How Narcissists Make You Look “Crazy” — And Why It’s Not Your Fault

How Narcissists Drive You to the Point of Feeling — and Looking — “Crazy” to Others

One of the most damaging effects of narcissistic abuse is not what happens in private. It is what happens to your identity in public.

Many survivors say the same thing:
“I don’t recognise myself anymore.”
“I sound unhinged when I try to explain it.”
“People look at me like I’m the problem.”

This shift does not happen because you are unstable. It happens because narcissistic dynamics are designed to destabilise you while preserving the other person’s image. Over time, the emotional pressure builds until your reactions become visible — and those reactions are then used against you.

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

Understanding this pattern is the first step in reclaiming your clarity.

1. Provocation Without Witnesses

Narcissistic individuals rarely behave the same way in public as they do in private.

Behind closed doors, there may be subtle digs, silent treatments, dismissive comments, emotional withdrawal, or calculated indifference. The behaviour is often just ambiguous enough to deny later. There are no raised voices. No obvious “scene.” Just a steady drip of invalidation.

In public, however, they appear calm, reasonable, even charming.

This contrast creates a dangerous imbalance. When you eventually react — perhaps by raising your voice, expressing frustration, or breaking down emotionally — it appears unprovoked. Others only see your reaction. They do not see the pattern that led to it.

Over time, this creates self-doubt. You begin to question whether you are overreacting. You try harder to regulate yourself. You suppress more. But suppression does not remove pressure. It only stores it.

Eventually, something gives.

2. Gaslighting Your Reality

Gaslighting is one of the most psychologically destabilising tactics used in narcissistic dynamics.

Conversations are denied. Events are rewritten. Promises are claimed never to have existed. Tone is reframed. Intent is twisted.

When you attempt to clarify, you are told you are “too sensitive,” “dramatic,” or “imagining things.”

This repeated distortion creates cognitive dissonance. Your memory says one thing. Their denial says another. Without external validation, the mind begins to fracture under the strain.

Anxiety increases. You second-guess yourself constantly. You may check messages repeatedly, replay conversations, or seek reassurance from others.

That anxiety — caused by sustained manipulation — is then presented as evidence that something is wrong with you.

“You’re paranoid.”
“You need help.”
“See how you’re acting?”

The original behaviour disappears. The focus shifts entirely onto your emotional state.

3. Pushing You to React

Repeated invalidation builds emotional pressure.

When your concerns are dismissed, your boundaries mocked, and your feelings minimised, frustration accumulates. Most people can tolerate a certain amount of stress. But ongoing psychological erosion activates the nervous system.

Eventually, you react.

You may cry intensely. You may raise your voice. You may send long messages trying to explain yourself. You may appear angry or distressed.

This is often referred to as reactive abuse — though the term can be misleading. What is happening is a trauma response to prolonged provocation.

The narcissistic individual then reframes your reaction as the central issue.

“You’re unstable.”
“You’re abusive.”
“You need to calm down.”

The original trigger is erased from the narrative. Only your response remains.

Outsiders, unaware of the pattern, see heightened emotion without context. It appears disproportionate. And that perception works in the narcissist’s favour.

4. Controlling the Narrative

Many narcissistic individuals begin managing their public image long before conflict escalates.

They may casually tell friends, family, or colleagues that you are “struggling,” “overwhelmed,” or “difficult.” These comments are subtle enough not to raise alarm, but consistent enough to plant doubt.

By the time you attempt to explain what has been happening, a framework already exists.

If you appear emotional while defending yourself, it confirms what they have implied. If you remain calm, you may be described as cold or manipulative.

This is often referred to as a smear campaign, but it does not always look dramatic. Sometimes it is quiet reputation shaping.

The result is isolation. You may notice that people respond differently to you. Invitations reduce. Conversations feel strained. Support becomes hesitant.

You begin to feel not only confused — but alone.

5. Weaponising Trauma Responses

When someone is exposed to chronic emotional instability, the nervous system adapts.

You may develop hypervigilance — constantly scanning for mood changes.
You may experience shutdown — withdrawing emotionally to protect yourself.
You may struggle with emotional regulation — feeling overwhelmed quickly.

These are normal trauma responses. They are signs of a nervous system under stress.

However, within a narcissistic dynamic, these responses are reframed as personality flaws.

“See how anxious you are?”
“You’re always so dramatic.”
“You can’t handle anything.”

