Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
(っಠ‿ಠ)っHugs to everyone! Once again thank you everyone, honestly you don't know how much strength I've gained from everyone's words. I wish I could edit my original post to make it easier for updates. But basically this is the deal, i'm def leaving on the 12th, went and picked up my ticket yesterday from the bus station. He hasn't done anything stupid, and I don't think he will at this point. He says he's dealing. I've already spoken to my land lord, and gotten the utilities out of my name. So everything is looking to be on the up and up.

I'm, so much better already. When I sleep now, its like the first real sleep I've had in seven years. It really is just committing to change your fate isn't it? The knot that had buried itself into my chest doesn't hurt as much. I won't be using this large step forward as an excuse to not get therapy tho, I know I need it.

As for those who are posting in a similar situation. My heart goes out to each and everyone of you. I know intimately how hard it is. My advice, which may not be very useful since I'm still in the middle of my own hurricane, just get some perspective. Talk to people who aren't involved and don't know, sometimes the wisdom of strangers is invaluable. At least that's my anecdotal experience. I know we are all unique and have our own set of circumstances. I wish the best of luck to each of you.
Helpful Answer (15)
Report
Ljanoe Aug 2019
Wonderful to hear Sammy! Please keep us posted on your progress. I especially want to hear when you are safely away. You sound so much clearer. Even though there will be ups and downs,you have made your decision and begun the steps to creating a beautiful new life.
(2)
Report
See 4 more replies
Well done, Yahoo! Sadsammy, have a great life! You can do it!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Happy that you're leaving, Sammy! Stick to your guns and don't back down--you won't regret it.

I recently moved permanently away from my narcissistic mother for the second time, and as I drove through the states heading from east to west my breathing improved--realized I hadn't been breathing deeply in three years.

All the best and hope you keep us posted.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

Happy for you, Sammy! Best wishes...
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I can definitely relate to having an abusive parent and there is help for you. You are still young with a beautiful & better life waiting for you. You’ll have to detach from him.
There are 12 step support groups (Adult Children Anonymous & Al-Anon). The programs really help me cope every day of my life and they are free.

Continuing to be the recipient of his abuse will not do your soul any good and you need to do what you need to do to take care of yourself. You are only responsible for controlling yourself, not him. You have to learn to take care of yourself, first and let go of co-dependency. You deserve a better life.

In my mother’s case, it was prescription drugs but the physical and emotional abuse were the same. As a child, I would hide some her pills when I could, so I could give them to her to keep her somewhat sane during the weekend (in the 70’s when pharmacies were closed on weekends). I did this so she wouldn’t tear the house up and beat me. With the programs above, I learned to let go and give the things I cannot control to my Higher Power which gives me peace.

Even now, my mother (at her Assistant Living Facility), is actually happy that I am disabled and I have to walk with a cane. But, with the ACA and Al-anon support, I have tools that I can use daily to help me cope so that I can still take care of myself instead of obsessing over everything and anything about her. I learned that she has a “disease” and she will not change, but I can.

It is a very difficult situation that you are dealing with but there is help. I wish the best for you. Please take care of you!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
anonymous828521 Aug 2019
Ur awesome: @ Help4mOm...😅
(4)
Report
Sammy: Good for you and glad you have a plan.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

SILENCE--say nothing about your plans to escape; the most dangerous time is right now.

Remember: abusive asshats will never change, you must rid yourself the thought that a normal relationship could ever exist.

Guilt is a powerful tool utilized by manipulative people. You area frog in boiling water, who will be burned and bounced around within your current dynamic.

You have been conditioned to hope for his change, nothing that you say or do will improve or change his behaviors.

He is abusive by choice. He knows exactly what he is doing and has done. And will continue being abusive because it's what works for him. Guilt is what binds him to others.

At this point you decided that abuse + guilt are NOT worth enduring. You reached out to this community ,so something inside said enough is enough.

You can emotionally cut ties by realizing the good side of your father isn't him. The abusive side is his true personality. Mourn the loss of the man who truly never existed; (the kind side you see every once in awhile),

Stockholm syndrome describes your situation as does Trauma Bonding.

