What do control issues look like?
A person who is too controlling runs the risk of derailing their personal relationships, career, and life because most people don’t want to be influenced that way.
It’s normal to want to exert some control over your life and surroundings. Few people would want to leave everything totally up to chance. But when that desire for control extends over other people or becomes unhealthy, there is an issue.
Identifying control issues can help interpret one’s own behavior or avoid people who may not have your best interests in mind. Here are some common ways that people seek to exert control. If you see any of them in yourself, or someone you know, be warned.
1. Dishonesty, lying, and lying by omission.
The person is seeking to control the flow of information so that others cannot make informed decisions. They may be covering up negative parts of themselves or trying to avoid responsibility for unsavory actions.
It may be a matter of trying to coerce the listener to make a particular decision or control their perception of a situation.
2. Helicopter or over-protective parenting.
It’s normal to be concerned for your children’s well-being and growth. What isn’t normal is protecting them from the consequences of their actions or prying too hard into their lives, especially if they are adults.
An overprotective parent can do a lot of damage to their child’s ability to deal with the slings and arrows that they will experience in life, like flunking a class or losing a job.
3. Expecting perfectionism in oneself or others.
Nothing is ever perfect, no matter how much we may want it to be. A perfectionist may be dealing with their own insecurities, gassing themselves up to believe that they are something more significant than they are.
They may even just be an eccentric who actually is great at what they do and feel they need to live up to that.
But expecting perfection from other people and holding them to an impossible standard is a convenient way for perfectionists to undermine or punish others for their shortcomings.
4. Self-harm.
Self-harm can be a tool that a person uses to deal with complicated feelings that they don’t know how to manage. They may feel they are in a situation that they cannot control, have emotions running amok, or may be an abuse survivor.
It’s not a positive thing, but self-harm can feel like something they have power and control over. They are choosing what is done to their person rather than having it imposed on them.
5. Monitoring technology.
A controlling person may do things like monitoring their partner’s technology, demand access to email accounts, share social media accounts, or track them via apps on their phone. They may check call records or snoop accounts to keep tabs on their partner and gather information.
6. Jealousy and accusing partners of cheating.
Jealousy and accusations are common tools that controlling abusers use with their partners.
It’s a method of forcing the partner to act in a particular way, preventing them from establishing friendships, or keeping communication avenues open. It’s a way for the abuser to keep their partner close and under their control.
7. Determining who their partner can and cannot talk to.
No one has a right to tell you who you can and cannot talk to. A controlling person may very well try to do precisely that. They may seek to limit your exposure to friends and family members because it’s easier for them to control you and limit your ability to get help.
This doesn’t always come as an outright demand, either. It may also be masked as whining. Like, “Oh, I really don’t like your mother. Can she just not come over anymore when I’m around?”
8. Gaslighting.
Gaslighting goes a bit deeper than just lying. It is the practice of trying to make a person question their own sanity and perceptions.
As an example, John sets his phone down on the counter before he goes to the bathroom. Sarah takes the phone and hides it. John comes back for his phone, finds it’s not there, and Sarah tells him that he didn’t set it down there but will help him look for it.
After looking for a while, John heads off to look somewhere else, and Sarah puts the phone somewhere easy to find. Sarah then tells John that he must be really stressed out from work or might be having medical issues that he should get looked at since he’s been so forgetful lately.
This type of behavior is Sarah encouraging dependency and trying to negatively influence John’s mind and behavior.
9. Abuse.
Physical, emotional, or any other type of abuse is a glaring red flag that should never be ignored.
Can you help someone with control issues?
In many cases, a person can heal their own control issues by addressing whatever is causing them in the first place.
If it’s an untreated mental illness, treatment might provide relief and facilitate a behavioral change. If it’s the result of trauma, addressing the trauma and creating new habits can help you be healthier.
A person who feels the need to control things may experience negative emotions like anxiety, stress, depression, anger, and shame, which will also need to be addressed.
But they need to be willing. And if they’re not, nothing you can do will help. In these instances the best thing you can do for them, and you, is walk away.