Context disappears. The pattern is ignored. Your reaction becomes your identity.

Over time, you may internalise this narrative. You start to believe you are difficult. Too emotional. Too reactive. Not stable enough.

This internalised doubt is one of the deepest wounds of narcissistic abuse.

Why It Feels So Disorienting

The most destabilising element is not simply the manipulation. It is the reversal of roles.

The person provoking you appears calm.
The person responding appears distressed.

To outsiders, this looks straightforward. But it is not.

Psychological abuse is often invisible because it operates through patterns rather than events. There may not be a single dramatic incident to point to. Instead, there is accumulation.

And accumulation changes behaviour.

Reclaiming Your Clarity

Healing begins when you stop defending your reactions and start examining the pattern.

Instead of asking, “Why did I react like that?”
You begin asking, “What was happening consistently before I reacted?”

Instead of internalising “I’m too emotional,”
You explore, “What was I responding to?”

This shift moves the focus from self-blame to context.

It is also important to understand that emotional reactions under prolonged stress are human. They are not proof of instability. They are signals.

When safety returns, regulation returns.

When validation replaces gaslighting, clarity strengthens.

When you are no longer being provoked, your nervous system gradually settles.

You Were Responding to Something Real

Feeling as though you have “lost yourself” during a narcissistic dynamic is common. Looking back, many survivors barely recognise their behaviour during that period.

That does not mean you are broken.

It means you were placed in an environment that distorted your perception and activated survival responses.

You were not driven to the edge because you are weak.
You were pushed there through sustained manipulation.

And the moment you understand the pattern, the narrative begins to shift.

You are not crazy.
You were responding to something that wasn’t safe.

Clarity is not about proving your sanity to others.
It is about restoring it within yourself.

Check these out! 

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.

A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.

Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.

Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future

(Sponsored.). https://betterhelp.com/elizabethshaw

Advertisements

Click on the links below to join Elizabeth Shaw – Life Coach, on social media for more information on Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse.

On Facebook. 

On YouTube.

On Twitter.

On Instagram. 

On Pinterest. 

On LinkedIn.

On TikTok 

 The online courses are available by Elizabeth Shaw.

For the full course.

Click here to sign up for the full, Break Free From Narcissistic Abuse, with a link in the course to a free, hidden online support group with fellow survivors. 

For the free course.

Click here to sign up for the free online starter course. 

To help with overcoming the trauma bond and anxiety course.

Click here for the online course to help you break the trauma bond, and those anxiety triggers. 

All about the narcissist Online course.

Click here to learn more about the narcissist personality disorder.

The narcissists counter-parenting.

Click here for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse, and information on co-parenting with a narcissist.

Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.

Click here for Elizabeth Shaw’s Recommended reading list for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse.

How Narcissists Use Your Feelings Against You (6 Emotional Manipulation Tactics)

How Narcissists Use Your Feelings Against You

Narcissists don’t just ignore your feelings — they study them.

They notice what hurts you. What calms you. What triggers guilt. What sparks empathy. What makes you soften. What makes you panic. What makes you try harder.

But they are not gathering that information to deepen connection.

They are gathering it to gain control.

In healthy relationships, emotions create closeness. With a narcissist, emotions become leverage.

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

Here are six ways narcissists turn your feelings into weapons.


1. Using Your Empathy Against You

If you are empathetic, compassionate or emotionally aware, a narcissist will identify that very quickly.

They will present themselves as wounded, misunderstood, rejected or fragile. You may hear about their difficult childhood, their “crazy” ex, the way nobody appreciates them, or how sensitive they are underneath their tough exterior.

Your empathy is activated.

You begin explaining instead of confronting. You forgive quickly. You give them another chance. You stay longer than you intended because you can see the “hurt person” behind the behaviour.

But empathy without accountability becomes exploitation.

They rely on your kindness to soften consequences. The more you try to understand them, the less they have to take responsibility for how they treat you.

Your empathy keeps the relationship going — even when you are the one being harmed.


2. Turning Your Pain Into Proof You’re the Problem

When you express hurt in a healthy relationship, it leads to discussion and repair.

With a narcissist, it leads to deflection.

Instead of addressing what they did, they focus on how you reacted. They criticise your tone. They call you dramatic. They say you are too sensitive. They accuse you of overreacting.

Suddenly, the conversation is no longer about their behaviour. It is about your emotional response.

