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» Home » Turning Inwards

You’re Not Going Crazy: 15 Signs You’re a Victim of Gaslighting

by Aletheia Luna · Updated: Jul 25, 2024 · 372 Comments

Image of a woman suffering from gaslighting
Gaslighting image

The only way you can describe how you feel is that you feel minimized.  You feel crushed and smothered.  You’re constantly second-guessing yourself; your feelings, your perceptions, your memories, and a small, suffocated part inside of you wonders whether you are actually going crazy.

You feel neurotic, you feel hyper-sensitive and you feel an overwhelming sense of alienation.

What is wrong with you?


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If you can identify with what I just wrote, you are most likely experiencing a sophisticated manipulation technique known as Gaslighting.  This technique undermines your entire perception of reality and can slowly creep into your relationships, friendships, family life and work life.

Although you might feel crazy, although you might feel imbalanced and irrational, there is still hope.

Table of contents

  • What is Gaslighting?
  • 3 Examples of Gaslighting
  • How to Know Whether Someone is Gaslighting You
  • Tactics Used by the Gaslighter
  • Why Empaths Often Get Gaslighted
  • Healing the Wounds Ignited by Gaslighting

What is Gaslighting?

Inspired by the 1940 and 1944 films “Gas Light,” where a husband systematically manipulates his wife in order to make her feel crazy, the term “Gaslighting” is now commonly used to describe behavior that is inherently manipulative.

Gaslighting, at its core, is a form of emotional abuse that slowly eats away at your ability to make judgments. 

Essentially, a Gaslighter spins their negative, harmful or destructive words and actions in their favor, deflecting the blame for their abusive deeds and pointing the finger at you.  This is often done by making you feel “overly sensitive,” “paranoid,” “mentally unstable,” “silly,” “unhinged,” and many other sensations which cause you to doubt yourself.

Commonly adopted by psychopathic, sociopathic and narcissistic types of people, Gaslighting tends to eat away at you slowly until you realize that you’re a shell of the former person you were.

3 Examples of Gaslighting

Let’s take a look at some examples of Gaslighting.


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In a family scenario:  Andrew’s father is an angry, bitter man.  Every day Andrew is afraid to “tip the balance” of his father’s mood because he often bursts out in fits of rage calling Andrew a “bastard” and a “worthless little loser,” among many other hurtful names.  When Andrew confronts his father about this aggressive name-calling, Andrew’s father laughs and tells him “to stop being so sensitive.”

In a relationship scenario:  Jade has been married for 5 years and has two small children with her husband Mike.  For the past few months, Jade has been trying to establish a small art shop, but when she asks for her husband’s assistance his mood darkens: “I can’t believe you’re spending so much time on this shop—don’t you care about me—don’t you care about your kids?  You’re supposed to be mothering them!” he exclaims.  Jade is shocked, “But I just wanted you to help me with setting up the store!  And I haven’t been neglecting anyone!”  Mike comes up very close to Jade’s face: “You see!   Now you’re denying it.  When I married you I thought you’d be there for your family.  I should just take the kids and go already!”  Mike storms off.  Later, when Jade sits down to talk with Mike about his threat, Mike says, “Honey, you know you were overreacting, and you know that you’ve been obsessing over this shop too much.  That makes the rest of us feel very ignored and excluded, I hope you understand that.”

At work scenario:  Sophie has been working in her department for the past five years when she is given a promotion to migrate to another level of the company that pays a higher salary.  However, Sophie has been given a trial period to determine whether she is capable of fulfilling her duties or not.  Nervously, she meets with her new supervisor, Kelly. At first, Sophie likes her supervisor and fulfills all of her tasks on time.  However, her supervisor begins to ask her to do belittling chores and favors here and there with increasing frequency.  While Sophie is fine with helping out, she finds that Kelly is becoming more and more demanding.  Finally, as Sophie’s work piles up to an unbearable level, she tells Kelly that she needs to focus on completing her work, but she can help another time.  Later, in a staff meeting, Kelly introduces Sophie to everyone and says, “Although she’s not keeping up with us yet, I’m sure she’ll learn to embody our hard-working ethics soon!”  Immediately, Sophie blushes and feels publicly insulted and humiliated, fearing for the security of her new job.  Later when Sophie asks her supervisor why she thinks that “she is not embodying their hard-working ethic,” her supervisor says: “I think you misunderstood me.  I just said that you’re not used to our pace of work so that other people can help you out.”  From then on Sophie accepts all extra demands and chores, no matter how much work she has, or how demeaning the tasks are.

