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Psychology, Philosophy & Real Life

‘Character Disturbance’ at Psychology, Philosophy and Real Life, Page 10

The following articles are related to ‘Character Disturbance’ at Psychology, Philosophy and Real Life.

This list is sorted chronologically, from newest back to earliest.

Playing the Servant Role as a Manipulation Tactic

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

One of the more subtle ways that a person hell-bent upon power and control can veil their will to dominate is to cloak it under the cover of subservience to a higher cause or the purported desire to be of service.

Vilifying the Victim

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

Neurotics hate to think of themselves as the injuring party and would rather carry the burden of abuse than see themselves as an abuser. Disturbed characters know this well. So, when they want to take advantage, a good one-two punch is to play the victim and then vilify the real victim.

Playing the Victim

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

Most of the time, when the manipulator casts themselves as a victim, they don’t really see themselves as victimized, they just really want the other party to see them as wounded, injured, or suffering in some way in order to elicit sympathy, cloud the picture about just who is the victimizer and who is the victim, and otherwise impression-manage the real victim.

Acting Innocent and “Playing Dumb” as Manipulation Tactics

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

Feigning ignorance is an effective tactic that manipulates the person confronting the behavior into having doubts about the legitimacy of the issue they’re trying to bring to the other person’s attention.

Evasion and Diversion as Manipulation Tactics

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

Side-stepping and misleading: rather than being accountable and responsible, what the issue-dodger and subject-changer really wants is to advance their own agenda at the expense of yours, while simultaneously managing your impression of them.

Lying: The Ultimate Manipulation Tactic

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

Disordered characters don’t want you to know what they’re all about or what they’re up to. Lying helps keep them one-up on you and a step ahead of you.

Playing the Blame Game as a Manipulation Tactic

By Dr George Simon, PhD |

By habitually blaming others for his own indiscretions, the disturbed character resists modifying his problematic attitudes and behavior patterns.

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