Why Am I Not a Narcissist and My Brother or Sister Is a Narcissist

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 296

  • @TheTalisman515
    @TheTalisman515 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    Both my siblings are narcissistic, I was the scapegoat and was able to self reflect and work on myself. It still sucks that I can’t have a normal relationship with my siblings and family but the cycle ends with me and will go no further

    • @MosmMAli
      @MosmMAli หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wow omg you took the words out of my mouth,I am in exactly the same predicament 😂😂

  • @fakename8856
    @fakename8856 ปีที่แล้ว +136

    I’m a twin, 41, male, American. My Mom is a covert vulnerable narcissist, I was/am her “scapegoat” and my twin brother is her “golden child”. Now Mom is 68 and brother is 41 and both are raging narcissists and we are estranged. Narcissism is sad.

    • @Patricia-h4o
      @Patricia-h4o ปีที่แล้ว +6

      IT REALLY IS I HAVE A SIBBLING WHOSE NARCISSISTIC WE HAD THE SAME MOTHER AND FATHER MY MOTHER WAS A VERY KIND AND EMPATHIC PERSON I AM SO GLAD SHE TAUGHT ME ABOUT KINDNESS AND EMPATHY

    • @Patricia-h4o
      @Patricia-h4o ปีที่แล้ว +6

      NARCISSISM IS BEYOND JUST BEING A LITTLE SELFISH AS WE ALL CAN BE SOMETIMES THESE PEOPLE REALLY THINK THE ARE SPECIAL AND ENTITLED WHICH IS SORT OF TWISTED BUT THE MIND IS A POWERFUL THING BECAUSE WHAT A FOOL BELIEVES THEY SEE

    • @mqmx2059
      @mqmx2059 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Patricia-h4o What is a covert vulnerable narcissist?

    • @Mindyzzzzz
      @Mindyzzzzz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Narcissism has EVERYONE missing out on the beauty of family.

    • @Julie-e1m
      @Julie-e1m 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I am a twin also and have had a lifetime (56 years old) of my twin and I being divided by my narc mother- we are estranged for years- you are not alone- what's sad is I think the twin relationship is really the closest and my mother hated that we had each other, she openly said so... my twin is a narc too trained well by my mother 😢

  • @TheSilentMystic
    @TheSilentMystic 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I very much agree with this video. My mother was a very strict narcissist growing up and my older sister was hit a lot and she became a narcissist. Her survival tactic was to become the monster that abused her. Now she reminds me of my mother when she was younger. But thank God that I went in a different route- I went deep into emotional healing and the spiritual path and decided that God is the only true parent I am looking for. The rest of the family is chasing and worshiping idols like money, status, fame, etc. But I feel freed of the spiritual and demonic torment to some degree. I did a lot of work on myself and now I have the spiritual armor of God that protects me from this unsafe family of origin. I was given a new spiritual family in Christ as I was called to be baptized and be cleansed of the demonic stuff that has haunted me since I was born. I still get attacked from within with those old twisted energies of narcissism but when I choose God, I feel freed every time. It’s always a choice within us to choose either the higher path in God or the devil/ego to move out of this.

  • @jimrich4192
    @jimrich4192 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    I once told the teacher at a Self Esteem workshop that I was attending ACOA meetings. She said "Oh, they're the PARENT BASHERS!" I said "No, we're the TRUTH TELLERS!"
    She had nothing more to say!

    • @OkieDokie-ft5pm
      @OkieDokie-ft5pm 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Agreed!

    • @fpetev676
      @fpetev676 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      What a ridiculous comment from somebody running a self esteem workshop 🤷‍♂️ wtf

  • @kimhumiston2686
    @kimhumiston2686 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    My sister was 4 years older than myself. I always remember her getting into trouble - sneaking out of the house, stealing, being sent to girls home and leaving home without graduating. She is the narcissist of the 5 children. My dad was a narcissist. Ironically sister and dad had trouble getting along, although I have said many times they were alike. Dad has passed and I went no contact with my sister 4 months ago just to save myself. I figured at age 66 I deserved to have a voice!

  • @ZOEYANDFRIENDS673
    @ZOEYANDFRIENDS673 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    Grew up with narc mother; jealousy used siblings against each other (gossiped) she worsened as I began to speak out more during my pre-teenage years. , especially when she gaslighted/manipulated reality, she couldn't stand to be corrected. She increasingly got more entitled. I was so focused on my mom, that i now realize most of my siblings are covert, vulnerable narcs. feeling judged, unloved and pure jealousy. i was in denial for a long time. their favorite weapon ; silent treatment. so i decided to stop playing their games. i will never allow them in my life again; i was so confused. im no longer confused, they are not my family. Blessed are those who have a loving family.

    • @sharonthompson672
      @sharonthompson672 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Narcissists absolutely hate the truth teller in the family. It's like a cult, they want you to drink the Kool aid and conform, not question.

  • @donnaallen5176
    @donnaallen5176 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    I agree! My overt narcissist twin sister drove me nuts when we were kids.
    As a young adult, she took some of my airplane crash settlement money from me. She tryed to have me mirrored. She sabotaged my book writing and publishing efforts. When I finally handed my sister her ugly truth, her mask slipped off and she went into a rage. I finally dumped her, from my life, 12 years ago. I am free!!!

    • @hillaryromero1761
      @hillaryromero1761 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I’m going through similar with my twin sister. It’s so sad.

    • @jeaninegilis3005
      @jeaninegilis3005 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@hillaryromero1761me too! We are 71 now…

    • @sharonthompson672
      @sharonthompson672 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes! We shared a womb fer crying out loud! WTH???!!! 😳

  • @parklady4233
    @parklady4233 ปีที่แล้ว +75

    The temperament of the child determines their coping mechanism.

    • @miaduana
      @miaduana 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Exactly 💯

    • @m998hmmwv7
      @m998hmmwv7 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Bingo...

    • @AmericanPendetta
      @AmericanPendetta 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Depends on who the target is too. Someone is getting it worse than someone else. Say one or both of your parents are narcissists and you’re the first born: good luck

    • @debb789
      @debb789 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@AmericanPendetta Yep

    • @pablosaz6491
      @pablosaz6491 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Does that mean that because of all this changes and stages of maturation through our life, that gives us the marvellous opportunity to heal meaningful relationships that at one point in the past were hurtful and difficult?
      For me just the realization of that phrase in your video opened a wold of possibilities that can bring a beautiful outcome for all those people that become aware of this fact!
      ( I am talking in a relationship between two perfectly imperfect human beings that are not narcissists?)

