For many years, I didn’t understand why I ate ridiculous amounts of unhealthful food when I wasn’t hungry. It wasn’t until after I started understanding the effects my father’s narcissism had on me that I finally understood that I was still trying to fill an emotional hole I had felt as a child.
When I was young, I didn’t have a mother for much of the time. It took me many years to recognize the enormous hole that was left in me by her absence. I felt lost and unloved because she wasn’t there. I felt abandoned — and I couldn’t understand that my narcissistic father is the one to drove her to a mental breakdown.
I never could be good enough for my father. I could never do enough to really get his approval. He taught me that it’s sometimes worse to have a bad parent there than to have a loving parent who was missing. His presence and emotional abuse were the most damaging of all.
This is the next in a series that shares thoughts that come to my mind as I’m writing a book called “The Truth About My Father.” If you’d like to subscribe to this new YouTube channel, click here and request notifications when I publish new videos. Or you can just watch this one below.

Love’s closest counterfeit sounds like love but acts like selfish need
I keep trying to find the light, but my choices leave me in darkness
Will a mechanical body allow you to live forever in a few decades?
Try a new game: Make others smile — and let yourself smile with them
Goodbye, Sonny
Calm and perspective needed for Boston, not accusations and games
My love of ‘fur friends’ stems from the callousness I saw in my father
Hurt people hurt people, and it’s hard to forgive that in ourselves