Surviving Dirty John with Debra Newell Pt. 1 | Navigating Narcissism with Dr. Ramani

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 8. 03. 2023
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    Season 2 of Navigating Narcissism premieres on March 16th!
    Debra Newell became nationally known when the LA Times and Deadline covered her volatile relationship with John Meehan, also known as Dirty John. Debra discusses how she met John, the list of past narcissistic/abusive relationships she's had, and how her unawareness of red flags and love bombing made her a vulnerable target. Listen to part 1 of 2 episodes of Debra's story, and learn about the steps she took to get out of the relationship safely while protecting her own family.
    I want to hear from you, too. Have a toxic topic you want me to explore? Email me at askdrramani@redtabletalk.com. I just might answer your questions on air.
    Guest Bio:
    Debra Newell is an interior designer based in Orange County, California. She’s the founder of Ambrosia Interior Design and is a self-made multimillionaire. As a little girl, she was always sick, so she’d spend her time drawing and designing houses. She grew up in a loving family, and although her previous marriages ended in divorce, she was close with her four children. She continues to build her interior design empire today; while spreading the word about domestic abuse and how to look out for red flags. She doesn’t believe in victim shaming, so she wrote a book about her experience with her narcissistic, abusive fifth husband, John Meehan. She and her daughter Terra, use their experience to share with those who may be going through the same struggles.
    Guest Information:
    Debra Newell’s Instagram - @debraambrosenewell
    This podcast should not be used as a substitute for medical or mental health advice. Individuals are advised to seek independent medical advice, counseling, and/or therapy from a healthcare professional with respect to any medical condition, mental health issue, or health inquiry, including matters discussed on this podcast.
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Komentáƙe • 627

  • @brittneysperspective8433
    @brittneysperspective8433 Pƙed rokem +249

    Forgiving someone who abuses and kills your daughter!? Unacceptable!
    Toxic Positivity. People, you absolutely have to have a line in the sand! You are not wrong to have boundaries.

    • @jenmdawg
      @jenmdawg Pƙed rokem +51

      I think it is "pathological altruism" at its core and abusers rely on this to perpetuate their abuse. There IS a way to NOT hate an abuser/murderer and that is by accepting the reality of what they did and who they are but to openly use the word "forgive" sets up a terrible example for her daughters, grandkids, etc. I come from two long lines of criminals who depend upon the grace and love of their victims to stay out of prison, support themselves etc (some of them are avid churchgoers) and well meaning people have said "You need to forgive" and "you only have one [insert close relative here]" let them back into my life but I reply "I only have one LIFE". I have fully accepted they are not able to love or live good, honest lives but it is up to their god/God to forgive them - that's god's job, not mine.

    • @notaclue822
      @notaclue822 Pƙed rokem +19

      Yes i agree, its toxic something, especially since it was immediate with no accountability or processing. Like the onus is on them when it needs to be on the perpetrator.

    • @saraw112
      @saraw112 Pƙed rokem +5

      You don’t understand. It’s impossible for some people to get it
 no explanation will be understandable to some


    • @123YMR
      @123YMR Pƙed rokem +25

      Her Mom sounds like a covert narcissist, with strict ideas of how her daughter should have behaved regardless of what her husband did. Sounds like she sympathised with her daughter’s murderer, mind boggling.

    • @nicolecarnevale3226
      @nicolecarnevale3226 Pƙed rokem +19

      Twisting a disgusting crime, blame and bully the victim. The victim is blamed for not being positive in the face of attempted murder, sexual assault etc. Twisted.

  • @solaura6218
    @solaura6218 Pƙed rokem +64

    The problem with chemistry is that it is totally superficial. It is lust, not love.

    • @StellaAdler_
      @StellaAdler_ Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +5

      I remember one therapist telling me after a hellish narcissistic relationship, she said that those butterflies we feel are actually warning sings our body is trying to tell us to RUN.

  • @asalane20
    @asalane20 Pƙed rokem +32

    This poor woman was so naive. Forgiveness does not mean re-engaging with the person.

  • @christinabeck9316
    @christinabeck9316 Pƙed rokem +22

    A few little red flags on the first date? Crossing a massive boundary by going in her room. Right there, he’s out for me. Get out and stay out.

  • @tyanaz1498
    @tyanaz1498 Pƙed rokem +51

    I have learned to question people's definition of "healthy" and sometimes I stick around for a while, I begin to see that healthy to them is toxic to me. The reason she has maladaptive patterns of relationships is that she was groomed that way at home.

  • @gabriellecimon
    @gabriellecimon Pƙed rokem +55

    I think she was never taught that forgiving doesn’t mean you have to be close to someone again. You can forgive and not forget without necessarily holding resentment about it. Just accepting that the person is the way they are.

  • @brandyandcream2
    @brandyandcream2 Pƙed rokem +84

    Here’s a part of the story Debra is not telling about her sisters murder.
    “At trial, Cindi’s and Debra’s mother Arlane Hart testified in Billy’s defense, explaining that she loved him and did not believe he had been in his right mind when he shot and killed her daughter. Per The LA Times, prosecutor Thomas Avdeef was stunned by Arlane’s testimony, which he interpreted as painting Cindi in a negative light. “They threw her under the bus,” Avdeef said, referring to Arlane and other family members who gave testimony. “I don’t know the dynamics of the family. I could never understand that. Why say bad things about the victim?”
    She grew in an abusive home and was taught to see abuse as ok and normal. I am surprised Dr. Ramani didn’t explicitly hammer this point and point this out. This wasn’t a simple case of her parents just asking her to forgive

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +19

      Right! I know this is awful to think, but I can’t help but wonder
 was Arlane maybe in on the plan to murder Cindi? Or at least aware of it? Another part they left out was that when Cindi left Billy, Arlane had Billy come live with her and Cindi lived elsewhere. Billy obviously planned this murder, given that he lied to a friend weeks prior about why he needed to borrow his gun, and if Billy was living at Arlane’s, was she really unaware of what he was up to? It’s possible she’s just that clueless and maybe Billy is/was a master manipulator, but I can’t really think of any other reason someone would be so quick to forgive such a horrific crime. And listening to Arlane discuss her daughter’s murder on the Dirty John podcast with such a strange tone of happiness does make me wonder. It’s like she didn’t even grieve at all for her dead child.

    • @testing1-2three
      @testing1-2three Pƙed rokem +22

      I think Dr. Ramani is being her utmost professional and doesn’t push it because she knows where they are mentally as in they just aren’t ready to see I that way and they may never get there. I noticed the same when she Interviewed Debra’s daughter as well. A regular person would become frustrated with them but the doctor is basically being good at her job. She can’t push it because they are not her direct patients.

    • @notaclue822
      @notaclue822 Pƙed rokem +14

      Yeah the misogyny of that mom created a culture in the family of never standing up to a man I figure. She would have approached the murder's defense team and offered to testify in his favour. That is so messed up.
      The next generation, Debra's daughters, seem to be aware of it.
      The Netflix miniseries was really good btw. Ronnie is a savvy young woman in it at least.

    • @andreavanda5402
      @andreavanda5402 Pƙed rokem +18

      Is this woman for real!? How naive can someone be? Dr. Ramani dropped the ball many times during this interview. I think she was instructed by the producers, who decided that this podcast was going to be as bland as possible, to just go along and be agreeable and light and substance-less. I say this because this woman has great insights on her other channel so what happened here?

