Key Takeaways
- Recognize when someone is using you by identifying if they often ask for favors and take but don’t give back.
- Protect yourself by setting healthy boundaries to prevent being taken advantage of.
- Seek guidance from a mental health professional or trusted person to help you manage relationships where you feel used.
Have you ever gotten the feeling that someone is manipulating you for their benefit? Or that they care more about what you can offer them than they do about you? In these situations, it’s possible that you’re being used. When someone is using you, it means they are manipulating or taking advantage of you for their own benefit.
When someone says they feel “used” by someone it typically means the person feels their rights have either been violated or they have been taken advantage of in some way, says Meghan Marcum, PsyD, chief psychologist at AMFM Healthcare.
“In some cases, the individual being used may not recognize the pattern until long after the behaviors first start. On other occasions, the individual is keenly aware they have been manipulated for another person’s gain right away,” says Marcum.
Keep reading to learn how to identify some signs that you’re being used and explore strategies to help you put a stop to it.
Signs You’re Being Used
Recognizing the signs of being used is important, but it isn’t always cut and dry. Sometimes, it’s easy to spot the signs that someone is using you, but in other cases, this behavior can be much more subtle.
While everyone’s circumstances are different, these are some signs that someone may be using you, according to Marcum:
- The person asks you for money, favors, or other items. For instance, they may ask you to lend them money or pay their bills.
- The person imposes on you without consideration for your availability or preferences. For instance, they may move in with you unexpectedly or want to borrow your car at a moment’s notice.
- The person expects you to take care of their needs. For instance, if you go out for dinner with them, they may not offer to pay and simply expect you to pick up the tab.
- The person appears disinterested in you after their needs have been met. For instance, they may use you to meet their needs but may not want to spend time with you otherwise.
- The person is only affectionate or intimate with you when it’s convenient for them. For instance, they may be affectionate toward you until they get what they want.
- The person doesn’t make an effort to be there for you when you need them. For instance, even though they borrow your car regularly, they may not agree to give you a ride to the airport.
- The relationship feels one-sided. They always expect things from you, but they never reciprocate.
Signs someone is using you may vary depending on the nature of the relationship. A friend who is using you may only want to do things together at their convenience. They may expect you to listen to them, but not be willing to hear what you have to say.
In a relationship, being used might involve selfishness and disinterest in your needs. It may also involve someone only being interested in a sexual relationship while refusing to make any other type of emotional commitment.
Commonly Used Tactics
People who are using you may also employ psychologically manipulative or abusive tactics to influence your actions and disguise their behavior. Examples of strategies they may use include:
- Gaslighting: This involves denying your reality to make you doubt yourself and the abuse.
- Love bombing: This behavior involves showering you with intense affection and attention to manipulate you.
- Future faking is an extreme form of love bombing in which a person makes grand promises for the future that they never follow up on.
- Passive aggression: This behavior uses passive, indirect expressions of negative feelings to avoid direct communication while still influencing your behavior.
- Criticism: The manipulator may criticize you to undermine your sense of self-worth and make you doubt yourself, making you easier to influence and manipulate.
- Isolation: They may isolate you from your friends and loved ones so that they have more control.
DARVO is a tactic that some people use to manipulate others. It stands for Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim. Using this strategy, the manipulator will deny that they are doing something wrong, act aggressively, and then reverse roles to claim that they are the victim and that you are manipulating or harming them.
Reasons People Use Others
When someone uses you, it means they are taking advantage of you or manipulating you in some way for their own gain. It’s a painful experience, and sometimes recognizing why people engage in this type of behavior can be helpful.
Common reasons why people use others include:
- Selfishness: They have a desire to get what they want and will do anything, including hurting others, to get it.
- Greed: They may use others for financial gain.
- Retaliation: They might feel that someone used them in the past, so they use others as a way to get revenge.
- Sex: They may sexually exploit others for their own pleasure.
- Control: Using others helps them to feel more in control.
- Insecurity: People with poor self-esteem may use others as a way to boost their self-image
- Lack of empathy: People who don’t understand how their actions affect others may be more likely to exploit and manipulate.
- Beliefs about relationships: Those who see relationships as purely transactional often feel that they should be able to derive specific benefits with little concern for the other person’s feelings.
Sometimes, using others can be related to a mental health condition such as narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) or substance use disorders.
The Effects of Someone Using You
It never feels good for someone to take advantage of you. It can make you feel poorly about yourself and take a negative toll on your relationships. It can also make it harder to trust other people in the future. According to Marcum, here are some of the ways that you might be affected if someone has been using you:
Impact on Mental Health
Being taken advantage of can lead to significant mental health problems, especially if you have been used or harmed in a previous relationship. It can manifest symptoms associated with anxiety, depression, and trauma. Over time, you may have difficulty trusting others and forming new relationships.
Impact on Relationships
Meghan Marcum, PsyD
Being used is definitely not a sign of a healthy relationship. It means one person is taking excessively while the other is making all the sacrifices.
— Meghan Marcum, PsyD
It disrupts the power balance within the relationship. In a healthy relationship, both partners would be responsible for providing support, trust, and emotional security to their partner.
Strategies to Avoid Being Used
Marcum lists some steps you can take to avoid being used:
- Set boundaries: Learning to identify violations to interpersonal boundaries and setting healthy boundaries is a great way to start protecting your mental health and ensuring you’re not being used.
- Work on your self-esteem: Working to build self-compassion and recognizing your value can also help limit the possibility of being taken advantage of in relationships.
- Seek guidance: Seeking guidance from a mental health professional, mentor, or someone you look up to can also be helpful as you work toward creating healthy boundaries.
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