Passive-aggressive people act passive, but express aggression covertly. Here are 12 characteristics of passive aggression.
Theyโre basically obstructionist, and try to block whatever it is you want. Their unconscious anger gets transferred onto you, and you become frustrated and furious. Your fury is theirs, while they may calmly ask, โWhy are you getting so angry?โ and blame you for the anger theyโre provoking.
Passive-aggressive partners are generally codependent, and like codependents, suffer from shame and low self-esteem. Their behavior is designed to please to appease and counter to control. You may be experiencing abuse, but not realize it, because their strategy of expressing hostility is covert and manipulative, leading to conflict and intimacy problems.
Passive Aggression โ Personality Disorder
Personality disorders are persistent and enduring. According to the American Psychological Association passive aggression was considered a personality disorder in the DSM-IV:
This behavior commonly reflects hostility which the individual feels he dare not express openly. Often the behavior is one expression of the patientโs resentment at failing to find gratification in a relationship with an individual or institution upon which he is over-dependent. (APA, 1968, p. 44, code 301.81)
The DSM-IV ascribed the disorder to someone with negative attitudes and passive resistance to requests for adequate performance, indicated by at least 4 of these traits not due to depression:
โข Passively resists fulfilling routine tasks
โข Complains of being misunderstood and unappreciated
โข Is sullen and argumentative
โข Scorns and criticizes authority
โข Expresses envy and resentment toward those seeming more fortunate
โข Frequently makes exaggerated complaints of misfortune
โข Shows alternating hostile defiance and contrition
After nearly 40 years it was dropped in 1994. Thereโs renewed interest in studying passive aggression. See a 2009 study. Passive aggression was found to be related to borderline and narcissistic personality disorders, negative childhood experiences, and substance abuse.
Read Covert Verbal Abuse: Passive Aggressive Behavior That Aims to Control You
Characteristics of Passive Aggression
Because you canโt have an honest, direct conversation with a passive-aggressive partner, nothing ever gets resolved. They say yes, and then their behavior screams NO. They try to sabotage your wants, needs and plans using a variety of tactics. We all engage in some of these behaviors some of the time, but when thereโs a pervasive pattern of multiple symptoms, itโs likely that youโre dealing with passive aggression.
1) Denial:
Like all codependents, theyโre in denial of the impact of their behavior. This is why they blame others, unaware of the problems theyโre causing. They refuse to take responsibility for anything, and distort reality, rationalize, blame, make excuses, minimize, deny, or flat out lie about their behavior or the promises or agreements theyโve made.
2) Forgetting:
Rather than say no or address their anger, they forget your birthday or the plans youโve discussed, or forget to put gas in the car, pick up your prescription, or fix the leaky toilet. You end up feeling hurt and angry.
3) Procrastinating:
Theyโre avoidant and donโt like schedules or deadlines. Itโs another form of rebellion, so they delay and delay with endless excuses. They donโt follow through on responsibilities, promises, or agreements. If theyโre unemployed, they drag their feet looking for work. You may do more job-searching on their behalf than they do.
4) Obstructing:
This is another nonverbal form of saying NO. When you try to decide on where or when to go on vacation, pick out an apartment, or make plans, they find fault with each suggestion and wonโt offer any of their own.
Read Emotional Abuse: The Quiet Killer
5) Ambiguity:
They hate to take a stand. They donโt say what they want or mean. However, their behavior tells the truth, which is usually NO. This way they retain control and blame you for being controlling. As you might expect, negotiating agreements, such as in a divorce or child visitation plan, is exasperating. In addition to procrastinating, they avoid being pinned down.
They may insist on โreasonable visitation,โ and label your attempts to specify a predictable plan as controlling. Donโt be fooled. This only postpones negotiation when repetitive arguments can occur over every exchange of the children. Alternatively, they might agree to terms, but not abide by them. You can expect to be back in court.
6) Never angry:
They donโt express their anger openly. In childhood, they may have been punished or scolded for showing anger or were never permitted to object. Their only outlet is passive-aggressive, oppositional behavior.
