Gaslighting is to manipulate (someone) by psychological means into questioning their own sanity.
I frequently hear about gaslighting happening in love-addicted relationships. They can also happen in friendships or work relationships. Most people don’t even know or realize it’s happening, especially if they are the one who is being gaslighted.
Gaslighting is a form of abuse used by love avoidants instilling the love addict’s extreme sense of anxiety. And confusion to the point they no longer trust their own memory, perception, or judgment.
The techniques love avoidants use in gaslighting are similar to those used in brainwashing, interrogation, and torture. These are the same techniques used in psychological warfare by intelligence operatives. In addition to law-enforcement, and other people in a position of power.
The intention is to, in a systematic way, target the victims’ mental equilibrium. In addition to self-confidence, and self-esteem to an extreme that they are no longer able to function.
In an independent way, gaslighting involves the love avoidant frequently and systematically withholding factual information from the love addict, and replacing it with false information. Because of its subtlety, this behavior is a deeply insidious set of manipulations that is difficult for anyone to work out, and with time it can ultimately determine the mental stability of the love addict.
That is why it is such a dangerous form of a boundary violation.
The emotional damage of gaslighting is huge on a love addict. When they are exposed to it for long enough, they begin to lose their sense of self. This reinforces their childhood belief they are not able to trust their own reality. The love addict can become depressed, anxious, and withdrawn. This reinforces their total dependency on the love avoidant for their sense of reality.
I will give an example of gaslighting in a friendship. Friends Mary and Jane plan a lunch together.
Mary decides on the time and location and tells Jane to meet her for lunch at noon.
Jane arrives and does not see Mary. After 20 minutes of waiting, Jane gets a text from Mary informing her that she is running 20 minutes late.
The next text says “please order for me and get me my food to go because I have a yoga class to at 12:30 pm.”
Jane feels really confused as they were supposed to have lunch together. She starts questioning whether not she had the correct plan with Mary. She asked Mary why she would plan a lunch if she had a yoga class scheduled during their planned lunch.
Jane responds by saying that she had previously told Mary a few days ago that she had a yoga class at 12:30 and she only had a short time to meet for lunch.
The truth was that Jane had forgotten that she had a class and realized that she really wanted to make the class. Instead of being honest with Mary she makes up a story that she had told her about the class a few days ago. Mary starts questioning her own reality, but feels angry at the same time because she made the time to go and meet with Jane.
She confronts Jane and Jane does not take any responsibility for her actions and blames Mary for not remembering. So even after being confronted, Jane continues to manipulate the situation so that she doesn’t have to take responsibility.
Another example would be of Diane and Steve. Diane finds out that Steve had been out drinking with his friends the night before. She happens to run into one of his friends the following day and randomly gets this information.
She confronts Steve because he did not tell her that he was out at the bars. Steve had told her about his day but had left out the part about drinking at a bar at the end of the day.
Diane confronts Steve and Steve tells her that she’s being insecure and that she doesn’t need to know every detail of his day. In reality, Steve had purposely omitted information because he knew it would upset Diane. When Diane found out, she confronted Steve and Steve made it sound like she was the one that who was insecure and needy.
This is a common form of gaslighting in a love addicted and love avoidance cycle.
Another example of gaslighting could be making an agreement with somebody, then not following through, and then getting mad at the person reminding you of the original agreement. Here’s an example.
Two parents come up with a parenting plan. One of the major rules is that the kids have to finish their homework before they watch TV. The very next day one of the parents comes home and the other parent has the TV on for the kids and they haven’t completed their homework.
The parent confronts his or her spouse. The spouse gets angry even though he/she had made an agreement, and accuses the responsible parent for being a nag or being too rigid. Furthermore, he/she accuses the spouse of being too controlling with the house even know they had made the agreement in the first place.
If you make an agreement with somebody and you don’t follow through, it is your responsibility. If you get angry at the other person after you broke a commitment with them, this is a form of gaslighting.
The sad part about this is over time the person who is being gaslighted will feel confused and start believing that they may be the one to blame. As time goes on their self-worth gets worse and worse and then they get more dependent on the person who may be gaslighting them in the first place.
In a final example there’s Luke and Jasmine. Luke has a habit of lying to Jasmine.
She catches him having an affair. He admits to everything and tells her that he did it because she hadn’t been paying much attention to him for the last couple of months. In essence, he blames her for his adulterous behavior.
Because her father cheated on her mother and her mother took the blame, it is her core belief that women are responsible for men cheating and lying.
The more time that goes on with the gaslighting the tighter the betrayal bond gets and the harder it is for her to leave. I will speak more of betrayal bonds in my next article.
The good news is that there is a treatment for those who practice gaslighting as well as those who are gaslighted. The key to getting started with any treatment is first having the awareness that the behavior exists.
The love avoidant would need an extremely strong therapist with good boundaries that will confront these behaviors over time. Unfortunately, many therapists are more client-centered and will sign off on these behaviors in order to make their client feel like they are correct, and blame the love addict.
I have seen this as a common pattern in therapy today. Many therapists working with couples would also be working with the love addict in the relationship, focusing on his or her family of origin issues and educating about boundary violations and how to stop the cycle of disrespect.
Often, psychotherapy is centered around one person being a narcissist which can give both the partners a sense that there is no hope. This simply is not true.
Remember, gaslighting is a severe and extremely common form of manipulation and can be very dangerous over time. However, with the right therapy and motivation, it can be identified, confronted, and controlled in a respectful and mature way.
If you’re suffering, there is hope. Your first step is to take our quiz. I’m going to ask you some personal questions to help you take the first step toward your future. You can count on my discretion. Trust that I will keep these answers completely confidential, and I will only use them to formulate your quiz results.
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