Guilt Tripping: Definition, Examples, & Phrases
Guilt Tripping: Definition, Examples, & Phrases
Guilt tripping is making somebody feel guilty about a behavior of theirs. Is this abusive? What does it look like? Let’s look at the definition of guilt tripping and review some examples.
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I once dated someone who held very strong political views and wanted to see a lot of change in the world. While I mostly shared their views, I was not as much of an activist and felt more ambivalence about certain political stances. Sometimes we argued about what and how much to do with regards to these political causes, and they often asserted that my privilege meant I was obligated to be more active, to give more of my time and energy. When I wavered on certain topics, they sometimes said that I was part of the problem. I often capitulated to their requests because these conversations left me so upset that I would rather acquiesce than try to articulate my position. |
When I look back on those moments in that relationship, I can see that my partner cared so much about those causes, and believed so strongly that she was right, that she was willing to go to great lengths to make sure that I, as her partner, was on board, too. Unfortunately, those lengths included guilt-tripping me about my hesitations. I felt guilty in those moments, and I continue to feel guilty when I think about how privileged I am. But having that guilt imposed upon me never felt good and was counterproductive – it made me want to get away, not stay engaged.
This article looks at the science around guilt tripping – who does it, how it is done, and what it sounds and looks like. If you’ve been on either end of a guilt tripping episode, I hope this research is helpful for you.
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What Is Guilt Tripping? (A Definition)
While we can feel guilt simply from becoming aware that we did something wrong, when we are guilt tripped by somebody else, they make us feel guilty by pointing out what we did and what the impacts are (Price, 1990). The guilt tripper usually does this with a desire to make us behave differently in the future, and their motives can vary from being helpful, such as helping us avoid a compromising situation in the future, to being harmful, such as trying to control us for their own benefit.
When somebody guilt trips another person, they are banking on the fact that when people feel guilty in relationships, they usually try to fix the situation by apologizing, making amends, or doing something else to resolve what happened (Leith & Baumeister, 2008). Doing this requires looking at the situation from the other person’s perspective, so guilt tripping can also be a way for the guilt tripper to get their target to see the situation as they see it.
Guilt Tripping Examples
Guilt tripping, by its nature, happens in relationships, and so examples of guilt tripping will typically come between at least two people. I remember many times in childhood that, after a particularly rambunctious period of time in the classroom, my teachers would stop everything and berate the class for being disrespectful and poorly behaved. There was a strong element of guilt tripping to this, and if I had been involved in the misbehavior, I did feel guilty. If I had not been participating in the shenanigans, I felt frustrated that I was being lumped in with the guilty parties.
This example from my childhood is illustrative of how guilt tripping often happens when one party has let the other down or hurt them in some way (Baumeister et al., 1994). In other words, it is in relationships where there are obligations between people that guilt tripping can occur.
Guilt tripping for lack of action
Here is a good example of a guilt trip in which a lack of action is called into question (Fischer, 2022): Suppose you call an old friend, someone with whom you were once very close, to catch up. They remind you that they moved to a new city recently. They then proceed to tell you how lonely they find the new city and how it’s been kind of sad that none of their friends have visited so far. They even wonder aloud, in a tone that suggests some self-pity, when they will have something like that to look forward to.
Would you feel guilty in this scenario? I know I would. Even though no accusation was made, the implications – I am lonely, you are my friend, you as my friend are obligated to visit me but have not done so – are clear. And it might work; I know I would feel some desire to say that I would visit, just to relieve my guilty feelings.
Guilt Tripping Phrases
“If you really X, then you would Y.” This is a classic way of inducing guilt around a behavior somebody is not doing. I am reminded of all the times I have heard a child say something along the lines of, “If you really loved me, you would let me have that dessert.” (I never had the courage to say that line myself, but I sure did want to!) A far more insidious example comes from the realm of abusive relationships (more on this below), where abusers will try to coerce their partners into certain behaviors by saying, “If you really loved me, you would do this for me.”
Another statement is, “You know better than that.” A statement like this not only clearly communicates that you did something wrong, but it just as importantly implies that you are aware of how you should behave and might have even deliberately behaved otherwise. I know I have heard many parents and teachers say this to a child. When the child’s behavior was premeditated and intentional, I think the adults may have something of a point. But when the behavior was impulsive – and with children, it usually is – then this statement just induces a whole lot of guilt where it isn’t needed.
