How to Respond to DARVO in Relationships — Signs, Examples & Scripts

How to Respond to DARVO in Relationships: Signs, Examples & Scripts | Red Flag Archive
Manipulation Tactics

How to Respond to DARVO in Relationships — Signs, Examples & Scripts

You raised something real. They denied it, made you the villain, and ended the conversation as the wounded party. Here is what that pattern is called — and how to stop letting it work on you.

March 8, 2026 15 min read Red Flag Archive
D
Deny

“That never happened.” The event, the words, the tone — all erased. Your memory becomes the problem.

A
Attack

You become the target. Your character, your past, your motives, your mental state. The confrontation pivots.

RVO
Reverse Victim & Offender

They are now the one being harmed. You holding them accountable is reframed as the abuse.

There is a specific kind of conversational whiplash that happens in certain relationships. You prepare yourself. You pick the right time. You stay calm. You bring up one thing — one real, specific thing that hurt you — and within minutes you are explaining yourself, defending your past, questioning your memory, and apologizing for feelings you came into the room to address.

It doesn’t matter whether you’ve been dating for three months or together for six years. DARVO doesn’t require a long history to execute. It requires a partner who has learned — consciously or not — that the fastest way out of accountability is to make you the problem.

This post breaks down how DARVO shows up across different relationship stages, what it sounds like in real conversations, and exactly what to say when it’s happening to you.

The most disorienting part of DARVO isn’t the denial. It’s ending the conversation unsure whether you had the right to bring it up at all.

What Is DARVO?

DARVO is an acronym coined by research psychologist Jennifer Freyd to describe a specific three-stage manipulation sequence used by people confronted with harmful behavior. The acronym stands for Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender.

Originally documented in perpetrators of institutional betrayal and sexual abuse, DARVO has since been identified as a pattern that appears across a wide range of interpersonal relationships — from early dating to long-term partnerships — wherever one person wants to avoid accountability and has learned that offense is more effective than acknowledgment.

The sequence is predictable once you can see it:

Deny — The behavior is flatly denied. “I never said that.” “That’s not what happened.” “You’re imagining things.” This phase attacks your confidence in your own perception.

Attack — The confrontation is turned against you. Your delivery, your history, your character, your mental health — anything becomes a valid target. The goal is to put you on the defensive so you stop pressing the original concern.

Reverse Victim and Offender — They are now the injured party. Your act of raising a concern has become the abuse. Their emotional response to being “accused” is foregrounded while your original hurt disappears entirely.

How DARVO Shows Up at Every Stage of a Relationship

DARVO doesn’t look the same in a new relationship as it does in an established one. The content shifts, the stakes escalate, and the techniques become more personalized as the relationship deepens. Here’s what it looks like at each stage.

Early Dating: When DARVO Arrives Before You Have History

Scenario — You call them out on canceling last minute again
You You’ve cancelled three times now, always the same day. I just need some consistency — it’s starting to feel like I’m not a priority.
Them Deny I cancelled twice, not three times. And both times I had real reasons. You’re keeping score like this is a court case.
Them Attack Honestly this is kind of a lot this early. Most people don’t demand this kind of accountability in the first two months. It’s intense.
Them Reverse I’ve been trying really hard and this is what I get? I actually feel really hurt right now. I don’t think I can do this if every small thing turns into a conversation about my character.
What happened A reasonable concern about consistency became “intense.” Your standards became the problem. Their hurt from being asked to show up became more visible than your hurt from being deprioritized.

Committed Relationships: When They Know Your Weak Points

Scenario — You address a dismissive comment they made in front of friends
You When you made that joke about me being bad with money in front of everyone, I felt embarrassed. I need you not to do that.
Them Deny It was a joke. Everyone laughed. You’re the only one who had a problem with it — doesn’t that tell you something?
Them Attack You’ve been looking for a reason to fight with me all week. This isn’t really about the joke, is it? What’s actually going on with you?
Them Reverse I can’t make a single joke without it becoming a whole thing. Do you know how walking on eggshells makes me feel? I’m the one who’s suffering in this relationship.
What happened The public humiliation you experienced is gone. Now the topic is your hidden motives and their suffering from having to be careful around you.

