Manipulators use a plethora of diversionary tacticsย that distort the reality of their victims, which ends up making them feel confused, lost, and even makes them believe that THEY are at fault, and not the abuser.
Many of us donโt even realize when weโre being manipulated. We may have an uneasy feeling in our gut that doesnโt match the manipulatorโs words or feel trapped into agreeing with a request. Most people react in ways that escalate abuse or play into the hands of the abuser and feel small and guilty, but retreat and allow unacceptable behavior. If you had a manipulative parent, it might be harder to recognize in a partner, because itโs familiar.
Ancient wisdom to โknow your enemyโ is essential when dealing with a manipulator. Being able to spot these hidden arrows allows you to respond strategically to covert manipulation. Understanding what theyโre up to empowers you.
Related: Dehumanization: A Narcissistโs Ultimate Manipulation Tool
When people behave passive-aggressively, what appears passive or defensive is covert aggression. Itโs debatable to what extent their behavior is conscious or unconscious. To the victim, it doesnโt matter. The effect is the same. Being overly empathetic puts you in jeopardy of being mistreated again and again. When someone attacks you overtly or covertly, theyโre being aggressive.
Psychologist George Simon argues that these covert manipulators intentionally say and do things to get what they wantโfor power and control. For people character logically disturbed, such as sociopaths and narcissists and some people with borderline personality disorder, he maintains that their tactics arenโt unconscious in the way that defense mechanisms normally operate. However, their behavior is so habitual that over time it becomes reflexive. They donโt even think about it but are still conscious of it.
Goals Of A Manipulator
The goal of all manipulation is to gain influence to get our needs met, but habitual manipulators do so for power and control and use deceptive and abusive methods. Manipulators maintain domination through continuous, recurring, emotional manipulation, abuse, and coercive control.
Often theyโre passive-aggressive. They may lie or act caring or hurt or shocked by your complaintsโall to deflect any criticism and to continue to behave in an unacceptable manner.
In maintaining control to do what they wish, manipulators aim:
1. To avoid being confronted.
2. To put you on the defensive.
3. To make you doubt yourself and your perceptions.
4. To hide their aggressive intent.
5. To avoid responsibility.
6. To not have to change.
Eventually, you are victimized and can lose trust in yourself and your feelings and perceptions. Gaslighting is a treacherous, disabling form of manipulation.
Covert Manipulative Tactics
Manipulation may include overt aggression, such as criticism, narcissistic abuse, and subtle forms of emotional abuse.
Favorite covert weapons of manipulators are guilt, complaining, comparing, lying, denying, feigning ignorance or innocence (e.g.โWho me!?โ), blame, bribery, undermining, mind games, assumptions, โfoot-in-the-door,โ reversals, emotional blackmail, evasiveness, forgetting, inattention, fake concern, sympathy, apologies, flattery, and gifts and favors.
Related: Manipulation Of The Charming Narcissist
See โHow To Spot Manipulation.โ Typical Tactics Are Described Below:
1. Lying
Habitual liars sometimes lie when itโs unnecessary. They arenโt lying because theyโre afraid and guilty, but to confuse you and do what they want. Some simultaneously put you on the defensive with accusations and other manipulative tactics.
Lying may also be indirect through vagueness and/or omission of material information though everything else said is true. For example, a cheater might say he or she was working late or at the gym, but not admit to an adulterous rendezvous.
2. Denial
This isnโt denial thatโs unconscious, like not realizing youโve been abused, have an addiction, or are avoiding facing difficult truths. This is conscious denial to disclaim knowledge of promises, agreements, and behavior. Denial also includes minimization and rationalization or excuses.
The manipulator acts as if youโre making a big deal over nothing or rationalizes and excuses his or her actions to make you doubt yourself or even to gain your sympathy.
3. Avoidance
Manipulators want to avoid being confronted and taking responsibility at all costs. They may avoid conversations about their behavior by simply refusing to discuss it. This might be combined with an attack, like, โYouโre always nagging me,โ putting you on the defensive with blame, guilt, or shame.
Avoidance can be subtle and unnoticeable when a manipulator shifts the subject. It may be camouflaged with boasting, compliments, or remarks you want to hear, like, โYou know how much I care about you.โ You might forget why you were upset in the first place.
