7 Things Narcissists Do When You Walk Away
Walking away from a narcissistic relationship is rarely just about ending the relationship itself. For many survivors, it marks the beginning of a new phase of manipulation.
When someone has relied on control, validation, or emotional influence within a relationship, your decision to leave can disrupt that dynamic. Their behaviour may change dramatically, not necessarily because they have reflected on their actions, but because they are reacting to the loss of influence.
It is important to remember that not everyone behaves this way after a breakup, and these behaviours are not unique to narcissism. However, many people recovering from emotionally abusive relationships recognise these patterns.
The Things Narcissists Teach Us About Ourselves: Finding Self-Worth, Healthy Boundaries, Healing & Freedom After Narcissistic Abuse Transform your pain into growth by rebuilding self-worth, strengthening boundaries, healing emotional wounds, and creating a life beyond narcissistic abuse.
Here are seven common things narcissists may do when you walk away.
1. They Love Bomb You Again
One of the most confusing experiences after leaving can be the sudden return of the person you always hoped they would become.
They may become affectionate, attentive and seemingly full of remorse. They send thoughtful messages, make grand gestures, shower you with compliments and remind you of the happiest moments in the relationship.
It can feel as though everything you wanted is finally happening.
This sudden shift often creates confusion because it appears to contradict everything that happened before.
The important question is not whether they are behaving differently today, but whether they have demonstrated consistent accountability, insight and long-term behavioural change.
Real change usually takes time, effort and genuine self-reflection. Temporary kindness alone does not necessarily indicate lasting transformation.

2. They Promise Everything Will Change
When they realise you are serious about leaving, promises often become urgent.
You may hear statements such as:
“I’ll change.”
“I’ll go to therapy.”
“I finally understand what I’ve done.”
“Please just give me one more chance.”
These promises can feel incredibly convincing, particularly if you have been waiting months or years to hear them.
Hope is powerful.
Unfortunately, hope can also make it difficult to separate words from actions.
Healthy relationships are rebuilt through consistent behaviour over time, not through emotional promises made during a crisis.
If meaningful change is genuine, it will continue regardless of whether you immediately return.
3. They Play the Victim
Instead of acknowledging your pain, the focus may suddenly shift towards theirs.
Rather than discussing the behaviours that led to the relationship ending, they may present themselves as the person who has been abandoned or treated unfairly.
They may tell others:
“I gave them everything.”
“They just walked away.”
“I don’t know what I did wrong.”
This reversal can trigger enormous guilt, especially if you are naturally compassionate.
Many survivors begin questioning whether they have been too harsh or whether they owe the other person another opportunity.
Protecting yourself does not make you cruel.
Choosing your own wellbeing is not the same as intentionally hurting someone else.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
4. They Smear Your Reputation
When direct control becomes more difficult, attention may shift towards controlling how other people see you.
Friends, family members, colleagues or mutual acquaintances may hear a very different version of events.
The relationship story becomes rewritten.
Important details are omitted.
Responsibility is minimised.
Your reactions may be presented without the context that caused them.
Smear campaigns can feel deeply distressing because they attack your reputation rather than addressing the issues within the relationship itself.
Although it can be tempting to defend yourself to everyone, constantly trying to correct every false narrative often becomes exhausting.
Over time, consistent behaviour usually speaks far louder than repeated explanations.
5. They Find Reasons to Stay in Contact
The messages often appear harmless.
A question about an item.
A birthday greeting.
A request for advice.
A reason that seems too small to refuse.
Each interaction may appear insignificant on its own, yet together they maintain an emotional connection.
The purpose is not always the topic itself.
Sometimes it is simply maintaining access.
Every reply creates another opportunity for conversation, emotional engagement or influence.
For individuals trying to heal, repeated contact can reopen emotional wounds and make it harder to move forward.
This is why many people find that clear, consistent boundaries support their recovery.
6. They Try to Make You Jealous
Sometimes they appear happier than ever.
Their social media suddenly becomes full of photographs, achievements or a new relationship.
They may mention how quickly they have moved on or how wonderful life has become.
These displays can leave you questioning whether the relationship ever mattered.
In reality, social media rarely reflects someone’s complete emotional experience.
Many people present carefully selected moments rather than everyday reality.
If someone’s primary goal is to provoke an emotional reaction, comparison becomes part of the strategy.
The healthiest response is often to stop measuring your healing against someone else’s online image.
Your recovery deserves your attention far more than their performance.
7. They Become Angry When They Lose Control
When affection, promises and guilt no longer achieve the desired outcome, frustration may emerge.
You may suddenly be described as selfish, uncaring or impossible to please.
The same person who recently declared their love may now criticise your character.
This shift can seem dramatic, but it often reflects the loss of influence rather than genuine understanding of the relationship.
When someone depends heavily on maintaining control, losing that control can trigger anger.
Remaining calm and maintaining your boundaries can feel incredibly difficult during these moments.
Yet boundaries are not punishments.
They are healthy limits that protect your emotional wellbeing.
Moving Forward
Walking away from an unhealthy relationship is rarely easy.
It often involves grief, uncertainty and moments of self-doubt.
You may wonder whether you made the right decision or whether things could have been different.
Those questions are completely understandable.
Healing is not about proving someone else was wrong.
It is about rebuilding your own sense of safety, confidence and peace.
As you recover, the focus gradually shifts away from analysing their behaviour and back towards understanding yourself.
You begin trusting your instincts again.
You recognise your worth without needing someone else’s approval.
You learn that boundaries are acts of self-respect rather than selfishness.
Most importantly, you discover that freedom is not simply leaving a relationship.
Freedom is reaching the point where their attempts to pull you back no longer determine your choices, your emotions or your future.
That is where lasting healing truly begins.
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.
✨ The Things Narcissists Teach Us About Ourselves: Finding Self-Worth, Healthy Boundaries, Healing & Freedom After Narcissistic Abuse Transform your pain into growth by rebuilding self-worth, strengthening boundaries, healing emotional wounds, and creating a life beyond narcissistic abuse.
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.











