Healing Misunderstandings: A Mother’s Perspective

Recently, I listened to my daughter’s podcast and heard her describe me as an “emotionally unattached parent.”

Those words landed like a punch to the gut.

Not because I think I was a perfect mother—no such thing exists—but because everything in my heart, my memories, and my lived reality says I was the exact opposite.

The Mother I Know I Was

I was the mom who showed up.

I was at the doctor’s appointments, dentist visits, sports practices, games, school events, and plays. I read bedtime stories, tucked her in, and whispered “you are so loved” more times than I can count. I called her my sunshine because she truly lit up every room she walked into, and my world revolved around making sure she knew that. I was essentially a single parent.

While her father focused on his career and traveled most of the time, I gave up mine to fill in the gaps to be two parents in one—emotional anchor, cheerleader, driver, tutor, advocate, and safe place. I was juggling not just her needs, but also her brother’s challenges and the weight of an abusive marriage I stayed in far too long because I believed keeping the family “together” was what the kids needed.

Was I tired? Absolutely. Overwhelmed? Often. But emotionally detached? No. If anything, I was hyper attached—tuned in, over-functioning, and constantly trying to fill in all the gaps.

When Love Starts Looking Like Limits

My daughter also shared how she “lost herself” because we moved a lot. I don’t dismiss that experience. Moving is hard on kids and teenagers. They leave friends, routines, and familiarity behind. Their grief is real.

At the same time, I remember those moves differently. I remember doing everything I could to make each new place feel like home. I remember the opportunities—great schools, new cultures, safe neighborhoods, travel experiences that many kids never get. I remember saying yes to activities and sports and adventures because I wanted her world to feel big, not small.

And then came the teenage years.

Like many teens, she went down a darker path—partying, drugs, and men who did not deserve her. That was when my role as “fun, cozy mom” had to shift. Love had to become boundaries. Curfews. Rules. Consequences. Hard conversations. Tears on both sides.

From the outside—or years later on a podcast—those years might look like “emotional disconnection.” From my side, it was the hardest, most courageous kind of love: stepping in, saying no, and refusing to watch my child self-destruct without intervening. I was doing my job – and well!

I was not abandoning her. I was fighting for her.

The Narcissist in the Middle

There’s another piece to this story that matters: I wasn’t co-parenting with a healthy partner. I was co-parenting with a man who has spent years rewriting reality, painting himself as the victim, and casting me as the “crazy, unstable, bad mom.” We were never on the same page; co-parenting.

During and after the divorce, he weaponized the kids’ love and loyalty. He has told them his version of events again and again—the one where I’m the problem, I’m the drama, I’m the unstable one. He knew my greatest fear has always been losing my relationship with my children, and openly threatened to ruin that bond.

That is the hallmark of narcissistic abuse: not just hurting you directly, but slowly eroding how others see you, especially your own children. Little digs. Half-truths. Stories told just skewed enough that you look like the villain.

And the painful part is this: I can see ways it’s working.

When my daughter sits behind a microphone and tells the world I was emotionally unattached, a part of me hears his voice coming out of her mouth. The same labels. The same distortions. The same rewriting of history where he’s the hero, and I’m the failure.

I don’t blame her for all of that. She was raised in the same fog I lived in for years. When you grow up around a narcissist, their story feels like the truth. Questioning it can feel like betrayal. It’s easier to side with the parent who seems powerful, successful, and certain than the one who’s been struggling, emotional, or broken open.

But just because a story is told with confidence doesn’t make it true.

Two Stories, One Past

What hurts the most isn’t just the label—it’s hearing our shared history told like a one-dimensional story where I’m the villain or the ghost.

She speaks publicly about the instability, the moves, the divorce, and my supposed absence… while leaving out the part where I was representing myself in court to save money because her father burned most of it on legal fees. She leaves out the part where I stayed longer than I should have in a toxic marriage to keep some form of stability. She leaves out the nights I couldn’t sleep because I was worried about how to afford their activities, school, and life while my own needs went on the back burner.

I don’t say this to shame her. She is allowed to tell her story. She is allowed to have her feelings, her lens, her pain.

But I am allowed to have mine, too.

God knows my heart. He saw the nights I lay awake, wondering if I was enough. He saw the times I almost broke, but got back up for my kids. He saw the ways I kept showing up, even when I was broke and broken. He also saw the manipulation, the gaslighting, and the quiet campaign to turn my own children against me.

