There’s a moment many people experience in narcissistic relationships that leaves them deeply confused: they realise they’ve started lying. Not big, malicious lies, but small omissions, filtered truths, softened explanations, or carefully edited versions of reality designed to avoid conflict. And for many people, this creates guilt and self-doubt. They begin questioning their own character.
“I was never like this before.”
That thought is more common than people realise.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
In healthy relationships, honesty feels safe. You can express yourself without fearing punishment, emotional withdrawal, rage, guilt-tripping, or manipulation. Even difficult conversations usually move toward understanding and resolution. But in narcissistic dynamics, honesty often becomes emotionally expensive. Over time, people adapt to survive the environment they’re in.
The important thing to understand is this: many people who begin hiding things in toxic relationships are not becoming deceptive by nature. They are becoming protective by necessity.
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One of the most common reasons people start lying is to avoid conflict. In narcissistic relationships, even harmless information can trigger disproportionate reactions. Something simple—wanting to see friends, visit family, spend money, rest, or have personal space—can suddenly become an argument. Instead of feeling heard, people feel interrogated, criticised, or emotionally punished.
Eventually, the brain starts learning a pattern:
“Honesty creates stress.”
And when that happens consistently, self-protection begins to override openness.
Another major factor is emotional unpredictability. In healthy communication, reactions are relatively stable. You generally know how someone will respond. In narcissistic relationships, reactions can feel inconsistent and extreme. One day something is fine; the next day it becomes a major issue. This unpredictability creates anxiety and hypervigilance.
People begin rehearsing conversations in their heads before speaking. They analyse wording, tone, timing, and possible outcomes. They start filtering information, not because they want to manipulate, but because they’re trying to manage another person’s emotional reactions.
This is where “walking on eggshells” develops.
Walking on eggshells changes behaviour slowly. At first, it may just be avoiding certain topics. Then it becomes minimising details. Eventually, people may hide entirely normal parts of their lives simply to avoid tension. They become highly attuned to moods, body language, silence, and subtle shifts in energy.
Over time, survival replaces authenticity.
Many people also begin lying to protect things that matter to them. Narcissistic partners often create tension around independence, relationships, hobbies, or anything that exists outside their control. Seeing friends may result in accusations. Spending time with family may trigger guilt-tripping. Pursuing goals or interests may invite criticism or passive-aggressive behaviour.
So people start hiding harmless activities because openness no longer feels emotionally safe.
What makes this especially painful is that victims often blame themselves afterward. They focus on the fact that they lied, rather than asking why honesty felt dangerous in the first place. But context matters. There is a huge psychological difference between manipulative deception and adaptive self-protection.
In many cases, these behaviours are trauma responses.
Trauma responses are not always dramatic or obvious. Sometimes they look like avoidance, silence, appeasement, overexplaining, or hiding information to reduce emotional harm. The nervous system adapts to unstable environments by prioritising safety over openness.
This is why many people feel emotionally exhausted in narcissistic relationships. They are not simply participating in communication; they are constantly managing emotional risk. Every conversation carries potential consequences.
Another difficult aspect of narcissistic dynamics is that honesty itself can be weaponised. Vulnerabilities shared in trust may later be used during arguments. Personal insecurities can become ammunition. Emotional openness may be mocked, dismissed, or minimised.
When this happens repeatedly, emotional safety disappears.
And once emotional safety disappears, authentic communication usually disappears with it.
One of the clearest signs of a healthy relationship is that people can tell the truth without fear. That doesn’t mean conflict never exists. It means conflict does not become emotional punishment, humiliation, intimidation, or manipulation. People feel able to express themselves honestly without constantly calculating the emotional fallout.
In toxic dynamics, however, communication often becomes strategic rather than natural. People start asking themselves:
“How do I say this without triggering them?”
“What version of this creates the least reaction?”
“Should I even mention it at all?”
Those are not signs of emotional freedom. They are signs of emotional survival.
The tragedy is that many victims eventually internalise the narcissist’s narrative. They start believing they are dishonest, difficult, selfish, or problematic. But often, their behaviours developed in response to an environment where openness repeatedly led to stress, criticism, or emotional instability.
That doesn’t mean lying is healthy long-term. It isn’t. Hiding parts of yourself slowly damages self-esteem and emotional wellbeing. It creates anxiety, disconnection, and shame. But understanding why it develops is an important part of healing.
Because healing begins when people stop asking:
“What’s wrong with me?”
…and start asking:
“What happened to me that made this feel necessary?”
That shift changes everything.
The goal of recovery is not simply learning to “tell the truth more.” It’s rebuilding emotional safety, self-trust, and the belief that healthy communication is possible. It’s learning that relationships should not require constant self-monitoring or emotional survival strategies.
The right relationships do not make honesty feel dangerous.
And if you feel like you can’t be truthful without consequences, anxiety, or emotional punishment, that says far more about the environment you’re in than it does about your character.
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.











