Ns have a distorted view of themselves and the world around them, right? Their enablers do too... they often don't see the N or the damage the N is doing clearly.
Some of the things Lissie said sounded to me like her parents' distortions and denial. NOT her own feelings or clear view of the situation. Which is of course to be expected from a 17 year old who has lived with a N and the N's enabler for her whole life! I actually thought she saw her father with remarkable clarity and it sounded like she already had a pretty good grasp on what his narcissism was all about. But I thought that her parents had put her into an unhealthy role in the family, and that she believed her family's distortions about what was normal and what was healthy.
I think part of the problem was that there were a few different levels of reality going on. The reality about herself and her family that Lissie believed. And the reality of her family that some of us saw. I think Karin may have been reacting to the fact that some of us were rejecting Lissie's "reality" about her family and were instead talking about the "reality" of her family that we believed instead.
I know Lissie came here to talk about her father and instead we started talking about something else that she wasn't prepared to talk about. I feel badly for her because of that. But I also think it would have been a disservice to her to not talk about what the real problem in her life was.
Karin had mentioned something about having been married to a N and getting through it with her own kids, I believe. So maybe us talking about the mother's role in the situation made her feel attacked. But we're all here because we've been under the thumb of a N at some point in our lives, right? We've probably all been enablers to some degree... We know it's not about being wrong or being to blame or being a bad person. It's about being emotionally healthy and setting healthy boundaries.
Portia, thanks for your kind words.
Yuki