Gaslighting Explained: The Ultimate Guide to What It Is, Why It Happens, and How to Stop It
Description
Key Takeaways
- Gaslighting is a form of psychological abuse that makes victims question their memory, perception, and sanity through deliberate manipulation
- The term is originally derived from the 1938 play “Gas Light” where a husband manipulates his wealthy wife into doubting her reality as he attempts to steal her generational wealth
- Common tactics include lying, denial, minimizing feelings, blame-shifting, and rewriting history to gain power and control
- Victims often experience anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, and difficulty trusting themselves or others
- Recovery involves seeking support, documenting incidents, trusting your instincts, and potentially leaving the abusive relationship
https://youtu.be/NfJGNfpg2IQ
If you’ve ever found yourself constantly second guessing your own memories, wondering if you’re “too sensitive,” or feeling like you’re losing your grip on reality in a relationship, you may be experiencing gaslighting. This insidious form of emotional abuse affects millions of people, leaving them confused, isolated, and questioning their own sanity. It is important to remember that gaslighting is not the victim’s fault; the abusive behavior is a choice made by the gaslighter.
Be reassured: you’re not imagining things, and you’re not alone. Gaslighting is a real, documented form of psychological abuse that mental health professionals recognize as deeply harmful. Understanding what gaslighting involves, why people do it, and how to protect yourself is the first step toward reclaiming your reality and your life.
What is Gaslighting?
Gaslighting is a type of emotional abuse where one person manipulates another into doubting their own memory, perception, and sanity. This deliberate psychological manipulation causes confusion, self-doubt, and increases the victim’s reliance on the abuser. Unlike simple lying or disagreement, gaslighting specifically targets your sense of reality itself. As a result, victims often feel unsure about their own perceptions and reality, further deepening their confusion and vulnerability. The longer gaslighting continues, the more a victim may start to rely on the gaslighter to define reality.
The term gaslighting comes from the 1938 play “Angel Street” (later called “Gas Light”) and the 1944 Alfred Hitchcock film adaptation. In the story, a husband systematically manipulates his wife’s environment—dimming the gas lights in their home while insisting she’s only imagining the changes. He denies her perceptions so persistently that she begins to believe she’s losing her mind. This is a classic example of a gaslighter gaslighting their victim, using manipulative tactics to make her question her reality. This deliberate campaign to undermine someone’s grip on reality gave us the word gaslighting.
The distinction between gaslighting and other forms of manipulation or lying is crucial. While all relationships involve disagreement and (unfortunately!) even some lying, gaslighting specifically targets one’s sense of reality. It’s not about winning an argument—it’s about making you doubt your own perceptions, memories, and mental stability to gain control. Gaslighters may even suggest you have a bad memory, using phrases like “You’re crazy – that never happened,” to discredit your experiences and undermine your credibility.
Gaslighting can occur in romantic relationships, families, workplaces, and friendships. The National Domestic Violence Hotline reports that 74% of women seeking domestic violence support have experienced gaslighting, making it one of the most common forms of psychological abuse. Women and marginalized groups are more likely to experience gaslighting due to systemic power imbalances.

Types of Gaslighting
Intimate partner gaslighting is the most recognized form, occurring in romantic relationships where an abusive partner systematically undermines the other’s reality. This might involve denying conversations, rewriting relationship history, or making their partner feel “crazy” for having normal emotional reactions.
Workplace gaslighting involves colleagues or supervisors undermining your credibility, denying conversations about work assignments, or dismissing your concerns about workplace issues. This form of abuse often targets competent employees to maintain power structures or avoid accountability.
Parental gaslighting occurs when caregivers manipulate children’s reality and emotions, denying abusive incidents or rewriting family history. Children who experience this form of abuse often struggle with self-trust and healthy relationship patterns into adulthood.
Racial gaslighting involves denying or minimizing experiences of bias and discrimination. This might include dismissing someone’s experiences of racism as “oversensitivity” or claiming that racial bias doesn’t exist in certain situations. Racial gaslighting discredits the experiences of an entire racial or ethnic group to undermine their credibility.
Medical gaslighting happens when healthcare providers dismiss patients’ symptoms or concerns, particularly affecting women and minorities who report pain or unusual symptoms. This can lead to delayed diagnoses and serious health consequences.
These patterns are examples of an abusive person’s behavior, which can occur in any relationship type.
Psychology of the Gaslighter
Understanding why people gaslight others reveals a disturbing pattern of power-seeking behavior rooted in deep psychological issues. Gaslighters are primarily motivated by an overwhelming need for power, control, and dominance over others. Manipulative people often use gaslighting as a tactic to achieve their goals. Their actions stem from a fundamental inability to handle accountability, criticism, or perceived threats to their authority. Gaslighting harms those who experience it and leads to increased dependence on the partner who is behaving abusively.
Some people who engage in gaslighting behaviors display specific personality traits that make them particularly dangerous in relationships. They typically lack empathy, show excessive need for admiration, and exhibit grandiose self-perception. These individuals often present different faces to different people, maintaining a charming public image while privately tormenting their victims. Gaining control over others is a core motivation for these individuals, driving their persistent use of psychological manipulation.
Mental health professionals have identified strong connections between gaslighting behavior and certain mental health disorders. Narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) is particularly associated with gaslighting, as individuals with NPD require constant validation and cannot tolerate being wrong or challenged. They view relationships as competitions they must win rather than partnerships built on mutual respect. Gaslighting can also contribute to or exacerbate mental illness in victims, leading to conditions such as anxiety, depression, or PTSD.
Antisocial personality disorder also correlates with gaslighting behaviors, as these individuals often lack conscience and view others as objects to be manipulated rather than people deserving of respect. However, it’s important to note that not everyone who gaslights has a personality disorder—some learn these behaviors from childhood trauma, dysfunctional family systems, or as part of covering up an addiction.
Some gaslighters may be unconscious of their behavior, using reality distortion as a defense mechanism to protect their fragile self-image. However, the most damaging gaslighters are deliberately manipulative, systematically planning their psychological attacks to gain control over their victims.
The role of childhood trauma cannot be overlooked in understanding gaslighter psychology. Many people who gaslight others grew up in homes where emotional abuse was normalized, where they learned that manipulation and control were acceptable ways to handle relationships. This doesn’t excuse their behavior, but it helps explain how these destructive patterns develop and perpetuate across generations.
Common Gaslighting Tactics
Gaslighters use systematic patterns of manipulation designed to confuse, control, and undermine their victims’ confidence. They may dismiss hurtful comments or actions as ‘just a joke’ to minimize their behavior and make the victim question their own feelings. These tactics often escalate in frequency and intensity over time, creating a web of psychological control that becomes increasingly difficult to escape.
Recognizing the signs of gaslighting is crucial for understanding emotional abuse and taking steps toward recovery.
Outright Lying and Denial
One of the most blatant gaslighting techniques involves bold-faced lying, even when evidence clearly proves otherwise. Gaslighters will deny conversations, agreements, or events that obviously occurred, often responding with phrases like “That never happened” or “You’re making things up.” This tactic specifically targets a person’s memory, making them question and doubt their own recollection of events.
This reality distortion goes beyond simple dishonesty—it’s a calculated attack on your ability to trust your own memories. When someone consistently denies obvious facts, they’re training you to doubt