How to Know Whether Someone is Gaslighting You

Gaslighting is so harmful because it promotes anxiety, depression, and with enough frequency in our lives, can sometimes trigger nervous breakdowns.  So the question now it: are you being gaslighted?  How can you know whether you’re experiencing this subtle form of manipulation in your life?  Review the following tell-tale signs:

  1. Something is “off” about your friend, partner, son, daughter, mother, father, sister, brother, colleagues, boss, or other person in your life … but you can’t quite explain or pinpoint what.
  2. You frequently second-guess your ability to remember the details of past events leaving you psychologically powerless.
  3. You feel confused and disorientated.
  4. You feel threatened and on-edge around this person, but you don’t know why.
  5. You feel the need to apologize all the time for what you do or who you are.
  6. You never quite feel “good enough” and try to live up to the expectations and demands of others, even if they are unreasonable or harm you in some way.
  7. You feel like there’s something fundamentally wrong with you, e.g. you’re neurotic or are “losing it.”
  8. You feel like you’re constantly overreacting or are “too sensitive.”
  9. You feel isolated, hopeless, misunderstood and depressed.
  10. You find it hard to trust your own judgment, and given a choice, you choose to believe the judgment of the abuser.
  11. You feel scared and as though “something is terribly wrong,” but you don’t know what or why.
  12. You find it hard to make decisions because you distrust yourself.
  13. You feel as though you’re a much weaker version of yourself, and you were much more strong and confident in the past.
  14. You feel guilty for not feeling happy like you used to.
  15. You’ve become afraid of “speaking up” or expressing your emotions, so you stay silent instead.

Tactics Used by the Gaslighter

Image of a narcissist's face gaslighting

Gaslighters use a variety of subtle techniques to undermine your reality and portray you as the disturbed and messed up one.  These include, for example:

  • Discrediting you by making other people think that you’re crazy, irrational or unstable.
  • Using a mask of confidence, assertiveness, and/or fake compassion to make you believe that you “have it all wrong.” Therefore, eventually, you begin to doubt yourself and believe their version of past events.
  • Changing the subject. The gaslighter may divert the topic by asking another question, or making a statement usually directed at your thoughts, e.g. “You’re imagining things—that never happened!”  “No, you’re wrong, you didn’t remember right.”  “Is that another crazy idea you got from your (family member/friend)?”
  • Minimizing.  By trivializing how you feel and what you think, the gaslighter gains more and more power over you, e.g. “Why are you being so sensitive?” “You don’t need to get angry over a little thing like that!” “I was just joking around, why are you taking things so seriously?”
  • Denial and avoidance. By refusing to acknowledge your feelings and thoughts, the gaslighter causes you to doubt yourself more and more.  For example, “I don’t remember that, you must have dreamt it!” “You’re lying, I never said that.” “I don’t know what you’re talking about, you’re changing the subject.”
  • Twisting and reframing. When the gaslighter confidently and subtly twists and reframes what was said or done in their favor, they can cause you to second-guess yourself—especially when paired with fake compassion, making you feel as though you are “unstable,” “irrational,” and so forth.  For example, “I didn’t say that, I said _____” “I didn’t beat you up Johnny, I just gave you a smack around the head—that’s what all good fathers do.”  “If you remember correctly, I was actually trying to help you.”

Why Empaths Often Get Gaslighted

An empath is a person who is highly sensitive to the energy of others. Empaths are known as energy sponges because they absorb the emotional pain around them. As a result, empaths tend to be highly self-sacrificing in an attempt to make everyone’s lives better.

