Caroline Foster

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Caroline Foster



Average rating: 3.69 · 104 ratings · 16 reviews · 27 distinct worksSimilar authors
Padres Narcisistas: Cómo li...

3.91 avg rating — 33 ratings
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Madri Narcisiste: come dife...

3.77 avg rating — 30 ratings
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Narzisstische Mütter: Wie m...

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Ladies Jamaican

3.80 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2004
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Donne Narcisiste. Guida con...

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Narcissistic Parents. The C...

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Write From The Start: The B...

2.60 avg rating — 5 ratings3 editions
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Padres Narcisistas: Cómo Ma...

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Les mères narcissiques: com...

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Padres Narcisistas: Cómo li...

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“You're constantly being broken down and you have self-esteem issues because of it. You're just constantly being told that you can't do things, that you can't do anything with your life or you're not worth anything or you're never going to be able to move out.”
Caroline Foster, Narcissistic Fathers: Dealing with Emotionally Abusive Father and Complex PTSD

“The narcissistic mother will manipulate other family members to gang up against you by focusing on everything that’s wrong with you. This conveniently takes the focus away from the real perpetrator, which is of course her. It’s interesting to think about the manipulation that’s actually going on. So if you have been labelled as the black sheep and that has been your permanent role in the family, it actually allows all the other family members to start feeling better about themselves. They actually start to believe that they are healthier and more obedient to the narcissistic mother than you, and again this creates a division within the family. Another important point is that if a child is scapegoated from an early age, he or she may fully internalize all of their narcissistic mother’s criticism and shame. This means that the scapegoats develop this harsh inner critic that will continue that inner dialogue that constantly reminds them of how bad and flawed they are. I guess you could call that “inner scapegoating,” and it is extremely toxic to a young impressionable child whose identity is still being formed. So, the scapegoat may struggle with low self-esteem and often continues to feel deeply inadequate and unlovable. Adult scapegoat children also tend to suppress a huge amount of abandonment anxiety because they were emotionally or even physically abandoned by the narcissistic mother over and over again. Adult scapegoat children therefore become super sensitive to observing any potential signs of approval or disapproval. These are all important aspects of the profound impact that a toxic family dynamic may continue to have on adult relationships. Perhaps you may still have issues with authority. Maybe you’re still used to justifying yourself or somehow proving your worth. This is an unconscious pattern that you may still not be aware of and that you are perpetuating because you don’t realize how powerful these dysfunctional family dynamics still are. And once you wake up and understand you can let go of that label, you can break that pattern by choosing to think and behave completely different. You can learn to choose your battles and do not always have to be defensive. You do not always have to feel victimized. You need to become more self-aware and notice if you are still trying to get your parents’ approval or validation. Maturing into adulthood means that you may need to understand that you may never have a healthy relationship with an intentional perpetrator of abuse. You need to process your feelings of frustration, loneliness, rage, and grief.”
Caroline Foster, Narcissistic Mothers: How to Handle a Narcissistic Parent and Recover from CPTSD

“1.5 Narcisistas patológicos como padres Cuando los narcisistas patológicos se convierten en padres, aplicarán todos sus patrones de comportamiento en la relación con sus hijos. Podemos reconocer dos tipos principales de padres narcisistas. El primero es el narcisista envolvente. Este tipo de padre está obsesionado con el niño, lo ven como una extensión de sí mismos. No ponen límites, en su lugar, se unen en la cabeza. Es posible que hayas escuchado la frase “No ha cortado las cuerdas del delantal con nosotros”. Este dicho se aplica a este tipo de padre narcisista. Pueden aparecer cerca del niño. Pero no emocionalmente. Físicamente no pueden mantenerse al margen de la vida de sus hijos. En la superficie, todo puede parecer grandioso y hay toda esta atención, pero el niño no se siente como un individuo, sino que se siente como parte de este padre. No pueden expresar sus propios deseos o sentimientos; Todas las decisiones son tomadas por sus padres. Y a medida que crecen,”
Caroline Foster, Padres Narcisistas: Cómo lidiar con un padre tóxico y recuperarse del Trastorno de Estrés Postraumático Complejo



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