Gaslighting rarely begins with an obvious lie. It begins with a small one — the kind you would doubt yourself over before you doubted them. Over time, those small denials add up, until you are no longer sure what you saw, said, or felt. The 10 examples of gaslighting below show how the pattern actually sounds and feels in a relationship, so it becomes easier to name — and naming it is where its power starts to fade.
What is gaslighting in a relationship?
The American Psychological Association defines gaslighting as manipulating someone into doubting their own perceptions, memory, or understanding of events. In a relationship, it tends to look less like a single dramatic act and more like a slow erosion. The Gottman Institute’s clinical writing on gaslighting, drawing on Certified Gottman Therapist Dr. Dana McNeil, describes the hallmark move: instead of taking responsibility, the gaslighter implies you misunderstood, misremembered, or overreacted. The damage does not land on the facts. It lands on your trust in yourself.
10 real-world examples of gaslighting
- Flat denial. They insist something you clearly remember “never happened.”
- Trivializing. Your hurt is recast as you being “too sensitive” or “dramatic.”
- Rewriting history. They confidently retell a shared event in a version that favors them.
- Blame-shifting. Somehow you end up apologizing for their behavior.
- Withholding. They refuse to engage — “I’m not doing this again” — until you chase and concede.
- Discrediting you to others. They tell friends or family you’re “unstable,” quietly isolating you.
- Feigned confusion. “I have no idea what you’re talking about,” repeated until you give up.
- Using your insecurities. Something you once confided becomes the lever they pull.
- Intermittent warmth. Occasional affection or praise after harm, keeping you off balance and hopeful.
- Questioning your mind. “You’re imagining things,” “You’re losing it” — aimed directly at your grip on reality.
What are the most common gaslighting phrases?
A few phrases recur so often they are worth memorizing as warning signs: “That never happened.” “You’re overreacting.” “I never said that.” “You’re too sensitive.” “You’re imagining things.” “Everyone agrees with me.” “Stop being so dramatic.” On their own, any of these can be innocent. As a steady pattern — always landing on your perception rather than their behavior — they are a signal.
How do you recognize gaslighting while it’s happening to you?
The clearest early sign is often in your body, not your logic. You apologize constantly. You replay conversations trying to find where you went wrong. You start keeping mental “evidence” to prove your own memory to yourself. You feel confused, foggy, or like you are walking on eggshells in your own home. That growing self-doubt is the cost gaslighting extracts — and it is the opposite of the emotional safety a relationship is supposed to provide.
How do you respond to gaslighting in a relationship?
Start by trusting your own account. Writing things down, soon after they happen, can steady a memory that someone else is trying to unsettle. Resist the pull to “win” the argument or to fix the other person — that is not your job, and it rarely works. Lean on outside perspective: a trusted friend, or a therapist who can reflect reality back to you. And it bears saying plainly: sustained gaslighting is a form of emotional abuse. If a relationship has begun to feel toxic, or you do not feel safe, that is the moment to reach for professional support — and, where needed, distance — rather than carry it alone.
If you want a clearer picture of what actually sits underneath your recurring fights, What Are You Really Fighting About? offers a free place to start.
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