Why Narcissists Never Take Accountability
One of the most confusing and emotionally draining experiences in a difficult relationship is trying to get someone to take responsibility for their behaviour — only to end up feeling like you are the one on trial.
You raise a concern.
You describe how something affected you.
You try to stay calm, factual, reasonable.
And somehow, by the end of the conversation, the focus has shifted completely.
Now you are defending yourself.
Now you are explaining your tone.
Now you are questioning whether you overreacted.
And the original issue — the behaviour that hurt you — has disappeared into the background.
This pattern is not random. It is not simply “bad communication.” It reflects deeper psychological and emotional mechanisms that make accountability something certain individuals consistently avoid.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Understanding why this happens does not excuse the behaviour, but it does bring clarity — and clarity is often the first step out of confusion.
1. Accountability threatens self-image
For many individuals who struggle with accountability, self-image is central to how they function.
They do not simply see themselves as someone who made a mistake. They often hold a deeper internal identity of being:
- right
- competent
- misunderstood
- or superior in some way
Admitting wrongdoing creates a direct threat to that internal identity.
So instead of holding the discomfort of “I did something wrong,” the mind defends itself by rewriting the situation.
This is not always conscious manipulation. In many cases, it is psychological self-protection. But the impact on others is still the same: accountability is avoided at all costs.

2. Blame-shifting protects emotional stability
Blame-shifting is one of the most common patterns seen in relationships where accountability is avoided.
Rather than owning behaviour, responsibility is redirected outward:
- “You made me react like that.”
- “If you hadn’t done X, I wouldn’t have done Y.”
- “This only happened because you…”
The focus moves away from their behaviour and onto your response.
This has a psychological function: it preserves internal emotional stability. If everything can be attributed to external causes, then there is no need to sit with guilt, shame, or discomfort.
The problem is that it creates a distorted version of reality where responsibility is always externalised.
3. Excuses replace genuine reflection
A genuine apology contains three elements:
- Acknowledgement of impact
- Ownership of behaviour
- Intention to change
In patterns where accountability is avoided, apologies often bypass these steps.
Instead, they become:
- “I’m sorry you feel that way.”
- “I didn’t mean it like that.”
- “I was stressed/tired/upset.”
These are not true apologies. They are explanations that shift focus away from responsibility.
On the surface, it can sound like accountability. But emotionally, it avoids the core requirement: owning the impact of behaviour without justification.
4. The focus shifts to your reaction
One of the most destabilising dynamics is when the conversation stops being about what happened and starts being about how you reacted to it.
You might bring up:
- a hurtful comment
- broken trust
- inconsistent behaviour
But the response becomes:
- “Why are you so angry?”
- “Your tone is the real problem.”
- “You’re overreacting.”
This reversal changes the entire emotional structure of the interaction.
Instead of accountability being explored, your emotional response becomes the issue.
Over time, this can lead to self-doubt, because the original event is never fully acknowledged or resolved.
5. Reality is rewritten over time
Another reason accountability is avoided is the ability to reinterpret events.
This can look like:
- denying previous statements
- minimising past promises
- changing the meaning of conversations
- forgetting key details that others clearly remember
This is not always a deliberate strategy. In some cases, it is a psychological process where memory becomes self-serving.
But the effect is significant: if reality can be redefined, then accountability becomes optional.
When someone consistently reframes the past, it becomes difficult for others to trust their own perception of events.
6. Victim positioning shifts sympathy
When confronted with behaviour, some individuals may shift into a victim role.
Instead of focusing on what they did, attention moves toward how they are being treated:
- “No one understands me.”
- “I’m always the bad one.”
- “Everyone is against me.”
This has a powerful emotional effect. It redirects empathy away from the original issue and back toward them.
As a result, the conversation becomes about comforting them rather than addressing the behaviour that caused harm.
This dynamic can be particularly confusing because it blends real emotion with avoidance of responsibility.
7. Without accountability, patterns repeat
Perhaps the clearest indicator of missing accountability is repetition.
When someone truly takes responsibility, change follows:
- behaviour is acknowledged
- adjustments are made
- patterns shift over time
When accountability is absent, the cycle repeats.
The words may change:
- different apologies
- different explanations
- different promises
But the underlying behaviour remains the same.
This repetition is often what leads people to realise that explanations alone are not enough. Change requires ownership, not just conversation.
The emotional impact on you
Being in repeated conversations without accountability can have a subtle but powerful effect.
You may start to:
- question your memory
- doubt your emotional reactions
- over-explain yourself
- feel anxious before bringing things up
- minimise your own needs
This is not accidental. It is what happens when reality is repeatedly shifted away from the original issue.
Over time, the emotional burden becomes heavier than the situation itself.
The most important truth
One of the hardest but most freeing realisations is this:
You cannot create accountability in someone who benefits from avoiding it.
No amount of explaining, proving, or emotional effort can force ownership where it is not internally present.
The shift happens when you stop measuring truth by words and start measuring it by behaviour.
Because accountability is not found in:
- apologies
- explanations
- promises
It is found in consistency over time.
Final reflection
When accountability is missing, confusion becomes the emotional default.
You try harder to be understood.
You explain more clearly.
You hope the next conversation will be different.
But clarity does not come from convincing someone else to see your reality.
It comes from trusting what their patterns already show you.
And once you see that clearly, the dynamic begins to lose its power.
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.











