Who You Become Trying to Keep a Narcissist Happy
One of the most heartbreaking aspects of a narcissistic relationship is not simply the way the narcissist treats you. It is the gradual transformation that takes place within you as you try to keep them happy.
Most people do not enter relationships intending to lose themselves. They enter with hopes, dreams, opinions, boundaries, interests, and a sense of identity. Yet over time, many people involved with narcissists find themselves becoming someone they barely recognise.
This change rarely happens overnight.
It happens slowly.
One compromise at a time.
One sacrifice at a time.
One disappointment at a time.
Until one day you realise that your life has become centred around managing someone else’s emotions while ignoring your own.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
You Become a People Pleaser
In healthy relationships, both people’s needs matter.
In narcissistic relationships, however, the focus often becomes one-sided.
You learn that keeping them happy feels safer than dealing with their anger, criticism, sulking, silent treatment, or emotional withdrawal.
Gradually, you begin putting their wants ahead of your own.
You choose the restaurant they prefer.
You watch the programmes they like.
You rearrange your schedule to suit theirs.
You become increasingly focused on making life easier for them.
The problem is that narcissists often have endless expectations and very little appreciation.
No matter how much you do, there is always something else they want.
The goalposts constantly move.
As a result, you spend more and more energy trying to earn approval that never truly arrives.

You Start Walking on Eggshells
Many survivors describe feeling as though they were constantly walking on eggshells.
You become highly aware of their moods.
You analyse facial expressions.
You monitor the tone of their voice.
You carefully consider every word before speaking.
Simple conversations begin to feel risky.
You may avoid discussing certain topics because you know they could lead to conflict.
You may stop expressing concerns because previous attempts were met with anger, blame, or ridicule.
Instead of feeling free to be yourself, you become focused on avoiding problems.
Life becomes less about living and more about preventing explosions.
You Stop Trusting Yourself
One of the most damaging effects of narcissistic abuse is the gradual erosion of self-trust.
Many narcissists engage in behaviours such as gaslighting, blame shifting, projection, and manipulation.
They deny things they said.
They rewrite history.
They question your memory.
They make you feel responsible for problems they created.
Over time, you begin questioning your own judgement.
You may find yourself constantly seeking reassurance from others.
You may second-guess decisions you would once have made confidently.
You may wonder whether your feelings are valid.
Eventually, you stop looking inward for answers and start looking outward instead.
The narcissist becomes the person whose opinion seems to matter most.
This creates a dangerous imbalance where your confidence becomes dependent upon someone who continually undermines it.
You Shrink Yourself
Many people in narcissistic relationships gradually become smaller versions of themselves.
Not physically.
Emotionally.
Psychologically.
You stop sharing opinions.
You stop discussing goals.
You stop celebrating achievements.
You avoid anything that might trigger jealousy, criticism, or competition.
Perhaps you stop seeing certain friends.
Perhaps you stop pursuing hobbies.
Perhaps you stop dressing the way you like.
You begin editing yourself to reduce conflict.
Little by little, your authentic personality gets pushed into the background.
The parts of yourself that once made you unique become hidden away.
Not because they disappeared.
But because they no longer felt safe to express.
You Become Hypervigilant
Living with unpredictability often creates hypervigilance.
Hypervigilance is a state of constant alertness.
Your nervous system remains prepared for potential problems.
You become skilled at spotting subtle changes in mood.
You notice tension before anyone else.
You can sense conflict approaching long before it arrives.
While this may seem useful, it comes at a cost.
Constant vigilance is exhausting.
Your body struggles to relax.
Your mind struggles to switch off.
You may experience anxiety, sleep difficulties, stress, and emotional exhaustion.
Many survivors discover that even after the relationship ends, their nervous system remains on high alert because it has become accustomed to living in survival mode.
You Lose Sight of Your Own Needs
One of the most common consequences of narcissistic relationships is self-neglect.
When so much energy goes into managing another person’s emotions, there is very little left for yourself.
Your own needs gradually move to the bottom of the priority list.
You stop asking:
“What do I want?”
“What do I need?”
“What would make me happy?”
Instead, your focus becomes:
“What will keep them calm?”
“What will avoid conflict?”
“What will stop them getting upset?”
Over time, your own goals, dreams, interests, and wellbeing become secondary.
Many survivors reach a point where they genuinely struggle to identify what they want because they have spent so long focusing on someone else.
You Forget Who You Were Before Them
Perhaps the saddest transformation of all is losing touch with your authentic identity.
The confident person you once were may feel distant.
The carefree person you once were may feel unfamiliar.
The independent person you once were may feel forgotten.
Many survivors look back at old photographs and remember a version of themselves that seemed happier, lighter, and more secure.
This loss of identity can feel incredibly painful.
However, it is important to remember something.
You did not lose yourself completely.
The real you is still there.
The confidence.
The personality.
The dreams.
The strengths.
The values.
They may have been buried beneath years of survival, but they have not disappeared.
The Path Back to Yourself
The tragedy of trying to keep a narcissist happy is that it rarely works.
No amount of sacrificing yourself can fill another person’s emotional emptiness.
No amount of people pleasing can guarantee approval.
No amount of walking on eggshells can create lasting peace.
The more you abandon yourself, the more disconnected you become from who you truly are.
Healing begins when you stop asking how to make them happy.
Healing begins when you stop measuring your worth through their approval.
Healing begins when you start reconnecting with yourself.
Your feelings.
Your needs.
Your values.
Your goals.
Your identity.
Recovery is not about becoming someone new.
It is about rediscovering the person you were before you spent so much time trying to keep somebody else happy.
And that person is worth finding again.
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.











