It doesn’t start when you leave.
It starts long before that — in the moments that didn’t quite make sense at the time. The conversations that went in circles. The feeling of trying to explain something clearly, only to somehow end up apologising instead.
By the time the decision is made to step away, it’s rarely sudden.
It’s built slowly.
Layer by layer. Moment by moment. A quiet accumulation of things that were dismissed, overlooked, or explained away just to keep things steady.
So when contact finally stops, there’s often a sense of stillness.
Not relief straight away — but space. A pause. The absence of constant tension. The chance to think without being interrupted, corrected, or redirected.
But that silence doesn’t stay contained.
Because while things go quiet on one side… something else begins on the other.
The story starts to change.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Not dramatically. Not in a way that would immediately stand out. Just small shifts at first. Subtle retellings. Conversations that sound almost right — but not quite.
It begins with what they did.
The effort they gave. The things they provided. The ways they “showed up.” It’s presented clearly, confidently, in a way that feels convincing to anyone who didn’t see what happened behind closed doors.
And that’s what makes it work.
Because the parts that mattered most aren’t included.
The conversations that never led anywhere. The way concerns were dismissed. The patterns that repeated despite being addressed. The emotional weight that built over time.
Those parts don’t translate as easily.
So they’re left out.
And without them, the story feels incomplete — but believable.

Then comes the shift in tone.
The focus moves from what happened… to how it’s interpreted.
Suddenly, distance becomes coldness.
Boundaries become disrespect.
Silence becomes betrayal.
The decision to leave is no longer seen as a response — it’s framed as an overreaction. Something unnecessary. Something confusing.
And slowly, a new version takes shape.
One where the roles are reversed.
Where the person who left becomes the one who caused harm. Where the person who avoided accountability becomes the one who “tried everything.” Where the situation is simplified into something easier to explain — even if it’s not accurate.
It doesn’t need to be completely false.
Just adjusted enough.
Because the most convincing stories often contain elements of truth — just without the context that gave them meaning.
And then, the labels begin.
Not always directly. Not always harshly. But enough to create an impression.
“Difficult.”
“Emotional.”
“Hard to deal with.”
“Going through something.”
And that’s where the real challenge appears.
Words that don’t seem extreme on their own — but when repeated, begin to shape how others see things.
It’s subtle.
Which is why it’s effective.
Because by the time anything circles back, the narrative has already been set.
Not in what’s being said — but in the urge to respond.
To correct it.
To explain it properly.
To fill in the missing parts so it finally makes sense.
It feels necessary.
Because when something important is reduced to a version that doesn’t reflect what actually happened, there’s a natural pull to set it straight.
To be understood.
But that’s where the pattern quietly continues.
Because stepping back into the explanation… often leads right back into the same dynamic.
Where clarity doesn’t land the way it should.
Where explanations are reinterpreted.
Where the focus shifts again — away from the truth, and onto something else entirely.
And eventually, something becomes clear.
That the story being told was never meant to include the full picture.
It was meant to protect an image.
To maintain a version of events that doesn’t require reflection or responsibility. One that keeps everything aligned in a way that feels comfortable — even if it isn’t accurate.
And understanding that changes things.
Because it shifts the question.
From “How do I make them understand?”
to “Why am I trying to be understood by someone who never intended to understand in the first place?”
That’s where the real turning point happens.
Not in proving anything.
Not in correcting the narrative.
But in stepping out of it completely.
Letting the story exist — without feeling the need to chase it, fix it, or defend against it.
Not because it’s true.
But because it no longer holds the same weight.
And that’s not easy.
Because being misunderstood, especially after something significant, can feel uncomfortable. Unfinished. Even unfair.
But over time, something else begins to settle.
A different kind of clarity.
One that isn’t based on what’s being said externally — but on what was experienced internally.
The patterns that were noticed.
The moments that added up.
The reasons that led to the decision in the first place.
And those don’t disappear just because someone tells a different version.
They remain.
Quietly, but firmly.
And with distance, they start to make more sense.
Because without constant interruption or redirection, there’s space to see things more clearly. To connect the dots without being told they don’t exist.
And in that clarity, something shifts again.
The need for validation from the outside begins to fade.
Because the understanding that matters most… has already formed.
Not loudly. Not all at once. But gradually.
Through reflection. Through distance. Through the absence of something that once felt overwhelming.
And eventually, the story being told elsewhere becomes less relevant.
Not because it’s gone — but because it no longer defines anything.
It becomes just that.
A version.
One that exists without the full picture. One that serves a purpose for the person telling it.
But no longer something that needs to be engaged with.
Because the truth was never something that needed to be proven.
It was something that was lived.
And that’s something no rewritten version can take away.
So the silence remains.
Not as avoidance.
Not as weakness.
But as a boundary.
One that no longer needs to be explained.
And in that silence, something stronger begins to take its place.
Not the need to be heard —
but the ability to move forward without needing to be.
Check these out!
Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist
15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.
Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future
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Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.











