The Nurturing After Narcissism  Podcast

Raising Thriving Kids After Divorcing a Narcissist: Start With YOU


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If you’re co-parenting with a narcissist, you already know: The abuse doesn’t end at divorce. The manipulation, gaslighting, and control tactics often escalate—especially when children are involved.

But here’s the truth I learned the hard way (and now teach as a trauma recovery coach):Your children’s ability to thrive starts with your healing first.

Why "Selfish" Parenting Isn’t Selfish At All

We instinctively focus on our kids’ needs, but you are the cornerstone of their stability. Narcissistic abuse leaves scars—PTSD, hypervigilance, eroded self-trust—that directly impact your parenting.

Healing yourself isn’t optional. It’s how you:

* Model healthy emotional regulation for your kids.

* Break the cycle of reactivity (so you don’t unintentionally mirror the narcissist’s chaos).

* Create a safe, predictable home—especially when the other household feels unstable.

Step 1: Protect Your Peace (So You Can Protect Theirs)

Post-divorce narcissists thrive on drama. Parallel parenting—not co-parenting—is your lifeline.

How to set up boundaries that stick:Use a third-party app (like OurFamilyWizard) for all communication.

* Court-admissible, uneditable records protect you from false accusations.

* No more verbal abuse via phone calls or in-person drop-offs.

Keep communication BRIEF and boring:

* Respond only to child-related logistics (health, school, schedules).

* Ignore personal attacks. (“That’s untrue” → end conversation.)

Never deviate from the parenting plan.

* Narcissists exploit flexibility. Stick to the agreement like glue.

* Document every violation (you’ll need it).

Why Co-Parenting Fails With a Narcissist

Co-parenting requires empathy, compromise, and mutual respect—traits narcissists lack.

What to expect instead:

* Provocations to get a reaction (then weaponizing your response in court).

* Sudden schedule changes to disrupt your life (even at the kids’ expense).

* Triangulation (using the kids as messengers or spies).

Parallel parenting works because it accepts reality:You’ll never have a cooperative relationship. Stop trying.

Practical Parallel Parenting Strategies

* Let go of “fairness” in both homes.

* Bedtimes, diets, rules don’t need to align (unless safety’s at risk).

* Say: “At Mom’s house, we ___. At Dad’s, they do it differently. Both are okay.”

* Never interrogate kids about the other home.

* Instead: “Did you have fun? I’m glad!” (Neutral = less pressure on them.)

* Block FaceTime calls during your parenting time (unless emergencies).

* Narcissists use “check-ins” to surveil you, not connect with kids.

* Keep a running log of:

* Missed visitations.

* Verbal abuse via text/email.

* Medical/school interference.

The Hardest (and Most Liberating) Boundary

Stop explaining yourself.Narcissists don’t want solutions—they want control.

Scripts that shut down drama:

* “That’s not what our parenting plan states. I’ll follow the agreement.”

* “I won’t discuss this further. Email me through OFW if it’s child-related.”

* “No.” (Full sentence.)

You’re Not Just Surviving—You’re Breaking Generational Chains

The narcissist may never change. But you already have.

Every time you:

* Choose calm over reactivity…

* Prioritize your kids’ emotional safety over “winning”…

* Model self-respect by enforcing boundaries…

You’re teaching them what healthy love looks like.

💜 Need support?

* Book a free discovery call to discuss 1:1 coaching here.

P.S. If you’re thinking, “But what about when they___?”—Drop a comment. Let’s problem-solve together. You’re not alone in this.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit swendel.substack.com
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The Nurturing After Narcissism  PodcastBy Susie Miller Wendel