Narcissistic parent

A narcissistic parent is a parent affected by narcissism or narcissistic personality disorder. Typically, narcissistic parents are exclusively and possessively close to their children and are threatened by their children's growing independence.[1] This results in a pattern of narcissistic attachment, with the parent considering that the child exists solely to fulfill the parent's needs and wishes. A narcissistic parent will often try to control their children with threats and emotional abuse. Narcissistic parenting adversely affects the psychological development of children, affecting their reasoning and their emotional, ethical, and societal behaviors and attitudes. Personal boundaries are often disregarded with the goal of molding and manipulating the child to satisfy the parent's expectations.[citation needed]

Narcissistic people have low self-esteem and feel the need to control how others regard them, fearing that otherwise they will be blamed or rejected and their personal inadequacies will be exposed. Narcissistic parents are self-absorbed, often to the point of grandiosity. They also tend to be inflexible, and lack the empathy necessary for child raising.[2]

  1. ^ Stephen E. Levich, Clone Being (2004) p. 31 and p.89-91
  2. ^ Hart, Claire M.; Bush-Evans, Reece D.; Hepper, Erica G.; Hickman, Hannah M. (2017-10-15). "The children of narcissus: Insights into narcissists' parenting styles". Personality and Individual Differences. 117: 249–254. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2017.06.019. ISSN 0191-8869. S2CID 149369979.

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