You know someone is intentionally gaslighting you when they consistently deny reality, twist situations to blame you, call you "crazy" or "too sensitive," minimize your feelings, tell obvious lies, and try to isolate you, making you constantly doubt your own memory, perception, and sanity, even with proof. The intent is clear when these behaviors are repetitive, designed to control you, and leave you feeling confused, anxious, and insecure about yourself, notes the National Domestic Violence Hotline and Respect Victoria.
Signs of gaslighting include the manipulator denying events, twisting facts, making you doubt your memory and sanity, calling you "crazy" or "too sensitive," trivializing your feelings, isolating you from support systems, and making you constantly apologize. The victim often feels confused, anxious, guilty, and dependent on the abuser for validation, losing confidence in themselves.
If someone uses any of these nine phrases, they may be gaslighting you:
The 7 key signs of emotional abuse often involve Isolation, Verbal Abuse (insults/yelling), Blame-Shifting/Guilt, Manipulation/Control, Gaslighting (making you doubt reality), Humiliation/Degradation, and Threats/Intimidation. These behaviors aim to control you, erode your self-worth, and make you dependent, creating a pattern of fear, anxiety, and low self-esteem, even without physical harm.
While gaslighting is a common term used to describe harmful manipulation, it shouldn't be confused with conflict. Although gaslighting is an insidious tactic and form of manipulation, too often, people consider aggressive behaviors, like addressing conflict directly, as gaslighting.
Gaslighters argue by denying reality, twisting facts, minimizing your feelings, and blaming you to make you doubt your sanity, memory, and perception, often using phrases like "You're crazy," "That never happened," or "You're overreacting" to shift blame and maintain control, creating a confusing cycle of self-doubt for the victim. They avoid accountability by projecting their flaws onto you or claiming they were "just joking".
Personality types that get gaslighted
If you are kind and empathetic, the natural thing to do is to always consider the other person's perspective, which can leave you particularly vulnerable to manipulation. Once that empathy is weaponized against you, you have no kindness left for yourself.
Narcissistic abuse typically involves a pattern of showering you with excessive affection and then attempting to tear down your self-esteem. Constant criticism and belittling. To devalue you, the abuser might unfairly nitpick your every action, insult you, or minimize your accomplishments. Shifting blame.
Signs of emotional and psychological abuse
Emotional abuse refers to a situation when a person willfully causes or permits a child to suffer, inflicts unjustifiable physical pain or mental suffering on a child, or willfully causes or permits the child to be placed in a situation in which their health is endangered while under their custody.
Here are five shifts to alter the dynamic between you and your gaslighter:
The abuser discreetly victimises someone in a disguised or passive manner, chipping away at one's confidence, self-esteem and sense of self. Simply put, gaslighting is when the perpetrator constantly and dishonestly disputes someone's recall of their experiences.
A gaslighting apology is manipulative and avoids real accountability, often starting with "I'm sorry you feel that way," adding "but," blaming the victim ("you're too sensitive"), or using conditional phrases like, "I'm sorry, if I offended you" to shift blame and make the other person question their own reality, instead of acknowledging the wrong done. A healthy apology takes ownership (e.g., "I'm sorry I did X and it made you feel Y"), validates the other's feelings, and outlines steps to change.
Victim blaming can have debilitating psychological effects on a person struggling to recover from abuse. It worsens anxiety symptoms, increases feelings of shame, and leaves a person disconnected from themselves and others. Being on the receiving end of blame is exasperating, exhausting, and painful.
If you experience these red flags in your relationship, instead of trying to stop gaslighting through mindfulness, you should seek help and create a safety plan. Seek help: Find a trained professional or consult One Love's list of resources to help you unpack the situation and identify potential gaslighting abuse.
Narcissists are skilled at twisting the truth to serve their own purposes. They take bits of reality, shuffle them around, and emphasize certain parts to manipulate the situation. And by bending the truth just enough, they can even make you start doubting your own memories and feelings.
The 7 key signs of emotional abuse often involve Isolation, Verbal Abuse (insults/yelling), Blame-Shifting/Guilt, Manipulation/Control, Gaslighting (making you doubt reality), Humiliation/Degradation, and Threats/Intimidation. These behaviors aim to control you, erode your self-worth, and make you dependent, creating a pattern of fear, anxiety, and low self-esteem, even without physical harm.
Signs of an Emotionally Abusive Relationship
Know the 5 signs of Emotional Suffering
'Highly narcissistic' people love to say these 7 phrases—here's how to respond: Harvard-trained psychologist
Narcissistic traits often peak in late adolescence and early adulthood (around ages 14-23), particularly with grandiosity and entitlement, as individuals seek identity and status, but then tend to decline as people mature and face life's realities, though some individuals with NPD may see intensification in these years before a potential mellowing in middle age.
Narcissistic breakdown symptoms can include rage, impulsive behaviors, or other ways of showcasing intense mental suffering. A narcissist will lash out at you in any way they can or hurt themselves to cope with the shame.
People who gaslight others may have developed their abusive and controlling behaviors as a response to childhood trauma, or as the result of narcissistic personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, or another psychological condition.
Borderline Personality Disorders (BPD)
Borderline Personality Disorder is characterized by intense emotions, fear of abandonment and unstable relationships. People with BPD often experience intense anger, known as “borderline rage,” which can be disproportionate to the situation.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD): People with NPD may exert control to maintain their sense of superiority and avoid vulnerability. Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD): Some individuals with BPD use controlling behaviours as a way to manage fear of abandonment.