"Read this if…" something keeps feeling wrong in a relationship, friendship, or workplace — but when you raise it, the story changes, and you end up apologising for even asking.
Gaslighting is when someone repeatedly distorts reality, denies what happened, or attacks your credibility until you doubt your own memory, judgment, or sanity.
The term is widely used — sometimes too loosely. This article clarifies what gaslighting is, what it is not, and where to read next.
What gaslighting is
Gaslighting is a pattern, not one argument. It usually includes:
- denying events you both experienced
- reframing your reactions as the real problem ("you're crazy / too sensitive")
- rewriting history after harm
- recruiting others to back their version
- punishing you for remembering
The goal is control through confusion and self-doubt.
For a fuller read on how it shows up across settings, see Understanding Gaslighting.
What gaslighting is not
Gaslighting is not:
- every disagreement where two people remember differently
- honest feedback you dislike but can verify
- a therapist challenging unhelpful beliefs with consent and care
- someone simply having a different opinion
- you being wrong about a fact once
Memory is imperfect. Relationships have friction. Gaslighting is when denial and distortion are used as weapons — especially repeatedly, especially after harm.
A quick test
Ask yourself:
- Do I leave conversations feeling smaller and more confused?
- Do I keep secret records because I no longer trust my memory?
- When evidence appears, does the goalpost move?
- Am I apologising for being hurt?
One "that never happened" can be a bad moment. A pattern is gaslighting territory.
Gaslighting beyond romance
It appears in:
- families ("we never treated you like that")
- schools and workplaces ("no one else has a problem with me")
- politics of friend groups and online pile-ons
It is not only a gender-based violence tactic — though it is common there. See Coercive Control and Unequal Power when control is the wider pattern.
What helps
- document facts on a safe device
- reality-check with someone outside the dynamic
- stop endless debate designed to exhaust you
- ask for help — When Should You Ask for Help?
If home or relationship danger is present, read Early Warning Signs of Gender-Based Violence and Leaving Safely.
Final thought
Naming gaslighting is not calling everyone a villain. It is refusing to live inside someone else's edited version of your life.
You are allowed to trust what you lived through — and to seek relationships where your reality is not constantly on trial.