Tag: Gaslighting

  • Is This Abuse? How to Recognize the Signs You Might Be Missing

    When people hear the word “abuse,” many think of bruises or physical violence. But abuse is much broader and more insidious than that. It’s not always easy to recognize, especially in the middle of it. Abuse can be subtle, manipulative, and emotional, often hiding behind charming smiles and carefully crafted facades.

    If you’re wondering whether what you’re experiencing is abuse, you’re not alone. Many survivors spend months or even years questioning their reality before realizing the truth. This post will help you understand abuse, recognize the warning signs, and trust your voice again.

    What Is Abuse?

    Abuse is a pattern of behaviour used by one person to maintain power and control over another. It can take many forms—emotional, psychological, physical, financial, spiritual, and sexual. The core of abuse isn’t just about harmful actions; it’s about domination, coercion, and the erosion of your sense of self.

    Abuse is not limited to physical harm. Someone doesn’t have to hit you for it to be abuse. Something is wrong if you constantly walk on eggshells, question your worth, or feel confused and drained in your relationship.

    Types of Abuse

    1. Emotional: This includes manipulation, gaslighting, blame-shifting, name-calling, silent treatment, shaming, guilt-tripping, and constant criticism. Emotional abuse chips away at your self-esteem and causes deep, lasting wounds.
    2. Psychological: This form of abuse includes mind games, threats, isolation, intimidation, and using fear to control your actions. It causes you to doubt your reality and can lead to anxiety, depression, and trauma responses.
    3. Physical: This involves any bodily harm or threat of harm: hitting, slapping, choking, shoving, restraining, or throwing things. But it can also include blocking doorways, invading personal space aggressively, or destroying your belongings.
    4. Sexual: This includes any unwanted sexual contact or coercion, even within a committed relationship. Consent is key. If you’re being pressured, manipulated, or forced into sexual acts, that’s abuse.
    5. Financial: This includes controlling all the money, limiting your access to funds, sabotaging your employment, or using money as a weapon to manipulate or trap you.
    6. Spiritual: This occurs when someone twists faith, Scripture, or religious beliefs to justify their control or mistreatment. It can involve guilt, fear, shame, and the misuse of spiritual authority.

    Common Signs You May Be in an Abusive Relationship

    • You’re constantly apologizing, even when you’ve done nothing wrong.
    • You feel like you can never do anything right in their eyes.
    • You’re afraid of how they’ll react if you disagree or express your needs.
    • You hide parts of your relationship from others to protect their image, or because you feel embarrassed.
    • They blame you for their anger, moods, or abusive behaviour.
    • You walk on eggshells trying not to upset them.
    • They isolate you from friends, family, or support systems.
    • They control aspects of your life—what you wear, who you talk to, and how you spend money.
    • You feel drained, anxious, depressed, or like you’ve lost yourself.
    • You’ve begun to question your memory or sanity, especially when they deny things you know happened (gaslighting).
    • They minimize your feelings or accuse you of being “too sensitive.”
    • You no longer feel safe—emotionally, physically, or spiritually.

    You Don’t Have to Check Every Box

    One of the biggest misconceptions about abuse is that it only “counts” if every sign or behaviour is present. That’s simply not true.

    It doesn’t have to be every behaviour for it to be abuse. Even one repeated pattern of manipulation, control, or cruelty is enough. Abuse doesn’t require a long list of offences—it only requires a dynamic where one person consistently uses power to diminish the other.

    Some abusers are explosive and aggressive. Others are quiet, covert, and calculating. You might be confused because they aren’t “always” unkind, or because they’ve never laid a hand on you. But love that harms, controls, confuses, or depletes you is unhealthy, no matter how it’s packaged.

    You don’t need to justify your pain by comparing it to someone else’s story. You don’t need to wait until things get worse. If something feels wrong, heavy, or unsafe, trust your gut. That’s not weakness. That’s wisdom.

    You deserve to be in a relationship where love doesn’t hurt, respect isn’t conditional, and you aren’t left questioning your worth.

    Abuse Is About Patterns—Not Just Isolated Incidents

    It’s important to remember that abuse is not about a bad day or a single argument. Every relationship has conflict. But abuse is a pattern—a repeated and escalating cycle of harm, apology, manipulation, and control.

    You might be in a honeymoon phase, where things feel “good again.” That doesn’t erase the harm that’s already been done. Abuse follows a predictable cycle: tension building, explosive event, apology or excuses, and a temporary calm. But unless there is accountability, repentance, and actual change (rare without serious professional intervention), the cycle usually repeats—and worsens over time.

