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Detecting Manipulation in Your Messages and Texts

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
6 min read

Detecting Manipulation in Your Messages and Texts

Written messages have an advantage that oral conversations don't: they remain. What is said by SMS, WhatsApp, or Messenger cannot be denied, reinterpreted, or reformulated after the fact. For this reason, writing is a particularly rich terrain for analysis when trying to identify manipulation patterns in your relationship.

As a CBT psychotherapist, I encourage my patients to reread their conversations with a clinical eye. Not to look for fault, but to spot patterns that, through repetition, become invisible. This article gives you a concrete framework for analyzing your own exchanges.

The 8 Warning Signs in Messages

1. Response Time as a Power Tool

The manipulator uses response delay strategically: hours of silence followed by a casual message, or conversely, a demand for immediate response.

What it looks like:
  • You send an important message -> silence for 6 hours -> "Oh sorry I didn't see it"
  • You don't respond in 10 minutes -> "What are you doing?? Who are you with??"
  • The double standard is the key sign: what is tolerated for one is not tolerated for the other

2. Answers That Don't Answer

The manipulator systematically avoids answering direct questions, especially when they put them in a difficult position.

Examples:
  • You: "Why did you say that in front of my parents?" -> Them: "You're always criticizing me about something."
  • You: "Can you explain?" -> Them: "If you don't understand, that's your problem."
Notice that the initial question remains unanswered. The subject has been deflected.

3. The Passive-Aggressive Tone

The message seems neutral on the surface but carries implicit hostility.

Examples:
  • "Oh, you're going out again tonight. Fine."
  • "No no, do whatever you want. As usual."
  • "No problem. I'll remember this."
The "no problem" that doesn't mean there's no problem at all is a classic of passive-aggressive communication by message.

4. The "Always" and "Never"

Absolute generalizations are a strong marker of manipulative communication.

Examples:
  • "You NEVER pay attention to me."
  • "It's ALWAYS the same with you."
  • "You NEVER change."
These generalizations prevent any constructive discussion. How do you respond to a "never"? The only option is to defend yourself, which diverts from the real discussion.

5. The Trap Message

A question that looks like an innocent question but is actually a test.

Examples:
  • "Who's this Lucas who liked your photo?"
  • "Your colleague, what does she look like?"
  • "What would you do if we broke up?"
There is no right answer to these questions. Whatever your answer, it will be used against you.

6. Non-Apology Apologies

Apologies that don't actually take responsibility.

Examples:
  • "Sorry if you felt hurt." (your sensitivity is the problem, not the act)
  • "I'm sorry, but you provoked me." (the apology is cancelled by the justification)
  • "OK fine, sorry, can we move on now?" (the apology is a tool to close the subject)

7. Control Disguised as Concern

Messages that seem caring but are actually control.

Examples:
  • "Send me your location, it's just to know you're safe."
  • "Who are you with? I'm not asking to control, just curious."
  • "What time are you coming home? To prepare dinner." (but the real question lies elsewhere)

8. The Disappearance-Reappearance

The manipulator disappears without explanation then returns as if nothing happened.

Examples:
  • Three days of silence -> "Hey! How are you?"
  • No response for 48 hours -> "My phone had a glitch"
  • Silence after an argument -> reappearance with an "I miss you" without ever addressing the conflict

How to Detect It in Your Messages: The Analysis Grid

Here is a systematic method for analyzing your conversations.

Step 1: Choose 5 Recent Conversations

Select 5 exchanges from last week, prioritizing those that left you feeling uneasy.

Step 2: For Each Conversation, Note

| Question | Your Answer |
|----------|-------------|
| Who initiated the conversation? | |
| What was the initial topic? | |
| Was the initial topic resolved? | |
| Who apologized? | |
| How did you feel afterward? | |
| Was the tone respectful on both sides? | |

Step 3: Identify Recurring Patterns

After filling out this table for 5 conversations, the patterns become visible:

  • Are you always the one apologizing?

  • Are the topics you raise never resolved?

  • Do you systematically feel bad after the exchanges?


False Positives: What Is Not Manipulation

It's important not to see manipulation everywhere. Here is what it is not:

  • A sincère disagreement: your partner has the right to disagree
  • Variable response time: everyone is sometimes busy
  • Clumsy wording: everyone writes poorly from time to time
  • A direct request: asking for something clearly is not blackmail
The key difference is repetition and intention. An isolated behavior is an incident. A pattern that repeats systematically and always leaves you in the same position (guilty, anxious, submissive) is a sign of manipulation.

Taking Action

If you've identified several of these signals in your conversations, here are the next steps:

  • Don't delete your messages: they are your best analysis tool
  • Talk to someone: a friend, a loved one, a professional
  • Set boundaries: "I refuse to continue this conversation in this tone"
  • Consult if the pattern has been established for a long time
  • For an in-depth analysis of your conversational dynamics, you can import your exchanges on scan.psychologieetserenite.com. Clinical insight helps reveal what habit has made invisible.

    Our psychological tests are also available to help you better understand your relational patterns.


    Gildas Garrec, CBT psychotherapist in Nantes

    Watch: Go Further

    To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

    The Childhood Lie Ruining All Of Our Lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Childhood Lie Ruining All Of Our Lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Diary of a CEO

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