  • @Plumduff3303
    @Plumduff3303 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    My dad was a narcissist, and my sister is too It felt like growing up as an orphan. My dad hated me but gave everything to my sister it made for a very strange dynamic. I remember when I had cancer he said looks like you will be dead before me.

    • @tamarathejudeochristianmedium
      @tamarathejudeochristianmedium ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Please whatever you do out live him 💙🙏🏻💙

    • @KellenAdair
      @KellenAdair ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@tamarathejudeochristianmediumIt would serve him right.

    • @luck-be2kj
      @luck-be2kj ปีที่แล้ว

      You are a better person than him. He is an asshole and no matter how long he lives.

    • @brianbarton2106
      @brianbarton2106 ปีที่แล้ว

      yeah. same here

    • @veronical3135
      @veronical3135 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Goodness, sorry to hear that. Left home young (because of my abusive family in the first place) and married abroad. When my dad finally agreed to meet my husband, he told my sisters and brother behind my back that I was brainwashed. For me it looks like he was envious of me. Just because I married someone from another culture does not mean I was brainwashed. On the contrary, I baptized my husband and he is an amazing supportive husband which we’ve been together more than two decades which is longer than his marriage with my mom.😂
      He passed away God rest his soul but my narcissist sisters and brother took over his abusive ways amplifying that in hundred ways.
      Well I fear not because I know God is on my side but I do need to stay away from them as much as possible because you can never change evil. It takes a Higher Power to achieve that.

  • @mehdontcare100
    @mehdontcare100 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I'm a twin. My brother is a narcissist. So are both my parents. I am not. I'm the family scapegoat/ truth teller/outcast, and I have PTSD for which I am being successfully treated. My brother was ill as a child and subsequently very spoiled and I was neglected, thus our present conditions. Therapy is absolutely vital to survive narcissistic abuse.

    • @lessismore8533
      @lessismore8533 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Same. The youngest in my house was coddled the MOST. Wasnt corrected for behavior like the rest of us. I have one of those baby biased mothers who will go the EASIEST on the youngest even though he’s in his 20s now. Not a baby. I hold my mom responsible for his entitled behavior. She coddled him too much as a child. I sucked growing up with someone who never got in any trouble…

    • @njay4361
      @njay4361 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same except my golden child sister had to endure sexual abuse to get the golden treatment she got. In hindsight, I'm glad I was the scapegoat because it saved me from being molested.

  • @f.t.9889
    @f.t.9889 ปีที่แล้ว +85

    Child number 1 and 4 became narcissists in our family, while me and my brother (2-3) became empaths.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว +15

      That is common

    • @Badassmotherhugger
      @Badassmotherhugger ปีที่แล้ว +5

      My family is the opposite but the same lol. 1&4 did not turn out to be narcissistic, and 2&3 did. Well...#1 has some narcissistic tendencies and is racist, but he definitely has a big heart and has been the only person there for me at all. We dont talk anymore though. He lives in Europe, and I'm in the US.

    • @AK-GermShep
      @AK-GermShep ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Well I think codependence causes often so-called folie-à-deux ... couple's illness- who will couple up , depends on the specific circumstances of the family-system.. wish the Best to All of you.. those who are not hit must thank God every day....

    • @KellenAdair
      @KellenAdair ปีที่แล้ว +1

      1, 2 and 4 did. Sigh, @ 71.

    • @claudiacanales2662
      @claudiacanales2662 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Wow I’ve ALWAYS wondered this! Dealing with 3 older narcissist brothers. I’m the youngest and only girl and consider myself very sensitive, total empath!!!!

  • @maried7776
    @maried7776 ปีที่แล้ว +77

    My parents had 3 of us in their early 20's. My sister 1st, 1 yr. later me, my brother 11 months later in the same year. Four years later another brother, 11 years later, the last child, my youngest brother. My Dad was extremely abusive to the first three children. The fourth one didn't get the physical abuse, but was neglected. The fifth child was my Dad's favorite and by then he was the only child living with my Dad as my parents divorced. I could write a book. It was an insane asylum home. 😏 I don't like the label "empath", but I was the only child who stood up to my Dad & later helped all of my siblings at different times throughout my life. My parents are in their 80's , they are still immature. I finally went no contact with all of them for my own sanity. I am free!

    • @patriciapiper6294
      @patriciapiper6294 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Hi Marie, Isn't it shocking how you were left behind after all that you did?? Much love!! My mother was a filthy narc to the very end, last breath. When the favored ones dissapeared, she never said thankyou to me.

    • @maried7776
      @maried7776 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@patriciapiper6294 Hi Patricia, I just came to understand my parents weren’t equipped to have children. Sorry that happened to you, but hey, we must remain who we are. Much love to you also. Thank you. 💕

    • @carolnahigian9518
      @carolnahigian9518 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      my cousin Windy the Windbag was a Naggy critic by age 8! and 1 of my siblings is in a Domination"( toxic) type relationship! ( he critiques me 24-7& say Carol is ' low Life" ( ???)

    • @patriciapiper6294
      @patriciapiper6294 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@maried7776 you're being honest and mature. I however----- not so much😀❣keep going strong Marie💪❣🖐

    • @gregpendrey6711
      @gregpendrey6711 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      OMFG they got away with it! They should be serving life sentences😳

  • @leeboriack8054
    @leeboriack8054 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Sadly there are no mandatory parenting classes before getting pregnant. Once I became a step parent, I realized how unprepared I was at understanding the developmental stages and needs of a child. Not to mention the parental demands of time, physical fitness and finances.

    • @laviniatemple2967
      @laviniatemple2967 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Me too.😢 my husband’s ex is a narcissist. And my step daughter became more like the mom. They both manipulate my husband. 😢 I didn’t get pregnant yet.

    • @barbarat5729
      @barbarat5729 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Who would design and teach those classes? What set of beliefs would they be based on?
      Who would enforce them? What grade would be considered passing.?

    • @yarnarrutor9418
      @yarnarrutor9418 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@barbarat5729 I agree. There should be no arbiter of what's right or wrong per se, but there should at least be education regarding character strengths and flaws, typical roles, self-awareness, impulse control. No tests or enforcement. I suspect the 'risk' of this might be that some children will (like I did when I was about 8) say to themselves, "I do not want my own family."

  • @michellewei7349
    @michellewei7349 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I wanted out from a young age. I knew my parents couldn't give me what I needed in life. Even at age 13, I went to a friends house who's mom was in Social Services. I asked to be put into foster care. Her mom told me to. go home. That was 1985. I walked away from my family 20 years ago. Yes, it's the environment! I wanted OUT! My parents were both very emotionally unstable for all I can remember growing up. But I knew there was something wrong all along!