Grace, Boundaries, and the 3 Choices

My daughter likes to talk about the “3 C’s” and the power of choice. In my own words, I see it like this:

  1. Complain – Stay stuck in the pain and replay the same grievances.
  2. Compare/Condemn – Focus on what others didn’t do perfectly and stay in blame.
  3. Celebrate – Acknowledge the good, the gifts, the ways love did show up—even in imperfect circumstances.

She has chosen, at least for now, to tell the story through complaint and condemnation. I wish she could also see the other side: that she never went without, that she had opportunities many children only dream about, that she had a mother who loved her fiercely and would have taken a bullet for her—who almost did for her, in some ways.

I’ve extended grace to her more times than I can count. There were times her actions hurt me deeply. Times she didn’t show up for me when I desperately needed her. Times I felt abandoned, judged, or dismissed. I could have gone public with those stories. I could have dragged her name through the mud, too.

I chose not to.

That, to me, is what grace and forgiveness look like: seeing someone’s flaws, recognizing your pain, and still choosing not to humiliate them.

The Boundary I Have to Hold

Hearing myself spoken about so harshly and inaccurately on a public platform—and knowing there is a narcissistic narrative behind it—has forced me into yet another boundary lesson.

I have always believed that love is supporting and lifting one another up—not breaking each other down for content or applause.

I still love my daughter. I am still proud of the woman she is becoming. I still pray for her and cheer for her from my corner of the world. But I also have to protect my own heart now.

I am too fragile—and frankly, too seasoned in this life—to continue being a doormat or a punching bag, even for people I love.

So this is where my boundary lives:

  • You can tell your story.
  • But you cannot continue to publicly distort mine without expecting me to step back and protect myself.

Maybe one day, if and when she becomes a mother, she’ll understand the deep, quiet, relentless selflessness that parenting really is—the way you hand your heart to your children and hope they won’t stomp on it when they’re older and hurting.

To Other Moms Who Feel Misunderstood

If you’re reading this and you, too, have been painted as the “bad mom,” the “emotionally unavailable” one, or the “problem” in someone else’s story—especially after surviving narcissistic abuse—please hear me:

  • Your memories matter.
  • Your version of events matters.
  • Your love and sacrifice count, even if they’re never fully recognized.

You can love your child and still hold boundaries. You can want reconciliation and still refuse to be humiliated. You can practice grace and still honor your own healing.

I have always believed that real love means supporting and lifting one another up—not tearing each other down.

God knows your heart, too. And even in the middle of heartbreak and confusion, I believe He is still capable of writing redemption into our stories. I don’t know exactly how my relationship with my daughter will heal or when, but I choose to keep a small light of hope burning—that one day we’ll be able to look at each other with softer eyes, kinder words, and a deeper understanding of how much we have always loved each other, even when she couldn’t see it clearly.

Why Boundaries Still Feel So Hard (Post Divorce)

You’d think that nearly eight years after divorcing a narcissist and rebuilding my life, I’d be a pro at boundaries.

I talk about them. I teach them. I write about the importance of saying no, of choosing yourself, of walking away from what hurts.

And yet, here I am—still struggling to stick up for myself. Still feeling that old familiar pull to “just go along,” to keep the peace, to be the easy one, the accommodating one, the people pleaser.

Recently, that pattern exploded in my face.


The Moment I Lost It

I was with a friend who kept pushing and pushing—antagonizing me, poking at sore spots, and refusing to let it go. You know that feeling when your nervous system starts buzzing, your chest tightens, and you know you should say, “Enough. Please stop”? (which I did ask over and over…..)

Instead, I did what I’ve done a thousand times before: I tried to stay calm, tried to be polite, tried to “handle it.”

Until I couldn’t.

I erupted. I shouted. All the swallowed words and the pushed-down feelings came out in one messy wave. I am not proud of how I reacted—but I am also human. I apologized.

And here’s the kicker: instead of accepting my apology, this person escalated. They instigated another argument. They kept going, saying more hurtful things, twisting the situation, making it all my fault.

That dynamic? Oh, I know it far too well.

Being married to a narcissist taught me exactly how that script goes.


Why Boundaries Feel So Hard After Narcissistic Abuse

People on the outside might say, “You’re divorced now. It’s been years. Why is it still so hard for you to speak up?”

Because my nervous system doesn’t know it’s been eight years.

It remembers:

  • What happened when I did speak up.
  • The punishment for having needs.
  • The silent treatment, the rage, the gaslighting.
  • Being told I was “too sensitive,” “selfish,” “dramatic,” or “crazy.”

When you’ve lived with that long enough, your brain learns a simple survival rule:
Keeping the peace = staying safe.

