Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Imagination Burst

The other extremely useful tool is Imagination Burst. Your own imagination is very effective in dealing with all the pain. If you stay with those intense emotions burning all the time, you will exhaust yourself and go crazy. You simply cannot maintain that emotional burn for the long-term. You need to purposefully take a break from it. This is that break!

The other extremely useful tool is Imagination Burst. Your own imagination is very effective in dealing with all the pain. If you stay with those intense emotions burning all the time, you will exhaust yourself and go crazy. You simply cannot maintain that emotional burn for the long-term. You need to purposefully take a break from it. This is that break!

I want you to use your imagination and imagine what it would be like if none of that abuse actually happened to you. Imagine who you would be right now if you had not gone through all of this. What would you be doing? What would you be thinking? Who would you be? How would you be spending your time and energy?

Do not confuse this with trying to live in denial. You are not trying to convince yourself that none of the abuse happened. You know without a doubt all the abuse that you have suffered. This is using your imagination to your advantage, to push you to better places. It is consciously taking a break from all the hard work of processing the emotions and looking at your life outside of them. Yes do the work, but you must allow your heart and mind to rest and enjoy who you are.



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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Couples Therapy

I actually tried couples therapy with my husband, a covert narcissist. It did no good for our marriage, but it did validate for me, even more so, what was going on. He threw me under the bus to the therapist, saying things I had never heard before, taking credit for things I had done, and causing me to look pathetic if I objected. Everything was my fault and my responsibility to fix. This became very clear. It was so eye-opening and validating to me that I was in fact dealing with covert narcissistic abuse. I could no longer deny it at all. However, it did nothing to help our marriage.

I actually tried couples therapy with my husband, a covert narcissist. It did no good for our marriage, but it did validate for me, even more so, what was going on. He threw me under the bus to the therapist, saying things I had never heard before, taking credit for things I had done, and causing me to look pathetic if I objected. Everything was my fault and my responsibility to fix. This became very clear. It was so eye-opening and validating to me that I was in fact dealing with covert narcissistic abuse. I could no longer deny it at all. However, it did nothing to help our marriage.

Covert narcissists use therapy as a way to justify their behaviors and to turn the tables against you. They manipulate anything you say as well as anything the therapist says. I have seen this myself and heard it from many victims too.

If the therapist is not educated about covert narcissism, marriage counseling can certainly work against and actually feed the narcissism. They often charm the therapist and convince them that they are doing all they can to help this marriage. This often causes the victim to get quite frustrated and reactive, giving the therapist even more reasons to believe the narcissist. The therapist then tries to work with you on how you can communicate better, handle your reactions better, and so on. 

When you have been pouring years of intense effort into this marriage and then get told, in front of the covert narcissist, by a therapist that you need to do more, this is maddening. It can often cause the victim to further doubt themselves and pour even more of their quickly dwindling energy into the relationship. This just fuels the covert narcissist even more, as they will continuously throw the therapist’s words in your face to remind YOU of your responsibility.

The only way for couples therapy to be effective is for both people to be willing to carry some of the blame, reflect honestly on their own behaviors, take ownership of their own faults, and be genuinely sorry for ways they have hurt the other person. This can happen in non-narcissistic relationships but is not possible in narcissistic relationships.

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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Conversations as Competition

Covert narcissists don't use conversations to find understanding, reconciliation, or compromise. They don’t use them to get to know someone better or to connect with another person. Sitting around and just visiting with others is a complete waste of time to them!

Covert narcissists don't use conversations to find understanding, reconciliation, or compromise. They don’t use them to get to know someone better or to connect with another person. Sitting around and just visiting with others is a complete waste of time to them!

Conversations are a tool to be used to their advantage. They are transactions that can be manipulated. They are seen either as an exchange, I give you something and you give me something, or as a competition, I win and you lose. They use conversations to win or gain an advantage.

Conversations are verbal competitions. Most of the time, they seem to want communication to be difficult and a problem. They don’t want to understand. They want only to maintain their position of superiority. In order to truly understand and sympathize with someone, you must allow a moment or two to be about the other person. Narcissistic people absolutely cannot do this. Not even for a tiny moment can life be about someone else. When they can keep the conversation confusing and difficult, it can stay centered around them. Then they have a “duty” to explain and educate the other person, which maintains their superiority and arrogance.

