Lord777
Professional
- Messages
- 2,579
- Reaction score
- 1,493
- Points
- 113
Emotional manipulators perfectly mimic ordinary people: there are many of them among our acquaintances, friends, and even close relatives. But while some resort to manipulation only occasionally and often unconsciously, others have mastered a whole science and skillfully achieve from those around them those actions in which they are interested.
? You have constant feelings of guilt
Relationships can be full only when partners, friends, or colleagues communicate on an equal footing. One of the most important meanings of any relationship is precisely to instill confidence in each other, to support, to help in a difficult situation. However, if after communicating with a person you regularly experience feelings of guilt, there is no doubt: you are dealing with a manipulator who uses you for his own purposes. The art of inspiring others to believe that they are to blame or owe something, some people master in early childhood. It is noteworthy that the reason for making you feel guilty can be both your action and its absence. You did not turn to your acquaintance-manipulator with words of consolation when he was demonstratively suffering - he makes you understand that you are hard-hearted. You tried to console him - he emphasizes that you chose the wrong words for this, and again you are the guilty party. Anything is suitable as a means of manipulation - when communicating with a manipulator, you will not be able to behave in such a way as not to be exposed to attack.
? Help is being imposed on you
Emotional manipulators often take on the appearance of sympathetic interlocutors who are always ready to listen to you, and friends who want to help. Indeed, by opening up to such a person, you show your vulnerabilities. In the future, this information will be useful to him. Very often, compassion serves only as an excuse to load you with important tasks for him: after listening to your exclamation about a particular failure, the manipulator immediately opens a session of half-hour complaints about his own life; having rendered a service that did not take him neither time nor energy, he immediately demands from you really serious help - and if you refuse, he goes to step 1, making it clear that you are an unreliable, heartless comrade.
? You cannot agree on anything
Manipulators are constantly changing the rules of the game: after all, any firmly adhered to an agreement is a step towards equality and honesty, and they cannot allow this in any way. This is why a favorite tactic of manipulators is to replay the rules on which you seem to have come to an agreement, to pretend that they did not agree on anything like that. In addition, they are real experts in seeing the world only from their own point of view, adjusting any events to their picture of reality. They can insult you in dialogue - and claim that you insulted them first; do a nefarious act that hurts you - and claim that it was you who provoked them. An emotional manipulator does not respect you - which means that he is ready for any lie to prove that he is right.
? An incomprehensible game is going on behind your back
Those who try to control you are forced to hide most of their manipulative mechanics from your eyes. This is why emotional manipulators are so fond of involving other people in their game, for example, retelling harsh statements from others that they did not really say, or, conversely, spreading rumors about you behind your back.
? You are forced to reproduce other people's emotions
Emotional manipulators are usually fixated on themselves: if they feel bad, then everyone around them should cry, they have success - others should jump for happiness with them. Forcing others to reproduce their own emotions is part of their comfort: they are used to seeing other people as a medium for self-affirmation. Of course, there are really serious situations when elementary politeness requires us to correspond to the emotional state of another, but this is rarely the case. If you have to constantly correspond to someone else's mood, this is an alarming symptom.
? You have constant feelings of guilt
Relationships can be full only when partners, friends, or colleagues communicate on an equal footing. One of the most important meanings of any relationship is precisely to instill confidence in each other, to support, to help in a difficult situation. However, if after communicating with a person you regularly experience feelings of guilt, there is no doubt: you are dealing with a manipulator who uses you for his own purposes. The art of inspiring others to believe that they are to blame or owe something, some people master in early childhood. It is noteworthy that the reason for making you feel guilty can be both your action and its absence. You did not turn to your acquaintance-manipulator with words of consolation when he was demonstratively suffering - he makes you understand that you are hard-hearted. You tried to console him - he emphasizes that you chose the wrong words for this, and again you are the guilty party. Anything is suitable as a means of manipulation - when communicating with a manipulator, you will not be able to behave in such a way as not to be exposed to attack.
? Help is being imposed on you
Emotional manipulators often take on the appearance of sympathetic interlocutors who are always ready to listen to you, and friends who want to help. Indeed, by opening up to such a person, you show your vulnerabilities. In the future, this information will be useful to him. Very often, compassion serves only as an excuse to load you with important tasks for him: after listening to your exclamation about a particular failure, the manipulator immediately opens a session of half-hour complaints about his own life; having rendered a service that did not take him neither time nor energy, he immediately demands from you really serious help - and if you refuse, he goes to step 1, making it clear that you are an unreliable, heartless comrade.
? You cannot agree on anything
Manipulators are constantly changing the rules of the game: after all, any firmly adhered to an agreement is a step towards equality and honesty, and they cannot allow this in any way. This is why a favorite tactic of manipulators is to replay the rules on which you seem to have come to an agreement, to pretend that they did not agree on anything like that. In addition, they are real experts in seeing the world only from their own point of view, adjusting any events to their picture of reality. They can insult you in dialogue - and claim that you insulted them first; do a nefarious act that hurts you - and claim that it was you who provoked them. An emotional manipulator does not respect you - which means that he is ready for any lie to prove that he is right.
? An incomprehensible game is going on behind your back
Those who try to control you are forced to hide most of their manipulative mechanics from your eyes. This is why emotional manipulators are so fond of involving other people in their game, for example, retelling harsh statements from others that they did not really say, or, conversely, spreading rumors about you behind your back.
? You are forced to reproduce other people's emotions
Emotional manipulators are usually fixated on themselves: if they feel bad, then everyone around them should cry, they have success - others should jump for happiness with them. Forcing others to reproduce their own emotions is part of their comfort: they are used to seeing other people as a medium for self-affirmation. Of course, there are really serious situations when elementary politeness requires us to correspond to the emotional state of another, but this is rarely the case. If you have to constantly correspond to someone else's mood, this is an alarming symptom.