Why Narcissists Never Answer Simple Questions
Have you ever asked a narcissist a simple question and somehow ended up more confused than when you started?
You ask for a yes or no answer.
You ask for clarification.
You ask for the truth.
Yet somehow the conversation goes everywhere except the question itself.
You may even find yourself repeating the same question multiple times, only to receive a completely different response every time.
Why does this happen?
Because for many narcissists, answering a simple question is not always the goal. Maintaining control, protecting their image, avoiding accountability, and shifting attention away from their behaviour often become the priority instead.
A straightforward answer can expose contradictions, reveal dishonesty, or require responsibility. For someone who struggles with accountability, avoiding the question can feel safer than answering it.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are seven reasons narcissists often avoid answering simple questions.
1. Deflection
One of the most common tactics narcissists use is deflection.
You ask a direct question.
Instead of answering, they redirect the conversation somewhere else entirely.
Perhaps you ask why they lied about something.
Suddenly they begin discussing your tone of voice.
You ask why they broke a promise.
Now they are talking about something that happened six months ago.
The focus quickly moves away from the original issue and onto a completely different topic.
The question remains unanswered.
Deflection works because it changes the direction of the conversation. Rather than discussing their behaviour, they create a new subject that allows them to avoid responsibility.
Many people become frustrated and follow the new topic, forgetting that the original question was never answered in the first place.

2. Word Salad
Sometimes narcissists respond with lengthy, confusing explanations that seem designed to overwhelm rather than clarify.
This tactic is often referred to as word salad.
The response may contain contradictions, irrelevant details, half-truths, and emotional statements that have little connection to the original question.
You may ask a simple question that requires a simple answer.
Instead, you receive ten minutes of confusion.
By the end of the conversation, you may struggle to remember what you originally asked.
This confusion serves a purpose.
The more confused you become, the harder it becomes to identify inconsistencies, challenge false claims, or hold someone accountable.
When clarity disappears, accountability often disappears with it.
3. Diversion
Diversion is similar to deflection but often involves creating a distraction.
Rather than discussing the issue, they introduce something new that immediately demands attention.
Suddenly there is another problem.
Another complaint.
Another emergency.
Another reason why they are the real victim.
The conversation becomes filled with unrelated issues that pull attention away from the original question.
Before long, everyone is discussing the distraction rather than the behaviour that was initially being addressed.
Diversion works because most people naturally respond to whatever seems urgent in the moment.
The narcissist understands this and uses it to redirect focus away from uncomfortable topics.
4. Counter-Accusations
One of the most frustrating experiences when dealing with a narcissist is watching a simple question turn into an attack against you.
You ask where they were.
They ask why you are so controlling.
You ask why they behaved a certain way.
They accuse you of being paranoid.
You ask for honesty.
They accuse you of being difficult.
Instead of answering, they place you on trial.
The conversation shifts from examining their behaviour to defending yours.
This tactic often leaves people feeling guilty, confused, or defensive.
Once again, the original question disappears.
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.
5. Playing Confused
Many narcissists suddenly become confused whenever accountability enters the conversation.
The question may be simple and direct.
Yet they respond with statements such as:
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“I don’t remember.”
“You’re not making sense.”
“I don’t understand the question.”
This apparent confusion can be surprisingly effective.
Most reasonable people assume that if someone genuinely doesn’t understand, further explanation is required.
As a result, they spend more time explaining and clarifying while the narcissist continues avoiding the issue.
Sometimes this confusion is genuine.
Often, however, it becomes a convenient escape route.
The longer they can avoid giving a direct answer, the less likely they are to face accountability for their behaviour.
6. Changing the Subject
Changing the subject is another common avoidance tactic.
You ask one question.
They answer a completely different one.
You ask about something that happened today.
They begin discussing something that happened years ago.
You ask about their behaviour.
They start talking about your family, your job, or an unrelated disagreement.
The conversation becomes so scattered that it is difficult to maintain focus.
Many survivors describe feeling mentally exhausted after these interactions.
The reason is simple.
Healthy communication follows a logical path.
Manipulative communication often jumps from topic to topic without ever resolving anything.
The goal is not understanding.
The goal is avoidance.
7. Avoiding Accountability
At the heart of many of these behaviours lies a simple motivation: avoiding accountability.
A direct answer may expose a lie.
Reveal hypocrisy.
Confirm manipulation.
Or require an apology.
For someone who depends heavily upon maintaining a particular image, these outcomes can feel threatening.
Rather than admitting fault, they may deny, distract, confuse, accuse, or evade.
Anything becomes preferable to taking responsibility.
This is why many conversations with narcissists feel repetitive.
You ask the same question repeatedly.
You receive different responses every time.
The issue never gets resolved because resolution would require accountability.
And accountability is often the very thing they are trying to avoid.
The Pattern Matters More Than the Answer
Healthy communication involves answering questions honestly, directly, and respectfully.
Even when conversations are difficult, healthy individuals generally try to address the issue being discussed.
Manipulative communication looks very different.
It is often filled with confusion, distraction, blame-shifting, and avoidance.
If you find yourself repeatedly asking the same question without receiving a clear answer, pay attention to the pattern.
Ask yourself whether the person is genuinely trying to communicate or whether they are simply trying to escape accountability.
A single avoided question may not mean much.
A consistent pattern tells a different story.
Sometimes the refusal to answer is the answer.
Sometimes silence speaks louder than words.
And sometimes the most important thing you can recognise is that someone who continually avoids accountability is showing you exactly who they are.
The more you recognise these patterns, the easier it becomes to stop chasing answers that may never come and start focusing on protecting your own peace, boundaries, and emotional wellbeing.
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.











