Betrayal Trauma Recovery - BTR.ORG

btr.org - btr.org has daily, online Group and Individual Sessions for victims of emotional & psychological abuse and sexual coercion. For women experiencing pain, chaos, and isolation due to their husband’s lying, gaslighting, manipulation, porn use, cheating, infidelity, emotional abuse, and narcissistic abuse. Labeling a victim as "codependent" is a form of victim blaming. Pornography addiction / sex addiction are a domestic abuse issue. Narcissistic abuse is not a communication issue. We help women who are married, separated, or divorced heal through establishing emotional safety. If you suspect your husband is a narcissist, a pornography addict, or emotionally abusive, this podcast is for you. Every woman on our team has experienced betrayal trauma first hand. To learn more about Betrayal Trauma Recovery, visit BTR.ORG

https://www.btr.org/podcast/

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episode 8: 4 Ways He Gaslights You


Gaslighting is notoriously difficult to spot, especially in the middle of an abusive episode. Anne shares her thoughts on gaslighting on the BTR Podcast - read the full transcript below and learn more about gaslighting in this informative article.
Victims of Abuse Are Empowered Through Education
As women learn the tactics that psychological and emotional abusers use to gaslight them, they are empowered to make informed decisions about their own safety.

Victims of abuse deserve safety in every area of their lives, especially their own minds. When abusers choose to gaslight victims, they are forcing the victim to call her own reality and her own sanity into question. This insidious form of abuse must be stopped.
The Four Secret Tactics of Gaslighting Revealed
Abusers will often use four discreet tacts to make victims question their reality and sanity; these tactics often overlap or are used two or three at a time.
Tactic # 1: "You Didn't See What You Just Saw"
One of the most notorious tactics used by gaslighting abusers is to blatantly discredit the reality of victims.

"Where did that $500 go that was in our bank account yesterday?"

"What $500? It didn't go anywhere. You're wrong."

OR

"I saw you with that woman from work; she told me that you are sleeping together. Please just tell me the truth."

"What woman from work? You're crazy. I'm not seeing anyone."

Abusers often use this tactics to try to hide substances and behaviors like infidelity, pornography, drug use, and gambling.
Tactic # 2: Redirect Responsibility
When abusers can successfully get a victim to look at her own responsibility in the chaos that he has created, the spotlight is off of his abusiveness, and he is able to carry out his abusive behaviors without consequences.

"Where did that $500 go that was in our bank account yesterday?"

"Why can't you keep track of the money? You've been terrible with money since the first day I met you."

OR

"I saw you with that woman from work; she told me that you are sleeping together. Please just tell me the truth."

"I'm not... but if I did, it would be because you never have sex with me when I want to."
Tactic # 3: Saying You Need Mental/Emotional Help AND/OR Dismissing Your Mental/Emotional Help
When an abuser can deflect from his own behavior by pinning the "craziness" on the victim by either

a. telling her that she "needs help" (stigmatizing mental health issues)

and/or

b. criticizing and dismissing the mental/emotional help that she is receiving through counseling, therapy, coaching, or support groups,

he is creating a distorted reality where he is the "sane and healthy" side of the partnership, and she is the one causing the chaos.

"Where did that $500 go that was in our bank account yesterday?"

"You are so paranoid! You need a psychiatrist!"

OR

"I saw you with that woman from work; she told me that you are sleeping together. Please just tell me the truth."

"Is this more of your man-hating therapist's garbage coming out? Is she telling you to accuse me of having affairs?"
Tactic # 4: Highlighting and Criticizing Your Character Flaws
This is simply another way for a gaslighting abuser to distort reality and create the illusion that the real chaos is caused by the character flaws of the victim, rather than his own abusive behaviors.

"Where did that $500 go that was in our bank account yesterda...


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 April 11, 2017  8m