A quote on a dark, stormy abstract background that reads: When it comes to abusive behavior, if they know to hide it, they know it's wrong. If they don't do it in front of other people, they know how to control it.

Beyond Conflict: Identifying the Patterns of Coercive Control in Family Dynamics

Coercive control is a strategic pattern of behavior used to dominate another person and strip away their sense of autonomy. It is not defined by a single violent event, but by a continuous web of intimidation, isolation, and micro-regulation of the victim’s life.

When applied to the family unit, this control is often maintained through three primary mechanisms:

1. Scapegoating

Scapegoating is the process of blaming one person for the family’s internal problems or the controller’s own failures.

The goal: To create a “common enemy.” By making one person—often a child or the other parent—the source of all conflict, the controller deflects accountability and keeps the rest of the family in a state of hyper-vigilance.

The result: The victim internalizes the shame, believing they are fundamentally “broken.”

2. Triangulation

Triangulation occurs when the controlling person refuses direct communication and instead pulls a third person into the dynamic to create friction or competition.

The goal: To divide and conquer. By telling different versions of a story to different people, the controller ensures loyalty while fostering suspicion between others.

The result: It prevents victims from forming a united front, leaving the controller as the sole source of “truth.”

3. Parental Alienation

In the context of coercive control, parental alienation is the ultimate extension of triangulation. It involves one parent using psychological manipulation to turn a child against the other targeted parent.

The goal: To sever the bond between the child and the other parent, effectively erasing that parent’s influence and presence.

The result: The child becomes a tool of the controller’s campaign, often resulting in long-term psychological trauma for both the child and the alienated parent.

How They Intersect

These are not isolated tactics, but interdependent components of a single power dynamic. Coercive control in a family setting operates through a calculated cycle of isolation and psychological pressure. It begins with scapegoating, reinforced through triangulation that manipulates communication and divides family members. These efforts culminate in parental alienation, where the scapegoated parent’s influence is erased, leaving the controller in command of the family’s reality.

Coercive control thrives in silence and isolation. Identifying scapegoating, triangulation, and alienation for what they are is essential for protecting your mental health.

The confusion you feel is a documented byproduct of the system, not a reflection of your worth as a parent or person.

Woman with half her face visibly distressed and tearful, the other half covered by a composed mask of her own face, symbolizing emotional masking and how composure is rewarded while distress is invalidated.

When “What Are You So Angry/Upset About?” Isn’t Actually Concern

I’m finally recognizing how validity gets measured not necessarily by the truth of what’s said, but by the composure of the person saying it.

My sister recognized this dynamic early on. As someone deeply sensitive and reactive, I was easy to push. She could use subtle, almost invisible cues—like dog whistles—to trigger me. When I reacted, my distress was visible. She soared, by contrast, appearing calm, composed. The comparison was stark: her unaffectedness made her look right, while my emotional presentation made me look wrong.

If you’re overwhelmed, overstimulated, or visibly distressed, your words can be dismissed simply because the delivery isn’t “correct.” You’re invalidated—not for what you say, but for failing to mask emotion. Meanwhile, those who appear composed—whether less sensitive, more resilient, or simply checked out—are granted credibility. In conflict, content matters less than presentation.

This dynamic is often weaponized. A question like, “What are you so angry about?” masquerades as concern but functions as control, subtly discrediting the other person.

In closed systems—family, workplace, or community—the sensitive one easily becomes the scapegoat. Sensitivity is reframed as weakness, instability, or unreliability. Any emotional communication that challenges the status quo is disqualified before it’s even heard, dismissed not for its substance but for the unmasked feelings attached.

Composure paraded as proof of virtue; sensitivity condemned as proof of sin.

Closed interior door with a narrow line of light beneath it, representing the experience of being shut out while continuing to endure, witness, and remain present.

Scapegoating and the Cost of Speaking Up

The Truth That Cannot Be Erased

For over a decade, this space has been my witness. For a multitude of reasons, outside of what has been designated as my willfullness and lack of gratitude, I have never been a pleasing or “quiet” victim sufferer. By around age eleven, I understood that my highest goal in life was to become someone else—or to become more palatable while absorbing abuse. I failed equally at both. I sought and gave myself to many similarly toxic situationships, I suppose, in the name of practice and growth in the art of better abuse-getting.

The Reality of the Scapegoat

As a neurodivergent survivor of childhood trauma and sibling molestation, my so-called “hysteria” was the only language available to me in an environment that protected my abuser and pathologized my pain. My sister was endorsed as the golden child. I was left to navigate the wreckage of her actions alone. She was praised for not being like me and pitied for having to deal with my “drama.”

The Refusal to Be Gaslit

This blog documents my experience as the family scapegoat—the person who could not believe or pretend that the “flow” was good. I was encouraged to calm down, be positive, grateful, you know- JUST go with the flow, even when that flow was designed to drown me.

A Legacy of Resistance

My “tantrums” were protests. My “outbursts” were the sound of a person being erased in real time. I write about the dirty and unsurprising alliance between an abusive sister and a similarly narcissistic ex-husband for what it is: a coordinated effort which denied me peace and my children.