So I became very good at:

  • Reading the room.
  • Anticipating what everyone else needed.
  • Avoiding conflict at all costs.
  • Sacrificing myself so no one else would explode.

That survival strategy has a name: people pleasing, or in trauma language, the fawn response. It’s what happens when fight or flight or freeze aren’t options—so you make yourself small, agreeable, and convenient.

Even after the narcissist is gone, the pattern often stays.


The Cost of “Going With the Flow”

Here’s the problem: when I keep “going with the flow,” I’m usually the one drowning.

I let the comments slide. I ignore the red flags. I downplay the knots in my stomach. I tell myself:

  • “It’s not worth the fight.”
  • “Don’t be dramatic.”
  • “Just let it go.”

But I’m not really letting it go. I’m swallowing it.

And all of that builds up inside me—until something small tips the scale and I snap. Then I walk away feeling ashamed of my reaction, while completely skipping over the hundred boundary violations that led up to it.

After a conflict, my heart hurts. My chest physically aches. I replay every word. I wonder if I overreacted, if I’m the problem, if I’m somehow broken.

That’s not just overthinking. That’s PTSD.


When Friends Trigger Old Wounds

The hardest part is when the hurt doesn’t come from a romantic partner—but from a friend.

I don’t get into arguments often. I really do try to forgive, move forward, and keep things light. But when something hits that old nerve—when I feel mocked, pushed, cornered, or intentionally antagonized—it links right back to those years of being married to a narcissist.

Suddenly it’s not just about this one argument.

It’s about:

  • Every time I was made to feel “crazy” for having a feeling.
  • Every time I apologized just to stop the fight.
  • Every time I wished someone would simply say, “I’m sorry I hurt you.”

So when this friend doubled down after I apologized—when they chose to keep hurting instead of healing—it stung in a very old, very deep place.

Part of me wants to be the bigger person, rise above, ignore their hurtful words and actions. But if I’m honest? That “ignore it” approach ends up eating me alive.


Boundaries Are Not Meanness

Here’s what I’m slowly, painfully learning:

  • Having boundaries doesn’t make me mean.
  • Saying “that hurt me” doesn’t make me dramatic.
  • Walking away from someone’s repeated disrespect doesn’t make me unforgiving.
  • Refusing to be antagonized is not overreacting.

It makes me healthy.

For people who were conditioned to be people pleasers, boundaries often feel like betrayal—of others, and even of our old identity.

We were praised for being “nice,” “flexible,” “easygoing.” No one clapped for us when we said, “That’s not okay with me.”

So today, instead of trying to be the “cool girl” who lets everything slide, I’m trying to become the woman who:

  • Notices the discomfort early, instead of waiting until she explodes.
  • Speaks up the first or second time, not the tenth.
  • Gives one sincere apology—but doesn’t chase people who weaponize her vulnerability.
  • Honors her feelings instead of gaslighting herself.

What I Want If You See Yourself in This

If you’re reading this and nodding along—if you, too, feel guilty every time you set a boundary—I want you to know:

You’re not weak because this is hard.
You are not “behind” because you’re still struggling years later.
You are unwinding years of programming that told you:

  • Everyone else comes first.
  • Your discomfort doesn’t matter.
  • Your role is to absorb other people’s moods.

That doesn’t disappear just because the divorce papers were signed.

Healing is not linear. Sometimes it shows up in ugly ways—like shouting at a friend and crying on the drive home, wondering how you got there.

But that eruption is also data.

It’s your body saying, “Something here is not okay for me. I’ve been trying to tell you.”


What I’m Working On Moving Forward

I don’t have all the answers. I’m still very much in this with you.

But here’s what I’m trying to practice now:

  • Micro-boundaries. Instead of waiting until I’m boiling, I’m learning to say, “Hey, that didn’t feel good,” when it’s still a simmer.
  • Checking safety. Not everyone is a safe person for deep vulnerability. If someone repeatedly mocks, dismisses, or antagonizes me, that’s not a “friendship problem”—it’s a values problem.
  • Owning my reaction, not their behavior. I can take responsibility for shouting without excusing the repeated poking that pushed me there.
  • Letting apologies be enough. I can apologize once sincerely. If someone uses that as an opening to attack me further, that tells me everything I need to know.
  • Honoring my nervous system. If my heart is racing, my chest is tight, and I feel that trauma response—that matters. My body is not lying to me.

One Last Thing

My heart hurts after conflict. I feel it physically. And when someone I care about chooses to wound instead of repair, it reopens old scars.

But perhaps the invitation in all of this is not to become harder—but to become clearer.

