DiscoverBetrayal Trauma RecoveryCoercive Control Examples: The Hidden Ways He Undermines Partnership
Coercive Control Examples: The Hidden Ways He Undermines Partnership

Coercive Control Examples: The Hidden Ways He Undermines Partnership

Update: 2026-04-14
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Coercive control is a sustained pattern of controlling a domestic partner. However, coercive control inherently means that it’s not a partnership at all. Here’s why.


Coercive Control Definition


Coercive control is a sustained pattern of control in marriage through deception. It’s a system of deception and manipulation meant to give one partner power while maintaining the appearance of normalcy, even goodness.


The key word is pattern.


Often, the spouse being controlled doesn’t recognize it. From the outside, all she sees is a husband who seems kind, composed, spiritual, or self-aware.


And coercive control can continue both during marriage and after separation or divorce.


If your husband starts to exhibit behaviors he never exhibited before marriage, it’s likely that the man you fell in love with was a mask he wore to coerce you to marry him. This means you may have been experiencing emotional and psychological abuse the entire time.


Learning the 19 different types of emotional abuse is essential. Our free emotional abuse quiz will help you see if what you’re experiencing is harmful to you.


Why Coercive Control Is So Hard to Identify


When your marriage isn’t functioning as a partnership, it can be incredibly difficult to name why.


That’s because coercive control isn’t just manipulation, it’s an entire hidden structure.


Many men who use coercive control work very hard to conceal it. They may appear:



  • Calm

  • Rational

  • Faithful

  • Engaged in therapy

  • “Trying”

  • Accountable


Meanwhile, their wives often feel:



  • Confused

  • Anxious

  • Emotionally exhausted

  • Responsible for everything wrong

  • Like they’re “too sensitive”


I’ve interviewed over 200 women who have experienced coercive control in marriage. Many are highly educated. Some work in mental health, law, social work, or education. They understand trauma and communication systems.


And almost all of them say:



“I don’t know how I missed it.”



Here’s the truth:


If it’s happening to you, you didn’t miss it. It was purposefully hidden from you.


The fundamental tactic of coercive control is deception.


Transcript: Coercive Control in Marriage


Anne:  Controlling and coercive men maintain power over their wives through deception. Wendy, a member of our community, is here to share her story. Welcome Wendy. Why don’t you start wherever you feel comfortable?


Wendy: I was married for about 15 and a half years, and found out a couple years in that he was viewing exploitative content. I was crushed. I remember the first time I found out I went downstairs, and I curled up in a ball on the living room floor. And just crying, and it’s like the only time I remember being that devastated. My husband wouldn’t stop lying to me.


He disclosed every so often that he viewed this. And of course, it seemed like it was just that one time. I’m a heavy sleeper, and I distinctly remember waking up a few times, feeling like I had had intercourse, but I didn’t remember.


I remember feeling worthless, and I felt like everything in our relationship that was wrong was my fault. Because I didn’t enjoy it with my husband. And that’s when I discovered this whole new world. And I found out way more than I guess I ever wanted to know.


The Miserable Experience Caused By Coercive Control you Can’t See


Anne: I totally understand. At 30 I was a virgin and so excited. I’m not a prude by any stretch. We married, and after two days of, I was like, this is miserable. I felt like an object. The whole experience, everything around it was awful too. I just felt used and worthless. And then afterward I’d say something like, what are you thinking about?


Hoping that he would connect with me in some way. And talk about me or us or something. But pretty much every time he’d say something like bike parts, and he’d be like staring into space. It felt completely disconnected. and. After a while, I was like, this isn’t fun for me at all. And this has nothing to do with me. It’s all about him.


From then on, I didn’t want to, but I continued to initiate because I thought I had to. I thought it was my job. I thought it’s like a chore that I check off the list. And I did not realize that that was coercion.


Wendy: Right, I enjoyed it when we first married. But then I suffered from what I thought was postpartum depression.


Searching For Answers After Marriage Feels Off


Wendy: I couldn’t even sleep in our bed. I slept on the couch. So I went to counseling and was better for a while. But I always felt like everything was my fault, and any issues were my fault. And there were people around me saying the same thing. Someone even told me that I should have it with my husband anytime he wanted. And that made me feel terrible. And I didn’t tell my husband about that. I kept that to myself. I just felt so worthless.


For a while, I was like, Oh, well, my husband never abused me. I really thought that and then. In the school library online, I was looking for studies on abuse in marriage, and I was coming up empty.


I just did a Google search and put in emotional abuse and marriage, and this study came up where they called it wife ##e. And that’s when it hit home, that’s what it was. Once I had that, I found a few more studies on it. I ended up on the National Domestic Violence Hotline website, and it actually has definitions of coercion.



Learn More about BTR Group Sessions


Defining What’s Happening To You as Coercive Control


Wendy: It talked about coercion. I had mostly experienced the coercion. And then it led me to other resources. As I learned more about this topic, I thought, that is exactly what happened. My husband did do this to me, but it was the coercion part that struck me and hit home. And then he admitted to doing this to me in my sleep. I don’t want other women to experience the same thing I experienced for so long.


Anne: It’s absolutely is, and a man can do this to his wife for years without her understanding what’s actually happening.


Let’s go back to coercion. Cause it’s something I talk about so much here on the podcast. What did you learn about coercion in your research?


Wendy: Sure, the first thing they mention is making you feel like you owe them because you’re married to them. You’re in a relationship, they spent money on you, they bought you a gift. They give you drugs and alcohol to loosen up your inhibitions, playing on the fact that you’re in a relationship. Saying such things as it is a way to prove your love for me.


Examples Of Coercion


Wendy: If I don’t get it from you, I’ll get it somewhere else. Reacting negatively with sadness, anger, or resentment. If you say no or don’t immediately agree to something. Continuing to pressure you after you say no. Making you feel threatened or afraid of what might happen if you say no. And trying to normalize their expectations. For example, I need it, I’m a man. Mostly it’s like trying to make you feel obligated. to have it with them.


Anne: So many women feel obligated to have it with their husbands. They don’t want to, but they’re worried about the consequences if they stopped.


Wendy: Right, yeah


Anne: On the flip side, they could be abusive to you because they’re hiding things, and maybe hooking up with people. And they’re not initiating with you at all. Because they are spending all their energy outside the marriage


Wendy: Right, and actually one of the studies I looked at mentioned that withholding can be a form of abuse.


Anne: That’s something the abuser will do. The abuser will say she’s withholding. She’s abusing me. But withholding is completely different than not having it with someone, because they are emotionally and psychologically unsafe.


Wendy: Exactly.


Anne: This is why this issue is so difficult with therapists or clergy or other people who don’t understand coercion. Is they’ll say, well, wife, you’re the abusive one because you are withholding. Then, because they believe men need it or they’re going to die or something. If you feel uncomfortable having it with him. That justifies him having it with prostitutes or multiple affairs.


The Myth of Male “Needs” When Justifing Abuse


Anne: A man will not die if he does not have it. If so, what, all boys would die instantly when they were 12 or something?


Wendy: Right, yeah, it doesn’t make any sense.


Anne: So when you feel unsafe an

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Coercive Control Examples: The Hidden Ways He Undermines Partnership

Coercive Control Examples: The Hidden Ways He Undermines Partnership