These conversations are antagonistic, combative, and extremely uncomfortable. I reached a point where I said to my friend, “I don’t even know how to have a normal conversation with my husband.” You see, with narcissistic people, there is no such thing as normal conversation. Anyone who has lived this knows exactly what I mean! Stop trying to have normal conversations with them. It is painful and exhausting!

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Constantly Defending Yourself

When with a covert narcissist, you learn to defend yourself constantly. You are always under attack and never feel emotionally safe. Things can blow up at any moment, so your guard is always up. The tiniest little thing can set everything off, so you are on constant watch.

When with a covert narcissist, you learn to defend yourself constantly. You are always under attack and never feel emotionally safe. Things can blow up at any moment, so your guard is always up. The tiniest little thing can set everything off, so you are on constant watch.

You are on the defense before anything has ever even happened. Before one word is spoken, you are already defending yourself. Rightly so. You  have been taught that you will have to defend everything you ever say or do.

This is not normal. This is not how non-narcissistic people interact. Healthy relationships don’t work this way. You are allowed to just talk, to be yourself, to be less than perfect, and to not be judged.

This abuse and the defensiveness it causes in you affects other relationships until you become aware of it and work to stop it. Here is an example:

My friend and I were texting after she had just gotten home from a road trip. When I told her that I hope she had some time to rest that day, she responded, “Me too!” My past abuse kicked in. It caused my mind to defensively take that comment to mean, “Leave me alone so I can rest now.” So I apologized for bothering her. She immediately responded, “You are not bothering me at all.” I know this was my past defensiveness showing its ugly head. 

I purposefully stopped this reaction inside me and continued a normal, healthy interaction with my friend. No judgment. No hidden agendas. No need for defensiveness. And my friend interacted with me in a normal, safe and accepting way. This is how life should be. This is how life is! Once you find freedom from narcissism!

Start identifying your defensive reactions. Call them out for what they are and watch them begin to fade away!

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Healthy Relationships

When a healthy individual harms someone that they love, here are some things that typically happen:

  • The person who made the mistake feels remorse for hurting the other person.

  • The person who made the mistake apologizes with sincerity and without excuses.

  • The person who made the mistake tries to not continue repeating the offense.

When a healthy individual harms someone that they love, here are some things that typically happen:

  • The person who made the mistake feels remorse for hurting the other person.

  • The person who made the mistake apologizes with sincerity and without excuses.

  • The person who made the mistake tries to not continue repeating the offense.

When genuine forgiveness happens, the following are typically experienced:

  • Forgiveness and reconciliation occur.

  • Genuine connection and openness is felt by both parties.

  • This leads to changes in behavior and attitude of the person who made the mistake.

  • These changes lead to a more stable environment and a happier future for all involved.

However, you just can’t reconcile with a narcissistic person. It simply can’t be done. All of these steps require give

Compare the things the healthy individual does above with these common reactions from narcissistic individuals:

  • The narcissistic person defends their actions and words, feeling no remorse for hurting someone.

  • The narcissistic person makes excuses and accusations, rather than apologies.

  • The narcissistic person continues repeating the offense because they see nothing wrong with their behavior.

So instead of the positive environment mentioned above, the following are typically experienced:

  • Resentment and dissension occur.

  • Disconnection and internal mental battles occur.

  • The behavior and attitude never change.

  • The environment becomes more unstable as time goes by.

  • Happiness seems far out of reach.

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Come Out of the Fog

You have been conditioned to live in thick fog. You have been made to believe that they are better at everything than you and know more about everything than you. You have been conditioned to care for all of their needs and feelings and to accept a complete disregard for your own needs and feelings. You have been taught to fear their anger, silence, and rejection. You have been taught that it is your job to care for their every whim. You have been made to feel guilty and responsible for any and every bad thing that has ever happened or ever will happen.

You have been conditioned to live in thick fog. You have been made to believe that they are better at everything than you and know more about everything than you. You have been conditioned to care for all of their needs and feelings and to accept a complete disregard for your own needs and feelings. You have been taught to fear their anger, silence, and rejection. You have been taught that it is your job to care for their every whim. You have been made to feel guilty and responsible for any and every bad thing that has ever happened or ever will happen.

