Grieving the Relationship

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#1 Mar 1 - 10PM
Ophelia
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Grieving the Relationship

Some of you may have seen this already, it's a helpful explanation of the difference between the end of a 'normal' relationship and that with an N

http://narcissism-support.blogspot.com/2009/01/grieving-relationship.html

Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Grieving the Relationship

I found this to be an inspired, meticulous and empathetic detailing of the grief experience. Truly amazing. ~Invicta

Author: nickyskye

Subject: grieving a N

My heart goes out to you in your recovery. Grieving the loss of a relationship with a N has many layers. They are not the usual layers of grieving a healthy person. The problem is that some of the layers ARE the same as grieving a healthy person but then there are layers reserved only for the loss of a N relationship, which are not understood by the 'civilian' population and can ONLY be understood by those who have survived a significant relationship with a N.

In a healthy relationship break-up one grieves:

The dream of love not continuing.
The break in the continuity of the familiar.
The pain of saying goodbye.
The sadness of the exchange of ill will in the parting.
A sense of loss.
Living with the nostalgia of things one used to do together, broken memories of past pleasures.
Hope interrupted.
Well wishing put aside for self-survival.

Those are typical feelings that can come up after a break-up of a healthy relationship.

But grieving a N there are other ingredients, not available to the public understanding, such as:

The nightmare of going from being idealized to being devalued.
Discovering the web of lies on many levels.
Coming to terms with the terrible, terrible understanding that one was not an object of love but a source of NS (narcissistic supply*). That in itself is so painful that it has many stages of comprehension.
The dawning of understanding that one's nostalgia and tender memories of affection for the N were corrupted by the N's agenda.
Not being believed by people about some of the weird things the N did and feeling isolated in one's grief more than in grieving a healthy break-up.
Discovering with some horror, mingled with relief of a strange kind, that the person one loved was not the person one thought one loved.
Everything about the relationship shifts into the garish clinical light of the DSMlV. One's object of former love is now something of a lab specimen, "a typical N".
Not being able to let go with love but having to let go only with understanding. The closure itself has the sadness of knowing the ex is disfigured, deformed but always dangerous. [I'm not certain closure is possible. ~Invicta]
When one hears one's healthy ex is having sex with a new person, married, or has gone on in their life, there is a sting of sadness, the nostalgia for 'what could have been'. That itself, the astringency becomes part of the detaching. And as time goes by that sting becomes a well wishing, including the ex in one's loving prayers. The ex gets woven into the fabric of one's fond memories.
But with a xN, news of their present life always bring chills of fear and twinges of unresolved grieving. Who are they hurting now? Will they ever come into my life again? Was I not important to them, was it all that for nothing? Knowing about the N's need for NS one cannot help thinking will they come back for my NS? Was *my* NS something they treasured and miss?
But in the light of day, understanding the N means that one is not valued for who one IS but only as a commodity, for NS, empty, meaningless NS.
After the detachment is physically complete with a N there is the nagging abyss of was that all for nothing? It's a terrible loss and there is nowhere to go with that loss. It's static. It doesn't evolve into lost love. It just remains as a loss.

Grieving a N is a burden, it's a hole in one's life.

Love, Nicky

Mar 4 - 4AM
faith_
faith_'s picture

Thanks for posting this,

Mar 2 - 1AM
freaked
freaked's picture

in a way.

in a way.
Mar 1 - 10PM
Night Owl
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"Not being believed by people

"Not being believed by people about some of the weird things the N did and feeling isolated in one's grief" That has been one of the hardest things for me. When I tried to say anything to his friends or family they acted like I was being overly emotional and exaggerating what he did. He had gaslighted me so I ended up looking like the crazy one. I was raised in a religious family that was very conscious of looking good from the outside so I was probably a wise pick for the N because he knew I would keep a lot of the crap he did hidden. I never told my family all that I put up with because I didn't want to worry them, plus I was embarrassed about it. So it is isolating because he looks so great from the outside but I know what he's really like.
Mar 1 - 10PM (Reply to #2)
Ophelia
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Well, you're not isolated

Well, you're not isolated here Night Owl :-) It's difficult when people don't understand or have never even heard of NPD. I started to tell a male friend about what happened, and his eyes started to glaze over when I described the steps of N abuse, D&D etc. He was sympathetic, as someone might be for a normal breakup but I was trying to relate that this was quite different... started to feel like Kevin McCarthy in that last scene of Invasion of the Body Snatchers... here it is for a chuckle, http://youtu.be/NIvH2dPolsM :-)
Mar 1 - 11PM (Reply to #3)
Night Owl
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Good comparison to the movie,

Good comparison to the movie, we end up looking like the crazy ones. That's why I have gone NC with his friends & family and don't tell people everything about his N characteristics. People who haven't lived it don't understand. That's why I enjoy this forum because people here "get it". Although I suspect his parents see more than they will admit, but that is another long story....