Read Will I Ever Be Good Enough?: Healing the Daughters of Narcissistic Mothers Online
Authors: Karyl McBride
Tags: #General, #Psychology, #Family & Relationships, #Interpersonal Relations, #Self-Help, #Family Relationships, #Personal Growth
You may be thinking, Sounds good, but I can never get there! The remaining chapters will assist you in accomplishing all of the above. Remember, however, recovery is lifelong work and you cannot accomplish all of them at once. Here are some encouraging stories of women who have individuated from their mothers.
Let’s move on to the next chapter, so we can focus more on you and your unique qualities as a truly deserving woman.
DESERVING DAUGHTERS
It is not easy to find happiness in ourselves, and it is not possible to find it elsewhere.
—Agnes Repplier,
The Treasure Chest
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A
fter years of having been coerced into being what your mother wanted you to be—whether it was how you looked and acted, or what you believed in and valued—it is time now to focus on what you want for yourself. No more succumbing to Mother’s attempt to mold you into her image. No more putting your internal growth on hold in order to please Mom. No more superficial smiles on pretty little faces.
In order to do the fun work I encourage in this chapter, I want you to address two serious issues.
Below, we will take each concept in turn and discuss the strategies you need to recover.
The Internal Mother
The internal mother is best understood as your own maternal instinct. It is the intuitive voice that speaks to you and wants to nurture, love, and mother you. While in the past you had to give up on the notion that your external mother could give you what you needed, you can now have an internal mother readily available to you. She makes it possible to parent yourself.
Many daughters are sad and angry when first confronted with the concept of parenting themselves, but when they realize and accept these feelings, they get through them to a sense of inner strength and empowerment.
To grow the internal mother, you must first give her permission to be there. You allow her kind, maternal voice to resonate within you. You allow yourself to hear it. To begin, find a quiet, lovely healing place where you will have solitude. This may be the bathtub, your deck, office, or on a walk. Whatever works for you. Try to create an atmosphere where you will not be interrupted. After you’ve done this several times, you will be able to do this anywhere and even go through interruptions. But start with having complete quiet and focusing on yourself. Have your journal, writing pad, and pencil with you.
Your first task is making what I call the “I am” list. To do this, it is important to allow your internal mother to share and review your many incredible strengths and characteristics. Write them down in a manner similar to these examples:
“I am strong, I am intelligent, I am wise, I am loving, I am helpful, I am empathetic, I am industrious, I am energetic, I am productive, I am sensitive, I am honest, I am a person with integrity, I am talented, I am caring, I am responsible, I am spiritual, I am beautiful inside and out, I am healthy.”
Your next task is to push away negative messages like “I don’t have any good traits.” You know in your heart that you do. If you give her permission, your internal mother will help validate and verify the positive
you
sitting right there. If the negative thoughts persist, it is a red flag that you have additional grieving and trauma to process and you must go back to first steps. As discussed earlier, reaffirming messages do not “stick” unless you have done the proper grieving.
Your “I am” list is the starting point with your internal mother. Practice being with her. Talk to her often and let her console you. I often tell clients to treat themselves at this point as they would treat a two-year-old child. Be gentle, kind, understanding, and sweet. You so deserve this. When you don’t know what to do, ask yourself how your own maternal self would treat a child with this same emotion or struggle and then do that. When I think of two-year-olds, I think about scooping them up and giving them lots of love and attention. I bet your maternal instinct is similar.
As you practice conferring with your internal mother, she will begin to grow and strengthen. You will feel a committee forming of “me, myself, and I.” The internal mother heads this association. I have found that the times to practice and strengthen the internal mother are in those situations where you want to reach out for help and advice from someone else because you don’t know what to do. This is the time to go internally and find intuitive answers and consolation from the maternal committee. The more that you confer with them, the stronger and more self-assured you become. This mother will never abandon you.
You will particularly need the internal mother when you experience what is called “the collapse.”
The Collapse
In true narcissism, the narcissist often experiences something called a “narcissistic injury.” According to the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM):
Vulnerability in self-esteem makes individuals with narcissistic personality disorder very sensitive to “injury” from criticism or defeat. Although they may not show it outwardly, criticism may haunt these individuals and may leave them feeling humiliated, degraded, hollow and empty. They may react with disdain, rage, or defiant counterattack.
