7 Things You’ll Notice About Conversations With a Narcissist
Have you ever walked away from a conversation feeling confused, frustrated, exhausted, or somehow responsible for a problem you didn’t create?
Many people who have dealt with narcissistic individuals describe conversations as one of the most draining parts of the relationship. What should be a simple discussion often turns into something entirely different. Instead of feeling heard, understood, or respected, they leave feeling bewildered and emotionally drained.
The reason is simple. Healthy communication is usually about understanding, compromise, and finding solutions. Narcissistic communication is often about maintaining control, protecting an image, avoiding accountability, or gaining an emotional reaction.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are seven things you’ll often notice about conversations with a narcissist.
1. The Conversation Always Comes Back to Them
One of the most common patterns is the narcissist’s ability to redirect attention back onto themselves.
You might be sharing good news, discussing a concern, or talking about something important to you. Somehow, the conversation gradually shifts until it revolves around their experiences, their problems, their achievements, or their feelings.
If you’ve had a difficult day, they’ve had a worse one.
If you’ve achieved something, they’ll find a way to outdo it.
If you’re struggling, they’ll often steer the focus back to themselves.
Over time, this can leave you feeling invisible because your thoughts and experiences rarely receive the same level of attention.

2. They Don’t Answer Direct Questions
Many people become frustrated because simple questions rarely receive simple answers.
You ask where they were.
You ask why they said something.
You ask whether they followed through on a commitment.
Instead of answering directly, they may change the subject, become defensive, ask another question, or focus on something completely unrelated.
The original issue remains unresolved.
This tactic often serves two purposes. It avoids accountability and creates confusion. The longer the conversation continues, the easier it becomes for the original question to disappear entirely.
By the end, you may find yourself discussing ten different issues while the question you originally asked remains unanswered.
3. They Rewrite Reality
Narcissists are often skilled at changing the narrative to suit their needs.
Agreements suddenly never happened.
Conversations are remembered differently.
Promises disappear.
Events are retold in ways that place them in a more favourable light.
You may hear statements such as:
“That’s not what I said.”
“You’re remembering it wrong.”
“That never happened.”
“You’re too sensitive.”
When this happens repeatedly, many people begin questioning their own memory and judgement.
This is one reason conversations with narcissists can become so mentally exhausting. You spend more time trying to establish basic facts than resolving the issue itself.
4. They Focus on Your Reaction Instead of Their Behaviour
This is one of the most frustrating communication tactics.
Perhaps they’ve lied.
Perhaps they’ve broken a promise.
Perhaps they’ve behaved in a hurtful way.
When confronted, instead of discussing their behaviour, they shift the focus onto your reaction.
Suddenly the conversation becomes about your tone of voice.
Your anger.
Your frustration.
Your emotional response.
The original issue disappears.
The discussion shifts from what they did to how you reacted when they did it.
This allows them to avoid accountability while placing you on the defensive.
5. They Turn Everything Into an Argument
Healthy conversations involve listening, compromise, and mutual understanding.
With a narcissist, even minor discussions can become battles.
A simple difference of opinion may be treated as a personal attack.
Constructive feedback may trigger defensiveness.
Questions may be interpreted as criticism.
Disagreements often escalate because the narcissist views being wrong as a threat to their self-image.
Rather than exploring different viewpoints, they may focus entirely on winning.
Being right becomes more important than finding a solution.
As a result, discussions that could be resolved in minutes can drag on for hours with no meaningful resolution.
6. They Use Word Salad
Many people who have dealt with narcissists describe conversations as confusing and chaotic.
This communication style is often referred to as “word salad.”
The narcissist floods the conversation with unrelated topics, contradictions, accusations, half-truths, and emotional distractions.
One moment you’re discussing a specific issue.
The next you’re talking about something that happened five years ago.
Then you’re defending yourself against accusations.
Then you’re discussing an entirely different problem.
The conversation becomes so tangled that you lose track of the original issue.
This confusion often benefits the narcissist because clarity would require accountability.
Confusion creates opportunities for avoidance.
By the end, you may feel mentally exhausted without understanding how the discussion went so far off course.
7. You Leave Feeling Worse Than When You Started
Perhaps the biggest clue is how you feel after the conversation ends.
Healthy communication usually creates clarity.
Even when difficult topics are discussed, both people generally leave with a better understanding of the situation.
Conversations with narcissists often have the opposite effect.
You may leave feeling:
- Confused
- Guilty
- Frustrated
- Drained
- Anxious
- Doubtful of yourself
Many people replay the conversation repeatedly in their minds, trying to make sense of what happened.
They search for the right words they should have used.
They wonder whether they overreacted.
They question their own memory.
The emotional aftermath can last far longer than the conversation itself.
Why These Conversations Feel So Different
The reason narcissistic conversations feel different is because the goals are often different.
Most healthy people enter discussions hoping to understand, communicate, solve problems, and strengthen relationships.
A narcissist may enter the conversation focused on protecting their ego, avoiding blame, maintaining control, gaining attention, or provoking a reaction.
When two people have entirely different objectives, communication becomes difficult.
One person is trying to resolve the issue.
The other is trying to avoid it.
Final Thoughts
One of the most important lessons many survivors learn is that communication alone cannot solve every problem.
Many people spend years searching for the perfect words, believing that if they could just explain themselves better, the narcissist would finally understand.
The reality is that understanding is often not the problem.
A narcissist doesn’t want to discuss their actions. They want to provoke your reactions so they can use your reactions as distractions from their actions.
The moment you recognise these communication patterns, you stop focusing on winning the conversation and start paying attention to the behaviour behind it.
And that awareness is often the first step towards protecting your peace.
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
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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.











