Controlling Behaviors & Patriarchy: Why You Question Reality

Controlling Behaviors & Patriarchy: Why You Question Reality

Author: Lynn Nichols April 16, 2026 Duration: 10:25
You bring up a concern and somehow end up feeling worse, more confused, questioning whether it even happened. That's not an accident.
This episode explores something most people never fully see: how controlling behaviors aren't isolated incidents or personality flaws. They're patterns that patriarchal systems have normalized and embedded so deeply into relationships that they feel like just how love works.
Lynn walks you through the mechanisms that make this happen:
• The deflection that turns your hurt into your defensiveness—suddenly you're proving your right to feel instead of discussing what happened• The systematic erosion of trust in your own perception that happens when someone tells you your reality isn't real• The silence and emotional withdrawal that punishes you for the exact thing you've been culturally conditioned to fear most: abandonment• The unpredictable cycles of warmth and coldness that keep you working harder, trying to figure out what changed, what you did wrong• The projection that makes your boundaries into selfishness, your concerns into overreaction, your voice into the problem
What connects all of these? They shift reality. They position you as the problem. They keep you focused on managing someone else's emotions while doubting your own.
Feminist scholarship and decades of research show us that these controlling patterns don't exist in a vacuum. They're taught. They're cultural. They thrive in systems where one person's needs and reality are positioned as more legitimate than another's. When women are socialized to be emotional managers, when men are taught to hold emotional authority, when everyone learns that women's worth depends on maintaining connection at any cost—that's when these patterns become invisible. That's when manipulation stops feeling like manipulation and starts feeling like love.
But here's what matters right now: You're not imagining what you see. The cultural lie is that you're too sensitive, too demanding, too much. The reality is that you've been taught to accept treatment that nobody should accept. And when you finally notice it, you're told the noticing is the problem.
This episode isn't about solutions yet. It's about clarity. It's about recognizing these patterns not as individual relationship failures but as predictable, structural dynamics that operate across countless relationships. It's about understanding that your confusion isn't a personal failing—it's a designed outcome.
If you've ever walked away from a conversation feeling smaller and more confused than when you entered it, if you've questioned whether your hurt even matters, if you've found yourself managing someone else's emotions while yours go unseen—this episode is for you. Listen now to understand what's really happening, and start recognizing the difference between love and conditioning.

📚 **Books by Lynn** 👉 Go Here  🎓 **Online Course: Narcissistic Abuse Recovery** 👉 Start the Course🤍**Coaching with Lynn** 1:1 Connect with Lynn - Coaching🧘‍♀️ **Somatic Healing Audio Sessions** 👉 Listen Now 

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Finding your footing after the disorienting experience of narcissistic abuse requires more than just advice-it demands validation, practical tools, and a deep understanding of the dynamics that held you captive. The Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Podcast offers exactly that, serving as a steady companion for anyone untangling themselves from toxic relationships and covert manipulation. Host Lynn, an author and dedicated advocate, brings a blend of honesty, depth, and necessary tough love to each conversation. She doesn’t just skim the surface; this podcast delves into the complex landscape of recovery, exploring how societal structures often enable these damaging patterns. You’ll hear discussions that help validate your experience, provide actionable steps to rebuild your sense of self, and ultimately empower you to revolutionize your approach to life and relationships. It’s a space where the fog begins to lift, offering clarity and a sense of solidarity for those on the path to reclaiming their mental and emotional well-being. Each episode is crafted to feel like a candid talk with someone who truly gets it, making this an essential resource for healing.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Podcast
Podcast Episodes
Sanitized Misogyny: How Narcissists Hide Abuse as Tradition [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 10:00
You've probably heard it a thousand times: that your emotions are "too much," your ambition is "unfeminine," or that it's "natural" for you to sacrifice your needs. But what if those aren't innocent observations about ge…
Structural Undermining: How Laws & Customs Trap Scapegoats in Abuse [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 12:20
You followed the rules. You respected the traditions. You honored the customs that everyone assured you were there to protect you. Yet somehow, those same structures keep you trapped in relationships that harm you, oblig…
Emotional Stagnation: Why Narcissistic Abuse Prevents Change & Growth [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 10:04
You've watched the same patterns repeat for years—maybe decades. The same conversations circle back. The same conflicts resurface. The same blame, the same denial, the same refusal to acknowledge harm. And absolutely not…
Pseudo Apologies: Narcissistic Abuse Recovery & False Accountability [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 9:53
You heard 'I'm sorry'—but it didn't feel like an apology at all. Instead, you felt more confused, more guilty, more responsible for accepting their non-accountability. If you've ever wondered why an apology from a narcis…
Ep. 117 Emotional Martyrdom: How Narcissists Play Victim to Control [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 10:12
You spent years managing their emotional crises, apologizing for things you didn't do, and silencing your own needs because they were always the one suffering more. But what if their victimhood was never genuine? What if…