Your tears become instability.
Your frustration becomes aggression.
Your boundaries become cruelty.

This is a subtle but powerful form of gaslighting. It teaches you to distrust your own emotional signals. Over time, you may start thinking, “Maybe I am too sensitive,” rather than asking, “Why am I being treated this way?”

Your pain becomes evidence against you instead of information about what needs to change.


3. Guilt-Tripping Your Boundaries

Healthy boundaries protect emotional wellbeing. Narcissists experience boundaries as threats.

When you say no, ask for space or limit behaviour, they often respond with guilt.

“You know how sensitive I am.”
“After everything I’ve been through?”
“I can’t believe you’d treat me like this.”

Instead of respecting your limit, they reframe it as rejection.

Your compassion is used against you. You begin questioning whether you are being harsh, cold or unfair. You may withdraw the boundary just to stop the emotional pressure.

This keeps the focus on their feelings — not your safety.

In time, you may find yourself abandoning your own needs just to avoid feeling guilty. The narcissist does not need to break your boundaries directly. They simply make you feel bad enough that you remove them yourself.


4. Using Your Hope to Keep You Hooked

One of the strongest emotional hooks in narcissistic relationships is hope.

After conflict, they may show brief warmth. They might apologise. They may promise change. They may act like the loving person you saw at the beginning.

Just enough to make you believe it can improve.

This pattern is called intermittent reinforcement — unpredictable affection followed by withdrawal. Psychologically, this creates strong attachment bonds. You cling to the good moments because they feel like proof of who they “really are.”

But the pattern repeats.

Warmth.
Withdrawal.
Apology.
Disappointment.

Your hope keeps you invested. You focus on potential rather than pattern. You stay because you believe resolution is close.

In reality, the inconsistency is the control.


5. Weaponising Your Fear of Conflict

If you dislike confrontation, fear abandonment or struggle with raised voices, a narcissist will sense that.

When challenged, they may escalate quickly. They may shout, withdraw affection, storm off, or create emotional chaos. The reaction feels disproportionate to the issue raised.

Over time, your nervous system learns a lesson:

Bringing up concerns leads to discomfort.

So you stop bringing them up.

You stay quiet to keep the peace. You swallow your feelings to avoid arguments. You convince yourself it is “not worth it.”

This is not peace. It is conditioning.

The fear of conflict becomes a silent control mechanism. The narcissist does not need to silence you directly — your body does it for them.


6. Making You Responsible for Their Emotions

In healthy relationships, each person manages their own emotional responses.

With a narcissist, you become responsible for theirs.

You monitor their moods. You anticipate triggers. You adjust your tone. You walk on eggshells. You try to prevent their anger, sulking or withdrawal.

Meanwhile, your emotions are dismissed or criticised.

If they are upset, it is your fault.
If they are angry, you provoked it.
If they withdraw, you caused it.

You become the emotional regulator of the relationship.

This creates exhaustion and self-doubt. You begin believing it is your job to keep everything stable. But no matter how careful you are, stability never lasts — because control, not harmony, is the goal.


Your Feelings Were Never the Problem

Your empathy is not weakness.
Your tears are not instability.
Your hope is not foolishness.
Your desire for peace is not naïve.

These are healthy emotional traits.

The problem was not that you felt deeply. The problem was that those feelings were used strategically against you.

When emotion is respected, it creates intimacy.

When emotion is exploited, it creates manipulation.

The shift begins when you stop treating your feelings as flaws and start seeing them as signals. Signals that something feels unsafe. Signals that your boundaries matter. Signals that your needs deserve space.

Clarity does not come from hardening your heart. It comes from protecting it.

If you recognise yourself in these patterns, know this: you were not too emotional. You were emotionally open with someone who used openness as leverage.

And awareness is the first step in taking that power back.

Check these out! 

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.

A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.

Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.

Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future

(Sponsored.). https://betterhelp.com/elizabethshaw

Advertisements

Click on the links below to join Elizabeth Shaw – Life Coach, on social media for more information on Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse.

On Facebook. 

On YouTube.

On Twitter.

On Instagram. 

On Pinterest. 

On LinkedIn.

On TikTok 

 The online courses are available by Elizabeth Shaw.

For the full course.

Click here to sign up for the full, Break Free From Narcissistic Abuse, with a link in the course to a free, hidden online support group with fellow survivors. 

For the free course.

Click here to sign up for the free online starter course. 