  • @cpvernon
    @cpvernon 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I'm a female first born child in a family which valued sons above all. Mom's second pregnancy ended in the miscarriage of a female fetus. Her third pregnancy resulted in the birth of the long-awaited male child (mom's generation was all female). The male child is the narcissist, compliments of mom, who was also narcissistic. No one else mattered. I have spent my life wondering what I did wrong. Now I know the answer is: nothing, my darling. You did nothing wrong.

    • @ahnikalopez3859
      @ahnikalopez3859 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I very much relate to that I have about the same situation

  • @leeboriack8054
    @leeboriack8054 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    “You didn’t become a narcissist, because you didn’t try hard enough.” Ha ha. I was on my way to being a narc, but dramatic life experiences and therapy changed that direction.

    • @mvbigmagic4048
      @mvbigmagic4048 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂😂😂😂

    • @snowredsnow666
      @snowredsnow666 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Me too!! Around 15 i really displayed npd. But grew out of it at 18.. became more on the bpd spectrum

  • @highplainsdrifter699
    @highplainsdrifter699 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    I'm sure many empaths LIVE IN QUIET DESPERATION .

    • @Crazy_Chriz
      @Crazy_Chriz 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yea 😭

  • @missdjamerica
    @missdjamerica ปีที่แล้ว +6

    You are making things better because you are making me better. I promise. Keep helping us Kenny, we need you.

  • @michelepascoe6068
    @michelepascoe6068 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    I think the choices a child makes is also a part of it. Whether they choose honesty or deceit in a situation, for instance, or whether they excuse what they did, blame someone else, or take responsibility, etc.
    Some children want to be just like their parent when they grow up; others want to be the opposite.

    • @Vercanya
      @Vercanya ปีที่แล้ว +8

      The book "Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents" talks about internalizers and externalizers. It explains a lot about this behaviour.
      In my family, my sister became an externalizer (& the narcissist). Rather than taking responsibility for their problems, Externalizers blame others and deny that they have any role in the problem or conflict. Meanwhile I'm an internalizer (the lost child & scapegoat). Internalizers attribute their mistakes to themselves and take personal responsibility for their mistakes and failures.

    • @michelepascoe6068
      @michelepascoe6068 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Vercanya Thank you. Rings true! I'll look for the book and thanks for recommending it.

    • @sherriflemming3218
      @sherriflemming3218 ปีที่แล้ว

      Another insightful book is Toxic Parents by Susan Forward.

    • @michelepascoe6068
      @michelepascoe6068 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @user-de6nl2ez8c thank you for your answer

    • @m998hmmwv7
      @m998hmmwv7 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Spot on..

  • @christineplaton3048
    @christineplaton3048 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The stress load you describe is valid. And people affect each other. Narcissistic Parent is the worst for the entire family.

  • @probi99
    @probi99 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    My parents also got married at 16 and 18. Raised by a narcissistic mother. Child # 1 mentally ill, #2 empath, #3 raging alcoholic narcissist, #4 very kind, but struggles, always sick as a child, stuttered

  • @john316mitchell4
    @john316mitchell4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Thank you! 🙏💚✨✨✨ Now, I see how much trauma I was passing on to all three of my children, even though I thought I was healing, and in recovery, therapy, etc. I never ever touched the root... causes. I was still stuck in my "Worst Day Cycle." I like your term "maturity in moderation." Once again, I am truly learning to fully face all of my traumas, survival skills, and also release those behaviors that do not serve me, in health. I do not have to be in survival mode. At 62, and married 43 years now, myself and my husband, both of us are seeing our truths and healing from so much trauma we neither could face, earlier in our relationship. We're reading, journaling, facing our past, and moving toward serenity. As you state...."Enjoying the Journey" is so vital.😊

  • @jessedehaven451
    @jessedehaven451 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    What you do is amazing. You have changed my life and I can make the difference in my children's lives. Thank you.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You’re welcome

    • @carolnahigian9518
      @carolnahigian9518 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      God bless you ; you Validate my childhood& siblings who hated me, for being " moms Helpful mini- ME"!!!

  • @nintencat
    @nintencat 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Because when you're the Scapegoat and the one made to suffer, you stop seeing the perks in being a narcissist.

  • @FrostInFreezer
    @FrostInFreezer 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Im the oldest sister and my parents decided from day 1, that I was the responsible one and that it was my responsibility to take care of my 6 years younger sister. They got divorced shortly after and I had to take even more responsibility, because my dad didnt wamt to care for a baby and my mom couldnt. Meanwhile, I was being sexually abused by my fathers friends and then I got home, where I had to parent my younger sister. I tried to seek out good people to be near to survive. Now me and my sister are in our 30s, we havent spoken much in the last 10 years, because she is blaming me for everything and she makes my parents do the same.
    Im thankful that the people I sought out as a child became my second family and taught me love and care for myself and others. To this day, they are still mt family and I love them as if they were blood. They saw me growing up with my sister and its been so helpful to hear them say, that they saw what happened and its not me who is wrong. I did do everything I could for my sister, Im not what she us trying to tell me I am.

    • @phyllisbeasley4446
      @phyllisbeasley4446 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Sadly this the same story for so many. Bless you.

  • @brendaeuliss7251
    @brendaeuliss7251 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Telling children that every parent has a favorite is nearly enough to make me stop listening to your ideas on narcissism. Just because YOU experiened it that way doesn’t make its fact. I loved both my kids equally... to the moon and back!!!

    • @Kristin-sw1zt
      @Kristin-sw1zt 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      My parents had favorites which fostered narcissism in my younger sister while i was the empath.

    • @jakerivets2249
      @jakerivets2249 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      🤣👍

    • @brendaeuliss7251
      @brendaeuliss7251 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@jakerivets2249 Why the laughter? Is that a , 'yeah right' kinda thing? meaning you think I could not possibly have loved them equally or you agree with me that he's wrong?

    • @KAT-dg6el
      @KAT-dg6el 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The parent always favors the child who is the easiest to raise.
      Nobody saying you don’t love them the same what’s being said if you don’t treat them the same.
      I bet if you pay closer attention to your daily activities you’ll see that you do favor one over the other(s)

  • @skylark...
    @skylark... ปีที่แล้ว +13

    If science told the truth it would make parents be more aware of how they are raising children. We would end up healthier than we are. The powers that be don't want a healthy society cause there's no money and no control in a healthy society. Society has created and perpetuated victimisation. You have to really seek out help, be willing to take responsibility in order to change your behavior and become healthy. It's not an easy journey and it all depends on how bad you want it. That's what I have learned.

