What is "codependency"? (Glossary of Narcissistic Relationships)

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 22. 04. 2020
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Komentáƙe • 1,7K

  • @toristoddard3831
    @toristoddard3831 Pƙed 4 lety +1663

    This lady is so incredibly brilliant. I have so much respect for her and she is by far the most intelligent therapist I have ever heard. She really understands this complex subject!! I try to watch every video of hers because she is so gracious, knowledgeable, academic and compassionate her approach on the subject of NPD. I'm so thankful to have found her-you are saving a lot of people's lives and you deserve to be hugely recognized globally. I wish I could have had you as my therapist....would have saved me a lot of ptsd, self doubt and confusion dealing with cluster b personalities. you are the real deal. You have all my respect and attention. Thankful for you Dr. Ramani ❀

    • @danyelleorr-mcneil4711
      @danyelleorr-mcneil4711 Pƙed 4 lety +69

      Girl, yes! She is my FAVORITE!!!❀ I'm always telling people about her! I agree, she should be and needs to be recognized on a global level🌎

    • @narcfreeatlast6975
      @narcfreeatlast6975 Pƙed 4 lety +20

      Yup. She inspired me to contemplate starting my own channel about it.

    • @elizabethfraser2996
      @elizabethfraser2996 Pƙed 4 lety +42

      ​@@danyelleorr-mcneil4711 - I hope she creates content to teach this stuff to middle scool students as part of the Health Curriculum. Awareness would arm potential victims with the knowledge they need to recognize the NPD and exit before suffering years of damage.

    • @beverlyirish7510
      @beverlyirish7510 Pƙed 4 lety +26

      Every word you have said 💯 applies to me as well. I feel that Dr Ramani has saved my life too💝

    • @elizabethfraser2996
      @elizabethfraser2996 Pƙed 4 lety +27

      @@beverlyirish7510 --We need to give young people this knowledge when they are taught sex ed so they do not have to learn it the hard way ! Silence is violence.

  • @alma7710
    @alma7710 Pƙed 4 lety +1605

    Loss of Self:
    *Our needs are rejected, so we deny them.
    *Our desires are ignored, so we dismiss them.
    *Our opinions are invalidated, so we discard them.
    *Our values are dishonored, so we abandon them.
    *Our words are twisted, so we remain silent.
    *Our feelings are too painful, so we numb them.
    Kay Douglas

    • @saherjangdah5242
      @saherjangdah5242 Pƙed 4 lety +12

      Alma Varian Gould đŸ™ŒđŸ»

    • @mmanda515
      @mmanda515 Pƙed 4 lety +27

      So well said!!! Stay safe, take care & be well.

    • @littleiodine9480
      @littleiodine9480 Pƙed 4 lety +30

      Alma wow, what an eye opener. thank you

    • @lindah.804
      @lindah.804 Pƙed 4 lety +25

      So right Alma. all of the above sum it up to a tee.

    • @FrancesShear
      @FrancesShear Pƙed 4 lety +31

      Yes I know.Then the first few people who show up in a codependant's life after we become habituated to act a certain way who doesn't treat us like that what was done to us for a very long time then we feel like starting to following around those few people around like an obedient lost pet dog looking for a new home. If that dog doesn't have good enough central vision anymore to detect a predator pretendting to be nice to them by giving them attention while dangling some bait [like an invitation to the next party too] while in truth they are hoping to get dog meat and dog fur or they want to train an attack dog to do it for them and then the whole cycle starts all over again. If that cycle gets repeated too many times for any dog [in denial about slavery in general when being owned] then they end up becoming the kind of animal that growls and/or snaps every time someone comes near their cage at the animal shelter where no one there knows what to do. And so no more excuses for me now that I am out of denial.

  • @TouchofShunshine
    @TouchofShunshine Pƙed 3 lety +367

    My therapist told me that I am co-dependent. She didn't explain it to me but you explained it well. People outside of the family can smell a codependent person and they will abuse that person. I am codependent because of self-esteem issues and being overly nice so people won't hate me. I feel as if I have to be this way so people won't abuse me. I have to work on my self-esteem that isn't tied to how other people act.

    • @alisha55555
      @alisha55555 Pƙed 2 lety +23

      I feel this is such a strange way to behave (narcissism/narcissists)
totally Godless. I would never think to myself to bully a nice person or see what I can get out of them. You can tell when someone is lacking a backbone, but why someone would take advantage of that person instead of being nice or just leaving them be is beyond me. I find it incredibly strange how many of them there are now, too. I don’t feel it was this way when I was growing up at all, but maybe my parents did a good job of shielding me from that.

    • @angellenamay
      @angellenamay Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @mz. white what books have you read that helped?

    • @princeemekpe7546
      @princeemekpe7546 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@alisha55555 you know this still baffles me up to date.

    • @avanellehansen4525
      @avanellehansen4525 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +5

      Sometimes the codependent person is abusive by lacking boundaries and smothering people with overgiving/overfunctioning.

    • @TouchofShunshine
      @TouchofShunshine Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

      @@avanellehansen4525 Right

  • @judithfowler9150
    @judithfowler9150 Pƙed 3 lety +347

    This was so freeing. "If you've turned your relationship into a full-time job."

    • @jvmlucky13
      @jvmlucky13 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      The best analogy!

    • @ang9095
      @ang9095 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      My mother has always been the child in the relationship crashing on my couch just completely irresponsible to herself and everyone.

  • @christiec3127
    @christiec3127 Pƙed 4 lety +344

    I think codependent behavior undoubtedly leaves you vulnerable to narcissistic relationships.

    • @dontbelongherefromanotherp9807
      @dontbelongherefromanotherp9807 Pƙed 4 lety +36

      Sure it does, people who are unsure of themselves rely on others to validate them. Unfortunately, the people who are validating them, are narcs and psychopaths. They put them on a pedestal and pull it from underneath them when the time is right.

    • @flamingsword777
      @flamingsword777 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      @@dontbelongherefromanotherp9807 ya kniw what's crazy? Mynhisabd actually used those specific words..... He said and i quote "I put you on a pedestal, but im taking you off it...." I told him "I never asked you to put me there in the FIRST place!"

    • @nancyclark-gaines6856
      @nancyclark-gaines6856 Pƙed 3 lety

      ChristieC
      I agree! Good statement!

    • @nancyclark-gaines6856
      @nancyclark-gaines6856 Pƙed 3 lety

      @@dontbelongherefromanotherp9807
      I agree100%

    • @ppmny7015
      @ppmny7015 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@AndrewLewisHowe Agreed. The need to be needed by others is certainly a form of narcissistic supply.

  • @Hawelufamily
    @Hawelufamily Pƙed 4 lety +928

    I became an “enabler” in my 27 year marriage to a narc. His parents enabled him still to this day. I bent over backwards just to keep the marriage together because of my religious convictions. Finally after exhaustion, I stopped enabling. Started demanding that my boundaries be respected. He filed for divorce. He proved to me that he wasn’t going to change, and that he didn’t love me. I’m better off now. Putting myself first and making myself a priority is not easy, but now I’m not afraid to ask for the things I need from a relationship.

    • @nschulz75
      @nschulz75 Pƙed 4 lety +47

      I don't know your religious convictions, but from my reading of the Bible, it is clear God never approves of the "wicked", the "scoffer" or the "prideful man". That's what these narcissists are. They keep "weak-willed women" in bondage for their own use. How glad I am that you were able to find strength to of mind and will to gain freedom from a man whose father truly is the devil. May you remain always free in Christ.

    • @Hawelufamily
      @Hawelufamily Pƙed 4 lety +42

      nschulz75 It was pounded into me, God hates divorce. That I would be against God to divorce. It was taken out of context of course, but I bought into it for many years.

    • @nschulz75
      @nschulz75 Pƙed 4 lety +23

      Kathy Haga Yes, I have been there and seen that. But as I realized that those ideas went against the very character of God, it makes more sense to see the sole picture of Scripture of a God who hates the proud but cares for orphans and widows in their distress. My mother is married to a narc...we just went no contact with him and now she has to decide what to do...will she still visit us alone or will she cut us off? I'm an only child with her only 5 grandkids. She is really in a pickle now. I and my husband had warned her not to marry "an unbeliever". He's actually much worse than that--he's a narc through and through. She shouldn't have married him believer or not. He is a wicked man. He will be judged unless he repents. But he can't because of his pride. We just pray he won't take her down with him. I highly doubt God cares about maintaining such a marriage compared to her getting free so she can come back to a relationship ship with her Savior. I am so glad you are free! Blessings!

    • @sarah4035
      @sarah4035 Pƙed 4 lety +29

      Kathy Haga I was just with the narc boyfriend for a year and it has left me with a lot of psychological damage. Couldn’t imagine 27 years. You made the right choice for you, and by setting your boundaries. When you respect your self worth and set boundaries, that’s usually when they leave.