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +21

      @@andreavanda5402 right
 I completely agree with you. I thought if anyone was going to finally call Debra out and ask her some tough questions rather than coddle her, that it would be Ramani because like you said, she generally seems to be overall intelligent with pretty accurate insights. I would have thought she’d see right through Debra’s “victim” act but yeah she pretty much dropped the ball here. Maybe it’s like you said, the producers pushed Ramani to be agreeable rather than confrontational at all, or maybe Ramani was purposely being like that because she wanted to get more information out of Debra and went with the friendly approach to try to get her to open up more. Either way, I am tired of everyone coddling Debra in these interviews
 this woman’s selfishness nearly got her daughter killed and she’s all giggling about it on talk shows and podcasts! And everyone just seems to go along with it! Wtf?

  • @lorieromano
    @lorieromano Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +30

    The fact that Dr. Ramani wants to avoid "focusing the lense" on Debra is scary. I have been married 3 times and it wasn't until i focused the lense on me and my choices, that i figured out i was the problem. Debra's description of her parents is suspect. I’d say its more than a coincidence to have two daughters find themselves in horrifically abusive relationships. Maybe her inability to see people for who they are extends to her family but there is def more than seeing the good in people going on here.

    • @marisolorosco4345
      @marisolorosco4345 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Agree.

    • @elizabeth84266
      @elizabeth84266 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +3

      Or maybe Debra is the toxic spoon in the cocktail
.

    • @lorieromano
      @lorieromano Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@elizabeth84266 hahaha perhaps.. but seriously, can one person have all that go on in their lives and the only explanation is "I love too much"?

  • @brittneysperspective8433
    @brittneysperspective8433 Pƙed rokem +76

    @57:00. I just cannot fathom. Her level of success. Her sister being murdered by her husband. Multiple failed marriages.
    And you marry a man your children hate, WITHOUT doing a background check? Without being SURE everything he said is true? Lord have mercy. I’m glad that she is telling her story.

    • @jillijane9793
      @jillijane9793 Pƙed rokem +9

      Marrying him after only a few weeks no less. She is probably on #6 by now. How many times can you be a "victim" before you learn...

    • @elizabeth84266
      @elizabeth84266 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      She seems to be devoid of empathy
 I think Dr, Ramani picked up in this too but she didn’t quite grasp it bc she is in therapist mode.
      BUT I guarantee you that if her son brought her home for dinner
.
      Her alarms would be BLARING!!!

    • @daCubanaqt
      @daCubanaqt Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Right! Women need to protect themselves. I would’ve done a background check on him so quick if I was her. So many successful women don’t check up in their potential new partner. There is so much you can find out nowadays by doing a simple internet search. It isn’t that hard, but so many women forgo it for some strange reason.

    • @wellinever1558
      @wellinever1558 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

      Unless you have been there you will never understand how it works.

    • @davidb5122
      @davidb5122 Pƙed 5 dny

      Yeah, good point. How did she not get crushed in her business

  • @Amaje311
    @Amaje311 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +11

    Made me cringe when she said her father was near perfect because I know that couldn't be true. As humans we are all flawed and not being able to see the flaws in others is also a huge red flag; it's like we are denying a part of reality. Heard so many red flags as well in the description of her family but I cant speak on it, since I was not there. I am so very glad she survived and had the courage to share these bits of her life with us, so we can learn from her mistakes. I applaud her for being so very courageous to let the world in, to learn from her mishaps.

    • @modestly4920
      @modestly4920 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      You know sometimes it is possible. Many of us don't have anywhere near to perfect father, that doesn't mean they are not there.

  • @pizzakrydder2515
    @pizzakrydder2515 Pƙed rokem +54

    I can't help but to wonder if Debra's stalker in her youth was Billy, her sister's husband. He might have gotten someone to scare her only to come in and be "the hero". Some sick game.

    • @TestTest-ft9xh
      @TestTest-ft9xh Pƙed rokem +8

      I think a commenter said she mentions elsewhere that he was a man who frequented a restaurant she worked at was eventually caught.

    • @lv5584
      @lv5584 Pƙed rokem +4

      I think you nailed it!!

    • @007nadineL
      @007nadineL Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +4

      I just made same comment before I saw yours
      !!!!!!!!

    • @lv5584
      @lv5584 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      I'm starting to feel they are all MASONS . Debra is doing the ILLUMINATI hand sign In interviews !!!! This "story " is not what it SEEMS !! it's getting all this publicity for a REASON !!! Sorry but reading comments & learning more information on this family /story & DEBRA Rubs me the WRONG WAY!!! SORRY not paying more attention to this .

    • @redsloane9905
      @redsloane9905 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +8

      YES! I was thinking along the same lines! Billy could've hired some loser friend....and then JUST HAPPENED to be the knight that saved her!🙄😡

  • @andreawannop8670
    @andreawannop8670 Pƙed rokem +33

    Oh god...first date invite a first date to your house...just crazy

    • @karriesaunders8597
      @karriesaunders8597 Pƙed rokem +5

      I think when a person has children,yes. Young people tend to do a lot of risky things,I did and I have put myself in those situations,now I don't even want to see old mates who lie or anyone who shows me more than one red flag.

    • @AAXS-op1vo
      @AAXS-op1vo Pƙed rokem +5

      Absolutely NOT. You are not coming in my house after just one date. And we damn sure ain’t having no night cap

  • @brandyandcream2
    @brandyandcream2 Pƙed rokem +155

    My first red flag was when Debra said her dad was perfect. There is no such thing as a perfect man or human.
    Based on her description of her parents it sounds like dad was likely abuse (possibly narcissistic), mom was an enabler (made excuses for and hid the abuse) and she was raised to not just see abuse as love but to always accept and forgive abuse. The chemistry she was looking for was familiar pattern of abusiveness she grew up with

    • @amyleiferman1167
      @amyleiferman1167 Pƙed rokem +27

      Agree with this. Debra initially said her mom had "traditional" views of marriage (antiquated) where the wife essentially serves the husband. Today, if a husband or partner has all the power, control, and decision-making in the relationship and the wife is to support him regardless, it falls under the definitions of domestic abuse (I am a therapist and keep a copy of the Power and Control Wheel of Domestic Abuse next to the tissues!). It sounds like her mother accepted her father's misogynistic behavior, therefore there was no apparent fighting between them. And isn't this a huge part of narcissistic abuse--to appear as the perfect family on the outside looking in? As long as the abuser is able to get their way, they would be in the ideal relationship and present as such. It is when the non-npd partner wants a voice or starts to set boundaries that the relationship starts to unravel.

    • @TestTest-ft9xh
      @TestTest-ft9xh Pƙed rokem

      Submission is a dirty word. It is very dangerous and leads to robotization (reversible) and then musselman (fatal) - Judith Herman, Trauma & Recovery
      Don't play with submission please.

    • @jacquelinedarby-kz3pz
      @jacquelinedarby-kz3pz Pƙed rokem +5

      I had a perfect dad.

    • @tomorrow4eva
      @tomorrow4eva Pƙed rokem +14

      I think her mum was the controller. Sets dad up on a pedestal, then gives everyone their marching orders. Dad doesn’t go against her for whatever reason, but clearly wasn’t truly happy with forgiving Billy.

    • @pallasathena1369
      @pallasathena1369 Pƙed rokem +12

      ​@@tomorrow4eva yes, the worst type is the martyr narc... The evil old bat actually chuckled with delight when discussing how she obeys God... And is so forgiving ...
      Awful listening to her rubbish..
      She is why her daughters became victims.

  • @healerscreek
    @healerscreek Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +35

    People who "forgive" no matter what are avoiding dealing with their emotions, sweeping it under the toxic positivity rug. I had "the sweetest ever" in-laws like that and they never dealt with anything emotionally. They just stuffed it, smiled, and carried on.

    • @oops-iam708
      @oops-iam708 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +5

      I am sorry for this. I’ve been casted the black sheep for pulling the rug or crying too long about my emotions having come from a “sweet” family as such. I wish it didn’t still hurt me today.

