town but you're helping me so much! Thank you, Dr Ramani🤗

    • @kesinissi6573
      @kesinissi6573 Год назад +5

      We can share contact if you want to so maybe we can talk about it. Im from Germany and it is hard to find a therapist who really understand what that is.

    • @nomadic_orthodox
      @nomadic_orthodox Год назад +4

      @@kesinissi6573 Germany is so far behind in trauma therapy.

    • @mday3821
      @mday3821 Год назад +5

      I haven't had much luck in finding a good therapist either. All three had no good idea on what I needed. The lost one was a Trauma therapist, but he was gaslighting me and kept trying to make me believe my experience wasn't real. I figured out he was a Malignant. He actually lied to me looking into my eyes. I dropped him just after 4 sessions. I just do what Dr. Ramani suggest and it's helping.

    • @nomadic_orthodox
      @nomadic_orthodox Год назад +5

      @@mday3821 My therapist told me my abuser didn't mean it in a bad way. I also left after just a few sessions.

    • @mday3821
      @mday3821 Год назад +2

      @@nomadic_orthodox I had a therapist that tried to tell me that my NM was physically abusing me to make me conform to society. I never went back.
      I hope you know abuse is abuse and your ex-therapist was Victim Shaming. Did your therapist really believe there's a good way to abuse someone?! What is wrong with these people? It seems Narcissists are now more in the health-care business than they ever was. I had some good therapist in the 90's.

  • @lm4700
    @lm4700 12 дней назад

    My scene was real life. A young family at Costco moving heavy items in the truck and picked up and acknowledged his child and his wife had the freedom to care for their child without active abuse or fear.

  • @juliagorton2594
    @juliagorton2594 9 месяцев назад +1

    My biggest grief is the unfairness of it all. I couldn’t cry when my father died as my abuser had brainwashed me into believing he was a nasty man. So now I yearn for his presence to protect me. Watching the legal system supporting the abuser in his convincing lies and invalidating the abused. No one looks at the background to a divorce, consults the counsellors that have aided the victim or reviewed the police reports of abuse that have been filed. The system aides the abuser rather than protecting the abused. You are not only trying to escape the abuser but you have to justify yourself and your actions on a superficial level which is impossible & deflating your self worth. This sends me into tears as I watch fellow victims tell their divorce stories. Mental abuse is just not actioned or believed in the way it should be.

  • @ziziscorsese9475
    @ziziscorsese9475 Год назад +42

    I think it was Dr. Ramani who made me aware of Narcissism. When I left my ex decades ago, I was terribly confused…and scared. In recent months, after learning about e confusion has gone. The awareness as to what it was really like,why did I stay so long ? 24 years. Because I was scared. The man said to me I would become a bag lady.
    I didn’t realize I had the skills needed to battle him. He was surprised . Me too. It was a long road. And I can’t say as it was easy. It wasn’t. This should be talked about at school. Self-esteem . I wonder how many narcissistic teachers there are. Ai ! Mine was classic. ☹️🤬.

    • @joyful_tanya
      @joyful_tanya Год назад +7

      My mother is a narcissist and was a 4th grade teacher for 35 years. My dad is also a narcissist and taught biology and botany at community college then after his PhD taught Science Education at the university level. I'm just validating your feeling!

    • @pa2359
      @pa2359 Год назад +2

      Same here ,25 year and now trying weak and hard to get up and go.

  • @McSpaddenator
    @McSpaddenator Год назад +40

    When I go to school events or birthday parties, I regularly start crying. It reminds me of how I had to learn how to care for myself and most people have people. I love being able to give it to my daughter. My parents were always focused on my narcissist sibling.

  • @AnnieV1001
    @AnnieV1001 10 месяцев назад +1

    When I saw Christopher Reeves family and friends support him after his tragic accident, it touched me to see the support and compassion from his family and friends presence in his life and I wept. I had recently gone through a divorce parting with a cheater, and realized the void of support with my family and parents who said don’t come home it will embarrass us.

