How a Narcissist Becomes a Narcissist & Why Their Story Doesnโ€™t Excuse Your Scars

Understanding the roots doesnโ€™t excuse the damage, but it explains everything. The pain that started it all.

I didnโ€™t just study narcissism, I lived it.

I was born to a narcissistic mother who saw me as an extension of herself, not a child with my own voice.

I dated a narcissist who twisted my emotions so well that I didnโ€™t even realize it was abuse until I was in therapy.

My sister? Narcissistic too. We havenโ€™t spoken in years after a brutal fallout that exposed just how far sheโ€™d go to compete with me and tear me down.

But the worst hit came when I was pregnant with my son. My motherโ€™s younger sister, another narcissist in the family tree, stole a large sum of money from me.

I almost went broke before giving birth. Thankfully, I got it back. But the betrayal? It left a scar.

So when I say this isnโ€™t just theory… believe me, itโ€™s personal.

Why Canโ€™t Narcissists Handle Criticism?

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Living with my toxic mother taught me this early: narcissists explode when you challenge them.

Even a simple question like, โ€œWhy did you say that?โ€ would lead to hours of emotional warfare.

Dr. Ramani Durvasula describes this perfectly. She says narcissists live in fear of being exposed. Thatโ€™s why even the smallest critique feels like a personal attack.

Itโ€™s not about what you said, itโ€™s about their internal chaos being threatened.

Their entire identity is a performance. Any threat to it? Feels like life or death.

How Does Someone Become a Narcissist?

This part helped me forgive myself for staying too long with the wrong people.

Not them, but me. I realized their behavior was rooted in something they had never dealt with.

1. Early Trauma & Emotional Wounds

Some narcissists are shaped by chaos. Abuse, loss, or neglect. They build a fantasy self to survive. A version of themselves thatโ€™s untouchable, powerful, admired.

Itโ€™s not real. But it keeps them safe.

2. Conditional Love & Emotional Neglect

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Others only received love when they were performing. When they were good enough. When they did what their parents wanted.

Real, safe love? That wasnโ€™t in their vocabulary. So they learned to become what others needed, never who they actually were.

Psychologist Heinz Kohut talked about this. He said that when kids donโ€™t get emotional mirroring, they struggle to develop a stable identity. So, instead, they grow up chasing validation to feel like they exist.

3. Overvaluation & Excessive Praise

Then, thereโ€™s the opposite. Some narcissists were worshipped by their parents. Told they were better than everyone else. That they deserved more.

But no one taught them emotional responsibility. No one said, โ€œYouโ€™re not better… youโ€™re just human, and thatโ€™s enough.โ€

So they grew up believing the world owed them something.

4. Praise, Punishment Rollercoasters

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This one hits hard.

Many narcissists grow up being praised one day and punished the next. One minute, theyโ€™re adored. The next, theyโ€™re ignored, blamed, or mocked.

My narcissistic mother was like that. If I succeeded, sheโ€™d bask in the spotlight like it was hers. If I failed or disagreed with her? The silent treatment, guilt trips, or rage.

That hot-and-cold cycle wires a child to chase approval. It teaches them that love is conditional and that they have to perform for it.

5. Temperament & Genetics

Not every narcissist had a traumatic childhood. Some just had the perfect storm: a sensitive or reactive personality, paired with toxic parenting.

Dr. Ramani notes that a difficult temperament is a risk factor. That doesnโ€™t mean a child is doomed, but it means theyโ€™ll be more affected by their environment.

Some kids adapt by becoming people pleasers. Others? They build walls, masks, and egos.

Myth: โ€œThey Love Themselves Too Muchโ€

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No, they donโ€™t.

Narcissists donโ€™t have real self-love. What they have is a hollow performance of superiority that masks deep self-loathing.

They need constant attention, praise, and control. Not because they feel worthy, but because deep down, they feel like nothing.

The therapist behind GoodTherapy.org put it best: โ€œAn inner core of insecurity often lies behind this mask.โ€

Itโ€™s like a black hole of shame theyโ€™re always trying to fill, often at your expense.

Myth: โ€œThey Just Got Spoiledโ€

Sometimes, yes. But many times? They were emotionally starved.

Some were praised too much. Others were neglected or torn apart.

The result is the same: They grow up without a grounded sense of self. They rely on admiration, power, and control to feel like they matter.

And in that process, they destroy everyone around them.

Understanding Isnโ€™t Excusing Their Sh*tty Behaviour

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I used to think that if I just understood them better, if I loved harder, showed more patience, they would change.

That if I became the perfect daughter, the perfect partner, the perfect sisterโ€ฆ theyโ€™d finally see me.

But hereโ€™s what I learned: You can understand where someone came from and still walk away from who theyโ€™ve become.

You can acknowledge their pain and still protect your peace. You can have empathy and still enforce boundaries.

Narcissists Make a Choice to be Bad People

If youโ€™re reading this and thinking, This is my mom. My ex. My sibling. Youโ€™re not alone. Youโ€™re not crazy. Youโ€™re not weak.

You were conditioned to tolerate the intolerable.

The truth? Youโ€™ll never change a narcissist. But you can change your story.

And it starts by knowing this wasnโ€™t your fault.

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