“Why do I feel like I’m losing my memory around him?”

Why do I feel like I’m losing my memory around him?

This one’s not just frustrating — it’s scary. And spoiler alert: it’s not early-onset dementia or you “being forgetful.” It’s a psychological weapon being used against you.

Let’s tear it open with the IMC Method™.

The Issue:

You’re not losing your mind.


You’re being gaslit so hard, your brain is hitting self-protection mode.


What you’re describing is a legit psychological response called “cognitive dissonance fog.”


When someone constantly:

  • Denies what happened
  • Rewrites conversations
  • Tells you your feelings are “wrong”
  • And then acts like you’re the problem

Your brain starts to short-circuit. It becomes safer for your subconscious to blur details than constantly try to defend them.


🛠️ IMC Method™ Breakdown

I – Identify

This is textbook gaslighting.

“I never said that.”

“You always twist things.”

“You’re remembering it wrong.”

“You’re imagining stuff again.”

They aren’t just arguing — they’re erasing your sense of reality. And when that happens long enough, you stop trusting your own mind.

🚨 Red Flag: If you feel more confused after every “clarifying” talk — that’s not miscommunication. That’s manipulation.

M – Minimize

First thing? Start trusting your memory again — even if it’s shaky.

Do this:

  • Keep a private journal. Write what was said, how you felt, what happened.
  • Use voice memos if you don’t like writing.
  • Repeat back facts to yourself in private: “I know what I saw. I know what I heard. I’m not crazy.”

✍️ Journal Prompt: “What details did I question today — and who made me question them?”

This isn’t about proving it to them. It’s about proving to you that your reality is still yours.


C – Control

The biggest shift? Stop debating what happened. That game is rigged.


Instead:

  • Use phrases like: “That’s not how I experienced it.” “I remember it differently.” “You don’t have to agree with my version — but I trust what I saw.”
  • Don’t ask for validation from someone invested in distorting you.

And when in doubt:

💣 If someone constantly makes you doubt your memory, the problem isn’t your memory — it’s their motives.

💬 Final Word:

You’re not losing your mind.


You’re losing your grip on a version of reality that was built by someone else — for their benefit. And that’s a good thing.


The fog you’re feeling? That’s your system trying to protect you. But now it’s time to get up and reclaim your clarity — one flash of truth at a time.


💬 Ask Eve a Question

Not sure if it’s narcissism? Wondering if you’re the problem? Totally anonymous. Always actionable.

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