When it comes to gaslighting, empaths are easy targets because they often struggle to differentiate themselves from their abusers. In other words, while they are highly intuitive and perceptive people, empaths often lack personal boundaries and struggle to say “no.” And no boundaries = perfect prey for narcissistic gaslighting techniques!

I’ve explored the issue of narcissistic gaslighting abuse in my book Awakened Empath.

If you think this might be an issue for you, it’s definitely worth checking out. This is a serious issue that can create long-term harm in your life, especially if you’re a sensitive person.

Healing the Wounds Ignited by Gaslighting

Gaslighting causes us to doubt our own memories, perceptions, and judgments, throwing us emotionally and psychologically off balance.

If you feel as though your self-esteem, confidence, and independence has withered under the flame of gaslighting you are not alone … and there certainly is hope!

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Almost all of us, including myself, have experienced one form of Gaslighting or another throughout life. 

The problems arise when Gaslighting is a frequent shadow that trails behind our relationships and partnerships.  

The good news is that knowledge and awareness is the first step to healing your life and rebuilding the strong, perceptive person you are … and you have already taken it!

While it is true that in some situations we genuinely might be overreacting, or might genuinely be exhibiting irrational behavior, it is also important for you to listen to your instinct or intuition. 

Do you have a heavy feeling in the pit of your stomach?  Do you feel weighed down and oppressed?  Do you feel depressed?  These are signs that you have unconsciously picked up on deception and “foul play.” 

While we can consciously be fooled, unconsciously we can’t, and often we will have a lingering feeling that “something just isn’t right.”  Make sure that you listen to this feeling and seek help, either professionally or socially (i.e. a trusted group of friends or a support network).

In summary, here are some ways to support yourself in the face of gaslighting:

  • Firstly clarify to yourself how, when and who is gaslighting you. Think about what ways they make you feel unhinged and like you’re losing it. Write down whatever you can think of. You must be able to confirm that you’re being gaslighted before you can move on with your life.
  • Pay attention to the signs of being gaslighted, like feeling confused, belittled, “crazy” or manipulated. Take a deep breath, clear your mind, and center yourself. Set aside regular time for grounding each day through meditation or a mindfulness exercise. These techniques will help you to stay objective even in difficult circumstances.
  • Decide whether it’s worth continuing your friendship or relationship. If you’re in a working relationship, think about whether it’s worth staying in your job or not. If you want to stay, think about ways to minimize interaction with the gaslighter until you feel grounded and confident.
  • Talk to trusted friends or loved ones about your problem. Alternatively, seek help from a mentor or therapist who can help you do some shadow work.
  • Shift your perspective from being a victim to being a warrior/winner or whatever word feels the most empowering. You don’t have to remain a victim for the rest of your life, and by reclaiming your personal power, you’ll also be able to help others in similar circumstances.
  • Read my emotional abuse article to deepen your understanding of this topic.

I hope these actions can help you regain a sense of personal clarity, confidence, and empowerment once again as you recover from the gaslighter’s mind games.

***

If you have left a relationship in which you were being gaslighted, and are being targeted by a narcissist in your life again, check out my article on “hoovering” which is another twisted emotional manipulation technique.

Are you experiencing Gaslighting?  Do you know someone else who is?  Do you have any recommendations that would help others?  Please share below.

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About Aletheia Luna

Aletheia Luna is a prolific psychospiritual writer, author, educator, and intuitive guide whose work has touched the lives of millions worldwide. As a survivor of fundamentalist religious abuse, her mission is to help others find love, strength, and inner light in even the darkest places. She is the author of hundreds of popular articles, as well as numerous books and journals on the topics of Self-Love, Spiritual Awakening, and more. [Read More]

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  1. Fluff Puff says

    March 17, 2016 at 8:15 am

    This so perfectly describes a situation I had found myself in not too long ago. I’m still trying to recover. It has affected my ability to do my job, my ability to be intimate with people, my ability to be close with people, just all in all my ability to function as a human being. I have really bad days where I can barely cope. I have limited my contact with this person but unfortunately I don’t think I’ll ever be truly rid of them unless I cut other people I care about out of my life as well.

