Retaliation and Manipulation: When a Narcissistic Ex Uses Your Child to Get to You


Retaliation and Manipulation: When a Narcissistic Ex Uses Your Child to Get to You


This fall, my son headed back for his junior year of college. For the third year in a row, I was pressured into fully furnishing his apartment.

What made this year different is that just before all this unfolded, I had reached out to my ex about his ongoing violations of our judgment of divorce — specifically his failure to meet certain financial obligations. Instead of addressing those issues, he retaliated. In retribution, he attacked me financially, pressuring me to assist our son far beyond what I could afford.

One of the most painful aspects of my experience was how the manipulation didn’t stop with my ex’s direct messages to me. He took it a step further initially by using his girlfriend to pressure my daughter, having her reach out and tell my daughter that I needed to “step up” as a mother. This was no accident or casual comment. It was a calculated tactic to drag my children into the conflict and use them as tools to control me emotionally and financially. By turning my children into messengers and pawns, he weaponized them to enforce his demands and deepen the pressure. This classic abusive strategy creates layers of guilt and confusion, making it harder for a mother to set boundaries without feeling she’s failing her children. Understanding this manipulation is key to breaking free from the cycle and protecting both yourself and your kids.

This time, I set a limit. My son had just had last minute shoulder surgery and, with only two weeks’ notice, they told me I needed to fly halfway across the country to help. As a Mother, there’s no place I’d rather be. However, the trip would have cost me thousands of dollars — money I simply didn’t have, especially while supporting our daughter who had recently moved in with me. So I gave my son a choice: I could visit and give him a helping hand for 2 days, (work and travel previously planned with our daughter commitment) or I could put some of that money toward his college expenses. Yet, they twisted both narratives, making it look like I was choosing to support my daughter over our son and that I didn’t care about his wellbeing. It’s an ugly tug of war meant to pull on a Mother’s heart strings.

Somehow, my ex twisted that into a promise to spend much more on his apartment. I’d already kindly offered to help financially with a set amount, and even that was more than I had planned to spend. When I refused to go beyond my limit, the conversation with my ex got ugly crossing all boundaries. I immediately shut it down, telling him I would no longer discuss it with him and would work it out directly with our son.

That’s when my son called me in tears, caught in the middle. I caved. This situation perfectly shows how a narcissist manipulates everyone to get his way. In this case, he wanted me to financially furnish our son’s apartment–something I never committed to and couldn’t afford. But, through guilt and pressure, he not only manipulated me, but also our son, daughter, and even his girlfriend, using them all as pawns.

The Hard Truth About Co-Parenting with a Narcissist

When you divorce a narcissist, the standard advice is: let go, go no-contact, don’t engage. But when you share children, total detachment is often impossible. The connection remains, and the narcissist will use it. One of their most painful tactics is weaponizing your children — using them as messengers, guilt-triggers, or bargaining chips.

How to Protect Yourself (and Your Children)

1. Recognize the Tactic
This is triangulation — bringing a third person into the conflict to exert control. When that third person is your child (and in this case, his girlfriend as well), it’s especially cruel. See it for what it is: manipulation.

2. Keep Your Boundaries Firm
Boundaries are not punishments — they’re acts of self-preservation. Once you set a limit, stick to it. It’s tempting to give in to make the discomfort stop, but each time you do, you teach the narcissist that pushing harder works.

3. Remove Your Child from the Middle
Tell your child calmly: “I know Dad is asking you to talk to me about this, but that’s between him and me. You don’t have to be in the middle.” Protect them from becoming the conduit for adult conflict.

4. Respond, Don’t React
If your ex is baiting you, slow down. Wait before responding. Sometimes, not replying at all is the most powerful move. “No” is a complete sentence.

5. Focus on What You Can Control
You can’t stop the narcissist from trying. You can choose not to play the game. Detach from the outcome and focus on your peace and your child’s emotional safety.

Final Thought

When they weaponize your child, their goal is to pull you back into the chaos. You can’t always prevent the attempts — but you can control your reaction. Hold your boundaries, speak with clarity, and keep your child out of the crossfire. Your sanity — and theirs — is worth protecting.