    • @lessismore8533
      @lessismore8533 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yah and you have to let PRIDE go. Pride won’t allow you to own up to things…

  • @herbylovebug1340
    @herbylovebug1340 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Genetics plays a big part in personality. I am very much like my father that I never met till I was 49. My mother would say that I was proof that character was not just how you are raised.

  • @yogabyjane2499
    @yogabyjane2499 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Most excellent video, & exactly what I needed to hear today as was looking for a balm to soothe my wounded heart on this Valentine's Day. You'd think 5+ years into recovery from Narc sibling abuse & no contact, I'd somehow be immune to the pain they do so love to cause. Visited my aged 97 y o mom yesterday, chocolates & valentine visit. My first visit since having & recovering from Covid nearly a month in duration front to back, including her birthday which I was unable to visit of course. Discovered neither of my narc siblings bothered to even send her a birthday card. No surprise, mind you, but it still hurt my heart. I may not ever be able to understand the cruelty aspect of this disorder. Your video was helpful, & being a long time Bruce Lipton fan, resonated w my entire being. Thank you for this, and all you do, helping so many find our way through these twists & turns dealing w healing our wounded child inside us. Namaste.

  • @Julie-e1m
    @Julie-e1m 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Narcs always play favorites but i dont believe that all parents have favorites even if they parent differently for any number of reasons

    • @KAT-dg6el
      @KAT-dg6el 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The favorite child is the one that’s the easiest to raise.

  • @lissab8459
    @lissab8459 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    To know what you teaching here , I dont feel that I am between two hard places anymore, A wonderful feeling that you can do something you not stuck

  • @matilda4406
    @matilda4406 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    it's not genetic, it's environmental, as you say irresponsible parents. Too young, too immature, too anxious, too selfish, etc.

    • @PsychoLOSZKA1
      @PsychoLOSZKA1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Well said

    • @OkieDokie-ft5pm
      @OkieDokie-ft5pm 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think it's demonic, but even the formerly atheist me would say that it's something within someone's head that makes someone like a schizo or whatever. I've been hearing this "their WITTLE childhood" excuse for decades. And I'm 50. And I'm just not buying it anymore.
      Over the length of my life I have seen people with way worse upbringings be the kindest people I ever knew.
      Signing off, a 50-yr old dude
      PS--my parents had a shotgun wedding too. I've known others who have to and some do better and some do worse. Yeah I've seen people stay in crappy situations because they blame their attacker's childhood as an excuse to stick around. Fortunately I'm too old and too wise to do that anymore to myself

    • @m998hmmwv7
      @m998hmmwv7 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Or just selfish child that demands everything including all attention. Stop blaming your parents for your own defective personality.

    • @debralawson1299
      @debralawson1299 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My dad was very selfish. He wanted to keep my mother "barefoot and pregnant" so she couldn't find out all the stuff he was doing behind her back! By the time I came along they both were sick of "raising" kids!

  • @njay4361
    @njay4361 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The gene part makes total sense. In my cell bio class in college, we learned about BRCA 1 and 2 genes -- which are precursors to breast cancer. They wait for the right conditions to activate and then become a major problem.

  • @vivianvennicia
    @vivianvennicia ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Thanks for helping us all grow up.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It's my pleasure

  • @triciadannyturner5111
    @triciadannyturner5111 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I appreciate your Work and perspective, thank you for showing up here and being so genuine. 🤝 I think your voice is very valuable and will help many more people than it could ever harm. Keep it up!❤️

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I appreciate that!

  • @mandeelaw8410
    @mandeelaw8410 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This is so helpful. Im no contact with my mom and sister but it helps greatly to have understanding.

  • @nursenicole222
    @nursenicole222 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    If you think about it, a child born in a stressful situation will need to be tougher to survive. Poor families, famine, people born into discrimination or oppression will need to be emotionally tougher to survive. That brain change during stress would most likely be a survival adaptation.

    • @lessismore8533
      @lessismore8533 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why is WHY babies who grow up in WEALTH dont understand this. They’re too coddled to know what REAL hardship is….

  • @christophmuller-albrecht8462
    @christophmuller-albrecht8462 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I am very happy that I found you on TH-cam. For me, it is a big help.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Happy to hear that!

  • @mirinabourbonnais2375
    @mirinabourbonnais2375 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    My oldest is autistic; we did genetic testing and the scientific evidence they gave me helped me to see so much can affect a child in the belly.
    When I went down the rabbit hole with that information I found out so much about myself too. It opened the door for me to start therapy.
    Studies show that if a woman experience trauma before 5 their DNA is genetically altered. It gave my son an 85% chance of being autistic. My gut not having a specific bacteria while I was pregnant raised that percentage for him. It was from my mom severely neglected my health problems and its been a life long problem for me still.
    Science is really important in your healing journey. Researching the specifics of your experience is so important to help you wrap your head around everything.
    Both my sisters ended up narcissistic in their behavior and I constantly remind myself that they were afraid of her too. I'm definitely more understanding of their crap than my mom's but I'm learning to look at my mom like I do them. Its just hard.

    • @mirinabourbonnais2375
      @mirinabourbonnais2375 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I was 6yrs old, it was so late; another nightmare woke me up and I was bummed there was no star trek on. I was in tears. I was angry (hurt), I wanted to just have someone up with me. I walked into my mom's room and realized I couldn't wake her up, I began to feel my furry grow and I asked myself if I even trusted her, and all I could think is she doesn't even care about me. I went to my oldest sister room, asked myself the same thing and I got the same answer. Middle sisters room... same thing. My dad was hrs away..I mentally knew my exact situation. It was a light switch moment i still remember feeling. I had no one, and I made a promise to myself i wouldn't be like them.
      The day I became the Blacksheep.

    • @longjohnny
      @longjohnny ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mirinabourbonnais2375 Plot twist: You're the mentally ill narc.

  • @cognitivedissonancechristi516
    @cognitivedissonancechristi516 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You are spot on! Trauma impacted my health as well!!

  • @glicmathan1771
    @glicmathan1771 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This is one of the wisest, most informative videos on these topics I’ve found. I completely relate to all you say. You have an older video that really resonated - something about the myth or fallacy of the empath. 🙏

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, I just did a live stream on that topic. You can find it on my "live" playlist.