    Reply
  2. Rebecca says

    February 29, 2016 at 11:12 pm

    I have experienced all of this. I found out recently that my husband was abusing pain pills for the second time in the four years we’ve been together. We are four months behind on our mortgage and he spent 400$ on additional pain pills even though he has a prescription for 120 of them a month. He ran out of 200 of them and then asked me to give him my adhd medication so he didn’t have to feel any back pain. It hit me what a huge problem and addiction it was. And instead of owning up to what he has done. He has for two weeks now told me I must have met someone else. Or I just want to leave him. That’s why I’m so upset. I wanted a reason to leave. It’s been heart breaking. I called his doctor and told him what was going on. And even made an appointment with a couples therapist. He googled her and since she is also a social worker he started screaming at me telling me I wanted to be placed in an abused women’s shelter. My appointment with the therapist is today. And he’s made it clear he will not go. I feel like maybe having someone in the room that puts on a level playing field to talk would help because I always feel like he manipulates me in to somehow apologizing even though he’s causing the problem. But it doesn’t matter because he won’t go. He told me I wanted to sleep with the therapist and one day he’d be picking his kids up at the doctors house. Somehow he missed that the therapist is a woman.
    I feel helpless. I feel guilty because after everything that’s happened in the last few weeks I actually do feel like leaving is entering my mind. I have two kids. One of them is his and my daughter calls him dad (her dad passed away a couple years ago). I’m a stay at home mom. I went to school about two years ago the first time I found out he was abusinf his pain pills. I went back home because he said he could get it under control. In the process of all of this I canceled our wedding. Something he still holds over my head. But when I came back I took the money for the wedding and used it to go to school for dental assisting and I had to fight him tooth and nail the entire time because he said the only reason I was going to school was so that I could leave him and support the kids when I did it. I don’t know how often people read these. But I could really use some advice.

    Reply
  3. Amber Collis says

    February 27, 2016 at 3:01 am

    This was so eye opening to me. My sister did this to me. She did the ” why are you so upset”. She convinced my extended family I wa a little crazy and just wanted to ruin holidays. One Christmas she took my keys and hid them , btw she is in her forties. Then when iI couldn’t find them she refused to look in her stuff. My uncle tore his house apart looking for them. In the meantime she left. After bout 30 mins she came back claiming she found them in her stuff. She then turned it around saying I put them there. She once attacked me, held me on the floor choking me and turned it around saying I attacked her. No one believed me until my nephew asked why was she trying to kill me. She does not live with me but runs the blame game cause she lives in a women’s shelter.

    Reply
  4. karma says

    February 26, 2016 at 9:42 pm

    Interesting that the pop up that appeared while I was reading the article used it, giving me a choice of wanting to improve myself or not wanting to improve myself when all I really wanted to do was read an article without being interrupted by ads. But clicking away left me feeling bad for at least not checking to see what the improvement was.

    Reply
  5. SpaceCaptainWarlock says

    February 24, 2016 at 10:55 pm

    I have experienced this, although I didn’t know it was gaslighting at the time. My “solution” was to keep a journal. Daily would be ideal, but simply being able to document arguments or events was extremely helpful in making me realize that I wasn’t the crazy one. The real solution in the end was divorce.

    Reply
  6. Anonymous says

    February 24, 2016 at 12:35 pm

    I actually cried reading this. This described 8 years of my life.

    “I wasn’t trying to hurt you, I was teyi g to restrain you, you were falling apart, having some kind of fit, I was afraid if I didn’t restrain.you you might hurt yourself. I never said those things, they must have been your imagination, I think you need to see someone, I love you, and I’m scared you are going to go so far one day you don’t come back.” But when I would try to get help I would be cut off, “you are being unreasonable, I’m here, don’t you trust me to take care of you? I can keep you safe, I have all this time. If you go [to the hospital] you will never see [child] again. Please trust me.”