The Record for My Sons

I am not begging for a seat at a table where I am not respected. I keep this record so my children may one day understand that their mother was not “unhinged” simply as a defect. She was unsupported, overstimulated, and being crushed by a system she could not fathom.

A Note on My Methods of Survival

In earlier chapters, I used my sister’s full name and shared specific accounts of professional and personal abuse, including details she offered as warning shots about how she handles uncooperative others. I did this frantically, without a playbook on navigating coercive abuse or even any idea that coercive abuse was a thing. I did so without a support system.

I am not proud of the desperation that shaped those posts. But I am not ashamed of how I reacted to being molested, scapegoated, and erased. I was a person without a net, doing the only that I could—telling my truth- raging against those who harmed and silenced and erased me. In the only space I can.

This space is a sanctuary, a place where we cannot be silenced or erased.  If my experiences or sentiments resonate with you and you feel like sharing or connecting, please feel free to reach out.  No pressure, always, I’m down to listen. Message me anytime 🤍🤍🤍 wholesomebadass@gmail.com


Quote image: “If you’re not at the table, you’re probably on the menu.” Exclusion, scapegoating, triangulation, and black-sheep labeling in family and social systems.

Dissent and Discipline: Understanding Family Dynamics

The Binary World I Grew Up In

In my family, things weren’t simply liked or disliked—they were either the best or the worst. No middle ground, no “not for me.” If you didn’t love something, you had to hate it.

Once something was labeled right or wrong, it became collective truth. Everyone had to agree—or at least pretend to. Questioning, hesitating, or feeling differently wasn’t just disagreement; it was dissent. And dissent made you the enemy.

That breach wasn’t corrected, it was punished. Not to remove the threat, but to create a cautionary tale: this is what happens when you don’t fall in line. You lose protection. You’re cast out. Cooperation or neutrality didn’t exist—only winners and losers. And victory was best established by the outcast’s observable demise.

Since exile wasn’t enough. You were destabilized—pressured, undermined, and then blamed for the very instability imposed on you. The campaign is subtle, managed through half-truths and character attacks disguised as concern.

And here’s the part that hurts the most: I absorbed it. I carried those hateful beliefs and destructive behaviors into my own life. It’s true that hurt people hurt people. For decades, I caused pain equal to what I had lived—sometimes more. The first 35 years of my life were marked by destruction, fueled by the system I came from.

Text image reading: “Trauma Bonding can make you terrified of ‘losing’ your abuser. Just keep in mind that you’ll also be losing the gaslighting, the sleepless nights, the knots in your stomach while they were ignoring you, the feeling of being blamed, and the stress of holding onto something that always felt like it was slipping away."

Trauma Bond: Addiction to the Abuser 

Across my closest relationships—mother, sister, husband, children—harm was never something to repair. It wasn’t acknowledged as harm at all, but reframed as my perception, my fault, my failure.

Peace was never on offer. If I stayed, there was no peace. If I left, I wasn’t allowed to go in peace either. Departure had to hurt—because how could being without them be permitted to feel better than being with them? Relief was available only through my disappearance or my transformation. A structural issue.

This closed system demands erasure or alteration, never mutual change. My pain is not evidence of harm, only inconvenience. I continue to bind myself to systems in which harm is normalized, repair is forbidden, and my full presence threatens the equilibrium.

Trauma bonding pulls me in. Scapegoating keeps me in place. I’m recognizing pattern familiarity, not personal defect.

“In a narcissistic family system, the scapegoat is forced to carry collective shame, guilt, and dysfunction. The family denies reality, refuses outside help, and isolates the victim, perpetuating the cycle.

The result is long-term harm: C-PTSD, anxiety, depression. Leaving feels terrifying, even though staying is destructive, because the bond convinces you that survival depends on the abuser.

Under extreme pressure, the scapegoat may break—reactive anger that the family then weaponizes as proof of their narrative: See? They’re crazy.

Quote about false narratives created by people who cause harm to avoid accountability for their actions.

The Quiet Logic of Exile

In connecting with other survivors of similar dynamics, I’m recognizing a pattern that seems less personal and more structural.

In families and systems which rely on scapegoating, it’s apparently simpler to remove a wounded person than to acknowledge and repair what hurt them. Exile is the tidy solution.

Repair would require humility, shared responsibility, and change. Removal does not.

Visibility becomes an offense. Directness, sensitivity, and emotional earnestness aren’t acknowledged; instead, the person carrying them is quietly marked as the problem, serving well as a cautionary tale.

What’s unsettling is how ordinary this can appear. The cruelty is subtle by design- expressed through concern, whispered warnings, and selective protection that isolates while claiming to care. No clear moment of rupture. Just a reorganization around comfort and protection of the system. Those still inside the system learn—often without being told: alignment is rewarded, and absence is easier to live with than complexity. In time, the person who stands alone, their alienation – is put forward as evidence of “how difficult/unwell they are”.

The discomfort is neatly exported. The structure remains intact and protected fiercely by those it serves.

