Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 54: 3 Simple Steps to Handle Being “Gaslighted”
Episode Date: September 14, 2020Have you been gaslighted before? Is it happening to you right now? If you’re not sure what “Gaslighting” means… It’s when someone manipulates you by psychological means into doubting your ow...n sanity. Over time, this can have a dramatic effect on our self-esteem as we slowly begin to doubt ourselves until we no longer trust our own instincts. It’s nasty. f you’ve ever expressed your needs to someone or tried to tell them about something they did that hurt you and you were made to feel crazy, this message is for you. It’s a horrible feeling when we are upset or anxious and we don’t even know if what we are saying is reasonable or whether we are overreacting… that’s why I’m so excited for you to listen to this episode. It’s going to bring you a sense of peace and calm again... I’ve got your back, friend. ►► Deep down, you know there’s something missing in your love life, your career, or your personal life. GOOD NEWS - I have a proven method to transform your life in just 6 short days with me → http://www.MatthewHusseyRetreat.com
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Hello there my lovely biscuits and buttercups.
My name is Stephen Hussey. This is, of course, the Love Life podcast.
And I got a question for you.
Have you ever been in a relationship with someone who makes you feel like you're crazy?
Who makes you feel like you suddenly take on a label that you never
took on before. Maybe they say to you, you're so selfish, you're always thinking about you.
Or they say, you're so difficult all the time, you're so needy, you're such a problem.
And you think, I don't usually feel like I'm a selfish person. I don't usually feel like I'm needy.
I don't usually feel like I cause all of these upsets and problems.
But suddenly you're walking on eggshells.
You're worried about putting a foot wrong.
You think that everything you do is going to incite a massive disagreement, an argument, a fight.
And you think, how did I get to this place?
I feel like I'm just being
my normal self and suddenly everything I do is wrong. Well, it's just possible you may be
a victim of gaslighting. Gaslighting, of course, is when you're made by someone else to feel like
you're crazy or they distort the truth in a way that makes you
start to question your reality and you're not sure what's up or down anymore. You're not sure if it's
you or if it's them or what's going on and then you're in a trap because if you don't know if
you're acting crazy or not, it's very hard to decide who's the problem in the relationship. So if this
sounds like something you've been through before, I'm going to pass over to my brother Matthew right
now who's going to talk all about gaslighting. Check it out. What is gaslighting? Gaslighting
is a form of psychological manipulation in which a person or group covertly sows seeds of doubt in
a target individual or group, making them question their own memory, perception, or judgment, often
evoking in them cognitive dissonance and other changes, including low self-esteem. That sounds bad, doesn't it? Typically, we'd associate such a horrible thing with the behavior
of a narcissist at the extreme end. And of course, what makes it so horrible is the intentional
sowing seeds of doubt, the willing someone to think that they are crazy, that they've lost touch with reality. It's humbling though to think
that we've probably all gaslighted someone on some level at some point in our lives. We've been in an
argument with someone and in the service of winning that argument we have ignored whatever valid
points they're making because our ego so desperately wants to win,
wants to be right. And we see this at every level. This isn't just in personal romantic
relationships or friendships or family dynamics. It happens in politics. You know, we see both sides
ignoring what may be rational or reasonable about the other side's argument because of the fear of ceding any ground
whatsoever to the opposition. God forbid I give up some of my power and get myself off balance
in the process. I've done this before. Got so wrapped up in wanting to be right that even when
I see that someone else has a point I've dug my heels into
my own logic further to contort the dialectic in my favor and the result of course is that the truth
becomes ever more hidden we get this complete lack of nuance in the information that we're fed it
becomes caricatured on both sides doesn't't it? The truth, meanwhile, lurks
deep in the sedimentary layer, far below the tempestuous ocean above, where the arguments
take place on the surface level. It's a horrible thing to experience, because we leave a conversation
or an argument not knowing what reality is anymore. You know, it's like being caught by a wave in the
ocean at just the wrong moment that has us somersaulting toward the seabed. And by the time
we come to our senses, we don't know which way is up anymore. We know we need to swim, but we don't
even know in what direction. If you've ever been gaslighted, then you know that experience of feeling like you're going mad, like you're losing touch with reality. Your trust and
confidence in yourself and your own opinions gets eroded to the point of not even wanting to speak
anymore. And perhaps one of the worst things about gaslighting is that when it's being done
effectively, we don't know it's being done at all. Which brings us to
today's question. How do you know if you're being gaslighted and what can you do about it? Number
one, get some space from the conversation that's happening. Getting closer and closer to the
conversation and chopping it up a thousand different ways,
which you've probably done, starts to get diminishing returns.
You no longer get any more clarity.
It just gets more confusing and both of you just get more entrenched in your way of thinking.
It doesn't mean going on a break from your partner. It just means getting enough space that you can quiet your mind, quiet it enough to know where I might be being unreasonable or where
I might have reacted badly and where I have a valid point that's not being acknowledged. Number two,
have conversations with people you trust who have no agenda. This isn't about getting a tribunal
together of all of your friends and
inviting all of their emotional demons and biases to the table to have a voice on your relationship.
That's dangerous. Instead, pick a couple of strategic conversations with people who are wise,
people whose opinions you value, and who you can trust to be impartial. In other words, to not simply tell
you what you want to hear. Ideally, people who know a bit about your history, your patterns,
your tendencies, that helps, but it's not absolutely essential. What is essential is you feel like
they're telling you the truth. Because although that may not result in things that you want to hear what it
will do is it will mean that when they tell you you have a point your reasoning
is valid your grievances are valid you'll believe them number three pay
attention to your feelings sometimes when we're obsessing over who's right or
wrong in an argument we lose sight of an even more important truth.
How this person makes us feel.
See, sometimes we're debating with someone who's a black belt in debating.
They know every move.
They've perfected these moves.
With a person like this, it can always feel like we lost the argument,
but that doesn't mean we're not right. It simply means that this person has linguistic capabilities
that we are not used to or practiced enough to deal with. What helps is to get out of the
complexity of the argument itself and get into the simplicity of certain questions about how you feel. When I
honestly and bravely and authentically bring up my feelings to this person, does the conversation
leave me feeling worse or better? Seething or soothed? Stupid or seen. We're never going to be right all the time. In fact, in our relationships,
we're going to be misguided and wrong a lot of the time. But the right relationship should have
a healing property. It should make us feel more confident. It should make us feel safer, more
loved. It should engender a style of communication that
compassionately helps us understand and navigate where we may be wrong and lovingly acknowledges
where we are right. If you're watching this and you're realizing that you don't pay enough
attention to the things that are making you happy.
And you're not being brave enough right now to let go of certain things, situations, people that are making you unhappy.
I would love for you to join us on the virtual retreat that is coming up.
Because I'm going to be spending three days virtually live with people.
Walking them through
a kind of reset of their lives to really look at everything and go, what is going to make me happy
in the next chapter? What do I need to move away from? And what do I need to move towards? It's
going to be an amazing time. It is the closest thing that I have to my live retreat because
we're actually going to be together live,
virtually, from all over the world,
working on our lives.
It's a process that I'm going through for me
to look at what I want out of the next year to five years,
and I'm inviting you to join us to do the same.
If you have questions about it, you want to know more,
come ask us those questions.
I've got a team that are ready to speak to you.
Go to mhvirtualretreat.com.
And as always, I will see you next week.