Every time I stand my ground, even if I stumble, I’m building strength. One step at a time. Believe in yourself.


Recovering from Narcissistic Abuse: Why It Resembles the AA 12-Step Program More Than You Think

When people hear the word recovery, they often think addiction — alcohol, drugs, gambling. Rarely do we connect it to relationships. Yet, anyone who has loved, lived with, or left a narcissist knows: reclaiming yourself after abuse requires a level of healing every bit as structured, layered, and courageous as the 12-step journey of Alcoholics Anonymous.


1. Acceptance of Reality

AA Step 1 begins with admitting the problem is real. Healing from narcissistic abuse begins the moment you finally accept this wasn’t love — it was manipulation. You surrender the fantasy, stop minimizing, and acknowledge the emotional harm that was done. Like I often say: what you’re not changing, you’re choosing. Acceptance becomes your moment of truth — and your doorway out.

2. You Can’t Do This Alone

AA members rely on sponsors and fellowship. Survivors of narcissistic abuse must also find support — therapists, best friends, faith, fellow survivors. Isolation keeps you stuck in the fog. Community brings clarity, strength… and hope.

3. Rebuilding a Sense of Self

Where AA seeks spiritual awakening, survivors seek self-awakening. After narcissistic abuse, you must rebuild who you are from the inside out. You rediscover your voice, passions, and worth. You begin to believe — in yourself again, and in God’s ability to restore what was broken.

4. Taking Inventory of the Damage

Step 4 in AA requires fearless self-inventory. Survivors similarly ask: Where did I abandon myself? What boundaries did I allow to be crossed… and why? This isn’t self-blame; it’s sacred awareness that leads to better boundaries — and better choices.

5. Making Amends — To Yourself

In AA, amends are made to those you’ve harmed. Survivors make amends to the person they harmed most: themselves. You forgive yourself for staying, for trying, for believing lies. You choose self-compassion over self-criticism.

6. Daily Maintenance (Because Triggers Are Real)

Healing isn’t linear — you may still crave them, miss them, dream of the good times. That’s the trauma bond, not love. Just like AA members need daily check-ins to stay sober, survivors need daily practices — prayer, gratitude, affirmations, exercise, therapy — to stay emotionally free.

7. Helping Others

AA teaches that helping others is the final step in healing. Survivors often feel a deep calling to help other women — to share their story, speak truth, shine light into the darkness. When your pain becomes your purpose, you know you’re free.


Believe — And Remember Why You Were Chosen for This Journey

Believe in yourself. Believe in God. Believe that you were brought into a narcissistic relationship not to destroy you, but to teach you, grow you, and awaken you. This was part of your soul curriculum — your time in the wilderness. And now? You’re walking back home to yourself.

Recovery isn’t a one-time decision — it’s a thousand brave choices, made one day at a time. But I promise you: if you keep choosing yourself, keep choosing truth, keep choosing God… freedom finds you.

When the Super Empath Wakes Up: The Quiet Dismantling of a Narcissist

There comes a moment in the life of a super empath when they stop seeing the narcissist through the lens of illusion—and begin seeing them clearly. It’s not an angry revelation. It’s a sacred shift. A calm, devastating truth.

Before this awakening, the empath suffers deeply. The betrayal is profound, the emotional whiplash exhausting. But something powerful happens in that pain: they transmute it into wisdom. They stop reacting. Stop feeding the narcissist’s false reality. And that silence—the withdrawal of attention and emotion—starts a quiet unraveling.

The narcissist thrives on admiration, obedience, and emotional reactions. Strip that away, and their grandiosity starts to crumble. Not in front of crowds, but quietly, in the absence of the empath’s engagement. Where once the empath was confused, now there is clarity. Where once they were entangled, now there is detachment.

This isn’t hatred. That would still imply a connection. What truly dismantles the narcissist is indifference. Emotional neutrality. The refusal to play the game.

