Across my closest relationships—mother, sister, husband, children—harm was never something to repair. It wasn’t acknowledged as harm at all, but reframed as my perception, my fault, my failure.
Peace was never on offer. If I stayed, there was no peace. If I left, I wasn’t allowed to go in peace either. Departure had to hurt—because how could being without them be permitted to feel better than being with them? Relief was available only through my disappearance or my transformation. A structural issue.
This closed system demands erasure or alteration, never mutual change. My pain is not evidence of harm, only inconvenience. I continue to bind myself to systems in which harm is normalized, repair is forbidden, and my full presence threatens the equilibrium.
Trauma bonding pulls me in. Scapegoating keeps me in place. I’m recognizing pattern familiarity, not personal defect.
“In a narcissistic family system, the scapegoat is forced to carry collective shame, guilt, and dysfunction. The family denies reality, refuses outside help, and isolates the victim, perpetuating the cycle.
The result is long-term harm: C-PTSD, anxiety, depression. Leaving feels terrifying, even though staying is destructive, because the bond convinces you that survival depends on the abuser.
Under extreme pressure, the scapegoat may break—reactive anger that the family then weaponizes as proof of their narrative: See? They’re crazy.“