Examples of Gaslighting That Quietly Destroy Your Confidence

April 6, 2026

If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking, “Wait… was that actually a big deal?” or “Maybe I’m just overreacting…”—you’re not alone. Many of us experience subtle, everyday examples of gaslighting without even realizing it. And over time, those moments don’t just create confusion—they quietly erode your confidence. Gaslighting doesn’t always look loud or […]

If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking, “Wait… was that actually a big deal?” or “Maybe I’m just overreacting…”—you’re not alone.

Many of us experience subtle, everyday examples of gaslighting without even realizing it. And over time, those moments don’t just create confusion—they quietly erode your confidence.

Gaslighting doesn’t always look loud or obvious. Often, we experience it as doubt. And our thoughts start to sound like “I don’t know.”

In this solo episode of Don’t Cut Your Own Bangs, I share how what we call confusion is often something deeper: not a lack of clarity, but a lack of trust in what we already know and the safety to express it.

Let’s unpack that together.

Examples of Gaslighting That Hurt Your Confidence
Real examples of gaslighting that make you doubt yourself. A therapist explains how it impacts confidence—and how to trust what you know.

What Is Gaslighting?

Gaslighting is a form of emotional manipulation that causes you to question your reality, feelings, or memory.

It doesn’t always look like blatant denial. More often, it’s subtle, repeated, and wrapped in language that makes you second-guess yourself.

What does gaslighting sound like?

  • “You’re overthinking this.”
  • “That’s not what happened.”
  • “You’re being too sensitive.”
  • “I never said that.”
  • “You always do this.”

Over time, these messages don’t just create doubt about the situation—they create doubt within you.

Common Examples of Gaslighting in Everyday Life

Let’s bring this out of theory and into real life, because this is where it actually matters.

1. The “Maybe I’m Overreacting” Loop

You share something that hurt you – to a friend, therapist, etc.

Before the other person even responds, you say:

“But I don’t know… maybe I’m overreacting.”

This is one of the most common gaslighting presents itself—but here’s the twist:
Sometimes it’s internalized.

You’ve heard enough messages (externally or internally) that your feelings aren’t valid, so you preemptively dismiss yourself.

2. The Rewritten Reality

You clearly remember something being said or done.

The other person responds with:

“That’s not what happened. You always assume the worst about me.”

And suddenly, you’re scanning your own memory like:
Wait… am I remembering this wrong?

Even if your body still feels the impact, your mind starts negotiating with your own experience.

3. The Minimizing Response

You say:

“That really hurt my feelings.”

And they respond:

“It wasn’t that big of a deal. Remember when you told me how sensitive you can be?”

Now you’re not just hurt—you’re confused about whether you’re allowed to be hurt.

Why Gaslighting Impacts Confidence So Deeply

Here’s the part we don’t talk about enough:

Gaslighting doesn’t just distort reality—it disconnects you from yourself.

“The problem is not that you don’t know, it’s that you don’t trust what you already know.” – from this week’s Don’t Cut Your Own Bangs Podcast epiosde.

That’s the real impact.

When you experience repeated examples of gaslighting:

  • You stop trusting your instincts
  • You override your emotional signals
  • You hesitate to speak up

And eventually, you live in a constant state of:

“I don’t know.”

“I Don’t Know” Isn’t Always Confusion

What does “I don’t know” actually mean?

“I don’t know” is often not a lack of information.
It’s a protective response.

It can mean:

  • I don’t feel safe saying what I know
  • I’m not ready to face what this means
  • If I say this out loud, something might have to change

This is often why difficult conversations feel so hard—not because you don’t know what to say, but because you do.

And once you know, you can’t unknow it.

A Real-Life Example

Think about a relationship where something feels off.

You notice patterns:

  • You feel dismissed
  • You feel small after conversations
  • You feel like you’re “too much”

But instead of naming it, you stay in:

“I don’t know…”

Because naming it might mean:

  • Setting a boundary
  • Having a hard conversation
  • Or even reevaluating the relationship

And that’s where confidence gets stuck—not in the knowing, but in the permission to know.

Rebuilding Confidence After Gaslighting

You don’t rebuild confidence by becoming louder or more certain overnight.

You rebuild it by reconnecting with your own voice—gently, consistently.

Here are a few small ways to start:

  • Name what you felt, remembered, saw, etc.
  • Write it down without filtering it, or speak it into a voice note
  • Say it out loud (even just to yourself)

Because the truth of your experience doesn’t need to be battled in the courtroom of your mind to be valid. Nor does it need to be proven to the person who is gaslighting you.

And, the harder thing to admit is that even if your proved your case, the other person might still choose to not see your side, validate you or apologize.

Final Thoughts on Examples of Gaslighting

If you take nothing else from this, take this:

Experiencing examples of gaslighting does not mean you’re weak.
It actually says more about how the other person can hold the weight of responsibility, or not.

But your clarity and confidence doesn’t come from getting it “right.”
It comes from being present with yourself enough to stay with what you already know.

Key Takeaways

  • Examples of gaslighting often sound subtle—not dramatic
  • “I don’t know” is often a sign of self-protection, not confusion
  • Gaslighting impacts confidence by disconnecting you from your own truth
  • Rebuilding confidence starts with trusting what you already feel

A Gentle Encouragement

You don’t need a perfect script.
You don’t need to say it flawlessly.

You just need to stay with yourself long enough to hear what’s true.

And if this resonated, share it with someone who might be sitting in that quiet, confusing “I don’t know” space too.

And don’t forget to subscribe to Don’t Cut Your Own Bangs—because you deserve calm, clarity, and confidence… without having to earn it.

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DANIELLE IRELAND, LCSW

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xo, Danielle