Gaslighting in the Name of God
Religious Trauma, Spiritual Abuse, and Rebuilding Self-Trust
@wilder_tally | info@wildertally.com | www.wildertally.com [http://www.wildertally.com]
Raised on Shame is a podcast about religious trauma, deconstruction, shame based faith systems, and learning to trust yourself again after leaving high control religion.
Gaslighting is often used as a buzzword, but clinically it has a specific meaning. Gaslighting is a form of psychological manipulation where someone repeatedly distorts or dismisses your reality, causing you to doubt your thoughts, memories, and perceptions.
In religious trauma and high control environments, gaslighting can be especially difficult to recognize. Language framed as “truth,” “growth,” or “spiritual authority” can override your internal experience. Over time, this can disconnect you from your intuition, your body, and your sense of self.
In this episode of Raised on Shame, Kimberly Wilder, licensed trauma therapist, explores gaslighting in religious contexts, including how spiritual abuse, power dynamics, and shame based systems contribute to self-doubt and loss of self-trust.
This episode integrates trauma-informed clinical insight, psychological research, and lived experience to help you identify gaslighting, understand its impact, and begin rebuilding trust in yourself after religious harm.
Later in the episode, Kimberly is joined by a guest who brings both clinical and lived experience to explore how gaslighting operates in spiritual environments and how it differs from genuine care and support.
• What gaslighting is (clinical definition vs common misuse)
• Gaslighting in religious trauma and high control faith systems
• Spiritual abuse and the role of power and authority
• The difference between gaslighting and disagreement
• Spiritual bypassing vs trauma-informed care
• How gaslighting impacts memory, identity, and self-trust
• Why survivors of religious trauma often doubt themselves
If it feels supportive, you might reflect on:
• Where have I been taught to question my own reality?
• What happens in my body when I trust my perception?
• What messages have shaped how I interpret my experiences?
• What do I know to be true about my experience, without external validation?
You might also try a grounding practice:
• Name three things you know to be true about your experience
• Notice what shifts in your body as you say them
• Pay attention to any sense of clarity, resistance, or relief
Explore trauma-informed resources, therapist directories, and support for religious trauma recovery:
• https://www.wildertally.com/resources [https://www.wildertally.com/resources]
Research referenced in this episode:
• Gaslighting as a social and psychological control mechanism (American Sociological Review)
• Scientific American: How gaslighting manipulates reality
• National Library of Medicine (PMC): Psychological impact of gaslighting
• APA PsycNet: Gaslighting and self-concept disruption
• Trauma Resolution and Recovery Institute
Books on religious trauma, gaslighting, and healing:
• The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk
• What My Bones Know by Stephanie Foo
• When Religion Hurts You by Laura Anderson
• Leaving the Fold by Marlene Winell
If this episode on gaslighting and religious trauma resonated with you, you are welcome to share your questions or reflections.
Your questions may be included in a future Q and A episode.
Interested in sharing your story or expertise? Apply to be a guest:
• https://www.wildertally.com [https://www.wildertally.com]
Follow, rate, and review Raised on Shame to support the podcast and help others navigating religious trauma and deconstruction find this content.
This episode discusses religious trauma, gaslighting, spiritual abuse, and psychological harm in a trauma-informed and non-graphic way.
This podcast is not a substitute for therapy or mental health care. If you are seeking support for religious trauma or emotional distress, visit:
• https://www.wildertally.com/resources [https://www.wildertally.com/resources]