24/02/2025
Have you ever felt loyal to someone, been their biggest supporter, but the moment you expressed yourself or shared a different view you were criticised for not being right?
If you don't do things their way they end up correcting you, so you end up doing things the way they want.
It feels like you're being criticised for not getting it right. So you try to get it right, but then it will be something else you do wrong. You might be told how to behave, be judged on your appearance or feel constantly nitpicked. It feels like nothing you do is good enough.
Maybe you feel pressure to meet their expectations, which seem unrealistic. You may feel pressure to respond the way they want.
Eventually, you end up walking on eggshells in case you do or say the wrong thing. So you become hypervigilant about what you say or do. You live under constant fear of their reaction.
Perhaps you felt wrong for speaking up, and question yourself. So you are careful in what you say to avoid being wrong.
You may even feel drawn into doing what they want, because they guilt trip you or punish you.
So you feel a shell of yourself around this person and give up your own thoughts, because you feel this person knows you better than you. You tell yourself this person must be right, not trusting yourself. So you start to gaslight yourself. You back down on yourself and let this person control you. You may feel under their thumb, as if this person has some kind of psychological hold over you.
But you get backlash for not going along with them, so you give up on yourself to avoid the fight. It becomes easier not to say anything at all. It will just make things worse.
This could be your boss, who micromanages you for minor mistakes. It could be a co-worker, who gossips behind your back. Perhaps a partner picks on you or pokes fun at you. A parent might control what you think in order to keep you there.
Any time they get exposed, they feel inadequate for getting it wrong and have to protect themselves by devaluing you in order to modulate their fragile self-esteem. They may have had a harsh, critical parent who focused on what they did wrong, so they learned to be perfect to get approval.
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