    • @davidb5122
      @davidb5122 Pƙed 5 dny +1

      Well said

  • @sjs3590
    @sjs3590 Pƙed rokem +102

    Thank you. I’ve been married 3 times for the same reasons. I tried to see the good in bad men.

    • @trishs4503
      @trishs4503 Pƙed rokem +3

      My story exactly!

    • @ting1084
      @ting1084 Pƙed rokem +2

      wow! me too!

    • @TestTest-ft9xh
      @TestTest-ft9xh Pƙed rokem +9

      Bad men, aka psychopaths, use self pity to induce empathy and help. Don't blame yourself and kind instincts that were purposely induced/manipulated by them laying it on thick.

    • @teresarenee3829
      @teresarenee3829 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +3

      Yup, I see the hurt little boy and I want to heal them. Bad men usually have a major sexual or physical abuse or neglect history, which interrupted their growth process and they forever stay those little boys, but get angrier and more self destructive with drugs or alcohol and that doesn't help.

    • @lovearttherapyalways
      @lovearttherapyalways Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      Me too. twice a fool was I and than I dated an absolute psychopath and swore of men for good! I still attract creeps, guys who are already with someone or even married and thinking they can play with me as a toy and get some...not this girl...no way...I see all the red flags now... I no longer see what I want to see but what is really there.

  • @dijaworldworld3895
    @dijaworldworld3895 Pƙed rokem +33

    Her mother taught her to disregard her instincts AND her mother put her kids second third and fourth. I forgave her daughters killer in one day so you can only imagine her disregard for her daughters emotional needs and choices she was making to divorce her husband. Then she started doing the same thing as her mother w her daughters. I am a smart beautiful woman, but I was taught to do the disease to please too. I did the same thing. Thank you for sharing this powerful story.

    • @marynywarriormomof1248
      @marynywarriormomof1248 Pƙed rokem

      Let's not blame her mother, there were huge red flags.

    • @dijaworldworld3895
      @dijaworldworld3895 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@marynywarriormomof1248 it’s not blaming. She loves her mother but it’s also true.

    • @marynywarriormomof1248
      @marynywarriormomof1248 Pƙed rokem

      @@dijaworldworld3895 what's true?

    • @tundeterez
      @tundeterez Pƙed rokem +5

      Yup, this is a generational thing. Also, I wonder if people notice her voice, that tone says a lot.

    • @redsloane9905
      @redsloane9905 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

      ​@@tundeterezvery 'little girl-ish' đŸ€ź

  • @teresafraser3049
    @teresafraser3049 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +14

    This beautuful soul has whats called Stockholm Syndrome....
    There is NO WAY that she along with her Sister who was murdered at the hands of her malignant Husband were raised in her words..."the most loving supportive Parents " this is an impossibility.....
    Her Mother was in her mind "a saint" her Father was wonderful...loving and supportive.....
    Nothing adds up so she has been in denial which unfortunately still is to this day.

  • @whyieyesyadonpiano
    @whyieyesyadonpiano Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +9

    Her mother forgave the man who murdered her daughter & this woman almost lost her own daughter to another abusive sociopath. Intergenerational trauma is real. I pray this woman's daughters are healing & awake bc mom still has got one foot in betrayal blindness. How on earth can she still refer to her mother as "the sweetest woman

    • @bereal6590
      @bereal6590 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +2

      That's a good point. It's also how I originally thought of my mother, as a victim of my father. Took me decades to realise she made me both his and her victim by smoothing over everything. It's not sweet, it's weak imo. Her mother by forgiving threw everyone else psychologically under the bus. Those kids needed therapy care and to be away from that man

  • @007nadineL
    @007nadineL Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +28

    *I'M GOING TO RESPECTFULLY SUGGEST THAT THEIR CHILDHOOD WAS NOT AS NORMAL SANE HAPPY AS SHE SUGGESTS IT WAS.*

    • @j1947m
      @j1947m Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +5

      I totally agree!

    • @Bells-ou1gj
      @Bells-ou1gj Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +6

      I agree, very bizarre that both her and her sister ended up in abusive relationships! What a coincidence...and their motheirs reaction after her daughter has been murdered as well🙄

  • @notaclue822
    @notaclue822 Pƙed rokem +53

    I'm sure she now realizes there are worse things than spending the evenings alone. Wow, she's an intelligent and genuine person and it's depressing she would set the bar so low in terms of who she let's into her life. Not judging, I see it as a societal problem that some people undervalue themselves to go along with being "nice"...i hate that word.

  • @luvbearbut
    @luvbearbut Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +13

    It's funny, the minute she said he was somewhat arrogant right out of the gate, I literally yelled at the phone "Ugh, NEXT! Total turn off!" Then Dr Ramani asked her if she knew that was a red flag😂

  • @maschinka_
    @maschinka_ Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +9

    I’m only nine minutes in but I can’t watch any further, it’s so blatantly obvious that her childhood was not as „perfect“ as she says. All the alarm bells were going off in my head immediately and I’m not the only one it seems like, looking through the comments, others had pointed this out way more eloquently.
    I understand why one would record an interview like that, but it’s extremely triggering to me (not the topic, just the toxic positivity around that)

    • @onlyonce1707
      @onlyonce1707 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

      Yes it gives me a brick in my stomach.

  • @christinabeck9316
    @christinabeck9316 Pƙed rokem +47

    She invited him to her apartment first date??!! Now this stranger knows where you live and sees what you have. Don’t do it. đŸ€ŠđŸŒâ€â™€ïž Then he appears in your room uninvited??! Jesus.

    • @gwenrios6268
      @gwenrios6268 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +5

      My sentiments exactly

    • @missym5196
      @missym5196 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +3

      I dated a narcissist 2 yrs. He didn't know where I lived the first 3 months. I found out he was married broke things off. Then stalking began. I had to move out of town this time last yr to make him lose my trail. He even made entry into my home when he knew I was at the hospital once! Police finally caught him 9/21/21

    • @JOY-ye2us
      @JOY-ye2us Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Oh too creepy, my x Narc would watch me and my daughter sleep and I asked him what he was doing? He said “ Have you ever seen something so beautiful in such a vulnerable state? “ yeah I know red flag but it didn’t stop there, creepy though as that may be there was much more to come. Deborah I’m a yes person also taught the same things and I’m so happy you are here to tell your story and you’re a great mother look at how your daughters turned out. Courageous beautiful young ladies. đŸ™đŸ’•đŸŸ

    • @JOY-ye2us
      @JOY-ye2us Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Predators for sure

  • @Aki.Yaghoubi
    @Aki.Yaghoubi Pƙed rokem +191

    Is it possible that those who say they had a great childhood and their parents were perfect and not abusive at all are in denial? Is it possible they are still unaware of the abuse that happened to them in their childhood? I'm very curious about this. Because I am listening to Debra's story, and I am hearing a lot of psychological abuse from her parents toward her and her siblings.

    • @laylaraven
      @laylaraven Pƙed rokem +57

      I have to agree with you. Something is definitely there in that childhood that modeled “looking the other way” and/or one parent compromising oneself. For two daughters to fall victim to abusers , one resulting in death and the other with multiple emotional/psychologically violent marriages “looking for love” she was obviously lacking within herself.

    • @brittneysperspective8433
      @brittneysperspective8433 Pƙed rokem +41

      @@laylaraven Well, listen to the daughter part on the podcast. 😐 She kinda spills the tea, and alludes to their being obvious issues within the family that were ignored. I’m struggling to believe her father was a good/perfect man.

