If You Do These 7 Things, You Were Raised by a Narcissist (And Don’t Even Know It)
The "Personality Traits" That Are Actually Childhood Survival Strategies Still Running Your Adult Life
You think your childhood was normal. You think every family is like yours. You think everyone apologizes for existing.
They don’t.
After surviving a therapist who extorted $126,000 from me, years of therapy unpacking my childhood, and thousands of conversations with other survivors, I’ve learned something that changed everything: The “quirks” you think make you weird? They’re not quirks. They’re survival adaptations from being raised by someone who needed you to not exist unless you were useful.
These behaviors are so deeply wired into your nervous system that you don’t even notice them. They feel like personality traits. Like who you are. Like how everyone operates.
They’re not. They’re evidence. Fingerprints left by a childhood spent managing someone else’s ego instead of developing your own.
“You don’t have personality flaws. You have survival strategies that expired twenty years ago.”
If you do these seven things, you weren’t raised by a parent. You were raised by a narcissist who happened to have children. And it’s time to understand why you’re still living by their rules.
1. You Apologize for Taking Up Space
You say “sorry” when someone bumps into you. Sorry for speaking in meetings. Sorry for needing things. Sorry for having feelings. Sorry for existing in ways that might inconvenience anyone, ever.
You make yourself smaller in crowded rooms. Physically smaller. You pull your shoulders in, tuck your legs under chairs, compress yourself into the least amount of space possible. You’d apologize for breathing if you could figure out how to stop.
When someone asks what you want for dinner, you say “whatever you want is fine.” When they ask where you’d like to sit, you say “wherever.” When they ask your opinion, you say “I don’t mind either way.”
This isn’t politeness. This is programming.
You learned early that having needs was dangerous. That taking up space meant becoming a target. That existing too loudly meant punishment. So you learned to apologize for existing at all.
“Children of narcissists don’t learn to be seen. They learn to be invisible with good manners.”
Your parent needed all the space, all the attention, all the resources. You learned to shrink. To disappear. To apologize for the audacity of having a body that occupied room in their world.
Now you’re 30, 40, 50 years old, still apologizing for sitting in chairs you paid for, in homes you own, in spaces you have every right to occupy.
2. You Can’t Accept Compliments Without Deflecting
Someone says “great job” and you immediately say “it was nothing” or “the team did most of it” or “I got lucky.” Someone compliments your appearance and you point out your flaws. Someone acknowledges your achievement and you minimize it into nothing.
You physically cringe when people praise you. Your body actually contracts. Your shoulders come up, your head goes down, you might even take a step back. Compliments feel like attacks because in your childhood, they were.
When a narcissistic parent compliments you, it comes with conditions. “You look nice… finally.” “Good job… for once.” “I’m proud of you… now don’t embarrass me.”
Or worse, they use compliments as setups. They praise you in public then destroy you in private. They build you up to knock you down. They use your achievements as weapons against you later.
So you learned that compliments are dangerous. That being noticed for good things makes you a target. That it’s safer to deflect, minimize, disappear.
“You don’t have low self-esteem. You have protective invisibility that once saved your life.”
You can’t accept compliments because accepting them means being seen. And being seen, in your experience, means being hunted.
3. You’re Hypervigilant About Everyone’s Mood
You walk into a room and immediately scan for emotional danger. Is anyone upset? Angry? Disappointed? You read micro-expressions like your life depends on it because it used to.
You know the sound of every footstep in your house. Heavy means angry. Light means safe. Quick means get ready. Slow means storm brewing. You learned to decode the danger level from the way someone closes a door.
You change your entire personality based on who you’re around. Not consciously. Automatically. Your nervous system shape-shifts to whatever keeps you safest. Funny when they need entertainment. Serious when they need gravitas. Invisible when they need space.
This isn’t emotional intelligence. It’s survival programming.