Long-Term Relationships: When DARVO Has Years of Ammunition

Scenario — You bring up a pattern of emotional withdrawal
You Every time I try to talk about something serious, you go silent for days. I feel shut out and I need that to change.
Them Deny I don’t do that. Name one specific time. You can’t, because it doesn’t happen the way you’re saying it does.
Them Attack You’ve been saying I’m emotionally unavailable for years but let’s talk about 2021 when you completely shut me out for a month after your family drama. You don’t get to play the victim of emotional withdrawal.
Them Reverse I have been holding this relationship together for years while you criticize everything I do. I am exhausted. I am the one who needs support right now — not another lecture about what I’m doing wrong.
What happened Your pattern observation is met with a single-instance demand for proof. Your own history is weaponized. Six years of their emotional labor is placed on the table as a counter-claim.
3x

Research by Harsey & Freyd (2020) found that targets of DARVO were three times more likely to blame themselves for the conflict — even when independent evaluators rated the DARVO user’s behavior as clearly problematic.
Source: Psychology of Violence, 2020

7 Signs DARVO Is Happening to You Right Now

01

You opened the conversation. You’re now the defendant.

If you brought the concern and are now justifying it, explaining yourself, or proving your memory is accurate — the conversation has been flipped.

02

The original issue evaporated within minutes.

DARVO requires a topic pivot. Whatever you brought up is no longer the subject. New grievances appeared in its place.

03

Your raising the issue is being called the abuse.

“This feels like an interrogation.” “You’re attacking me.” “You always do this.” Accountability is being coded as aggression.

04

Things from your past are being introduced as evidence.

Your history is being weaponized mid-conversation to neutralize the current concern. A counter-accusation is not a response.

05

Their distress is now louder than your original hurt.

By the end of a DARVO cycle, managing their emotional state from the confrontation has replaced your original need entirely.

06

You’re being told your standards are the problem.

“You’re too sensitive.” “Most people wouldn’t make this a big deal.” “You expect too much.” Your expectations are framed as excessive rather than reasonable.

07

You left the conversation apologizing.

The clearest indicator: you came in with a concern and you left feeling guilty for having it. That guilt is the intended end state of DARVO.

How to Respond to DARVO — What to Actually Say

The core discipline of responding to DARVO is this: refuse the redirect, not the person. Every accusation they introduce, every new grievance they surface, every attack on your tone or history is an invitation to leave your original concern behind. The work is staying anchored while not escalating.

These scripts are organized by the phase of DARVO you’re encountering.

Responding to the Deny Phase

They say: “That never happened” / “I never said that”
“I understand we remember it differently. I’m not here to debate the exact details — I’m telling you what I experienced and what I need. Can you hear that?”
They recount a completely different version of events
“We can have two different memories of this. What I won’t do is drop the concern because we disagree on the details. That’s still something I need addressed.”
They imply you’re lying or unstable
“I’m not going to argue about whether my experience is valid. It happened to me. That’s what I’m here to talk about.”

Responding to the Attack Phase

They attack your tone or delivery
“I hear that my delivery is bothering you. I’m willing to work on that. But the concern itself doesn’t go away because of how I raised it — and I still need a response to it.”
They bring up your past mistakes or behaviors
“I’m genuinely willing to talk about that — separately. Right now I need to stay with what I brought up. Can we do that, and come back to what you’re raising after?”
They call you controlling, abusive, or manipulative
“That’s a serious thing to say. If you believe that, it’s something we should address with a professional. Right now I’m asking to be heard about one specific thing.”
They question your motives (“This isn’t really about X, is it?”)
“Yes, it really is about X. I know what I came here to talk about.”

Responding to the Reverse Phase

They position themselves as the victim of the conversation
“I can hear that you’re upset. So am I — that’s why I brought this up. Both things can be true. But we still haven’t addressed what I came here to talk about.”
They cry, shut down, or storm out to end the conversation
“I can see you need a minute. Let’s take 30 minutes and come back. I’m not going to drop this — but I also don’t need to force it right now.”
They claim you’re the one who’s hurting them by raising concerns
“Bringing something up that hurt me is not the same as hurting you. I need you to hear the difference.”

The universal anchor — use at any stage

When you’ve been pulled three topics away from the original issue
“I notice we’ve moved away from what I originally brought up. I need to come back to that before we talk about anything else.”

DARVO vs. Other Manipulation Tactics: How They Compare

Tactic What It Does How It Overlaps With DARVO
Gaslighting Erodes your confidence in your own perception over time — sustained campaign against your sense of reality. DARVO’s Deny phase often includes gaslighting. Repeated DARVO across many conversations becomes gaslighting cumulatively.
Deflection Changes the subject to avoid the original concern. Passive, not escalating. DARVO’s Attack phase is an escalated form of deflection — it doesn’t just redirect, it turns the conversation against you.
JADE-trapping Forces you to Justify, Argue, Defend, and Explain yourself in circles. DARVO triggers JADE behavior in the target — you find yourself explaining and defending, which is exactly the intended effect of the Attack phase.
Victim playing Using distress to avoid accountability or gain sympathy. DARVO’s RVO phase is structured victim-playing — but within a specific confrontation sequence rather than as a standalone pattern.
Silent treatment Withdrawal as punishment or control after conflict. Sometimes follows a failed DARVO cycle — when attacks and reversal don’t end the conversation, withdrawal becomes the exit.

