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There’s a version of control that most people never learn to recognize because it looks nothing like what we were taught to fear.
We grew up watching movies where the villain raises their voice, slams their fist on the table, makes threats you can point to and say: that, right there, that’s the problem. We were trained to look for volume. For aggression. For the obvious.
But the most sophisticated forms of manipulation rarely announce themselves. They whisper. They withdraw. They leave you scanning your own behavior, convinced you did something wrong, unable to locate the moment everything shifted.

The quiet architecture of control
Psychologist Harriet Braiker, in her work on emotional manipulation, described a particular type of interpersonal dynamic where one person systematically erodes another’s confidence through tools that are nearly invisible to outsiders. Silence. Withdrawal of affection. A sudden coolness that has no stated cause but fills the room like a change in atmospheric pressure.
The key word is systematic. Everyone withdraws sometimes. Everyone needs space. What separates ordinary human messiness from manipulation is the pattern: the withdrawal is deployed when you assert a need, when you set a boundary, when you dare to say “this matters to me.” Over time, the lesson your nervous system absorbs is simple. Having needs is dangerous. Expressing them leads to abandonment.
Dr. George Simon, a clinical psychologist who has spent decades studying covert aggression, makes a crucial distinction. Overt aggressors fight you openly. Covert aggressors fight you while maintaining plausible deniability. They don’t yell because yelling would give you something to push back against. Instead, they give you nothing. A blank wall. A sigh. A slow, patient look that says you’re being irrational again.
Silence as a weapon, not a boundary
There’s a meaningful difference between someone who says “I need some time to process this before we talk” and someone who goes cold, refuses to explain why, and waits for you to cycle through confusion, self-doubt, and eventually an apology for something you can’t quite identify.
The first is a boundary. The second is a strategy.
Research on the “demand-withdraw” pattern in relationships, studied extensively by psychologist Andrew Christensen at UCLA, shows that this dynamic is one of the most reliable predictors of relationship distress. One partner raises a concern. The other withdraws. The first partner, now anxious, escalates. The withdrawer points to the escalation as proof that the first partner is “too much.” The original concern disappears entirely.
It’s elegant, in a terrible way. The person who withdraws gets to position themselves as the calm one, the reasonable one. And the person with the unaddressed need gets recast as the source of all the conflict.
In my recent piece on people who forgive too quickly, I explored how some of us learned early that restoring peace was our job, regardless of who caused the rupture. That same conditioning is exactly what makes silent manipulation so effective. If you already carry the belief that harmony is your responsibility, you won’t notice when someone weaponizes that belief against you.
The reframing of your needs as unreasonable
One of the most damaging tools in the covert manipulator’s repertoire is the ability to make your completely normal human needs feel like character flaws. You want reassurance? You’re “needy.” You want to talk about something that hurt you? You’re “starting drama.” You want accountability? You’re “living in the past.”
This is sometimes called “crazy-making” in clinical literature, and it targets your perception of reality itself. The goal is to get you to a point where you no longer trust your own assessment of what happened. When someone says “I never said that” about something you distinctly remember, or responds to a clear grievance with “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” they are performing a kind of psychological sleight of hand. Your attention moves from the thing they did to the question of whether you’re perceiving things correctly at all.
A recent New Yorker piece on the growing trend of going “no contact” with parents explored how many adults are only now, sometimes decades later, naming dynamics they couldn’t articulate as children. The patterns were there the whole time. The vocabulary wasn’t.
The emotional math that keeps you stuck
Here’s what makes this cycle so hard to exit: the manipulator occasionally gives you exactly what you need. A moment of warmth. A flash of the person you first connected with. Psychologists call this intermittent reinforcement, and it’s the same mechanism that makes slot machines addictive. The unpredictability of the reward is precisely what keeps you pulling the lever.
You stay because the good moments feel so good. Because when the warmth returns, the relief is enormous, and your brain codes that relief as love. Over time, you stop noticing that you’re spending most of your energy managing someone else’s mood, walking on eggshells to avoid the withdrawal, adjusting yourself in smaller and smaller ways to keep the peace.

Why the calm ones can be the most dangerous
There’s a cultural bias that equates calmness with emotional health. We admire people who “never lose their cool.” But calmness, like any trait, exists on a spectrum. At one end is genuine equanimity, the kind that comes from self-awareness and emotional regulation. At the other end is something colder: a composure that is maintained because the person has learned that staying calm while others become distressed gives them the upper hand.
As a recent YourTango article on shutting down manipulation pointed out, recognizing the tactic is the first step. The ability to name what’s happening breaks the spell. Phrases like “I notice you go quiet every time I bring up something important” or “I’m not going to apologize for having this conversation” interrupt the pattern because they refuse to accept the frame the manipulator has set.
This matters because manipulation thrives in ambiguity. It depends on you second-guessing yourself. The moment you say, clearly and without aggression, “I know what I experienced, and I’d like to talk about it,” you’ve changed the dynamic. You’ve stopped playing the role you were assigned.
The body keeps the score (even when you can’t name it)
Long before you consciously recognize manipulation, your body often knows. That tight feeling in your chest when you’re about to bring something up. The way you rehearse conversations in your head for hours, trying to find the “perfect” way to say something so it won’t be turned against you. The exhaustion that settles over you after an interaction that, on paper, contained nothing objectionable.
I wrote recently about the particular exhaustion of people who never learned it was safe to stop performing. That exhaustion and the fatigue of being in a covertly controlling relationship share the same root: the constant expenditure of energy monitoring someone else’s emotional state at the expense of your own.
Your nervous system is doing enormous work. It’s scanning for micro-shifts in tone, for the slight tightening around the eyes, for the pause before a response that tells you the temperature in the room just dropped. This hypervigilance is adaptive in the sense that it helps you survive the relationship. It is also slowly dismantling your sense of self.
What recognition looks like
If you’ve read this far and something in your chest tightened, pay attention to that. The recognition usually comes as a slow thaw, not a sudden revelation. You start noticing the pattern: that your needs are consistently treated as problems. That you feel worse about yourself after conversations that contained no raised voices. That you spend a disproportionate amount of time wondering if you’re “too sensitive” or “too much.”
Those questions, the ones you keep asking yourself about whether your feelings are valid, didn’t originate with you. Someone planted them there, carefully, over time, through strategic silence and the quiet withdrawal of warmth whenever you dared to take up space.
The most manipulative people rarely raise their voice because they don’t need to. They’ve found something far more effective: making you raise yours, and then pointing to your volume as evidence that you were the problem all along.
Naming it is where the shift begins. You stop asking “Am I too much?” and start asking a different question entirely: “Why does this person need me to believe that?”
Feature image by Markus Winkler on Pexels














