Guilt can be a positive emotion, but it's also often used as a tool to control or manipulate.

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Wondering what verbal emotional abuse looks like?
Let's start with what it feels like. Verbal emotional abuse feels like getting punched and hugged at the same time.
When you love someone and feel like they love you too, it’s hard to imagine that they could, or would, do anything deliberately to hurt you. Even when they do hurt you it’s easy to explain away their actions with, “he didn’t mean it” or “she was just angry.”
So, admitting that what a person you love is doing to you is verbally and emotionally abusive can be really difficult.
Verbal emotional abuse can also be especially difficult to recognize when you're in the middle of it.
Often a verbal abuser will make it seem like they care for you at the same time they're hurting you deeply.
The wounds from being verbally abused aren’t obvious either, unlike those from being physically abused. They’re subtle, internal wounds, tearing apart your self-esteem and self-identity.
Often victims will blame themselves, believing they’ve done something wrong or caused the abuser to act this way. And abusers will work hard to promote that belief, saying things like,
After all, they love you, right?
That’s not love – that’s them . . .
There's no abuse in a loving and healthy relationship.
The image of someone being yelled at and told how worthless they are may bring to mind a cowering woman with no self-confidence.
The truth is that victims of verbal emotional abuse come in all forms.
and everyone in-between can be victimized this way.
The common denominator is that the abuser is someone they love, and they believe loves them too.
Take a look at what some victims of verbal emotional abuse have to say.
Does any of this sound familiar?
Can you see yourself or someone you love in these stories of verbal emotional abuse?
If so, it’s time to make some changes. That can be easier said than done, but it’s necessary.
If you’re being emotionally abused, take the following steps to begin to get change:
None of these things are easy. Change in any form is rarely easy, but changing behavior that’s verbally and emotionally abusive is crucial.
Verbal emotional abuse is particularly difficult because it can feel both angry and loving at the same time. Abusive behavior is manipulative behavior, so it’s very common for abuse victims to end up feeling they’re at fault for the abuse.
If you suspect you’re being verbally and emotionally abused, know this:
If you think you may be a victim of verbal emotional abuse in your relationship, take another look at the real-life examples above. And understand that you’ll almost certainly need professional help to learn what to do.
As the last quote said, verbal abuse can make you feel "crazy," so you'll need a professional therapist to help you recognize the truth and restore the real 'you.'
Editor's Note: This post was originally published October 10, 2010, updated on November 06, 2018, and updated again accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Guilt can be a positive emotion, but it's also often used as a tool to control or manipulate.
Guilt is a powerful emotion and not always a bad one. It can nudge us to do better, apologize when we’re wrong, and keep us from being deceptive. But when guilt is used as a tool to control or shame someone, or to maintain the upper hand in a relationship, it becomes dangerous and detrimental to emotional health.
Would you recognize Emotional Manipulation In Your Marriage? Check the signs of Emotional Manipulation In Marriage and how you can stop being manipulated.
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I feel your pain, that's the way I get treated.
Hey I read my post just now and I'm sorry to all the women on here that I completely made lite of their situation I was only hoping to make people understand that abuse can happen to anyone at anytime,and being a male victim of mental abuse I know and it has taken its toll on me and my family. If we would take and look at our society and how men and women are veiw and how the word domestic violence is pretty much seen as male on female violence when it's not we need to make people who speak out against it to make sure they don't single it out as a woman only problem because if we made it less of an issue for men to come forward that it could help men and maybe prevent an abused man from becoming an abuser in his future relationship plus the obvious benifets of letting others know
I feel your pain, that's the way I get treated.
Abusive men are coward insecure beigns.