    Abuse Thrives in Silence and Secrecy

    One of the most excellent tools of an abuser is isolation. You may be told not to talk to anyone about your relationship. You may be led to believe that no one will believe you, or that you’re the problem. These are lies meant to keep you silent.

    Please know this: You are not crazy, you are not alone, and you are not to blame.

    What If You’re Still Not Sure?

    If you’re still questioning whether what you’re experiencing is abuse, that in itself is worth paying attention to. Healthy relationships don’t leave you confused, fearful, or questioning your worth. If your relationship feels heavy, toxic, or unsafe, trust your gut. Don’t dismiss your intuition just because they haven’t hit you or because it says all the “right” things.

    You might consider speaking with a trauma-informed therapist or advocate. Many domestic violence shelters offer confidential support, even if you’re not ready to leave. Just talking to someone who understands can help you gain clarity.

    Final Thoughts

    Recognizing abuse is the first step toward healing and freedom. If you see yourself in these words, take a deep breath and remind yourself that it’s okay to ask questions, to want more, and to protect your peace.

    Abuse doesn’t always leave visible scars. But emotional, psychological, and spiritual wounds are just as real and deserving of care and healing.

    You are worthy of love that is safe, kind, respectful, and free of fear. That kind of love does exist—and it starts with the love you show yourself by recognizing the truth and taking steps toward healing.

    If you need help or want to talk to someone confidentially:

    • In Canada: ShelterSafe.ca
    • In the US: The Hotline – 1-800-799-SAFE (7233)
    • Or reach out to a local shelter, counsellor, or trauma-informed support group

    You deserve to be safe. You deserve to be free.

  • When Abuse Becomes Entertainment: How the Media Is Selling Us a Lie About Love

    Some of the most dangerous lies aren’t shouted; they’re whispered through screens, disguised as love stories, and wrapped in fantasy. We watch them unfold in movies, binge on TV shows, and scroll past them in viral TikToks and memes. They’re everywhere. Many tell us that control, dominance, or manipulation are forms of passion.

    Take Fifty Shades of Grey, for example. It was marketed as a provocative, edgy romance—a daring take on seduction and sexual exploration. Millions bought the books. Box office records were shattered. But here’s what was often missed: what was sold as a “love story” was, at its core, a deeply unhealthy and abusive relationship.

    Christian Grey isn’t a dream partner. He’s controlling, possessive, emotionally manipulative, and isolating. He stalks Anastasia, controls her career decisions, dictates who she can see, and uses intimacy as a tool of control. And yet, audiences swooned. His behaviour was excused as the actions of a “damaged man who just needed love.” The message was clear: if you love someone enough, you can fix their trauma, even if it means sacrificing your safety or sense of self.

    This isn’t just bad storytelling. It’s dangerous.

    And it’s not always a man hurting a woman. Women can be abusers, too. Media tends to portray abusive women as “crazy,” “jealous,” or “just emotional,” but these are red flags too, not plot twists. Female abusers may weaponize guilt, control finances, isolate partners from family, stalk, or use children as pawns. Whether the abuse is emotional, physical, sexual, or verbal, and regardless of the gender of the abuser or the victim, it’s still abuse.

    When abuse is repackaged as romance, it distorts our understanding of what love is supposed to look like. It blurs the lines between passion and possession, between desire and domination. And for those who have lived through real abuse, it feels like a punch to the gut.

    Because here’s the truth: Real survivors don’t get luxury penthouses and fairytale endings. They get confusion, isolation, trauma, and years of healing. They get gaslit into thinking it’s their fault. They get disbelieved, silenced, or told to be grateful it wasn’t worse.

    The media doesn’t just glamorize abuse; it often eroticizes it. It teaches young people that being desired means pursuing relentlessly, even when you say no. That jealousy is romantic. Mood swings and emotional outbursts show how deep someone’s love runs. That boundaries are meant to be broken if you’re truly “meant to be.”

    But this isn’t love. It’s an obsession. It’s dysfunction. It’s abuse dressed up as intimacy.

    It’s not just Fifty Shades. Countless other stories glorify toxic relationships: The brooding, emotionally unavailable partner who treats their love interest like a project. The “bad boy” or “crazy girl” who hurts everyone but magically changes for the right person. The romanticization of stalking, ignoring boundaries, or using sex as a bargaining chip.