To help with overcoming the trauma bond and anxiety course.

Click here for the online course to help you break the trauma bond, and those anxiety triggers. 

All about the narcissist Online course.

Click here to learn more about the narcissist personality disorder.

The narcissists counter-parenting.

Click here for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse, and information on co-parenting with a narcissist.

Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.

Click here for Elizabeth Shaw’s Recommended reading list for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse.

Why Narcissists Get Worse When You Pull Away

Why Narcissists Escalate When You Detach

One of the most confusing experiences in narcissistic abuse is what happens when you finally begin to pull away.

You stop reacting.
You explain less.
You reduce contact.
You detach emotionally.

Instead of things calming down, they often get worse.

The tension increases. The messages become sharper. The behaviour intensifies. You may see rage, panic, love-bombing, threats, victimhood, or even smear campaigns.

This escalation is not random. It is predictable.

Understanding why it happens helps you stay grounded when it does.

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

Detachment Threatens Their Control

At the core of narcissistic behaviour is a need for control.

Control does not always look loud or obvious. Sometimes it is subtle — influencing your mood, shaping your reactions, steering conversations, creating guilt, or keeping you emotionally focused on them.

When you detach, you remove that access.

You stop defending yourself.
You stop arguing.
You stop explaining.
You stop trying to be understood.

To a narcissist, this feels like losing leverage.

Emotional engagement is how they measure influence. When your emotional responses reduce, they experience that as a loss of power. For someone whose self-worth depends on external control, that loss feels intolerable.

Escalation becomes an attempt to regain it.

Your Calm Feels Like Rejection

Detachment often looks calm from the outside. You may feel tired, numb, or simply done. But to the narcissist, your calm can feel like abandonment.

Not because you have done something cruel, but because you are no longer feeding their need for attention and emotional validation.

Narcissistic dynamics rely on intensity. High emotion — whether positive or negative — keeps the cycle alive.

When you detach:

  • You are no longer arguing.
  • You are no longer chasing.
  • You are no longer reassuring.
  • You are no longer defending.

To them, this feels like disrespect.

Your neutrality challenges their sense of importance. If you are not reacting, they may interpret that as you no longer caring. And if you no longer care, they no longer feel significant.

That perceived rejection can trigger anger, panic, or dramatic attempts to pull you back in.

Escalation Is an Attempt to Re-Engage You

When subtle tactics stop working, behaviours often intensify.

What once looked like minor guilt-tripping may turn into aggressive blame.
What once looked like occasional criticism may turn into rage.
What once looked like intermittent affection may turn into sudden love-bombing.

The goal is the same: provoke a reaction.

Even a negative reaction is still engagement.

If you argue, they feel connected.
If you defend yourself, they feel powerful.
If you cry, they feel impactful.
If you explain, they feel central.

Escalation is not about the content of the conflict. It is about restoring emotional access.

This is why detachment can initially make things worse before they improve.

Silence Removes Their Emotional Mirror

Narcissistic individuals often rely on others as emotional mirrors. They use reactions to regulate their own self-image.

When you respond strongly, you reflect back importance.
When you become distressed, you reflect back influence.
When you chase them, you reflect back desirability.

Detachment removes that mirror.

Without your emotional responses, they are left alone with feelings they do not manage well — insecurity, shame, boredom, or emptiness.

Instead of processing those feelings internally, they attempt to resolve the discomfort externally.

This may look like:

  • Picking fights
  • Creating crises
  • Accusing you of being cold or heartless
  • Sudden dramatic declarations
  • Seeking attention elsewhere

The agitation increases because the emotional supply has decreased.

Smear Campaigns Often Follow

If they cannot control you directly, they may try to control the narrative around you.

Smear campaigns often appear when detachment becomes firm and consistent.

This can involve:

  • Telling others you are unstable
  • Accusing you of being abusive
  • Framing themselves as the victim
  • Sharing private information
  • Distorting events to protect their image

This behaviour serves two purposes.

First, it protects their ego. If you have detached, they may reinterpret the story to maintain superiority.

Second, it attempts to regain indirect control. If others doubt you, defend you, or confront you, the narcissist remains central in your life.

Again, the goal is re-engagement.

Escalation Does Not Mean You Are Wrong

One of the most damaging parts of escalation is the self-doubt it creates.

You may think:

  • “Maybe I am being cold.”
  • “Maybe I should just explain one more time.”
  • “Maybe I am overreacting.”
  • “Maybe I caused this.”

