Why Narcissists Do What They Do: Understanding the Patterns Behind the Behaviour
One of the most confusing parts of dealing with narcissistic behaviour is trying to understand why it happens. Why do they love bomb you one moment, then withdraw the next? Why do they deny things they clearly said, shift blame onto you, or suddenly come back after months of silence?
To the person experiencing it, the behaviour can feel chaotic and emotionally exhausting. But in many cases, it follows a pattern.
Understanding these patterns doesn’t excuse harmful behaviour—but it does help you stop internalising the confusion and start seeing the dynamic more clearly.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
1. Love Bombing: Creating Fast Emotional Attachment
At the beginning, everything can feel intense. Constant attention, affection, compliments, future plans—it feels exciting, validating, and deeply connecting.
This stage is often referred to as love bombing.
The purpose isn’t always conscious manipulation, but it frequently creates the same outcome: rapid emotional attachment. The intensity builds trust and emotional investment before deeper patterns become visible.
The more attached you become early on, the harder it becomes to walk away later when unhealthy behaviour starts to appear.

2. Future Faking: Keeping You Invested
Promises play a powerful role in narcissistic dynamics. Discussions about marriage, change, healing, future plans, or “what could be” create hope.
This is often called future faking.
The focus shifts away from what’s actually happening in the present and onto the possibility of a better future. You remain emotionally invested because you’re holding onto potential rather than reality.
This creates a cycle where you keep waiting for consistency that never fully arrives.
3. Silent Treatment: Regaining Power Through Withdrawal
One of the most emotionally destabilising behaviours is the silent treatment. Communication suddenly stops. Messages go unanswered. Emotional distance appears without explanation.
The silence itself creates anxiety.
You start replaying conversations, analysing your behaviour, and trying to fix a problem you may not have caused. The emotional focus shifts entirely onto restoring connection.
That’s what gives the silent treatment its power—it creates uncertainty and imbalance.
Instead of discussing the actual issue, the dynamic becomes about regaining their approval or attention.
4. Blame Shifting: Avoiding Accountability
Healthy relationships involve accountability. Narcissistic dynamics often avoid it.
When concerns are raised, the focus quickly shifts away from their behaviour and onto your reaction.
Instead of discussing what happened, the conversation becomes:
- “You’re too sensitive.”
- “You’re overreacting.”
- “Look how you’re speaking to me.”
This tactic protects their self-image while placing emotional responsibility onto you. Over time, you may begin doubting whether your feelings are justified at all.
The original issue disappears, and you end up defending yourself instead.
5. Gaslighting: Creating Confusion and Self-Doubt
Gaslighting is one of the most psychologically damaging behaviours because it targets your perception of reality.
Events are denied. Conversations are rewritten. Your memory is questioned.
You hear things like:
- “That never happened.”
- “You’re imagining things.”
- “You always misunderstand.”
The goal isn’t always to convince you completely—it’s often enough to make you question yourself.
And once self-doubt appears, control increases. Because when you stop trusting your own perception, you start relying more heavily on theirs.
6. Inconsistency: Strengthening Emotional Attachment
One of the reasons narcissistic relationships become so addictive is inconsistency.
One moment they’re loving, attentive, and emotionally available. The next, they’re distant, cold, or critical.
This creates emotional highs and lows that keep you psychologically focused on regaining the “good” version of them.
The unpredictability strengthens attachment because your brain becomes conditioned to seek emotional relief and validation. It’s similar to intermittent reinforcement—the same mechanism that keeps people attached to unpredictable rewards.
You end up chasing moments of connection while tolerating increasing emotional instability.
7. Hoovering: Pulling You Back Into the Cycle
When you begin distancing yourself, another pattern often appears: hoovering.
Suddenly they return with:
- Apologies
- Attention
- Nostalgia
- Crisis situations
- Promises of change
The timing often feels significant—especially when you’ve finally started healing or moving forward.
Hoovering isn’t necessarily about genuine transformation. Often, it’s about restoring emotional access, control, or validation.
And because the earlier stages created attachment and hope, the pull can feel incredibly powerful.
Why Narcissists Behave This Way
At the core of many narcissistic behaviours are a few consistent themes:
Control
Control creates emotional security for them. If they can influence the emotional dynamic, they feel more stable and powerful.
Validation
External validation becomes essential. Attention, admiration, emotional reactions, and reassurance all reinforce their self-image.
Avoiding Shame
Deep accountability can trigger feelings of inadequacy or shame. Blame shifting, denial, and defensiveness help protect against that discomfort.
Emotional Supply
Reactions—whether positive or negative—maintain emotional significance and attention within the relationship.
Why It Feels So Confusing
The confusion comes from contradiction.
You’re trying to apply healthy relationship logic to an unhealthy dynamic. You expect communication, empathy, consistency, and accountability.
Instead, the relationship operates through unpredictability, emotional shifts, and power imbalances.
That inconsistency creates cognitive dissonance:
- “They say they love me… but hurt me.”
- “They apologise… but repeat the behaviour.”
- “They seem genuine… but nothing changes.”
Your mind keeps trying to resolve the contradiction, which is why the cycle becomes mentally exhausting.
The Shift That Changes Everything
Healing often begins when you stop asking:
“Why are they doing this to me?”
…and start asking:
“Why am I staying in a dynamic that consistently harms me?”
That shift moves the focus back onto your wellbeing, your boundaries, and your healing.
Because understanding narcissistic behaviour isn’t really about analysing them forever. It’s about gaining enough clarity to stop questioning yourself.
Final Thought
Narcissistic behaviour rarely feels random when you step back and look at the pattern. Love bombing, gaslighting, blame shifting, inconsistency, and hoovering all serve a purpose within the dynamic.
That purpose is usually centred around:
👉 control
👉 validation
👉 emotional access
👉 avoiding accountability
And once you understand the pattern, the confusion starts to lose its power.
Because clarity changes everything.
Not because it changes them—but because it changes how you respond, what you tolerate, and what you choose moving forward.
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.










