9 signs you are being negged by someone
Katia Beeden
Founder and Creator of #SelfLoveJourneys Coaching | Self-love Coach | Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Expert
If you notice these signs of emotional abuse, run.
I recently met someone who was funny, smart and super fun to be around. The conversation flowed and it seemed like we could talk for hours about anything. I was charmed to say the least. But then something shifted.
After our third conversation, as I came off the call, I realized I didn’t feel so good. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it but it felt like I had a heaviness in my aura. I felt drained. As a coach who teaches somatic bodywork, I’m super tuned into the subtle sensations in my body. So I decided to practice what I preach and I tuned into what my body had to say.
I sat for a while, got still and allowed myself to fully feel the heaviness. While doing so, I allowed whatever wanted to come up to come up. What arose in my mind’s eye were flashes of the conversation I’d just had. In these flashes, I saw how the other person had ‘negged’ me several times. As I realized what had just happened, I was taken aback at how subtle and sneaky emotional abuse can be.
This is why it is so important to be in touch with the cues you get from your body. It is a powerful oracle and it acts as the bridge for your intuition. By noticing the heaviness and taking the time to get curious about it, I learned valuable information about the other person’s character. In the past, I had ignored these cues and found myself staying in abusive or narcissistic relationships. Now, I notice how I truly feel around people.
What this person doesn’t know is that I have read?The Game?by Neil Strauss. I am familiar with the pick-up tactics insecure men, who have also read the book, use to try and punch above their weight. The tactic for which?The Game?became especially famous, was the art of “negging.” Men are trained to give a woman backhanded compliments so as to deliberately lower her self-esteem. By subtly insulting her, they make her want their approval, which then makes her more vulnerable to their advances. It’s psychological manipulation at its finest.
This tactic works especially well on women who have “daddy issues” and have an unhealed father wound. The negger represents the abusive, absent or emotionally distant male figure she is familiar with. The putdowns trigger her into wanting to earn a man’s (daddy’s) love. Instead of recognizing the shitty behavior for what it is, she tries to win his approval. This unconscious desire to repeat the past is known as repetition compulsion. Once again, a woman finds herself drawn towards a painful or destructive relationship. This is why self-awareness is so important. It’s a powerful tool to help you recognize and break the cycle of abuse.
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Whether he’s just an insecure guy trying to win at the dating game or a genuine psychopath, I am not hanging around to find out! However, if I find myself in a similar situation again, I am calling that behavior out on the spot.
He was a weak man. The sort who needed to crush a woman in order to feel powerful. — John Mark Green
Over time, negging can seriously damage your self-esteem and change the way you show up in relationships. It can also spiral into severe physical, emotional and narcissistic abuse. It can come from anyone — your boss, a parent, spouse, sibling, friend… No matter who you are and who is doing the negging, it’s not okay and you don’t have to put up with it.
Here are 9 signs to look out for:
Negging and emotional abuse does not happen by accident. It is deliberate and calculated. Abusers will show no remorse and will deny or minimize your hurt feelings. They have no intention of changing and if you hang around, the abuse and criticism will continue to escalate.
It’s better to distance yourself and surround yourself with healthy, positive people. Neggars are insecure and toxic and nothing you do or say will turn them into better people. You deserve more.