Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): Are You Being Gaslighted? 3 Ways To Know
Episode Date: June 17, 2022If 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 video is for you. It's a horrible feeling when we ar...e 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 see this - it's going to show you how to get your personal power back and make sense of the situation. --- Join our next Virtual Retreat! - Claim Your Limited Time Early Bird Discount ($200 OFF the usual price!) for The Virtual Retreat at MHVirtualRetreat.com - Offer ends July 6th. --- Email us! You can get in touch with the show and give your feedback/thoughts at podcast@matthewhussey.com --- Follow Matt on Insta @thematthewhussey --- ►► FREE guide to download: “3 Secrets To Love” → 3SecretsToLove.com
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Does the conversation leave me feeling worse or better?
Seething or soothed?
Stupid or seen? How do you know if someone is gaslighting you? That's what we talk about in today's clip. Check
it out. I think you're really going to enjoy this one. And don't forget to leave us an iTunes review
if you get the chance. They mean so much to us. And now let's get to it. Are you being gaslighted? Three ways
to know. 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 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.
I hope you enjoyed that episode, everybody.
Don't forget we have an early bird special on the virtual retreat right now
that's coming up in November.
Last chance to come to one of our retreats this year. Go to
mhvirtualretreat.com to get that early bird ticket while they're still available. I'll see you next
time. you