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Blame Reversal: When the Victim Becomes the Guilty Party

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
3 min read

Blame Reversal: When the Victim Becomes the Guilty Party

You express a legitimate complaint and, ten minutes later, you're the one apologizing. You point out hurtful behavior and are told that you are the problem. This reversal is not coincidental. It is a perfectly identified manipulation technique in psychology: blame reversal.

Researcher Jennifer Freyd formalized this mechanism under the acronym DARVO: Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender. This pattern is found in many toxic relationships and constitutes one of the most destabilizing mechanisms for the victim.

How the Reversal Works

Phase 1: Denial

The manipulator denies the facts, even in the face of evidence.
  • "I never did that."
  • "You're misinterpreting."

Phase 2: Counter-Attack

Rather than responding to the accusation, the manipulator attacks on another subject.
  • "And you, you think you're perfect?"
  • "You want to talk about what YOU did to me last month?"

Phase 3: Role Reversal

The victim finds themselves in the position of the accused.
  • "Actually, you're the toxic one in this relationship."
  • "I'm the real victim here, not you."

Why the Reversal Works So Well

The Victim's Empathy

Targeted people are often very empathetic. When the manipulator positions themselves as victim, their natural empathy triggers and they abandon their own grievance.

Self-Doubt

After several episodes, the victim develops chronic doubt: "What if it really is my fault?"

Emotional Fatigue

Eventually, the victim simply stops trying to express themselves. Silence is not a choice: it is exhaustion.

How to Detect It in Your Messages

  • The subject systematically changes: you talk about problem A, the conversation drifts to problem B (concerning you)
  • Your complaints are returned identically: you say "you don't listen to me," you're told "it's you who never listens"
  • "What about you" is the default response to any criticism
  • You end the conversation apologizing when you were the one with a grievance
  • Your initial problem is never resolved

A Practical Test

Reread a recent argument by messages and answer:

  • What was the initial subject?

  • Was the initial subject addressed and resolved?

  • Who apologized at the end?

  • What were you talking about at the end?
  • If the initial subject disappeared and you went from complainant to accused, the reversal happened.

    The Link with the Karpman Triangle

    The Karpman Triangle (Victim - Persecutor - Rescuer) perfectly illuminates this mechanism. The manipulator alternates between Persecutor (when attacking) and Victim (when reversing). The real victim finds themselves trapped in the Persecutor role without having chosen it.

    The very fact of asking yourself "Am I the bully or the victim?" is a sign that you are not the bully. Real manipulators don't question themselves.

    Strategies to Escape the Trap

  • Stay anchored in the initial subject: "I understand your point and we can discuss it. But first, I'd like to finish discussing what I raised."
  • Refuse the false dilemma: You have the right to point out behavior without being questioned as a person.
  • Keep written traces: Messages don't change. If your partner denies having said something, you can return to the original message.
  • Talk to a third party: The reversal loses all its power when an outside perspective is applied.

  • Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist
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