Anonymous wrote:The danger of these online articles is that all of us, ALL OF US, exhibit these characteristics. Anyone who claims to be blameless is a special kind of toxic. So if you look at your spouse, over a several-decade relationship, you'll see "subtle signs" of all kinds of dysfunction, because humans are all dysfunctional, flawed creatures. DARVO took over gaslighting as the diagnosis du jour, but the truth is that everyone gaslights sometimes, everyone has DARVO'd and will likely DARVO again.
What makes these things problems isn't the single issue or occasional presence of some of these characteristics. "Emotional abuse" is a long-term pattern of consistent behaviors, not being wrong/stupid/a jerk once. There has to be more to it than that, otherwise we're all "emotional abusers" and the whole idea loses meaning.
So while it's tempting to look at your spouse's behaviors and try to categorize them as THE dysfunction in your relationship, the more mature thing to ask is "where do I do this same thing?" Remember the old adage about pointing the finger, and how many fingers point back at you when you do. Then keep in mind that the only person you control is yourself, so there's not really much point in trying to label or blame others. If you're unhappy, leave. If you're honest enough to recognize your part in the problem (and 99% of the time, you have one), simply get about the business of adjusting your own behavior(s) and see what happens.
Posting one-sided stories on DCUM and asking strangers to validate your non-medical evaluation of a person they don't know is... a special kind of sick, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tread lightly here, because once you start seeing these patterns you will want to start standing up and defending yourself and your kid. That risks escalating the abuse because your DH will interpret this as a personal attack.
Seek your own therapy first to help you process the emotions this discovery is uncovering and offer some tips for changing your communication based on this new awareness.
OP here: I was shocked when the videos I watched on DARVO said to not confront and couples counseling wouldn't work. Seems bleak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tread lightly here, because once you start seeing these patterns you will want to start standing up and defending yourself and your kid. That risks escalating the abuse because your DH will interpret this as a personal attack.
Seek your own therapy first to help you process the emotions this discovery is uncovering and offer some tips for changing your communication based on this new awareness.
OP here: I was shocked when the videos I watched on DARVO said to not confront and couples counseling wouldn't work. Seems bleak.
Anonymous wrote:Been married about 19 years and recently noticed that my husband’s behavior, what I call selfish, has intensified. Yesterday he did a thing that I described to my friend and she said he did a DARVO and when I looked it up, it exactly described what I experienced. Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender. He did it, in almost exact detail, to one of our children last week. This morning I looked up subtle signs of emotional abusive relationships and found that I’m experiencing about half of them but he’s not violent and he doesn’t threaten me or make me fearful in any way of anything other than he has threatened to leave me recently, which makes me feel emotionally unsafe. These: #10: Making you feel guilty for their behavior
#9: Invalidating your feelings
#8: Dismissive or withholding affection
#7: Monitoring or controlling your actions (he only controls my actions like spending although my income is double his).
#5: Blaming you for their problems or feelings
But this is by far the worst:
#4: Gaslighting and manipulation
Any hope for this marriage? I’m giving myself a year to decide and will start seeing a counselor next week. It's "not that bad" but it's happening, and getting noticeably worse.
Anonymous wrote:Tread lightly here, because once you start seeing these patterns you will want to start standing up and defending yourself and your kid. That risks escalating the abuse because your DH will interpret this as a personal attack.
Seek your own therapy first to help you process the emotions this discovery is uncovering and offer some tips for changing your communication based on this new awareness.