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The narcissistic individuals I have known who have had this kind of injury reaction take a long time to get over it; they hold grudges, want to get back at the person they perceived harmed them; they seek revenge, try to cause problems for their attacker, and seem never to forget or forgive. Most daughters of narcissistic mothers with whom I have worked experience a similar condition, although to a much lesser degree, which is called “the collapse.” They feel as if they just popped their self-esteem balloon and all the air rushed out and they need a bit of time to restabilize and refill that balloon. It is different from the narcissist’s injury, because it doesn’t last long and the daughter is able to forgive and forget, and she is not haunted or humiliated for long periods of time. She is also typically not out to get revenge, do paybacks, or seek to harm. The daughter’s collapse is due to her internal sensitivity caused by being insulted and invalidated as a child, adolescent, and adult by her narcissistic mother. When it happens during recovery, it is as if it triggers a momentary regression back to childhood; old memories make the current situation feel much bigger than it really is. This “domino effect” leads to the feeling of internal “collapse,” which is also described as a result of post-traumatic stress disorder, commonly referred to as PTSD. The
DSM
explains this further:
The traumatic event is persistently reexperienced in one or more of the following ways…. Intense psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event, and…physiological reactivity on exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event.
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This means that the daughter will feel the collapse when something reminds her of early childhood wounds. At this moment, a daughter is most tempted to reach out for external validation and ask someone else to make it better for her, and she may act needy. You can manage this differently—without acting needy—by going to your internal mother for support and comfort.
Without naming it, daughters frequently describe “the collapse.” As Felicity told me:
As in the past with her mother, Felicity was reminded of years she had tried to be so good and pleasing, to do things right and be kind and polite and then got zapped in the end as never being good enough. This domino effect or collapse took Felicity back to historical wounds, but she handled it by talking to me, her therapist, and a friend. She reached out for external validation in this case, but eventually learned to manage other situations like this on her own, which was her recovery.
Now that you are aware of what the collapse is, you will be better prepared to deal with it when it happens to you. Notice your reactions in the next week; keep track of how many times a collapse actually happens to you. Your increasing awareness will give you increasing strength. You are in charge of you.
Kristal describes another example of a collapse moment:
In Kristal’s case, the friend had good boundaries, but what she asked, although not inappropriate, triggered in Kristal feelings of being a burden on her mother, and she had a strong reaction that lasted for several days.
The collapse can cause another problem, as described by Joanie, 36.
Joanie’s experience with her weeklong collapse is interesting. First she was
hurt
and then
angry
at not being rescued from her pain. She could have worked on this and shortened her distress if she had strengthened and called on her internal mother, who could have comforted her immediately. Instead, she did not get the validation for her feelings that she needed until she came to therapy a week later. Again, getting support is a good thing, and we all need it on occasion, but you can save a week of feeling bad by building up your self-reliance—your internal mother.
The Sensitive One
Daughters were often called “the sensitive one” in the family. They tire of people telling them that they are overreacting to things said or done by other people. Daughters of narcissistic mothers have to work on freeing themselves of this tie to their past. You will feel more normal and less crazy when you understand that any temporary collapse is a normal reaction to a trigger from your history. When you can identify and understand it, you can also work to relieve it and prevent it from recurring. Otherwise, you may tend to beat up on yourself for letting things bother you and buying into the old “you’re the sensitive one” script.
Now that you understand why you need to strengthen the internal mother and recognize your being at risk for periodic emotional collapses, you are ready to start reinventing yourself. After the painful work of prior chapters, the rest of this chapter should be fun and entertaining. For the exercises that follow, you need only your own approval and that of your internal mother, who is always on your side, no matter what. Let’s get started, so you can discover your passions and preferences, which you may have kept under wraps before now, when it was “all about Mom.” You will be asking yourself questions such as:
Who Am I Really?
Because daughters of narcissistic mothers have been forced into supporting roles demanded by their mothers and the narcissistic family system, it is not uncommon for them to say they don’t really know who they are or what they like. They have become accustomed to doing for others and not focusing on themselves in healthy ways. As Mei tells me, “The message I got from Mom is that she will love me if I do what she thinks I should do. So I try to be me, but I don’t know who I am.”
To begin the discovery process, it is important to know the basics of what you like and what you believe in. To do this, I am going to suggest two exercises to get you started.