    Think about how often films show people being “worn down” until they finally say yes. Or how many times emotional abuse is chalked up to childhood trauma that the love interest is supposed to fix. These narratives aren’t just tired—they’re harmful.

    They send the message that love requires suffering. The more you endure, the more valuable your passion becomes. That abuse is a phase, a kink, a challenge—not a crisis.

    And for those of us who have survived actual abuse, it’s triggering. Because we’ve lived the reality behind the fiction. We’ve endured the “love” that left bruises—not just on our bodies but also our minds and spirits. We’ve been told our abusers were just “misunderstood.” We’ve heard, “But they buy you nice things,” or “At least they come home at night,” or “Maybe you’re just too sensitive.”

    So when the world glamorizes what nearly destroyed us, it’s not entertainment. It’s erasure.

    We must start calling it what it is. Abuse is not sexy. It is not romantic. It should not be brushed aside for chemistry or plot development. Abuse is traumatic. It’s life-altering. And no amount of cinematic flair can change that.

    We need better stories. We need love stories rooted in respect, empathy, communication, and mutual care. We need media that shows healthy relationships—where power is shared, not hoarded; consent is sacred, not negotiated; and people are partners, not projects.

    And we need to equip ourselves—and the next generation—to spot the difference. To recognize when the screen is lying to us. To stop confusing red flags with butterflies.

    Because real love doesn’t control, it doesn’t intimidate. It doesn’t cross your boundaries and then blame it on trauma. It doesn’t make you feel smaller so someone else can feel powerful.

    Real love honours, protects, and sets you free.

    Let’s stop letting Hollywood define romance. Let’s tell the truth—even when the truth isn’t shiny or marketable or trending, because survivors deserve more than to see their pain turned into profit. And love deserves more than to be reduced to abuse with good lighting and a soundtrack.

  • Abuse Is Not a Mistake — It’s a Choice

    It’s not an accident when someone hurts you repeatedly, intentionally, and without remorse. It’s not a slip-up, a moment of weakness, or a one-time lapse in judgment. Abuse is not a mistake. Abuse is a choice.

    We need to say this louder and clearer than ever before because too many victims have been conditioned to second-guess their reality, minimize what’s happening behind closed doors, and carry the weight of someone else’s destructive behaviour, all while wondering, “Was it that bad?” or “Maybe they didn’t mean it.”

    But here’s the truth: abuse is deliberate. It’s calculated. It’s repeated. And it thrives in environments where it can go unchecked, hidden behind smiles, charm, and public displays of affection.

    The Test: Can They Control It?

    One of the most revealing indicators that abuse is not a mistake is this: abusers often have remarkable self-control, just not with you.

    Think about it.

    Can they hold themselves together at work? Can they treat their friends with kindness and respect? Can they stay calm and collected in front of strangers, their boss, their pastor, or even the police?

    If the answer is yes, then they can choose how they behave. They have control over their actions. The anger, gaslighting, insults, intimidation, and shouting? Those are not reflexes—they’re choices.

    It’s not that they can’t do better. It’s that they won’t.

    They’ve decided you don’t deserve the respect they show others. They’ve made you the target, the emotional punching bag, the one who absorbs all the pain they refuse to deal with. And that decision to lower the mask behind closed doors isn’t accidental; it’s intentional.

    Mistakes Look Different

    Mistakes include forgetting to text back, burning dinner, or saying something careless and then feeling remorseful. However, mistakes come with ownership, apologies, and a genuine effort to make things right.

    Abuse, on the other hand, is marked by patterns or cycles of control, harm, and manipulation. And while it may be followed by apologies or love-bombing, those moments are not repentant; they’re part of the cycle. A means to regain control. A way to keep the victim tethered in confusion and hope.

    The Mask in Public

    One of the most disorienting parts of abuse is how invisible it can be to everyone else. Abusers are often charismatic, well-liked, and even praised for how “loving” or “fun” they seem. They know how to play the part. They know when to turn it on.

    You’ve probably heard it before:

    “He’s so nice! “She seems like such a great mom! “I can’t imagine them doing something like that.”

    But that’s the point. They don’t act that way with others because they choose not to. It’s not a lack of emotional regulation. It’s a deliberate decision to harm you and protect their reputation simultaneously.

    That’s not a mistake. That’s manipulation.

    You Are Not Overreacting

    If you’re reading this and it resonates, please know that you are not crazy, or too sensitive.