I have news for you. None of this is true!! They are not better at everything than you. They do not know more about everything than you. It is not your job to care for their every need. You should never accept the total disregard for your own needs and feelings. You do not need to fear their anger. You do not need to care for their every whim. And you are not responsible for everything! You are allowed to walk this Earth in peace and happiness.

Get your eyes out of the FOG, out of the Fear, Obligation and Guilt!!

Fear - You are allowed to live without fear. I know that facing this abuse is frightful. The unknown future in front of you on this journey can certainly be scary, but you are definitely not alone. Many have gone in front of you, many are going with you, and many will come behind you. You are stronger than you know!!

Obligation - It is not your job or duty to “build” or “fix” them or this relationship. They are an adult, and the responsibility for them lies with them. Their choices, their attitudes, their actions, and their words are NOT your fault or responsibility. You are responsible only for you.

Guilt - You are allowed to be human, to just be you. No one made the rule that you had to be a superhero. You do not need to be perfect, and in fact cannot be. It is okay to not be the best at everything or to not have all the answers. Take the guilt you feel and throw it away again and again.

Keep returning to that epiphany of walking the Earth in peace. That gift of a peaceful life is every bit as present for you as it is for anyone and everyone else. You do deserve it. You are worthy of it. And you CAN have it. Hang onto this epiphany as if to your very own lifeline.

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Clinging to the Breadcrumbs

Have you ever said...But we have some good times together. Remember that one day…. Remember that one time….We had so much fun. We were so happy that day.

Have you ever said...But we have some good times together. Remember that one day…. Remember that one time….We had so much fun. We were so happy that day.

Are you building an intimate relationship on single day events? Are you building a lifelong relationship on breadcrumbs of good times?

Sure, we had some good times together. We had occasional evenings that were successful and happy. We had the random weekends where his anger stayed in check. But I came to the realization that I was hanging on to those all-too-rare times and pretending that they were our reality. I was desperately trying to build a home and raise kids around that illusion. It wasn't working.

I finally realized that if I was always making an excuse as to why he was angry and mean, then I might need to consider that he is just angry and mean. When the good behavior stands out, that isn’t a good sign. When it’s the good behavior that causes you to be surprised and think, “That’s really not like him/her,” that causes you to be incredibly grateful for a change, then you need to take a long, hard look at the relationship.

In a healthy, non-toxic relationship, it’s the bad behavior that causes one to think, “Wow, that’s really not like you.” The quick temper and sharp tongue are rare and thus brought on by external factors. Not a daily part of life.

Building a lifelong relationship, a marriage, a family on breadcrumbs does not work. The relationship is not sustainable. You have to have more than breadcrumbs of peace and happiness.

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Circular Talk

When you are with a covert narcissist, everything you say can and will get used against you

It’s no wonder we start grey-rocking. Do you know what this is? I was doing this long before I ever knew there was a name for it. Grey rock is when you become as boring as a grey rock to them. You give them no emotional reaction, no extra dialogue, no questions, nothing that will ever extend any conversation. You don't defend yourself, which only gives them fuel. You don't explain yourself. You don't try to help them see your side of things. You stop engaging!

When you are with a covert narcissist, everything you say can and will get used against you

It’s no wonder we start grey-rocking. Do you know what this is? I was doing this long before I ever knew there was a name for it. Grey rock is when you become as boring as a grey rock to them. You give them no emotional reaction, no extra dialogue, no questions, nothing that will ever extend any conversation. You don't defend yourself, which only gives them fuel. You don't explain yourself. You don't try to help them see your side of things. You stop engaging!

Why do we do this? Because we have learned from experience. Everything we say does get used against us. Everything gets thrown back in our face. They never see our side of things.  They never validate what we say or how we feel. They take everything we say, flip it around somehow, and use it against us.

He was mad at me one day for how I answered his question in what was just a normal everyday conversation. Now because of our past circular conversations, I had been very careful to make sure I answered nicely and graciously. It was a simple answer and a safe one, I thought! Yet he found a way to be completely offended by my answer.

