Emotional Manipulation: 7 Common Techniques to Know
Émotional Manipulation: 7 Common Techniques to Know
Émotional manipulation is one of the most insidious forms of psychological violence in a couple. Unlike open conflicts, it operates in the shadows, through small touches, until the victim loses confidence in their own perception of reality.
1. Gaslighting: Questioning Your Perception
Gaslighting consists of denying the reality you experienced until you doubt your own memory and judgment.- "I never said that, you're making things up again."
- "You're too sensitive, it was just a joke."
2. Love Bombing: Drowning in Affection to Control
An avalanche of compliments, gifts, and disproportionate attention, especially at the beginning or after a conflict.- "You're the only person who understands me. Without you I'm nothing."
- After a fight: "I bought you a gift, forget everything, let's start over."
3. Silent Treatment: Punishing Through Silence
Ceasing all communication to force the other to yield. It's not a need for space -- it's a weapon.- Messages read without response for hours or days
- Monosyllabic responses: "Ok.", "If you want.", "As usual."
4. Systematic Guilt-Tripping
The manipulator turns every situation so you feel guilty, even when you're within your rights.- "If you went out less with your friends, we wouldn't have these problems."
- "After everything I've done for you, this is how you thank me?"
5. Progressive Isolation
The manipulator distances their victim from loved ones, often subtly, by criticizing their circle.- "Your best friend is a bad influence, she turns you against me."
- "You prefer your family to me, is that it?"
6. Rôle Reversal: The Victim Becomes the Guilty Party
Turning the situation so the person being manipulated ends up accused of being the problem.- "You're the toxic one in this relationship, not me."
- "If you hadn't provoked me, I wouldn't have reacted like that."
7. Émotional Blackmail
Using fear, pity, or guilt to get what the manipulator wants.- "If you leave me, I don't know what I'll do..."
- "Nobody else will want you."
- "If you really loved me, you'd do this for me."
How to Detect It in Your Messages
- You constantly apologize without knowing exactly why
- You rephrase your messages multiple times out of fear of the reaction
- You feel anxiety with each notification
- Your needs are never addressed: the conversation always returns to the other
- You doubt your memories after rereading an exchange
What to Do If You Recognize These Techniques
Import your exchanges on scan.psychologieetserenite.com for objective analysis based on recognized clinical models.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist
Watch: Go Further
To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
🧠
Vous traversez une relation difficile ?
Notre assistant IA spécialisé en psychothérapie TCC vous accompagne en 50 échanges, en toute confidentialité.
Démarrer la conversation — 1,90 €Disponible 24h/24 · Confidentiel
💬
Analyze your conversations
Upload a WhatsApp, Messenger or SMS conversation and get a detailed psychological analysis of your relationship dynamics.
Analyze my conversation →📋
Take the free test!
68+ validated psychological tests with detailed PDF reports. Anonymous, immediate results.
Discover our tests →🧠
Vous traversez une relation difficile ?
Notre assistant IA spécialisé en psychothérapie TCC vous accompagne en 50 échanges, en toute confidentialité.
Démarrer la conversation — 1,90 €Disponible 24h/24 · Confidentiel
Related articles
Neurodivergent Couples: Gifted, ADHD, Autism
Giftedness, ADHD or autism in your relationship: understand the gaps, defuse conflict and build an adapted relationship with CBT.
Sexual vulnerability and emotional safety in couples
How to cultivate sexual vulnerability in a climate of emotional safety to strengthen couple intimacy.
Breaking the sexual routine: renewing couple intimacy
How to break the sexual routine in your relationship? Discover concrete strategies to rediscover desire and complicity.
5 Emotional Wounds: Impact on Relationships
Bourbeau's 5 emotional wounds through a CBT lens: impact on couples, Young's schemas, exercises and self-observation protocol.
