Ignoring a Narcissist: What Really Happens When You Take Back Your Power

Ignoring a narcissist is a powerful boundary to set, it lets you regain your power. So not only does it let you heal it drives the narcissist to confusion, they haven’t experienced this before.

This is scary, Will they retaliate? Will it actually work? The answer to both is yes, but it is scary with lots of temptations along the way to try to get you to engage. But the clarity you can find in your healing is worth it.

You can do this, you’ve been strong enough to live through the abuse, you are beyond strong enough to leave, let’s look at what happens when you pull away and how you can protect yourself emotionally while you’re ignoring a narcissist.

Why Narcissists Crave Attention

Ignoring a narcissist is cutting off the narcissistic supply which is the attention they need to feed their self-image, they develop their self image by others opinions rather than by their own.

Calm woman standing in soft morning light near a window

A narcissist depends on a constant flow of validation and emotional reactions to keep them in their over-exaggerated ego. So when you’re ignoring a narcissist it’s like cutting off their supply to food.

A narcissist doesn’t even need the attention to be positive to keep them “fed.”  Even negative attention will feed the narc’s needs; they just need attention, so by ignoring a narcissist completely you are in fact starving them.

to a narcissist your silence isn't peace it's starvation

What Happens When You Start Ignoring a Narcissist 

Smartphone with unread notifications fading beside an empty plate, symbolizing how silence starves narcissistic supply.

1. Shock and Confusion

The narcissist has been in control of you the entire time so when you are ignoring a narcissist they realize they are losing control and they are not used to that. This causes confusion because they do not like change.

When you’re ignoring a narcissist they may increase their efforts to regain your attention, remember they need attention to survive, positive or negative ignoring the narcissist is depriving them of their supply.

Hand turning off a faucet with the last drop falling, representing cutting off attention and emotional reactions.

2. Anger and Provocation

When you’re ignoring a narcissist, you can expect them to throw temper tantrums with guilt-tripping, rage, or even passive-aggressive behavior. They want your attention just like a child kicking and screaming to get you to notice them.

When you are ignoring a narcissist you can cause narcissistic injury, this is an emotional trauma to a narcissist’s pride or ego that can trigger manipulative retaliation actions.

Woman walking away in focus while a blurred man looks confused at his phone, showing loss of control.

3. Hoovering Attempts

When you try ignoring a narcissist, you will see them trying to get your attention in any way they can whether it’s sending messages or having a fake emergency that they need your help.

They might even go back to love bombing. They are going to do whatever it takes to get you to notice them and give them attention aka their supply.

All their attempts for attention, while you’re ignoring a narcissist is designed to re-engage and restart the cycle. Once they get your attention, they can start regaining control and gain a constant supply.

Clenched fist pressing into a pillow near an untouched cup of tea, symbolizing provocation and your choice of calm.

4. Smear Campaigns

If you continue ignoring a narcissist through all of their attempts to regain control they may start attacking your reputation. They figure if they can’t control you, you are now a liability to them, so they need your reputation destroyed before you expose them.

When you are ignoring a narcissist, you have to be aware they will enlist flying monkeys, these are mutual friends that you are both still talking to, but these “friends” provide the narc information, keep quiet and watch carefully.

Flowers and an envelope on a doorstep while a curtain closes, representing hoovering and refusing re-entry.

5. Eventual Detachment or Shift to New Supply

When you are successfully ignoring a narcissist and they can not find a way to get a response they will often move on. They need supply, and if you aren’t going to give in they go on the hunt for the next source.

This stage can feel bittersweet. On one hand you won, you are free and on the path to healing. But obviously watching someone you loved move on is painful. Remember it’s not personal, they just need to get their supply needs met.

How to Successfully Ignore a Narcissist 

Blurred people whispering over a phone while a woman stands grounded, symbolizing smear campaigns and staying steady.

1. Go “Gray Rock” or No Contact

Going gray rock is not fully ignoring a narcissist, it’s responding to provide required information with no emotions, only facts.

You had a life together information will have to be exchanged, but don’t let the emotions get in there that is fuel to them.

Gray rock method of ignoring a narcissist is a perfect way to handle it when you can’t cut ties fully with the narc. If you are co-parenting or co-working, obviously there still has to be some communication, just don’t give them the emotions they are seeking.

Hand blocking a contact on a smartphone, representing creating a safe digital boundary.

2. Block or Mute on All Platforms

If you are ignoring a narcissist, block them on social media and your phone. You have to cut off any way they can contact you. If you can see them they can see you, so if there is a block button hit it.

When you are exiting a narcissistically abusive relationship safety is priority number one. Creating a safe digital boundary is mandatory for your healing. Blocking the narc’s access to you is part of the new boundaries.

As we’ve already discussed, flying monkeys keep in mind that if you are ignoring a narcissist they still want to know what you are doing, so if you become aware of a flying monkey they may need to be blocked on social media as well.

Woman holding a closed notebook, symbolizing choosing silence instead of defending or explaining.

3. Don’t Defend or Justify

When you are ignoring a narcissist, they may start asking why questions looking for an explanation, what they are really looking for is an opening for them to be able to get some supply from you. Your silence speaks way louder than an explanation.

You do not need to “clear things up” or explain the situation. You need to explain the situation to yourself as you work on healing. If the narc wants to work on healing, they can explain things to themselves or their therapist, but they don’t need you to explain things to them.

Supportive group of women in a circle, representing community, validation, and healing support.

4. Build a Support System

Validation for our feelings is not something we’ve experienced, so when we leave and we start finding it and building a support system we start to find validation from friends, support groups, and our therapists, this is a major step in our healing and growing stronger.

Emotional Challenges You May Face 

Woman holding a mug by lamplight, representing guilt, doubt, and loneliness during the healing process.

Yes, ignoring a narcissist is going to challenge you emotionally. You are going to experience guilt, doubt, and unfortunately loneliness. You are making the right choice though, good things take hard work, and it will be worth it.

Healing from trauma bonding and codependency is a process, there is no switch you can flip and say ok I’m healed. These are learned behaviors and they need to now be unlearned and new behaviors learned, it takes time.

When you are in the healing phase feeling bad doesn’t mean you made a bad decision, it means you are working through old feelings that are still in you. You should take time and look at why you feel that way rather than act on your feelings.

Signs You’re Regaining Power 

Hands turning a ringing phone face down, symbolizing resisting the urge to respond.

There will be days you feel calmer and more in control of your life and more decisive and you will then know that you are regaining your power. You may notice it as it happens or as you reflect on your day and realize you got this.

In the beginning when you are ignoring a narcissist of course you want to know how they are reacting, but after you begin healing you stop obsessing over their reactions and start to solely focus on your healing. Let them be their own issue.

During your healing journey you will start to find your inner voice, and eventually you will start trusting your inner voice again rather than the narcs voice that is usually in your head as you try to make a decision.

Footprints stopping at a line in the sand, representing a firm boundary and choosing no engagement.

Ignoring a narcissist is not cruel or punishment, it is self-preservation. Your whole life has been about meeting their needs. Your needs are to heal, and you are making yourself a priority by not giving them supply.

Ignoring a narcissist is choosing peace over chaos and that is a good thing. You can not heal in the middle of the chaos the narcissist brings, so ignoring a narcissist is just choosing a peaceful healing journey.

If you’re noticing signs of narcissistic abuse or you feel stuck in a narcissistic relationship, you’re not alone — and it’s not your fault. What you’re experiencing is real, and healing is possible.

For more support, visit https://www.themarymcconnell.com for free educational resources, recovery tools, and guidance to help you recognize toxic patterns, rebuild your self-trust, and move forward safely.

If you need immediate help, support is available 24/7: National Domestic Violence Hotline https://www.thehotline.org/ (1-800-799-7233), Crisis Text Line (Text HOME to 741741), and 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline).

Have you dealt with a narcissist or recovered from narcissistic abuse? If you feel safe, share your experience in the comments — your story might be the moment someone else realizes they’re not “crazy,” they’re being harmed.

Looking for more guidance on narcissism and recovery? Explore the related articles below on boundaries, gaslighting, love bombing, and healing after narcissistic abuse to keep building your path to emotional freedom.

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Mary McConnell

Mary McConnell

Mary McConnell is a narcissistic abuse survivor turned certified hypnotherapist and coach. After decades in an abusive relationship, she found the courage to leave and discovered her calling: helping other women escape toxic situations and build the fulfilling lives they deserve. Through hr personal experience and professional training, Mary provides the support she wished she'd had during her own journey to freedom
Muck Rack

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