    • @dijaworldworld3895
      @dijaworldworld3895 Pƙed rokem +22

      Telling your truth doesn’t mean that your parents were bad. Parents, including us as parents, are not perfect. Her Dad sounds controlling and her Mom allowed it. Both are responsible.

    • @sk.n.9302
      @sk.n.9302 Pƙed rokem +13

      My ex Narc husband would say this about my family, "it can't be, you had no isssues". We did have issues, enough for me to be attracted to a Narc, which is more than normal) BUT no where near the meaness & drama in his family.

    • @mmmsunshine5367
      @mmmsunshine5367 Pƙed rokem +20

      ​@@brittneysperspective8433 yep.....eberytime I hear the story and the "perfect" family thing I always go suuuuuuure if you say so but I have lots of questions

  • @trishs4503
    @trishs4503 Pƙed rokem +16

    For the Christian who’s struggling with forgiving someone who isn’t remorseful, Luke 17:3 says we should forgive someone if they are remorseful. It doesn’t say forgive a non-repentant person. It’s not biblical the idea that God forgives everyone! See John 3:16. There is a wonderful ministry called Luke 17:3 and it helped me tremendously!

    • @chrisdher65
      @chrisdher65 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      Jesus said “forgive them, for they know not what they do.” “They” were NOT repentant or remorseful. # 7x77

  • @lilymohsye
    @lilymohsye Pƙed rokem +16

    How does a father get his children back after having killed their mother???!!

    • @angeliquem.j.simard8437
      @angeliquem.j.simard8437 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +6

      Yes, this is deeply disturbing and I’m stunned. That’s a profoundly awful, twisted thing to do to these children . Everything about this is situation is bizarre and tragic for the kids.

  • @dolorestroeller4734
    @dolorestroeller4734 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +10

    If the love at home as a child was so amazing why did they seem to have such a need to be loved that they always were willing to risk their lives with these men especially Debra risking her children’s lives more than once. Severely damaged girls

  • @Renee302976
    @Renee302976 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +12

    It sounds like Debra is still in some serious denial about how bad John truly was, bless her heart đŸ€ŠđŸœâ€â™€ïž

  • @Nvrgiveup15
    @Nvrgiveup15 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +24

    Is anyone else not completely uncomfortable with her having no ability to see red flags after being married 5 times? Wouldn’t she be blamed for putting her children in danger after being told an investigator found out he was a fraud by her daughter? Ehy wouldnt she trust her children

  • @lynnwilliams8295
    @lynnwilliams8295 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +15

    This. This is why I’ve chosen to stay single for the last 13 years or so. Once your with a dangerous malignant narcissist it can ruin you. I do t trust people. To afraid to once again pick the wrong men. I’m actually pretty happy. I have friends who say “well I have to ask my husband” before we go anywhere or make plans. I don’t have to do that. I come and go as I please. No more multiple texts saying “where are you? Why aren’t you home yet? What’s taking you so long” it can be lonely at times but it’s worth not having to deal with all that

    • @Prometheuspredator
      @Prometheuspredator Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

      Same here.

    • @StellaAdler_
      @StellaAdler_ Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      My story is very much similar to urs. I’ve healed but im petrified to date & haven’t for the last 3 yrs. Learned a lot about narcissists and myself, but haven’t worked on building trust again.

  • @adimeter
    @adimeter Pƙed rokem +37

    This interview was painful to listen to. Debra has a long way to go in facing the truth about her parents. I put a lot of the blame on them. They taught her toxic positivity. Most of the ridiculous things Debra says, she starts off with telltale nervous laughter. That indicates to me that at some level she knows she is not grappling with fully facing things. Debra's mother is totally disgusting. I wanted to scream at our beloved Dr. Ramani. But I realize she was soft handling Debra because she is so fragile. I wonder how many years of therapy will Debra need to be able to stop her behavior. When will she ever be able to say something was major wrong with my family of origin. I am 75 yrs old and only discovered Dr. Ramani 2 yrs ago. I can say my family was toxic, narcissistic and I don't know what else. It might be hard but we have to face the hard facts. At least I think so. Now that I have I feel so much lighter. I feel so free. Good luck to Debra. And generationally speaking, good luck to her children. SMH

    • @No-xs1no
      @No-xs1no Pƙed rokem

      Debra and Ramani are narcissists themselves

    • @moniquemichelle7295
      @moniquemichelle7295 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +11

      YES! Exactly!! I’m 15 minutes in and triggered! She has zero awareness of the root cause of her trauma. My God.

    • @_Marina
      @_Marina Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Debra will need life-long in-depth psychotherapy. She has a severe emotional developmental delay, originating from childhood trauma (which she still is in denial of and not willing to address), exacerbated by adult trauma. She has her work cut out for her. Hopefully at some point she will realize she has a role to play in breaking this cycle and pattern of abuse and trauma...

  • @rebeccachambers419
    @rebeccachambers419 Pƙed rokem +15

    We misdefinenforgiveness. This person’s mother also misdefined forgiveness. Submission is also misdefined. It’s these types of things that gives Christianity a bad name.

    • @trishs4503
      @trishs4503 Pƙed rokem +4

      Indeed, amen! Luke 17:3 instructs us to forgive when someone is remorseful. Not abusers, not narcissists. It’s enough to eventually be able to accept the truth of what happened. As for submission, in the same exact passage, married people are supposed to submit to each other. Duh! I appreciate your comment!!

    • @jo-annkreiderkreider3116
      @jo-annkreiderkreider3116 Pƙed rokem

      czcams.com/users/liveLso9wViOuIE?feature=share

  • @jaceksulek
    @jaceksulek Pƙed rokem +10

    I have to admit I’m shocked by comments such as “gosh 5 marriages I learned after 1 already she should’ve know better”.

    • @Contessa998
      @Contessa998 Pƙed rokem +2

      I felt the same thought.

    • @TestTest-ft9xh
      @TestTest-ft9xh Pƙed rokem +4

      People don't understand the extreme bonkers obedience that her mother's & father's religion taught. LA Times podcast goes into detail about that aspect.
      It's chilling how conditioned the women were. You can see it's impact in the TWO! murders it resulted in one family system urgh.
      Submission is a dirty word. It is very dangerous and leads to robotization (reversible) and then musselman (fatal) - Judith Herman, Trauma & Recovery
      Don't play with submission please.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 Pƙed rokem +2

      ​@@TestTest-ft9xh i actually had a woman say to me it was God's will that her (extremely violent) husband (she'd left because she sensed he was going to kill her this time) died in a house fire to "save her from the dishonour of a divorce".
      Never mind the fact the husband had been bashing her bloody & broken for 20 years plus.
      And saying it to me - a divorced Christian.

  • @janm9610
    @janm9610 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +15

    There's an interesting perspective on forgiveness. When you forgive you, stop taking the poison, but the person, the perpetrator, does not escape the consequences of the action. It's just that you are no longer ruminating in the poison.

  • @sweetielady7710
    @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +20

    I’m confused about the stalker/attacker story from when Debra was in her late teens. Debra says here that he was never caught. But she said on Laura Richards’ podcast that he was in fact caught and sent to jail, but had no recollection due to the trauma. In her book, she again says that he was in fact caught by the police and went to jail, and that he was actually a guy she’d recognized as a regular at the restaurant at which she’d been working at the time. So was he caught or not? Also wondering why this story was never brought up on the original “Dirty John” podcast
 maybe she wasn’t comfortable discussing it yet at the time, but I feel like that’s kind of a major life event to omit, especially since Chris Goffard was digging into her past trying to understand her psychological state of mind.

  • @Sissy317
    @Sissy317 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +11

    The book “Dear John” saved my mental health. I went through the same type of abuse. God bless Debra. I understand why she did what she did. They are PRO con men. Mine got wanted in MI and left. I’m happy as I don’t have to worry about him coming back. Now I’m stronger and if he dared show his face to me I will would introduce him to my cast iron frying pan. No nice girl anymore.