Later, he brought this up and told me how much I had hurt him with my answer. What?? Here we go again. Every word I say somehow manages to hurt him. I no longer knew how to talk with my own husband in any way. So again, trying to make peace with him and trying to understand, I gently told him, “I answered you like I would my best friend.”

His response, “I thought I was your best friend! Am I not?” And he was all offended and upset again!!

You have got to be kidding me!! What are we in middle school? We were in our 40’s with 2 teenage kids! And we are really having this conversation! Seriously!

Conversations with covert narcissists loop and loop endlessly. There is no ending in sight, no point of reconciliation, no closure. Everything you say can and does get used against you. It gets thrown back in your face. You start by explaining that what they did really hurt you and yet you end up defending yourself and apologizing for anything, like not calling them your best friend! Any words or acts that they can misinterpret, they do.

These conversations just leave a victim in total confusion about what is going on. You think you are making progress, and then WHAM! All of a sudden, you are right back in the thick of it. Are things getting better or not? I have no idea! One minute I say yes and the next minute not at all!

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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Circular Conversations

I have heard these circular conversations referred to as gaslighting, word salad, and verbal vomit. I prefer to call them circular conversations from hell. 

I have heard these circular conversations referred to as gaslighting, word salad, and verbal vomit. I prefer to call them circular conversations from hell. 

It is the single most painful place I have ever been, the most painful thing I have ever experienced. I have never felt so alone and destitute as when trapped in one of these. And I do mean trapped, held prisoner. There is no way out. Nothing you say will change the course. Nothing you say will turn it in a positive direction. Nothing makes this better, and I have tried everything! The covert narcissist will unceasingly turn everything around and around, spinning forever in a bottomless pit of negativity. One minute you might feel like you are making progress, going in a good direction, and then WHAM!!! You are right back where you started. Right back to the hurt feelings. Right back to the anger and despair. You find yourself wondering, “What just happened? How did we get back here?” You find yourself defending everything you have ever done, said, or even thought. You are defending a look you had or the way you breathed. You are defending things that were positive things at the time that have now been twisted against you. Guards are up and engaged. Spontaneity does not exist. Reconciliation does not exist. Give and take does not exist.  Staying relaxed is impossible! If you have ever been in one of these conversations, you know exactly what I am talking about. When you talk to others who have been there, you know it.  How do you get out of these conversations? You walk away!!! Tell them you aren’t talking about this right now, shut your own mouth no matter what comes out of theirs, and walk away. Leaving is the only out! Anything you say can and will get used against you!

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Can I Love Them and Still Walk Away

Many victims ask, “But what if I still care for them? How can I leave then?” They feel they must stay because they still care. Or they keep returning to the relationship because they care about them.

Many victims ask, “But what if I still care for them? How can I leave then?” They feel they must stay because they still care. Or they keep returning to the relationship because they care about them.


There is absolutely nothing wrong with having compassion for them. In fact, I think that is a wonderful and beautiful thing. You have compassion because of your own beauty inside of you. You care about him/her. But you do not have to stay just because you care about them. If they are continuously abusing you, you can love them and still walk away.


Should you stay and help them? No, absolutely not! You can’t! It isn’t possible for you, the victim, to help them. They will not hear it from you, and you will go crazy trying. They will manipulate everything you say or do to work against you. You are fuel to them, feeding their sense of superiority and entitlement. They will see you no other way! If they are ever going to get help, it cannot come from those closest to them.


Should you stay with them? NO! Their misery is strong and it runs deep in them. Just think about how long it has been there. You can wish them the best and sincerely hope that they get help somewhere, somehow. But you don’t have to stick around while they do it, or don’t do it. Their misery will rub off on you if you stay. It is okay to have compassion for them and still leave. It is okay to want what is best for them and still walk away.


You don’t have to hate them in order to leave. You can recognize that you want a healthy relationship in life. Be prepared - they will say that’s what they want too, but they simply aren’t capable of it. They are not able to do the intense work that it will take for them to get there. You don’t have to fix them or this relationship. No one ever said that you have to be their miracle worker!


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They Want to Be a Compassionate Person

A miserable person can and often will try to hide their misery. They cover it and mask it. They can do such a great job of this that it stays hidden for decades. They can even go so far as to hide it from themselves quite successfully. But eventually, those closest to them start to recognize that something is wrong. They start to feel uncomfortable and guarded around this person. Often at the beginning, they do not even know why.