    • @ruby-qv5bd
      @ruby-qv5bd Pƙed 4 lety +32

      As soon as you call them out, they are out the door and you are left thinking why did I ever stick around and put up with this as long as I did? Such a waste of time, but it does teach us many things and for me it was to hold to myself and love myself even when the narcissist was telling me I wasn't worth it by discarding me into the trash as if I never existed. You know, it's all okay because life can and does go on without them. It's all for the best.

  • @tamlynn786
    @tamlynn786 Pƙed 4 lety +608

    I used to be a codependent until I read “Codependent No More” by Melody Beattie. Life changer! It goes deep into the behaviors and mindset of the codependent. I highly recommend this book.

  • @johndeal4381
    @johndeal4381 Pƙed 4 lety +125

    It's scary after recognizing narcissistic behavior. It's like a Sci Fi movie where no one recognizes the aliens have taken over until they're in control of society.

    • @bereal6590
      @bereal6590 Pƙed 2 lety +5

      This is exactly how I feel.... strangely I always felt as a child I must have come from another planet! Now I see it all even clearer it's truly scary 😯

    • @Lil-ie6xw
      @Lil-ie6xw Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Omg strangely true đŸ€Ł

    • @shemaisrael1258
      @shemaisrael1258 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Great description!

    • @goodmorningsundaymorning4533
      @goodmorningsundaymorning4533 Pƙed rokem +2

      Basically like the movie They Live đŸ•¶ïž How great would it be to have narc sunglasses.

    • @luvindaopera111
      @luvindaopera111 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      Exactly what is happening with the Orange Menace vying for the WH again (but really trying to stay out of shackles. Poor, pathetic man-child.)

  • @colywogable
    @colywogable Pƙed 4 lety +439

    A lot of children of narcissists are forced into codependence with them on a deep level.

    • @TempermentalTart
      @TempermentalTart Pƙed 4 lety +16

      Yes! Makes me think of enmeshment.

    • @BC-xo3hf
      @BC-xo3hf Pƙed 4 lety +6

      Yupppp. Me.

    • @jekyllandheidi
      @jekyllandheidi Pƙed 4 lety +23

      Agreed... or they become narcissists themselves.

    • @SolKiLittleSun
      @SolKiLittleSun Pƙed 4 lety +20

      That's me. I stop being Codependent since I learn about Narcisist. I learnt everything in detail.

    • @colywogable
      @colywogable Pƙed 4 lety +36

      @@SolKiLittleSun Good! Me too. Us kids of narcissists end up with narcs as partners. But sometimes we realize its abuse, recognize the parrern, and then research the topic until we are basically experts. And then we become super good at spotting a narc from a mile away and avoiding them.

  • @everydaynicole1
    @everydaynicole1 Pƙed 4 lety +436

    Child of a narcissistic and codependent đŸ™‹â€â™€ïž. Everything you say is true. Spent over 40 years trying figure things out.

  • @devidaughter7782
    @devidaughter7782 Pƙed 3 lety +183

    "narcissistic relationships are characterized by the denial of your own needs" (12:45) . . . also by anxiety, denial, hypervigilance, stress "that can culminate into physical and significant mental health issues" (13:30), 'constriction of emotions' (13:40). . . "narcissists persist because the world enables them" (18:40). . . "never, ever link your self-esteem to another human being" (19:47)

  • @tiffanypersaud3518
    @tiffanypersaud3518 Pƙed 4 lety +98

    "Some people who are stuck in narcissistic relationships have learnt to be very judicious, and have learnt to not share their emotions with the narcissist in their life, but have a full an beautiful range of emotions with other people who are safe, healthy and loving - so it's not like they're constricted everywhere." That is so interesting!

    • @tasiawilliams3705
      @tasiawilliams3705 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Learning

    • @hughkelly623
      @hughkelly623 Pƙed 3 lety +10

      My Narc would notice I would do that and try to find some way to invalidate the other friendship.

    • @loriswenson2276
      @loriswenson2276 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      Unfortunately narcs often have codependents. I have a sister who has a narc husband but sadly she doesn’t have a life outside of him. I live a couple miles away and see her very rarely as she is wrapped up with him and his fam. She always seeks their approval. Even after he’s hit her and hurt her.

    • @jill6581
      @jill6581 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@loriswenson2276 Maybe you can show this video to her and make her realize she might be a codependent!

  • @lillyofthevalley208
    @lillyofthevalley208 Pƙed 4 lety +169

    So, what you are saying is that, a child from a narcissistic background, grows up looking for love in all the wrong places. They want those who do not love them, to love them or they feel, inadequate.
    The only love they know, is rejection. It's normal to them.

    • @carribgirl007
      @carribgirl007 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      Sounds about right. I personally know someone in the situation.

    • @sonyvalencia
      @sonyvalencia Pƙed 4 lety +25

      Man sometimes I don't know if am codependent or the covert narcissist.

    • @JohnDoe-gq3tm
      @JohnDoe-gq3tm Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@sonyvalencia Same!

    • @christa7773
      @christa7773 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Well said

    • @lillyofthevalley208
      @lillyofthevalley208 Pƙed 4 lety +12

      @@sonyvalencia No you not. You wouldn't be able to watch this. You just hurt.

  • @Sophia-ix2ri
    @Sophia-ix2ri Pƙed 3 lety +48

    Codependency is not forever. I'm incredibly sad to hear that when people label themselves as codependent (whether or not they are), some take it on as an identity and are held back because of it. For myself, I look at healing codependency as a way of ending the cycle of misery in my life and relationships, similar to how some adults learn to form secure attachments after being raised into an insecure attachment style. Every day, I work to heal and it's the most important thing I have ever done.

    • @humblejoy3564
      @humblejoy3564 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      đŸ„°â€ïžđŸ’ŻđŸŽŻ

  • @michelled1475
    @michelled1475 Pƙed 3 lety +111

    Codependency is staying in an abusive relationship instead of leaving. Narcissists can be codependent as well, stalking the empath who hurts them by leaving, instead of letting go.

    • @winniexo263
      @winniexo263 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      I’m experiencing the stalking now

    • @nicoleestella7967
      @nicoleestella7967 Pƙed 2 lety +3

      I am finding this out now.

    • @NATALIEKING1976
      @NATALIEKING1976 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      It’s been 13 years since divorcing my narc and he still stalks me.

    • @diasroshi4097
      @diasroshi4097 Pƙed rokem +2

      Codependents can be narcs as well. Well actually they are. Those two are like the two sides of the same coin

  • @saturninebear
    @saturninebear Pƙed 4 lety +184

    I remember being hurt so badly by someone calling me a "co-dependent" when I was just struggling so bad to deal with the nightmare my sociopath had turned my life into. I was just trying my best to help this person who had presented himself to me as a victim of terrible abuse who needed saving. He went on to destroy my life and my confidence before I finally threw him out to save myself.

    • @nrsimmons178
      @nrsimmons178 Pƙed 4 lety +29

      I had to learn that no sane, emotionally healthy male wants to be saved, pitied, or looked at as a victim. I used to love a "fixer upper," but an 11-year relationship/7-year marriage with a covert narc changed all that. The next relationship will absolutely be "move-in ready!"

    • @zirpa1
      @zirpa1 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      @@nrsimmons178 amen!đŸ™đŸŸđŸ™ŒđŸŸ

    • @javiervidal366
      @javiervidal366 Pƙed 2 lety +11

      Narcissists prey on those with high empathy, who want to help others. So often, they present themselves as victims. Provides narcissistic supply and they can proceed to manipulate that person.

    • @Bexstarartist
      @Bexstarartist Pƙed rokem

      @@nrsimmons178 or female!

    • @Tania-rg7jp
      @Tania-rg7jp Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      The truth hurts sometimes. That person who said you were co-dependent was a true friend for saying so. You did not need to have your self esteem destroyed. You could have considered it and put boundaries on strictly and ended the abusive relationship. Healthy people have a low tolerance for abuse. But speaking the truth is not abuse. The truth hurts but it will set you free. Or you can spend 20 years in therapy over some bullshit the narcassist did to you in two. What was and is the home in your self esteem? That is how abusers keep you.
      -Recovering Co-dependent.

  • @nacarreira777
    @nacarreira777 Pƙed 4 lety +120

    I save my emotions for the good, trustworthy people in my life....the narcissists get grey rock.....always! Man, these narcissistic creeps are EVERYWHERE!!!! Thank you, Dr. Ramani...your video's have been invaluable in my healing journey.

    • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
      @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      Nancy, yes sadly they do appear to be prolific. Shocking! 💐
      And Black Weirdo, that’s where the positive comes out of identifying codependency; breaking the cycle. 💐

    • @kirstysewell367
      @kirstysewell367 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      This is why I never opened up to my narc crush. I just knew I couldn't trust her, I knew she would use it as power. What people put into me is what they get back. To say I never really knew her I knew EVERYTHING about her life...

    • @idaraubong8721
      @idaraubong8721 Pƙed 3 lety

      This is the motto!