    • @JOY-ye2us
      @JOY-ye2us Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      That’s good Sissy you have to protect yourself

  • @gabriellecimon
    @gabriellecimon Pƙed rokem +14

    It’s funny because he figured out her love languages right away and after that she was hooked. And immediately she thought that she finally found the Mr right.

    • @Cupcake44689
      @Cupcake44689 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      Nothing funny about finding out someone was copying you just to manipulate you.

    • @bernadettekelly8165
      @bernadettekelly8165 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      Sounds like a catfish or online shark .... 😼😼😼

  • @dolorestroeller4734
    @dolorestroeller4734 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +4

    It’s amazing how we are taught that if we don’t yell or fight with each and believe in the Bible everything with our family is great, but kids will always be too young (at the most crucial time of their lives) to figure out the real dynamics of the family 😱😱

  • @starlingswallow
    @starlingswallow Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +12

    I'm amazed. Here I thought that the only people who got wrapped up in abusive narcissistic relationships were those who had neglectful and even abusive dads~ now I see that it's also those who had _loving_ dads as well. Interesting.
    We are all susceptible. The only way to guard ourselves, outside of our parental upbringing, is to learn about red flags *early on.*

    • @AuntyEsther
      @AuntyEsther Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +4

      Idolizing and spoiling a child is also abuse; the recipient might think it's love.

  • @ThingsILove2266
    @ThingsILove2266 Pƙed rokem +8

    I thought it was interesting that he picked roses on the way to see her
. From where? The cemetery, or the neighbors yard?

    • @marthawilk
      @marthawilk Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      Stolen from neighbor’s yards

    • @redsloane9905
      @redsloane9905 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

      Ikr? Too weird.

  • @sheilasmith7779
    @sheilasmith7779 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +4

    Debra grew up with a family inwhich reality was presented as a
    Mary Poppin's world. It's a false reality of life, and of human beings. So her mariages and relationship with John made sense from her world view.
    Her perspective and her responses was based on her world, Mary Poppins, view, and makes sense.
    I think she still holds on to that view.

  • @LEM19284
    @LEM19284 Pƙed rokem +21

    I’m worried about Debra.

  • @cristinamoscarillo7695
    @cristinamoscarillo7695 Pƙed rokem +19

    Forgiveness is not forgetting and allow abuse to continue or giving that person a pass.Forgiveness is for you to let go and not foster the harm. Forgiveness is not for the other person but for you. it’s hard and it takes fully feeling your feelings for it to work .Once the heart becomes open, nothing else makes sense❀.

  • @scapps8173
    @scapps8173 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

    I know people who still believe you should forgive and forget. I don't do that. I can forgive, but I never forget what the abusive person did and I never allow them to do it again.

  • @gigiarmany4332
    @gigiarmany4332 Pƙed rokem +21

    I guess I'm too jaded but I 'm not buying the" perfect family" story.. 2 daughters in the clutches of narcopaths, one even unalived & a grand daughter almost? sorry too many coincidences in that "perfect" family, we know about COVERT NARCISSISM now..what I'm getting here is a total denial & lack of discernment about abuse, mental & physical😒🧐

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +3

      Definitely covert narcissism! You are spot on. Glad someone finally called this out.

    • @HollyMurphy3
      @HollyMurphy3 Pƙed rokem +2

      Not getting covert narc vibes, but enablers / codependents are super aggravating. I can’t stand them more than I can’t stand cluster B’s. My understanding of covert narcs is they are self loathing in order to get attention.

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@HollyMurphy3 they definitely can be self-loathing, but it’s normally an act. The main characteristic of a covert narc is that they LOVE to play the victim. They have to be the best at everything, including being the “best” victim. Most narcissists that I’ve been around (too many unfortunately lol) are usually a combination between being a grandiose and a covert narc. They are super overt and full of themselves, but if anything goes wrong or if they make mistakes, suddenly they turn into a “victim” and nobody can ever dare try to hold them accountable, because then that’s “victim-blaming” 🙄 (that seems to be the covert narc’s favorite line). They HAVE to be a victim, in their eyes, because they don’t believe there’s any way they did anything wrong. It’s always someone who did something to them. 🙄

    • @HollyMurphy3
      @HollyMurphy3 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@sweetielady7710 she was definitely a victim. Even if she liked it, which I don’t believe, it doesn’t make it ok. This John guy was a psychopath. Debra definitely has some personality traits that attracted this type of guy. She made some bad moves that almost cost her everything. But I think she was conditioned mostly by her upbringing. Most women are going to think this can’t happen to them, and come down on her. They don’t know the basic darkness that runs though mens’ heads as a general rule of thumb. The truth is, most women test high in agreeableness and attract at least some of these traits in a man, and settle for it. I see it everywhere i look. This is a very extreme example. That’s why people hate enablers. I bet if John would have spent his life in prison he would have had all kinds of women writing him love letters. As if they understand his pain and and side with him that Debra was not a victim.

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@HollyMurphy3 I’m not necessarily disagreeing; John was definitely a bad person, probably a psychopath, and even though I don’t see Debra as a victim, it doesn’t mean I side with John at all. Yes Debra was very likely the way she was due to her upbringing, but almost all narcissists are. We can say the same about John. He was literally taught his behavior by his dad, so if Debra gets a pass for her actions based on her upbringing, why doesn’t he? I ask that rhetorically, as I don’t believe anyone’s actions can be excused based on childhood issues. That goes for John AND Debra. I think they were both toxic in their own ways. I did a background search on Debra out of curiosity because I was really into this story and felt that a lot was left out overall. I can tell you from what I found that this woman is simply not as much of a victim as she wants people to think. Of course it doesn’t make John’s behavior okay, but she was a heck of a lot more complicit in all of it than she leads on.

  • @ladynataliemarie7780
    @ladynataliemarie7780 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +11

    I agree teach middle schoolers personality types and red flags and what manipulation is-

  • @shaneinan7797
    @shaneinan7797 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +4

    Holy moly!!! Executive producer JPS?!?!? How?
.đŸ€Ż

  • @annettecantu3826
    @annettecantu3826 Pƙed rokem +10

    Sitting on your bed first date is a RED BaNNER. Moving in after two months?? Ridiculous. I have no sympothy

    • @j1947m
      @j1947m Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      I have to admit that I WANT to have more sympathy than I actually HAVE; actually I feel more like kicking her in the pants!

  • @bonniekelley1130
    @bonniekelley1130 Pƙed rokem +8

    When I watched this story, I was actually angry with the victim for being so stupid. In August of 2021, I discovered my husband of 17 years was a total fraud, a classic malignant narcissist and everything that goes with that. I still haven't been able to fully forgive myself for being so damned dumb.

    • @ravernastahl8963
      @ravernastahl8963 Pƙed rokem +3

      You know what? I’m “angry” about how her mother let her down.

    • @sbdsinc8366
      @sbdsinc8366 Pƙed rokem +1

      It took me 10 years. They are just so good at manipulation

  • @carolynmurphy3697
    @carolynmurphy3697 Pƙed rokem +8

    Our Criminal System is so corrupt

  • @kathyhoskin8350
    @kathyhoskin8350 Pƙed rokem +14

    I'm surprised to hear she comes from such a wonderful background. I was sure she found herself in this type of relationship because she found it familiar and comforting.

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +18

      I don’t think her childhood was as idyllic as she’s claiming; she might be romanticizing it, especially since her father has passed away. A lot of people romanticize things and forget about the hardships after a loved one passes away, so maybe she’s just remembering all the good times from her early years and disregarding the bad. I do remember reading in her book that her sister got married on her 18th birthday so she could get out of the house as quickly as possible, and her brother is estranged from the family, so it sounds like their household maybe wasn’t as pleasant as she’s recalling.

