By Ox Drover
I recently read The Gaslight Effect—How to spot and survive the hidden manipulations other people use to control your life, by Dr. Robin Stern. I highly recommend this book to Lovefraud readers.
Robin Stern, Ph.D., is a therapist specializing in emotional abuse and psychological manipulation. She teaches at Hunter College, Teachers College and Columbia University, and is a leadership coach for faculty.
This well-written book is quite reader friendly. Dr. Stern starts off by defining the term “gaslighting” as being “pressured by someone else to believe the unbelievable.” She goes on to show that gaslighting is “an insidious form of emotional abuse and manipulation that can be difficult to recognize and difficult to break free from.”
In the first chapter, Dr. Stern says:
I constantly encounter women who are smart, strong, successful. Yet, I keep hearing the same story: Somehow, many of these confident, high-achieving women were being caught in demoralizing, destructive and bewildering relationships. Although the woman’s friends and colleagues might have seen her as empowered and capable, she had come to view herself as incompetent—a person who could trust neither her own abilities nor her own perception of the world.
”¦ In every case, a seemingly powerful woman was involved in a relationship with a lover, spouse, friend, colleague, boss or family member who caused her to question her own sense of reality and left her feeling anxious, confused and deeply depressed ”¦ (and) whose approval she kept trying to win, even as his treatment of her went from bad to worse. Finally I was able to give this painful condition a name: The Gaslight Effect, after the old movie Gaslight.
In the 1944 classic film, Ingrid Bergman marries a charismatic and mysterious man played by Charles Boyer. It is the story of a young and vulnerable singer who marries an older man who, unbeknownst to her, tries to drive her insane in order to get her inheritance. He continually tells her that she is ill and fragile. He rearranges household items and accuses her of doing so, and manipulates the level of lights, which dim for no apparent reason. Eventually the heroine starts to believe she is going insane and begins to act “crazy.” She is desperate for her husband’s approval. She is only able to finally realize she is not insane when a policeman sees the lights dim and validates her reality.
Though Dr. Stern makes clear that not all gaslighters are deliberately trying to drive their partners insane, nevertheless, they invalidate the views and realities of their partners. In trying to please them, the partners let go of themselves and their view of reality.
Dr. Stern never uses the words “psychopath” or “sociopath,” but instead refers to emotional abusers as “gaslighters” and the abused as “gaslightees.” She does make it clear that there are patterns here that most of Lovefraud readers would equate with sociopaths and psychopaths.
Dr. Stern divides types of gaslighters into three categories of emotional abusers and three stages of gaslighting. She points out the internal signals, feelings that would tell a person being gaslighted that they are indeed experiencing some form of emotional abuse and invalidation of their reality by someone they want to please.
I am one of those people who, when reading a book, am apt to highlight passages in the book for later reference. With this book, I gave up highlighting because I tended to highlight entire chapters instead of a few phrases. In my opinion this book is a must have for every Lovefraud reader. It validates the very subtle feelings we get when we know something is wrong and can’t quite put our fingers on what is wrong with a relationship.
Not only does Dr. Stern point out how to recognize these feelings as warning signs, but she coaches readers in how to handle these in a way that is healthy and easily understood. She gives the tools to her readers to recognize even subtle signs of emotional abuse, and to confront this in such a way that if the victim is not dealing with a psychopath/sociopath, the relationship can be improved markedly. She also points out that there are some gaslighters that are so invested in being right that there is no hope for the relationship, and the only hope for the victim to be happy is to let go of that toxic relationship.
The Gaslight Effect is available on Amazon.com.
Dear Hurtnomore,
We have been programmed to be nice by putting our self-esteem aside. It’s okay to say NO! Oxy is right about being assertive, it may seem like you are being mean, but you are only respecting your boundaries. You’re dads girlfriends may be lackeys and don’t really know how they are being used, but being firm while saying no is NOT being mean.
I get accused of being mean when I stick up for myself, when I see something isn’t right somehow that makes me mean. I say B.S. to that. I have been without a voice for too long and it makes the problems worse, not better. You are probably a loving, kind person, making you an easier target for people with no boundaries. Take back your power, just say no.
Hurt…..
HOW……by rising above, keeping track of YOUR truth and pulling away.
These women are temporary and YOU do not have to be the ‘welcome’ wagon or hospitality committee.
These women are not your mother. Even though they have no idea whats going on…….adults need to make adult decisions. You are NOT their caretakers!!!!!
You can show ‘respect’ and not give and be conned.
Play the game…..
If I recall…..your going to moms soon…….can’t be soon enough.
