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Episode Description
DARVO has become one of the most overused and misunderstood psychological terms on the internet.
In this episode, Elisabeth McKay breaks down the difference between actual DARVO behavior and “truth advocacy” — the attempt to restore factual accuracy, context, and alignment in emotionally distorted conflict.
Because in today’s mental health culture, emotional certainty is often treated like objective truth.
This episode explores:
Why viral psychology content rewards emotional validation over accuracy
How confirmation bias distorts relationship dynamics
The difference between feeling attacked vs actually being attacked
Why emotionally reactive people often misread clarification as abuse
How interpretation drift escalates conflict
Why both sides in a conflict can identify with the same mental health content
The psychology behind DARVO (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim & Offender)
Why context, specificity, and factual correction matter
How self-deception reshapes perception and memory
The difference between emotional filtering and objective reality
Elisabeth also breaks down how emotional states distort communication, why assumptions feel like facts, and how modern psychology culture increasingly labels precision, boundaries, and factual correction as manipulation.
This is not a defense of abuse. It’s a discussion about the collapse of discernment we are experiencing as a collective.
If you’ve ever struggled to tell the difference between manipulation, projection, emotional reasoning, and genuine attempts to repair communication, this episode will challenge the frameworks you’ve probably absorbed online.
Not every disagreement is gaslighting. Not every correction is DARVO. And not every emotional reaction is proof.