My main goal right now is to navigate through my own issues of voicelessness.
Again, my disappointment has to do with the fact that the Message Board does not have Narcisissim in the title, and the articles and essays, while mentioning narcissism both as a cause and an effect of voicelessness, do not dwell on the concept. (Titles raised as a good point by another poster in Narcissism I). In this respect I do feel a little misled, but that is no one's fault here. I'm griping because I'm disappointed, and because of the following:
I have a deep appreciation for the concepts set forth in the articles and essays - and have developed a few ideas of my own in response to them. For example, I believe that "authentic voice" is implicit in an "I" statement, as opposed to a "we" statement or a "they/He/She" statement.
For example - "I am angry", "I am hurt", "I do not accept X.", as opposed to "He makes me mad", "She hurt me", "Why are they so mean?".
I'm sure to some it sounds like a petty thing, but I do believe that language is functional in more respects than just communicating ideas. I believe it also shapes attitudes - about ourselves and others. In this way, language is very powerful - just simply in they way we relate ideas to ourselves and others and the precise words we choose, we tip the interpersonal power balance.
"I feel abandoned" ", I am hurt" gives power, opportunity, hope - and responsibility - to the speaker. "He abandoned me", "She hurt me" give responsibility and power to the subject.
I'm not saying that those who hurt us are not guiilty of their actions - they are - but they technically are not responsible, in the sense that they can choose to take responsibility and make it up to us or not, but ultimately it is optional for them. So the only real, reliable way to deal with hurt and anger and fear etc. is to take on the power of ownership and responsibility for ourselves.
Just sayin' - and also tipping my hat to "easier said than done". If I though it were easy I wouldn't be looking for a good place to explore these ideas and feelings, I'd have already mastered it all...and it is clear to me that I haven't.
So - I'm in pursuit of power over my own "voicelessness", irrespective of whether it came from a narcissistic parent or partner or whether I just fall in the 50% nature category. Probably some of both. I've encountered many people who have had run-ins with narcissistic and self-centered types who have not suffered to quite the same degree as I have, being somehow able to emerge less damaged - which is worth looking at.
In the meantime, I probably will keep looking for another place to post. I do understand where people here and on other narcissism-devoted boards are coming from, I just did feel that it was important to make a few of these points - not the least of which is that not every situation is hopeless and inherent evil is a theocratic notion, not a human, psychological notion.
In addition, I wanted to direct some focus toward the essays - which I believe to be very important - more so than debating wether or not a "perp" is an NPDer, whether they know it or, or whether one should get revenge.
I don't lack appreciation or empathy for what is going on for some of the posters - been there and it still hurts - and I don't plan to continue arguing my points, either (though I will respiond to questions, as these points, especially those that are "athentic voice" oriented, are important to me).
I don't think everyone has to agree with me or support my contentions, I just want to share my ideas, experiences and opinions. I think the evidence for that is in the fact that I did not derail anyone else's post to make these points or take any one particular post to task (not that I think anyone is doing that to me, especially - I realize my views could be construed as somewhat contoversial here and questions - even hard ones - are appropriate). I believe that the experiences and feelings of the posters here are perfectly valid - I am simply presenting alternative viewpoints that I hope will be helpful to at least a few.
longtire: I still feel stuck in a wierd middle place sometimes. My ideas and philosophies have evolved quite a bit ahead of my mastery. Part of the quest for that mastery includes cultivating the "I voice". I think finding a place for anger etc. to belong has to do with ownership - and if my "I voice" is weak or non-exisitent, I can't own it. I'll remain dependent upon the voice of the "other" to tell me what to do with it, and since other technically can't be responsible for my healing and learning, that just won't work.
My huasband still does not take responsibility for all his behaviors, and perhaps I do not always do so either, especially when I'm feeling victimized. I do find it helpful (though of course not a perfect solution) to be diligent about hearing HIM, also, without blame or jugement or tit-for-tat, even if he is not operating in the "I voice" (You do this, You do that). I try to overlook hyberbole and blame in favor of hearing th subtext, at least at the time, and just respond to his feelings at the moment. At the very least, I can cite it as an example of what I need from him at another time.
Basically, I try to overlook use of "always", never" and similar, and also don't demand that his facts be utterly straight and accurate before listening and responding to how he feels. sometimes I go back later and say "Do you really think I always/never?" or "Do you really feel I was doing something to hurt you?". Often, if sufficient time has passed and the mood has changed, the answer will be "No - I was just upset at the time. I'm sorry I was so over-the-top"". I can then point out that I need this level of listening from him. I also do not resist delivering a simple "I'm Sorry" when I know I haven't been exactly awesome (I am human, too), whether or not he's wonderful about delivering his criticism - although I will reinforce that I want gentleness in criticism later.
I alos try to avoid tit-for-tat because I then say truthfully that I have not responded to his accusations with a counter-accusation (Yeah? Well, You x, x, x"). This is called deflection and it's something that voiceless/narcissitic people are very good at but serves no useful purpose in problem solving. I believe he does much more of this than me, but just the fact that I consciously don't respond in kind (usually, I'm not perfect either) gives me logical leverage when trying to help him understand my needs and complaints.
In addition, I do not discuss whether or not the behavior is question is narcisisstic in nature, I just tackle tham as discrete entities, one at a time. We've had those NPD conversations in the past, and I'm not sure whether it helped or not to discuss them in that context. The joint therapist does not dispute nor confirm his NPD status, and according to him, his therapist says "personality disorder" but does not specify. I think she does not feel it necessarily helpful to pigeonhole, and may be, like me, a subscriber to the personality continuum thoery - meaning the degree to which one is experiencing dysfunction and crisis is what determines whether they are just a narcisisstic personality type (no harm no foul), a borderline, an NPDer, an anti-social, or a psychotic - which can change over time, moving up and down the scale.
Hope that helps.
PS: Please pardon all my typos...too lazy to fix. I really am more literate than that (and terribly insecure, ain't I?)