    “You were dreaming again, I tried to wake you up, but you started flailing and fighting me. You know i would never rape you. It isn’t your memory, its a dream. We both know you can’t tell the difference between real and imaginary, that’s why we had to take those books away, that’s why writing is so bad for you. I only let you do it because we can’t afford therapy, but really. Last night was a dream, we did have sex before bed, bit you must have mixed everything yo in your dreams. You have to believe me, I would never lie to you…”

    “How could you say that about us? Your mother told you that didn’t she? All she wants is to see us fall apart. Both our mothers do. They hate us for having such a strong love, so they want to ruin what they can’t have.”

    “I never would have slepted with her if you hadn’t introduced us, and besides you are so depressed I thought that offering you the chance to explore other beds might help, and I know you have been scared to try it, but this is a two way street, and you want me to be happy right? I only want what’s best for us. And if you make me choose between you two I will kill myself.”

    The last one did it, when he said he was moving US in with HER, but that I could have the fold out because he loved us both equally a switch went off in my head and I found a way out of the relationship. The last two years were like the above comments, and I would be bruised, I would dream of waking up to find the act engaged, or wake up choking on [it] and begging for it to stop, but be told when I would fight back it was all in my head, that he was waking me from a dream. I was isolated, scared, and when I was finally out of his reach the texts and emais were as spiteful, manipulative, and confusing.

    I am sharing this as a warning. If your relationship is starting to make you feel crazy get out now. Don’t accept excuses if they don’t want you to get help it is more important then ever you do. Please don’t make my mistake. Please get put now.

    Reply
  7. JizzLips says

    February 20, 2016 at 4:19 am

    Hi, please ignore the ridiculous username. It was a joke on another website and I like to use it to keep my identity secret.

    If anyone could reply to this and help me out it would be great, I would like some input because I do have mental health issues and at times it really is hard to tell when I am being “crazy” and when I am experiencing gas lighting.

    I have always been belittled for most of my life, from bullying at school to my home life. Now with my partner of six years the feeling grows every day that he is gas lighting me in how he treats me.
    He will say some of the most ignorant, rude and demeaning things and swear up and down he was joking and I shouldn’t take it so seriously because… he was “just joking”. I feel as though he is never supportive of what I say or do (which was what my family life was and is still like) despite me being 100% in his corner.

    When I have an idea or I want to do something with my life, between him and my parent’s I am left feeling depressed, useless and I lose my motivation. For example, he was in the bathroom today and I told him I applied for a job while he was in there and his initial response was to laugh in my face. When I became annoyed and said “oh, yes that is so funny” he made another comment and I lashed out by saying “no wonder I never feel like doing anything and sitting at home all the time” (please be understanding that I have been growing more and more frustrated with him putting me down and I will explain more situations after this) to which he tried to say “It’s nice that you say you stay home out of spite” and I told him that I don’t do it out of spite but of course he would see it like that.
    He then tried to say he was supportive of an idea I had about making graphic designs and having a print of demand shop website for them, which he wasn’t. He wasn’t flat out supportive, he questioned my motives and “What do you expect to gain from this?”

    Back in September I spoke of getting a job and he told me he rather I not because we would be moving soon and he rather I deal with that, while at the same time he hints if not flat out says I need one. When I brought up getting a course so I could become a private investigator this was another situation where he laughed in my face and “joked” about it until I became upset and then it was “just joking”.

    I don’t do things and I stay home because any time I put myself out there and express my thoughts and ideas with my parents and with him they immediately put me down or essentially shit all over my idea.

    I made a diet change roughly 7-8 months ago and it has helped me gain weight (I have always been very tiny and could never gain weight) and he constantly “makes jokes” about me being overweight or fat despite me still being very tiny, I probably have gained 10-15 lbs which would bring me to 110-115 lbs. When I try to snap back because those hurt the most he goes back to his “I’m just joking, just joking” excuse. I shouldn’t take him so seriously, it was just a joke. I was initially very proud of gaining weight and feeling slightly more comfortable in my skin but I no longer do. He makes me question if I really am fat despite him saying he’s just joking.

    He also seems to have a habit of flat out calling things I say/ideas I have or things I do “dumb” or “stupid” and then acts shocked when I become pissed off. Then he didn’t mean it like that and I took it the wrong way and I shouldn’t take things so seriously.