A miserable person can and often will try to hide their misery. They cover it and mask it. They can do such a great job of this that it stays hidden for decades. They can even go so far as to hide it from themselves quite successfully. But eventually, those closest to them start to recognize that something is wrong. They start to feel uncomfortable and guarded around this person. Often at the beginning, they do not even know why.

 “If he is such a compassionate person, then what is wrong here?” He clearly “wants” to be a compassionate person.

Years of researching and exploring opened my eyes. It is quite simple - miserable people create misery for those closest to them. I realized that my husband desired to create a loving and positive environment, but that he simply wasn’t capable of it. His internal environment was full of turmoil and misery.

If you are in a similar relationship, with a spouse, a parent, a family member, etc, you may be asking yourself, “Do I really believe that they don’t love me?” You may be convinced that they do love you and yet the relationship is full of pitfalls. No, you aren’t crazy! It is very possible that they truly want to love you. They are like the clown that WANTS to cheer everyone up, but just can’t ever get there themselves.


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Brinkmanship

I remember my husband telling me in our early marriage that brinkmanship was his favorite word ever. I thought it was odd and didn’t even really know the word. I looked it up and found this even weirder. I had no idea what this would come to mean for me.

I remember my husband telling me in our early marriage that brinkmanship was his favorite word ever. I thought it was odd and didn’t even really know the word. I looked it up and found this even weirder. I had no idea what this would come to mean for me.

Brinkmanship is the art or practice of pushing a dangerous situation or confrontation to the limit of safety, especially to force a desired outcome. It is the technique or practice of maneuvering a dangerous situation to the limits of tolerance or safety in order to secure the greatest advantage, especially by creating diplomatic crises. 

He said that he would push his friends just far enough to make them really mad but not quite far enough to send them over the edge. He enjoyed watching them squirm in their discomfort, as well as having the power to pull them back down. He was quite proud of his skills in brinkmanship.

This played out in our 21 year marriage. He pushed situations to their breaking point. He pushed me and our kids to the brink, the edge of a cliff to get the outcome he wanted. He repeatedly made us as uncomfortable as he possibly could until we gave in.

He often made us miserable with his attitude, reactions, short comments, snippy-ness. It got what he wanted though, for all of us to tap-dance around HIS moods, for us to bend over backwards to accommodate HIS wants and desires. We all took responsibility for any situation just to make peace. I would be the one apologizing to him just to make things calmer and bearable.

He got what he wanted by pushing us past the point of tolerance and emotional safety, over and over. This is no way to live!! It destroys all the relationships involved and each individual person as well.

If you are living this way, you need to step back from that edge. Step around this abuser in your life and make your own space of safety. You will never find your safety in a person who enjoys brinkmanship. 

Where does this precious safety lie? In a couple safe friends that you can open up to. In a few safe family members. In a therapist or counselor. In group coaching sessions. In online support groups. Most importantly, in yourself, learning your value as a person and that you deserve a peaceful and safe environment. 

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Breadcrumbs

They give you just enough breadcrumbs to make you believe in them.

One good evening can erase a whole lot of bad in your mind. This is who he really is. See, he really is a good person. A small glimpse of goodness can erase several days, weeks, or even months of bad behavior. Finally, he is back! This is what I have been waiting for. You feel relieved, even ecstatic. You drop your guard and relax, only for the cycle to start all over again.

They give you just enough breadcrumbs to make you believe in them.

One good evening can erase a whole lot of bad in your mind. This is who he really is. See, he really is a good person. A small glimpse of goodness can erase several days, weeks, or even months of bad behavior. Finally, he is back! This is what I have been waiting for. You feel relieved, even ecstatic. You drop your guard and relax, only for the cycle to start all over again.

There is just enough truth in what they say to make you feel like everything is good. They point out something they just did for you or the kids. Something they said that you liked. And they are right. You admit that in your mind. All of a sudden, you are now doubting that there is even a problem at all. Maybe you are imagining it. Maybe things aren’t that bad.

Then they also throw in just enough truth to make you think that everything is truly your fault. They point out something you did or said. And they are right. You did do that. STOP right there though. Yes, maybe you did do that, but that doesn’t change anything about all the things they have done or said or not done or not said. It is just another way for them to take the focus off themselves and put it all back on you.

