Emotional Abuse – Could It Be Happening to You?

Have you ever walked away from a conversation feeling drained, confused, or small? That uneasy feeling may not be random. Emotional abuse can happen anywhere—within families, romantic relationships, friendships, workplaces, and even in parenting situations. Yet, it often goes unspoken.

Could someone in your life be using emotional manipulation? Keep reading—you might recognise more than you expect.


What Emotional Abuse Really Looks Like

Emotional abuse isn’t always loud or obvious. It can be silent, subtle, and deeply damaging. It often chips away at your confidence over time.

Using the Power and Control Wheel, we see how control is exerted emotionally, not just physically. Tactics like gaslighting, isolation, guilt-tripping, and blame-shifting are key indicators.

Contrary to common belief, abuse is not gender-specific. Anyone, regardless of gender, can be a victim or perpetrator.


Family and Scapegoating: The Hidden Harm

In families, emotional abuse can be masked as “tough love” or “discipline.” Scapegoating often occurs, where one member is blamed for all problems.

Does one family member always seem to get the blame? Are your boundaries constantly disrespected? These are strong red flags.

Over time, the nervous system becomes hypervigilant, staying in survival mode. That constant tension isn’t your fault. It’s a trauma response.


Romantic Relationships and Narcissistic Abuse

Emotional abuse in intimate relationships can feel like a rollercoaster. Love bombing, gaslighting, and control are hallmark behaviours of narcissistic abuse.

You may feel you’re always at fault or find yourself questioning your own memory. These are not signs of weakness; they are signs of manipulation.

This dynamic isn’t about love. It’s about power. Recognising this is the first step toward freedom.


Friendships: When Support Turns Toxic

Friendships should feel safe. But when a friend becomes controlling, dismissive, or passive-aggressive, emotional abuse might be occurring.

Are your accomplishments downplayed? Do you walk on eggshells? If so, this friendship may be more harmful than helpful.

Abuse isn’t only in romantic relationships. Toxic friendships can leave deep emotional scars.


Workplace Dynamics and Emotional Abuse

Emotional abuse in the workplace is often overlooked. Micromanagement, sabotage, exclusion, or public criticism are signs of coercive control.

If your nervous system is constantly on edge at work, your body is signalling danger. Your experience is valid.

Documenting patterns and seeking support is crucial. Abuse doesn’t stop just because it’s happening in a professional setting.


Parental Alienation and Obstruction

In co-parenting situations, emotional abuse can appear as parental alienation or obstruction. One parent may manipulate the child against the other.

This form of abuse is recognised on the Power and Control Wheel. It leaves lasting damage on both child and targeted parent.

Have you felt erased from your child’s life? Have lies been told to control the narrative? These are forms of psychological abuse.


The Nervous System: Where Trauma Lives

Your body holds the truth. Emotional abuse is not just psychological; it is somatic. The trauma is stored in the nervous system.

Somatic trauma-informed coaching helps reconnect you to safety. When you feel unsafe, even in calm moments, your body is remembering the abuse.

Breathing exercises, grounding, and body scanning are tools that can support healing. You are not overreacting. You are responding to stored trauma.


What Is Somatic Trauma-Informed Coaching?

This coaching style works with your body, not just your thoughts. It focuses on nervous system regulation to help you feel safe again.

When the body feels safe, clarity returns. Emotions become more manageable. Healthy relationships feel possible again.

Have you ever felt stuck even after therapy? A somatic approach could be the missing piece.


Taking the Next Step

Now that you know what to look for, what red flags have you noticed? Have you felt controlled, erased, or silenced in your relationships?

Awareness is the first step. Healing comes next.

Support is available. Whether through somatic trauma-informed coaching, support groups, or therapy, you don’t have to walk this alone.

Your nervous system deserves peace. You deserve to feel safe in every area of your life.

Kevin R Webb (MEd.L, BEd., BA Found., QTS), Somatic Trauma Informed Narcissistic Abuse Coach


Ready to learn more or work with a somatic coach? Reach out today to start your healing journey.

If this resonated with you, please join me on Zoom to share your story. Your voice matters. Let’s raise awareness about the silent epidemic of parental alienation and narcissistic abuse. Contact info@thepowerandcontrolwheel.co.uk for more information.

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info@thepowerandcontrolwheel.co.uk

If you’ve experienced abuse of any type and can’t find a way forward, contact me for effective, affordable, coaching support. Email support@thepowerandcontrolwheel.co.uk

author avatar
Kevin
Talk Support and Coach for Narcissistic Abuse and Parental Alienation

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