7 Narcissistic Behaviours That Slowly Destroy Relationships
Have you ever left a relationship feeling emotionally exhausted, confused, or like you slowly lost parts of yourself along the way?
Many people assume toxic relationships are defined by obvious abuse, constant arguments, or dramatic confrontations. But some of the most damaging narcissistic behaviours happen gradually. They often develop so subtly that you don’t fully recognise their impact until your confidence, emotional wellbeing, and sense of identity have already been affected.
While every individual is different, there are certain patterns that frequently appear in relationships involving narcissistic traits. Here are seven narcissistic behaviours that can slowly destroy relationships over time.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
1. Making Everything About Themselves
One of the most common experiences people describe is feeling emotionally unseen.
Whenever you share your feelings, struggles, achievements, or concerns, the conversation somehow shifts back to the narcissist. Your experiences become secondary to theirs.
You may begin a conversation seeking support, only to find yourself comforting them instead. Even important milestones and achievements can become opportunities for them to redirect attention toward themselves.
Healthy relationships involve mutual care, empathy, and emotional reciprocity. When one person’s needs consistently dominate the relationship, emotional imbalance develops, leaving the other person feeling invisible and unimportant.

2. Lack of Accountability
Every healthy relationship requires accountability.
People make mistakes. Conflict happens. Misunderstandings occur. What strengthens relationships is the willingness to acknowledge wrongdoing, apologise sincerely, and make meaningful changes.
Many narcissistic individuals struggle with accountability because accepting fault threatens their self-image. Instead of taking responsibility, they may blame others, minimise the problem, make excuses, or deny events altogether.
Over time, unresolved issues accumulate. Trust begins to erode because problems never truly get addressed. The same conflicts repeat themselves while responsibility is continually shifted elsewhere.
Eventually, you may feel as though you’re carrying the emotional burden for both people.
3. Emotional Invalidation
Emotional invalidation can be one of the most damaging forms of psychological harm because it attacks your relationship with your own feelings.
When you express hurt, disappointment, or concern, you may hear responses such as:
“You’re too sensitive.”
“You’re overreacting.”
“You’re imagining things.”
“You’re making a big deal out of nothing.”
Instead of your emotions being acknowledged, they’re dismissed or criticised.
Repeated invalidation teaches people to distrust their own emotional responses. You may start questioning whether your feelings are reasonable, whether your concerns matter, or whether your perception of events can be trusted.
Over time, this can significantly damage self-confidence and emotional self-awareness.
4. Constant Need for Control
Control doesn’t always appear as obvious dominance.
In many narcissistic relationships, control is subtle and difficult to identify.
It may appear as guilt-tripping when you make independent decisions. It may involve silent treatment when you set boundaries. Sometimes it shows up as criticism, manipulation, or emotional pressure designed to influence your choices.
Gradually, you may begin altering your behaviour to avoid conflict.
You stop expressing certain opinions. You become cautious about your decisions. You avoid activities that might upset them.
Little by little, your independence starts shrinking.
Healthy relationships encourage individuality and personal growth. Controlling relationships often have the opposite effect.
5. Love Bombing Followed by Withdrawal
Many people describe the beginning of narcissistic relationships as intense and exciting.
There may be overwhelming affection, constant attention, frequent communication, grand promises, and declarations of deep connection.
This phase can create a powerful emotional bond.
However, once attachment develops, the dynamic often changes. The affection becomes inconsistent. Attention decreases. Validation becomes unpredictable.
You find yourself longing for the version of them you experienced at the beginning.
This emotional inconsistency creates confusion. Many people work harder and harder to regain the warmth that initially drew them into the relationship.
The result can be emotional dependency and an unhealthy cycle of seeking approval.
6. Lack of Empathy
Empathy is one of the foundations of emotional intimacy.
It allows people to feel understood, supported, and emotionally connected during difficult moments.
Many narcissistic individuals struggle with empathy, particularly when another person’s needs compete with their own desires or self-interest.
When you’re hurting, they may appear emotionally detached, dismissive, impatient, or uninterested.
Rather than feeling comforted during vulnerable moments, you may feel alone.
One of the most painful experiences in a narcissistic relationship is realising that someone can be physically present while remaining emotionally unavailable.
This emotional loneliness often becomes increasingly painful as the relationship progresses.
7. Making You Question Yourself
Perhaps the most damaging behaviour is slowly causing someone to doubt their own reality.
Over time, repeated manipulation, denial, blame-shifting, and emotional invalidation can make you question your memory, judgment, feelings, and perceptions.
You may find yourself constantly second-guessing your decisions.
You begin asking yourself:
“Did that really happen?”
“Am I being unreasonable?”
“Maybe I’m the problem.”
When someone causes you to lose trust in yourself, the relationship becomes emotionally unsafe.
Self-doubt creates dependence because you begin relying on the other person to define reality for you.
This is one of the reasons recovery from narcissistic relationships often involves rebuilding self-trust and confidence.
Final Thoughts
Recognising these behaviours isn’t about diagnosing every difficult person as a narcissist. Instead, it’s about understanding unhealthy relationship patterns and protecting your emotional wellbeing.
Healthy relationships should provide emotional safety, respect, empathy, accountability, and stability. They should encourage growth, not confusion. They should strengthen your sense of self, not diminish it.
If you recognise these patterns from your own experiences, know that you are not alone. Many survivors spend years questioning themselves before understanding what happened.
Awareness is often the first step toward healing. The more clearly you can recognise unhealthy behaviours, the easier it becomes to set boundaries, rebuild self-trust, and move toward healthier relationships in the future.
Because real love should never require you to lose yourself in order to keep someone else happy.
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.











