After narcissistic abuse, healing is often expected to feel transformative or cathartic. Instead, it can feel slow, repetitive, and unremarkable. This is not a failure of healing — it is often a sign that regulation is taking hold.
The difference between boundaries and emotional withdrawal
After narcissistic abuse, many people struggle to distinguish healthy boundaries from emotional withdrawal. This confusion is understandable — both can involve distance, but they serve very different functions.
Why you may feel worse when things finally go quiet
Many survivors expect that once contact ends or conflict subsides, their nervous system will relax. Instead, they may feel more anxious, unsettled, or low. This reaction is common — and it has less to do with danger than with unfamiliar calm.
When validation helps — and when it backfires
Validation can be deeply relieving after narcissistic abuse — but it can also become destabilising when it replaces self-trust or prolongs external dependency. Understanding when validation supports healing, and when it undermines it, is an important part of recovery.
Trauma bonds: why leaving can feel harder than staying — and how healing actually happens
Many survivors feel confused by how attached they remain to someone who caused them harm. This attachment is often described as a trauma bond. Understanding what it is — and what helps it loosen — can reduce shame and clarify the path forward.
Why ‘closure’ rarely comes from the abuser
Many survivors hope for closure through acknowledgment, accountability, or explanation. In narcissistic dynamics, this rarely arrives — and the pursuit of it often prolongs distress rather than resolving it.