Are You Being Manipulated? Keys to Hidden Aggression

GoodTherapy | Are You Being Manipulated? Keys to Hidden AggressionWe all engage in manipulation from time to time. When your boss asks you what you thought of his or her terrible presentation and you render lavish praise, you’re concealing your real feelings in an attempt to elicit the reaction you want from someone in power. But in close interpersonal relationships, manipulation can take on a much darker hue, leaving its targets never quite knowing where they stand.

The very nature of manipulation makes it challenging to know when you’re being manipulated. Manipulators attempt to conceal their motives and feelings, and their targets—who often struggle to sustain an honest, open, and manipulation-free relationship—may have to do some detective work to determine whether they’re being played.

What Is Manipulation?
Manipulation is the process of trying to change another person’s feelings, beliefs, or behaviors through indirect tactics. Rather than asking for what they want, manipulative people tend to use deception, coercion, even threats to get their needs met.

Manipulation is associated with a number of mental health conditions, including borderline personality disorder, passive-aggressive personality disorder, addiction, antisocial personality disorder, and narcissism. Not all manipulative people have mental health issues, but when manipulation becomes a primary style of interaction, it can indicate an underlying psychological issue.

Tactics Manipulators Use
If you’re concerned that you’re being manipulated, examine the tactics the other person is using. If you find yourself caught up in a web of deception and unclear motives, it could be manipulation.

Some common tactics manipulators use include lying, withholding information, denying feelings, playing the victim, blaming the victim, minimizing others’ feelings, pretending to be confused or ignorant, guilt, shame, and pretending that his or her tactics are intended to serve a higher calling such as God or a political cause. Manipulators also frequently use gaslighting—the process of provoking someone into an extreme or angry reaction, then blaming the other person for his or her reaction.

While anyone can be manipulated, expert manipulators tend to target people with and take advantage of certain personality traits. These traits include:

  • The desire to be liked or to please; these people are more likely to take extraordinary measures to gain favor
  • Low self-esteem
  • Dependency; people who tend to be dependent upon others will be more easily swayed by threats to withdraw love or support
  • Naiveté or ignorance
  • Loneliness
  • Impulsivity, greed, and materialism
  • Low assertiveness
  • Fear of anger, sadness, and other negative emotions—either in oneself or from the manipulator

Why People Manipulate
For some people, manipulation may be an inadvertent strategy for dealing with a cutthroat world in which discussing feelings is often taboo. Manipulation is part of the normal range of behavioral tactics, and most people engage in manipulative strategies from time to time. People whose primary style of interaction is manipulation, however, tend to share some traits in common. These include:

  • A need for control or power over others
  • A need to raise their own self-esteem
  • Fear of abandonment
  • Feelings of worthlessness, helplessness, or hopelessness
  • A willingness to prioritize their own feelings and desires over the needs and well-being of others

How to Handle a Manipulator
Many of us are highly aware when we’re being manipulated, but are still left unsure of what to do. Because manipulators often play the victim, some victims of manipulation might excuse their behavior or insist that the manipulator doesn’t really know what he or she is doing. Manipulators thrive on hiding their motives, so it can be challenging to get them to admit their true intentions, and many people will refuse to do so even under pressure. Instead, try the following tactics:

  • Avoid allowing yourself to be shamed or guilted into doing something.
  • When a manipulator makes a covert threat, ask him or her about the threat.
  • Ask the manipulative person if he or she can tell you directly what he or she wants.
  • Avoid sharing how the manipulation makes you feel, as these feelings can later be used as a tactic by the manipulator.
  • Be direct, clear, and honest, and refuse to participate in the escalating game of manipulation.

References:

  1. Psychological harassment and psychological manipulation. (n.d.). Psychological Harassment Information Association. Retrieved from http://www.psychologicalharassment.com/psychological_manipulation.htm
  2. Simon, G. K. (n.d.). Dealing with manipulative people. RickRoss.com. Retrieved from http://www.rickross.com/reference/brainwashing/brainwashing11.html
  3. Spotting emotional manipulation. (n.d.). Cassiopaea. Retrieved from http://www.cassiopaea.com/cassiopaea/emotional_manipulation.htm

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  • yvonne

    March 22nd, 2013 at 10:34 AM

    What if I am married to the master manipulator? What then? He needs serious help but I am almost afraid to tell him that because he makes me feel like I am the one who is crazy when I know that isn’t true! He always gives me these guilt trips, and yes, I let it happen, but he will do anything that he needs to to get his way. And it’s not just with me- it’s that way with everyone and we all feed into it. How do I get him to loosen some of that control and power? I know that it is a change that I have to eprsonally make but I am not sure how.

  • Lona

    January 27th, 2017 at 5:59 AM

    ever heard of divorce?

  • Victoria

    April 16th, 2017 at 11:25 PM

    I too have a husband like yours, mine is 52 and I’ve been married to him for 2 yrs. He will not change, he will find fault with everyone if he does not get his way. Mine does it to everyone. And I finally decided, not to be with him because he is also dominating, controlling, the arguements we have are to make me to be the crazy person but I am not, I listen to every word. But if I were to remind him he said one thing and then he changed his mind he feels I hang him on his words. Your best bet is too talk with him about what he is doing to you, give him some time to adjust but not too much time. But if he doesn’t seek out help for his problems and treats you as mine treats me, then you are better off without him.

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