7) Incompetency:
When they finally do what you ask, you likely have to redo it. If they make a repair, it might not last or youโll have to clean the mess they made. If theyโre helping with house cleaning, their inefficiency may drive you to do it yourself. At work, they make careless errors.
Read 3 Mental States That Narcissists and Sociopaths Manipulate in Others
8) Lateness:
Chronic lateness is a half-hearted way of saying NO. They agree to a time, but show up late. Youโre dressed-up, waiting to go out, and theyโre โstuck at the office,โ on the Internet, or watching the game and not ready. Lateness at work or delivering assignments is a self-sabotaging form of rebellion that can get them dismissed.
9) Negativity:
Their personality may include pouting or acting sullen, stubborn, or argumentative. They feel misunderstood and unappreciated and scorn and criticize authority. They frequently complain and envy and resent those more fortunate.
10) Playing the Victim:
The problem is always someone elseโs fault. Their denial, shame, and lack of responsibility cause them to play the victim and blame others. You or their boss become controlling, demanding one. They always have an excuse, but itโs their own self-destructive behaviours that cause them problems.
11) Dependency:
While fearing domination, theyโre dependent, nonassertive, indecisive, and unsure of themselves. Theyโre unaware of their dependency and fight it whenever they can. Their obstructionism is a pseudo attempt at independence. They donโt leave but withdraw or withhold intimacy instead. An autonomous person has healthy self-esteem, is assertive, and can take a stand and keep commitments. Not so for someone passive-aggressive. Their behavior is designed to avoid responsibility for themselves and family, and sometimes they depend unfairly on their partner for support.
Read 6 Diversion Tactics Used By Sociopaths, Narcissists and Psychopaths to Manipulate You Into Silence
12) Withholding:
Withholding communication is another form of expressing anger and asserting power passively. They may walk away, refusing to talk things over, or play the victim and say, โYouโre always right,โ shutting down the discussion. Theyโre unable to articulate what they want, feel, or need. Instead, they retain their power using the silent treatment or withholding material/financial support, affection, or sex. This undermines intimacy as a way to fight against their dependency.
There is a myriad of other things they might do, like slamming doors, giving away something of yours, or offering you a dessert that youโre allergic to or when youโre dieting.
What You Can Do About Passive Aggression
Because a passive-aggressive person is indirect, it may be hard to recognize whatโs going on, but itโs essential that you recognize whom youโre dealing with. Look for a pervasive pattern of several of the above symptom, and monitor your feelings. You may feel angry, confused, or powerless when trying to get cooperation. If this is a common pattern, youโre likely dealing with passive aggression.
Itโs important not to react. When you nag, scold, or get angry, you escalate conflict and give your partner more excuses and ammunition to deny responsibility. Not only that, you step into the role of parent โ the very one your partner is rebelling against. Donโt be vague, drop hints, blame, or allow yourself to pay-back in kind.
Neither be passive, nor aggressive. Instead, be assertive. Itโs far better to address noncompliance and problems in the relationship directly. Frame it in terms of โWe have a problem,โ not โYou are the problem,โ which is shaming. Donโt blame or judge your partner, but describe the behavior you donโt like, how it affects you and the relationship, and what you want. If you let your partner come up with a solution to a problem, thereโs a better chance of resolution.
When you go along with your partnerโs tactics or take on his or her responsibilities, you enable and encourage more passive-aggressive behaviour. It would be similar to nagging your child but allowing the youngster not to do his or her chores. This takes practice and requires being assertive. Be prepared to set boundaries with consequences. See my blog, โ10 Reasons Why Boundaries Donโt Work.โ For suggestions on dealing with passive aggression, write me atย [emailย protected]ย for โ12 Strategies for Handling Manipulators.โ Practice the tools inย How to Speak Your Mind- Become Assertive and Set Limits.
ยฉ Darlene Lancer, 2015, 2016
Written by Darlene Lancer JD, MFT
Originally appeared onย WhatIsCodependency.com
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