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The Nurturing After Narcissism Podcast
Am I the Narcissist?” The Question That Haunts Survivors
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Am I the Narcissist?” The Question That Haunts Survivors

If you've ever found yourself lying awake at night wondering, "What if I’m the problem?", you’re not alone. In fact, it’s one of the most common and painful questions I hear from survivors of narcissistic abuse.

And let me say this clearly: the fact that you're even asking this question is often the biggest sign that you are not the narcissist.

In this post, I want to unpack 7 reasons survivors start doubting themselves, how narcissistic abuse can distort your self-image, and why your self-reflection is actually proof of your humanity, not pathology.


Why Survivors Think They're the Narcissist

Survivors often carry the weight of misplaced blame, even long after the relationship ends. Maybe you yelled during an argument, shut down emotionally, or sought support outside the relationship and now you're spiraling in guilt. I get it. Here’s why this happens:

  1. You were told you were the narcissist. Over and over, your abuser may have labeled you as selfish, dramatic, or manipulative.

  2. You were gaslit into doubting your own emotional needs. Being called “too much” or “too sensitive” slowly chips away at your truth.

  3. You acted out in dysregulation. Slamming a door, snapping, or breaking down in tears isn’t narcissism, it’s survival.

  4. You shut down to protect yourself. That’s not silent treatment, it’s a trauma response.

  5. You confided in someone else. That’s not betrayal. That’s seeking safety and clarity.

  6. You became isolated. Not out of ego but to manage the chaos.

  7. You became reactive or suspicious. Hypervigilance isn't paranoia when you're constantly gaslit.


The Truth About Narcissism vs. Reactivity

Here’s the difference: narcissists don’t reflect, they don’t feel shame, and they don’t change. You, on the other hand, probably overthink, journal, apologize, and do everything in your power to be better.

That’s not narcissism, that’s empathy in motion.

If you’ve ever cried in the shower after an argument, questioned your tone, or apologized because you wanted to repair—not control—that’s growth. That’s healing. That’s proof that you're not the narcissist.


What Real Accountability Sounds Like

You’ve likely heard fake apologies like:

  • “I’m sorry you feel that way.”

  • “That wasn’t my intention.”

  • “I said sorry, what more do you want?”

But a real apology sounds like: "I hurt you. I take responsibility. I’m committed to doing better."

If you crave that kind of apology—or offer it yourself—you are not the narcissist. You are the one trying to heal.


Final Words

If you reflect on your actions, feel shame when you cause harm, and show up differently next time—you’re not the narcissist. You're human. You’re healing. You’re growing.

Your ability to reflect, repair, and rise again is the clearest proof that you are not broken. You are brave.

💗 You are not alone.


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