7 Things Narcissists Say to Make Their Toxic Behaviour Your Fault
A narcissist rarely wants to discuss what they did.
Instead, the focus quickly shifts away from their behaviour and onto your reaction to it. The conversation stops being about accountability and starts becoming about blame, confusion, and emotional defence.
Over time, this pattern can leave you questioning your own judgement, second-guessing your reactions, and feeling responsible for situations you did not create.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Here are 7 common phrases narcissists use to make their toxic behaviour your fault.
1. “You made me do it”
This is one of the most direct forms of blame-shifting.
Whether it involves anger, insults, lies, cheating, or emotional withdrawal, the responsibility is transferred away from them and placed onto you.
Instead of owning their behaviour, they suggest your actions somehow forced them into it.
This creates a false cause-and-effect narrative:
Your behaviour caused their reaction.
In reality, adult behaviour is a choice. But this phrase removes choice entirely and replaces it with justification.
The result is often guilt, confusion, and self-doubt in the other person.

2. “You’re too sensitive”
This phrase reframes emotional response as the problem.
Instead of addressing what was said or done, the focus shifts to how you reacted.
If you feel hurt, offended, or upset, that becomes the issue rather than the behaviour that caused it.
This is emotionally invalidating because it dismisses your internal experience.
Over time, you may begin to suppress your reactions to avoid being labelled as “too sensitive,” which can weaken emotional boundaries.
The message becomes:
The problem is not what I did, but that you noticed it.
3. “I was only trying to help”
On the surface, this can sound reasonable. But in manipulative dynamics, it is often used to reframe control, criticism, or interference as kindness.
When you challenge the behaviour, you are positioned as ungrateful or difficult.
This creates a reversal of accountability:
- Their control becomes care
- Their criticism becomes concern
- Their intrusion becomes support
Instead of questioning their actions, you may end up defending yourself for not appreciating them.
This tactic makes it difficult to set boundaries without feeling guilty.
4. “You misunderstood me”
Rather than clarifying or explaining their behaviour, they shift responsibility onto your interpretation.
This phrase suggests that the issue is not what they said or did, but how you perceived it.
It subtly invalidates your understanding of events and creates uncertainty about your judgement.
Over time, this can lead to self-doubt:
- Did I hear that correctly?
- Am I overreacting?
- Am I misreading everything?
This erosion of confidence is one of the most powerful outcomes of this tactic.
5. “If you had just communicated better…”
Here, responsibility is redirected onto your communication rather than their behaviour.
The implication is that their actions were reasonable, and the problem only exists because you failed to express yourself properly.
This creates a moving target:
- If you speak up, you’re “too emotional”
- If you stay quiet, you “never communicated”
- If you try to explain, it’s “not clear enough”
No matter what you do, the responsibility remains on you.
This keeps you in a cycle of over-explaining and self-correcting.
6. “I was only joking”
This phrase is often used to dismiss cruelty, sarcasm, insults, or humiliation.
When you react to hurtful comments, the behaviour is reframed as humour, and your reaction becomes the problem.
You are placed in a position where:
- If you laugh, you tolerate it
- If you object, you are “too serious” or “can’t take a joke”
This creates a confusing double bind.
Over time, it can make you less likely to speak up when something hurts, reinforcing emotional suppression.
In healthy communication, jokes do not require someone to feel diminished in order to be funny.
7. “You’re the toxic one”
This is perhaps the most damaging reversal of all.
The person causing harm becomes the one defining you as the problem.
This is a form of projection combined with blame-shifting. It turns accountability completely upside down.
You may find yourself defending your character instead of addressing the behaviour that caused the conflict.
This tactic can leave long-lasting effects, including:
- Self-doubt
- Shame
- Confusion about reality
- Difficulty trusting your own judgement
It often serves one key purpose: to shift focus away from their behaviour entirely.
The Pattern Behind All 7 Phrases
While these phrases may sound different, they often serve the same function:
- Avoid accountability
- Shift responsibility
- Create confusion
- Deflect attention
- Maintain control of the narrative
When these statements are repeated over time, they can reshape how you see yourself and the relationship.
You may begin to feel responsible for emotional reactions you did not cause. You may start apologising for things that were never yours to own. You may even begin to doubt your perception of reality.
This is not about isolated arguments. It is about a consistent pattern of communication that distorts responsibility.
Final Thoughts
Healthy communication does not require blame to function.
In balanced relationships, people can acknowledge impact, take responsibility, and discuss issues without turning everything into someone’s fault.
Manipulative communication, however, often avoids accountability at all costs.
If you repeatedly hear phrases that make you feel responsible for someone else’s behaviour, it may be worth stepping back and observing the pattern rather than engaging with each individual statement.
Because sometimes the most important realisation is this:
Your reaction may need reflection, but it does not erase the behaviour that caused it.
And responsibility for actions ultimately belongs to the person who chose them.
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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