“That’s not how we do things” or “We don’t act that way here.” These sentences imply a clear violation of values; they send the message that your behavior puts you at risk of being separate from everybody else.
Is Guilt Tripping Manipulation?
Think about it: guilt tripping is inserting guilty thoughts and feelings into somebody else’s day, where perhaps none were before. If I tell you that you are being selfish or do not care enough about something, I am not only inducing guilt in you, but I am also putting myself in a position of moral superiority. Therefore, I am exerting a kind of control of you (Simon, 2010).
Is guilt tripping always bad?
Okay, so guilt tripping is a form of manipulation. Is it always bad? Well, emotions can be unpleasant or pleasant, but they are never actually good or bad. There are many upsides to feeling guilt: primarily, it can help us make moral choices, feel empathy, and work to maintain our social connections (Leith & Baumeister, 2008). If – and this is a hard if – a person can skillfully and gently induce enough guilt in another person so that they take important action to correct a wrong situation for themselves, then I would say that guilt tripping may be morally acceptable. However, I am afraid that most of the time, guilt tripping is used to meet the needs of the person doing the guilt tripping, and in that sense, it is an unhealthy manipulation.
Is Guilt Tripping a Form of Abuse?
Abusers may even use guilt tripping to justify their own wrongful behaviors (Price, 1990). For example, an abuser might blame their partner for the fact that they yelled at and shoved their partner after a visit to the partner’s family. For example, “You know how much your dad drives me nuts with his political rants. If you didn’t insist on us going to visit your family, I wouldn’t get upset like that.”
Is Guilt Tripping a Form of Gaslighting?
Guilt Tripping From Parents
How to Stop Guilt Tripping
For some advice on how to handle being on the receiving end of a guilt trip, I recommend watching this video:
Video: Watch This to Never Feel Guilty Again
Guilt Tripping Quotes
- “People get into a heavy-duty sin and guilt trip, feeling that if things are going wrong, that means that they did something bad and they are being punished. That’s not the idea at all.” – Pema Chodron
- “Once you become a mother, you always have a guilt trip. You always try to do the best, but you feel you can always be better.” – Gal Gadot
- “The journey of life is both too short and too precious to be sidetracked by guilt trips.” – Bill Crawford
- “We know that babies develop as well in nonmaternal as in maternal care, as long as the care is of good quality. The issue is not who gives the care but the quality of that care… The guilt trip is, in my view, a hangover of another era and of unacknowledged tactics to keep women in their proper place—at home full-time.” – Sandra Scarr
Articles Related to Guilt Tripping
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Final Thoughts on Guilt Tripping
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References
- Baumeister, R. F., Stillwell, A. M., & Heatherton, T. F. (1994). Guilt: an interpersonal approach. Psychological Bulletin, 115(2), 243-267.
- Baumeister, R., Stillwell, A., & Heatherton, T. (1995). Personal narratives about guilt: role in action control and interpersonal relationships. Basic and Applied Psychology, 17, 173-198.
- Fischer, A. (2022). Then again, what is manipulation? A broader view of a much-maligned concept. Philosophical Explorations, 25(2), 170-188.
- Follingstad, D. R., Coyne, S., & Gambone, L. (2005). A representative measure of psychological aggression and its severity. Violence and Victims, 20(1), 25-38.
- Frost, R.O., Steketee, G., Cohn, L., & Griess, K. (1994). Personality traits in subclinical and non-obsessive compulsive volunteers and their parents. Behavior Research and Therapy, 32, 47–56.
- Leith, K., Baumeister, R. (2008). Empathy, shame, guilt, and narratives of interpersonal conflict: guilt- prone people are better at perspective taking, Journal of Personality, 66, 1-37.
- Lewis, H. B. (1971). Shame and guilt in neurosis. Psychoanalytic Review, 58(3), 419.
- Mandara, J., & Pikes, C. (2008). Guilt trips and love withdrawal: does mother’s use of psychological control predict depressive symptoms among African American adolescents, Family Relations, 57, 602- 612.
- Price, G. (1990). Non-rational guilt in victims. Dissociation, 3, 160-164.
- Simon, G. K. (2010). In sheep’s clothing: Understanding and dealing with manipulative people. Little Rock, AR: Parkhurst Brothers.
- Winner, N. A., & Nicholson, B. C. (2018). Overparenting and narcissism in young adults: The mediating role of psychological control. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 27(11), 3650-3657.
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