Clearer about what I will and won’t tolerate.
Clearer about who gets access to me.
Clearer about the fact that my peace is not up for debate.

I’m still learning. I still slip back into people-pleasing. I still sometimes stay quiet until I can’t anymore.

But eight years after divorcing a narcissist, here’s what I know for sure:

I am worth protecting.
My boundaries matter.
And loving myself means listening when my heart says, This is not okay.

If that’s where you are too, you’re not alone. We can learn this together—one boundary at a time.

Forgiveness and Moving On

Today, an old friend called—a friend who was there at the very beginning of my relationship with my ex-husband. She knew about the divorce but not the full extent of the abuse and pain I endured. For some reason, I felt compelled to share just a small part of what I went through.

It left me wondering: am I fully healed? Have I truly forgiven? Or is the very act of speaking about it part of my ongoing healing journey? I’ve come to realize that sharing isn’t about reopening old wounds—it’s about making sense of the past so I can keep moving forward. Each time I speak my truth, I take another step away from the darkness and closer to freedom and joy.

Forgiveness isn’t about excusing what happened or minimizing the pain. It’s about reclaiming my peace. And healing doesn’t happen in silence—it happens in connection, honesty, and hope.

For every person who reads this, know that your presence here brings me happiness and hope. Maybe my words are changing a life. Maybe you see me in a new light. Maybe something here resonates with your own story. This isn’t about him—it’s about me, about rising from depression, and about remembering how far I’ve come.

To anyone still walking through the valley: your pain doesn’t define you. Your future is brighter than your past. Forgiveness and healing are not single moments—they are journeys, and every step forward is a victory. 🌷✨

Dead In America Podcast: Breaking Free From Narcissistic Abuse, Kimber Foster’s Journey to Healing

In this compelling episode of the Dead America Podcast, host Ed Watters sits down with Kimber Foster, author of Year of Thorns and The Divorce Checklist, to explore the realities of surviving and thriving after narcissistic abuse. Kimber opens up about her harrowing 30-year journey within a toxic relationship and the transformational process of breaking free from emotional manipulation and psychological control.


Listeners will gain powerful insights into how narcissistic behavior affects mental well-being and how subtle tactics—like gaslighting, guilt-tripping, and invalidation—keep victims trapped. Kimber offers practical steps for reclaiming personal power, including building self-belief, facing emotional challenges head-on, and rewriting the story of suffering into one of strength.


She also introduces her free guide designed to support individuals navigating the complex process of divorcing a narcissist, highlighting key checkpoints for legal, emotional, and spiritual preparedness. Kimber’s mission is to empower survivors to rise above pain and move toward healing with confidence and clarity.


Whether you’re in recovery, supporting a loved one, or seeking deeper understanding of emotional abuse, this episode is both educational and deeply affirming.


00:00 Cutting the Chains of Control
00:54 Meet Kimber Foster: Author and Survivor
02:11 Recognizing Narcissistic Behavior
05:24 The Journey of Self-Discovery
10:58 Breaking Free and Finding Support
20:37 Practical Advice for Divorce
27:15 Final Thoughts and Resources
https://thehub.mastermind.com/v2/prev…
Divorce Checklist “The Ultimate Survival Kit to Freedom from a Narcissist” Free Copy for listeners
https://a.co/d/dzBrda9
Year ofThorns, What to Expect When Divorcing a Narcissist Amazon Link
https://a.co/d/fsYI5yy
Divorce Checklist “The Ultimate Survival Kit to Freedom from a Narcissist” Amazon Link
@yearofthorns Instagram
/ yearofthorns

Click Here for Podcast Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4_LWuJ_gG0

Podcast: Spotting a Narcissist w/Kimber Foster: Digital Dating with Anonymous Andrew J. Polizzo,

S04 E13

Jun 25, 2025

49:50

In this episode, Kimber Foster shares her personal journey of divorcing a narcissist and the challenges she faced during and after the process. She discusses the signs of narcissism, the importance of self-love, and offers practical advice for those in toxic relationships. Kimber also shares her experiences with dating after divorce, the difficulties of co-parenting with a narcissist, and the significance of having a support system. Her insights aim to empower others who may be navigating similar situations.

I’m curious, how can YOU tell if someone is a Narcissist on a first date(s)?

https://rss.com/podcasts/anonymousandrew/2085238/

Podcast: Life-Changing Challengers, “Surviving Narcissistic Abuse – Kimber Foster’s Path to Empowerment.”