Escalation does not mean you are cruel.
It does not mean you are heartless.
It does not mean you are doing something wrong.

It often means the dynamic depended on your emotional involvement — and that involvement is reducing.

When a system stops functioning the way it used to, it often destabilises before it settles.

Why Detachment Is Still the Right Move

Detachment is not punishment.
It is protection.

It is choosing not to participate in a cycle that harms you.

Healthy detachment involves:

  • Limiting information shared
  • Reducing emotional reactions
  • Avoiding unnecessary explanations
  • Staying consistent in boundaries
  • Prioritising safety and support

It does not require hostility.
It requires steadiness.

Over time, when escalation fails to produce emotional access, behaviour often shifts. This may look like reduced contact, replacement attention elsewhere, or quieter manipulation attempts.

But the intensity usually decreases when it no longer works.

The Bigger Picture

Escalation after detachment reveals something important.

It shows that the relationship dynamic was not built on mutual regulation, accountability, or emotional safety. It was built on access, control, and emotional supply.

When you withdraw that supply, the imbalance becomes visible.

What feels chaotic is often simply exposure.

You are not breaking something healthy.
You are stepping out of something dependent on your emotional participation.

Escalation is not proof that you are damaging the relationship.

It is proof that the relationship relied on a level of emotional access that is no longer available.

And that shift, although uncomfortable, is often the beginning of clarity.

Check these out! 

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.

A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.

Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.

Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future

(Sponsored.). https://betterhelp.com/elizabethshaw

Advertisements

Click on the links below to join Elizabeth Shaw – Life Coach, on social media for more information on Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse.

On Facebook. 

On YouTube.

On Twitter.

On Instagram. 

On Pinterest. 

On LinkedIn.

On TikTok 

 The online courses are available by Elizabeth Shaw.

For the full course.

Click here to sign up for the full, Break Free From Narcissistic Abuse, with a link in the course to a free, hidden online support group with fellow survivors. 

For the free course.

Click here to sign up for the free online starter course. 

To help with overcoming the trauma bond and anxiety course.

Click here for the online course to help you break the trauma bond, and those anxiety triggers. 

All about the narcissist Online course.

Click here to learn more about the narcissist personality disorder.

The narcissists counter-parenting.

Click here for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse, and information on co-parenting with a narcissist.

Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.

Click here for Elizabeth Shaw’s Recommended reading list for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse.

What Is Narcissistic Supply? Signs, Examples & How to Cut It Off

It’s Not Love — It’s Supply

When you first hear the term narcissistic supply, it can sound clinical or abstract. But once you understand it, something clicks. The confusion starts to clear. The emotional chaos begins to make sense.

Because what you thought was love… often wasn’t love at all.

It was supply.

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

What Narcissistic Supply Really Means

Narcissistic supply is the emotional fuel a narcissist depends on to regulate their fragile self-esteem. It is how they stabilise their identity, soothe their insecurities, and feel significant.

Supply can come from admiration, praise, validation, attention, success, control — but it can also come from anger, tears, arguments, jealousy, or distress. Positive or negative doesn’t matter. What matters is the emotional reaction.

That’s the key.

It isn’t about connection.
It isn’t about intimacy.
It isn’t about mutual care.

It’s about reaction.

And once you see that, the entire dynamic shifts.

Why It Feels Like Love at First

In the beginning, narcissistic supply often looks like romance.

They pursue intensely. They idealise you. They mirror your interests, values, and dreams. You feel seen, understood, chosen. The attention is overwhelming — in a good way.

But what’s happening underneath isn’t emotional bonding. It’s extraction.

Your admiration fuels them.
Your excitement fuels them.
Your belief in them fuels them.

When you respond warmly, they feel powerful and validated. The relationship feels electric because it’s built on emotional intensity, not stability.

And intensity is addictive.

The Shift: When Supply Changes

Over time, something changes.

The admiration becomes expected. The effort decreases. The criticism begins. You start defending yourself more. Explaining more. Trying harder.

Here’s where many people miss what’s happening.

When the positive supply fades — when you stop praising constantly, when life becomes normal — they don’t suddenly stop needing fuel. They simply switch sources.

Now your anxiety feeds them.
Your tears feed them.
Your attempts to fix things feed them.
Your confusion feeds them.

Arguments become circular because resolution isn’t the goal. Engagement is.