SILENCE, again its extremely important that you say nothing to him about permanently vacating, take all pets with you, if he has a gun, remove its bullets. In my experience I've heard of abusive parents killing pets and shooting at offspring trying to escape. Abusive alcoholics are narcissistic psychopaths, who will make it a point to make you pay, for leaving...or trying to leave. Hugs (っಠ‿ಠ)っstay safe.
Helpful Answer (13)
Report
anonymous828521 Aug 2019
Screenamed: ur reply is Awesome! I love it, esp the 'arsehat' lol. My life was just as you described... Very weird for me to see it summarized so easily, when I'm such a mess from it all, even today. I really enjoyed ur post
(6)
Report
Yes, I can relate. Self preservation friend. I knew being 'over exposed' to my mother would kill me, like it did kill my dad (@65yrs old), & my sister (31yrs old). My heart knew the facts were: her or me. I did care for her for 6 yrs, but refused to converse with her about my life. Also turned my phone off when her calls got ridiculous. Cut way back on visits after 4 years, & of course she never stopped trying to control & shame me. I may seem cold, to place a huge 'wall' up, in my heart, but we must: to survive. I knew God saw my heart, that I didn't hate her.. Just trying to survive her. It was a spiritual war for me, (with many days of panic or crying), but persevere & be fierce!
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

As an adult child of a life-long alcoholic, I understand your pain. Caregiving is hard in the best circumstances. If you cannot care for your parent/s you cannot do it. Period. No guilt needed.

That said, I am about 20 years older than you are, and have learned A LOT of skills in that time to ensure my mental and emotional health around my mom. I have made very good boundaries, and I have stuck to them. These skills that *I* developed (emphasis on I) never required my mom to acknowledge her behavior, admit her wrong doing, or even change. I cannot make anyone change, so focusing on her behavior is a waste of my time. Instead, I focused on me.

I learned as a child there were times of day I couldn't speak to my mom, and I learned she would not remember many of our conversations. As an adult, I refines those skills.

For decades now I have ensured that I do not spend "unproductive" time with her. If I am around her, I have a project to do; she can join, watch, or leave me alone. Boundary development is the most critical skill I have ever learned, and it works!

Thru the years, my mom has chosen to join my projects. The result is a parent who wants to show her best public face, and I get the benefit of it because she can be quite helpful. Privately, even with family, my mom can be brutally ugly. She takes pleasure in telling straight out lies about me to my uncles, aunts and cousins. They turn and look at me, shocked, and I just shake my head to say it's not true. The family knows, and they see my respose, and it's simply not worth fighting over any more. It only reflects badly on her.

I cannot express fully just how emotionally, verbally, and physically abusive this woman was to me for years. She went into violent rages where she hit me with a belt. She drug my younger brother up the attic stairs and closed the pull down door on him right in front of me when I was too young to help him. She worked hard though her life to pit my brother and I against each other - and it worked, he has no contact with me, and very little with her.

What I will say next is not what everyone can - or even should - expect. But, it's worth saying: I have been my mom's caregiver to support her aging in place for the past 3 1/2 years, and I absolutely LOVE it! Over those 20 years between your age and mine, the boundaries I built, and the emotional work I did, has allowed me to create a relationship with my mom on MY TERMS.

She's older now. She still drinks, but doesn't have the energy for the brutal fights. And, I know all the warning signs. At the 1st hint of her ugliness, I make an excuse and leave. Sometimes I calmly say, "Well, you are in a bad mood, I'll come back later." Most of the time I don't. Because, it's not about getting her to change, it's about me, my health and my boundaries.

I couldn't have cared for my mom 20 years ago. I didn't have the skills. And, quite frankly, she didn't NEED me - which I'm sure is a motivation behind her improved behavior. I put no blame on you for any decision you make now - unless it is a decision to not protect yourself. Just know, you can change, your skills can grow, your boundaries can hold, and your relationship with everyone can change for the better because of it. You cannot make your father someone else. But, you don't have to expose yourself to his brutality without armor either.

Perhaps, in time, you will build the skills you need to handle abusive relationships. You are at a great disadvantage because of the poor foundation you got as a child. But, you can do it. The skills will empower you greatly! Perhaps they can transform your relationship with your parent, probably they will not. But those skills WILL be worth having for yourself.