    • @bereal6590
      @bereal6590 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Oh goodness aren't they! Absolutely everywhere like cockroaches

  • @MJBrabantNZL
    @MJBrabantNZL Pƙed 4 lety +136

    I am guilty as charged. Well... Was. I only understood this last year after 37 years of not knowing and found out how I came to be this way. I grew up as the black sheep in a "functionally dysfunctional" family. Nothing I did was good enough for my angry stepfather. So along with the abandonment and rejection issues as a toddler I also had the people pleasing eggshell walking enabler of abuse, which no surprise ended up prime for a 10 year marriage with the narc.
    It took a second relationship (really the 4th interaction) with a narcissist that woke me up last year. Now I know what it means to love myself properly, and that includes having boundaries, and healing oneself from all those childhood wounds, and dealing with one's shadow side. Hard? Yes, it can be, but we have a far better chance of doing this than those who abused us.

    • @goitomfessahaye1701
      @goitomfessahaye1701 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      I relate buddy . You know you just heal in your own time as most of the world I feel has their own trauma which never gets addressed .
      I often find a useful meditation is one of visualizing your inner child self and hugging them . Even if that child was technically you last week or last month for bad choices or putting up with it . Forgiveness is not just of others it can also be necesccary for oneself .
      I love you like I do everyone . Hope you become free of your burdens soon enough c

    • @Jessica-iq3id
      @Jessica-iq3id Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Same! Its awful...married 16 years, and really struggling to get out. Education is imperative for escape, I realize this. But its amazing how much I have changed personally in this relationship. Its like I suddenlyvwoke up in a world where Im completely isolated and stuck. I cant seem to get out😣

    • @MJBrabantNZL
      @MJBrabantNZL Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Thanks for your input, @@goitomfessahaye1701 .
      I'm still quite new to meditation, but I can already see the benefits. I do have a lot of flashbacks from back to my childhood (which I guess for those of us healing those childhood wounds will be well aware of)), and I'm always trying to be mindful of how I felt at the time for each situation. Having to forgive everybody including myself for the bad choices or reactions I took throughout life has been an eye-opening experience, and I feel better all the time for it. It does seem quite true that most people are carrying around this knid of trauma, not knowing how much better life could be if they dealt with it. I thought time healed all wounds, but really, it doesn't, we just become forgetful.
      Thanks again for your kind words, brother.

    • @MJBrabantNZL
      @MJBrabantNZL Pƙed 4 lety +5

      @@Jessica-iq3id I know the feeling. I had no idea of what narcissism was until last year - a full 9 years after the marriage was officially over, and yet I knew something was fundamentally wrong with her, even though I couldn't put a finger on it. I knew she got a kick out of getting a rise out of me, so I learned what grey rocking was before I even heard of the term. Now it all makes so much sense, but it doesn't fix the problem of being able to remove yourself from the situation.
      But you can do it. You need to make small steps, starting with knowing what your particular triggers are, and not reacting to them, then not feeding into their provocation. Ross Rosenberg calls this the "Observe, don't absorb" technique, which is handy for those that have removed the emotional attachment from the equation. I'm sure you have to be careful, even more so if there are children involved, but you can do it, and if you can put up with that kind of abuse for that long then you can certainly survive the aftermath. đŸ„°â€

    • @Jessica-iq3id
      @Jessica-iq3id Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @Michael Brabant.... Thanks!

  • @christiwright3604
    @christiwright3604 Pƙed 3 lety +32

    Definitely a narcissistic background... I need to be someone’s choice. I finally learned I choose me. The right man will love that about me.

  • @cherrybacon3319
    @cherrybacon3319 Pƙed 2 lety +22

    I used to think I needed others to feel a sense of esteem, but then after experiencing abuse and standing firm with my boundaries, I came to realise I didn't need anyone. I was strong enough to just be myself and practice self-love. 🍒

  • @samarariley7636
    @samarariley7636 Pƙed 4 lety +143

    Dr.Ramani you opened my eyes! I thought being a codependent was showing love.

    • @KayQhosa
      @KayQhosa Pƙed 4 lety +12

      Me too! â˜č

    • @gabby413
      @gabby413 Pƙed 4 lety +21

      That would be too easy. Instead it jus means someone messed us up and we have to dig ourselves out of hell.

    • @krisluvsutube2684
      @krisluvsutube2684 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@gabby413 Yep!

    • @auk8174
      @auk8174 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      Obidience is not love :(
      Accepting disobidience and holding space for it is much more closer to love

    • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
      @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Gabby, telling it like it is!

  • @allainamadeleinedixon
    @allainamadeleinedixon Pƙed 4 lety +109

    I went through a very toxic relationship with a narcissist and it was one of the most traumatic things I have ever endured including the break up. Without that relationship I would have never come across Dr. Ramani's videos on narcissism and emotional abuse and how those patterns connected with my parents. Feeling that I was never enough or unworthy of love for so many years and how for so many years I was repeating patterns with different people.There is a saying that "there is a plenty of fish in the sea" however, if I didn't give myself the time to heal after that toxic relationship I would have just continued the same pattern of being hurt and hurting myself in my relationships. Thank you so much Dr. Ramani for opening my eyes to my past so I can have a brighter future!

    • @alejandrinanunez3194
      @alejandrinanunez3194 Pƙed 4 lety +8

      It feels better to know other people are on the same journey. Good Luck ✹

    • @komalmasood6927
      @komalmasood6927 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      You have explained exactly what I have went through.

  • @leeboriack8054
    @leeboriack8054 Pƙed 4 lety +41

    My former narc once said:
    "Empathy can be used as a weapon"
    Using your intellect for to understand the narc's emotional maze of inequities will keep you forever in their trap.

  • @narcfreeatlast6975
    @narcfreeatlast6975 Pƙed 4 lety +87

    Being able to walk away and stay out of these relationships demonstrates the opposite of powerlessness. It shows power, strength and enough self love to want the best for ourselves.

    • @jillquilla8235
      @jillquilla8235 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      So true. I left a Narcissist marriage. Staring over from ground 0. Just got apt. A loving table set was given to me. I had brand new mattress and box spring donated to me. It is a humble beginning, but I have peace.

  • @lindah.804
    @lindah.804 Pƙed 4 lety +244

    I would give anything to have had this knowledge 30+ yrs ago, and I would not be in the prison I'm stuck in now. The narcissist I exist with has multiple health issues including dementia. I have no family in the area & no support system to speak of. Isolation began from the start all those many yrs ago, and I didn't know any better at 19 yrs old. A lonely person all my life, so the love bomb worked like a charm. Ugh!!

    • @ka8990
      @ka8990 Pƙed 4 lety +19

      And what are doing about it now that you know ? I hope things are getting better for you.

    • @nahmastay7497
      @nahmastay7497 Pƙed 4 lety +14

      Same Linda...I spent so much time alone that my husband targeted me and I just couldn’t make sense of how it went. I was 28 but very naive. I just wanted someone to share my life with and got so much more. I was the one who ended up with health issues and he is trying to exploit my issues to get me not to divorce him. He is a powerful man in his job but I want no parts of it anymore. I pray you’re able to get some peace from your connection to him.

    • @krisluvsutube2684
      @krisluvsutube2684 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      I'm defiantly not judging you cause I know I put up with way too much for so long trying to "love like Jesus" but I do hope you can get out of that situation.

    • @kk_med5416
      @kk_med5416 Pƙed 4 lety +12

      You are not a codependent you are an angel stay well

    • @LynnT6904
      @LynnT6904 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      Hi Linda, your post struck a spot in my heart. I am in a similar boat. And if you are a Christian woman, you always thought you were doing the Christian=like thing by putting your husband first and others last. Then one day you realize about this CNPD and that you simply got sucked in and used up and before you know it, you e been completely isolated from your support system. I am a nurse and can only imagine how this has played out for you now that he has dementia and all the rest. IMHO now that you e stayed this long, should you see it through till the end so that you can get something out of all those years you e put in? I know that’s a cold way to think about it, but it sadly may be the truth.

  • @Stephanie-hn3yn
    @Stephanie-hn3yn Pƙed 4 lety +324

    Dr. Ramani, I feel like there are a lot of resources out there for understanding what narcissism is and how to spot it, but there isn’t much out there about getting back to your old self and getting past all of the abuse.
    Your videos have helped me to understand what I’ve been through so much, and I now know that I’m not crazy and that there was something off with him and I’ve finally accepted that.
    I’m at a place where I know I’ll still have bad days when I miss him, but I know that he was bad for me, and he could never love me the way a healthy person should. But now I’m at a point where I just feel numb to everything, and afraid to be nice to anyone because I don’t want to find myself in another position where someone can take advantage of my kindness. Ive been this way for so long now that I don’t know if I even know how to be kind anymore. I’ve mostly kept myself isolated so that I do t have to disappoint people or be so awkward around them. Can you do a series on what steps you should take to put yourself back together again?

    • @genevalawrence801
      @genevalawrence801 Pƙed 4 lety +33

      Yes! Seeing the problem, and even getting free of the narcissist, is different from recovery.

    • @Hawelufamily
      @Hawelufamily Pƙed 4 lety +36

      Have you checked out Richard Grannon? He teaches on how to heal from narcissistic abuse.

