Gaslighting: How to Detect It in Your WhatsApp Messages
Gaslighting is one of the most destructive forms of manipulation in a relationship. Yet it has a peculiarity that victims tend to underestimate: it leaves traces. Unlike verbal manipulation that disappears in an instant, gaslighting through messages is carved into digital stone. Every "You're making that up," every "I never said that," every reversal of events is there, timestamped, archived, indisputable.
Your WhatsApp, Telegram, or Messenger conversations may contain proof of what you've been sensing confusedly for months: you're not going crazy. Someone is deliberately distorting your perception of reality. And your messages can prove it.
Typical Phrases in Gaslighting Messages
Robin Stern, psychoanalyst and author of The Gaslight Effect (2007), identified the mechanisms by which a manipulator progressively invalidates their victim's reality. In written conversations, these mechanisms translate into recurring formulations that appear with troubling regularity.
Denial of facts:- "I never said that."
- "You're completely making it up."
- "That's not how it happened."
- "Read it again, you're confusing everything."
- "You're too sensitive."
- "You're making a drama out of nothing."
- "It's all in your head."
- "You're overreacting."
- "It's your fault I'm reacting this way."
- "If you hadn't done that, I wouldn't have had to..."
- "You're pushing me to the edge."
- "You told me you were okay with it."
- "We decided together, don't change the story now."
What ScanMyLove Detects in Your Exchanges
Analysis of your conversations goes beyond simply listing keywords. It identifies structural patterns that, individually, might seem harmless, but when repeated across hundreds of messages, they paint a coherent picture of manipulation.
Here are the indicators that the report highlights:
- Projected cognitive distortions. The analysis identifies phrases designed to distort your perception of facts: denials, minimizations, causal reversals. These formulations are mapped according to Beck's cognitive distortions framework.
- Patterns of systematic denial. The report measures how frequently your partner contradicts your memories or perceptions. Occasional denial is normal. Systematic denial, accompanied by a peremptory tone, is a warning signal.
- Recurring emotional invalidation. Every time you express an emotion and the response is "You're exaggerating" or "You're too sensitive," that's invalidation. The report quantifies these occurrences and puts them in perspective with the power dynamics identified by the Duluth wheel.
- Reversal of guilt. The analysis identifies sequences where you voice a legitimate complaint and within a few messages, you end up apologizing. This reversal is one of the most reliable markers of conversational gaslighting.
Example: Camille and Antoine's Report
Camille, 29, had been living with Antoine for three years. She felt "increasingly lost," unable to know whether her reactions were justified or if she was "making a big deal out of nothing." She imported a year of WhatsApp conversations.
What the analysis revealed:- 147 occurrences of denial phrases ("I never said that," "You're making it up," "That's false"), averaging one every 2.5 days.
- 89 emotional invalidations ("You're too sensitive," "You're dramatizing," "It's all in your head").
- 62 reversals of guilt: in 73% of cases where Camille voiced a complaint, the conversation ended with Camille apologizing.
- A recurring pattern: Antoine contradicted a specific fact, Camille sent a screenshot proving the opposite, and Antoine responded "You're taking things out of context." The denial didn't stop in the face of proof. It mutated.
Camille wasn't "too sensitive." She was the target of a manipulation strategy documented by a year of messages.
Taking Action After Becoming Aware
If you recognize yourself in these descriptions, the first thing to hear is this: you are not responsible for the manipulation you are experiencing. Gaslighting works precisely because it makes you believe otherwise.
Here are the concrete steps I recommend in consultation:
- Keep your messages. Delete nothing. These conversations are your anchor in reality. They prove you're not making things up.
- Talk to someone you trust. Isolation is the manipulator's ally. Breaking the silence means reclaiming your power.
- Consult a professional. A psychologist or psychotherapist trained in psychological abuse can help you rebuild your self-confidence. CBT is particularly effective for deconstructing beliefs installed by gaslighting ("I'm crazy," "I'm too sensitive").
- 3919: Violence Against Women Helpline (anonymous and free call)
- 3114: National Suicide Prevention Hotline
- 114: Emergency SMS Number
To deepen your understanding of the topic, check out our detailed article on 7 gaslighting techniques and how to break free or our guide on concrete examples of gaslighting.
Your Messages Contain the Truth
Gaslighting makes you doubt everything, including yourself. But your conversations don't lie. Import your WhatsApp messages and let the numbers speak for you.
Would you prefer to see an example before diving in? Try the free demo with a fictional conversation to discover what the analysis can reveal.
You're not imagining things. And your messages can prove it.
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Need professional support?
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychopractitioner in Nantes, offers individual therapy, couples therapy, and structured therapeutic programs.
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