    There is so much more that I unfortunately can’t remember at the moment but it is a daily thing where he makes ignorant comments that he swears up and down they are “just jokes”. I honestly feel like I am about to blow, I have addressed feeling respected so many times in the past and I feel like with every passing day I am closer to leaving because he never respects that I don’t like this treatment and he never changes.

    Reply
    • Anonymous says

      February 24, 2016 at 1:04 pm

      Get out. He isn’t to the point you think you are dreaming or doubting your memories, having time lost, ect. Don’t let him get there. Get out. You deserve better. And I can’t tell you how to love yourself, or how to undo what has been done, because I haven’t gotten that far yet. All I can say is get out as fast as you can.

      Reply
    • Lia Rees says

      June 17, 2016 at 7:22 pm

      Gaslighting is a deliberate attempt to make someone doubt their own perceptions. It was done to me in therapy. What you’ve been through sounds more like common-or-garden insensitive behaviour.

      I still recommend that you leave, if you haven’t already.

      Reply
    • Kim Seto says

      October 17, 2016 at 3:52 pm

      This sounds exactly like my mother, who is negative and condescending, sometimes I am so confused about her, one minute she makes one comment about something, the next minute she could be making other comments that are completely contradictory to the previous comment. When I asked her what does she really mean, she doesn’t seem to know…. which makes it even more confusing for me.

      I am not fully sure why my mother was and still gaslighting me. I know for a fact she is not doing it with ill intent. In fact my mother is a kind-heart woman. She has low intelligence but she is kind hearted.

      Negative comments constantly comes out of her mouth, such as: your new haircut looks awful, you have bad taste in clothes, you can’t cook. I can appreciate honesty when the person is genuine about it, but these negative comments are CONSTANTLY coming out of her mouth.

      She truly is not a bad person. She just has no idea how hurtful her negative comments are. She really had no idea her gaslighting me was making me go insane. Sometimes I am so confused looking at her, staring at this woman who raised me, who gave me life, but she is just so negative and complicated, so hard to understand and so incapable of logical reasoning…..you can never sit down and reason with her, cuz she will just NOT get it!

      She would deny having said certain things or done certain things. I don’t know what the motive is behind the denying, if someone knows, please tell me. If I brought up something she did last week, she would deny it then accuse me of lying.

      I felt I was going crazy everyday trying to cope with her gaslighting me. I felt I would explode, so I eventually moved out. Presently, I stay with her some of the time. It used to be so frustrating living with my mother. Moving out is probably the best thing I’d ever done.

      Is your partner capable of having a serious conversation with you if you ask to sit down and have a heart to heart talk with him? I ask this because my mother is incapable of it. My mother is very weak in the logical reasoning area. My mother is not capable of logical reasoning and she definitely is NOT able to see things objectively.

      Gaslighting has huge psychological effects on a person and can be be very damaging if you don’t stop it, or distance yourself from the gaslighter. I moved away from my mother for my own sanity, so it’s your call.

      Reply
  8. Edonai says

    January 19, 2016 at 6:59 pm

    Experienced it for the last 36 years, still experiencing it. Tried everything to get it to stop. Not everyone has a choice to leave their environment and “get out in nature to ground yourself” as many like to say. Best option, in my situation anyway, is to say nothing to anyone … ever. About anything.

    Reply
    • Aletheia says

      January 22, 2016 at 3:32 pm

      I’m sad to hear this Edonai. You can only be gaslighted if you have given away your power to another. Now that you’re conscious of it, it’s possible to change: awareness of the issue is the key to your freedom. But that’s only if you allow yourself to be free and release the chains of victimhood and martyrdom.

      Reply
      • theheidi doll says

        July 04, 2016 at 4:18 am

        …easier said than done. i truly feel you, edonai. prayers for us all.

