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You sat down to have a conversation. A real one. You had prepared what you wanted to say. You were calm. You brought up something that hurt you — maybe it was the way they spoke to you at dinner, or the fact that they promised to be home by 7 and disappeared until 10 with a one-word text. Reasonable. Clear. Specific.
And then something happened. Within two or three minutes, you were on the defensive. You were being accused of being “too sensitive,” of “always attacking” them, of “never trusting” anyone. The conversation became about your past mistakes, your tone, your timing. About how hard they have it. About what you put them through.
You left the room confused, guilty — and somehow still without a resolution. If this sounds like your marriage, there’s a name for what happened: DARVO.
What Is DARVO?
DARVO is an acronym coined by psychologist Jennifer Freyd describing a defensive manipulation sequence: Deny the behavior, Attack the person confronting it, and Reverse Victim and Offender — casting themselves as the real victim of the encounter.
It was originally documented in the context of sexual abuse perpetrators, but researchers and clinicians have since identified DARVO as a pattern that appears across controlling relationships — including marriages where one partner routinely avoids accountability through manipulation rather than force.
Flat denial. “That never happened.” “I never said that.” “You’re making that up.” The goal is to destabilize your grip on what actually occurred.
Turn the confrontation back on you. Attack your credibility, your memory, your motives, your mental health, your character. Make you the problem.
They are now the injured party. You holding them accountable becomes the abuse. Their suffering from being “accused” is centered and amplified.
In marriage, DARVO is especially corrosive because it happens behind closed doors, inside a relationship you’ve built trust within. The person executing it often does not think of themselves as manipulative — they genuinely feel attacked when confronted, and their defensive escalation feels justified to them.
DARVO in Marriage: Real Examples
The following examples illustrate how DARVO unfolds in common marital situations. Each shows the Deny, Attack, and Reversal phases as they actually sound in conversation.
Example 1: The Broken Promise
Example 2: Contemptuous Language
Example 3: Financial Deception
of people who have experienced DARVO report initially blaming themselves for the conflict — before understanding the pattern they were subjected to.
Source: Harsey, Zurbriggen & Freyd, 2017 — Psychology of Violence
How to Recognize DARVO in Real Time
The challenge with DARVO is that it moves fast. By the time you feel something is off, you’ve already been pulled three conversational steps away from the original issue. These are the clearest real-time signals:
You started the conversation. You’re now defending yourself.
If you initiated the discussion with a concern and are now explaining yourself, justifying your feelings, or proving your memory is accurate — DARVO is likely in play.
The original issue has disappeared.
DARVO requires a topic pivot. The broken promise, the cruel comment, the deception — none of it gets addressed. New grievances surface instead.
Your act of speaking up is being framed as the abuse.
“You’re attacking me.” “This feels like an interrogation.” “I feel accused.” Holding someone accountable is being coded as aggression.
You feel guilty for bringing it up at all.
A successful DARVO cycle ends with you managing their distress instead of your original concern being heard. That guilt is the intended outcome.
Their suffering is louder than your original hurt.
By the end of a DARVO cycle, their pain from being “confronted” has eclipsed whatever you came into the conversation to address.
How to Respond to DARVO — Scripts That Work
Responding to DARVO effectively requires one core discipline: refusing to chase the redirect. Every new accusation they introduce is an invitation to leave the original conversation. The goal is to stay anchored without escalating.
When they Deny
When they Attack
When they Reverse Victim and Offender
These scripts are tools for clarity and self-protection — not guarantees of resolution. If DARVO is a consistent pattern in your marriage, the scripts alone will not fix it. Consistent DARVO, especially when combined with other controlling behaviors, is a sign of a relationship dynamic that typically requires professional intervention or serious reassessment.
Why DARVO Works So Well in Marriage
DARVO is particularly effective within committed partnerships for several reasons that have nothing to do with your intelligence or awareness.
You are emotionally invested. You genuinely care about your partner’s distress. When they perform suffering, you respond — because that’s what love trains you to do.
You share a history. There are real things from the past that can be weaponized. The attack phase of DARVO pulls from the archive of your relationship, making it feel relevant and real.
The isolation of marriage provides no witness. With no one watching, the person executing DARVO faces no social cost. And with no witness to validate your version, the denial becomes harder to hold onto.
You want to believe the best. Acknowledging that your partner manipulates you in a patterned, consistent way is painful. It’s easier to wonder if maybe you really are too sensitive — and DARVO exploits that generosity.
DARVO vs. Gaslighting: What’s the Difference?
These terms are often used interchangeably, but they describe distinct mechanisms that frequently co-occur.
Gaslighting is a sustained campaign to destabilize your sense of reality — making you doubt your perceptions, memories, and interpretations over time. It’s slow. It’s cumulative. It works through repetition until you no longer trust yourself.
DARVO is a reactive sequence — it’s what happens in a specific confrontation. Deny, Attack, Reverse. It’s situational, though it can be a consistent pattern across many confrontations.
In practice, a partner who uses DARVO routinely is also frequently gaslighting — the repeated denial of events compounds over time into a broader erosion of your grip on reality. They are part of the same ecosystem of accountability avoidance.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
DARVO in marriage doesn’t just prevent resolution. It inverts reality. Over months and years, the accumulated weight of being consistently denied, attacked, and cast as the abuser while trying to raise legitimate concerns can reshape how you see yourself. The self-doubt that sets in is not a personality flaw — it’s the intended outcome of the pattern.
Naming it is the first interruption. The second is refusing to chase the redirect. The third — and the one that matters most — is deciding what kind of accountability you actually require from a life partner, and whether this relationship is one where that’s available to you.
You deserve to have your concerns heard. Not eventually. Not after you’ve defended yourself for 45 minutes. The first time you raise them.