I wish you strength, patience, and serenity in the time ahead.
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

If he’s on Medicaid will it pay for a facility?
I guess we all handle this junk as best we can. My mother is the abusive narcissist. My siblings and mother have always used me as the scapegoat. I’m 66 years old and still discovering how a lifetime of abuse from them has affected me and my self image. Imo, run ! Call some aging service, tell them he can’t care for himself and let them take over. He’ll just accuse you of who knows what and as a narcissist, he’s a good liar and manipulator so they may believe him. You deserve a life free from abuse. He chose his course. You aren’t responsible for his situation, he is.
if you can, try to seek counseling. Childhood abuse is the gift that just keeps giving. It’s painful but if you can learn about you and your feelings, it will help you.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

Wonderful to hear you have heeded advice here. I wish you all the very best in your new life away from the emotional blackmail/ guilt. Glad to see you are thinking of counselling and, although improving, get help with your depression too so that you can cope with any new hurdles life throws your way. Congratulations on taking that first, brave step.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Hi Sadsammy- run! I had an extremely narcissistic mother & father, mother's gone, father's still here and has made life for me difficult financially. HIGHLY recommend Alice Miller's books( the psychologist), such as "For Your Own Good". I am in process of distancing from abusive Dad, it's not easy but it can be done! Save yourself! And as Alice Miller points out, it's not love if someone is abusive to you. Your inner child craves what she never got. All I can really say is, it's natural that a part of you would feel longing-that's ok, but the present day reality is abusive. You're not alone!
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

Put yourself first and establish healthy boundaries. You have one life to live.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Good for you for working through this. I fully understand your issue as a 56 year old "only child" of two extremely abusive narcissists.

They spent their life ruthlessly attacking me in any way possible. They had money and sent me away in the summer to camps to get me out of the house..away from them..because they didn't like being parents and I was a nuisance to them. I learned independence from it. They also sent me to counseling because they loved putting me down and treating me like garbage. They scapegoated me constantly. The therapist was horrified and at 12 years old told me that I was being severely abused. She taught me all about abuse and how to help myself cope and learn from it. She said to be as independent as possible, not use them as role models and realize that they cannot love me in a healthy way. I was taken from our home by my school teachers for my safety when I was in my teens because they got so brutal.
Fast forward to now. I am a survivor. My parents are vicious, hostile, jealous because they didn't want me to succeed..but I did, using their hate and putdowns as fuel to prove to myself that they are wrong. I have always had a talent in art which got me a lot of attention as a kid and is my career as an adult. I still get a lot of attention and my narcissistic parents HATE it. They are old..79 and 87. They no longer have the money they once had, or the fancy professional jobs. They've resorted to borrowing large amounts of money from close friends in order to buy their latest house..then stiffing the friends (whom mom knew from childhood). I got a call from the friends, telling me that mom and dad just blocked them! I've been contacted by an attorney too, looking for my dad who ran up a credit card without ever paying on it. Their delusions of money, power and superiority are strong..and at any cost.

I have had strong boundaries and now am backing away even more. My parents now loom at me as their "cash cow". Nope. I am scared I will be hurt or killed by one or both of them, as they are desperate for money and refuse help from aging agencies. Plus mom as been so nasty and demanding to helpers that they all backed away.
My therapist says they can take good care of themselves and the best thing for me to do is to let go and stay away. She says my self esteem and wellbeing depends upon it, because they are so extremely cruel by nature to me whenever I'm around them (very rarely).
So, I live my life, in peace, on my own in my home. I wanted to be a "good daughter" all my life and tried hard to fix them. It didn't happen. Gradually I learned my power is best spent on helping myself. I have no children or local friends (I moved to an area where I don't know anyone). I'm ok though. I run my businesses online, have my pets and enjoy the solitude of no cruelty in my house. It is safe and peaceful..far from how I grew up (in complete chaos due to a histrionic, sociopathic mom who flew into huge rages). This holiday season I will turn down their attempt to have me visit them. They attacked me last Christmas, and I was a sitting duck at their house since my car died and they brought me there.
No, I am not jeopardizing my life anymore. Like every year, I buy my own presents, put up my tree and carry on my life. Traditions and routine have been good for me. When you leave, make sure to do nice things for yourself, too. Use that energy once spent on fear to give yourself love, healing and support. I parent myself..and tell myself kind things to fight the negativity heaped onto me by my parents. You will be JUST FINE. It may be extremely hard but getting out is the first step in thriving. It's a process. Just remember none of this garbage is your fault. You must take care of yourself first. I wish you only the best.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Thank you Carolynmc for your post, really good for me to read. Why are some people so wierd?(just venting). We all have to carry on taking care of ourselves!☺️
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter