
The Summer Trap
Let’s be honest.
If you’re co-parenting with a narcissist, summer isn’t relaxing; it’s triggering.
The school routine disappears, parenting time stretches get longer, and the structure you’ve clung to for emotional survival? Gone.
And suddenly, you’re back in the same exhausting cycle:
Last-minute changes
Ignored messages
Power plays masked as “requests”
And the mind games that leave you questioning your own reality
Sound familiar?
You’re not crazy. This is how narcissistic co-parenting works.
It’s not about the child. It’s about control.

Narcissists Love the Gray Areas—and Summer Is Full of Them
The narcissist you’re co-parenting with knows this season offers the perfect storm for chaos.
More time = more chances to manipulate.
Less routine = more opportunity to gaslight.
More parenting time = more space to erode your bond with your child behind the scenes.
They may...
Refuse to confirm schedules
Withhold information about trips or activities
Drop your child off late just to mess with your time
Undermine your rules, routines, or boundaries in subtle (or not-so-subtle) ways
And it’s not random. It’s calculated. Narcissists thrive on unpredictability.
Because unpredictability keeps you unstable—off balance, emotional, reactive.

So How Do You Fight Back?
You don’t match their chaos. You build your own structure.
Here’s how you outsmart the trap:
1. Lock Down Your Plan
Don’t go into summer “hoping for the best.” Go in with a written, documented plan.
Confirm all vacation times in writing. Screenshot everything. Save every message.
If they won’t clarify? You document the attempt to clarify. That matters.
2. Keep the Receipts
Narcissists rewrite history. Your job? Keep it written.
Use a shared parenting app. Create a communication log. Journal every schedule change, every ignored message, every pattern.
You’re not being dramatic. You’re building evidence.
3. Stop Explaining Yourself
You will never convince them to “see your side.”
You will never get validation.
Stop overexplaining and start responding with neutral, brief, fact-based replies.
You’re not trying to win them over. You’re protecting your mental health.

4. Protect Your Child’s Nervous System
You can’t control what happens at the other house. But you can create a safe, stable environment in yours.
Stick to routines
Offer emotional safety
Reassure them they’re loved—without digging for details
Let your home be a soft place to land, not another battleground
That consistency speaks louder than anything your co-parent says.
5. Don’t Do This Alone
If you're parenting through narcissistic abuse, you need more than strength—you need strategy.
Coaching. Community. A system. A lifeline.

Because white-knuckling it isn’t a plan.
You need people who understand the manipulation, the gaslighting, and the legal gray zones. You need to be seen, supported, and prepared.
You’re Not Weak for Struggling—You’re Brave for Staying in the Fight
This summer doesn’t have to derail you.
Yes, it’ll be hard.
Yes, there will be moments where you want to scream into a pillow or throw your phone across the room.
But you can make it through without sacrificing your peace or your sanity.
You just need the right tools, the right boundaries, and the right people in your corner.
Need support right now?
Join Her Next Chapter Support Meeting
Book a 1:1 session and map your summer strategy
I’m here. I get it.
You can’t co-parent with a narcissist.
But you can outsmart them.
And you can take your summer back.