  • @Starlightndust
    @Starlightndust ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Out of 5 girls, child 1 and 5 became Narcissists. Child 2, me, became Codependent. Mother was Narcissist and physically abused me. She spoilt the oldest and youngest. Child 3 and 4 were ignored. I didn't get on with my mother. I became a Scapegoat and got beaten and verbally abused. Father was possibly a Codependent. We had a chaotic and turbulent childhood. Parents constantly fought. My oldest sister became rebellious and manipulative. She got spoilt cos of her emotionally blackmailing my parents and toxic need for attention. I became a people pleaser, always trying to fix problems. I was forced to take care of my oldest sister and if I didn't, she would beat me. 😢 I am now in my early 50s and healing from all that abuse. I'm so glad I'm not a Narcissist. At least Codependency is easier to fix compared to Narcissim. I'm not saying it's easy but at least we can heal. I've always believed that Narcissists are created by nurture. I don't believe it's genetic. We ultimately choose how to respond to abuse. Even spoiling a child is abusive.

  • @christopheriwaniuk2589
    @christopheriwaniuk2589 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    you make so much sense, you are explaining and clarifying a lot of stuff for me, thank you. I know that i have a lot of empathy but i am not an empath. I have learned that just because of your lecture. You explain difficult subject simply, so i can understand. I was born to quite a toxic family my mom always glued to a mirror. Father aggressive also a narc, but different than my mom. He was overt. Etc.... Whole family is at odds with each other's. Lightly saying.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You are so welcome

  • @bewarefalsenonprofits
    @bewarefalsenonprofits 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I believe I am the only empath yet scapegoat, amongst a vipers nest of various types of narcissists because I was so loved and well cared for by an illiterate, yet wise, older black woman and the Jewish families that fed me and welcomed me into their homes. It was my first experience with normalcy. I am so thankful now, that I was mostly ignored by my own family even though I have many memories of physical, verbal and emotional abuse.

  • @gisella1350
    @gisella1350 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My sister was born during the war in Germany. There were air raid sirens and bombs dropping. Mutti had put to her into wash basket and run for the cellars . I was born as the the war ended. We are like chalk and cheese, I love animals, she cant stand animals, I am happy with my life even though there were rough spots. She always wants more and more, she can be very cruel with her words, I prefer to walk away. Now I understand why, thank you, it makes sense. This does not mean that I will take the brunt when she is nasty, I just won't add to it, I think it makes her worse.

  • @nicoledburns82
    @nicoledburns82 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I'm the oldest of 4, my parents were 19 when they had me followed by my sister 2 years later and then 2 boys. I moved out at 18, was extremely independent, did things my own way but growing up had to babysit constantly since my parents worked and couldn't afford a sitter. My sister is a malignant narcissist but both of my brothers are introverted and very empathetic. At 38 my sister lived rent free with my parents so she could buy a large truck and go on trips, she didn't go to our brothers wedding because she wasn't the maid of honor and even tried to tell me my kids would be better off if I were dead. She got in fist fights in school, was morbidly obese when the rest of us are thin and athletic and pulled out her eyelashes and hair as a kid. She's the only one like this to where people in the family don't want to see her and don't invite her to gatherings. So odd she's the one off.

  • @juliamason8240
    @juliamason8240 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This is the best teaching and explains my sister who went on a smear campaign

  • @masteringfibromyalgia
    @masteringfibromyalgia ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I appreciate your complete honesty and forthright information in all your episodes!!

  • @md1972
    @md1972 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So true, as the youngest of 4, I learnt from my older siblings and adapted. One of my older brothers is a narcissist. This was a great video. 😊

  • @wg8517
    @wg8517 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I can see how the changes in my grandparents lives affected my mother during my grandmother's pregnancy with my mom. She became a narcissist, probably NPD. I even thought possibly my grandmother had post partum depression. That being said there was nothing I could do to make my mother happy and always afraid of making her mad. My brother the golden child is very narcissistic and has great disdain for both parents and puts me in the same bucket as them. We don't speak or have a relationship. But narcissistic parents do tear families apart.

  • @datamindersstudentservices8655
    @datamindersstudentservices8655 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    As a researcher (social sciences though), I love how you breakdown studies and their limitations. I guess that's why there was the Twins-reared-apart design. As a child of a narcissist, however, if I were to go back a generation, to my uncles, his brothers, I would also say luck, choice and intellect, also play a role. Life takes everyone on a combination of paths, the narcissist, however, well my narcissist, had luck but never optimized it through good choices and I wonder if it's because of his intellect (as compared to his siblings who succeeded). So his insecurities are now put on his kids. My sister is a narc and had the luck, optimized the path and used others and her own intellect and yet still is a narc, because of the environment made by my parent narc for her to be the successor. I guess my point is, we are all too complex to put in a study. Too many variables and too many limitations. Even if you were to unethically do a Truman Show like approach on a pair of twins. How the assigned parent feels in the morning will affect the twin parented in the morning (if they are not a morning person) versus if the parent is an evening person and parents twin no. 2. We cannot put every second of existence in a glass tube. As you said, all we can do is be cognizant of our role in making the narcissist. As a person cognizant of my role, I refuse to be the supply of my father and my sister.

    • @miaduana
      @miaduana 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Wonderfully stated.

  • @danielkaiser8971
    @danielkaiser8971 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    There is a term for the parent/child relationship during a child's formative years and the resulting hard-wiring of a person during fetal and early childhood. It is the "mother-child dyad". It is also prudent to mention that familial violence and abuse is generational, passed down. Both of these factors contribute to the likelihood of narcissism in adult years. The cycle of abuse/narcissism does stop sometimes on one hand, and sometimes it starts without apparent cause on the other hand, and this video offers insight into the possible reasons.

  • @healthylife4eva
    @healthylife4eva 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Dr. Gabor Mate is a gift to humanity. He is changed my life and millions of others with his studies on ADHD and trauma that ADHD is not genetic but as a result of Trauma. I listen to his videos everyday, he is an expert in childhood trauma ADHD, diseases as a medical doctor. And well said about identifying narcissistic siblings.

  • @equalityforall5620
    @equalityforall5620 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is so interesting. I have always felt that although I was actually one of four kids, we were raised as two separate families with two kids each. By the time the second two came along, my older sister and I were both working, making money, paying for our own clothes, cars, etc. My parents never had to bother with us or worry about us. Whereas my younger sister was the Golden Child and my younger brother was the boy my father expected. So they were treated like they were special. They were catered to and given everything they wanted, while my older sister and I (the 2 smarter, better children IMO) weretreated like the two first pancakes you want to throw out because the griddle is not hot enough. My father was an alcoholic, rageaholic, abusive narcissisist and my mother was neglectful. We raised ourslves. But my parents were better off financially when they had the two younger kids, and more mature. (This is not to excuse their behaviour, which I would never do.) It's just to say, I think this man is right.