    • @lv5584
      @lv5584 Pƙed rokem +5

      @@sweetielady7710 bingo!

    • @onlyonce1707
      @onlyonce1707 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

      Very interesting. She is overly nice about it all - it feels like she doesn't do healthy anger. But listening to this I feel anger for her and I wonder if Dr Ramani does too.

    • @Cupcake44689
      @Cupcake44689 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      Do not under estimate a narcissist. Their very existence depends on their behaviors getting the supply they need like oxygen.

  • @elipotter369
    @elipotter369 Pƙed rokem +19

    No. No, it's not sweetness that caused instant forgiveness. It's a failure to face truth & reality. There is something very seriously wrong to "forgive" a destructive control freak who shot your daughter dead.
    If my memory serves me right, hearing the mother talk, she was obsessed with showing everyone she was the good, best Christian for forgiving, but it was really a ploy to avoid her facing how imperfect & terrible the events in her own situation was - this terrible tragedy of domestic abuse that she'd done nothing to help with .
    Sounds Ike the mother bullied her husband into not facing reality, & brainwashed her remaining daughter that she was the best Christian. It's not out of sweetness the mother behaved that way. She seems very controlling.
    I've seen some traditional Christian wives fake they were submissive & behind the scenes bullying their husbands into carrying out their wishes.
    As for Deb, shudder. So fake nice.

    • @lv5584
      @lv5584 Pƙed rokem +6

      Covert narcissist the mother was! Reminds me soooo much of my own mother!!

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +7

      Your comment seems spot on. I totally agree. Debra says her mom is the sweetest person but siding with the murderer of your daughter is not sweet! Yes the mother is very much obsessed with showing the world her "perfect Christian" side and she even made a ton of money off the daughter's murder by traveling around the world and giving speeches about forgiveness!! And wrote a book about it! Ugh. People say Debra's dad might've been abusive (and it's possible he was), but I definitely think the mom was the abusive one! Forcing everyone to not only forgive the murderer but to be in his presence at family gatherings sounds like mentally abusive behavior to me.

    • @gtaylor6937
      @gtaylor6937 Pƙed rokem +1

      Totally agree - professing forgiveness for many is virtue signaling. But Debra has some great things going for her - she didn't buy it. And she raised some pretty cool daughters - they are intelligent and discerning and they're straight talkers. Hard to raise kids like that if you're a total dufus.

  • @amberovermyer2654
    @amberovermyer2654 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +10

    Teaching your children willful ignorance is harmful and incredibly dangerous

  • @shelbybutler9714
    @shelbybutler9714 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +5

    Some acts are unforgiveable. I think people confuse forgiving a sick person for being sick; but, you do not have to forgive the action. People need to be held accountable for their actions. There is a cause and effect to every thing we do- jail would have been a natural consequence for what that man did.

  • @sheilasmith7779
    @sheilasmith7779 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

    John's response demonstrated a lack of respect and empathy for another. It's not the sort of thing we should consider a mistake. It's not his presumption that she would sleep with him that was the problem, but his response to, "no."

  • @OzmaOfOzz
    @OzmaOfOzz Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +6

    Will there be a part 2 or just this one? I know there's one with her daughter but I feel like this side remains incomplete 😱

  • @dmix2263
    @dmix2263 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    Forgiveness is for OUR healing. You don’t have to go to those people and say I forgive you. You forgive in your heart and turn away completely from the abuser.

  • @rhondam4369
    @rhondam4369 Pƙed rokem +12

    I remember watching the story during the pandemic..omg....and at the same time in 2020 I left my ex which from looking at this movie and hearing Dr Ramani youtube videos I figured out my ex is narcissist...my story definitely was no where near Debra's but going through some of the same arrogance and charming ways of my ex was the same....I feel for her. She is very much an empath
    Hopefully now she is so much more aware and enjoying her life after Dirty John

  • @KaylaKennington1
    @KaylaKennington1 Pƙed rokem +2

    i have also been married 5 times and now not married but entangled with a narcissist. I feel so stupid!!!! My parents have been married for72 years and are still so kind to one another. My health is failing. I'm now dependent financially on him. (he got me fired from my live in caregiving job... no place to go).

  • @andreawannop8670
    @andreawannop8670 Pƙed rokem +39

    I'm only partially in the podcast ...honestly Deborah set herself up for danger. He whole background screams lack of discernment in her romantic choices, including her 5 marriages. I know you don't want to "blame" victims Dr Ramani, but accepting one invited in the danger is the number one way to avoid it again. Personal responsibility is the key here. Deborah had complete lack of wisdom. I've made a huge mistake myself ..but it happened once and will never happen again. ..Because I have learned that I allowed the toxic man into my life.

    • @JRB09990
      @JRB09990 Pƙed rokem +7

      I agree, I listen to Dr. Ramani all the time, but listening to this was difficult, as I got the feeling Debra is still too nice, even looking back on all this. For her to stop being nice and protect herself, she should work to shift her self blame to better discernment. Her daughters had discernment, interestingly. Fool me once, as they say.

    • @nettiea9384
      @nettiea9384 Pƙed rokem +7

      I agree women need to know how to recognize signs of abuse and manipulation. And women need to know how to be alone!

    • @nettiea9384
      @nettiea9384 Pƙed rokem +1

      Five marriages???!!! Holy hell!!! But he was an imposter masquerading as a doctor. She didn’t see that train coming for her.

    • @juliewilliams9897
      @juliewilliams9897 Pƙed rokem +2

      So judgemental. Stop it! We need to be supportive and empowering one another! 😼

    • @InaStanley83
      @InaStanley83 Pƙed rokem

      I don't think SHE set herself up for any of this. I think her upbringing did. Seriously, she was raised by people who wanted the entire family to just forgive the murder of her sister and move on. These people wanted their own GRANDCHILDREN to forgive that their father murdered their mother and just move on. These were CHILDREN! Their MOM was murdered. These people's own DAUGHTER, not Daughter-In-Law. No wonder she fell into multiple relationship traps. She and her siblings were taught to forgive even the most egregious actions, so why wouldn't she forgive someone cheating or just generally unloving or disrespectful behavior? I mean murder is supposed to be one of the most heinous acts a person can commit. So if a person is taught or convinced to forgive something like that, or silenced into forgiving something like that, kind of makes sense that they would totally forgive and move on from lesser evils... because literally all of them are lesser when compared to murder.

  • @andreavanda5402
    @andreavanda5402 Pƙed rokem +16

    Is this woman for real!? How naive can someone be? Dr. Ramani dropped the ball many times during this interview. I think she was instructed by the producers, who decided that this podcast was going to be as bland as possible, to just go along and be agreeable and light (in other words, substance-less). I say this because this woman has great insights on her other channel, so what happened here? Did she forget 30 years of clinical training? This was just plain boring and frankly, I'm really surprised and disappointed. The commenters had more interesting and enlightening things to say than the host. I don't predict much success for this channel if this continues to be their approach.

    • @joyminnies9037
      @joyminnies9037 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

      I dont think this is intended to be a therapy session, it is however her story and there are lessons to be learnt. I agree that the comments are insightful.

    • @lorirhodes870
      @lorirhodes870 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      You nailed it!!!!

  • @chrisharper7950
    @chrisharper7950 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +7

    Doesn’t add up. BOTH sisters pick demons? That type of treatment should have repelled them INSTANTLY.

