Gaslighting is a form of emotional abuse where someone manipulates another person into doubting their own reality, sanity, and perceptions, often through denial, distortion, and misrepresentation of events.
Here's a more detailed explanation:
- Gaslighting involves a persistent pattern of behavior where one person, the "gaslighter," systematically undermines the victim's sense of reality and self-worth.
- Gaslighters may deny things they said or did, make the victim feel crazy or mistaken, or distort the truth to make the victim question their own memory and judgment.
- Gaslighting can lead to feelings of confusion, anxiety, isolation, and depression, as the victim struggles to trust their own perceptions and experiences.
- "You're imagining things," or "You're crazy," when the victim is simply stating their own experiences or feelings.
- Denying that an event or conversation ever happened, even when there are witnesses or other evidence.
- Blaming the victim for the gaslighter's own behavior or actions.
- "You're imagining things," or "You're crazy," when the victim is simply stating their own experiences or feelings.
- Gaslighting is often effective because it can erode a person's confidence and ability to trust themselves, making it harder for them to recognize the abuse and leave the situation.
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