Tracking Gaslighting: How to Measure Your Progress

How to track Gaslighting symptoms and progress over time — validated tools and approaches.

Tracking gaslighting creates accountability, identifies patterns, and makes progress visible — especially important since gaslighting distorts our perception of improvement.

Why Track Gaslighting?

  • Gaslighting naturally waxes and wanes — tracking reveals patterns invisible to memory
  • Seeing measurable improvement reinforces treatment motivation
  • Tracking identifies triggers before they cause major gaslighting episodes
  • Data from tracking helps therapists optimize treatment

Ways to Track Gaslighting

Daily mood ratings: Simple 1-10 rating of gaslighting intensity, logged consistently

Validated questionnaires: Standardized scales for gaslighting used before and during treatment

Journaling with structure: Specific prompts about gaslighting triggers, symptoms, and coping

Behavioral tracking: Monitoring sleep, exercise, and social contact — predictors of gaslighting

Interpreting Your Gaslighting Tracking Data

Look for patterns over weeks and months, not day-to-day fluctuations. Share tracking data with your therapist or doctor to optimize gaslighting treatment.

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