    What you’re experiencing, or have experienced, is real. And just because others can’t see it doesn’t mean it isn’t happening. That’s often how abusers operate: they isolate you, discredit you, and make sure no one else sees the version of them that you live with every day.

    Abuse Is a Choice—And So Is Healing

    We can’t force abusers to change. We can’t make them take responsibility or stop hurting others. But we can choose healing. We can choose freedom. And we can choose to stop accepting excuses for inexcusable behaviour.

    No one “accidentally” abuses someone repeatedly. They chose it. And you can choose to break free.

    If this spoke to you, or if you’re walking through the confusion and aftermath of abuse, you don’t have to do it alone. Healing is possible. And your story matters.

  • “She’s Just Difficult” — The Misconception About Abused Women

    One of the most damaging lies ever told about women who have survived abuse is that they are too much. Too emotional. Too guarded. Too hard to love. Too sensitive.

    It’s a narrative that doesn’t just misunderstand trauma—it weaponizes it.

    Women who have been abused aren’t difficult. They are cautious. They are layered. They are learning to navigate a world that has, more than once, proven unsafe.

    When someone has experienced betrayal from someone who once said, “I love you,” trust doesn’t come easily. That’s not dysfunction—that’s self-preservation.

    When someone has been blamed, degraded, gaslighted, and manipulated, they may flinch at raised voices, silence in the middle of an argument or changes in tone. That’s not drama; it’s a nervous system trying to protect itself.

    When someone has been repeatedly told they are the problem, they may need more clarity, reassurance, and space to process. That’s not insecurity; it’s unlearning years of emotional warfare.

    Yet society often looks at these survivors and says, “She’s damaged.”“She’s just too broken.” “She’s hard to love.”

    But what if the truth is the opposite?

    What if she’s not hard to love—what if she needs to be loved right? With consistency, gentleness, patience, and truth.

    What if the real issue isn’t that she’s difficult but that most people have no idea how to love someone who’s had to survive what she has?

    It takes strength to open up again after betrayal, courage to choose vulnerability after being shamed for your feelings, and immense faith to love again when love was the very thing that hurt you most.

    The women who have walked through abuse and still show up with open hearts, hopeful spirits, and a willingness to heal—those women are not difficult.

    They are remarkable.

    They are resilient.

    And they deserve to be seen not as burdens but as humans. As survivors. As daughters of God doing the hard work of healing.

    If you’re one of those women, hear this:

    You are not hard to love. You are learning how to trust. You are allowed to have boundaries, emotions, and needs. And you are worthy—not despite your story, but because of it.

    It’s time to bury the lie that trauma makes someone unlovable. The truth? It reveals the depth of a soul that has survived hell and is still choosing to hope.

    That kind of woman isn’t too much. She’s extraordinary.

  • “She’s Crazy” — The Weaponizing of Mental Health to Discredit Survivors

    One of the oldest tricks in the abuser’s playbook is to shift the focus from their behaviour to their victim’s mental state.

    “She has issues.”

    “She needs help.”

    “She overreacts.”

    “She’s unstable.”

    If you’ve ever heard a version of this—especially coming from someone who’s been accused of abuse—pause and pay attention. Because this narrative isn’t just damaging… it’s calculated.

    Why Abusers Use This Tactic

    When an abuser senses that their mask is slipping—that someone might start asking questions or that their victim may begin speaking out—they often try to discredit the victim preemptively. One of the most effective ways to do this? Question their mental health.

    Because if they can convince others that you’re “crazy,” then your version of events doesn’t matter. If they can paint you as unstable, they never have to take responsibility for what they did.

    It’s not just manipulation. It’s character assassination. And it’s cruel.

    The Truth About Trauma

    Trauma does affect mental health. When someone’s been gaslighted, lied to, manipulated, isolated, and abused—they may cry more easily. They may feel anxious. They may struggle with trust. They may seem “off” or “emotional.” And guess what? That’s not evidence of instability. That’s evidence of survival.

    But abusers know how to weaponize the very symptoms they caused. They push you to the edge, then point to your reaction as the problem.

    “See how she acts? This is why I had to leave.”She’s always been difficult.”She needs therapy.”

    There is no mention of the years they chipped away at your sense of self. There is no mention of the lies, the betrayal, or the emotional whiplash. Just the neat, tidy version that makes them look like the rational one and you the wreck.