    • @i_am_whole_again
      @i_am_whole_again Pƙed 4 lety +18

      @@Hawelufamily I was going to mention Richard Grannon as well. He has a free course on Decreasing Emotional Flashbacks that was VERY helpful in my healing. His videos are very informative as well.

    • @borealiswan2363
      @borealiswan2363 Pƙed 4 lety +10

      I second the RG vids and courses, very well articulated, informative, and if you put it to work, and I mean a lot of hard work, you can rebuild yourself and see through the dark glass

    • @LynnT6904
      @LynnT6904 Pƙed 4 lety +20

      Stephanie I think we all feel like we have been robbed of our former self and forever changed by the narcissist. I think you have to realize that you were a great person before the narcissist! You deserve to be around people who care about you and love you for who you are! (Meaning family and friends) Don’t let them (the narc) keep the true YOU from existing. I understand how you feel and I realize it would be so easy to isolate ourselves out of fear of falling prey to another narcissist. My take on this is: Don’t let the narcissist continue to rob you of your future! You need to get back in touch with your emotions and allow them to be. I am working through this same thing myself. Dr. Ramani and Dr Carmen Bryant are both right on with their very “True advice” on this subject! Realize that it may take some time. Allow yourself the time to heal. I will be Praying for you that you will discover your true self again and get your true beautiful self and life back! 💕

  • @noveighteen1210
    @noveighteen1210 Pƙed 4 lety +40

    Winning the unwinnable parent leading to trying to win the unwinnable spouse = thanku for providing clarity to my situation 💜

  • @rhodayackez9570
    @rhodayackez9570 Pƙed 4 lety +24

    My father was codependent enabler, I became one. You're teaching about something I now realize I have control of.

    • @DavidFraser007
      @DavidFraser007 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      My adopted father was too. I wasn't a codependent, but I had hangups for quite a few years after I left home at 18. These faded. But looking back my codependent father could be quite toxic and selfish. I was condemned as rebellious and a black sheep, but really I wasn't. I was actually a soldier in the British Army and quite a conformist. I think it was was minimal contact and living far away from them that allowed me to have the life that I wanted and enjoyed. Stay in control Rhoda, it's your life , not theirs.

  • @Shasha8674
    @Shasha8674 Pƙed 4 lety +43

    Finding a partner in life that doesn't expect you to only serve them, but being an equal partner so both can thrive is needed. Draining a person is not a healthy relationship. Both need to be ok/healthy. The codependent may destroy their life helping others to the point of yes hurting their kids etc. Enabling/unbalanced relationships is not good.

    • @amber40494
      @amber40494 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      In addition to males being entitled

  • @joyesexton4437
    @joyesexton4437 Pƙed 4 lety +94

    I realized my ex husband was a narcissist about 20 years into our marriage. After therapy and education, I did leave him and we are divorced. It did take 5 years after I was awakened to the abuse. Codependency was a small part of the relationship but mostly in relation to his shopping addiction. Once I realized the shopping wasn't the fire issue, lying and deceit and lack of ability to empathize were, I was done. Now no contact and "grey rock" when communicating about the kids.

    • @gigibtsurvivor3348
      @gigibtsurvivor3348 Pƙed 4 lety +11

      Joye Sexton, very similar situation. My ex had a secret sexual life for the entirety of our relationship. I didn’t know what I didn’t know, until his double life was exposed. Sexual addiction “sobriety” and “Recovery” were for appearances only. His real issue is his dysfunctional personality and abusive nature. Yellow rock here.

    • @Mushroom321-
      @Mushroom321- Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Relateable! Good for you!! đŸ˜Œ

    • @tamarbatyah7
      @tamarbatyah7 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@gigibtsurvivor3348 - What's "yellow rock"? Just curious!

  • @Cybraxas
    @Cybraxas Pƙed 4 lety +10

    This comment section is a treasure of experiences of strong women who managed to protect themselves and their children from a lot of emotional pain and unhappiness.

  • @psycherevival2105
    @psycherevival2105 Pƙed 4 lety +49

    That last bit was my favourite.
    I just ended a very short relationship that showed many textbook narcissistic red flags. Love bombing, alcoholism, gaslighting, rage, and more. These videos and other have been key in helping me see the patterns quickly and clearly, and giving me the confidence to nip it in the bud. There are still moments when I wonder ... if I had only said things differently here, or been less reactive there, could it have turned out differently?
    “Never ever link your self esteem to another human being...”
    Thanks, I needed to hear that.

    • @bee12355
      @bee12355 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Good for you. So happy you didn’t invest more time in that relationship

    • @hughkelly623
      @hughkelly623 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      I always found it interesting that all the Narcs I’ve known in my life have been addicts (specifically alcoholics) I wonder about the correlation?

    • @psycherevival2105
      @psycherevival2105 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      ​@@hughkelly623 I think that codependents can easily be addicts too.

  • @berries8691
    @berries8691 Pƙed 4 lety +52

    Dr ramani please make a video on PTSD in narcissitic relationships 🙏 i would love to hear you explain about it.. You explain it so well i love listening to you

  • @kk_med5416
    @kk_med5416 Pƙed 4 lety +58

    I loved this video as it cleared up some unsettling feelings that I have had about codependency. I was told by my therapist that I am codependent but it never felt right to me. I immediately left a relationship after being physically abused. Once my ex-narc husband left and I figured out what he is I went no contact which was a saving grace. I agree that we get confused by the hope that someone will be better and stick things out for too long. Once we realize that it is never going to happen we cut our losses by getting out. We take care of ourselves, that for sure is not codependent it is just smart.

  • @gardenbee1238
    @gardenbee1238 Pƙed rokem +7

    Thank you! Codependency has become my identity. I can see my mother was waiting for my dad to show up, and I formed similar habits towards my father. I then went on to do this with the men I've dated.
    As a teen, I suspected my dad was gay, so as an adult woman, I would choose men I believed were in the closet then attempt to rescue them from it. Now I'm ashamed of this behaviour.
    I thought I was completely normal, and this cruel world needed my "help" to restore it. I was certain that I was simply a person who is a little more generous, and helpful than the average person. Illusions are very convincing indeed.

  • @ashvarma1
    @ashvarma1 Pƙed rokem +4

    Dr Ramani is incredibly knowledgeable, insightful and compassionate. She is a global treasure. 💐

  • @SophieBird07
    @SophieBird07 Pƙed 4 lety +102

    Many people confuse codependent with patience and hope. But many in these positions finally do hit their limit and make a change, and sometimes they put up with obnoxious behavior for reasons beyond their control at the moment. It isn’t always a weakness of character that keeps people seemingly stuck. Love your vids.

    • @goitomfessahaye1701
      @goitomfessahaye1701 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      Yeah I once went under spiritual transformation , after being an addict for a decade and arguably my whole life.
      Really made an effort to look at all my wrongs and improved vastly then I naturally became aware of my own family were all dysfunctional but was just approaching them with a Buddha like mentally . Little did I know ileventually this wore me down their narcissm, hatefulness frustration , controlling behaviour and it dragged me down back into relapse . I blamed them for a long time but ultimately neither they or me were to blame , like Dr ramani says they're habits are hardly ever going to change and I was young in spiritual healing journey now I just love on create strict boundaries and don't feel obligated to maintain this illusions of an authentic loving family . Try and expand your network and this will hopefully help you very kuch.

    • @suzyharpa459
      @suzyharpa459 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Sophia Lahen yes it’s exactly how you put it

    • @mariyaa111
      @mariyaa111 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Goitom Fessahaye I love your story ❀

    • @gretabrown1408
      @gretabrown1408 Pƙed 4 lety

      mariyaa111 yes love hearing about how “seeing clearly” at last enables us to see the damage for what it is. It is not easy though to get out and it is risky too so good planning is required and keeping the plan to yourself until you can implement it

    • @godzillamanstreb524
      @godzillamanstreb524 Pƙed 3 lety

      Yes

  • @d.komisar
    @d.komisar Pƙed 4 lety +27

    I am from unhealthy family and all my relationships used to be very codependent. There always have been a guy, a friend, a co-worker who was my "human project". I just used to take care of somebody until I fell exhausted. And how many of this people are still around? About zero. All this relationships ended with a bruised narc's ego and me resembling my own shadow. I used to feel guilt for saying any "no", I used to gaslight myself and have poor connection with my own feelings. In my worse days I feel like I am only waiting until life will pass, like it is a burden. Only making the list of things I am grateful for turns me back to life, or journaling about stuff that made me feel anything good.
    Also, it is a good point that I used to do things I wasn't asked for. Looking back, I see that sometimes refusing could save a lot of time and resources to me and other. Just I have this feeling like if I am not doing anything for anybody, I am pointless creature. Still can not get used to the idea it is not so.

    • @elipotter369
      @elipotter369 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Dariia Popovych I hope you can find some things in life that you enjoy and can love. I have spent way too much time in unproductive draining relationships and unpleasant situations with people, so right now I am focussing on my own interests and goals, such as artistic pursuits and reading. Plus a simple, healthy lifestyle. If you can find and have a hobby you like, that can really lift your spirits and focus on yourself instead of onto others. Eg photography - or anything you can do and learn about now in this period of pandemic isolation. Or work on improving your skills for better employment success. I wish you all the best.

