---
title: "9 Phrases Narcissistic Parents Use — And How They Affect Their Kids"
type: "News"
locale: "zh-HK"
url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/275900467.md"
description: "The article discusses the damaging phrases used by narcissistic parents and their long-term effects on children. Common phrases like 'you're too sensitive' and 'that never happened' can invalidate children's feelings, leading to low self-esteem, identity confusion, and relationship struggles. Experts emphasize that recognizing these patterns is crucial for healing, as children raised by narcissists often doubt their emotions and rely on external validation. The cumulative impact of these subtle manipulations can profoundly affect their adult lives."
datetime: "2026-02-13T12:00:17.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/275900467.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/275900467.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/275900467.md)
---

> 支持的語言: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/275900467.md) | [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/275900467.md)


# 9 Phrases Narcissistic Parents Use — And How They Affect Their Kids

Many of us are all too familiar with narcissism, having dealt with narcissists at work or in our dating lives. For some, though, the experience began in childhood at home.

The effects of having narcissistic parents can be profound and long-lasting.

**Health: 6 Red Flag Phrases Narcissists Use To Manipulate You During An Argument**

“Children of narcissistic parents often report that their parents invalidate their feelings, minimize their accomplishments, compare them unfavorably to other people and may even say things that cause them question their own reality or sanity,” said Lauren Maher, a licensed marriage and family therapist specializing in anxiety, trauma and narcissistic abuse recovery.

Parents are supposed to provide unconditional love and positive guidance to help build the emotional foundation and self-worth kids need to succeed as adults.

“One of the most damaging aspects of narcissistic parenting is that the harm is often subtle and cumulative rather than overt,” said Tina Swithin, author of “Divorcing a Narcissist: One Mom’s Battle.”

“Common phrases like ‘you’re too sensitive,’ ‘that never happened’ or ‘after everything I’ve done for you’ may sound minor on their own, yet repeated over time they shape how children understand themselves, their emotions and their reality.”

**Family: Pediatricians Weigh In On The Most Common Disagreements Between Parents And Grandparents**

The long-term impact is often low self-esteem, identity confusion, difficulty trusting instincts and struggles in relationships as these kids grow into adults.

But experts say recognizing these patterns is an important first step toward healing. Below are nine common phrases narcissistic parents often say and how these words can affect their children.

## **1\. ‘You’re too sensitive.’**

“A fairly universal phrase many narcissist parents use is accusing their child of being too sensitive. Often this arises when a child asserts a boundary, verbalizes a need that is counter to their parents or expresses an emotion like anger or sadness,” said Hannah Alderete, a licensed mental health counselor and the author of “Break Free From Narcissistic Mothers.”

In these cases, their parent might respond with “You’re too sensitive” or “You always make such a big deal out of everything.” They might even ask, “Can’t you take a joke?” or call their child a “crybaby.”

**Relationship: 6 Phrases Adult Children Want To Hear From Their Parents**

“A narcissistic parent will often use these phrases as a way to invalidate their child’s feelings and avoid taking responsibility for their own behavior,” Maher said. “The irony is that many narcissists are perpetually hypersensitive and dysregulated themselves, but by projecting this onto other people, they are able to shift blame and avoid accountability. ”

But this approach invalidates a child’s emotional experience and distorts their sense of reality.

“It sends the message that their feelings are wrong or unreliable, which may cause them to doubt themselves and internalize blame,” said Marie-Line Germain, author of “Narcissism at Work: Personality Disorders of Corporate Leaders” and a professor of human resources and leadership at Western Carolina University. “Over time, this messaging can interfere with the child’s ability to trust and understand their own emotions.”

As a result, the child might struggle to express needs in relationships.

“They learn to associate their feelings with being ‘too much’ or somehow inappropriate,” Alderete said. “Without a solid connection to their emotions, children learn to rely on external validation to determine who they are, what they want and what’s ‘allowed’ for them.”

Being raised by a narcissist can lead to low self-worth, difficulty accessing emotions and relationship struggles. Ivan Pantic via Getty Images

_Like this article? Keep independent journalism alive. Support HuffPost._

## **2\. ‘That’s not what happened.’**

“If a child says the parent hurt their feelings, the parent might say, ‘I did not hurt your feelings’ or ‘that never happened,’” said Virginia Gilbert, a licensed marriage and family therapist specializing in high-conflict divorce and attachment trauma. “Feeling consistently minimized and gaslit makes the child believe that they have no value, that their needs don’t matter.”

She added that children of narcissists might start to feel that they’re too difficult and not worthy of love. They may rely on their parents to make decisions due to eroded self-confidence.