One of the reasons we give them the benefit of the doubt so much is because of our intense desire for them to be the good person we see in those breadcrumbs. We so badly want that to be the person we married or are in a relationship with, so we cling to those glimpses of good and build our whole life around them.

One of the best tools for for dealing with this is to make a list of the good behavior and make a list of the bad behavior. Be honest with these lists. Compare them to each other. If the good behavior outweighs the bad, then be grateful and enjoy the good times. However, if the bad behavior far outweighs the good, then you are living on breadcrumbs.

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Defending Yourself

As a victim of covert narcissistic abuse, you have a mind that is going a million miles per hour. When you have a need or desire and actually want to express it, you do not feel that you can do this. You have been taught that your needs and desires do not matter and that you are wrong for even having them in the first place.

As a victim of covert narcissistic abuse, you have a mind that is going a million miles per hour. When you have a need or desire and actually want to express it, you do not feel that you can do this. You have been taught that your needs and desires do not matter and that you are wrong for even having them in the first place.

So when you want to express a need or desire, you are already defending it before you even utter a word. Your mind is already coming up with 50 reasons why you need this, whatever it is.

For example, you can’t just go out with a friend because you want to. You have to have a reason, a justification. Something like “They are going through a rough time and need support” (whether this is actually true or not). “They need a night away from their kids.” (It can’t ever be about what you need) “It’s the only night they can do it. We’ve been trying to get together for several months.” (Even if this just came up at the last minute)

Again, you can’t be honest and just say that you simply want to go out with this friend. You make excuses for going out with other people, friends and/or family, even your own kids. You have been taught repeatedly that your own needs and desires don’t matter. The jealousy of a covert narcissist is extremely high when you are getting your needs met and they are not. When you go out with that friend, you pay a very high price when you get back.

Another example of this is when we feel we can’t say no to the covert narcissist. The simple answer of “no” is not sufficient. We feel we have to justify why we don’t want to do what they are suggesting. If they want to go out to eat, but we really aren’t wanting to, we can’t just say, “No, I would rather stay home tonight.” We have to have a reason and are already prepping that in our mind. “I don’t feel good. It’s too expensive. I don’t like that restaurant’s food.” Your mind spends so much energy coming up with the “right” way to say no.

Even when you are out of the relationship, you can still feel the need to always explain yourself and defend yourself. You do not have to defend yourself to anyone!! You do not owe anyone an explanation! No can simply mean no. You are allowed to have your own opinions and desires. But you will probably need to purposefully stop defending yourself and your choices. 

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But it Could be Worse

I know other people have it worse, so my situation just isn’t that bad. I should be grateful that it isn’t worse.

Maybe I am making a big deal out of nothing. Maybe it really isn’t a problem. I have heard these exact words from many victims of covert narcissistic abuse. In fact, I have even said them myself.

I know other people have it worse, so my situation just isn’t that bad. I should be grateful that it isn’t worse.

Maybe I am making a big deal out of nothing. Maybe it really isn’t a problem. I have heard these exact words from many victims of covert narcissistic abuse. In fact, I have even said them myself.

So, let me ask you something. If you have a broken leg, do you think, “Well, some people lose their leg entirely, so since it could be worse, I’ll just tough it out and keep my mouth shut about it.” Do you choose to not seek medical help because someone else, somewhere, has it worse than you do?

You don’t decide to just be grateful and thus not fix your broken leg simply because their situation is worse. This wouldn’t make sense to anyone around you. Your entire family and circle of friends would be all over you to get yourself to the doctor and take care of your leg.

Pain is pain, and healing is needed!

It is, of course, okay to recognize that things could be worse. Let me be clear, there is nothing wrong with being grateful that things aren’t worse, or more dire. But this doesn’t mean you have to stay or put up with abuse just because it could be worse. This doesn’t mean that you don’t need support and help. It doesn’t mean that you don’t need answers. A broken leg still needs attention and care!

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Belief in the Goodness of Others

Your belief in the goodness of others is not a bad thing, but it can certainly cause problems. It can lead you to be willing to overlook the faults of others and set you up for abusive relationships.

