






Stott’s stomach was in knots. Lately, it was like that most of the time. He could never be good enough. Everything was always his fault. Just this week, there had been two “reality warp” situations already.
Tina, Scott’s wife, yelled at him for paying their electric bill a week late. (He’d written the check and gotten it ready to send. Tina said she would put it in the mailbox, but didn’t. Of course, she convinced Scott she’d asked him to mail it.)
Two days later, Tina blew up and tore into him in front of his sister. This time, Scott had put the lawn mower in the “wrong” spot; she tripped over it and dropped the groceries. (He could have sworn he put the lawn mower in the same spot as always, but decided he must have been wrong.) When his sister mentioned that Tina seemed to be over-dramatic and accusatory, Scott lied and said she was just having a rare rough day, downplaying the scene.
Scott is being “gaslighted” by his wife.
Gaslighting is “psychological abuse whereby a perpetrator manipulates a victim into doubting his or her own sanity or reality.” The perpetrator is frequently “withholding factual information from, and/or providing false information to, the victim – having the gradual effect of making them anxious, confused, and less able to trust their own memory and perception.” Victims are filled with self-doubt and often feel confused about what’s going on.
Scott grew up in a household dominated by alcoholism. His childhood was filled with self-doubt, constant attempts to hide his true feelings and frequent lies to cover up his father’s actions. All of these scenarios prime a person to be gaslighted as an adult; they make adult children of alcoholics perfect targets for gaslighting. The dysfunction of Scott’s childhood is now playing out in a slightly different way in his adult marriage.
Since it is easy for adult children of alcoholics to fall into this unhealthy pattern, it is important to be aware of signs that they are being gaslighted. Watch for the following L.I.G.H.T.S.
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