Children of narcissists become emotional weather stations, constantly monitoring the barometric pressure of every room. You learned to predict storms before the first cloud appeared. To adjust your behavior to prevent lightning strikes.
Now you’re exhausted all the time and you don’t know why. It’s because you’re still running radar for threats that aren’t coming. Still shape-shifting for safety you already have. Still monitoring moods that aren’t your responsibility.
4. You Feel Guilty for Being Happy
When something good happens to you, your first feeling isn’t joy. It’s guilt. Then fear. Then the urgent need to minimize it, hide it, or give credit to someone else.
You’ve learned to downplay your successes. To whisper your good news. To immediately follow any positive announcement with “but it’s not a big deal” or “I probably won’t last” or “I just got lucky.”
In your childhood, your happiness was a threat to your parent. Your success made them feel inferior. Your joy reminded them of their misery. Your wins highlighted their losses.
So they punished your happiness. Mocked your excitement. Sabotaged your success. Created chaos whenever you had something to celebrate.
“You learned that happiness was selfish because your parent needed all the emotional resources for themselves.”
Now you sabotage your own joy before anyone else can. You minimize your success before someone attacks it. You feel guilty for good things because you were trained to believe you don’t deserve them.
You’re still living by the rule that your happiness comes at someone else’s expense. That rule was written by someone who needed you miserable to feel powerful.
5. You Constantly Doubt Your Own Memory
Someone asks what happened and you immediately say “I think” or “maybe” or “I could be wrong but…” You second-guess your own experiences. Question your own perceptions. Assume others’ versions of events are more accurate than yours.
When you try to recall childhood memories, they’re foggy. Disconnected. You remember feelings but not events. Sensations but not stories. You have gaps where years should be.
This isn’t poor memory. This is what happens when you’re gaslit from birth.
Narcissistic parents rewrite history constantly. That thing that happened? Didn’t happen. That thing they said? Never said it. That promise they made? You imagined it. Your hurt feelings? You’re too sensitive. Your clear memories? You’re confused.
They train you to distrust your own mind. To question your own experience. To believe their reality over your own.
“Gaslighting doesn’t just make you question what happened. It makes you question if you can trust yourself about anything, ever.”
Now you document everything. Screenshot texts. Save emails. Keep receipts. Not because you’re paranoid, but because you’ve been trained to need external evidence that your own experience is real.
You still preface your memories with disclaimers. Still assume you’re wrong. Still defer to others’ versions of your own life.
6. You Over-Explain Everything
You send a text saying you can’t make it to something and then send five more explaining why. You give seventeen reasons when one would be enough. You provide evidence, documentation, witness testimony for the smallest decisions.
When you set a boundary, you write a dissertation defending it. When you say no, you provide a PowerPoint presentation of justifications. When you have a need, you present a legal brief on why it’s reasonable.
This isn’t consideration. It’s conditioning.
In your childhood, “no” was never enough. You needed evidence. Proof. A compelling argument that might, maybe, possibly be accepted. And even then, probably not.
Your narcissistic parent demanded explanations for everything. Why do you need that? Why do you feel that? Why can’t you just be normal? And no explanation was ever sufficient.
So you learned to over-explain preemptively. To provide every possible justification before anyone could attack. To defend your right to have boundaries, needs, feelings, thoughts.
Now you exhaust yourself explaining decisions that need no explanation. Justifying boundaries that need no justification. Defending your right to exist in ways that need no defense.
7. You Attract People Who Need Fixing
Your relationship history is a graveyard of projects. Partners with potential. Friends who need saving. People who are always in crisis and somehow you’re always the solution.
You don’t seek out broken people consciously. They just find you. Like you’re wearing a sign that says “I’ll sacrifice myself to heal you.” And in a way, you are.
Children of narcissists are trained to be supply. To provide emotional regulation for dysregulated people. To sacrifice themselves for someone else’s stability. To exist only in service of another’s needs.