Dear Hopeforjoy,
That’s where I always mess up when it comes to assertiveness. I always get that I am passive and let people walk all over me. She’s a nice woman but its sad that I have to push her away so my dad’s schemes won’t work. My younger siblings have gotten the hang of it. But she thinks its her personally.
hurtnomore: glad to see you are learning more about your situation and reaching out for help.
your sibs have figured it out – so watch them. what do they do? how do they handle situations? and talk to them about how they process all of this internally. i know your character is probably different than theirs – so learn from them.
you are not this woman’s keeper. and don’t think of her as a person unto herself, BUT AS AN AGENT OF YOUR FATHER. Keep it clear – it’s not about not hurting others, it is about PROTECTING YOURSELF.
Best,
one step
Dear One step,
I have noticed that my siblings don’t talk to her and they pretend like she’s inexistant. They also make her uncomfortable. I just realized that they are more people that my dad manipulates and tricks in my life. Its sad to let go of some of our family friends and members of my family. But the less I speak to them, the more peace there will be. My dad knows that I speak to one of the family’s friend for female advice. The other day he went to their home and told them that I was being “disrespectful” and “rude”. They called me and were yelling at me for my “actions”. Whenever he calls my mom, she says okay I will talk to her. My mom doesn’t buy it or asks me what really went down. My dad’s other x girlfriend in North Carolina is being used to but I keep in contact with her. The reason is because she’s right near my college and I’m going to stay at her house during breaks.
Dear EB,
Yeah that’s true. I’m not her hospitality team.
Dear Hurtnomore,
Sweetie, I know it is difficult to go NC with people that are family, and it took me a LONG TIME to do that, but I realized that as long as I let these people EMOTIONALLY ABUSE ME then I am going to continue to hurt.
It is NOT rude to stand up for yourself to ANYONE, but of course they will TELL YOU it is “rude”—LIES.
Your DAD calls your friends and LIES to them about what you did or said and then they call you up and yell at you? IS THAT WHAT YOU SAID ABOVE? If so, WHAT IN THE HELL MAKES ANY OF THEM THINK THEY HAVE A RIGHT TO YELL AT YOU?
You are not some stray dog that tore up the trash can in their yard that they can yell at you. You are a human who DESERVES RESPECTFUL TREATMENT, but as long as YOU ALL them to treat you DIS-respectfully, they will all continue to do so.
Learn to set boundaires. TO SAY NO! To say, “I do not appreciate being spoken to disrespectfully, so I think I will hang up now, and when you can speak to me respectfully, then call me back.” CLICK!Q!!Q!
Write that phrase down, and leave it by your phone and when people start to speak to you DIS-respectfully, READ IT to them, then hang up.,
The first time I “SET A BOUNDARY” to a “friend” that I actually CAUGHT stealing from me, I CRIED!!!! I literally couldn’t stand to “upset her”
WAIT A MINUTE!!!! I CAUGHT HER STEALING FROM ME AND I AM WORRIED ABOUT UPSETTING HER?????
Yep, I was soooo worried I would upset her because I CAUGHT her stealing from me. I knew she did, but I ignored it,, but when I actually CAUGHT HER in the ACT of stealing I couldn’t ignore it any more! Why had I EVER ignored it?>????
I finally after more than 6 years of knowing this woman stole from me, went NC with both her and her husband and nicely told them to stay out of my life! They are mooches at BEST and thieves at WORST, but I do NOT need this kind of person in my life.
I also do not NEED people who treat me or talk to me disrespectfully in my life. People will treat me with RESPECT and CONSIDERATION or they are out of my life. PERIOD.
Why do any of us need ANYone in our lives that treats us poorly and what “relationship” gives anyone the RIGHT to treat us like DIRT? Or talk to us mean? NOTHING DOES!~!!!
Dear OxDrover,
That No Contact idea is what I use on my grandmother and her two daughters. They disrespect me and my siblings. Her two daughters, also known as my aunts, treat their kids better than us. I hated when they came over. My aunt beat my little brother up just for playing in her bed. My mom wants me to call them and invite them to my graduation tomorrow. I refuse to. I know that they will disrespect me and call me horrible names. They keep saying ohhh they are family, you don’t have a choice.
Dear Hurtnomore,
That is no family, family are the people who care about your wellfare and want the best for you. Family do not call you names and try and make you feel bad about yourself. They may be related by blood, but they are NOT family.
We care about you and want you to only have healthy people in your life. What is wonderful is that you have the courage to reach out to other people because you know that your father, grandmother and aunts are disordered. Give yourself credit for knowing that they don’t treat people with respect. You have the ability to have a good life without them tearing you down.
On a lighter note, HAPPY GRADUATION!!!!!!! Hope you have a great party! Ignore the riff raff.
Dear Hopeforjoy,
Thanks! I knew my instincts were right.
Dear EVERYONE ON THIS SITE:
Thanks for being supportive and helping me out. I really appreciate it. I’m so thankful to God for finding this website.