The narcissist escalates. Provokes. Spins new narratives. But the empath no longer responds. They’ve figured out the rules—and walked away from the board. They don’t explain, justify, or chase closure. They don’t wait for a confession or apology that will never come. They simply leave—emotionally, energetically, spiritually.

And that departure? It terrifies the narcissist. Because it forces them to confront what they cannot bear: their own reflection, their own emptiness. Without someone to provoke or control, their identity collapses.

True empathy doesn’t coddle dysfunction. It calls it by name. The empath now sees manipulation for what it was. The fog lifts, and what was once a tangled mess becomes crystal clear: this was never love—it was control.

The narcissist spirals—provoking, blaming, rewriting history. But the empath is done. They’ve stepped off the crazy wheel.

This isn’t just survival. It’s sovereignty. The empath reclaims their truth, their peace, and their power—not to destroy, but to lead. They’ve risen—not bitter, but whole.


Wondering If You’re Dating a Narcissist? Watch Out for These Words and Phrases

When you’re navigating a new relationship, things can feel exciting, intoxicating—even too good to be true. But if you’ve ever found yourself questioning your worth, your memory, or your reality… you’re not alone. Many of us have been charmed, manipulated, or emotionally disarmed by someone who, beneath the surface, was more interested in control than connection.

This isn’t about blame. This is about empowerment. The more we understand the tactics and language used by narcissists, the better we can protect ourselves—and others—from emotional harm.

So, if you’ve ever found yourself wondering, “Is it just me, or is something off?” — here are the red flags and words to watch out for.


💣 1. Love Bombing: “You’re everything I’ve ever wanted.”

In the early stages, a narcissist may seem like the partner of your dreams. They’ll say things like:

  • “I’ve never felt this way before.”
  • “You’re my soulmate.”
  • “We’re perfect together.”
  • “I knew the moment I met you.”

It feels romantic—but it’s often strategic. They want you emotionally invested fast, before their true behavior surfaces.

You might hear:

“Tell me everything about you—I want to know your fears, your dreams, your past.”

And at first, it feels safe. But soon, they’ll use those vulnerabilities against you. When the mask slips, the charm turns into criticism, jealousy, and control.


🧠 2. Gaslighting: “You’re imagining things.”

Gaslighting is emotional manipulation that makes you doubt your own reality. You might start to wonder if you’re too sensitive, too emotional, or just plain wrong. Classic gaslighting phrases include:

  • “You’re crazy.”
  • “You’re remembering it wrong.”
  • “I never said that.”
  • “You’re making something out of nothing.”
  • “I didn’t know your memory was so bad.”

They’ll twist the truth so often that you start questioning yourself. You may begin apologizing for things that weren’t your fault—just to keep the peace.


🪞3. Blame-Shifting: “It’s not my fault.”

A narcissist rarely takes responsibility for their actions. If they talk about their past relationships, listen closely. Do they say things like:

  • “All my exes were toxic.”
  • “She was crazy.”
  • “No one’s ever treated me right.”

Eventually, they’ll start talking about you that way, too.

Even during arguments, they may say:

  • “You’re the reason I act like this.”
  • “You made me angry.”
  • “If you didn’t do that, I wouldn’t have to react this way.”

That’s not accountability. That’s manipulation.


🚫 4. Dismissiveness & Contempt: “You’re too sensitive.”

When you express hurt, disappointment, or a need for connection, watch for contempt disguised as honesty:

  • “You’re being dramatic.”
  • “You’re too emotional.”
  • “You’re overreacting.”
  • “It was just a joke—don’t be so sensitive.”

They may roll their eyes, mock your tone, or talk down to you. Over time, you may start to feel small, foolish, or even ashamed for expressing basic emotional needs.

But here’s the truth: your feelings are valid. Full stop.


😡 5. Rage & Punishment: “This is why no one puts up with you.”

When narcissists feel challenged, they often respond with anger or cruelty. You might hear:

  • “You’re a bitch.”
  • “You’re lucky I even put up with you.”
  • “Everyone else thinks you’re difficult too.”
  • “You always ruin everything.”