        Reply
  9. chris60 says

    January 10, 2016 at 10:18 am

    This is interesting as the prime motive of many abusers is to escape accountability and consequences for their intentional attempts to deny having been abusive. Most abusers are driven by an insatiable need for power and control. To increase their sense of power they isolate then brainwash their victim, and warn others that their victim is crazy or a liar when they dare challenge the abuse. Unfortunately many people trust the wrong person and slowly the victim finds themselves alone without support or validation. Listen to your gut. If something feels off try to track the one engaging in malignant gossip that is creating your sense of instability and distress. Trust that little voice that warns that something is wrong and then find new people outside the sick inner circle who can help to establish a sense of safety and connection.

    Reply
    • Aletheia says

      January 22, 2016 at 3:33 pm

      Good advice Chris.

      Reply
    • yellowrose45 says

      April 19, 2016 at 1:50 pm

      my primary abuser during my adult life has been the Department of Veterans Affairs. It was a doctor of theirs who was the short-term abuser that kicked it off, but they definitely were going to protect his reputation over checking to see if I needed help. While I withered away.

      I stand in solidarity with military sex abuse survivors, because I was a proud Sailor, until my pelvis was fractured & didn’t heal. I was medically discharged, still needing lots of care for the chronic pain. The Department of Veterans Affairs put a physician on my case who was a liar and sexual predator. He convinced me to undergo unapproved treatment, no nurse present, and I was raped. Continuous patient exploitation pushed me to run out of the state to re-start my life. He located me again and stalked me for months, even taking time off from medical duties & being on medical school clinical faculty to fly out and say to me, “I have done you a grave disservice.” Mainly he tried to see if I remembered all I’d been through. Yeah, I do.

      There is such a thing as an “Iatrogenic Illness,” which is one resulting from the activity of a health care provider or institution; said of any adverse condition in a patient resulting from treatment by a physician or allied health professional. You know Uncle Sam will not let that term be associated with my life.

      Twenty-nine years later, my disability claim JUST got me entitled to appear for a VA evaluation for PTSD and a week later, I received a landmark award, in principle, for benefits. I won a claim under Sec. 1151, Title 38, U.S.C., which is for an injury or illness occurring as a result of VA treatment. However, to retaliate against me, the VA made my “effective date” 22 years later than the 1992 claim documents–I only got retroactive benefits from Jan. 27, 2014 to Mar. 31, 2014. The psychologist PTSD evaluator specifically wrote: “Veteran reported sexual trauma to multiple VAMC providers, but a timely diagnosis and treatment is not evident, the result being that the disability (PTSD) continued to progress.” The Veterans Benefits Administration threw that into “file 13.”

      The monetary recovery is a pittance because of the chicanery of ignoring when I filed the claim or when my medical record took notice of it, and substituting the date I wrote a letter asking President Obama not to just look at campus assaults, but those by medical professionals, too. This sick physician had a track record; I got his state license to practice suspended; another violation while he was on probation, for what he did to me, got him turned in by a co-worker, and made his license get revoked for life. In the documents, a matter of public record by Texas State Board of Medical Examiners, the Agreed Order says, “violated the boundaries of the doctor-patient relationship, therefore his conduct constitutes unprofessional and dishonorable conduct that deceived, defrauded and/or injured J.P. and constitutes a deviation from the acceptable standard of care.”

      You all should know military and veterans facility doctors do not have to carry malpractice coverage The VA won’t do anything about it, they’re incensed I even expected them to investigate. Congresspersons haven’t been able to bring any attention to this plight, either. There are doctors who rape, it’s too awful for people to think about. My mother told me I “had better just see to it that it stays out of the newspaper, so [I] don’t have to be embarrassed in front of my friends.” Veterans (after service) assaulted in VA care need as much a safety net (powerful media presence, legislation, pro bono assistance with taking a legal stand, admission to VA inpatient MST programs, etc.) as those still in uniform.

      Reply
      • chris60 says

        July 05, 2016 at 12:09 pm

        What a horrible experience. Unfortunately too much power is given to those in the medical profession and some practitioners violate their ethical code and do great harm to those who trusted them. Some doctors are treated as gods and wrongfully start to believe that they are above the law and moral norms of society. High intellect does not equate with empathy or emotional regard for those they treat. I’m pleased that this practitioner was held accountable for his misconduct and outrageous betrayal of trust.

