The end goal of a gaslighter is to gain and maintain power and control over their victim. This is achieved by systematically manipulating the victim into questioning their own memory, perception, and sanity.
In the final scene, Brian and Paula agree to see each other again, and Mrs Tlwaites (who finally gets her chance to see inside the Alquist house) can be heard saying, "Well!"
To shut down gaslighting, focus on validating your own reality, setting firm boundaries, trusting your feelings, and documenting incidents; you can stop the manipulation by disengaging from "right/wrong" debates, shifting focus to your feelings, and recognizing it's about their control, not your truth, while seeking support to regain your sense of self.
What causes a person to gaslight? 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.
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.
If someone uses any of these nine phrases, they may be gaslighting you:
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".
Here are five shifts to alter the dynamic between you and your gaslighter:
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.
Surround yourself with supportive people, engage in activities that make you feel good, and continue to prioritize your mental health. With time and effort, you can overcome the effects of gaslighting and lead a fulfilling, empowered life.
Gaslighting is the use of a patterned, repetitive set of manipulation tactics that makes someone question reality. It's often used by people with narcissistic personality disorder, abusive individuals, cult leaders, criminals, and dictators.
Meditate. Meditation, the mother of all mindfulness practice, helps protect your mental health at all stages of, and especially after, a gaslighting relationship. Because meditation begins and ends in the body, regular practice strengthens your attention muscle to defend you against gaslighting's distraction.
How can he trust her to free him when she's so unreliable? Paula ultimately gets a happy ending. Her abuser is gone, but the practice of gaslighting it seems is here to stay.
Gaslighting occurs in intimate relationships when a partner repeatedly undermines and distorts their partner's reality by denying facts, the situation around them, or their partner's feelings and needs. It can cause a survivor to question themselves and become unable to trust their own perceptions and judgements.
Gas was used to light streetlamps until the 1950s when it was replaced in most areas by electricity. Before the 1800s, most homes, workplaces and streets were lit by candles, oil lamps or rushlights (rush plants dried and dipped in grease or fat).
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.
What are the ten different types of abuse?
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.
While a person may occasionally mislead or lie to others, a true gaslighter often lies or misleads. They almost always have a personality disorder such as Narcissistic Personality Disorder (commonly known as a narcissist) or Anti-social Personality Disorder (commonly known as a psychopath or sociopath).
Taking a strong stand
Be straight yourself. Let your 'yes' be 'yes' and your 'no' be 'no'. At first the manipulator might push back even harder, but at heart these people are cowards. Stay firm, stay calm, and never take the bait if they try to wind you up.
It may include verbal abuse, gaslighting, coercive or controlling behaviour, threats, humiliation, isolation, surveillance or economic/financial control. At its core, emotional abuse is about power and control in a relationship.
Four Ds of Narcissism: Deny, Dismiss, Devalue & Divorce. As we discussed in an earlier blog post, there's nothing easy about being married to a narcissist.
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.
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.