  • @barbarahawkins7864
    @barbarahawkins7864 Pƙed rokem +13

    Forgiveness is not about excusing anyone’s bad behavior... it’s about letting go of the need “to make them pay,” and leave it to God who WILL deal with it. Forgiveness is NOT FORGETTING. And it does mean you have to live in their presence as if nothing happened.

    • @gwenrios6268
      @gwenrios6268 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      Very well said ❀

    • @taniamartin6978
      @taniamartin6978 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      This is so important to understand. It's not for their benefit.

  • @LEM19284
    @LEM19284 Pƙed rokem +35

    I think Billy had something to do with the stalker so he could be seen as a hero. How did that stalker keep getting away?

    • @samanthajayewardene4523
      @samanthajayewardene4523 Pƙed rokem +10

      That was my first thought. The stalker had help.

    • @Roz852
      @Roz852 Pƙed rokem +6

      I was thinking the same!

    • @sweetielady7710
      @sweetielady7710 Pƙed rokem +4

      Excellent point! I never thought of that. I’m also confused as to how he kept getting away, especially if they had a PI on the case. The dude was breaking in, so did he not leave fingerprints? He could’ve worn gloves I guess, but it sounds like he knew her schedule because he was breaking in when she wasn’t home and knew when to call her at night. Why didn’t the police sit undercover nearby and watch for the dude during the hours Debra wasn’t home? I feel like it would’ve been easy to catch him.

    • @notaclue822
      @notaclue822 Pƙed rokem +3

      I thought so too.

    • @IntheCrawlSpaceTarot
      @IntheCrawlSpaceTarot Pƙed rokem +1

      Thought the EXACT same thing!

  • @melissaskitchen8832
    @melissaskitchen8832 Pƙed rokem +28

    I enjoy listening to your podcasts, but for some reason watching them has an increased comforting effect. It might be the combination of your calming demeanor and the pictures. Thanks so much.

    • @KoolT
      @KoolT Pƙed rokem +2

      Yep. You can fall asleep listening

    • @StellaAdler_
      @StellaAdler_ Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      For me it’s the same. I focus better too when I see the people, not just listen.

  • @jasonuren3479
    @jasonuren3479 Pƙed 2 dny

    'My mom taught us to be submissive to men.'
    Sums it up for me.

  • @chrissybrown4737
    @chrissybrown4737 Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    Her story of her parents & being raised to give people the benefit of the doubt really resonates with me. After surviving a 5 year relationship with a covert narcissist and constantly making excuses for him/his behavior, & forgiving him over & over, it was extremely difficult for me to see the red flags for what they were.

  • @themuse11
    @themuse11 Pƙed rokem +71

    It seems to me that her home life as a child encouraged self-abandonment as a Christian virtue.

    • @annettecantu3826
      @annettecantu3826 Pƙed rokem

      There is nothing about her life that reflects being a christian

    • @testing1-2three
      @testing1-2three Pƙed rokem +4

      👏

    • @waywardmd
      @waywardmd Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +9

      Powerful statement. Thank you

    • @starlingswallow
      @starlingswallow Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +10

      Yup. I'm healing from this, too, at age 42. đŸ€ŻđŸ˜–đŸ˜“

    • @christineploeg1992
      @christineploeg1992 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +12

      She picked and chose from the tenets of Christianity as so many do. A huuuuge one she missed is ‘be not unequally yoked together with an unbeliever’ a growing Christian who has a real relationship with Christ and the Spirit of God within them is longing for the companionship of fellow believers.

  • @AuthorAngieDeLisi
    @AuthorAngieDeLisi Pƙed rokem +11

    I think billy and the stalker knew each other 😱

  • @butterscotch2086
    @butterscotch2086 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +2

    Sometimes two narcissists end up in a relationship together. A bigger narc and a smaller narc


  • @Nvrgiveup15
    @Nvrgiveup15 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

    After hearing about the stalker why on earth would she be so trusting?

  • @janahoffman3895
    @janahoffman3895 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

    Forgiveness isn’t “deserved” or “earned”. It doesn’t mean you’re saying the bad thing the person did was okay. It doesn’t mean you have to let that person back into your life or have any type of relationship with them. It doesn’t mean you should trust them. It doesn’t mean the person should not be punished to the full extent of the law. What forgiveness IS is a choice that the person who was hurt makes. They choose to not hold the offense against the offender any longer. They’re NOT saying everything is ok or that they’re letting the person back into their life or they shouldn’t be punished or have consequences for what they did. That is just stupid. Forgiveness is a gift. It’s not earned or deserved. It simply a choice you make in your heart to not hold the act against the person any longer.

  • @soliel8999
    @soliel8999 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +6

    I think this lady was actually spiritually abused and hasn't yet comprehended it. Actually, the Bible would have the death penalty for the man who murdered his wife. The family could then truly heal. His poor kids would have justice. I bet they are so messed up. It's a false gospel that demands forgive someone without their repentance or restitution. As a Christian, this misrepresentation really ticks me off.

  • @andreavanda5402
    @andreavanda5402 Pƙed rokem +3

    What happened to the rest of the comments? It says in the description that there are 209 comments and I see maybe 50?

  • @davidb5122
    @davidb5122 Pƙed 5 dny

    Dr Ramani is so smart and wise. Wish there were more psychologists / mental heath professionals trained in narcissistic abuse. Debra is hard to figure out, is anyone really that kind and forgiving,. Personally I've never met anyone like that. I've known extremely kind people, but they were also realistic. Debra, fool.me once, shame on you, fool me twice shame on me

  • @nettiea9384
    @nettiea9384 Pƙed rokem +11

    Some people don’t know how to recognize crazy when they meet them! These days women need to thoroughly get potential partners. If he says he’s a dr u better investigate to mk sure.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 Pƙed rokem

      Yes I dated a doctor for a while..my friend started badmouthing him & saying he wasn't that good blah blah - so I googled - everything he said was true -.he was a top of his field specialist who trained other specialists etc etc.
      Realised my friend was just being a mean jealous b*ch.

  • @Audhepfan1
    @Audhepfan1 Pƙed rokem +3

    @57:39 Dr. Ramani commentary. To the video editor, I get the idea of having music in the credits but please don't play it at the same volume when anyone is talking, especially when Dr. Ramani is providing valuable commentary. Background sounds are a distraction when it is the same volume as the speaker and it's also competing.

  • @cinnamongirl5410
    @cinnamongirl5410 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +11

    3 years for pre meditated murder. When I lived in Portland, we knew a man who shot his abused wife in the head in front of their 2 boys. He got 1 and a half years because he was drunk. But women who killed their husbands who abused them doing life. We think we came a long way, and we haven't. We think because we can go out into the workforce, we have progress. But all we got was extra responsibility on our shoulders.
    As for it being ''more understandable that the boys were encouraged to forgive because that 'was their father'" SMH what kind of therapist are you?? THAT is the problem, and the norm that keeps the cycle of abuse. I thought we knew that now.
    No one is obligated to forgive, especially the non repentant. Even God sends those to hell, so why you christians putting it on the innocent to do what God Himself wont do?? WTF

  • @Fillemexicaine36
    @Fillemexicaine36 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Debra, it would be great if you could have an interview with Dr. Gabor Mate who specializes in trauma. When you say your family upbringing was perfect, he will have you dig into it, so that you can accept what it was really like.

  • @justines1919
    @justines1919 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

    Dear Dr. Ramani - please talk about secondary narcissistic abuse when you have children.

  • @bonnies.d.1121
    @bonnies.d.1121 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

    Please read Alice Miller, expert on child abuse and criminality, mental illness, and addiction. She explains that children who cannot tell their parents about being abused do not have a good relationship with their parents...not even if it looks sweet and good to untrained eyes.