Surviving Narcissistic Abuse – Kimber Foster’s Path to Empowerment

Podcast link: https://www.lifechangingchallengers.com/surviving-narcissistic-abuse-kimber-fosters-path-to-empowerment/

Kimber Foster shares her journey of surviving narcissistic abuse, finding healing, and empowering others with her book, The Year of Thorns.

Season 5

In this compelling episode of Life-Changing Challengers , host Brad Minus sits down with Kimber Foster, author of The Year of Thorns: What to Expect When Divorcing a Narcissist. Kimber opens up about her journey from an overachieving, people-pleasing child in Grand Rapids, Michigan, to enduring a toxic marriage characterized by narcissistic abuse, manipulation, and control.

After 27 years in a marriage with a narcissistic spouse, Kimber found herself emotionally broken, isolated, and fighting to regain her sense of self. Through her writing, coaching, and advocacy, she now empowers others to recognize red flags, break free from abusive relationships, and reclaim their lives. This episode is a raw, honest look at the insidious nature of narcissistic abuse and the strength it takes to rise above it.

Episode Highlights 

  • [2:00– Kimber’s childhood as the youngest of three, growing up as an “oops” child in Michigan
  • [15:00– Early red flags in her marriage and the gradual erosion of her self-worth
  • [30:00– The isolation caused by constant moves and her husband’s control over their life and finances
  • [45:00– Surviving emotional, verbal, and physical abuse and the realization she was married to a narcissist
  • [1:05:00– The breaking point: a panic attack that forced her to face the reality of her situation
  • [1:20:00– Writing The Year of Thorns and why sharing her story was a turning point in her healing
  • [1:35:00– Kimber’s divorce checklist: A comprehensive guide for those preparing to leave a toxic relationship

Key Takeaways 

  1. Love Bombing Is a Red Flag – Narcissists often come on too strong too fast to create a false sense of connection.
  2. Narcissists Never Take Accountability – If someone constantly blames others and never admits fault, pay attention.
  3. Gaslighting Is Psychological Abuse – Making you doubt your reality is a classic tactic used to maintain control.
  4. Reclaiming Your Identity Takes Time – After years of manipulation, rediscovering your self-worth is a process.
  5. Resources Exist—You’re Not Alone – Kimber’s Divorce Checklist offers practical guidance for those ready to leave.

Links & Resources 

  • 📘 Book The Year of Thorns: What to Expect When Divorcing a Narcissist – Buy on Amazon 
  • 🌐 Website YearOfThorns.com – Access free resources including her Divorce Checklist , blogs, and coaching info
  • 📱 Connect with Kimber on Social Media :

If this episode resonated with you or someone you know, please share, subscribe, and leave a review . Kimber’s story is a testament that healing is possible.

Have an idea or feedback? Click here to share. 

Contact Brad @ Life Changing Challengers 
Instagram: 
@bradaminus 
Facebook: @bradaminus 
X(Twitter): @bradaminus 
YouTube: @lifechangingchallengers 
LifeChangingChallengers.com

Podcast

Broke Up – Not Broke(n) Podcast: Overcoming Narcissistic Abuse and Gaining Financial Empowerment with Kimber Foster

S2 E16 • Apr 16, 2025 • 29 mins

Jamie M. Lima is joined by Kimber Foster to discuss the intricacies of dealing with narcissism in the context of divorce. They explore how to identify narcissistic behavior and address the financial abuse that can accompany it, emphasizing the role of a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA) in such situations. The episode focuses on post-divorce financial empowerment and emotional recovery, offering strategies for setting boundaries and fostering personal growth. Challenges of cohabitation and creating a healing environment are discussed, along with finding joy in new beginnings.

Key Points

  • Narcissists often use financial control and manipulation as a tactic during and after divorce, making it crucial to be well-informed and prepared to protect your assets.
  • Building a supportive team, including a certified divorce financial analyst, can provide essential guidance and potentially save significant legal fees by efficiently handling financial complexities.
  • Personal empowerment and setting clear boundaries are vital steps in recovering self-worth and establishing healthier future relationships post-divorce.

Visit Kimber Foster’s links to explore more of her work.

Kimber Foster is a renowned author, coach and interior designer, specializing in helping individuals recover and thrive after experiencing narcissistic relationships. As a survivor of 30 year relationship with a narcissist, Kimber offers a unique and deeply empathetic perspective to those who are struggling. 

Her firsthand experience allows her to connect profoundly with her clients, offering both hope and practical strategies for moving forward. 

Her online workshops and personalized coaching sessions have garnered acclaim for their profound impact and transformative outcomes.

Listen Here: https://podcast.allegiantds.com/episodes/Lu3a47S7aLR