Gaslighting - everything you need to know

What is gaslighting?

Gaslighting is a form of psychological or emotional abuse that involves manipulating another person into doubting or disbelieving their own experiences, feelings, perceptions of reality, or even their sanity. It often involves outright lying and denying the individual’s visible known facts and experiences.

Most commonly, it is frequently disagreeing with someone, or refusing to listen to their point of view. Many of us might be guilty of some mild form of gaslighting from time to time – refusing to hear what our partner has to say, even if they’re totally right! It’s mostly harmless, a form of pettiness – an unwillingness to be proven wrong. However, in more extreme cases, it can be a real form of abuse. When it’s done repeatedly, over a long period of time, it can have the effect of making someone doubt their own ideas about things – or even question their sanity.

What are the signs?

  1. They shift blame away from themselves and put it onto you

  2. They put you down one minute and praise you the next

  3. Their words don’t match their actions

  4. Compulsively worrying you are interpreting things wrong, or being too sensitive

  5. Thinking everything is your fault

  6. Feeling confused or uncertain about your memory

  7. Finding it increasingly more difficult to make decisions

  8. Saying things to you like “you’re crazy”, “you’re way too sensitive/dramatic”, “You always make a big deal out of nothing”, “you’re remembering wrong/twisting the situation”, “I didn’t say that you heard me wrong”, “why can’t you just let that go?”, “I would never do that to you. Do you really think that little of me?”

What are the effects?

  1. Can impact you in both the short and long term

  2. Become increasingly self-critical

  3. Question yourself and your identity

  4. Difficulty making or sticking to decisions

  5. Anxiety over decision-making and in general

  6. Second guessing your reality or experiences

  7. Lack of self-trust and intuition

  8. Decreased self-confidence and increased self-doubt

  9. Constantly apologising and people-pleasing

  10. Feeling like everything you do is wrong and everything is your fault

  11. Eventually come to believe the person attacking you must be right

Why does gaslighting happen?

Sometimes, the person doesn’t even know they’re doing it. Often, it’s much to do with their own insecurities about being wrong, or having less power in a relationship – which can be due to childhood, or previous relationship experiences. In other cases, it may be done deliberately to make you feel less confident, and less likely to challenge them.

What can I do?

  1. Best thing to do is to remove yourself from the situation and distance yourself from the people or person gaslighting you

  2. Take a step back from the situation and assess it: do you think that this is what’s happening? It might be useful to talk to family and friends – people who you trust who can give you an objective opinion on things. It can be a good idea to talk to more than one person: that way you can get a few different perspectives

  3. The best ways to respond is for example “If you continue invalidating me, I will not continue the conversation”, “I hear you, but that isn’t how I experienced that”, “I am not going to argue with you about what I know I experienced”

  4. Speak to The National Domestic Violence Helpline. Their support workers can help you to understand what you’re going through & talk you through potential ways to address it.

For more information and help on gaslighting, please watch our YouTube video, which breaks down the effects and signs of gaslighting even further.

Nik & Eva Speakman

We have studied and worked together since 1992. Between us we have studied human behaviour and psychology for seven decades. We both share an uncontainable passion to offer hope and to help people lead happier and less inhibited lives.

After many remarkable breakthroughs we created our own behavioural change therapy, ‘Schema Conditioning.’® Subsequent work with trauma victims and their related symptoms, led to the creation of two further trauma-based therapies.

‘Schema Conditioning Psychotherapy.’®

‘Visual Schema Displacement Therapy (VSDT)’®

‘Visual Schema Detachment & Restructuring (VSDR)’®

Qualifications from the creation of our therapies, resulted in training psychology professors, doctors and masters students at Universities in Amsterdam and Utrecht. In 2015, this training produced the two sets of scientific studies conducted into the workings of our therapy; the first two study papers highlighting the remarkable efficacy, was published in the Journal of Behaviour Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry in June 2019. A further third study was then published in the European Journal of Psychotraumatology in April 2021, with a fourth clinical study with hospital patients is currently underway and will be completed by the end of 2022.

In addition to members of the public, we work with, and have treated many high-profile clients and ‘A’ list clients around the world, having had prodigious successes. We are resident therapists on ITV’s multi award-winning ‘This Morning’ and have been for over a decade, we have also had own television shows, one of which, ‘The Speakmans’, also aired on ITV and several countries worldwide. Over the last two decades we have appeared on numerous other television shows as experts, such as the multi award-winning Saturday Night Takeaway.

Our mission is to illuminate that there is ALWAYS HOPE and that overcoming trauma and improving quality of life is entirely possible. Many people have either never been given hope, or worse had hope taken away from them, our aim is to correct that by sharing our message in any way we possibly can, including live workshops, theatre tours, books, podcasts, radio, television, social media and YouTube.

At the heart of all we do, is our relentless mission to offer HOPE to as many people as we possibly can.

https://nikandeva.com
Previous
Previous

Lesser-known symptoms of anxiety

Next
Next

Binge eating disorder - the basics