  • @lizmcvey1294
    @lizmcvey1294 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

    This is all true.. if we don’t see manipulation and dark behaviour carried out by our parents and role models.. it’s a shock and we don’t know how to evaluate what’s happening and what to do


  • @leahhanderson3737
    @leahhanderson3737 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

    I have to disagree that traditional value systems are inadequate for dealing with narcissist. It seems to me that traditional value systems are a ready made set of boundries that if adhered to will protect against narcissistic abuse. What I am hearing is that many women who allow their boundries to be continually compromised are also continually compromising their value systems. In my experience being strong in boundries and values will expose and weed out predators if we are willing to stay within our values rather than be coaxed out by flowery promises like some utopian dream of romantic love.

  • @cushman1366
    @cushman1366 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    Forgiveness = you renounce your right to apply the "an eye for an eye" law. In this case, you forgive the killer by not killing him.
    Reconciliation = you heal and makntakn the relationship when there is true repentance and a change in behavior.
    People tend to confuse the two terms and mash it into the same thing, when it is not. That's ppm fknd it hard to forgive, they think they have to reconcile with person, when in fact, they don't.

  • @jdab9
    @jdab9 Pƙed rokem +2

    I've been a Christian for how many years but still struggle on forgiveness because God said so that we need to forgive even to those who have done so bad to us, but after learning about narcissm and relating to the word of God, i believe our understanding in the word of God should be put on context. Yes God commands us to forgive but somehow demonized people always use this to exploit us, so i believe we need to be wise when it comes to forgiveness as evil can't be defeated unless people don't see how bad they are and suffer the consequences of their doing. God's love is very patient pleading to people to repent using all circumstances but God is a just God too and this is something so many people are blinded about not knowing that there's is judgement to come to all of us..hell is for the devil but we too are going there because of the simple disobedience of mankind but again God's love was displayed when God has to die in person of Jesus, we can be free from that judgement of hell if we believe what God has done and, be remorseful of our sins, personally come to Him and accept Him again in our life to be our Lord and Saviour then that is great forgiveness from hell but it takes an action from us, so like God we can't forgive someone who can never be remorseful but are manipulative and exploitative of our great trait God has passed to us, he can't forgive satan and those rebellious angels who chose to be God's enemy and so hell was created for them for God set boundaries to everything between good and evil, holy and unholy etc

  • @ldisch2476
    @ldisch2476 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

    Having listened to Dr. Ramani for several years, I admit to doing a double take when she mentioned Red Table Top in her opening disclaimer. Interesting association given her content.

    • @StellaAdler_
      @StellaAdler_ Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      I too am stunned. Did not expect that whatsoever, after everything we know about jada

  • @_Marina
    @_Marina Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

    What i appreciate about this interview by Dr Ramani, is how she emphasises right from the start how this should be the story about Debra Newell. And rightly so. Thus, now is the time for this 60+ year old woman to wake up and smell the roses and start taking responsibility for her life, decisions, relationships and trauma. Hopefully she seeks out the right professional help to help her face reality. I feel for her children...

  • @onlyonce1707
    @onlyonce1707 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

    I wonder if Dr Ramani speaks more than usual because Debra's tone and passivity is not always easy to listen to. I find myself feeling impatient in places.

  • @leahhanderson3737
    @leahhanderson3737 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

    I am just up to the forgiveness part and I wanted to say that forgiveness is important to do for the victim. It doesn't mean they get a pass or a pardon. It means we let go of our resentment and we can find some understanding for the sickness that drove them to act so abominably. If a person remains toxic we have every right to keep away.

  • @shaneinan7797
    @shaneinan7797 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    Agree that someone without remorse does not deserve forgiveness, this is just truth and does not require you to feel unjustified or conflicted in any way. They did not ask for forgiveness, and someone who does asks for forgiveness without at least a show of some remorse is not sincere, therefore a manipulative tactic that does not require forgiveness. We need to be teaching deep biblical critical thinking skills.

  • @sherryripepi6024
    @sherryripepi6024 Pƙed rokem +9

    (Verse 1)
    Dirty John, he's a charmer
    He'll sweep you off your feet
    But beware, he's a danger
    He'll leave you in the street
    (Chorus)
    Dirty John, he's a con man
    He'll take your money and run
    So don't be fooled by his handsome face
    He's a dirty, dirty man
    (Verse 2)
    Dirty John, he's a liar
    He'll tell you anything to get what he wants
    But don't believe a word he says
    He's a dirty, dirty man
    (Chorus)
    Dirty John, he's a con man
    He'll take your money and run
    So don't be fooled by his handsome face
    He's a dirty, dirty man
    (Bridge)
    Dirty John, he's a monster
    He'll hurt you in ways you can't imagine
    So stay away from him
    He's a dirty, dirty man
    (Chorus)
    Dirty John, he's a con man
    He'll take your money and run
    So don't be fooled by his handsome face
    He's a dirty, dirty man
    (Outro)
    Dirty John, he's a danger
    He'll ruin your life
    So stay away from him
    He's a dirty, dirty man

  • @mthornton1234
    @mthornton1234 Pƙed rokem +1

    Thank you so much for this I have been in a very similar situation which also ended involving the police in the end due to missing all the red flags including ignoring my kids even after my brother warned me please ladies these men exist elsewhere I live in the UK and thank God for the good Dr

  • @annbow4064
    @annbow4064 Pƙed rokem

    I am loving your podcasts,watched your CZcams channel then found your podcasts.

  • @briarts
    @briarts Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    I'm not buying the "happy family" narrative. She didn't know red flags because of a secure home. It's because she was brought up around them in some way and it seemed normal. Her mom was an enabler. Too many people equate that with nice. She mentioned she didn't have chemistry with several nice guys before meeting John. I'm sure she found that kindness to be boring. No judgment on her about it; I feel the same way. Why? Because I grew up with a narcopath father and former stepparents.

  • @jiecobb8728
    @jiecobb8728 Pƙed rokem

    Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @NatureFreak1127
    @NatureFreak1127 Pƙed rokem +3

    You're both so powerful. đŸ”„ Thank you for sharing. 🙏

  • @juliewilliams9897
    @juliewilliams9897 Pƙed rokem +3

    Hi Dr Ramani and Debra, I’m so intrigued with this story. It sounds familiar- I think I’ve watched this story on Netflix. I’m so proud of you and empowered. Thank you for sharing your story â€ïžđŸ™đŸŒđŸ‡ŠđŸ‡ș

  • @candicevee1
    @candicevee1 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +2

    I’d like to listen to part 2 of Debra Newell’s story but can’t find it in Dr. Ramani’s list. I really wish a link to part 2 had been attached at the end of part 1.

  • @JJ-nr2nn
    @JJ-nr2nn Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    My daughter was the same way about the Narc I married the very first day she met him that day she said mom he’s the worst. I feel like he’s the devil and lord have mercy she was right 8 years later I’m trying to get out of a nightmare

  • @FixingOurFamilyCourts
    @FixingOurFamilyCourts Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you for this episode. Debra should be applauded for telling her story. As a female attorney who has represented many women who were married to narcissistic men (and having had relationships with a few myself), I wanted to point out that many women my age (66) were raised in the traditional sense to be submissive to men, not only in marriage but in everything. We also have a culture that glorifies relationships with successful men. We get lonely and when we're not informed, it's easy to fall for these charming sociopaths. It's important to keep learning about narcissism and partner abuse. It's only when we stop thinking that a relationship with a man completes us that we can start focusing on healing whatever issues we have that are causing us to put a man before us. Until we understand our own vulnerabilities and the traits of narcissists, we will be at risk. Many women are judgmental about Debra wanting to know why she didn't see the red flags and leave. Each of us has a different level of how we were 'brainwashed' by our families and culture.