I consciously realized last night that I use manufactured praise to save myself from my fear of being bad and inadequate. If I can manipulate people into praising me, that gives me temporary relief from my fear of not being good enough.
That’s a pretty brutal realization. I think I already knew it, but I hadn’t quite put it into words like that. Not consciously. But as soon as I did, I recognized the pattern that I learned from my father.
A narcissist desperately seeks what is called “narcissistic supply” — and my father taught me to do something that was pretty much identical to what he did.
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 reaching others with the videos.) Or you can watch the most recent video below.

How many of these Christmas myths did you assume were from the Bible?
What if repairing my worst flaw meant losing my greatest power?
Money can’t buy happiness, but poverty can make you miserable
This mortal life swings between lonely misery and loving paradise
Each loss makes me feel grateful for the irreplaceable ones I love
Certainty leaves us unwilling to change beliefs when we’re wrong
Eviction leaves me sifting through collateral damage of a broken life
Why are killing, maiming people elsewhere called moral, ‘legal’?
After year of pandemic, I’m finally feeling bit of fear about COVID-19