    • @d.komisar
      @d.komisar Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@elipotter369 thank you. You have very kind heart.

    • @pure9593
      @pure9593 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Hey I get you and here is the answer: "If I dont help others my life is useless" this is a belief. It is not a reality. Just a belief. Secondly, Yes, doing for others is noble and gives a higher type of pleasure but it has to come naturally. And it will come naturally when you feel full yourself. And if you do it while your empty then you're being a slave of your beliefs and also won't be able to serve so well. But if you invest in filling yourself up healthily then service will naturally pour out healthily

    • @BagznBirdz
      @BagznBirdz Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Dariia this was me. Always trying to validate my existance by doing evrything I could for others. My relationships are a collection of those human projects that were broken and I tried everything I could to make them whole again. I recently realised I'm codependent and I'm starting therapy soon to get over the s**t my narcissistic dad did to me, my eating disorders that started from an early age (thanks, dad) and also codependency. I'm starting to believe that I am enough. You are, too. Without any tricks, bells and whistles. Just you. As you are.

    • @d.komisar
      @d.komisar Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@BagznBirdz thanks, dear. Wishing you the best with the therapy.

  • @kyootzee
    @kyootzee Pƙed 3 lety +6

    ‘You didn’t cause it. You can’t control it. You can’t cure it.’
    What we tell people who have loved ones with addiction should be the same thing we tell people who are in relationships with narcissists.

  • @pinkygoraya
    @pinkygoraya Pƙed 4 lety +5

    Child of a narcissist, codependent relationships.... what you say solves so many mysteries for me

  • @tinylittlebutstillalion4101
    @tinylittlebutstillalion4101 Pƙed 4 lety +30

    Every one who stays for long time in a narcisistic relation, including myself, 17 years married to a narc, is codendent person, but i did not know what narcisissem is, and i never did anything in a bad attencion, and that is the reason why it is never the fault of the codependent person, until you realise what are dealing with it can not be your own fault. But when you know what you are dealing with and then keep on letting it happen, then you really are codependent and then you have a real Problem. I feel bad for People who does not see, but i myself also did not see for many many years. So it is really difficult. Love from Switzerland

    • @dontbelongherefromanotherp9807
      @dontbelongherefromanotherp9807 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      Most in the mainstream are not aware of the terms narcissist or psychopaths, and this explains why people are trapped in relationships with them

    • @christinagipperich2780
      @christinagipperich2780 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      True. Once you know you can’t not know. When Dr. Ramani gave the definition of codependency, I had a difficult time accepting that definition as a description of myself or some other people I know. It was never my intention to control the narcissist/alcoholic in my life, My codependency was only a way to stay safe. Unfortunately, I have met some people who truly do want to control their family members by using codependent behavior patterns. I feel those different motivations create very different dynamics. Those trying to control others to enhance their own sense of self worth are every bit as bad as the alcoholic or narcissist. No matter what, we just have to focus on our own motivations and do the best we can to be honest with ourselves about them.

  • @Anonymous-ss9iq
    @Anonymous-ss9iq Pƙed 4 lety +16

    If there's one thing I learned in therapy. narcissistic mother = co-dependent children. Then co-dependent son marries narcissistic wife. When she was drinker I would enable her with what I now know was just unreasonable things. The narcissism would really surface when she was drunk and I would just brush it off. She quit drinking later in life and as I became aware I noticed the traits were always there, just not as magnified but it was more frequent. Once the devaluing started they really got ramped up again. I hope she gets help but I am breaking the cycle.

  • @stephaniejohnson1972
    @stephaniejohnson1972 Pƙed 5 dny

    Her explanation of codependency is so brilliant. She is describing my home as a child. My father was a drug addict and my mother sympathized with him and his complaints of how he was mistreated on his job and unfairly fired. Everything revolved around his needs in the family. My mother denied her own comfort and needs and at times the needs of her children to satisfy my father's thirst for drugs and fast food etc.

  • @RMiska96
    @RMiska96 Pƙed 2 lety +5

    I owe my life to Dr. Ramani and these CZcams videos. I have a narcicistic father and I was extremely codependent as the youngest my role was “care taker” that’s all I was trained to do my whole life I’m 25 now and just starting a job and I no longer live with my father and have minimal to no contact with my siblings. My situation made me extremely depressed and suicidle I genuinely thought I had no choice and no escape other then taking my life. She really gave me to courage and tools I needed for setting boundaries, and while I’m not fully over the emotional trauma I am doing much better and moving forward.

  • @ednasmith4545
    @ednasmith4545 Pƙed 4 lety +10

    I am a recovering codependent. Learning I was codependent was a shock.

  • @bitchenboutique6953
    @bitchenboutique6953 Pƙed 4 lety +25

    I’m grateful every day for the discovery that my friend/coworker was a narcissist because [A] it meant I wasn’t going out of my mind and [B] it helped me to uncover my own issues with codependency so I can figure them out and work on them!

    • @Tamara_YT
      @Tamara_YT Pƙed 2 lety +1

      I have this exact situation! What were the signs for you because it's still pretty new for me and I've been ruminating a lot. Still trying to make sense of it and shocked as well.

  • @aletablakely7605
    @aletablakely7605 Pƙed 3 lety +33

    There is a constant feeling of "fixing" or "needing to fix" the relationship the situation the crisis to crisis living all stemming from the needs and demands of the narcissist. The focus is called "us" and it is really always "him" (or her if the partner is a female narcissist). The loss of self for me was from the get go because I came out of a parental narcissist pattern--never knowing that was what I was dealing with.

  • @AJ-wy6zm
    @AJ-wy6zm Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Never ever link your self esteem to another person. You are you. Free standing unit. You are embedded in lots of important systems. It your sense of self your self compassion your self worth they all come from you.

  • @sindiswamoolman5505
    @sindiswamoolman5505 Pƙed 4 lety +18

    I have educated herself about narcissistic relationships through these CZcams lectures. I am now in a very loving and stable relationship. However, your lecture makes me feel I need psychological detox. My childhood neglect and physical abuse is still haunting me. I sometimes get trauma flashbacks of my childhood. Strangely, these flashbacks only started after I became aware of this narcissism and I started focusing on myself.

  • @LibraLove1717-us8qp
    @LibraLove1717-us8qp Pƙed 4 lety +10

    Selflove is key. It took me 30 years to realize this. Very good Information on Codependency. I'm so over it now because I woke up to what was really going on in my dysfunctional marriage.

  • @jalpenobaby7582
    @jalpenobaby7582 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    Sending love to everyone here in the comments ❀ Thank you for the love, support, and community.

  • @sunshine241
    @sunshine241 Pƙed 4 lety +12

    i would have thought I was a co-dependent until I discovered the 'narcissist' information. I'm not (much). Knowledge really was power for me. I am now out after 26 years. THANK YOU!

    • @christianpulisic7784
      @christianpulisic7784 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Elizabeth Miller,You look stunning,hope you are not with a narc 😈!

  • @tessmccarthy3654
    @tessmccarthy3654 Pƙed 3 lety +57

    What came first, the narcissist or the co-dependent? I wish they taught this stuff in high school. Thanks so much for all of your insight!

    • @lindamorrow7573
      @lindamorrow7573 Pƙed 2 lety +6

      I am not certain that I would have emotionally understood it as a teen since I was so completely under my narc mother's spell...perhaps at college/University age. Any thoughts from other narc survivors???

    • @pinrayi7909
      @pinrayi7909 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Some things comes from life's experiences only. That is organized education is just means to make money and only limited to certain courses and for some people not everyone.

    • @RS54321
      @RS54321 Pƙed rokem +2

      This stuff absolutely should be taught in schools. Even a basic level understanding would be so helpful (eg., things that a good friend would do vs a narcissistic 'friend' and how to avoid narcs). This should be standard knowledge in all workplaces so bosses will hire based on skill and character rather than superficial charm and looks.

    • @cowoverthemoo
      @cowoverthemoo Pƙed rokem

      I would say the co-dependency on the parent.

    • @cowoverthemoo
      @cowoverthemoo Pƙed rokem

      like the codependency doesn't leave them, never standing up for themselves..growing inside them resentment turning them into a narcissist

  • @janejohnson5488
    @janejohnson5488 Pƙed 4 lety +17

    OMG! This is so about me! An alcoholic boyfriend for many years, always trying to make him better and denying the totality of his problem that has affected my entire life with my now estranged children. Not only was he a narcissist, but my mom and my oldest brother were also horrific narcissists. Share emotions growing up, didn't happen. Wow! Now my entire family is gone and I've had much time to learn about this problem, but my children won't listen and won't talk to understand what has gone on in this family. Consequently, I am totally alone in this world. I do have a narcissistic girlfriend that I've noticed "everything and every conversation is about her" and if it's not, she will make it about her. And, she's a habitual liar! I am 69 years old. There IS NO therapy available.