Your belief in the goodness of others is not a bad thing, but it can certainly cause problems. It can lead you to be willing to overlook the faults of others and set you up for abusive relationships.

For many years of my marriage, I never considered that my husband was abusive or NOT a good person. Of course he was a good person. How could he not be? I made excuses for his bad behavior. He doesn’t feel good today. He is stressed from work. He’s tired. He’s worried about a big project.

My belief in the goodness of him says more about me than it does about him. I want people to be good. I want people to care for each other, to love each other, to live in peace with each other. I so badly wanted him to be a good person, and I refused to consider otherwise. So I overlooked all the red flags for years.

If you grew up under an abusive parent, this can certainly magnify the problem. It causes so much confusion in a youngster. The thought that your parent could be a bad person isn’t even considered. This is your mom or your dad. You believe in them and turn to them for love and support. So you grow up believing that a bad person is truly a good person. This leads to a lot of internal confusion, and you aren’t even aware of it. So later in life, someone can be abusive to you and you might remain convinced for years that they are a good person.

Hang on to that desire for others to be good people, loving and peaceful. Nothing wrong with that. Just keep a reality check with it. Just because you want someone to be a good person does not mean that they are. Look at their attitudes, behaviors, words, actions and see them for what they are. You can be sad that they are a bad person, but you cannot “will” them into being a good person.

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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Don't all Relationships have Their Problems Though

I remember early in our marriage when things got ugly, I would think to myself, “Every marriage has issues though. It would be the same with anyone else.”

I remember early in our marriage when things got ugly, I would think to myself, “Every marriage has issues though. It would be the same with anyone else.”

He snapped at me because I told him that he had toothpaste on his mouth.

He got angry because I hung pictures in the house without asking him, even though he had told me that he didn’t care.

These seemed so minor and just like any other marriage. I knew my parents had times they got mad at each other, and they have been happily married over 50 years. My friends had conflicts in their marriages. Isn’t this normal? Wouldn’t it be like this no matter who I married?

What I didn’t realize at the time was that we never reconciled. He blew up over something trivial, I made apologies, but we never made amends. He never offered any apologies. He never carried ANY of the blame with me. I did all the apologizing, and then I swept everything under the rug as fast as I could. 

There was no mutual forgiveness and no reconciliation with each other. Instead, as everything just got swept under the rug, it was never talked about again. I remember laying in bed at night, thinking to myself, “I will NEVER bring that up again!” I always paid a high price anytime I tried to clear things from under the rug, so that pile under the rug just got bigger and bigger.

When I had a disagreement with a friend or a family member, it didn’t seem to be as big of a deal. We would apologize and forgive, and no hard feelings lingered. I used to think that maybe this is just because of the complications of being married. It’s harder when it is on an intimate level. I guess all marriages are like this. I just have to keep working at it. Maybe someday we will get it.

I sure was wrong!! Not all marriages are like this. It isn’t because of the intimacy of the relationship. It is because we could never find a place of reconciliation. When you are in a truly loving relationship, reconciliation is something you experience often. The issue wasn’t about all the little disagreements and trivial problems. Yes, we sound trivial when trying to explain what is going on in our marriage. This is because the real issue is the lack of reconciliation, not the trivial little disagreements.

When your friend explains a similar trivial problem in their marriage and is able to laugh about it now, it is because they found reconciliation afterwards. They carried mutual blame and understanding. They found middle ground and resolved it. The problem is gone, never to be thought of again. It doesn’t linger, it doesn’t add up, because it was resolved.

When you are with a covert narcissist, that resolution and reconciliation never comes. Can you picture your spouse in the heat of the moment actually saying, “Oh, that makes sense. I can see why you would have thought that? I’m sorry for misunderstanding.”??? Or can you see them saying, “Hey, it’s okay that you misunderstood me. It happens. I’m sorry for not being more clear.”??? These are words that lead to resolution and reconciliation, and they are words that you will never hear from a covert narcissist.

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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

You're the Only Person Who Thinks Like That

I was told that I am the only person who sees anger in him. He said that he asked his friends and co-workers. Friends?? He has no friends. He doesn’t do anything with anyone, ever. He sits in the house and plays video games, night after night and all day on the weekends.