    The Danger of Believing Only What You See

    The person who appears calm and composed isn’t always innocent. And the person who is emotional, broken, or angry isn’t always unstable—they’re often telling the truth.

    Abusers are often charming in public and cruel in private. They know how to perform. They know how to win people over. And they know that if they can get others to doubt your mental state, they don’t have to answer for what they did.

    So they go on a quiet campaign: subtle comments, sighs of concern, and “just trying to help.” The real victim sits alone, wondering why no one believes them.

    What You Can Do

    If someone comes to you saying they were abused, don’t dismiss them because the other person seems “so nice” or “put together.” Don’t be quick to assume that emotional expression means instability. Listen. Ask questions. Be discerning.

    And if you are the one who’s been labelled “crazy,”—you’re not alone.

    You’re not crazy for crying. You’re not crazy for being angry. You’re not crazy for finally speaking up.

    You’re human. You’ve been hurt. And you’re still standing, which proves your strength, not your weakness.

    God Sees What People Can’t

    People may be fooled by performance, but God is not. He sees what is done in secret, hears what is whispered in the dark, and is near the brokenhearted—not the ones who pretend to be whole while breaking others.

    If you’ve been discredited, misjudged, or dismissed, know this: Your truth still matters. Your voice still matters. And healing is still possible—even after the world turned its back.

    You don’t need to convince everyone. You don’t need to defend your sanity. You don’t need to carry their lies.

    Let God be your defender. He sees, knows, and will bring justice in His perfect time.

  • “They Would Never Do That” — What That Really Means

    “They would never do that.”

    It’s a phrase we hear often—spoken with confidence, certainty, and sometimes even indignation. It’s usually uttered by someone defending someone they know or believe they can vouch for. But here’s the truth that often goes unspoken:

    “They would never do that” usually means, “They’ve never done it to me.”

    And that’s a huge difference.

    We all interpret people through the lens of our own experiences with them. If someone has only ever been kind to you, it’s natural to assume they are kind. If they’ve never lied to you, you believe they are honest. If they’ve never harmed you, you might conclude they are safe. But what if they only treat you that way because there’s nothing for them to gain by mistreating you?

    What if their cruelty is reserved for those closest to them—the ones they feel they can control, manipulate, or silence?

    People are not always consistent across relationships. Abusers don’t abuse everyone. Manipulators aren’t always obvious. Some of the most harmful people are also the most charming, polite, generous, and helpful—when it serves them.

    So when someone says, “They would never do that,” they’re not stating the truth. They’re making a statement about their personal experience. And while personal experience matters, it is not the whole picture.

    It’s easy to dismiss a victim’s account when it doesn’t align with what we’ve seen. But just because you haven’t seen it doesn’t mean it hasn’t happened. Just because they smile at you doesn’t mean they don’t scream at someone else behind closed doors. Just because they seem godly in church doesn’t mean they aren’t a nightmare at home.

    Abusers wear masks. And sometimes, those masks are so convincing that even the most discerning people can be fooled.

    The real danger in saying “they would never do that” is that it shuts down conversation. It invalidates the lived experience of someone who did witness it. Someone who was on the receiving end. It implies that your experience with the person outweighs theirs—as if proximity to goodness cancels out proximity to pain.

    But both realities can coexist. A person can be kind to some and cruel to others. They can be generous with friends and controlling with family. They can charm a crowd and terrorize their partner.

    If someone is brave enough to speak up and say, “They did this to me,” the response should not be, “They would never.” The response should be, “Tell me what happened.” It should be one of curiosity, not condemnation—compassion, not dismissal.

    The truth is, many victims stay silent for years because they’ve heard that exact phrase echo in the background: They would never. And in their minds, that means no one would believe them. So they suffer quietly. They shrink. They question themselves. They internalize shame that never belonged to them.

    So let’s change the narrative.

    Instead of insisting on what someone would or wouldn’t do, let’s acknowledge what we don’t know. Let’s recognize that people show different sides to different people. Let’s create a world where someone can share their story without fear of being met with disbelief.

    Because when we say, “They would never,” we’re really saying, “I choose not to believe you.”

    And that choice has consequences.

    You don’t have to have seen it for it to be true. You don’t have to understand it for it to matter. You have to listen—with humility, empathy, and the awareness that sometimes, what we think we know is only part of the story.

    Let’s stop silencing survivors with our certainty. Let’s start believing that just because they never did it to you doesn’t mean they didn’t do it to someone.