  • @scotturner3178
    @scotturner3178 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    This is the best educational video I've ever seen on any subject. Dr. Ramani is a brilliant communicator and therapist. The amount of healing she is facilitating with her videos is immeasurable. THANK YOU DR RAMANI!!!

  • @rekhatripathi8149
    @rekhatripathi8149 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    In many parts of world where mental health awareness and professional services are meagre, your book/online help on codependency would be life saver.
    Inspired by your existence.

  • @laurac964
    @laurac964 Pƙed 4 lety +39

    I thank you for this because I do think somebody recovering from narcissistic abuse should not be thrown the term codependent when they were actually just victimized and they need help and healing and not to made it feel like somehow its their fault .

    • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
      @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Nest of cluster B’s. Like a hornets 🐝 nest. Brilliant!

    • @littleiodine9480
      @littleiodine9480 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Tewdy Quew you are so correct. so I suppose it is the fault of Ted Bundy's victims that they were his victims as well right? if somebody takes candy from a baby it's the baby's fault right? boy am I waking up. also my brain just flat ass couldn't believe that a human being could behave in such a fashion on purpose in any way. I sure can now. I don't relate to it but I know it's there. Be safe all

    • @littleiodine9480
      @littleiodine9480 Pƙed 4 lety

      Laura Cunningham thank you I'm in total agreement

    • @geertruivanbroekhoven7209
      @geertruivanbroekhoven7209 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Very well said. So true. Happy to find people here who understand this.

  • @phaxad
    @phaxad Pƙed 4 lety +81

    I feel bad for codependent people. Many of them stay in an abusive relationship because they fear being alone. I was an only child. So being alone comes natural to me. Its easy for me to leave when Im being abused.

    • @bioniclohan7291
      @bioniclohan7291 Pƙed 3 lety

      My siblings are much older so I was also raised as an only child. I'm not codependent in relationships but I see it in my friends and I try to save them from their own codependent behaviors. I'm not sure how to deal with it even though I'm happily married.

    • @farahkhan4692
      @farahkhan4692 Pƙed 2 lety

      I am codependent and I’m learning to be happy alone . It’s hard for me to leave as I’m afraid of being alone.

    • @TheFearlessSuspender
      @TheFearlessSuspender Pƙed rokem

      i am an only child, but was constantly expected to deny my own needs to comfort my volatile parent. once i learned about narcissism i was able to leave. but it was very hard before that because i want a family soon and thought going through the process with someone else would take too long.

  • @cynacist1823
    @cynacist1823 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    Thank you for making this video. This cycle describes my family system to a t. Dad was an addict, mom kept insisting that he would get better and children left to their own devices. They fed us, housed us and educated us, and I'm grateful for that. They were so focused on each other that they didn't really impact us. Mom's still the rescuer trying to "bring back" the love of her life and refuses to admit she was duped. Dad's still a monster. All us kids have grown and left. To anyone reading this: if you have the chance to escape, do it. Leave them behind. They cannot change so they won't.

  • @thaddeusdombrowski2241
    @thaddeusdombrowski2241 Pƙed 4 lety +7

    Thank you for helping me make sense of a traumatic confusing childhood. Doing much better now.

  • @lorettanericcio-bohlman567
    @lorettanericcio-bohlman567 Pƙed 4 lety +5

    Oh, hello! I believe we’re able to deny all levels of enabling but our bodies store this and react appropriately. Illnesses, cancer, pain, shrinking of our spirit shown in bad posture, you name it; it will come out.
    Thank you Doc for more food for thought. Always 💐🐬🩋

  • @priyankathaddaeus4082
    @priyankathaddaeus4082 Pƙed 4 lety +12

    Thank you, Dr. Ramani. What an eye-opener! I survived all the dynamics - depression, denial of my needs, crippling anxiety, hypervigilance to keep myself from being constantly denied, stress...it was a mad relationship, and I felt so unsafe and unable to open up emotionally. With my close friends though, I was free and normal! Blessed everyday that I'm not in that system anymore...

  • @christinac2012
    @christinac2012 Pƙed 4 lety +20

    It gets so confusing because the definition of a "good wife" and a "good mother" in my culture is about putting others first. Luckily, I have been too selfish to pursue these roles. But I did feel guilty and like a failure for not being like those around me.

    • @tamarbatyah7
      @tamarbatyah7 Pƙed 2 lety +11

      You got it! Patriarchy, which an extension of male narcissism, seeks to make women Codependent!

    • @nancydowling4049
      @nancydowling4049 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      So true! This is where the blurred line for me seemed to just disappeared. Even in the stupid shows I was exposed to growing up, you didn't see the kids doing the dishes or folding the laundry. I felt like I wanted my kids to be able to enjoy their childhood, so maybe I took care of some of the monotonous stuff. But when they got older and it came time to delegate the narc ex-husband pretty much ruined the whole plan by trying to iron fist them into helping. He certainly didn't help much with household tasks either, and when he did run the vacuum, it was a big production of how good he was. Anyway I do agree you think you're being a good wife and allowing your children moments to be a kid then you wake up and you've been living a nightmare.

  • @annemccarron2281
    @annemccarron2281 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    I'm glad you gave an accurate description. I get annoyed when people use codependency as simply another term for dependency. I have a real hard time with people saying narcissists are codependent. They are not! Narcisdists have a dependency need for fuel but they do no relinquish their needs to attend to the needs of others unless it is a facade to manipulate others. Big difference!

  • @homersmom
    @homersmom Pƙed 4 lety +10

    I’m glad you put this topic in the series. I believe my mom was a classic codependent, not only with my alcoholic brothers but my narcissistic sister, as well. She continually bailed out my brothers which allowed them to continue their unhealthy lifestyles, and excused my sister’s behavior Every Single Time. All of this was meant to keep peace in the family...peace at any cost. It took me years to realize how this dynamic played out and affected my family. I’m thankful to be able to say that our younger family members have caught on and are much better at settling boundaries. No more walking on eggshells!

  • @goitomfessahaye1701
    @goitomfessahaye1701 Pƙed 4 lety +25

    The thing I've often struggled with was the denial by my family to even listen to my opinions or objections to their criticism .
    I was never against their criticism although sometimes k get hyper vigilant and emotional , I try and recificy the situation by writing an email saying both parties may or may have done things badly , but they just operate out of controlling and narcisstictic behaviour . The worst is when you lose your job or are struggling to lift yourself up and they act this way and believe nothing you have to say is valid as cirtism towards then and often becomes a non reciprocal relationship . I've battled with resentment for a while but you just have to allow the compassion and understanding that they are just unconciously acting out and even though its not right the compassion and forgiveness of for yourself to at least be able to deal with it until you become independent enough both financially and emotionally, by getting a place and finding a good support network , to then move on .

  • @wildalbalass4867
    @wildalbalass4867 Pƙed rokem +1

    This is very important to me. I was brought up by a Passive Aggressive Covert Narcissist. It took me 51 years to break free.
    I’m 64 and now I’m facing that I have at least 1 and possibly 2 adult children with Narcissistic personality styles.
    I’ll need to watch this again.
    Many thanks.

  • @phoebeglobe483
    @phoebeglobe483 Pƙed 4 lety +18

    Having being in this situation as a child and witnessing my mothers relationship with my father, I would say that you can tell if you are a genuine co_dependent enabler or merely an uneducated victim quite easily. A co-dep ACCEPTS the narcs behavior as correct. The Narc is not criticized or argued with for their behavior; instead they are helped to continue it... the co-dep JUSTIFIES the behavior and actively argues with any who say its not right and in the case of kids punishes them if they rebel or speak out while instructing them to obey blindly . Any feelings of resentment are vented onto the scapegoat . co-deps feed by proxy via the narc . They cover up for them, lie for them, gang up with them as second in command and are flying monkey number one.

    • @breannacarels6479
      @breannacarels6479 Pƙed 4 lety

      Omg. This is my step-son to a tee with his Mother.

    • @hannehyer1330
      @hannehyer1330 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Thank you Phoebe, I come from a family of two narcissistic parents, one scapegoat (me), one invisible child ( younger sister), one narcissist ( youngest sister) and my twin that I haven’t been able to place. Married thirty years to a superentitled narcissist, she’s become increasingly entitled herself.I’ve been trying to figure out whether she’s a narcissist or a co-dependent. Your description helped me a lot. I couldn’t believe that she could condone his awful behaviour, in full kow-tow always and expect me to buy the charade while also telling me how unhappy she was. I don’t know how to help her, but now I know I’m not dealing with a narcissist, just a co-dependent. I’m very grateful for your input❀

  • @nelumbonucifera148
    @nelumbonucifera148 Pƙed 4 lety +19

    Thank you for highlighting this, Dr Ramani. I’m well and truly out of this toxic codependency cycle with my Narc husband and this happened only after the discard, when I started looking for answers. What is horrifying now is, I’m witnessing my adult daughter and teenage son getting trapped in the same cycle with their father. They have became the enablers and I’m not able to coerce them out of this mindset. Years of being raised in a dysfunctional family system has resulted in compromises being made, just so that they can somehow earn their father’s withheld approval and they nurse grand hopes that he will change for the better, although his track records prove otherwise. It’s heartbreaking to realise that perhaps, just like me, only when he discards them for good will they realise the magnitude of the deception they were enmeshed in.