**Family: 'Bigorexia' Is On The Rise. Here's What Parents Should Know.**

“Narcissists are master manipulators and experts at gaslighting and will try to make their children believe an alternate reality,” said journalist and “Married to a Narcissist” author Catenya McHenry. “They often will use psychological abuse to make someone believe what actually happened is not what happened.”

This kind of gaslighting has an even broader mental health impact into adulthood.

“Children of narcissists will often start to question their own perception or sanity when faced with repeated denials of their reality,” Maher said. “Over time, they may start to say things like, ‘I don’t know, maybe I’m just crazy.’ In therapy, we often work to help people trust their own perceptions and rebuild self-trust.”

## **3\. ‘I only do/say this because I love you.’**

“Another phrase I hear narcissistic parents say is along the lines of, ‘I only do this because I love you,’” Alderete said. “The problem with this type of statement is that it pairs the word love with something unloving. The way a child might interpret this statement is to assume that love is a permission slip for harmful behavior.”

**Relationship: There Are Different Types Of Narcissists. Any Of Them Sound Familiar?**

She added that children who internalize this incongruent behavior and message might find themselves in toxic relationships as adults, with similar excuses to justify harmful actions. The effect is feelings of deep grief and a self-perception that you’re unlovable or deserve poor treatment.

Chelsey Brook Cole, a psychotherapist specializing in narcissistic abuse, added that this framework sets up a trauma bond wherein criticism and control are confused for caring and closeness.

“Narcissists use these kinds of phrases to say something hurtful while maintaining the ‘moral high ground,’” she said. “If you get upset, they can claim you misunderstood them rather than admitting to their insult. You end up distrusting your own intuition as you convince yourself that they ‘really do love you’ and if they’re harsh, it’s because they ‘love you so much.’”

## **4\. ‘After everything I’ve done for you, this is how you treat me?’**

“To a narcissistic parent, love isn’t an unconditional gift ― it’s an unpayable investment,” Cole said. “They view basic parental duties ― providing food, shelter, or clothing—not as responsibilities they chose to take on, but as favors you are now expected to ‘pay back.’”

Such a message turns love into something that must be earned. It cultivates and weaponizes a sense of obligation to maintain control.

“This manipulative tactic often conditions a child to become a guilt-driven people-pleaser who struggles to establish healthy boundaries,” Germain said.

Children who hear that comment may feel wrong for having basic needs or that their existence is a burden. The same goes for phrases like “I gave up everything for you.”

“A child may be left with a lifelong sense of guilt and that they owe the narcissistic parent obedience, compliance, time and an equal degree of sacrifice,” said Margaret Ward-Martin, a psychotherapist who founded The Grace Project to work with survivors of narcissistic abuse.

## **5\. ‘I’m the only one who will ever really love you.’**

“This statement serves as a tactic to create isolation and total dependency,” Germain said. “This rhetoric aligns with the narcissistic need to exert control by systematically depleting a child’s psychological energy and self-worth. By convincing the child that the world outside the parent-child bond is hostile or unloving, the parent sabotages the child’s social confidence.”

Narcissistic parents might also say things like, “No one will ever love you as much as me.” Although these comments are not true, Ward-Martin noted that children who grow up hearing such statements may never have the chance to learn otherwise.

“This sets up a child up to feel unfulfilled and likely to forge unhealthy attachments in relationships,” she said. “This is ugly early modeling.”

Children who are exposed to this kind of indoctrination often grow up with a fear of independence as they are conditioned to believe they cannot find love or safety elsewhere.

“Narcissists often manipulate their children into believing they have no power or control of their own and in their own lives and over their own voice,” McHenry said. “They don’t want their children to be better than them and they manipulate their children over time, eventually affecting their self-esteem and self-confidence.”

She pointed to statements like “You will never be \_\_\_\_ without me.” It’s a way assert superiority and breed self-doubt, anxiety and co-dependency.

Narcissists tend to focus on external validation and competition. Olga Rolenko via Getty Images

## **6\. ‘Why can’t you be more like your sister or brother?’**

“Narcissistic parents routinely pit siblings against each other,” Cole said. “This keeps the children competing for the parent’s attention and love, makes children easier to manipulate and allows the parent to avoid responsibility. If one child starts setting a boundary, the parent might say, ‘Your brother never treats me like this, he’s so much more helpful.’”

This competitive hierarchy for parental approval creates jealousy, competition, guilt, anger and confusion ― ultimately creating a sense of overwhelm, dominance and devaluation that makes it easier for a narcissist to maintain control.

“Such comparisons frequently breed lifelong sibling rivalry and a pervasive sense of inadequacy,” Germain said. “Over time, this leads to profound identity confusion, as the child abandons their authentic self to adopt whatever persona they believe will finally win the parent’s favor.”

