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 Libelle,
I am glad for you that you are so happy with your new upcoming job. I can vouch that the less pay, but less stress, is a great trade off. Money is NOT everything! Peace IS EVERYTHING! The drive is about what I have most of my life commuted, so here in US not unusual. But for a good, happy, and peaceful working place it is well worth the time and effort.
I actually liked the alone time of the drive to and from work when my house was busy with family and friends, I could think, listen to a book on tape, or music, or just “zone out.”
It seems too that while we are having one P-attack at work, or at home, that another one will creep up on us at the same time. Like somehow they are “coordinated” to kick us when we are down. That is when we must be the BEST to ourselves and stay away from anyone who is TOXIC (P or not) so that we can use all our energies to take care of ourselves. I am so glad that things are finally turning around for you on the job market and that you have chosen so wisely to be good to yourself! TOWANDA!!!! for you!!! (((hugs))))
Hi Oxy,
I think I am going to go get this book today. I was invalidated my entire childhood by my step mother… and I tried and tried to get her love, approval and positive attention to no avail. I was convinced I was unlovable for some reason which I could not identify. I see how this pattern of thinking runs deep in me today.
Thanks for this review. I have a list of books I want to read and this is at the top but I forgot about the list. :O)
Aloha
Libelle
Just to acknowleadge what you say:
Therefore I think the potted plant treatment is something quite dangerous, it can become silent treatment. It might become bullying. And as we all are on our way towards healing we have to be aware of the different stages and “rawness” of LF-members. Time will tell what kind of poster is around, and with overt P/N/S then NC is appropriate, in my opinion.
this thought also crossed my mind in relation to blocking a conversation, leading to ignoring a poster, who may well be a P or also just a person wanting to vent, express stuff and be difficult. I have a high tolerance of different types of expression, so yes, I think it is a huge decision to suddenly “ignore” a poster without real proof they are’ trouble makers’.
I also want to acknowledge Ox Drovers welcome to each new poster and indeed to me when I came, I felt so welcomed and understood by Oxy, I was crying!! Oxy you are so warm and welcoming it is so soothing and healing and I thank you for that. TOWANDA!!!!(((hugs))))
Dear Aloha,
Yes, I REALLY got a lot out of this book. Seems for me at least the more I find I am doing “better” the MORE I LEARN from new books and new articles. This one doesn’t use the “P” word, but describes it very very well. The EMOTIONAL abuse we get with gaslighting in many facets of our lives, as children at home, from bullies at school and on the streets, at work, and from “friends” and “lovers” is really amazing and we discount it as what we expect.
The more we get the more “normal” it seems.
What is amazing too is how she points out that the gaslighter can recruit bystanders to join them in the bullying and why it seems to common. Of course we know that the smear campaign and so on happens but this explains a great deal of the whys and how to combat it, or, how to at least survive it and not place the blame on ourselves. I’d helplessly seen this happen to me and others and yet never seemed to be able to put it into words or concepts, this sure helped.
I have been ordering quite a few books lately off line (used) for very cheap prices and most of them have been really great. One by Martha Stout not so good–but over all mostly very helpful.
I read this about a year ago. It was pretty good.
Oxy,
Which one was by Martha Stout. I might have read it already. It sounds familiar.
I see how damaging it can be the messages people get from outside themselves… like the kids that are bullied and commit suicide. The believe what people are saying to them, that they are worthless and they succumb. It’s so sad.
I always tell the kids I work with that “self esteem” comes from yourself… you learn to esteem yourself. Am I off base here?
I read the Sociopath Next Door by Martha Stout and found it fairly useful, but I was just at thr beginning of learning about this condition so didn’t know much at all.
I watched the original movie Gaslight on Youtube and although it is far removed from modern society, it had a powerful impact on me as I could relate to everything the heroine was going through. I used to think emotional abuse was just saying nasty things to someone – I had no idea about factors such as Gaslighting where the abuser warps and alters the reality of the victim. It;s an insidious and crazymaking experience and it made me very depressed … I could do nothing right and apparently my perception and recollection of everything was all wrong too – like banging against a brick wall day after day with no hope of anything ever getting better.
