Narcissist Gaslighting: Why They Make You Question Your Reality
One of the most damaging parts of dealing with narcissistic behaviour is not always the obvious conflict, criticism, or arguments.
It is the confusion that comes afterwards.
You start questioning yourself.
You question what happened.
You question what was said.
You question whether your feelings are valid.
You question whether you are the problem.
Many people describe feeling like they are “going crazy” after repeated experiences with manipulation, denial, and emotional invalidation.
This is often referred to as gaslighting — a pattern of behaviour where someone attempts to make another person doubt their own perception, memory, feelings, or judgement.
Gaslighting does not usually happen through one single conversation. It often happens gradually, through repeated experiences that slowly weaken a person’s confidence in their own reality.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
1. They Dismiss Your Feelings
One of the most common signs of gaslighting is the dismissal of emotions.
You explain that something hurt you.
You try to communicate your concerns.
You hope for understanding.
Instead, you may hear:
“You’re too sensitive.”
“You’re overreacting.”
“You’re making a big deal out of nothing.”
The focus moves away from the behaviour that caused the hurt and onto whether you are “allowed” to feel hurt.
Over time, this can create self-doubt.
You may begin asking yourself:
“Am I being unreasonable?”
“Should I just let things go?”
“Why do I react this way?”
The problem is not having emotions. Emotions are a normal part of being human. The issue is when someone repeatedly teaches you that your emotions are the problem instead of allowing space for honest communication.

2. They Deny Your Experience
Another common gaslighting tactic is denying things that happened.
You remember a conversation.
You remember what was said.
You remember how the interaction made you feel.
But the other person insists:
“That never happened.”
“You’re remembering it wrong.”
“You’re making things up.”
When this happens repeatedly, it can create a deep sense of uncertainty.
Many people begin relying on the other person’s version of events more than their own memories.
They start thinking:
“Maybe I did misunderstand.”
“Maybe I am remembering it incorrectly.”
“Maybe I am the one causing problems.”
The danger is not simply disagreement. Healthy people can remember situations differently and still have respectful conversations.
The damaging part is when your reality is constantly dismissed, challenged, or rewritten until you no longer trust yourself.
3. They Turn Your Reaction Into The Problem
A common pattern is that the original issue disappears, and suddenly the focus becomes your response.
You raise a concern.
You explain that something hurt you.
Instead of discussing what happened, the conversation becomes about:
Your tone.
Your attitude.
Your emotions.
Your reaction.
Suddenly, you are defending yourself rather than addressing the original behaviour.
This can leave you feeling exhausted because every attempt to communicate becomes another argument about you.
You may find yourself carefully choosing your words, trying to avoid conflict, or spending hours explaining yourself.
Over time, this can create the feeling that nothing you say will ever be understood.
4. They Create Confusion Through Contradictions
Another reason people feel like they are losing themselves in unhealthy relationships is because of inconsistency.
One moment someone may seem caring, affectionate, and understanding.
The next moment they may become cold, dismissive, or critical.
This unpredictable pattern can create emotional confusion.
You may spend a lot of time analysing:
“What changed?”
“Did I do something wrong?”
“How can someone be loving one day and hurtful the next?”
When positive and negative experiences are mixed together, people can become focused on trying to get back to the good moments.
They may spend more energy chasing the version of the person they hope to see again rather than recognising the repeated pattern.
5. They Attack Your Character Instead Of Addressing Behaviour
Healthy communication focuses on specific actions.
For example:
“I felt hurt when that happened.”
A damaging dynamic often shifts from discussing behaviour to attacking identity.
Instead of:
“That situation upset me.”
It becomes:
“You are difficult.”
“You always cause problems.”
“Nobody can deal with you.”
These statements are not about solving an issue.
They are designed to make you question who you are.
Repeated criticism can slowly affect confidence and self-esteem.
You may begin seeing yourself through the other person’s negative perspective.
You start wondering whether you really are too emotional, too difficult, or too demanding.
6. You Stop Trusting Your Own Instincts
One of the biggest signs that gaslighting has affected you is when you stop trusting yourself.
Your inner voice becomes quieter.
You may start looking outside yourself for reassurance.
You ask other people:
“Was I wrong?”
“Did I overreact?”
“Did that actually happen?”
You may even ignore your own discomfort because you have learned to question it.
Many people describe knowing something felt wrong but convincing themselves they were imagining it.
Your instincts are not always perfect, but constantly feeling confused, anxious, or afraid to express yourself can be important information.
7. You Feel Like You Are Losing Yourself
The biggest impact of gaslighting is often not one argument or one disagreement.
It is the gradual loss of connection with yourself.
You may become more anxious.
You may overthink everything.
You may spend more time trying to prove your intentions.
You may feel like you are constantly trying to keep someone else happy.
The person you were before becomes harder to recognise.
You may wonder:
“When did I become someone who doubts everything?”
“When did I stop trusting myself?”
“When did my confidence disappear?”
This is why recognising gaslighting is so important.
Understanding the pattern allows you to begin rebuilding self-trust.
Remember, feeling confused does not automatically mean you are wrong.
Everyone experiences disagreements.
Everyone makes mistakes.
But healthy relationships should not leave you constantly questioning your worth, your memories, or your sanity.
If you repeatedly feel unheard, invalidated, and unsure of yourself, it is worth paying attention to that pattern.
The goal is not to prove yourself to someone who refuses to understand you.
The goal is to reconnect with your own voice.
Because one of the most powerful things you can regain after manipulation is the ability to trust yourself again.
Check these out!
Behind The Mask: The Rise Of A Narcissist
15 Rules To Deal With Narcissistic People.: How To Stay Sane And Break The Chain.
A Narcissists Handbook: The ultimate guide to understanding and overcoming narcissistic and emotional abuse.
Boundaries with Narcissists: Safeguarding Emotional, Psychological, and Physical Independence.
Healing from Narcissistic Abuse: A Guided Journal for Recovery and Empowerment: Reclaim Your Identity, Build Self-Esteem, and Embrace a Brighter Future
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Elizabeth Shaw is not a Doctor or a therapist. She is a mother of five, a blogger, a survivor of narcissistic abuse, and a life coach, She always recommends you get the support you feel comfortable and happy with. Finding the right support for you. Elizabeth has partnered with BetterHelp (Sponsored.) where you will be matched with a licensed councillor, who specialises in recovery from this kind of abuse.