I was told that I am the only person who sees anger in him. He said that he asked his friends and co-workers. Friends?? He has no friends. He doesn’t do anything with anyone, ever. He sits in the house and plays video games, night after night and all day on the weekends.

When I finally asked him who he was talking about, he named friends from high school that he hadn’t seen in years. He named a friend who lives on the other side of the world, with whom he stays connected through email. Of course these friends don’t see anger in you. They don’t even see you!

Then he named his coworkers. Ok, at least these are people you see in your daily life. However, they have no social interactions outside of work. They only know him in the work environment, and most of that is computer interaction. They certainly don’t live with you.

Saying that you are the only person who thinks like that completely invalidates your feelings. It is an attempt to devalue what you are saying and prove you wrong. But again, these are people who do not live with you behind closed doors and are not a part of your intimate relationship. Even close friends are not IN the relationship. Their knowledge of all that is going on is still very limited.

In reality, it really doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks. This relationship with this person is your relationship. No one else’s. If you don’t like the way you are being treated, who cares what the friends and coworkers think? This isn’t about them in the first place.

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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

An Epiphany

You are allowed to walk this Earth in peace just like everyone else. The gift of a peaceful life is every bit as present for you as it is for anyone and everyone else. You are not obligated to live under stress and abuse. You CAN choose to spend each individual moment of your life doing things that are peaceful and that make you happy. You CAN choose to spend your time and energy on things that make you feel positive, productive, compassionate, and connected to others. You ARE allowed to be you!!

You are allowed to walk this Earth in peace just like everyone else. The gift of a peaceful life is every bit as present for you as it is for anyone and everyone else. You are not obligated to live under stress and abuse. You CAN choose to spend each individual moment of your life doing things that are peaceful and that make you happy. You CAN choose to spend your time and energy on things that make you feel positive, productive, compassionate, and connected to others. You ARE allowed to be you!!

This epiphany hit me right between the eyes one day. Of course, it is true!! This is my life! I am allowed to live it! This realization became more valuable to me than anything else in the midst of the narcissistic nightmare that I was living. It floated in and out of my grasp and remained elusive at times. But I continued to bring myself back to it over and over.

This epiphany creates the most amazing feeling inside when you truly connect with it. It is an overwhelming feeling of peacefulness. Each time you find it, it releases a little bit more of the tension and stress that has been in the body for years and years. It frees you from the effects of narcissistic abuse. It feels so wonderful that you will want to cling to it forever. 


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Renee Swanson Renee Swanson

Am I the Narcissist

Just because you do something athletic does not make you an athlete. 

-Throwing a ball

-Kicking a ball

-Running (to catch a bus)

Just because you do something athletic does not make you an athlete. 

-Throwing a ball

-Kicking a ball

-Running (to catch a bus)

Just because you do something musical does not make you a musician

-Singing in the car

-Dancing in the living room

Just because you do something narcissistic does not make you a narcissist

-Silent treatment because everything you say is being used against you

-Getting overly defensive about something because you are tired of being attacked

-Having a moment of jealousy

-Over-stepping your boundaries

-Standing up for yourself

-Desiring for life to be about you for even a moment because you want to matter

-Greyrocking - short answers, not engaging, emotionally shut down

-Feeling like a victim

Yes, these are traits we see in covert narcissists. They show up in victims too as trauma responses and survival skills. Just because they show up in your struggle to survive this does not make you a covert narcissist!

We all have selfish moments. That does not make us a selfish person.

The narcissist in our life has generous moments. Does that make them a generous person?

My ex even had compassionate moments. He certainly was NOT a compassionate person.

When you see glimpses of narcissism in you and question this, remember that if you are asking if you are a narcissist, then that is a huge sign that you are not. Narcissistic people do not genuinely ask themselves if they are narcissistic. They may ask another person simply to receive validation that they are not. But they will not ask themselves and self-reflect within.

What you are experiencing when you see those moments of narcissism in you is reactive abuse. When you have been pushed to an edge over and over and can’t do anything right, it is very normal to react. That reaction can be explosive and scary, yelling, hitting, throwing things, etc. It can make you look crazy and even make you feel that maybe you are. See it for what it is. You have been cornered enough times, and eventually the intense bottled up frustration comes out!


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