I was born in KCMO and raised in KCK. In my mind they are still the Kansas City Chiefs. Tradition has and will always be there no matter which side of the state line you are on. There’s enough unnecessary division in this country.
Clark Hunt sends a message to #Chiefs fans.
He says, "If you travel... You don't have to tell people which side of the state line you're from. You tell them you're from Kansas City. There's a pretty good chance that the response might have something to do with the Chiefs."
A narcissist doesn’t regret hurting you. They regret not breaking you completely. That’s what registers as discomfort, that their operation was less successful than they wanted.
Good god this is a crazy interview. Listen as Scott Pelley describes how Bari Weiss wanted journalists at CBS to cover the killing of Renee Good in Minnesota. This is why we can’t have oligarchs running our news outlets, this is absolutely devastating.
Oversharing as a trauma response is very common among survivors of narcissistic abuse — especially for those who were the scapegoat or subject to constant emotional invalidation, gaslighting, or character assassination.
This is a trauma-born strategy for self-protection, especially when you've been falsely labeled as “the bad one,” or “the manipulator.” Often stemming from an internalized belief that you're inherently suspect or guilty. Transparency became a form of armor:
-"If I’m fully open, no one can accuse me of secret motives."
-“If I tell them everything, I won’t be misunderstood."
-“If I explain myself thoroughly, I won’t be scapegoated again."
The intent is noble — you wanted honesty, clarity, fairness. But Narcissistic people weaponize that transparency.
They:
-Use your openness to control or take advantage of you
-Pretend you’re “confessing” to wrongdoing
-Store your truths and vulnerabilities to later shame or punish you
So your transparency, instead of protecting you, often reinforces the abuse.
On Narcissistic Abuse Awareness Day, sending love, strength, and healing to everyone who has survived manipulation, gaslighting, emotional abuse, and control.
The wounds may be invisible, but the pain is real. To everyone rebuilding their life, confidence, and peace after such abuse, your courage is inspiring.
May you continue to heal, thrive, and never doubt your worth again. ❤️
June 1st is World Narcissistic Abuse Awareness Day. I know you’re not crazy. You’re finally safe, finally seeing clearly, and finally learning what it feels like to trust yourself again.