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David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Child Sexual Abuse and Narcissism
By Karyl McBride, Ph.D., Psychology Today
Mar 25 2011

Narcissism is a serious disorder that has far reaching effects. Our obligation to understand demands informed awareness. Having placed a focus on trauma, my professional work includes treating both parental narcissism and child sexual abuse. Is there a connection? Oy, what an understatement! But, let me be clear. Of course all narcissists are not sex offenders, but child sex offenders display narcissism in its most destructive form.

When treating adult children of narcissistic parents, I have observed a major factor that releases shame and turns the corner for the advance of recovery. That factor is realizing that the narcissistic parent has a serious disorder. And, that this disorder is not the fault of the child. The child understandably internalizes that it must be their fault or they would be loved and treasured. In recovery, the adult understands that the parental behavior was not about them at all...but instead about the limitations of the parent. This huge relief is the precursor for healing work to begin. For adult children of narcissistic parents, realizing that the parent truly cannot love unconditionally or express empathy in a genuine manner is difficult and painful. It is also the expressway to freedom. It's the understanding that the parent may have a bike, but no legs to ride it. Or the parent sees the rainbow, but is colorblind. Limitations are limitations. In the five-step recovery model developed in my work for adult children of narcissistic parents, this level of acceptance is the first and foremost step to moving ahead. Given the need of the small child to depend on the parent for their physical and emotional survival, denial of the parental disorder is a needed defense mechanism in childhood. To do otherwise is terrifying to the child. In recovery, however, it must be embraced and exposed.

When treating victims of child sexual abuse the initial focus is exactly the same. My experience has shown that even after years of therapy with assurance that the sexual abuse was not their fault, the victim continues to carry the shame. Somehow the child feels they must have caused this behavior in the parent. "But, I did get extra attention." "I was the favored child" "I did accept the gifts." "Sometimes the touching felt good so I must have liked it." "I want to love this parent, so if I believe it is my fault, I can still hope for genuine love."

But, enter the profile of a sex offender...the ultimate narcissist. Whose needs are more important? Does that offender think of the child and what that child needs? Are the child's needs put above their own? Is the offender aware of the life-long devastating effects on the child? Do they consider the fact that self-esteem, trust, and healthy sexuality will be a life-long struggle? And, that the child is at risk to carry the shame forever? Do they care? No they don't. Then add the child's burden of keeping the secret that is embedded by the sex offender's manipulation and grooming. Pile on a culture that sadly encourages this denial.

The sex offender is concerned about his or her own desperate needs. Sexual gratification is met at the expense of the child. The child is an object to be used for them. That child has no voice, is manipulated, and controlled. Because child sexual abuse is weirdly done with affection, the attention is disingenuous. So, how would the child know? It is not what it appears to be, similar to other kinds of narcissistic parenting.

Is it any wonder that victims of child sexual abuse and children raised by other kinds of narcissistic parents grow up with shame, confusion, self-blame, and feeling it must be their fault? That they report there must be something wrong with them? With the alarming statistics that 1 of 3 girls and 1 of 6 boys will be sexually abused before they reach the age of eighteen, we must unanimously agree that denial of such an insidious and child shattering problem is a monumental societal illness.

The cornerstone of narcissism is lack of empathy. Narcissists do not see or realize the impact their behavior has on others. They do not step into someone else's shoes. They see their own needs. Their sense of entitlement is paramount. This is why you hear mental health professionals say that sex offenders are difficult to treat and that full-blown narcissists are treatment failures. Narcissists typically blame the victim. They see it as someone else's problem.

Who says that the "get over it already" belief system works? It doesn't. Without treatment for adult children of narcissistic parents or children of sexual abuse, the trauma if not released is carried. It is worn like a heavy wool coat that suffocates and creates destructive life patterns.

Sometimes those patterns include acting out the very trauma that they themselves experienced. Many sex offenders were themselves victims of child sexual abuse. Many narcissistic parents today had narcissistic parents themselves.

So, what makes the difference? How can we stop it and therefore have the greatest influence for a healthier culture of human beings? How can we stop hurting children? The answer lies in accountability, awareness, education, and ultimately strong recovery programs. We could stay in denial. Keeping big white elephants in pretty external living rooms is easier in the short run. But, in the long run, that elephant grows and begins to take up emotional space and energy. This ultimately consumes individuals, families, and eventually whole cultures. Knowing that it is okay and profoundly important to speak out and embrace the unspeakable is the first courageous step. Recovery is a huge blessing for all. William Shakespeare, in Sonnet 116, states, "Love...is an ever-fixed mark, that looks on tempests, and is never shaken." The violent storms caused by elephants in living rooms need to be stilled and calmed. How do we do that? We talk about it! There's predictably a frightening stir when that elephant is released, but the aftermath of trauma understood and processed is a state of tranquility understood only by the courageous and brave.

Dr. McBride's private practice website: www.karylmcbridephd.com.
 
My experience has shown that even after years of therapy with assurance that the sexual abuse was not their fault, the victim continues to carry the shame. Somehow the child feels they must have caused this behavior in the parent. "But, I did get extra attention." "I was the favored child" "I did accept the gifts." "Sometimes the touching felt good so I must have liked it." "I want to love this parent, so if I believe it is my fault, I can still hope for genuine love."

Wow. That is SO painfully true. I have said all of those things to myself and I still feel so ashamed after several years of therapy. So sad.
 
I was not molested by my mother, but my mom does have NPD. My mom's nephew molested me. He was very manipulative and skilled for a young boy between 12 and 15 (and possibly older) and my therapist thinks he might have been groomed for it (by details I have told him). It took me over 15 years to tell my parents because I was terrified of what my mom would do or what would happen. I got the Spanish Inquisition (had to give her a bunch of details to prove it happened I guess). I was lucky, I guess in the sense that these molestations that happened were only whenever we went to visit my mom's parents (he and his sister were adopted by my grandparents because their daughter (mom's sister, my aunt) had pretty scathing alcohol problems and who knows what else. It was hinted to me that my grandparents 'rescued' my cousins and if they could have afforded it they would have rescued more.

However my mom has some kind of twisted ideas/messed up priorities because she supports and sticks up for him all the time and tries to tell me things that will make me feel sorry for him. Instead it just infuriated me. She also said to me that it was probably my fault when I asked her if it was. I cried with relief for about 20 minutes when my therapist told me it definitely was NOT my fault.

More recently I found out that my mom had been lying to me about herself being molested by her grandfather. Another relative told me it wasn't my mom, it was the relative I was talking to that this happened to. My mom seems to borrow other family members' traumatic events and tell other people who can't fact-check that those events happened to her. She also has tried that with cancer (she doesn't have it, but has boasted about pretending to have it and fooling someone who was renting from her so he would quit yelling at her).

So even if a Narcissistic parent ISN'T the one that sexually abused you, it's bad enough. So I can only imagine how bad victims of these Narcissistic predators feel when it's all access, all the time, and the person you are supposed to trust, and who has the most power over you.

A child is defenseless. The child of a NPD parent is probably even more vulnerable. Please don't blame yourself.
 
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