
Is My Partner Gaslighting Me? How to Tell From Their Text Messages
You just read their message for the fourth time. Maybe the fifth. You're not sure anymore. Something about it doesn't sit right, but you can't point to the specific word or phrase that's wrong. It sounds reasonable. It even sounds caring, in a way. But your stomach is tight and your mind keeps circling back, trying to figure out what just happened. That feeling — the one where the words look fine but something underneath them feels off — is not you being dramatic. It's not anxiety. It's not overthinking. It is your nervous system registering a structural pattern in the communication that your conscious mind hasn't named yet. And that pattern has a name. Gaslighting in text messages is harder to spot than gaslighting in person, because you lose tone, facial expression, and timing. All you have are the words. And the words are often carefully chosen to sound completely normal to anyone who reads them out of context. That's not an accident. That's the mechanism. The Structural Difference
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