You think you’re fighting for the relationship.
They’re feeding off the reaction.

It’s Not Who You Are — It’s How You React

One of the most painful realisations is this: it was never really about who you are.

It was about how you responded.

If you admire them, you’re useful.
If you argue passionately, you’re useful.
If you chase closure, you’re useful.
If you try to prove your worth, you’re useful.

The moment you stop reacting, something shifts dramatically.

And that’s when the control weakens.

The Power of Emotional Withdrawal

Cutting off narcissistic supply doesn’t mean being cruel or cold. It means becoming aware of what feeds the cycle.

Here are seven ways to begin reclaiming your emotional independence:

1. Stop Over-Explaining
Long explanations keep you engaged in their frame. Clear, brief responses remove the reward. You don’t need to defend reasonable boundaries.

2. Reduce Emotional Reactivity
Strong reactions — even anger — are still supply. Calm, neutral responses limit the emotional payoff.

3. Set Boundaries Without Debate
Boundaries are statements, not negotiations. If you debate every limit, the cycle continues.

4. Limit Access to Your Time and Energy
Less availability means less opportunity for control. Emotional and physical distance weakens the dynamic.

5. Stop Chasing Closure
They benefit from confusion. True closure comes from clarity within yourself, not from their admission of wrongdoing.

6. Shift Validation Inward
If you continue seeking their approval, you remain emotionally hooked. Build validation through safe relationships and your own internal confidence.

7. Accept Who They Are
This is the hardest step. Letting go of hope removes one of the strongest sources of supply — your belief that they will change.

Acceptance isn’t approval. It’s clarity.

Why They React When You Change

When you stop feeding supply, you may see sudden shifts:

  • Increased charm
  • Sudden anger
  • Victim narratives
  • Attempts to provoke you
  • Love bombing returning temporarily

This isn’t transformation. It’s regulation.

When their emotional fuel source weakens, they feel destabilised. Your calm threatens the system because it removes control.

And control is what supply protects.

The Guilt That Follows

Many people feel guilty when they begin withdrawing emotionally. It can feel harsh. Unkind. Unnatural.

But cutting off supply isn’t punishment.

It’s self-protection.

Healthy relationships don’t rely on emotional extraction. They don’t depend on keeping someone confused or reactive. They are built on mutual respect, empathy, and stability.

If someone only feels secure when you are distressed, apologising, or over-functioning — that isn’t love.

It’s dependency on supply.

Reclaiming Your Power

The moment you understand narcissistic supply, you stop personalising everything.

Their criticism isn’t always about your flaws.
Their anger isn’t always about your mistakes.
Their withdrawal isn’t always about your worth.

Often, it’s about regulation.

When the supply changes, their behaviour changes.

That awareness is powerful.

Because once you realise your reaction is the fuel, you begin to see your power clearly.

You don’t have to perform.
You don’t have to defend endlessly.
You don’t have to convince someone of your value.

You can step back.

You can become neutral.

You can choose where your energy goes.

Final Thought

It’s not love — it’s supply.

Love feels safe.
Supply feels intense.
Love feels mutual.
Supply feels one-sided.
Love builds you.
Supply drains you.

When reactions stop, control weakens.
When control weakens, clarity returns.

You don’t withdraw supply to hurt someone.
You step back to heal yourself.

And healing begins the moment you stop confusing emotional extraction with love.

Check these out! 

Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist

15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.

A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.

Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.

Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future

(Sponsored.). https://betterhelp.com/elizabethshaw

Advertisements

Click on the links below to join Elizabeth Shaw – Life Coach, on social media for more information on Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse.

On Facebook. 

On YouTube.

On Twitter.

On Instagram. 

On Pinterest. 

On LinkedIn.

On TikTok 

 The online courses are available by Elizabeth Shaw.

For the full course.

Click here to sign up for the full, Break Free From Narcissistic Abuse, with a link in the course to a free, hidden online support group with fellow survivors. 

For the free course.

Click here to sign up for the free online starter course. 

To help with overcoming the trauma bond and anxiety course.

Click here for the online course to help you break the trauma bond, and those anxiety triggers. 

All about the narcissist Online course.

Click here to learn more about the narcissist personality disorder.

The narcissists counter-parenting.

Click here for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse, and information on co-parenting with a narcissist.

Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.

Click here for Elizabeth Shaw’s Recommended reading list for more information on recovery from narcissistic abuse.