What to Do After a DARVO Conversation

The immediate aftermath of a DARVO encounter often feels like an emotional hangover — confusion, guilt, exhaustion, and a gnawing sense that something happened that you can’t quite name. Here’s what to do with that.

01

Write down what actually happened — immediately.

Before your memory gets revised by their version, document the original concern you raised, the sequence of how they responded, and how you were left feeling. Date it. Quote them directly where you can.

02

Separate the two conversations.

Your original concern and their counter-claims are two separate issues. Don’t let guilt about the second invalidate the legitimacy of the first. You still get to have your concern addressed.

03

Tell someone outside the relationship what happened.

DARVO depends on isolation. Telling a trusted person the sequence of events — and watching them recognize it as wrong — is a direct interruption of the self-doubt cycle.

04

Notice the pattern across conversations, not just this one.

A single incident of deflection can happen in any relationship. DARVO as a pattern — where every confrontation ends the same way — is a different and more serious problem. Track frequency and consistency.

05

Get individual therapy — not just couples therapy.

Couples therapy without individual support can become another arena for DARVO. Having your own therapist gives you an objective space to process the pattern and clarify what you’re experiencing before entering joint sessions.

Important

Scripts and awareness tools help you maintain clarity in the moment — they are not substitutes for assessing the relationship overall. If DARVO is the consistent response to every concern you raise, the question is not only how to respond better. The question is whether this relationship is one where your concerns can ever genuinely be heard.

Frequently Asked Questions About DARVO in Relationships

What is DARVO in a relationship?
DARVO stands for Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender. In a relationship, it describes a pattern where a partner who is confronted about harmful behavior denies it, attacks the person raising the concern, and then positions themselves as the real victim of the interaction — ensuring the original concern goes unaddressed and the person who raised it ends up apologizing.
Is DARVO a form of emotional abuse?
When used consistently in a relationship to prevent accountability, erode someone’s sense of reality, and silence their concerns, DARVO meets clinical criteria for emotional abuse. A single incident of defensiveness is different from a pattern — the pattern is what makes it abusive.
Can someone use DARVO without realizing it?
Yes. DARVO is often a learned survival response, developed in environments where being confronted felt threatening or dangerous. People who grew up with DARVO modeled for them may execute the pattern automatically without conscious intent. This doesn’t remove the harm or the responsibility to change — but it does affect how you approach conversations about the pattern.
Should I tell my partner they’re using DARVO?
Naming the tactic mid-conflict almost always escalates things — it gives the Attack phase new ammunition and introduces a new thing to deny. The most effective move is to execute the anchor script without the framework label. If you want to address it as a pattern, do that outside of an active conflict, ideally with a therapist facilitating.
What’s the difference between DARVO and just being defensive?
Defensiveness is a response to perceived criticism — pulling back, getting quiet, or shutting down. DARVO is an active, structured sequence: deny the behavior, attack the person raising it, then reverse roles. It is offense, not just defense. The reversal component — positioning themselves as the victim of the confrontation — is what distinguishes DARVO from ordinary defensiveness.
How do I know if I’m overreacting?
Ask yourself: did you come in with a specific, concrete concern, and did that concern get addressed? If the conversation ended without your concern being acknowledged — and you are now questioning whether you had the right to raise it — that’s not overreacting. That’s the successful execution of DARVO on you.

The Pattern Has a Name. That Changes Things.

One of the most common things people say after first encountering the word DARVO is some version of: that’s what’s been happening to me for years.

The naming matters. Not because a label fixes anything, but because “I was manipulated in a specific, documented pattern” is a different self-story than “I am too sensitive and I make everything worse.” The second story was handed to you. The first one is accurate.

You are allowed to raise concerns in your relationships. You are allowed to have them heard — the first time, without a 40-minute defensive sequence, without needing to prove your memory is correct, without ending the conversation as the villain.

If that isn’t available to you in your current relationship, that is information worth sitting with.

© 2026 Red Flag Archive — Informational content only. Not legal, psychological, or therapeutic advice.

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