These comparisons indicate that approval is tied to performance rather than to personal or internal factors.

“Emotional expression becomes something to suppress rather than explore,” Swithin said. “Children learn to manage how they are perceived instead of learning who they are.”

## **7\. ‘You are such an embarrassment / disappointment / disgrace.’**

“Typically, narcissistic parents are all about performance and achievement,” said therapist and “Disarming The Narcissist” author Wendy Behary. “They tend to fall short on the notion of connection, unconditional love, the idea of really focusing on interpersonal skills and reciprocity and empathy. They fall short because they’re so focused on status and winning and being extraordinary, often living vicariously through their children.”

Because narcissists view their children as extensions of themselves, they view their successes as carrying out a positive legacy. On the flip side, their children’s missteps are not opportunities for resilience but rather moments to criticize and shame, using labels such as “embarrassment,” “disappointment,” and “disgrace.”

“These comments make the child feel worthless and desperate, frightened and depressed,” said Linda Martinez-Lewi, a psychotherapist who has published multiple books on dealing with narcissists. “This is a direct attack on the child’s core identity. Some children treated with such disdain and cruelty can develop a deep inner shame that stays with them into adulthood.”

She noted that these sorts of statements make children feel inadequate and defective simply for being their authentic selves. They learn to tie their self-worth to their performance and achievement because reputation is all that matters.

“A child may stop trying when mistakes are conditioned to result in shame,” Ward-Martin said, adding that perfectionism is another big issue in these dynamics.

Karyl McBride, a licensed marriage and family therapist and author of “Will the Drama Ever End? Untangling and Healing from the Harmful Effects of Parental Narcissism,” noted that even when a child does a perfectly fine job with something, their narcissistic parent might respond with “You can do better.”

“The message is that ‘nothing is ever good enough,’” she said.

Thus, the child will feel incapable, leading to unhealthy dependence and fear of abandonment. Good parenting is about fostering a healthy balance between autonomy and connection as children work toward their goals.

“Parents raise a child with a sense of their own capability and worth by saying things like, ‘How are you going to make that happen? What support do you need?’” Ward-Martin said.

## **8\. ‘I don’t know what I’ve done to make you hate me.’**

After a child sets a boundary, Cole noted that narcissistic parents often say something evasive like “I don’t know what I’ve done to make you hate me” or extreme like “I’m sorry I’m such a bad mother/father.”

“If they admit they know _why_ you are upset, they would have to take responsibility,” she explained. “By saying ‘I don’t know what I’ve done,’ they maintain their victimhood and innocence. It’s their way of saying ‘Your anger and boundaries are invalid and unjustified.’”

By jumping to extremes and declaring themselves “bad,” narcissists make it difficult to discuss specific issues at hand as well. Instead, they use what Cole describes as “performative” shame to regain power by painting you as a bully.

“You learn that your honesty hurts others,” she said. “This leads to emotional constriction ― you stop being honest about your feelings because you don’t want to be ‘mean’ or make someone feel bad.”

These messages can cause you to feel responsible for everyone’s emotions and avoid saying how you feel. You might also struggle to trust you own reality and thus over-explain in relationships, anticipate being misunderstood and feel like you have to “prove” your perspective is valid.

## **9\. ‘You’re the only one who understands me.’**

“Narcissistic parents frequently utilize triangulation, a tactic where they insert a third party into a relationship to manipulate, foster competition and maintain dominance over a child,” Germain said. “Rather than engaging in direct or safe communication, the narcissistic parent leverages others to secure their own power.”

A common method involves the parent inappropriately confiding in the child about their other parent to create an “us vs. them” alliance and burden them with intense guilt, divided loyalties and toxic dependence.

“A statement like ‘I don’t know how I’ll carry on living when you leave’ is manipulation and guilt tripping,” Ward-Martin added. “A child is not responsible for their parents but may feel it, crushingly, and make life choices accordingly.”

In addition to asserting that their child is the only one who can understand or take care of them, narcissistic parents might also try to create this kind of pressure and remove autonomy in the opposite way.

“They might say ‘I know you better than you know yourself,’” McBride said, adding that the implication is “Therefore, listen to me.”

It’s another way to overpower a child’s self-worth when their individuality threatens the narcissistic parent’s control.

“By saying such things, the child’s sense of self may be compromised and they grow up second-guessing themselves, thinking dad or mom knows best,” Ward-Martin noted. “It takes a strong individual to understand that they are autonomous, and that their parents were wrong.”

### Related...

-   There Are 5 Types Of Narcissists. Any Of Them Sound Familiar?
-   4 Signs You Were Raised By A 'Communal Narcissist'
-   This Is The Most Dangerous Type Of Narcissism

**Read the original on HuffPost**

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