    • @lisajames3117
      @lisajames3117 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Nelumbo,Omg, this is EXACTLY how I feel!! Exactly my situation! Couldnt have said it any better myself.

    • @tinylittlebutstillalion4101
      @tinylittlebutstillalion4101 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Me to, that is the worst thing, when you know, but you can not save your children.

    • @1annettesinclair
      @1annettesinclair Pƙed 4 lety +2

      I am so grateful to you for taking the time to explain the relationship between codependency and how it relates to someone who grew up in a dysfunctional family system. I suffered narcissistic abuse in my family of origin. This dynamic repeated itself in my adult relationships...roomate/"best friend", ex husband and then a fiance whom I broke it off with. Finally I now understand. It was easy to just say, "Oh, I'm codependent". It goes so much deeper than that but to the uneducated observer, it is easy to label it as such and I believed it! Now I know so much more about the nature of narcissistic abuse and can finally make sense of it all thanks to you. I am so grateful to you for taking the time to explain what has been so difficult for me to make sense of and to explain to others. I gave up. You have helped me see the light. God bless you Dr. Ramani.

    • @lisajames3117
      @lisajames3117 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Is it possible to save our children? Even our young adult children. I feel guilty for keeping my children in the situation, but I kept them in it trying to keep the family together. I finally got out but they will still be affected, becuase he is their father and one still has to visit him on weekends. Ugghhh

    • @tinylittlebutstillalion4101
      @tinylittlebutstillalion4101 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@lisajames3117 i know exactly how you feel. But i believe that you can only save someone who knows what narcisissem is and undestands it fully. My children are 16 and 20 and they do understand something but they still Love their father and i see how they are struggeling but i cannot do anything about it. It is really hard.

  • @dougbell2071
    @dougbell2071 Pƙed rokem +3

    Thank God! For Dr. Ramani, my addictions students for the past few years have learned so much from her Awesome presentation's.
    Dr. Ramani views are better teaching than most classroom's I prepped in
    Thank you Dr. Ramani
    Professor WaltđŸ’„

  • @beatrizblazzio870
    @beatrizblazzio870 Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    I stopped breathing while finding myself into a narcissistic relationship for more than 30 years, thank you so much

  • @valeriehershkovych7850
    @valeriehershkovych7850 Pƙed 4 lety +11

    Thank you for shedding light on this, it has been incredibly helpful why a person, who has been in a narcissistic relationship, denies everything and gaslights her kids

  • @AnnabellaEdeL
    @AnnabellaEdeL Pƙed 4 lety +16

    This series is SO GOOD that, as soon as it ends, I'm going to go to chapter 1 and go over it again.

    • @bethlombardi1605
      @bethlombardi1605 Pƙed 3 lety

      How do I find series on this subject?

    • @AnnabellaEdeL
      @AnnabellaEdeL Pƙed 3 lety

      @@bethlombardi1605 Hi! You can find the whole series here: czcams.com/play/PL3QtnfcMTMhEfRXN-Kk2vndn89nBZxKUj.html

    • @AnnabellaEdeL
      @AnnabellaEdeL Pƙed 3 lety

      @@bethlombardi1605 Hope you enjoy and learn from it as good as I did. it has really made a difference in my relationships. Doctor Ramani is really good.

  • @GaveMeGrace1
    @GaveMeGrace1 Pƙed 4 lety +17

    Thank you-I’m glad you addressed the codependent vs trauma bond connection; which could warrant a whole separate video.

  • @briarrose4747
    @briarrose4747 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    I like that you mentioned its destabilizing to question the fam dynamic..Because for me thats exactly how ive felt facing the reality of it.Its like discovering your in a nightmare in real life..Its traumatizing dealing with it.

  • @godsees7903
    @godsees7903 Pƙed 4 lety +1

    I am a true codependent I have the desire to stay and weather the storms because I always had to. I constantly seek to make people happy because truly I am not. And I would not want anyone to feel the way I do all the time so I reach for any way I can make a person feel comfortable. Even if it means doing things I don’t want to do. I feel the pressure of the other person and because I want to make them happy or smile or just be nice to me. I go all out . I am truly a codependent people pleaser. Great job at braking things down the way you do. I love your videos there helping my life in such a wonderful way.!

  • @naydra4210
    @naydra4210 Pƙed 4 lety +10

    I was definitely in a co-dependent friendship. I made my narcissist best friend of 15 years even worse by letting her get away with being mean to others. I don't know why I didn't just get away sooner. It's also really difficult not to gaslight yourself when you see all these posts about "real friends are always there for you" which made me feel like, if I left, I was the terrible person. Our friendship ended abruptly after I said no to something, and I'm sure she expected me to return with an apology. Thankfully I found all of Dr. Ramani's videos and they really helped me realize what was going on, so I wouldn't return to her like I did before. Thank you so much Dr. Ramani, it's hard to look back and see how many mistakes I made, but I'm grateful to be free.

    • @ka8990
      @ka8990 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      You did a great job . I too been in narcissistic friendship of 8 years . Before 3 days I deleted her last flying monkey . 😊😊 so happy

    • @naydra4210
      @naydra4210 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@ka8990 I'm glad to hear you got away too! It's hard but it's also incredibly liberating!

    • @ka8990
      @ka8990 Pƙed 4 lety

      Everyday is celebration . ❀

    • @godzillamanstreb524
      @godzillamanstreb524 Pƙed 3 lety

      I’ve left 3 narcissistic friends during covid.....realized I was totally enabling their abuse toward me & others ......awful! I feel much better đŸŒș

  • @314Tazo
    @314Tazo Pƙed 4 lety +27

    Codependency can, also, occur when taking care of someone who has dementia.

  • @mm7846
    @mm7846 Pƙed rokem

    That is so profound! “Narcissists exist because the world enables them” đŸ€Ż

  • @carolnagy408
    @carolnagy408 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I was diagnosed as co dependent after listening to the video I discovered that I am far from co dependency.

  • @cliffp.8396
    @cliffp.8396 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    I look to your tutorials for the facts, for learning in a language I can understand for answers to my questions. What I find consistently is authenticity, a real unmasked kindness toward others. In giving away all this knowledge (traditionally held behind a pay as you go curtain) you are helping thousands to find healing and teach and protect their young from the same suffering. You have my respect. Thank you for what you do.

  • @robertjohnston8876
    @robertjohnston8876 Pƙed rokem +5

    Again fantastic!
    Stayed out of loyalty, kids, and hoping for things to improve some day (they never will)
    She was ruining my life until she left
    God rescued me
    The lesson: Always be in touch with your own needs and look after #1 . If you don’t nobody will.

  • @tomsuber1794
    @tomsuber1794 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    I just wanted to thank you for posting this type of material. You have helped me understand a 37 year disaster through sharing content and experience.

  • @wendyhammond4445
    @wendyhammond4445 Pƙed 4 lety

    Thank you Dr. Ramani. Had a high conflict divorce. It lasted 10 years. Consequently was always distracted while raising my two girls. Oldest went to use drugs with her father, youngest stayed with me. Both now married and have children. Just starting to come around. They still have us both in their lives. Me No Contact with him. Am now 73 yrs old. Come from a long line of Narcissistic men. Kept marrying my father. Thank you for shedding light on this. Courts, judges, attorneys are a nightmare too by having their head in the sand. Sadly it never ends even when you get out.

  • @jsbg7323
    @jsbg7323 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    This is so random, but I used to have a friend when I was in high school (we're still friends) who had this gorgeous singing voice, one of the best female soprano voices I might add. She's eight years older than me, and I remember how real she came across to me. Generally just super humble and in touch with her own vulnerabilities and her gifts. No diva complex about her whatsoever. Dr. Ramani, you remind me of her so much. You're like the psychotherapist version of my friend Hilary. I'm gonna recommend your channel to her.

  • @eottoe2001
    @eottoe2001 Pƙed 4 lety +60

    A co-dependent is a nice and decent person who has an affinity for relationships with not so nice and not so decent people. Co-dependency is a pejorative term. They suffer not only the abuse from the not so decent people but they also get blamed for receiving the abuse of the abuser by other people, support groups and more importantly by themselves -- forgetting that the abuser was doing the abusing and not them. The co-dependent is the one who goes into therapy, joins support groups and has regrets whereas the abuser usually does not. Even so, they are blamed for being “the co-dependent” to the abuse of the abuser. Generally the abuser gets off scot-free. In many cases they weren't enabling the other as much as the other is parasitic. The parasite usually is not scrutinized for her or his activities as much as the "co-dependent" is in his or her web off deceit. They again don't go to support groups, therapy or have regrets. They also don't get a term like “co-dependency” attached to them for being mean people.

    • @ElanaVital83
      @ElanaVital83 Pƙed 4 lety +14

      Not all codependents are innocent victims of circumstance. My mother allowed my father to abuse us. My sister and I paid the price for her "nice and decent" behavior.