Aloha – I know you directed your question to Oxy, but it got me thinking. I think our self esteem is made up of what other people reflect back to us at least in part. It is our appraisal of our self worth as human beings and is based at least in part on external evidence. My self esteem plummeted with the P – I used to feel good about myself but the continual failure I experienced with him gave me evidence that I was a failure and incapable of sustaining or being happy in this supposedly ‘good’ relationship that he had no problem with. Iw as the weird one for being miserable – apparently I had no reason to feel that way.
It’s only now that I am out that I’m starting to rebuild a positive self image and self appraisal and it started from the outside and has moved inside. I undertake things that I think will result in success and I mix with people who reflect good things back to me – it’s making a real difference and healing me of all that pain. The P didn’t care how I felt about myself or anything – to him I was a doll on the shelf for his amusement and entertainment and I am sure my distress was a bonus for him – it showed him how ‘powerful’ he really was.
I haven’t read this book (at least I don’t think so!) so I will look into getting hold of a copy. I’ve read quite a few books in this area now – psychopathy, abuse, recovery etc
“The Myth of Sanity, Divided consciousness and the Promise of Awareness” about “multiple personality disorder” (mmore formaly called “dissociative idenity disorder”)—her reasoning didn’t make a lot of sense to me….she seemed to write like this was some “common everyday disorder,” which, though I am no expert and don’t pretend to be, I don’t agree with.
I totally agree with you though, Aloha, that getting our validation of worth from OTHERS is never a good way to do it. It has to be internalized. Sure we must get it from our parents and other adults as we are infants and children, but we have to internalize it, make it our own, I think, in order that “circumstances” of life or other’s opinions can’t derail us.
Working with teenagers I think you see, as I did, that too many times at that age the self esteem is totally from the peer’s approval rather than from internally. Media also gives images of what is “cool” or “good” that are unrealistic and if a teen doesn’t meet those criteria of skinny or popular then their self esteem suffers and they tend to seek it from others opinons of them.
Seeiing healthy adolescents with good self esteem is a different thing entirely. They make some mistakes of course but they are not totally depending on OTHERS for their self worth or seeking to “purchase” approval with promiscuious sex or other currency.
Not that they are all perfect, by any means, but most of the Scouts and college kids that hang out here at my house are great kids. They are all good role models for the Scouts they mentor at camp (most work at the big scout camp near here in the summers) and work very hard to direct the “little kids” in the right direction. It is amazing how a bunch of Eagle scouts will raise your opinons of teenagers and young adults! Involved with their parents and their troops, and their schools, churches and communities. It gives me a great deal of hope among newspaper and TV news shows full of teen crime statistics and unwed teenaged mothers!
I never realized that no matter how much I accomplished or succeeded or how good my grades were, or how “great” I was, my self estem was not dependent upon MY valuatiion of ME but on other’s valuation of me. I still find it difficult to accept a compliment from others, and have to work at not saying inside myself “well, boy have I got you fooled!”
Now I am working on saying to myself, “Yep, I AM GREAT, and I deserved that compliment, I earned it.” If that sounds narcissistic, that’s okay, because I don’t clammer after credit I have not EARNED or DESERVE by who I am. Healthy narcissism (self interest and recognition of accomplishments) is a good thing! It’s a great feeling because no one can take it away! It is mine! Heck, I’m becoming a healthy adolescent in my old age! (((hugs))))
This is a blog I did a year ago on my myspace about emotional abuse…
http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=105302917&blogId=504767646
You will see everything we talk about here and more… I complied my info from various places, and you will see gaslighting and the silent treatment plays a big part of the abuse.
If the above link does not work, or you have trouble, I will be happy to post the written parts here.
Southernman…
I’d be interested to hear what these “three categories of emotional abusers” are–in Robin Stern’s typology anyway. There certainly are different “types” of abusers, but I didn’t see any information on Stern’s view of this in the amazon.com pages.