Why Do I Look So Successful but Feel So Anxious?
You have a successful career. You are dependable. You meet deadlines. You are the person everyone counts on when something needs to get done. Friends describe you as thoughtful, responsible, and accomplished. Yet behind the scenes, you spend hours worrying about whether someone is upset with you.
Was It Really Trauma If Other People Had It Worse?
Many people dismiss or minimize their experiences because they compare them to stories of severe abuse, violence, or neglect. While those experiences are undeniably traumatic, trauma is not a competition. The reality is that many adults struggle with anxiety, people-pleasing, perfectionism, relationship challenges, and low self-worth because of experiences they do not believe are significant enough to count as trauma.
Signs Your Anxiety May Come From Growing Up in a Narcissistic Family
Anxiety can show up in many ways… racing thoughts, people-pleasing, perfectionism, or feeling like you’re always “on edge.” For many adults, these patterns started long before adulthood. They often began in childhood within family systems that were emotionally unpredictable or centered around a narcissistic parent.
Why You’re Not Ready to Go No Contact
Social media depicts going no contact as a no-brainer or all-size-fits-one solution to ending the emotional and psychological pain of being a part of a narcissistic family system. But for many adults raised in narcissistic families, the idea of going no contact doesn’t feel empowering at first.
Counseling for Women Raised by Narcissistic Mothers: Reclaiming Your Voice After a Childhood of Walking on Eggshells
Growing up with a narcissistic mother often means learning to survive in a home where love feels conditional, emotions are unsafe, and your worth depends on how well you meet someone else’s needs. Many women raised in this environment don’t realize the impact until adulthood, when relationships feel confusing, boundaries feel impossible, and their inner world feels shaped more by fear, guilt, or self-doubt than by a sense of safety.
Breaking the Cycle: How Therapy Helps You Reparent Your Inner Child
Reparenting yourself isn’t about blaming your parents or reliving your entire childhood. It’s about learning how to care for the parts of you that didn’t get what they needed back then, and giving those parts compassion, patience, and the love they deserve now.
From Survival to Self-Discovery: Reclaiming Your Voice After Narcissistic Parenting
Growing up with a narcissistic parent is like learning to walk on a tightrope you never asked to cross. As daughters, many of us were raised to be vigilant, to constantly monitor our emotional terrain, to walk on eggshells… always optimizing ourselves to avoid criticism, blame, or invalidation. It can leave you feeling like you’re never enough, even when you try so hard to be perfect.