  • @anAngelisHard2find
    @anAngelisHard2find 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It was so helpful and affirming to have the quotations from the most elite researchers and master teachers such as Brian Weiss and Mate Gabour. This presentation has truly illuminated me. Thank you Kenny Weiss. Excellent points made here.

  • @forddreamsdofly546
    @forddreamsdofly546 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    5:06 This is gold 😱

  • @smartypants6198
    @smartypants6198 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I became bpd and got c ptsd

  • @fifitheflowerpot
    @fifitheflowerpot ปีที่แล้ว +1

    He's absolutely right.

  • @normanczerski5221
    @normanczerski5221 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    That is horse droppings. Case study of identical twins separated at birth, raised in different socioeconomic conditions and in different locations indicate that heredity is the dominant factor. This, do to the close genetic factors, is the only valid study. Putting the cart before the horse that it is the child that assumes a role other than the parents dictating that role is stupid.

  • @lisatoles2705
    @lisatoles2705 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you for the truth. I can now start my healing process. ❤😊🎉

  • @tomnelson203
    @tomnelson203 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thank you Kenny, that was brilliant,

  • @Hauptstadtmädel
    @Hauptstadtmädel ปีที่แล้ว +10

    We are 4 children... I am the oldest... my 3 brothers got much more love and attention from my parents in the past... so i lived quiet and with a high expectation level from my mother to me in my family... my mother was narcissistic... we had a very bad till none relationship.... and today I come to realize that all of my 3 brothers have wifes at their side with similar character with my mother... my brothers are quiet persons because of peace reasons... but I am able to open my mouth if something is irritating... and everytime its surprising me that the wifes from my brothers are acting like my mother did (she died in 2019).... painful words, feeling of hate, not able to take critic,,i am the bad person... I don't have the key for what is the right reaction to this behavior... so after i speak out my opinion where i use facts and not something i creat in my mind i get my painful gaslight shower from them... then I feel so hurt that i turn my back to them to protect myself for more painful words and behavior... in the end the result will be that in the future I will break the contact with them... and this is making me so sad... it's not only protecting me for narcissistic behavior of the wifes but also losing my brothers of my childhood because of the bad influence....

    • @AK-GermShep
      @AK-GermShep ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Well some years ago I met a social worker from London UK, I told her the family Story of my ex-wife,, she answered: we call this A BLACK CHAIN.. She was working in a social focal point in London... I was talking of an family of highly educated academics with noble ancestors...

    • @susantolle7599
      @susantolle7599 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@AK-GermShep j

    • @susantolle7599
      @susantolle7599 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Being noble and aristocratic does not exclude narcissism .
      On the contrary it can enhance it.
      A true noble man or lady should behave with dignity and virtue,however this is is not always the case.
      Educated people from Eton, Oxford etc can be and are often just as vicious as others with less education.
      They can be more clever and adroit and sarcastic with their words, the punch however is still as strong if not stronger and more cutting and sophisticated.
      I know this from experience .
      Verbal sarcasm can be a severe form of twisted abuse .
      My best wishes to you .
      I have been there and it's not a pleasant experience..

  • @jimrich4192
    @jimrich4192 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It took a while but I finally figured out, in 12 step Recovery, why us 3 kids turned out so different. It was 100% healthy/unhealthy PARENTING along with some Genetic or natural differences in ALL of us. It's been a huge relief to know & understand what went wrong in our shame-based family & why. I cherish all that I learned at CODA & ACOA!

  • @mvbigmagic4048
    @mvbigmagic4048 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You mention you're not sure if telling people this is going to cause unintended problems. I dunno, but all I do know is that learning from your videos has helped improve my life since I started watching them last fall (2023). I am learning more and more about my childhood and even my parents' childhoods, and it has helped me try to break this horrible cycle with my own children. I'm not perfect, but I'm definitely better. Kaizen. :)

  • @katebeedot6964
    @katebeedot6964 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Parent favouritism is deadly, ruins all the children for life

    • @debb789
      @debb789 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, it does

  • @maryannhunwick2774
    @maryannhunwick2774 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I knew it, I always wondered. The father to my third child was very abusive during that pregnancy. I was so stressed and had to fight him constantly. And guess what, my darling daughter committed suicide 6 years ago....ugh. And actually I left him after the 4th child, due to his alcoholism issues. Lastly, he committed suicide last August. My youngest child is 36.

  • @jeffreyjackson5229
    @jeffreyjackson5229 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very simple- temperament and composition.
    You can grow up in the same home and come out so differently.
    Of the three of us, I am the high school and college graduate. Only veteran. Only one with a professional job.
    My brother and sister: high school dropouts, felons, substance abusers, were teen parents.
    I had and have none of these issues.

  • @missdjamerica
    @missdjamerica ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Whoa. This is real. Yes, the parents don’t want to get better. I keep trying to help my mom but I’m not doing well.

  • @yafayafa9601
    @yafayafa9601 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I have been waiting for a vid on this exact situation (for personal reasons), thank u very much.

  • @annhaney8014
    @annhaney8014 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm a twin and my twin sister has strong narcissistic tendencies and i am empathic.

  • @debralawson1299
    @debralawson1299 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I was born into a family with 7 children, with 5 brothers and my sister was already 5 by the time I came along. My mother was schizophrenic, and was going through a really bad mental breakdown as I was actually being born. She was so out of touch with reality that her mother caught her in the act of trying to smother me to death with a pillow just days after the release from the hospital. Then at about 2 to 3 years old, I was molested by a family member. My life after all that just became full of crazy shit all my life, even up to right now. My entire childhood, I had to live in fight or flight mode, because everyone else was so much older than me, and I was constantly the target of someone's anger, and hostility, which led to me learning to be alone. I'm 55 and I am still not good around people, I hate being around people, because I have such anxieties I sometimes feel like a ball of nerves, almost like crying, or just irritated. Lately I've been watching videos about narcissistic people, and I've learned that my sister has been one since we were really little!
    She had to replace my mother when she was only eight, and I don't blame her for wanting to experience childhood, but for years I felt like she just took her frustration out on me, because she blamed me. However, the more of these videos I have watched, the more since it made that she is narcissistic. I've finally, a few years ago decided to stop going around her, and I'm beginning to feel better than I ever did! I no longer feel like I'm underneath her, my confidence is improving, and just generally more happy with who I am!
    I decided that after 55 years of trying to have a healthy relationship with her, and the fact that it hasn't happened yet, it probably never will! Her daughter passed away about a year ago, and that's the only time I have been around her in 3 to 4 years. I did make it clear that I loved my niece, and that I appreciated her (my niece) for being good to me. I haven't been back, and don't plan to go. Could write a book about how horrible she's treated me, but if I were to give advice to someone who is going through this, I would say, walk away, leave, and get the hell out of it! You DO deserve much, much better! And YES, you are very important! Maybe not to a narcissist, but hell, who cares what a narcissist thinks anyway! Be kind to yourself! God bless everyone who is/has been going through this childish game with anyone! ❤

