The Narcissist and the Money They Owe You
August 21, 2025
Zero Accountability: Mark’s Reel vs. Reality
August 23, 2025Mark Anthony Stephens is back at it again, flooding timelines with another round of daily posts. And while he calls this “Season Three,” the truth is there’s nothing new here. It’s the same recycled episodes: alienation, victimhood, hidden messages, and the hero-dad performance. Let’s take a look at today’s set:
The “Season Three is coming” announcement: The biggest tell of all. Instead of actual progress, he packages his dysfunction as entertainment. Season Three, like Season Two and Season One, is the same storyline: repeat the grievances, blame everyone else, cry victim, and hit post.
The “foundation” posts: Mark leans heavy on Bible verses, preaching about Yeshua, faith, and repentance. Yet the man quoting Scripture refuses to take the first, simplest step toward healing—communicating through Our Family Wizard as ordered by the court.
The “cheated on / betrayed” cycle: Once again, he frames himself as the man wronged, the one everyone has lied to, cheated, or abandoned. He’s been telling this story for years, but it never explains why he has yet to do the work required to see his children.
The “hidden” posts: Dozens locked down to private, keeping his loudest rage and manipulation away from public view. He loves the appearance of openness while hiding the darker stuff behind closed walls. That’s not transparency—that’s image control.
The “victim dad” reels: Videos about fathers being silenced, kids needing only their dad, and the system being against men. He plays them like they’re proof of his own life, yet he hasn’t asked once how Liam is doing or engaged meaningfully in his children’s care.
The “repentance vs. therapy” posts: Mark mocks therapy as useless, claiming only repentance and faith matter. Meanwhile, his son is in treatment for one of the most severe cases of eating disorder his doctors have ever seen—and Mark won’t even acknowledge it, let alone support it.
The “alienation” declarations: He insists he’s been alienated, erased, and silenced. But alienation isn’t refusing to use court-approved tools. Alienation isn’t failing to follow through on clear steps given by the judge. That’s neglect.
The casual selfie / pickleball filler: Every day has to end with the illusion of “normal life”—Mark smiling, Mark on the court, Mark in the sun. He’ll find time for selfies, games, and travel, but not for his court-ordered evaluations or even a check-in to ask about his son’s health.









Reality Checks
- He hasn’t asked once how Liam is doing, despite knowing his son is struggling with serious medical and mental health issues.
- He has not taken a single step toward completing the clear, court-ordered path—evaluations, treatment plans, care follow-through—that could restore contact with his children.
- He refuses to use Our Family Wizard, the one tool designed to help him co-parent responsibly. Instead, he spends his energy on daily posts to strangers.
The truth is simple: Mark isn’t living in Season Three. He’s stuck in Season One—an endless loop of victimhood, blame-shifting, and performance. The only new content is the growing evidence that he will spend every ounce of energy curating an image rather than doing the work of being a father.
At some point, even the most loyal viewers tune out. Nobody binges reruns forever.



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