They lash out to regain power, especially when you’ve set a boundary or stood up for yourself. Over time, they may train you to stay silent just to avoid their wrath.


💬 6. Control Disguised as Concern: “I’m just trying to protect you.”

They might discourage you from seeing certain friends or family members, saying things like:

  • “They don’t really care about you.”
  • “They’re jealous of what we have.”
  • “I just think you’re better off without them.”

At first, it may sound like care—but it’s often the beginning of isolation. The more separated you are from people who support and empower you, the more dependent you become on them.

You might also hear:

  • “All we need is each other.”
  • “You’re my soulmate.”
  • “No one understands us like we do.”

These phrases can sound romantic—until you realize they’re being used to shut out the rest of the world and create a closed system of control. When one person becomes the gatekeeper of your time, energy, and identity, that’s not intimacy—it’s emotional captivity.


🧨 7. Backhanded Apologies: “I’m sorry you feel that way.”

True apologies take ownership. Narcissists avoid that at all costs. Instead, you may hear:

  • “I’m sorry you took it the wrong way.”
  • “I’m sorry you’re so sensitive.”
  • “I said I’m sorry, what more do you want?”
  • “I guess I can’t say anything around you anymore.”

These are not apologies—they’re weapons disguised as peace offerings.


🎯 8. Poking the Bear: “Wow. Look how toxic you are.”

When you finally react—after being pushed, baited, or verbally attacked—they’ll say:

  • “You’re the abusive one.”
  • “You’ve got serious issues.”
  • “You need help.”
  • “I can’t believe you’re acting like this.”

They provoke your emotional response, then flip the script to play the victim. This cycle keeps you in defense mode while they stay in control.


🧍‍♀️ The Real Problem Isn’t You

It’s easy to internalize all of this—to think:

“Maybe I am too sensitive.”
“Maybe if I just try harder, things will go back to how they were.”

But the truth is: you are not too much. You are not too emotional. You are not the problem.

What you are… is worthy of:

  • Respect
  • Safety
  • Emotional honesty
  • Kindness
  • Mutual care

And that’s the bare minimum in a healthy relationship.


🛑 You Can’t Heal in a Place That Keeps Hurting You

When you set boundaries, narcissists may call you:

  • “Too difficult”
  • “A drama queen”
  • “A bitch”

But healthy people won’t punish you for having limits—they’ll respect you more for it.

You don’t need to argue your worth to anyone. You don’t need to prove that your feelings are real. You just need to recognize when someone is trying to control, manipulate, or emotionally exhaust you.

And then, you need to choose you.


If any of these phrases felt familiar, take it as a sign. Not of failure—but of awakening. You are not broken. You are becoming aware.

And that’s where your healing begins.

10 Early Signs of a Narcissistic Relationship

Early warning signs (Red Flags) in a relationship with a narcissist can include:

  1. Excessive Charm and Flattery: At the beginning, a narcissist may shower you with compliments and attention to win your trust and admiration quickly.
  2. Lack of Empathy: They are unable to genuinely empathize with others, which can become evident when they seem indifferent to your emotions or the emotions of others.
  3. Need for Control: They often want to control the relationship and your actions, making decisions for you or overriding your opinions and preferences.
  4. Boundary Violations: Disregarding your personal boundaries or trying to test them early on is a common trait.
  5. Grandiosity: They may often talk about their achievements or fantasies of unlimited success and power, expecting admiration for their perceived superiority.
  6. Manipulation: Narcissists might manipulate situations to their advantage, making you feel as if your feelings or desires are unimportant.
  7. Sense of Entitlement: They believe they deserve special treatment or privileges and may become angry if they do not get what they want.
  8. Gaslighting: This involves making you doubt your perceptions or reality, often making you feel confused or questioning your own sanity.
  9. Constant Seeking of Validation: They often seek constant validation and approval from others to bolster their self-esteem.
  10. Quick to Anger: Any perceived slight or criticism can lead to anger, and they may react harshly to maintain their self-image.