There’s a terrible moral reversal in narcissistic families: the psychologically healthy person in an otherwise toxic system is the one labeled as “mentally ill.” The person with intact empathy, moral consistency, and reality-testing, is a threat to the narcissist’s facade, so the toxic system has to neutralize them. The easiest way to do that is to pathologize them.
So the family flips reality:
The most psychologically grounded person becomes “the problem.”
Normal reactions to abuse are reframed as mental illness, instability, or defect.
Relentless pressure, gaslighting, and punishment are applied until trauma finally appears—and then that trauma is used as “proof” that the label was correct all along.
Meanwhile, the dishonest, cruel, or morally hollow members are declared “healthy” precisely because they conform to the pathology of the system. Their lack of empathy, denial, and cruelty are treated as normal because they don’t challenge the family’s false narrative.
What makes it especially grotesque is the circular logic:
We abused you because you were “mentally ill,” and the damage we caused now proves you were mentally ill.
This is deeply entrenched character assassination as a control mechanism. The scapegoat isn’t broken; they’re the healthy one who’s been broken down. And the family’s claim to health is not psychological health at all, but successful moral dissociation