        Reply
        • yellowrose45 says

          January 28, 2017 at 2:50 am

          But his employer is accountable, and Uncle Sam has behaved like a horse’s ass for 31 years despite all of my evidence. I’m nearly spent when it comes to activism. I’m going to be one of the veterans who dies waiting. So will the 9 men who reported the insane Physicians’ Asst from the Leavenworth Veterans Hospital in Kansas (are more victims, these are the only ones fighting).

          Reply
    • kymykat says

      October 31, 2016 at 2:17 am

      Chris60. You said it perfectly!!!!!!!!! Thank you

      Reply
  10. Heidi says

    January 09, 2016 at 6:36 am

    You’ve made me realize I’ve been married to a gaslighter for almost 30 years. I used to be such a joyful soul. I don’t want to upset the apple cart but I can’t do this anymore. I’m so afraid of where I’ll end up if I leave, and hurting my daughters. He’ll make me think it was the worst mistake I ever made. I don’t have the guts. So I sit and cry, then go make dinner.

    Reply
    • theheidi doll says

      July 04, 2016 at 5:22 am

      had i seen your post 10 years ago, i would’ve thought that i was the heidi who’d written your comment! my heart aches for you…and fears for you. you’ve been under the ‘spell’ for so long, you’ve forgotten how to do anything else, or how you ever did-you were once a capable, functioning human being-when/why did that stop?…the unpleasantness that follows any little rebellion or assertion of your self or individuality is so bad, that it’s not worth the tiny victory you might feel…even if not openly, you are definitely punished in one way or another for letting his grip on you slip for a second (and allowing him to know it) you’ve probably wondered how did i end up here? why would someone want to systematically tear me down? hurt my feelings, when i’ve given them nothing but my whole heart, body and soul? how could i not have seen this monster beneath the surface? (i’ll bet you sensed it before you were ever married and ignored that little feeling, because you weren’t experienced enough in life’s tragedies to recognize the warning, but i bet you remember that moment very clearly now) maybe you never had the power to ‘give’ away…maybe you never learned it was something you had to keep locked up tight, because THAT’S not was love is about, right? hear this, it won’t help the little voice in your heart understand WHY, and i’m so very, very sorry for that! my sad little voice is crying for yours, because there is no understanding, ever.

      you won’t plan it. it’ll surprise you as much as him, when you are all of a sudden (HA! more like for a quarter of a century! i digress) no longer able to stay. it’s as simple as that. it’s the worst way to do it, but people like us never make any GOOD choices for ourselves unless/until we’re between a rock and a hard place…that is on fire, covered in spikes, napalm and everything else horrendous to imagine. even then, sometimes we don’t, but sometimes we do…to our dismay. lol. it feels awful and amazing in a completely strange way, and you’ll have no say in what your self preservation has finally decided for you. RUN WITH IT, please don’t fight it it-you’ll regret it the rest of your YOUR life…i know, and that’s why i’m writing this.

      a few pieces of advice i have yet to see plainly spelled out that i wish i’d been given, in the event that you are able to escape— #1 COVER YOUR TRACKS! they’re natural detectives and pros at discovering anything hinting at them losing control of you #2 once you start to get away, keep moving and DON’T LOOK BACK. if you hesitate or let your guard down for one second, you’ll give them all they need to get the hooks back into you and you’ll be right back where it’s not comfortable, but definitely familiar. #3 EXPECT THE WORST there is nothing too low, too illegal, too horrifying for them to try at this point. prepare to have your friends and family and strangers and the legal system/law enforcement, literally EVERYONE turned against you (unless you already have advocates; in which case, you’ve no reason to still be there) mind you, this is all if you can find enough love for yourself in you to make that move…this advice is what i didn’t get and don’t know if i could’ve taken if i had! i feel your hopelessness, powerlessness, frustration at people telling you to “take the power back”, like it’s so simple! in my experience, for every year a gaslighter works on you, it takes the same amount of time to get free of the toxins-mentally, physically, emotionally, spiritually.

      Reply
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