Text reads: “Be cautious of connections that feel like home if home wasn’t always a safe place for you.” A reflective image representing emotional awareness and healing from relational trauma.

When the Story Writes Itself

I can’t deny how “clean” and persuasive the narrative against me can look.

That’s what happens when people of similar energetic makeup benefit from the same imbalance — the same rupture without repair. The story writes itself.

I’m learning to recognize and name that attraction and familiarity. This isn’t self-exoneration.

It’s pattern literacy.

And it unsettles the most convenient explanation — that things are “difficult” only where I’m involved — when all other relationships remain intact through the shared commitment to avoidance of (conflict) resolution through silence, distance, and collective denial.

Overhead view of a chessboard highlighting a pawn in the foreground, with the queen and other pieces behind, symbolizing the contrast between visible power and hidden consequences in social and familial dynamics.

If X, Then Y: The Game Beneath the Board

I continue noticing how this pattern shows up at every scale.

We’re taught to admire extreme wealth as proof of virtue — intelligence, discipline, superiority, deservingness. The story goes: They have more because they earned more. Which quietly implies the inverse: Those in poverty or struggle have failed.

That belief system damages and divides all those without similar ranking.

It hides how power actually works — how wealth concentrates through access, legislation, subsidy, insulation, and protection — and reframes it as moral achievement. It teaches people to confuse accumulation with character. Control with competence. Detachment is mistaken for self-control.  “Coolness” as competence.

And then how illuminated philanthropy serves as morally defining.

People and systems can be emotionally cold, harsh, and controlling, even malevolent in private relationships while being visibly giving in public. They receive credit and moral insulation for “doing good,” without accountability for the harm enacted out of view—especially when it lands on those with less power and presence.

The generosity is legible.

The damage is diffuse.

And the people negatively impacted are easy to disregard.

Split image showing a smiling “good witch” labeled as how narcissistic personalities present publicly, contrasted with an angry “wicked witch” labeled as how they behave privately in close relationships.

The Binary: Invisible or a Spectacle

Post-therapy processing.

I keep noticing a painful pattern.

When I speak directly—calmly, clearly, logically—it’s often received as aggression. Meanwhile, dishonesty softened with politeness, or harm delivered with a smile, is protected, even rewarded. In the past, I would escalate or collapse, distracting from the issue with my reaction. I don’t do that anymore, but the outcome is no better.

My existence itself starts to feel like the problem.

I’ve been labeled “demanding” or “confrontational” simply for asking direct questions or naming inconsistencies. Clarity seems threatening to those who rely on ambiguity. Without wiggle room, there’s no easy exit, so instead of engaging with the issue, the focus shifts to me for raising it.

Clarity isn’t manipulation—it’s an attempt to understand what’s real.

Passive aggression works differently. It dismisses boundaries, contradicts itself, or withdraws without owning the impact. If I react, my reaction becomes the headline. The harm vanishes, replaced by concern about my tone, my intensity, my feelings. That’s where the punishable feeling comes from—not because I’m wrong, but because I’m visible.

This is especially common for people like me: highly sensitive, neurodivergent, earnest. In systems that prize politeness over honesty, directness breaks the spell. Accountability is reframed as hostility. Repair is avoided. The story becomes that the person naming the problem is the problem.

My choices narrow: stay invisible, or be made into a spectacle. Neither feels safe or healthy.

I’m not interested in winning arguments or proving anyone wrong. I want movement, repair, the question: what can we do to make this better? Yet again and again, I meet people who want only rightness—debates about tone, form, correctness—because once rightness is established, nothing more is required.

I’m still healing from how often my nervous system has been punished for my inability to play along. I’m learning not to disappear or become a spectacle. I keep seeking a third way.

I want to believe that in healthy systems, directness doesn’t equal war, disrespect, or danger. That standing without shame or silence isn’t audacious—or punishable.

Illustration of Gottman’s Four Horsemen representing criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling in relationships

When Rightness Trumps Repair: Patterns in Diifficult Relationships

I’m getting closer to being able to name and understand this pattern after friction or  rupture in relationships with people heavily invested in their rightness and entitlement, and equally invested in my wrongness and unworthiness.

When the conversation—tilts into litigation mode, they get to focus on proving the impeccability of their form while pointing to my “sensitivity” and inability to percieve correctly as THE problem. Historically I offered up the gift of distraction – with high reactivity- my increasing escalation or full on collapse. Having withdraawn these unfortunate ways of feeding the binary dynamic, has not been well-recieved, which at first made no sense, to me. I was like “let’s celebrate”- Now we can really focus on repair—right? Wrong.

When I limit my communication to the question of “what we can each do to make this better for us”, it has been treated as an act of hostility or insolence – their focus and commitment are to their authority, rightness, and excellence of form. Because if they are right and in perfect form, then the only problem is the person who notices the problem or reacts imperfectly to it. When I fail to degrade myself in escalation or collapse, I am consistently met with stone cold silence.

There is a specific exhaustion in holding the map while being told the map is the problem:

  • I am seeking progress toward a shared intention.
  • They are seeking  consensus.
  • I am seeking a plan.
  • They are working on their untouchable closing statement.