We Believe You
Hypothesis: How Permanency Systems Sort for Narcissistic Dynamics
Permanency frameworks are not designed to create stability for children. They are designed to create stability for the system, using the language of child wellbeing as the justification.
When a system’s primary goal is to:
- close cases on schedule,
- demonstrate parental “progress,”
- avoid delays,
- maintain compliance with federal timelines,
- reduce caseload pressure,
- and preserve institutional image,
it will inevitably pressure the most regulated person in the case to absorb the instability of the least regulated person.
This creates a selection pressure where:
- dysregulation is accommodated,
- volatility is reframed as “trying,”
- avoidance is reframed as “processing,”
- lateness is reframed as “stress,”
- lack of skill is reframed as “learning,”
- and refusal is reframed as “fear.”
Meanwhile, the regulated caregiver is asked to:
- be patient,
- be flexible,
- understand the parent’s feelings,
- avoid escalation,
- maintain communication,
- support transitions,
- and “not take things personally.”
This is not child‑centered practice.
It is system‑preserving practice.
How This Plays Out on the Ground
When the regulated caregiver or other professionals provide clear, documented information about:
- repeated lateness,
- inability to administer medication,
- refusal to use communication tools,
- pattern‑based concerns,
- emotional outsourcing,
- and predictable escalation arcs,
the system responds with classic narcissistic‑system moves:
1. Performance of Parental Effort
Professionals emphasize:
- “how hard she’s trying,”
- “how much progress she’s made,”
- “how impressed they’ve been.”
This protects the system’s narrative of improvement.
2. Recontextualization of Dysregulation
So professionals reframe:
- the parent’s inability to regulate,
- the parent’s fixation on the child as a stabilizer,
as “normal separation anxiety.”
This protects the system from acknowledging risk, and places the burden of the contradiction on the regulated caregiver.
3. Minimization of Concrete Data
Professionals may claim they are “never worried about parental lateness,”
despite:
- multiple late arrivals to family time,
- lateness to the doctor’s appointment,
- and documented patterns of inconsistency.
This protects the system from having to intervene.
4. Externalization of Responsibility
Professionals framed failures as:
- institutional issues,
- scheduling issues,
- communication issues,
- misunderstandings.
This protects the parent’s image and the system’s timeline.
5. Avoidance of Skill‑Based Accountability
When milestones are missed instead of cataloging those accurately, the system reframes this as:
- “still learning,”
- “needing more support,”
- “working on it.”
This protects the reunification plan.
Structural Conclusion
When a system must preserve its own stability, it will always protect the narrative of parental progress, even when the evidence contradicts it.
This is why:
- dysregulation is minimized,
- lateness is dismissed,
- lack of skill is excused,
- emotional volatility is reframed,
- and the regulated caregiver is pressured to compensate.
This is not a psychological phenomenon.
It is a structural inevitability of Permanency frameworks that prioritize system stability over child stability.
The system becomes an extension of the dysregulated parent’s emotional architecture because the system’s incentives align with preserving the parent’s image, not confronting the parent’s patterns.
This is how a system becomes narcissistic in function, even when no individual inside it is acting with narcissistic intent.



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