Skip Navigation

the person who abused(?) me (who I’m breaking free from and focusing on me💪) acted like this: is this common with certain mental health conditions?

i don’t mean this to say that people with mental health conditions are all abusive, nor do i take your comments as a diagnosis, i’m more or less just curious. after all, only a professional could help the specific person.

i have been emotionally abused by someone. they can never accept their own faults or mistakes. telling them they made a mistake will set them off and cause outbursts of anger. they strictly adhere to rules and try to control people to follow a rigid set of them.

will often prey on weaknesses to make you stay with them because “no one understands you, just me”. discards you but comes back after a while and the cycle repeats.

often makes others feel bad about themselves, that they are the best/only good person and they should be the reliable one to come to when something’s wrong. in their eyes, you are worthless no matter what you do to change it.

8 comments
  • There is no disability which needs a human punching bag as an accommodation.

  • I feel the need to chime in to agree with the people saying that you need a sudden and complete exit strategy ASAP, but also, I hope you'll forget trying to diagnose them or figure them out. It could be part of a mental disorder, but everything you listed could just as easily be emotional immaturity. It's not your problem, and leaving will be easier once you accept that.

  • I'm not a professional or anything but it sounds like pretty standard behavior for someone with a narcissistic personality disorder. I'm glad to hear you're getting away from them!

8 comments