    • @eottoe2001
      @eottoe2001 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      @@ElanaVital83 actually I understand that from personal experience.My dad wasn't equipped to deal with mom's abuse but I have a lot anger at his failure to protect us. I have a woman friend whose mother allowed abuse of her by her father. What I was miffed at was that here I am going to groups and therapy (which is good) but my former girlfriend, its like nothing happened. In the mean time me and the people are labeled codependent and that feel a bit pejorative if that makes sense? I think there needs to be a better descriptor. ((Of topic, using the COA/ACA model dad doing the drinking translated in mom being the enabler, when started see BPD and NPD info, that model was turned on its ears for me. Dad was bringing in a great income which let her do whatever she wanted to do which apparently come after us when we wasn't around.)) Yes, I see your point.

    • @tamarbatyah7
      @tamarbatyah7 Pƙed 2 lety

      @@ElanaVital83 - Did your mother have the option to leave?

    • @downo
      @downo Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Disagree, and actually think that this is super wrong to say, because my narcissist is a codependent himself. He's toxic, immature and codependent all at the dame time.

    • @eottoe2001
      @eottoe2001 Pƙed 2 lety

      @@tamarbatyah7 of she had wanted to badly enough.

  • @TheBaumcm
    @TheBaumcm Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I love that Dr. Ramani does her videos largely unedited. It shows humanity and that she’d rather get the information out there than worry about perfection.

  • @rmyosp
    @rmyosp Pƙed 2 lety

    "Never ever link your self esteem to another human being". I'll never forget this. Thanks doc!

  • @sandyg3772
    @sandyg3772 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    Thank you soooooo much. I almost didn't watch this video because of the topic. I have gotten so tired of people assuming that I stayed with my ex so long because I "needed to feel needed." I can assure you, I don't need someone to need me! I do like to help others, and I used to do so at my own expense (because I didn't know anything else), but I don't get my self-esteem from thinking I can change someone else.
    I am so grateful that you made that point clear.
    GREAT VIDEO!

    • @JerneyMarisha
      @JerneyMarisha Pƙed 2 lety +1

      Yes exactly this! I always feel a little bit offended by the term. I am so happy on my own and not being drained the whole time by someone who needs me to be someone else and keeps changing the goal posts.
      I do however have issues with boundaries. I do try to set them but I found that I try to understand where the other is coming from too much. Only now at 41 I’m realising that it doesn’t matter and I need to stop giving others excuses to treat me like crap. Or even recognising that they are.
      I’m now realising that growing up with a parent with mental health issues and alcoholism warped my judgement. It helped me not to become too traumatised and to be albe to love my mom as I was growing up. But on the other hand it blinded me to unhealthy behaviour because it seemed normal to me to try and figure out what’s underneath and what I myself can do to better the situation. I think THAT is the problem. Not the need to be needed.

  • @genevalawrence801
    @genevalawrence801 Pƙed 4 lety +21

    There is community responsibility for narcissistic patterns and for codependent patterns that is insufficiently acknowledged, and is sexist at its roots. In many social systems, girls are raised to deny their own needs. Their family, their community, their schools, and their church all teach them that caring for other people's physical and emotional needs at the expense of their own and putting themselves last is noble, good, and expected, and that there is something wrong with them if they choose to live differently. Then when they finally try to leave the system, the community, the church, or the marriage that is harming them, they get labeled as selfish or bad by the social system they are leaving AND pasted with the label "codependent" by those outside the system who could help them but choose not to. Labeled, blamed, and dismissed from two different directions. I have no trouble seeing why so many women in abusive situations find it hard to leave. (And before anyone jumps in with "Men, too" - yes, I know that men also suffer from narcissistic abuse. But your social conditioning is different from ours, and that's what this post is about.)

    • @TempermentalTart
      @TempermentalTart Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Beautifully said! The "self-sacrificing" that is ingrained in us by our society, culture or religion is profound, deeply rooted and complicit.

    • @ElanaVital83
      @ElanaVital83 Pƙed 4 lety

      And if a woman says "men, too"?

    • @genevalawrence801
      @genevalawrence801 Pƙed 4 lety

      @@ElanaVital83 , it's not the gender of the speaker, nor do I deny that society also programs men in harmful ways. That's a whole conversation worth having, but that's not what I'm doing here. I mean for my comment to address the programming that is specific to women.

    • @NoName-eu2xw
      @NoName-eu2xw Pƙed 2 lety

      @@genevalawrence801 comment is a year old so maybe more information has been made available. What about women that claim feminism and find a man that is subservient and then continue to emasculate him. Your point could be used as leverage for this to happen. However it does takes 2 to tango.

  • @teal1010
    @teal1010 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    " Putting myself first and making me a priority isn't easy...!"
    *I felt that!
    😱

  • @robertchapman1337
    @robertchapman1337 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    Holy S!%t....I’ve been dating this woman off and on for 20 years and wondered what was wrong with me, why I couldn’t fix or get through, make that connection like the first few months of the relationship. This person that would put me through the meat grinder till I couldn’t take any more, and leave. she is very good at what she does...super convincing. She made me feel like she was all in. Her exact words. but of course our paths would always cross again inevitably. Thank you so much Dr. Ramani for these videos.
    Your explanation in this video fits me like a glove. As far as my ex partner, not for me to decide but let’s just say I don’t carry around a meat grinder.😁

  • @su-enaahleebeautifulcontra3617

    I was a parentified child for my mother after my father died when I was 7years old. But then when it came to my own decisions, I wasn't allowed.

    • @eagleeye2300
      @eagleeye2300 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Hope you are doing very well now-- and I have the sense that you are a very intelligent person. You have a right to make your own decisions, and forge your own life!!

    • @majakolonja4266
      @majakolonja4266 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      Typical

    • @jackier8142
      @jackier8142 Pƙed 2 lety

      This was me

  • @hollymarie4508
    @hollymarie4508 Pƙed 4 lety +13

    Dr. Ramani, you’re amazing! I feel like I should be paying you for these wonderful insights and explanations. Thank you!!

  • @LaSnob711
    @LaSnob711 Pƙed 2 lety +2

    OMG, I grew up in an invalidating family where noone had my back...and I keep ending up with "broken" men in relationships where I keep trying to help them and rescue them...only recently I realized that and am making a change. Thank you for pointing it out for me. It really helps my efforts and explains a lot. I just got out of a relationship with a narcissist. The one before was a substance abuser. Thank you for educating me on this issue. Makes me feel much better.

  • @through.a.barrel.she.breathes
    @through.a.barrel.she.breathes Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

    I used to think I needed others to feel a sense of esteem, but then after experiencing abuse and standing firm with my boundaries, I came to realise I didn't need anyone. I was strong enough to just be myself and practice self-love.

  • @borealiswan2363
    @borealiswan2363 Pƙed 4 lety +15

    Thanks for making this nuance. Too often, the term 'co-dependant' is used to blame the victim for his\her situation. "Well, why doesn't s\he leave ? She doesn't because she's addicted to the abuse or the abuser, she likes it that way". I never saw anyone as "addicted" and "enabling" abuse he or she is suffering from. Someone who takes advantage of you is an abuser, the victim isn't asking for it. As you pointed out, there may be unknown variables why the victim can't get out or isn't willing to. It's like being pinned down under a heavyweight. I think co-dependant is an unjust and unfair description of the narc's victim(s).

  • @mattsharkey8437
    @mattsharkey8437 Pƙed 4 lety +141

    If you're a Christian, just remember, Christ never wanted his followers to be enablers, but to be fighters!!

    • @tw69hands2
      @tw69hands2 Pƙed 4 lety +17

      You're right but very few ministers, priests, and other Christian teachers (including theologians) ever teach this. They use the discipline of apologetics, meaning the science of justifying the divine right of kings (rulers).

    • @mattsharkey8437
      @mattsharkey8437 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      @@tw69hands2 push on brother. Keep fighting

    • @MentalDeviant
      @MentalDeviant Pƙed 4 lety +15

      I think some codependent people use him as an excuse. But he always stood up to people verbally that attacked him.

    • @annmichellemuse6008
      @annmichellemuse6008 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Absolutely Matt!

    • @mattsharkey8437
      @mattsharkey8437 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      @@MentalDeviant they do, but if they learn from him, they'll see how he dealt with Narcissists

  • @YoAverageNpc
    @YoAverageNpc Pƙed 2 lety +2

    From where I come from I can't really afford any form of therapy but this channels's videos along with the various books I have read helped me overcome narsisstic abuse and also reclaim my self esteem
    Thank you ❀
    Dr Ramani

  • @RM-wl8qx
    @RM-wl8qx Pƙed 2 lety +2

    Grew up in a fucked up household with a codependent mother who supplied endlessly to my narcissistic and abusive father. We were neglected, degraded and abused by these monsters until 25 or older. To this day my mother tries to control us as we are enmeshed family with no boundaries. Finally at 40 I'm realizing what my life used to be. Luckily I moved to another country far away from my parents, happily married with an only child whom I am trying to raise with awareness. They hate me. They think I'm a black sheep in the family.