Another avoidance tactic is evasiveness that blurs the facts, confuses you, and plants doubt. I once went out with a man who claimed we were incompatible because I was too precise and he was a โgloss-overโ kind of guy. Precisely! He felt uncomfortable when Iโd ask questions or note inconsistencies in his half-truths. It became apparent that he was a skilled, manipulative liar.
Itโs easy to give someone the benefit of the doubt and go into denial yourself when youโre hopeful about a relationship. When you have doubts, trust them!
4. Blame, Guilt, and Shame
These tactics include projection, a defense where the manipulator accuses others of his or her own behavior. ย Manipulators believe โThe best defense is a good offense.โ By shifting the blame, the aggrieved person is now on the defensive. The manipulator remains innocent and free to carry on, while their victims now feel guilt and shame.
Abusers typically blame their victims or anyone else. Be wary of an apology that is really another manipulation. Addicts typically blame their addiction on other people, their demanding boss or โbitchyโ spouse. A criminal defendant with no defense will attack the police or their methods of collecting evidence. Rapists used to be able to attack the reputation of their victims.
I counseled a couple in a domestic violence case, where the violent husband blamed his wife for his violence. I said to him, โIโm surprised your wife has that much power over you.โ He was dumbfounded since his whole agenda was to gain power over her.
Guilt-tripping and shaming shift the focus onto you, which weakens you while the abuser feels superior. Martyrs use guilt when they say or imply, โAfter all, Iโve done for youโฆโ sometimes combined with criticism that youโre selfish or ungrateful.
Shaming goes beyond guilt to make you feel inadequate. It demeans you as a person, your traits, or role, not just your actions. โThe children would behave if they had a father who knew how to parent (or, made a decent living.)โ
Comparing is a subtle, but powerful form of shaming. Itโs harmful when parents compare siblings with each other or with playmates. Some spouses compare their mate to their ex to have the upper hand by making their mate feel inferior.
Guilt and shaming may include โblaming the victim.โ For example, you find evidence on your partnerโs phone that he or she is flirting. Your partner acts outraged that you went into the phone. Now he or she has switched the focus onto you.
By blaming you, your partner has avoided a confrontation about flirting, and may also lie about it, minimize, or circumvent it altogether. You, the real victim, feel guilty for spying, undercutting any justified anger, and may thereby allow the flirting to continue unaddressed.
Related: How To Spot Manipulation
5. Intimidation
Intimidation isnโt always with direct threats, but can be subtle.
Intimidation can be achieved with a look or tone and statements like: โI always get my way;โ โNo oneโs irreplaceable.โ โThe grass isnโt any greener;โ โI have methods and friends in high places;โ โYouโre not so young anymore;โ or โHave you considered the repercussions of that decision?โ
Another strategy is telling a story meant to provoke fear, such as: โShe left her husband and lost her kids, their house, everything.โ โI fight to win. I once almost killed a guy.โ
6. Playing the Victim
This is distinct from blaming the victim. Rather than blame you, this โpoor meโ tactic arouses your guilt and sympathy so youโll do their bidding. โI donโt know what Iโll do if you donโt help me.โ More disordered personalities often threaten suicide if you leave.
It can also take the form of, โYou donโt care about me;โ โWhy do you treat me like this?โ or โNobody helps me.โ Your compliance breeds your resentment, damages the relationship, and encourages continued manipulation.
Guilt over someone elseโs behavior or predicament is irrational guilt.
Conclusion
These tactics are destructive. Donโt confuse forgiveness with forgetting. Manipulation will likely continue. Over time, this is traumatic and can severely damage your self-worth. Awareness is the first step. You may need help to see things clearly.
Write out conversations and try to identify abuse and all the tactics used. Harder still is not taking the words of the manipulator personally and learning how to respond. Find out how to Deal with a Narcissist and Difficult People, and Become Assertive and Set Limits.
Join my list and get free โ14 Strategies to Handle Manipulation.โ Also do take the steps to Raise Your Self-Esteem and find Freedom from Guilt. Often, childhood trauma is what made you deny and be vulnerable to such abuse in the first place. You may need to Conquer Shame if your self-worth has been damaged.
ยฉDarlene Lancer 2019
Written by Darlene Lancer Originally appeared in What Is Codependency
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