I am painfully aware of what was done to me as a child. I still need to talk about it and be sure I understand it. But I’ve reached the point that I am no longer remaining a victim. When I was a child, my father took power away from me completely and he held onto that power after I became an adult. He kept reinforcing the ways in which he was the one with power and I was the one who was under his thumb. Even though he’s dead, it would be easy to keep living that way — to keep living as though I had no power and I had no ability to get past what he did to me.
But that isn’t what I want. That isn’t what I need. I am slowly taking back the power that I had given up to him. I’m taking back the control that I allowed him to keep over me far into my adult life. I can be who I really am. I can take back the power over my own life. And in doing these things, I can finally stop victimizing myself. I can slowly stop being anybody’s victim, but only because I’ve healed enough that I’m ready to do that.
This is the next in a series of videos dealing with issues that come up for me to think about as I write a book about my childhood experience of growing up with a narcissistic father. You can visit that YouTube channel to subscribe to future videos. (Liking and subscribing help me quite a bit in helping others to see the videos.) Or you can watch the most recent video below.

Some Ohio State football fans believe a U.S. president has superpowers
Buggy WordPress plugin knocked site off the air for about 36 hours
Starved for love: Portrait of a plastic person living a little plastic life
Briefly: Expect the unexpected as my site migrates to new servers this week
What if the best you can offer to someone will never be enough?
What kind of savages are we today? ‘Pick ’em out and knock ’em out’
What’s the best word for those of us who just want to be left alone?
Sad husband: ‘My beautiful wife is dying; I’m so sad I can’t sleep’