How can I love someone who abuses me? Can a narcissist love?

I get asked this all the time, mostly by women praying and hoping I’ll say yes.

They’re looking for hope and confirmation that if they stay, persevere and keep proving their love their partners will change.

How can I still love someone who abuses me?

This is the $64 million question those who’ve never been through an abusive relationship ask.  Before asking:

Why don’t you just leave?

One of my online video course students has just shared a brilliant article which answers both questions (link below).

It perfectly sums up codependency and what I experienced in my relationship with a violent ex.

[bctt tweet=”I didn’t fall in love with an abusive man.  I fell in love with a charming, charismatic guy who later happened to turn violent. ” username=”beingunbeatable”]

He didn’t come into our relationship with the intention of hurting me either.  We had the same hopes and dreams that this relationship was the one we both needed.  At first it felt like it was and I thought:

He is the One

Can narcissists love?

Can narcissists love?

We both felt we were in love.  The trouble was it wasn’t a healthy form of love.

It was conditional love.

We loved on the basis that the other would respectively fulfil our deep-seated insecurities and needs.

I was low in self-esteem, desperate for approval and needed him to need me.  I feared abandonment too.

He made me feel special. Great.  I was the only one in the room that first night we met.

Not long after he revealed his darker side.  Damaged, he claimed, by events in his past.

I felt sorry for him.  I made it my mission to protect him and rescue him.  If only I could love him enough.

I can heal the wounds this poor, lovely man has.

That made me feel needed and good.  That was what love meant to me.  I loved him.  He needed me.

For awhile this worked.

Even though he’d shown me his flaws, I accepted him, loved him all the more.   I ignored any red flags that told me I should run away.

My entire focus on him made him feel powerful.  It gave him the warmth and security he needed.  He loved me for it.  I’m sure it felt like love to him.

He felt so good, he lavished me, put me on a pedestal.   I was unlike any of the girls he’d met before.  I felt great.

It didn’t last long. You can’t hide from insecurities forever.

He started to doubt, test my love, push me away.

He set unwritten rules I could never live up to.  Aimed at proving my undying love for him, so he could be sure of it.

Abuse followed.

Will she still love me if she sees who I really am?

I wasn’t sure.  I started to question his behaviour.  Showing signs I might walk away.

Bam!

Out came the loving, attentive man again.   The one that made me feel so good about myself again.  I stayed.

My ex was once more the entire focus of my world.  I loved him, tried to help him, rescue him, change him.  That made him feel good about himself again.  For a while.

That’s how the cycle of abuse works.  Both needing the other to fulfill insecurities.

Neither of us could do this.  The internal well we both had were bottomless buckets.   Deep-seated needs are insatiable.

Round and round the abuse cycle went.

Feeling great, feeling down, feeling great again, being abused again.  It takes its toll on your self-esteem.

I hit rock bottom.  Then the lightbulb went off in my head:

This isn’t love

It’s not. It’s an unhealthy codependency.

I couldn’t agree more with this article.  It describes what I went through to a tee.

It’s a dysfunctional dance based on each dancing the correct unhealthy steps.

If you’re in an abusive relationship or have experienced one in the past, I urge you to read it:

A THEORY ON THE ROLE OF LOVE IN ABUSE

Are you in love with someone who hurts you?   Trapped in an abusive or dysfunctional cycle?  Let me know in the comments below.