  • @sawdustadikt979
    @sawdustadikt979 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a refreshing big view perspective, in this “narcissism” space, a lot of the info is “us verses them” it seems. I think the simplistic “us versus them” is very important part of healing from this because your boundaries have been eroded. You have boundaries but they have massive holes in them that you cannot see or, are not willing to see. I think”us versus them” allows us to see where we end and others begin. BUT, that is just the beginning. As I went further there were a lot of holes in this thinking, no answers to why I did certain things in certain situations. CTPSD explains a lot, the biggest thinkers I have found in this space are Sam Vaknin and Richard Grannon. This is my first time seeing one of your videos, I am encouraged to see more with what I’m perceiving as humble, wider view on this.

  • @monicamiles4544
    @monicamiles4544 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Why are some kids end up being narcissistic? And some end up being empathic?

  • @deedekelsey9425
    @deedekelsey9425 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My ex boyfriend is a twin, he is a narcissist. His brother is fine. But I have watched how his mom had treated them completely different, unfortunately she was not loving and harsh toword my ex. Even throughout his adult life, its sad.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is very common. No parent, parents each child the same

  • @matilda4406
    @matilda4406 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    the development of a narcissist starts after the child is born. I believe the deformation is set after birth in the first year, as you say by the actions and emotional state of the parents, but particularly the mother since the newborn needs the mother's affection, care, attention, time, response, presence and much more.

  • @kathleenking888
    @kathleenking888 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I believe everyone can change only if they want to of course. Regardless of your DNA or your parents, friends etc. you have a choice the only thing we truely have in life is choice, so chose wisely, stop with the excuses and blame and move forward in life. Leave negative people behind you and chose better. The world is full of caring loving people, your true obligation is to yourself and not allow these people whatever label you tag them with to bring you down or control you in anyway. Respect yourself, love yourself and you will start seeing others in the same way, and those negative people will eventually drift out of your life.

  • @crazycatc123s5
    @crazycatc123s5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    When I watch your videos I sometimes feel like you are my twin in male form...I was the youngest & had a sister that was 12 years older & a brother 7 years older ....Im pretty sure they are both Narcissists & so was our Mom (she would switch from a covert Narcissist to an codependent) & their Dad...we had different Fathers...that was kept secret for many years...I am a severe codependent & was the person everyone came to for emotional support & financial support....Im thinking of writing a book.

  • @snowredsnow666
    @snowredsnow666 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My brother was her fav, she told me simply bec he was 'so easy'

  • @Amethystxxxxx
    @Amethystxxxxx 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Very interesting and validating video. Both of my parents are narcissistic. Different types though. A complete shit storm growing up. I got out and got therapy. Younger sibling acts the same as my parents. They were born right before my parents divorced.

    • @debb789
      @debb789 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Mine are too

  • @JumpingJesus4
    @JumpingJesus4 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My conclusions about Narcissism in family dynamics is very different. I came by these ideas from my spirit guides, who have been teaching me since I was young.
    A person becomes a narcissist spontaneously because of three converging elements. These are different from children who become Narcissists because one or both parents are Narcissists. Not all Narcissists have Narcissist parents. My mother's parents, in my experience, were not.
    The first condition is apparently genetic: they lack all but a few degrees of empathy. The four diagnostic pathologies that lack empathy are Narcissists, Psychopaths, Borderlines, and people on the Autistic spectrum..
    Narcissists are people without empathy who have "oral" character armor, according to the system devised by Alexander Lowell. Orals suffered early trauma in their capacity to give affection and love. I don't understand why they are called "oral." Not all Orals are Narcissists.
    Finally, Narcissists have a secret to withhold. They reconstruct their entire life around their ability to withhold that secret, often to the point they withhold it from themselves. They struggle with great feelings of inadequacy and insecurity triggered by the secret they withhold.
    Second generation Narcissists may or may not be inempathic; they may or may not be oral, but they all have a secret.
    I have analyzed my mother and siblings to great effect with this system. There are elements in a Narcissist's life that cannot be penetrated without intuition.
    The children who most often survive Narcissism are the Scapegoats. They may be oppressed, but if they're lucky they learn to question everything and thus find their way, as have I.

    • @talkabriela
      @talkabriela 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I have empathy as a borderline, and it’s too much empathy that I get taken advantage of and then as I soon as I found out, it hurts so badly …. Because I feel the betrayal so much, it’s actually turn me into a keep my distance person. More like walls built up , extra boundaries. Because no one protected me in my childhood. Not all borderlines manipulate though. I’ve met some narcissistic borderlines ….but other the hand I’m pretty much self aware and I can tell in a second if someone is being deceitful and has awful intentions

  • @Liz-bt9dv
    @Liz-bt9dv หลายเดือนก่อน

    Everyone is born with a temperament. Also.. a nervous systems that leans one of the three. Fight/ flight or freeze. Narcissist are more predisposed and so very hard to change because they have that strong willed fight response.

  • @johnlopez7529
    @johnlopez7529 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wow, you gave me a different perspective on how family personalities are developed. Thanks.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @streaming5332
    @streaming5332 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have often wondered about this topic. My parents were 30 and 23 when married. The first 3 children were born close together, my parents desperate for an heir. My older sister is very toxic. Myself born next am the scapegoat. No 3 my brother, son and heir, is entitled and narcissistic. We all suffered severe discipline. It was crime and punishment mentality.
    No 4 another sister born several years later was my mother's indulgence. She did not suffer the same abuse..But she was alone with the needy mother. She is highly irresponsible, has MS, is entitled and is always broke. The older 3 are the opposite, responsible financially. Only my older sister and myself believe in fairness. I never felt my father had a favourite, but he was biased toward my brother, being a male.
    I wish someone would write a book on this. Im grateful to hear these ideas, Im Australian.

