"Read this if…" someone's rules, moods, or punishments seem to run your whole life — and you are not sure whether that is "how relationships work."
Coercive control is a pattern of domination: monitoring, isolating, regulating, and punishing until another person organises their life around the controller's demands.
It is a core feature of many abusive relationships — and it can exist without frequent physical violence.
For GBV-specific depth, read Coercive Control and Unequal Power. This article explains the pattern in plain language for any setting where something does not feel right.
The logic of coercive control
Controllers often believe they are entitled to:
- know where you are and who you speak to
- veto clothes, friends, jobs, or faith
- punish independence with silence, rage, or threats
- frame compliance as love
The message underneath: your autonomy is optional.
Common tactics
- surveillance — phones, location, "checking in" constantly
- isolation — see Isolation: When Relationships Become Smaller
- economic control — taking wages, debt traps, sabotaging work
- sexual coercion — pressure framed as duty or makeup
- gaslighting — see What Is Gaslighting? (and What It Isn't)
- intermittent kindness — good days that make you hope the harm was an exception
Coercive control vs "strict" partners or parents
Strictness sets mutual rules. Coercive control sets fear:
| Strict but healthy-ish | Coercive control |
|---|---|
| curfews discussed openly | punishment for unseen "disrespect" |
| expectations explained | rules change without notice |
| consequences proportional | consequences designed to humiliate |
| you can negotiate | negotiation triggers rage or threats |
If you fear the person's reaction more than you respect the rule, look closer.
Why people stay
Not because they are foolish — because control works:
- dependency (money, housing, children, visa)
- hope tied to good days
- shame and secrecy
- realistic fear of escalation if they leave
Leaving Safely addresses exit risk.
Final thought
Coercive control is not passion. It is architecture — a life built so leaving feels impossible.
Naming it is the first step toward measuring how small your world has become — and whether you want it back.