You learned love through service. Care through sacrifice. Worth through usefulness. You don’t know how to be loved for just existing because you were never loved for just existing.
“You don’t attract broken people because you’re broken. You attract them because you were programmed to be their solution.”
So you collect people who need fixing because fixing them feels like love. Their need for you feels like being wanted. Their dysfunction feels like home.
You’re still trying to earn love by being useful. Still trying to prove worth through sacrifice. Still living by the rule that you only matter when you’re serving someone else’s needs.
The Pattern You Can’t Unsee
These seven behaviors aren’t random. They’re connected. They all serve the same purpose: to make you smaller, quieter, less threatening to a parent who couldn’t handle you being whole.
You apologize for existing because existing made you a target. You deflect compliments because being seen was dangerous. You monitor moods because emotional weather predicted physical storms. You feel guilty for happiness because your joy triggered their rage. You doubt your memory because your reality was constantly rewritten. You over-explain because nothing was ever justified enough. You attract dysfunction because you were programmed to serve it.
This isn’t who you are. This is who you had to become to survive a childhood where your parent’s ego consumed all available oxygen.
“Every ‘quirk’ you have is a scar from a war you didn’t know you were fighting.”
The Truth That Changes Everything
Recognizing these patterns isn’t about blame. Your parent was probably raised by a narcissist too. These patterns run through generations like cursed heirlooms, passed down from damaged parent to adapting child.
But recognition is the first step to liberation.
When you catch yourself apologizing for existing, you can stop. When you notice yourself deflecting compliments, you can pause and just say “thank you.” When you realize you’re monitoring everyone’s mood, you can choose to monitor your own instead.
These behaviors saved you once. They kept you safe in an unsafe environment. They were brilliant adaptations to an impossible situation.
But you’re not in that situation anymore. You’re not that powerless child. You don’t need those strategies.
You can take up space without apologizing. You can accept praise without deflecting. You can let others manage their own moods. You can be happy without guilt. You can trust your own memory. You can set boundaries without justification. You can love people who don’t need fixing.
What Happens Next
Once you see these patterns, you can’t unsee them. You’ll notice yourself doing these things dozens of times a day. The automatic apologies. The constant scanning. The reflexive shrinking.
Don’t judge yourself for these behaviors. Thank them. They kept you alive. They got you here. They were your brilliant mind’s way of protecting you when you had no other protection.
But also notice: You have other protection now. You have adult power. You have choices. You have the ability to leave rooms, end relationships, set boundaries, take up space.
You don’t have to live by rules written by someone who needed you small to feel big. You don’t have to keep yourself diminished to maintain someone else’s comfort.
“Healing isn’t about becoming someone new. It’s about unbecoming everything you had to be to survive.”
The child in you who learned these adaptations was a genius at survival. But you’re not just surviving anymore. You’re allowed to thrive. To exist without apology. To be seen without fear. To be happy without guilt.
Your narcissistic parent’s voice might still echo in your head, telling you you’re too much, not enough, selfish for having needs.
That voice is lying. It was always lying.
You were never too much. You were a child trying to exist in a space where your existence was treated as an inconvenience.
Now you get to exist without permission. Without justification. Without apology.
And if that feels scary, remember: The scariest thing already happened. You already survived the unsurvivable. You already lived through what you’re afraid of.
Nothing ahead of you is harder than what’s behind you.
You’re free now. Even if you don’t feel it yet.
Even if you’re still apologizing for reading this article about yourself.
Stop apologizing.
Start existing.
You’re allowed.
— Cody Taymore
Kill The Silence
If this gave you clarity, peace, or just helped you feel a little less alone — and you want to support more work like this — you can leave a small tip here.
This was/is me. I try every day to let go of the old survival skills I honed. Learning to let go of your old self is a lifelong job (for me.)
I need to read this every day until it reprograms me completely.
Thank you, Cody. 💕
Oh boy. Did this ever hit home. Thank you.