Is Your Partner a Narcissistic Parent?
Until you have a child, you never really know what kind of parent you or your partner will be. But raising kids tends to clarify a person’s psychology, letting both strengths and weaknesses shine through. Because, whether kids are triumphant or having a tantrum, parents have a choice of reaction somewhere between selfishness and selflessness. However, for narcissistic parents the reaction will only ever be selfish in the extreme. Everything their child does is a reflection of who they are as a person, and the outcomes don’t tend to be particularly healthy. So how do you spot a narcissistic parent, or recognize those traits in yourself?
Just Narcissism or a Disorder?
It’s important to understand that there are parents who have sub-clinical narcissistic tendencies and those who have a mental health condition known as narcissistic personality disorder or NPD. The disorder is more prevalent in men than women, but is exceedingly rare, affecting maybe 1-percent of the U.S. population. So while the chances of parenting with or being raised by someone who has NPD are vanishingly small they are not nil.
“Parents with NPD often have a hard time attuning to the needs of their children,” says William Schroeder, a licensed professional counselor and co-owner of Just Mind Counseling. He grew up with an NPD parent and notes that those who suffer with the disorder often use narcism as a coping mechanism for their own chaotic upbringing. “The result tends to be an inflated ego and an inability to sit with their own emotions. They require others to cater to them and they expect to get what they want.”
Other Narcissistic Parent Traits
Subclinical narcissistic parents will likely share some of the same traits as NPD parents. One common attribute is that they will be unable to separate their own self-worth from their child’s achievements, according to Dr. Laurie Hollman, psychoanalyst and author of “Are You Living with a Narcissist?