  • @sandrabellerue2836
    @sandrabellerue2836 Год назад +1

    The relationship began at the beginning of the pandemic lockdown, by cellphone, both seniors who knew each other as teens, his dysfunctional behavior as a teen still the same.
    It began in the mind, like a fix to an addict during isolation, then having the rug pulled out.
    I endured 4 discards. The last didn't work on me.
    Thanks to all qualified podcasters.

  • @leeannschaffer1433
    @leeannschaffer1433 Год назад +105

    The portion addressing missing the narcissist was 💡 illuminating and really helpful. Also, grief over someone who is not dead was spot on.❤️

    • @ScarletBrimstone
      @ScarletBrimstone Год назад +4

      My husband just cut ties with his narc family and is starting the grieving process. When he initially went no contact, the floodgates opened and he started venting about everything he went through. But since then, he's become reserved and doesn't want to talk about it. I'm giving him his time and space as he needs it.

  • @notsoreverendbecca2308
    @notsoreverendbecca2308 Год назад +39

    Former clergy here: THANK YOU for your words on clergy/pastoral counselors. I can tell you from experience that we do not have the training, skills, (oftentimes) legal standing, and goals to be appropriate mental health supports. Generally speaking, I would say that the only clergy remotely qualified to help are going to be people who have been victims of narcissistic abuse and domestic violence. Most of the people I know who have been through this experience have a sense of what their helpful limits are.

  • @bonniellibell5935
    @bonniellibell5935 8 месяцев назад +1

    EVERYONE OF THEM!!!! Not one out of five understood the narcissistic abuse I lived through for 66 years. YAAAY FOR YOU Dr. Ramani!!!!

  • @sesscirco
    @sesscirco Год назад +1

    16:41. You asked for our opinions as to what could be a repellent for narcissists.
    Hi, I’m a narcissist in recovery. I work as a porter, or groundskeeper for a set of properties. I’ve been in personal recovery for at least two years now, watching videos and listening to audiobooks about setting better behavioral patterns and such. I’m also an alcoholic, and that’s really when my narcissistic tendencies flourish the most. I call it Bob. My alter ego.
    No matter, I simply wanted to state that something I JUST discovered today was the meaning of when people say that phrase of “what would be something you’d do for free and enjoy it? That’s your passion.”
    How? By walking on the street on my day off and picking up trash from the sidewalk as I was walking to get more legal liver killer. It felt wholesome and like I had purpose. I felt happy and like I at least was doing something that mattered as opposed to simply drinking myself to death within 1:30 hours.
    So maybe guiding narcissists towards their untapped potential could shine the light away from you, the victim?

  • @blake_229
    @blake_229 Год назад +12

    "Look at me son, it's not your fault" from Goodwill Hunting. Robin Williams empathy gets me every time.

  • @nancylachenauer8437
    @nancylachenauer8437 Год назад +55

    “This is your life story and it’s rich and it’s beautiful.” Thank you so much for this!

  • @planet-karma
    @planet-karma Год назад +2

    I ended up seeing a therapist to help my ex after he went off the deep end and was threatening to hurt himself (he soon started threatening me). It was a therapist whom he had seen earlier in our relationship because of his anger issues. She seemed to be supportive when it was about him but once he started threatening me, she started repeating that, after a year of a relationship, both people were equally responsible. I got to the point that I was desperate to get away from him but terrified he would try to kill me. She had no empathy and said that the door was open, why didn’t I just walk out. After a nightmare of abuse and illness, I eventually got away but he kept all my belongings. His condition for giving some of them back was for us to see her. Her response was to offer to go into the woods with us where I could scream out all my anger but then I was to never mention it again and to work on the relationship. I realized that she was almost as disturbed as he was.

  • @sandytonoli4421
    @sandytonoli4421 4 месяца назад +1

    I wish I found you decades ago. You have explained everything. It’s hard to hear but, it makes sense. I’m not crazy.