  • @fightswithspirits915
    @fightswithspirits915 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    6th out of 7. Family tried to shut down my sensitivity and it worked for decades. After years of arrogance and anger, finally just arrogant and not angry. Still no sense of love, but I did cry when my uncle told me he was in ICU with septic blood. Still sensitive and by golly, will take what I can get.

    • @fightswithspirits915
      @fightswithspirits915 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      1 - grandios 2- scapegoat 3 - illusion 4 - violent 5 (girl) covert 6 - shut down and ignored 7 - new golden child for born again mom mask, has no idea he really didn't matter, angry as hell.
      1 and 2, different fathers
      3 & 7 illegitimate from same man while dad was in Vietnam or on TDY
      4, 5 & 6, children of husband. I'm convinced mom hated that group more than all others. mom discarded husband and me. Not sure what 4 got but it was enough to make him a serious asthmatic, alcoholic who thinks everyone is stupid.
      18 year old mom mated with 15 year olds to have 1 & 2
      Traits alive and well. I'm the only one who knows what's going on, compliments of a recent psychopath/covert/whatever gf.
      there you go!

  • @diornotwar2356
    @diornotwar2356 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    my narcissistic sister was such a disaster in her adolescence that she abused and stressed out the whole family and distracted my parents from being better parents to me

  • @jeffreykuhns6581
    @jeffreykuhns6581 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    My sisters picture is behind the word narcissist in the dictionary. She is 10 years older than me and she spent a lot of time at our grandmother's house. (Moms side) that grandmother never liked my dad and may have tainted her attitude towards her immediate family. I've aftfn wondered how she became so jaded when we were raised by the same people. The difference was i wasn't allowed to stay at Grammas house. I guess our grandmother was kind of a serrogate parent to her and maybe that had a negative effect on my sister's.

  • @herbylovebug1340
    @herbylovebug1340 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Their mom was physically abused during her first pregnancy. The oldest sister is narcissistic. She has built a trauma bond with the youngest brother. Turned him against his mom.

  • @johncorson6599
    @johncorson6599 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Very well done. I have had a difficult time believing genetics view point … I lived with my 2nd oldest brother for a couple years during convid lockdowns .. since he is 12-13 years older than I, I had really no idea what he was like when I was young .. he was out of the house before I was 8 … it was pure hell being around him as he is a raging narcissist and after he lost his supply from some woman he was dating who ended it with him it was turned on me .. also saw him in narcissistic collapse about some other woman that had broken up with him 5 years prior … I think 2 others of my 6 siblings are narcissists .. I was neglected most if not all my youth .. never remember or hug or positive validation from either parent .. so distracted myself with lots of focus on music, athletics .. other interests .. then found science and they all blend together .. did most things by myself even weightlifting .. no one could keep up … but I was able to reflect and be introspective and ended up asking questions no one liked .. turns out my intuition was pretty good though did not know it at the time .. I’m sure I was the only one in high school with a subscription to psychology today lol

  • @mac-ju5ot
    @mac-ju5ot 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've had to pick and choose my battles . The therapist said Ive had a disability and I agree .dyslexia .. I've struggled and it's never been good enough in my family. I understood the rules and dad refused to do any therapy....he could stress out a e tire army if you let him

  • @JT0007
    @JT0007 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I was molested/beaten/neglected/starved. Took care of my 2 younger siblings, feeding and protecting from abuse. My youngest get sister is a raging covert narc today. If she knew what I did for her as a kid…I still think she wouldn’t care. Narcs are cold devoid people.

  • @chriswalls5831
    @chriswalls5831 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Knew that long time ago they are jealous

  • @jimrich4192
    @jimrich4192 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am NOT a Parent & have had many fights with online Parents when I dare tell the truth about my own shame-based parents & the emotional damages that occurred in our SICK family. BLAMING always comes up to attack me & my story or dismiss it. DENIAL is serious stuff!

  • @Julie-e1m
    @Julie-e1m 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My enabler dad drank to cope with the narc abuse of my mother... codependency is about narcissism- the drinking in my family was a side story distraction the main narc in my family used to cover her behavior/abuse that she was doing that has divided us-= deception

  • @TeaRose9
    @TeaRose9 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The golden child is the narcissist in my family and the scapegoat child, me , is the empath.

  • @THE1804SHOWCHAPTERTWO
    @THE1804SHOWCHAPTERTWO 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you for saving me just now. Going through this now. New subscriber!

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks for subscribing and really happy to hear it helped you.

    • @THE1804SHOWCHAPTERTWO
      @THE1804SHOWCHAPTERTWO 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@kennyweiss Appreciate this video

  • @ellem8990
    @ellem8990 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been trying to learn about narcissists (and other disorders), because I'm pretty sure at least one of my family members is a narcissist, my oldest brother. One big reason for my constant research is that I have a hard time believing I'm truly the only one in my family that didn't become a narcissist or get BPD or ASPD. Not that I think I got no problems (I'm pretty sure I have CPTSD at least), but I guess I feel like I didn't get the "bad person" disorders and that makes me think I'm just unaware, but now I feel like maybe it genuinenly is possible I didn't get any of those. I personally wouldn't count BPD in that "bad person" category, but a lot of people do so that's why I put it there.
    I'm still trying to make sense of the whole family dynamic, especially the part where I recently found out that my brother (and maybe my dad) seems to have ASPD, when I previously thought they both just are autistic without diagnosis and that would explain their behaviour. I see now I might just have wanted to see them as unintentionally hurtful/insensitive, not that I'm now 100% sure that they have ASPD but it's possible.

  • @willytompkins8115
    @willytompkins8115 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Did you ever read the link between C-section births vs. natural birth..& addiction ? I also guess one could argue that the surgery itself was emotionally traumatic for all . Excellent video.

    • @sianrudd9167
      @sianrudd9167 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ha well my poor child has no hope. I couldn’t wait to get him out so he didn’t have to suffer being inside me anymore.

    • @harleyquinn5774
      @harleyquinn5774 ปีที่แล้ว

      My nephew was a c-section and in the roughly a year or more after his birth he suffered from night terrors.

  • @sararichardson737
    @sararichardson737 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Really elucidating. Thank you.

    • @kennyweiss
      @kennyweiss  ปีที่แล้ว

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @kristinmeyer489
    @kristinmeyer489 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    7:46 A phd I saw due to trauma and abuse told me that a rebellious attitude in response to abuse was normal.

  • @donnabailey566
    @donnabailey566 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This guy is good. What is his background? Is he a licensed therapist?