I have to agree with almost everything you guys have said here. What is particularly troubling about Ns is they are extremely hard to diagnose. My Nm has not had an official diagnosis, since she thinks absolutely nothing is wrong with her, but my brother and I have concluded, along with our separate therapists, that she is indeed NPD/BPD.
if I could add another issue to the mix - I think there is a lot of value for us here on the board in MacKenzie Phillips story. Specifically, how just turning 18 and becoming an adult means that your childhood and those wounds are not left behind and they continue to have an effect.. She was groomed very early to not have boundaries and speak up for herself, and she got a very skewed sense of right and wrong. She was belittled, demeaned, invalidated, etc, all priming her for the abuse. And, her drug problem unfortunately hurt her credibility. Just because you reach a certain age does not mean you are equipped and immune to the past and its effects. Several members of her family do not believe her or claim she is mentally ill and an addict, so she is effectively being abused twice.
I'm beginning to look at life with new eyes, because as much as this hurt, confusion and anger continues for me, I was literally blind to my problem for so long and I feel some sense of relief in knowing what I can change to make my life better now.